America as we know it was built largely upon and because of our rail industry, and today it remains…
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So-Called "Railway Safety Act" Constitutes a Political Handout to Big Labor That Does Nothing to Improve Safety At All

America as we know it was built largely upon and because of our rail industry, and today it remains a pillar of our economy.

Unfortunately, a destructive proposal before Congress misleadingly named the "Railway Safety Act" (RSA), part of broader surface transportation reauthorization, threatens great harm to our railroads.

Simply put, the bill has nothing to do with improving safety, but has a lot to do with advancing the political agenda of Big Labor.  At a moment when inflation burdens American families and fragile supply chains remain vulnerable to disruption, the last thing our economy or rail sector need is another costly federal mandate imposed upon one of the nation’s most important transportation sectors.

As an initial matter, as noted by The Wall Street Journal, the…[more]

May 20, 2026 • 04:28 PM
Notable Quotes
 
On Bipartisan Senate DACA Proposal:
 
 

"A bipartisan Senate group tentatively agreed on a trimmed-down immigration proposal Wednesday that would allow citizenship for young undocumented immigrants and provide $25 billion for a border wall without meeting White House demands for cuts in family migration and an end to a diversity visa lottery.

"'You're down to what most Americans would cheer: strong border security and fair treatment of 1.8 million DACA population,' said Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, referring to the young immigrants. 'It would be a two-pillar bill.'

"Second-ranking Senate Republican John Cornyn said that proposal is among four that are likely to get the first votes, also including cracking down on sanctuary cities; a plan by Cornyn and Republican Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa that mirrors a plan by President Donald Trump, and a bipartisan plan by GOP Senator John McCain of Arizona and Democratic Senator Chris Coons of Delaware. Cornyn of Texas said he couldn't say what the timing would be.

"White House officials who briefed reporters Wednesday said any sort of fallback solution falling short of Trump's demands would be insufficient."

 
 
— Laura Litvan and Anna Edgerton, Bloomberg
— Laura Litvan and Anna Edgerton, Bloomberg
Posted February 15, 2018 • 08:24 AM
 
 
On the U.S. Economy and Election Messaging:
 
 

"A top Democratic group issued a warning to party leaders nine months out from the midterm elections: It's still the economy, stupid.

"The prominent super PAC Priorities USA released a polling memo Tuesday showing that as attention has been centered on White House scandals and immigration the past few weeks, Democrats have been losing ground on taxes and the economy.

"The findings deliver welcome news for Republicans, who have been working on improving public perception of their originally unpopular tax bill and also banking on an improved economy in 2018. The Priorities' survey shows upticks in President Trump's job approval rating, along with increased approval on key GOP policy items including health care, taxes and the economy."

 
 
— Caitlin Huey-Burns, RealClearPolitics
— Caitlin Huey-Burns, RealClearPolitics
Posted February 14, 2018 • 08:08 AM
 
 
On Susan Rice's Inauguration Day Message:
 
 

"Two top Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee are questioning former national security adviser Susan Rice about an 'unusual' message she sent to herself on Jan 20, 2017 -- President Trump's Inauguration Day.

"Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) questioned Rice why she sent a note detailing a conversation she observed on Jan. 5 between then-FBI Director James Comey and then-President Barack Obama.

"'It strikes us as odd that, among your activities in the final moments on the final day of the Obama administration, you would feel the need to send yourself such an unusual email purporting to document a conversation involving President Obama and his interactions with the FBI regarding the Trump/Russia investigation,' they wrote in a letter to Rice.

"They said that in the message, Rice noted how Obama repeatedly emphasized during the meeting on Russian election hacking with Comey that he wants every aspect of the issue handled 'by the book.'"

Read entire article here.

 
 
— Olivia Beavers, The Hill
— Olivia Beavers, The Hill
Posted February 13, 2018 • 08:09 AM
 
 
On Making America a Strategic Mineral Superpower:
 
 

"Why is the United States reliant on China and Russia for strategic minerals when we arguably have more of these valuable resources than both these nations combined? This has nothing to do with geological impediments. It is all politics.

"This is an under-reported scandal that jeopardizes American security. As recently as 1990 the U.S. was number one in the world in mining output. But according to the latest data from the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. is 100 percent import dependent for at least 20 critical and strategic minerals (not including each of the 'rare earths'), and between 50 percent and 99 percent reliant for another group of 30 key minerals.

"Why aren't alarm bells ringing?

"This import dependency has grown worse over the last decade. We now are totally dependent on imports for vital strategic metals that are necessary components for everything from military weapon systems, to cellphones, to solar panels to scores of new age high-technology products. We don't even have a reliable reserve stockpile of these resources.

"Fortunately, the Trump administration is working to reverse decades-long policies that have inhibited our ability to mine on federal and private lands our own abundant resources -- mostly in the Western states like Montana, Colorado, Wyoming and the Dakotas."

Read entire article here.

 
 
— Stephen Moore, Economist, Economic Consultant and Heritage Foundation Senior Fellow and Ned Mamula, Geoscientist and Cato Institute Adjunct Scholar
— Stephen Moore, Economist, Economic Consultant and Heritage Foundation Senior Fellow and Ned Mamula, Geoscientist and Cato Institute Adjunct Scholar
Posted February 12, 2018 • 08:13 AM
 
 
On How Gentry Liberals Own the Democratic Party:
 
 

"Amid the brouhaha about the Nunes memo and the DACA controversy, an item from Greg Hinz of Crain's Chicago Business caught my eye. Local demographers crunching Census data estimate that Chicago's black population fell to 842,000 last year, while its white non-Hispanic population increased to 867,000. National political significance: in our three largest central cities -- New York, Los Angeles, Chicago -- gentry liberals have become the dominant political demographic group.

"That's consistent with election results. Gentry liberals -- the phrase is urban analyst Joel Kotkin's -- are the political base of each of those cities' mayors, Bill de Blasio, Eric Garcetti, and Rahm Emanuel. That's something new in American politics. Modest-income Jews used to be a key group in New York, white married homeowners in Los Angeles, 'bungalow ward' ethnics in Chicago. In time they faced challenges from candidates with non-white political bases -- blacks, Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in New York, Mexicans in Los Angeles, blacks and Hispanics in Chicago. Now gentry liberals are on top.

"This reflects demographic change. Blacks have been moving from central cities to suburbs and to the South. Mexican immigrant inflow largely shut down circa 2008. Affluent professionals and single college graduates have colonized -- gentrified -- neighborhoods like Park Slope, Silver Lake, and Wicker Park, with bedraggled but potentially attractive housing stock convenient to downtowns.

"The trend is visible elsewhere -- not only in San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, but also in Washington, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, even in Cleveland and Detroit. It's widespread and strategic enough to be changing the face of the Democratic Party.

"There's irony in this. Gentry liberals have produced the highest-income-inequality metropolitan areas in the nation. They decry gentrification, and the accompanying movement of low-income blacks and Hispanics out of their neighborhoods, even as they cause it. They sing hymns to diversity even as they revel in the pleasures of communities where almost everybody believes and consumes exactly the same things -- and votes uniformly Democratic."

Read entire article here.

 
 
— Michael Barone, Principal Co-Author, The Almanac of American Politics and Washington Examiner Senior Political Analyst
— Michael Barone, Principal Co-Author, The Almanac of American Politics and Washington Examiner Senior Political Analyst
Posted February 09, 2018 • 07:57 AM
 
 
On Senate Bipartisan 2-Year Budget Agreement:
 
 

"Senate leaders announced a bipartisan two-year budget agreement Wednesday that would provide nearly $300 billion in additional funding, a crucial step toward averting a Friday government shutdown and ending a months-long impasse on spending priorities.

"The plan would suspend the federal debt ceiling until March 1, 2019, and would provide almost $90 billion in hurricane and wildfire disaster aid. A Senate vote is expected Thursday, followed by the House. ...

"Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called the plan a 'significant agreement' among Senate and House leaders that gives both parties what they want. It includes a long-sought defense spending boost that was the top goal of Republicans who lead both chambers in Congress and gives more funding for domestic programs sought by Democrats. ...

"Defense spending would increase by $80 billion over current law in this fiscal year and $85 billion in the one that begins Oct. 1. Non-defense spending would rise by $63 billion this year and $68 billion next year."

 
 
— Laura Litvan, Erik Wasson and Sahil Kapur, Bloomberg
— Laura Litvan, Erik Wasson and Sahil Kapur, Bloomberg
Posted February 08, 2018 • 08:23 AM
 
 
On Congressional Democrats' Classism:
 
 

"Classism is foul any way you cut it. It's nasty, it's uncharitable, and it often relies on shame and embarrassment as a means to control those at the bottom. It's also very un-American, given our nation's extremely egalitarian culture in comparison to almost anywhere in Europe.

"The Democrats and their media boosters, however, have a classism problem.

"When House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., used the word 'crumbs' to refer to tax reform-related bonuses and wage increases, it seemed like a one-off political blunder. In her haste to attack anything bearing the Republican brand, it appeared the California congresswoman merely didn't fully think through what she said. We've all been there before. But the attitude that $1,000-plus bonuses and wage increases are actually insignificant amounts, and that the people who are excited about them are perhaps not particularly bright or well-educated, has persisted in the anti-GOP ranks, casting Pelosi's remarks in a new light.

"That is, it seems increasingly clear that the strategy to counter the GOP's tax reform efforts includes not just the usual attacks on congressional Republicans, but also a campaign to shame the not-too-terribly-wealthy who are now enjoying the benefits of the bill's passage."

 
 
— Becket Adams, Washington Examiner
— Becket Adams, Washington Examiner
Posted February 07, 2018 • 08:33 AM
 
 
On the Emergence of a New Christopher Steele 'Trump' Memo:
 
 

"A newly released document from the Senate Judiciary Committee says Christopher Steele, the former British spy who compiled the Trump dossier, wrote an additional memo on the subject of Donald Trump and Russia that was not among those published by BuzzFeed in January 2017.

"The newly released document is an unclassified and heavily redacted version of the criminal referral targeting Steele filed on Jan. 4 by Republican Sens. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. It appears to confirm some level of coordination between the extended Clinton circle and the Obama administration in the effort to seek damaging information about then-candidate Trump.

"According to the referral, Steele wrote the additional memo based on anti-Trump information that originated with a foreign source. In a convoluted scheme outlined in the referral, the foreign source gave the information to an unnamed associate of Hillary and Bill Clinton, who then gave the information to an unnamed official in the Obama State Department, who then gave the information to Steele. Steele wrote a report based on the information, but the redacted version of the referral does not say what Steele did with the report after that."

 
 
— Byron York, Washington Examiner Chief Political Correspondent
— Byron York, Washington Examiner Chief Political Correspondent
Posted February 06, 2018 • 08:16 AM
 
 
On the Nunes Memo and Corruption of Journalism:
 
 

"This week we saw a perfect example of how corrupt journalism has become. There was an opportunity to report the news and journalists and their fellow travelers in the pundit class balked. While that wasn't unusual, what was is how they did it in the lead up to the news, not bothering to wait until they'd seen what they were attempting to discredit. There was an unprecedented attempt to make the release of the FISA memo NOT NEWS before anyone knew what was in it.

"Over the past two weeks, Democrats scrambled to 'warn' the public that the release of the FISA memo would 'damage national security' were it released. Journalists picked up the mantra and ran with it, unquestioningly parroting it in badgering Republicans about why they would support its release considering this charge. There was virtually no discussion as to whether or not this allegation was true or an attempted partisan distraction, it was simply accepted and repeated as if it had been carved into stone tablets by a burning bush and sent directly to the teleprompter in their TV studios.

"The memo, of course, was nothing of the sort. There was nothing that was a threat in any way to national security, no remote mention of sources or methods. It was all a Democratic Party lie immediately adopted by journalists. As with past false stories that needed to be retracted or corrected, there was no comeuppance for those who spread the lie to the media, nor the media figures who regurgitated it. It happened, and when it was proven to be a lie, it was memory-holed."

 
 
— Derek Hunter, Washington, DC-based Writer, Radio Host and Political Strategist
— Derek Hunter, Washington, DC-based Writer, Radio Host and Political Strategist
Posted February 05, 2018 • 08:25 AM
 
 
On Proper Presidential Control - and Distance - From the FBI:
 
 

"FBI abuse of power is a real threat. We saw it under J. Edgar Hoover. These people have the spy equipment and the guns. Both Congress and the president need to keep a close eye on them.

"And these days, there are bad actors at the FBI. ...

"With federal law enforcement, ultimate control rests with the president and oversight and funding come from Congress, but the professionals there are to act as independent professionals. They are not supposed to be allies of the president. Equally, they are not supposed to be his antagonists."

 
 
— The Editors, the Washington Examiner
— The Editors, the Washington Examiner
Posted February 02, 2018 • 07:40 AM
 
Notable Quote   
 
"Another academic year has wrapped up, and another batch of college graduates has walked across the stage to accept diplomas of declining value. Even the graduation ceremonies have lost their historic luster, as only ideologically approved speakers can provide commencement addresses. Any speaker who might bring a serious message is either disinvited or not considered in the first place.American sentiment…[more]
 
 
— Jeffrey M. McCall, Media Critic and Professor of Communication at DePauw University
 
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