THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Articles by THE WASHINGTON TIMES
EDITORIAL: Guns are big, but football’s bigger
Guns are big in Arkansas, but hogs and football can be bigger. The National Rifle Association took on the Razorbacks of the University of Arkansas over a law that would have enabled fans to take their guns to the game, and the Razorbacks won. Published April 16, 2017
EDITORIAL: The Great Deceiver’s advice
This work presents issues of faith from the perspective of Screwtape, a fictional devil, in a letter to his nephew Wormwood, a junior tempter. Published April 13, 2017
EDITORIAL: The Passion of the Christ
Straightaway in the morning, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council, and bound Jesus, and carried him away, and delivered Him to Pilate. Published April 13, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Maximizing losses
As a macroeconomics student, I agree with Richard Berman ("Minimum wage resistance," Web, March 6). The basic idea behind the minimum-wage hike is good, but there are disadvantages that come with such a law. Published April 12, 2017
EDITORIAL: Fizzler in Kansas, surviving hopes in Georgia
Congressional Democrats were counting on two special elections this month to provide the smelling salts to revive their dispirited ranks. The first, on Tuesday in Kansas, fizzled. Now all hope is focused on a reliably red district in the suburbs of Atlanta. Published April 12, 2017
EDITORIAL: Calculating the threat from North Korea
"The land of the morning calm" is anything but that. The ancient Korean name for the divided peninsula is belied by the tension simmering for nearly 70 years, enlivened with frequent bursts of cross-border invective and sometimes violence. Published April 12, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Illegals’ crime rate 100 percent
This week Attorney General Jeff Sessions directed 94 U.S. attorneys to enforce human-smuggling laws, as well as identity-theft-related and Social-Security-related fraud. (The chief actuary of the Social Security Administration has said that some 75 percent of working illegal aliens use false Social Security numbers). Published April 12, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Trump like all the rest
Donald Trump promised us prosperity and security, but now has us on the brink of war with Russia, China, North Korea and Iran. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson claims that the United States is ready to use its military to punish any massacre of civilians anywhere in the world. The U.S. military recently killed more than 200 civilians in a bombing raid on Iraq March 17, which is approximately twice the number of people killed by the April 4 Syrian airstrike. President Trump suspects the attack in Syria was chemical, but it may have been a toxic gas cloud created by the destruction of a chemical-weapons manufacturing facility controlled by rebel forces. There is no hard proof that Syrian leader Bashar Assad is responsible for using chemical weapons. Published April 11, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Seek charges against Syria, Russia
The Russians are very advanced in their ability to wage war in nuclear, biological and chemical environments. The Syrian air force likely possesses similar capabilities, possibly in older, Soviet versions. Substantial decontamination facilities are probably present near the chemical-weapons storage areas, as well as the flight line. Published April 11, 2017
EDITORIAL: The unfriendly skies
One man's misery can be another man's meat, and business-school students looking for a lesson in how not to turn a manageable crisis into an uncontrolled public-relations catastrophe will owe United Airlines a debt for years to come. Published April 11, 2017
EDITORIAL: The violent legacy of Freddie Gray
Healing is preferable to hurting but much harder to achieve. That's the lesson in Baltimore two years after the death of Freddie Gray, whose death in police custody set off riots and mayhem. Faced with a choice between escalating crime and aggressive policing, the city has spurned the advice of the Trump administration and stuck with a strategy that promises more pain and heartbreak. Published April 11, 2017
EDITORIAL: A bad week for a rogue
Action speaks louder than red lines. Accepting the mantle of the leader of the free world, Donald Trump has just done what Barack Obama vowed to do, and never did. The sight of Syrian civilians massacred in a chemical weapons attack prompted President Trump to punish the Assad regime in the name of humanity. Next for a reckoning are Syria's more formidable protectors, Russia and Iran, which have drawn their own red lines. Fresh to the world stage, the dealmaker has put unruly powers on notice that he is as likely to strike a target as a bargain. Published April 10, 2017
EDITORIAL: An early test of the Gorsuch court
The fireworks over the elevation of Neil Gorsuch to the U.S. Supreme Court — he was sworn in Monday as the ninth justice — overshadowed a perversion of the law by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago that could offer an early indication of the tilt of the newly restored Supreme Court. Published April 10, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Question presidents’ words
This year is the 100-year anniversary of U.S. entry into World War I. We must never forget this war. As war ravaged Europe, President Woodrow Wilson publicly adopted neutrality -- while secretly supplying Great Britain with weapons. Wilson knew the Lusitania was hauling weapons to Great Britain and using civilians as cover. The Germans were aware, too, that the United States was secretly arming the Allies, and thus targeted U.S. ships, leading to America's involvement in the war. Published April 10, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Foreign aid pays dividends
Throughout his campaign Donald Trump said the United States spends too much money helping other countries, and he vowed to change that. Budget director Mick Mulvaney reiterated that stance in a St. Patrick's Day presser. But how much do we really spend on foreign aid? Published April 10, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Quarrel on your own time
Our government is engaged in a messy bout of sandbox politics. Just like the petty fighting we used to do in the sandbox when we were little, politics these days is turning into partisan child's play. Democrats disagree with Republicans just because they're Republicans and vice versa. Published April 9, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Jordan can now breathe easier
Last week President Trump met with Jordanian King Abdullah at the White House. After years of being snubbed by the previous presidential administration, it's about time the king and his wife received respect they and the kingdom deserve. Published April 9, 2017
EDITORIAL: Nine again
Neil Gorsuch is finally safe as a justice of the United States Supreme Court, survivor of a cheap campaign to impugn his character and his knowledge and devotion to the Constitution and the law. The justices number nine again, and Donald Trump has redeemed one of his most important promises. Published April 9, 2017
EDITORIAL: A decisive week for the world
Donald Trump finally had a pretty good week after several weeks that were not so good. The U.S. Senate finally confirmed Neil Gorsuch for the U.S. Supreme Court, overcoming partisan opposition for opposition's sake, and his missile strike on the government forces of Bashar Assad stunned nearly everybody, destroying the Syrian air force base that launched the chemical strikes on Assad's own people. Published April 9, 2017
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Time for GOP to stand ground
The Democrats have proven by deed that they are not interested in representing the American people, nor are they interested in bringing us together. They are continuing President Obama's game plan to divide and conquer. As long as they can create chaos and obstruct our new president in any way they can, they are doing their best to kill democracy as we know it. From electing a new Supreme Court justice, to sanctuary cities and blaming President Trump for colluding with Russia, they lie and obstruct with impunity. Published April 6, 2017