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THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Articles by THE WASHINGTON TIMES

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: BDS movement helps no one

Clifford D. May deserves our commendation for bringing some logic and common sense into the boycott-Israel issue ("Jobless and desperate Palestinians," Web, Oct. 27). Published October 29, 2015

President Barack Obama speaks to the International Association of Chiefs of Police in Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2015. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune via AP) ** FILE **

EDITORIAL: Obama’s road to disaster in the Middle East

The one great lesson from the Vietnam War is that waging war by increment is a recipe for disaster. It never works because armies are not designed to wage war piecemeal. You do a puppy no kindness by cutting off his tail an inch at a time. Published October 29, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Debate moderators an embarrassment

I was appalled Wednesday night watching the Republican debate on CNBC. Instead of focusing on economic issues such as jobs, interest rates, Dodd- Frank and taxation, the moderators asked 'pinhead' questions. Published October 29, 2015

Jeb Bush, second from left, is flanked by Mike Huckabee, left, Marco Rubio, center, Donald Trump, second from right, and Ben Carson during the CNBC Republican presidential debate at the University of Colorado, Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2015, in Boulder, Colo. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

EDITORIAL: GOP presidential campaigns get serious

The Republican debate this week may have been the actual beginning of the 2016 Republican campaign for the presidency. All that has gone before was mere entertainment. The "real" candidates began to emerge and the CNBC-TV moderators, as bad as they were, helped with separating the wheat from the tares. The sifting and winnowing is finally under way. Published October 29, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Clinton still evading Benghazi justice

On June 17, 1972, five men broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington. The resulting investigation led to the impeachment and eventual resignation of President Richard Nixon. No one lost their life, no national security concerns were in play, jihad was not a factor and justice was served. Published October 28, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Tsai not planning ‘formal independence’

Tsai Ing-wen, the Democratic Progressive Party's presidential candidate, has not and will not propose "formal independence," as The Washington Times' recent editorial, "Concern in the Taiwan Strait" (Oct. 25), wrongly states. Dr. Tsai's clearly articulated goal for her administration is maintenance of the current status quo, based on the existing ROC constitutional order and the more than 20 years of negotiations and exchanges with China. Published October 28, 2015

Sen. Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, left, and Hillary Rodham Clinton laugh during the CNN Democratic presidential debate, Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2015, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher) ** FILE **

EDITORIAL: The consequences of a ‘living wage’

Everyone wants a raise, but only a few of us expect to get it by government edict. Some workers at the bottom of the payroll will see a larger paycheck — if they don't get a pink slip first. It can get cold in the real world because despite all the government can do there's still no free lunch. Published October 28, 2015

In this Oct. 24, 2015, photo, Republican presidential candidateBen Carson greets audience members after speaking outside the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity at Iowa State University during a campaign stop in Ames, Iowa. Carson and the other Republican presidential candidates are getting ready for the third GOP debate on Oct. 28, in Boulder, Colo.(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

EDITORIAL: Ben Carson’s rise

Ben Carson represents the best of America. Whether he should be the president of the United States is another question that is not under consideration here. But his ascent to the top of the public-opinion polls tells a lot about both the man and the country he wants to lead. Published October 28, 2015

Former Internal Revenue Service official Lois Lerner testifies March 5, 2014, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Investigators said Thursday, Feb. 26, 2015, they have recovered 32,000 emails related to the former IRS official at the heart of the agency’s tea party scandal. But they don’t know how many of them are new. (Associated Press) **FILE**

EDITORIAL: The lesson of Lois Lerner

Almost any prosecutor, so courthouse wisdom goes, can persuade a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich, with or without cheese. Barack Obama's prosecutor, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, was "persuaded" to throw out the case against Lois Lerner, the high-ranking officer at the Internal Revenue Service who targeted Tea Party groups for special attention in the run-up to the 2010 and 2012 elections. Published October 27, 2015

In a public opinion survey published Oct. 8 by the independent Levada Center pollster, more than 70 percent of Russians said they backed President Vladimir Putin's decision to launch airstrikes against forces opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad. (Associated Press)

EDITORIAL: Vladimir Putin trying to recreate Soviet Russia

Vladimir Putin never sleeps, unlike his most famous counterpart elsewhere. He has refigured the Russian domestic scene in the Soviet image, one that gladdens the hearts of the remaining Soviets who never thought they would see his like again. Published October 27, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Pass budget deal before Nov. 3

To those 535 people on Capitol Hill: Get to work. The Treasury's borrowing authority must continue without interruption ("White House calls on Congress to approve two-year budget deal," Web, Oct. 23). The current statutory debt limit must be suspended. Published October 27, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Consider John Kasich

I understand the appeal of voting for people who have never held public office. I, too, believe in a 'citizen government.' However, there is much to be said for one who has the correct experience for a particular task. Consider Donald Trump. Mr. Trump is a very successful businessman. It is unquestioned that he is at the top of his profession. Yet he did not start at the top; he gained his level of success through years of hard work and experience. Same with Dr. Ben Carson. You can be sure Dr. Carson did not begin performing delicate and complicated brain surgeries on Day One of his career. He had years of training and experience that enabled him to perform at this level. So why would one automatically dismiss someone with governmental experience, especially one who is running for the country's top position? Published October 26, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Clinton redux would destroy U.S.

Just as Barack Obama's severe shortcomings did not stop the liberal media from anointing him the first black president even before he was elected, Hillary Rodham Clinton's deceptions to cover her failures in the Benghazi terrorist attack will have no effect on that same media crowning her the first woman leader of the United States. Published October 26, 2015

President Barack Obama speaks about his Clean Power Plan, Monday, Aug. 3, 2015, in the East Room at the White House in Washington. The president is mandating even steeper greenhouse gas cuts from U.S. power plants than previously expected, while granting states more time and broader options to comply. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

EDITORIAL: Environmental lobby dictates climate science

The business of Washington is politics, but politics doesn't sell without "good optics." The White House that passed out white lab coats to a phalanx of doctors backing Obamacare in a Rose Garden photo-op, is lining up big-name companies now to pledge allegiance to "a low carbon-dioxide future" in advance of next month's climate change conference at the United Nations. Published October 26, 2015

Rep. Paul Ryan had been reluctant to give up his role as head of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee and precious weekends with his family, so he demanded support from every wing of the party by Friday. (Associated Press)

EDITORIAL: Paul Ryan for Speaker of the House, Daniel Webster for majority leader

"Personnel is policy," most of the time, and whom a president, governor, senator or mayor surrounds himself with is a good way to judge whether he will stay true to his convictions, beliefs and values once comfortably in office. Once elected, such officials tend to attract either "yes men" or advisers with rogue agendas while taking care to appear to be reliable "yes men." Published October 26, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Muslim refugees Europe’s death knell

In the current unofficial global war against radical Islam, the Islamic State is demonstrating greater command than its opponents of the use of economic maneuvers in asymmetric warfare. It is doing this while exploiting our fear of "lone wolves," with the unwitting aid of a gullible liberal media. Published October 25, 2015

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Captain, company have responsibility to crew

As a formal naval officer who was an officer of the deck underway, a navigator, a meteorology officer and on-track for ship command, I am appalled by the decision of the captain of the El Faro container ship to head into a ferocious storm at sea ("Memorial service to be held for crew member aboard El Faro," Web, Oct. 13). Published October 25, 2015

China's President Xi Jinping, attends a joint press conference with Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, at 10 Downing Street, London, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015,  on the second day of his state visit to the UK. China's state visit to Britain moved from warm toasts and ceremony to cold, hard cash Wednesday, with business deals including a major Chinese investment in the U.K.'s first nuclear power station since the 1980s. (Suzanne Plunkett /Pool Photo via AP)

EDITORIAL: Concern in the Taiwan Strait

There might be a lesson in Taiwan for political parties in democratic states elsewhere about what to do when stuck with a bad candidate and an approaching election. Taiwan, where politics is always about survival, will elect a new president in January and the ruling Kuomintang, direct descendants of Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists who fled the Mainland Communists in 1949, was saddled with a nominee running 20 percentage points behind in the public-opinion polls. Published October 25, 2015