Christopher G. Adamo

Christopher G. Adamo


  • September 20, 2006

    Applying the Geneva Convention Will Destroy It

    Amidst the cascade of caterwauling over the 'plight' of the Islamist monsters being detained at Guantanamo, the potential for an adverse effect on the Geneva Conventions' protections for our captured soldiers has been touted as a self—intereste...

  • July 20, 2006

    The Man From Wapakoneta

    It was a time when America desperately needed heroes. As the institutions and beliefs that formed the heritage of the nation were being systematically dismantled by counterculture revolutionaries, those who held such things in high regard fervently s...

  • May 18, 2006

    Bush on Immigration: Repackaging the Trojan Horse

    Among the tiny handful of Americans who still clung to the illusion that President Bush might want to truly address and correct the illegal immigration crisis, it only took the first moments of his May 15 speech to dispel all hope. Though conceding, ...

  • May 12, 2006

    GOP 'Moderates' Put Democrat Principles in Charge

    Were any anti—government 'militia' or separatist organization to consistently discuss Timothy McVeigh as merely a 'rental truck operator,' their underlying sympathies would become glaringly obvious. While such a description is not absolutely in...

  • May 4, 2006

    Washington Offers No Solutions

    The nation's capital has been shaken by the recent Rasmussen poll indicating that a significant portion of Americans would support a third—party candidate for President in 2008. Perhaps most alarming to Washington's current ruling class is the ...

  • April 27, 2006

    Cancerous Remnants of the Clinton Era

    In contrast to recent revelations of national security leaks occurring within the CIA, consider the absurdly trivial and wholly unsubstantiated charges that ultimately drove House Majority Leader Tom Delay from office. After presenting a vapid case b...

  • April 13, 2006

    Who Can Secure A GOP Presidential Victory In '08?

    With the Democrat Presidential primaries apparently already completed, and Hillary Clinton still leading the pack, with Al Gore in the (left) wings waiting to stride onstage, it might behoove Republicans to start pondering a workable strategy for the...

  • March 31, 2006

    Cultural Collapse Spells Doom For Democracy

    From a strictly military perspective, Iraq represents a stunning victory for America. But as capably as American forces prevailed over Saddam Hussein on the field of battle, the post—war effort has been frustrating, to say the least. Endeavors ...

  • March 23, 2006

    America in The Hands Of Angry Democrats

    In stark but reliable simplicity, Republican successes of the past several decades can be directly correlated to the contrasts between their philosophy and agenda as compared to that of the Democrats. In the 1994 election cycle, differences between t...

  • March 16, 2006

    The Two Faces of Democrat Presidential Politics

    Shortly after this year's elections, the 2008 presidential race will begin in earnest. This means that among Democrat politicians, the venom and bile being spewed against President Bush will only increase. But at some crucial point, it must be redire...

  • March 11, 2006

    Beneath The Veneer Of Public Education

    Americans who love their country and its heritage have been outraged as they learned of Aurora, Colorado geography teacher Jay Bennish, who was recorded by a student last month as he spewed anti—American diatribe to his class. But should anyone...

  • February 19, 2006

    Al Gore, Liberals, and the Islamists

    In the midst of the heated controversy over Danish cartoons disparaging Islam, a couple of drawings of a much more inflammatory nature suddenly were disseminated throughout the Muslim world, adding significant fuel to the fires of their outrage. Thes...

  • February 9, 2006

    A Culture Worth Defending

    Throughout Europe and the Middle East, people are dying. Some of them are non—violent and innocent of any wrongdoing. Yet they die, and buildings burn, the result of anger against western civilization erupting from outraged Muslims. But with so...

  • January 19, 2006

    Republicans Should Play Offense

    Were Americans to be honestly polled about which national issues they consider to be of primary importance to the future of the country, terrorism, illegal immigration, and private property rights would likely rank at the top. And on at least two of ...

  • December 30, 2005

    The Democrat 'Scandal Du Jour' Strategy

    Behind closed doors, prominent Democrats were no doubt livid that Saddam Hussein would tread so clumsily upon their sacred turf, claiming 'abuse' at the hands of his American captors. Who does he think he is? It is their prerogative, and theirs alone...

  • December 22, 2005

    Guest worker programs are no bargain

    Nationally syndicated columnist Phyllis Schlafly recently issued a blanket indictment of guest worker and amnesty programs being proposed in Washington, bluntly characterizing them as 'immoral.' In closing, she quotes Theodore Roosevelt, who, wh...

  • December 16, 2005

    Liberal Antics and the Alito Confirmation

    With John Roberts safely installed as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and the Harriet Miers debacle fading into the past, most Americans are not presently focused on the upcoming confirmation battle for Samuel Alito. But a mere glance at other new...

  • December 3, 2005

    Education, privacy and tyranny

    On November 1, the San Francisco based Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in the case of Fields v. Palmdale that school districts and the state are the ultimate moral authority in the raising of children. Parents who naively assumed that such respo...

  • November 16, 2005

    Analyzing Patrick Fitzgerald's doublespeak

    Even as the actual events surrounding the Grand Jury investigation of the Plamegate non—scandal fade into irrelevancy, the liberal spin machine continues to work overtime in its efforts to reformulate the entire affair into something it ne...

  • November 14, 2005

    France mirrors the left's end-game for America

    France's government is virtually clueless in its understanding of the nature of the problem of rioting Muslim 'immigrant youths' and hence, how to properly respond to it. With each ensuing attempt by government officials to grovel and pander their wa...

  • October 28, 2005

    The Cost of Real Corruption

    As of the writing of this column, liberals are practically frothing in anticipation of the rumored indictments of such notable individuals as Karl Rove. Concurrently, they exult over House Majority Leader Tom Delay, who is being dragged with pai...

  • October 20, 2005

    The real culture of corruption

    From the moment of Tom Delay's indictment, liberal grandstanding has been relentless. Its most notable mouthpieces, led by the ever—shrill House Democrat Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, characterized the indictment as solid proof of a 'culture of...

  • September 30, 2005

    Democrats paper over their divide

    Last weekend a gathering in Gillette, Wyoming highlighted the present, chaotic state of the Democrats and their party. The two faces, one representing moderation and the other representing fire—breathing liberalism tried to smile at each other,...

  • September 15, 2005

    Judicial Confirmation Process Has Become A Joke

    Regardless of the outcome of John Roberts's confirmation hearings, it is plain that liberal Democrats have succeeded in making the entire process a grotesque caricature of what the Founders originally intended. As stipulated in the Constitution, the ...

  • September 2, 2005

    Exploiting Cindy: standard operating procedure

    If conservatives have one common failing among them, it is their lack of sufficient cynicism to properly assess the nature of their liberal opponents. Their reaction to the ongoing antics of Cindy Sheehan stands as inarguable proof. Long before her s...

  • August 18, 2005

    A broken confirmation process

    While many conservatives still hold out hope that President Bush will reverse the abominable condition of the nation's courts, prospects look increasingly bleak. Sadly, the situation appears to be locked in its despicable state, not merely because of...

  • August 10, 2005

    Gaza: Appeasement Redux

    Among history's most repugnant episodes of multinational capitulation was the cowardly and reprehensible manner in which France, Poland, and England forced Czechoslovakia in 1938 to accede to Hitler's demands to seize the Sudetenland, a horseshoe sha...

  • July 8, 2005

    Hillary and the Democrats telegraph their vulnerabilities

    Within certain Republican circles, moods run from panic to despondency whenever Hillary and the 2008 presidential election is discussed. Among consummate party pragmatists, so historically prone to abandon principle in pursuit of political gain, the ...

  • June 30, 2005

    Supreme Court eradicates Constitutional principles

    Throughout the course of history, the overriding tendency of those in power is to manipulate that power to their own benefit. Regardless of any noble premises on which governments might be founded, over time they nonetheless degenerate into self...

  • June 23, 2005

    Is Democrat shamelessness a winning strategy?

    It was only a few weeks ago that liberals on Capitol Hill and in the 'mainstream' media were caterwauling about the raging corruption of House Majority Whip Tom Delay (R.—TX). Since then however, the subject completely changed to the plight of ...

  • June 14, 2005

    Dean and the Clintons

    Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey (who, for the record, never claimed he spent Christmas in Cambodia) once called Bill Clinton 'an unusually good liar.' Unfortunately, American culture has degenerated to such a point that this statement, coming as it did f...

  • June 3, 2005

    McCain's delusion: The rebirth of 'moderate' dominance

    Despite continuing outrage among conservatives over last week's sellout of Senate Republicans by seven 'moderates' in their midst, it is clear that Arizona Senator John McCain, the apparent leader of the effort, presumes himself to be a big winner. W...

  • May 26, 2005

    America betrayed: the judicial filibuster 'compromise'

    It will be some time before the full impact of this week's sellout by seven so—called 'moderate' Republicans in the U.S. Senate becomes completely apparent. The plan to break Democrat filibusters of judicial nominees was, in reality, no less th...

  • May 12, 2005

    Southern Baptists and government schools

    Far too few among the Christian community are willing to remain steadfast in their beliefs, in the face of the enormous pressures of liberal social change. Fortunately, Bruce N. Shortt exemplifies the meaning of such worthy resolve. Last year Shortt,...

  • April 28, 2005

    Judicial filibusters: High Noon For conservatives

    Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist is in big trouble. At least that is what one might believe from the liberal press accounts of his participation in a Family Research Council—sponsored event last Sunday. By appearing at the gathering (albeit in...

  • April 22, 2005

    Ominous rumblings of a 'North American Union'

    Among the greatest ironies of history is that during the first part of the Twentieth Century two World Wars and a 'Cold War' were fought on the European continent, for the specific purpose of preventing its consolidation under one governing authority...

  • March 10, 2005

    Why liberals abhor true Social Security reform

    If Americans of all ages ever recognize the degree to which they've been conned by the proponents of failed government programs such as Social Security, they will likely respond in a manner reminiscent of the Boston Tea Party. And it is not hard to i...

  • March 7, 2005

    Arlen Specter's warped sense of proportion

    Illustrating the abhorrent yet entirely predictable behavior of those on the left, Rush Limbaugh explains, 'A tiger is a tiger. A snake is a snake. And a liberal is a liberal.' To which he might add,  a 'moderate' is a liberal too. Pennsylvania ...

  • February 18, 2005

    Saint Hillary and Reverend Dean? Don't believe it!

    Howard Dean, the new chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and Senator Hillary Clinton (D.—NY) jointly hold the dubious distinction of being the only major public figures with less credibility than Mahmoud Abbas. Abbas, the recently el...

  • February 10, 2005

    Democrats' desperation

    Democrats are despondent over the latest polling data showing that nearly sixty percent of the nation approves of President Bush's job performance. In their eyes, the President is benefiting from the gamble he took when he invaded Iraq. Conversely, t...

  • January 19, 2005

    Obliterating what cannot be defeated

    Prior to September 11, 2001, Afghanistan's repressive Taliban regime was known to most of the world only on account of a single controversy involving its decision to destroy two ancient Buddhist statues. Of course reaction to this incident was one of...

  • December 30, 2004

    Will Republicans seize the opportunity?

    Political operatives on both sides of the aisle are discussing the 2008 election as if it were only days away. But this seemingly premature preoccupation is hardly a dismissal of the important issues facing President Bush in his second term. Rather, ...

  • December 23, 2004

    Dismantling Rumsfeld's Successes

    If the left is to have any hope of undermining President Bush's second term, it must continue its previous efforts to destroy the reputation of every worthwhile conservative in his cabinet. And no one is more likely to remain a target than Defense Se...

  • December 10, 2004

    Republicans squander political capital

    Following the Republican landslide victories of the 1994 midterm elections, conservatives watched in amazement as Republican 'moderates' proceeded to completely squander the ground they had gained, culminating in the defeat of Bob Dole in '96. In the...

  • November 10, 2004

    The battle for the judiciary

    In a bizarre manner, Arlen Specter actually did an enormous favor to conservatives and pro—Constitution forces last week. Essentially stating that pro—life court nominees need not apply, he brought to the forefront a subject about which c...