The media may be in “see no evil” mode about the Muslim Brotherhood but this fraternity is hardly a benign force wherever it is massed in significant numbers, whether that be in the country of Egypt or on an American college campus.
Yearly Archives For 2011
Repeating Mid East History
28 years ago I was invited to lunch with Hosni Mubarak, the then new president of Egypt.
Broken Bulbs
Conventional wisdom says if it isn’t broken there is no reason to fix it.
Meet The Press Secretaries
At The George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs recently, four former press secretaries shared their thoughts and insights on their job and the media in, “Live From The White House: Making and Shaping the News.”
Relying on the Unreliable
We live in a country that loves a winner.
Liberty in Law School
Law school students may not only be getting an incomplete view of American history but a misleading notion of the Law of the Land, a dissident professor shows in a new book.
Nation At Greater Risk
The national decline in education standards is starting to affect national security.
Massaging Higher Education Prospects
College students may not face brighter job prospects after graduation but they feel better about themselves.
Parental Rights UNplugged
When the UN cannot influence people with their ideas through discussion they seem to push ideas through law, a parents’ rights group claims.
Constitutional Literacy Check
Read about how American citizens possess a more acute understanding of the U. S. Constitution than the country’s leaders, particularly academic elites, in Accuracy in Academia’s latest monthly Campus Report newsletter.