Mitt Romney: enabling the PRC’s foreign adventurism?
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | October 19th at 11:00 AM |
There’s a lot to talk about with regard to last night’s debate, but I want to drill down on this unforced error made by Team Romney. It’s… subtle, but it’s going to hurt Mitt in unexpected ways. Via the CNN debate transcript (via Ben Domenech’s Transom) comes this fascinating discussion of alternative methods of funding humanitarian aid: COOPER: Governor Romney, should foreign aid be eliminated? | Read More »
People’s Republic of China Mocks the President (and Us)
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | January 23rd at 06:31 PM |
[I've been sitting on this all day, hoping for a perfectly logical explanation. Alas, no dice.] The PRC had one of their pet pianists play an anti-American, Korean War-inspired ditty (did you know that we’re jackals? Did you also know that Marxists are incompetent buffoons who can’t feed themselves, or the countries that they manage to control?) at the White House without the administration twigging | Read More »
Carole Shea-Porter… BROUGHT DOWN BY THE PRC?
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | December 27th at 07:30 PM |
That’s the implication, at least: Ms. Shea-Porter is going around telling people that the reason that she lost was because of all that dirty, dirty (and apparently foreign) special interest money. The quote: “They’re in the halls of Congress everywhere, and it means, for example, that you sit on a committee and you say something about concern about Chinese influence or something, you don’t even | Read More »
So much for those ‘Free Tibet’ bumper stickers.
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | October 5th at 08:06 AM |
I understand that they can be easily enough removed with a combination of WD-40 and a razor blade. Some people should get cracking with that… In an attempt to gain favor with China, the United States pressured Tibetan representatives to postpone a meeting between the Dalai Lama and President Obama until after Obama’s summit with his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao, scheduled for next month, according | Read More »