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Common Core confusion

Twice lately I’ve listened to people on each side of the Common Core debate plead their case. I’m sorry to report I’m no more certain of what Georgia should do than I was before. It’s hard to believe a checklist of student knowledge and skills for math and English/language arts ...

What the Capitol car chase did have in common with recent shootings

When news broke that shots were fired outside the U.S. Capitol, a lot of people jumped to the usual conclusions and made the usual comments about the usual answers. It's beginning to look like this situation was far from ordinary (via the Associated Press): "The mother of a Connecticut woman ...

The day Obama became a Republican

While mocking congressional Republicans about the government shutdown during a speech at an asphalt plant in Maryland today, it seems President Obama inadvertently revealed his plans to reform labor laws to outlaw strikes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEHKBqlpYwM Obama: "Everybody here just does their job, right? If you're working here, and in the middle ...

Poll: GOP, Dems equally obligated to compromise, end shutdown

It is both silly and inescapable to watch the opinion polls regarding the federal government shutdown. Silly, because we all know that's not how lawmakers ought to decide when and how to compromise -- and inescapable, because we all know that's what they're going to do. So it is quite ...

The bigger government gets, the more of these we’ll see

On the second day of the latest federal-government shutdown, the online Urban Dictionary added a new entry named after President Barack “Barry” Obama:“barrycade: 1. A barrier (usually temporary) that exists for no reason. 2. A barrier erected for political reasons.”Here’s how the website — not owned or funded by the ...

GOP can count on the Obama administration to overplay its hand

If House Republicans sometimes seem remarkably willing, time after time, to step into apparent P.R. disasters, perhaps it's because they can always count on the Obama administration to bail them out by overplaying its own hand. In March, remember, the administration's decision to cancel White House tours as part of ...

Federal government shuts down ... for the 18th time in 37 years

1976 1977 (three times) 1978 1979 1981 1982 (twice) 1983 1984 (twice) 1986 1987 1990 1995 1996 And now 2013 joins the list of years since the mid-1970s in which the federal government has been shut down due to disagreements over funding issues. You probably remember the two shutdowns of ...

Ideas for fiscal compromise do exist, even if incentives don't

It's "Shutdown" Showdown Day in Washington, and we'll be treated to all manner of explanations from each side as to why the other guys are the only ones standing in the way of fiscal sanity and world peace. After all, when one side (GOP) insists on negotiating and the other ...

Let’s go team! Fight, fight, fight!

Adults say the darndest things.They say things like Washington has “too much power” — as 60 percent of respondents, including almost two in five Democrats, told Gallup in a poll earlier this month. That 60 percent figure was the highest mark since Gallup began asking the question in 2002, when ...

Those rascally Republicans, doing what Congress has done for 40 years

When President Obama uses words like "never" and "unprecedented," it's often a signal that what he should have said was "routinely" or, er, "precedented." The president this week went with "never" as his hyperbolic-and-false word choice to describe Republican insistence that an increase in the debt ceiling come with some ...

Some Obamacare harm will be unseen, but felt all the same

Here's a snippet from my column in today's print edition of the AJC. The full column, about how the premiums on the Obamacare exchange starting next week will affect Georgians, is available to subscribers on MyAJC.com: *** Statistics tell us overwhelmingly that the surest path to avoiding poverty is to ...

The harm may be unseen, but felt all the same

Oppose a do-gooder law like Obamacare enough times, and you’ll pick up some new adjectives: evil, heartless, inhumane.After all, if the president says he’s trying to help people, who are we to wonder if people will really be better off?Obamacare is like the 2009 “stimulus” bill in this sense: Washington ...

The time a Texas senator tried to block a law and wasn't branded a hero

Ted Cruz's long speech (it's not technically a filibuster) in the Senate, aided by interjections by fellow Republican senators who sympathize with him, has just passed the 19.5-hour mark as I write this post. It's earned plenty of derision from pundits, especially those on the left, but Timothy Carney points ...

A 'shutdown' in which most federal employees would still go to work

Chicken Little, call your office. Once again, Washington is agog about a possible government shutdown, and once again we are hearing dire forecasts of what will happen if that comes to pass. These forecasts are similar to what we heard about sequestration, the automatic budget cuts that took effect earlier ...

Obama's ad-libbed policy and broken promises, health care edition

If you thought President Obama's "red line" in Syria represented his first foray into ad libbing his way through his most important policy decisions, Politico reports that's not the case: "The most important red line of Barack Obama's presidency was scrawled hastily in January 2007, a few weeks before he ...

A big legal win for Atlanta's charter schools

I'm back from vacation and, having just spent a week at the beach with 12 kids under one roof, I am not surprised to be drawn to this AJC education story: "Atlanta charter schools won a victory to preserve their public education funding Monday when the Georgia Supreme Court unanimously ruled ...

From big to bigger, and that’s bad

It was a Sunday like this one, five years ago, when the walls of the Street started to crumble.Lehman Brothers was bankrupt and — unlike Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before it — was not getting a bailout.Merrill Lynch was selling itself to Bank of America for $50 ...

Just a few things

I'll be out of the office this week taking in a week at the beach. My family will be there with five others -- 12 adults and 12 children in one big house -- so I'll let you know when I get back if it was more or less relaxing ...

Putin's hollow regard for the U.N. and international law

The New York Times today published an op-ed by Vladimir Putin, and it is an epic example of trolling, with the former KGB officer's lofty language about preserving peace and closing cheap shot about the notion of American exceptionalism. I don't fault the Times at all for publishing it, but ...

The bigger picture explains Americans’ reluctance

Twelve years ago, four airplanes-turned-missiles shattered a decade-old set of beliefs about the world and our place in it. Twelve years later, we’re still working on a replacement. Understand that, and you’ll understand our halting, haphazard response to the crisis in Syria — and why Americans are reluctant to follow ...

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