Op-Eds
Washington Times
If America drives off a fiscal cliff, will the crash landing at the bottom be less painful if we’re going over the cliff at 60 miles per hour rather than 80 miles per hour?
Republicans reject President Joe Biden’s 80-mph plan to increase our national debt to more than $52 trillion over the next ten years.
President Joe Biden wants to raise the national debt by more than $3 trillion over the next two years. He wants future generations to pay for his wild spending spree. He doesn’t want to slow down spending, reduce out-of-control spending by the federal government, or find the hundreds of billions of dollars wasted every year by the federal bureaucracy. He doesn’t want accountability or reforms.
In China, the Communist Party has devised a scheme to compel compliance. They score every person and business to determine whether they are sufficiently in line with the Party’s standards. In America, this type of fascistic overreach is known as “ESG.” ESG fuses big government, big tech, and big business, and this tyranny is coming for you.
Gazing into the vacant eyes of President Biden and the penetrating malevolence in those of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, you sense that the debt ceiling issue and border crisis will bring further attacks on Americans. You might say that President Biden and Mayorkas are a potent duo of destruction.
Were you impressed by President Biden’s recent visit to El Paso, Texas? Neither was I. Between cleaning up the congregated homeless illegal aliens and the limited time he spent in the area, we can assume that Biden came on the scene with scant information and probably left more confused than ever.
“Why aren’t you voting for Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to be the next speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives?”
This is a question that I’ve been hearing lately, usually with a few personal pejoratives directed my way. That’s OK.
Daily Caller
It is time. It is time for new leadership of the U.S. House of Representatives.
People are thrilled that Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s reign of Leftist extremism is ending. The question is whether we will be treated to the status quo that will move us along the same path, though perhaps more slowly.
During this campaign, I attended hundreds of events in my district, around the state of Arizona and around the country. The issue that I was asked about most often was whether I or the Republicans in the House, or the Republicans in the Senate, would keep the same leaders.
Not only did my constituents want the “red wave” that didn’t ever materialize, but they also wanted new leadership.