Enraged Democrats still offer no substantial alternatives to the Trump agenda.
Victor Davis Hanson
Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and the author of “The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won,” from Basic Books. You can reach him by e-mailing authorvdh@gmail.com. His columns appears Sundays in the Review-Journal.
But she is a poor substitute for the successful bait-and-switch 2020 con of “ol’ Joe Biden,” the fake moderate “uniter” from Scranton.
If the administration must speak, Washington should do so by conveying disproportionality and unpredictability.
The Left does not enjoy majority public support.
On campuses, Middle East activism, course instruction and faculty profiles are now virulently anti-Israel — and indistinguishable from anti-Jewishness.
It would be hard to imagine any planned agenda to destroy America that would have been as injurious as what we already suffered the past two years.
When the original strain of COVID-19 arrived in spring 2020, a pandemic soon swept the country. Most survived. But hundreds of thousands did not. American deaths now number well more than 1 million.
The military is not yet a revolutionary people’s army overseen by commissars. But it is getting there with politicized agendas that split the country in half and abandon the military’s traditional role of unifying in common purpose to defend America.
Americans privately fear these rules while publicly appearing to accept them.
After COVID-19 arrived in the United States, Atlas consistently warned that government must follow science, not politics, in doing the least amount of harm to its people.