Loren Smith

Loren Smith


  • June 4, 2020

    The leftist mob of inadequates

    Has America's long-storied love affair with the underdog finally gone too far?  If you rounded up a group of Antifa rioters and their soy-boy college-snowflake accompanists currently looting cities across the country and asked them why ...

  • April 4, 2020

    Golden goose mistakenly tarred and feathered

    On Thursday's edition of Tucker Carlson's show, Jared Moskowitz, Florida director of that state's emergency management department, was given a platform to slam Minnesota-based 3M company, essentially for diverting N95 masks and other...

  • March 27, 2020

    UK health care fails under coronavirus

    Everyone paying attention knows full well by now that electromechanical ventilators are the most critically needed and longest lead-time items required for saving the most vulnerable COVID-19-infected patients — the ones who develop secondary p...

  • March 23, 2020

    In coronavirus crisis, liberals have strangely and suddenly fallen in love with men in uniform

    As a forty-year veteran of the North American medical device industry, watching reporters complain to President Trump at his Saturday news briefing that a random doctor in Louisville, Kentucky couldn’t obtain a mask and other such granular comp...

  • November 10, 2019

    Now British hospitals can kick you out if they think you're racist?

    Cost isn't everything.  Elizabeth Warren's outlandish $52-trillion price tag for her Medicare for all plan has appropriately been the subject of much media coverage.  However, there is another largely unreported disturbing twist tha...

  • October 22, 2019

    God's vital signs are precarious

    Somewhere down the 85-year long path connecting the Gilded Age to The Age of Aquarius, Western values unraveled but still maintained the silhouette of the previously shaped garments they had been woven into.  The following fifty-two years o...

  • August 2, 2019

    Love and politics are closer than people imagine

    "We might as well face it: we're addicted to love" is not merely a 1985 song title by Robert Palmer; it is a bedrock characteristic of human nature with roots and principles that cross over into the political sphere.  By ...

  • July 31, 2019

    Dem candidates pushed equality fantasies last night

    In the July 30 Democrat debate, several unworkable schemes and hackneyed themes kept re-emerging.  But the most dangerous common refrain was (essentially) that "not everyone has benefited equally" and "some people are still b...

  • July 24, 2019

    Tweets frenzy exposes the Left's terminal dementia

    If America was never great because of initial slavery sins, compounded by additional recent sins, then why are progressives so embarrassed by our president?  If a hated opponent fails conclusively, shouldn't that be the occasion for cel...

  • February 5, 2019

    Why stop at Medicare For All?

    Thus far, in the recent leftist fantasy rantings on health care, only the insurance component of that sector has been put on the table as being ripe for federal government nationalization.  But why stop there?  There seem to be tw...

  • March 16, 2018

    Will South Florida motorists call for a bridge ban?

    Separated on the calendar by exactly thirty days, two significant and unrelated tragedies at South Florida educational institutions have extinguished innocent lives in horrific fashion.  Estimating that approximately half the number of people...

  • May 21, 2017

    Veterans' health care or veteran bureaucracy featherbedding?

    Providing health care services for military veterans has a long history, dating back to colonial times in America.  Contemporary surveys show that nearly 90% of citizens want to prioritize improving care for those who have risked their lives to ...

  • March 1, 2017

    Public education for whom?

    Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, appeared on Morning Joe Monday to do battle with Michael Steele on the topic of education policy.  For the umpteenth time, Morial spewed the false, evil narrative that school vouchers ...

  • November 12, 2016

    A fork in the reality road

    How can we explain the phenomenon of frightened, frantic snowflake children who are freaking out in protest over Donald Trump’s victory?  The easy answer is, they are reacting to wicked lies spread previously by the MSM in a cynical attemp...

  • September 22, 2016

    Methinks she doth repeat too much

    Ever notice how often Hillary Clinton begins answers to reporters' questions with clauses such as, "As I've said repeatedly" or "We've addressed this on several previous occasions"?  Come to think of it, President...

  • September 12, 2016

    Pneumonia diagnosed by telepathy

    Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine were in Harrisburg this past Friday campaigning together.  Now we learn from Hillary’s doctor, Lisa Bardack, MD, that Hillary was diagnosed on Friday with pneumonia.  This delayed announcement came on...

  • July 31, 2016

    Automotive Inequality: The Dems’ Next Issue?

    The top 1% of automobiles sold in America have maximum speeds and performance levels that are significantly above the bottom 99% of automobiles sold.  It’s high time to restore automotive justice to our nation.  Progressives must take...

  • January 13, 2016

    Progressives channel Pygmalion

    Around 20 A.D., the Roman poet Ovid wrote the first version of what became the Pygmalion myth in Greek literature.  In the story, a sculptor falls in love with one of his own creations.  When he kisses the statue’s lips, it comes to l...