You might remember President Obama saying he wanted to look forward, not back. You may also remember Speaker Pelosi telling all of us that impeachment was off the table.
Memory is a most peculilar thing.
Those forgive-and-forget statements grow more stunning with time. This is especially true now that Obama's Attorney General, Eric Holder, has in effect crashed any hopes of holding Bush administration officials accountable for torture and other abuses and crimes.
Alex Baer: Memory, Through the Looking Glass
Prairie2: The Living is Easy in Romneyville
Incredibly, the Republicans think they can pull a Ronald Reagan stunt and work the 'Morning in America' scam on the voters again. Carter lost a big chunk of the union vote who blamed him for the bad economy caused largely by Nixon, they foolishly believed Reagan to be on their side.
Mitt Romney doesn't pass the smell test for most voters, even with many of those who will vote for him anyway.
Alex Baer: Bizarro Phases & Places
It's been a long weekend of eyebrow-lifting reports, likely the perceptual hangovers from the holiday, combined with the come-and-go effects of our ongoing intersection with the Bizarro Universe.
Steely-eyed readers with exceptional powers of recall will remember these odd and unpredictable effects on life in this universe first began because of -- or resulted in -- Willard Romney's selection of Paul Ryan to be his Veep-runner in this marathon presidential race.
Alex Baer: Lyin' Ryan and the Tangled-Web Weavers
This is getting to be a serial adventure with this guy, like Harry Potter -- but way heavier at the nightmare end of things.
So far, Paul Ryan's running his campaign as Veep wannabe about like he does a marathon: running his own course, running his mouth, and running out his clock on his own sense of time and timing. For someone who considers himself so fleet of foot, he's certainly being footloose with the truth, getting so often tripped up by it and tangled all around in it.
Alex Baer: Enduring Messages & Disposable Thoughts
We've had to low-crawl on our stomachs and chests all week, under razor wire and raking machine gun fire, but we've finally made it, safe: The Weekend.
Relax, enjoy your coffee, no rush. There'll be little mention of politics here today, save for a quick thanks to the cosmos for the Tampa-tantrum finally ending. (Yes, now that you ask, I will have a little something in my coffee, after all. Whooo-ah.)
What about Israel’s nuclear weapons?
Readers periodically ask me some variation on this question: “Why does the press follow every jot and tittle of Iran’s nuclear program, but we never see any stories about Israel’s nuclear weapons capability?”
It’s a fair question. Going back 10 years into Post archives, I could not find any in-depth reporting on Israeli nuclear capabilities, although national security writer Walter Pincus has touched on it many times in his articles and columns.
I spoke with several experts in the nuclear and nonproliferation fields , and they say that the lack of reporting on Israel’s nuclear weapons is real — and frustrating. There are some obvious reasons for this, and others that are not so obvious.
Alex Baer: Old Echoes Die Hard, if Ever
The older the echo, the louder the cry.
And then, there were the waves and waves of echoing cries crashing out in torrents from the tightly-choreographed GOP amateur hour and presidential auditions in Tampa, where everyone's dance steps are painstakingly mapped out in lockstep, on the planks of that sprawling, unbrawling floor.
It is an unusual Tampa-tantrum, this gathering, but one bearing many old echoes.
Peculiar, it was, not having George W. Bush, the previous Republican occupier of the White House, slide on by to cut some conversational brush with us, and remind us how fine those eight years were. But, the taint of epic disaster lingers among those echoes, so -- please: No reason to drop by.
More Articles...
Page 60 of 148
Editorial Glance





























