Posts filed under 'Media'
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial board thinks health care should be a basic right.
In America, buy cialis capsule rights are traditionally things you already have in a natural state that can’t or should not be taken away: life, case liberty, speech, freedom, self-defense.
But you don’t already HAVE healthcare: you purchase it from people who spent a very long time learning to become medical professionals.
You don’t have a right to other people’s time, talent, and expertise.
What the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is talking about is an entitlement not a right.
I’m willing to discuss the possibility of making universal health care an entitlement for every American.
Unlike the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, I’m not willing to abuse the meaning of the word “right” to try to lend the idea extra credibility.
May 20th, 2007
So what do you guys think would happen if I followed the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel‘s lead in demanding to see all 1, viagra buy ampoule 500 of the pornographic images found on a Cedarburg school teacher’s work computer?
Somehow, cialis usa ed I don’t think a judge would decide I had a right to see them.
I also doubt the Journal Sentinel is going to post them on their website for the public to peruse them, drugstore even though their argument was:
“… that releasing the images was essential so citizens could judge whether the district was right to have fired Zellner.”
Just another case of “the public has the right to know…what we, the journalists, want them to know.”
May 15th, 2007
Unsurprisingly, viagra sale for sale the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel objects to any effort to impede illegal immigration.
Today’s editorial purports to be about the Real ID legislation that requires states to make their driver’s licenses tamper proof, cialis generic nurse but the Journal Sentinel’s real objection to the bill is that it might slow down the unrestricted flood of illegal immigration:
The Real ID legislation was tacked onto a 2005 emergency spending bill without sufficient debate. The target allegedly was terrorists. The real target is illegal immigrants.
Sorry, ailment even without driver’s licenses, they will continue to drive to those jobs the U.S. economy needs them to do because the rest of us won’t. They won’t go away.”
So, here again, the Journal Sentinel wants us to believe we need to encourage unlimited illegal immigration because there are “jobs the the U.S. economy needs them to do because the rest of us won’t.”
But doesn’t that conflict with their editorial stance from April 11th where they argued that welfare in Wisconsin has to be more generous because there aren’t enough jobs to go around?
“But the research paper itself shares with W-2 a fundamental flaw: a failure to grapple with the hard reality that there simply are not enough jobs to go around.”
If the working conditions at the jobs held by illegal immigrants are so onerous that unemployed American’s refuse to do them, shouldn’t the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel be arguing that the working conditions of those jobs need to be improved rather than using the unattractiveness of those jobs as an excuse to exploit third world workers?
May 11th, 2007
Other bloggers in the Milwaukee area have already said everything that needs to be said about local radio personality Michael McGee’s rant about the death of Charlie Syke’s mother.
I have nothing to add.
And, cialis health in truth, help when a blogswarm reachs a certain critical mass, I get very uncomfortable about joining it; even a good cause takes on the trappings of a pitchfork-carrying angry mob at some point and I prefer to keep my pitchfork in the garage.
May 6th, 2007
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial board once again published a vague editorial calling for immigration reform.
What they don’t say is what they mean by reform.
My suspicion is they mean no penalties for breaking the law…that anyone who can sneak across the border should get to stay…that illegal immigrants should be rewarded at the expense of the thousands of people who jump through all the government hoops trying to immigrate legally.
But I can’t say that for sure, cialis sale recipe because they don’t have the courage to come right out and say it.
So I’m asking, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, what do you mean when you say, “Immigration reform now?”
May 1st, 2007
Local Milwaukee radio personality Charlie Sykes lost his mother, tadalafil ambulance today.
I’m sincerely sorry for his loss.
May 1st, 2007
On April 17th, cialis canada pharm I bet that the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel would run a pro-gun control article by Sunday, discount viagra sovaldi April 22nd.
They ran it on Sunday, April 22nd.
There are two things you can rely on when it comes to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial board:
- They are predictable.
- They are wrong.
April 25th, 2007
1.) Look at the magazines next to the checkout aisles in most major supermarkets. What color are the faces of the people on those magazines?
2.) How often do you walk into a McDonalds or retail establishment and see a bunch of white customers being waited on by a bunch of African-American workers?
The world isn’t quite as colorblind yet as I’d like it to be.
April 19th, 2007
…that the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel will run a pro-gun-control editorial between now and Sunday?
My money is on tomorrow.
April 17th, 2007
In today’s editorial urging that Wisconsin revamp its welfare system to actually provide government jobs to the chronically unemployed in Milwaukee’s inner city, discount viagra drugstore the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel‘s editorial board wrote:
“But the research paper itself shares with W-2 a fundamental flaw: a failure to grapple with the hard reality that there simply are not enough jobs to go around.“
But…
…less than two weeks ago the same editorial board wrote :
“The current immigration system is broken. Needed is a system that regulates flow, viagra sales ed a system that allows employers to have the workers they need – doing work, advice in many instances, that Americans won’t do”
So which is it?
Do we have to put inner city folks on the public payroll because there aren’t enough jobs?
Or do we need to stop enforcing our immigration laws because we have more jobs than there are Americans willing to do them?
April 12th, 2007
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