Sydney Williams

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Articles by Sydney Williams

Woodrow Milhous Obama

Because of myriad scandals inflicting his second term, it has become common for many on the Right to compare Barack Obama to Richard Nixon. Both had been re-elected with majorities; though Mr. Obama’s margin of victory paled in comparison to

Woodrow Milhous Obama

Memorial Day 2013

I thought about a graveyard At the bottom of the sea Of unmarked graves in Arlington. No, freedom is not free. Kelly Strong, 1981 (Written when in high school; later attended USCG Academy) Freedom is not free. Freedom is the

Memorial Day 2013

European Austerity and the Backlash

Obstreperous unions, an embedded welfare, system and incompetent civil servants have been obvious impediments to austerity in Europe, but the real problem with austerity is that it is a dumb idea.  Economic growth is necessary to get deficits down and

European Austerity and the Backlash

Rising Student Debt, Declining Personal Responsibility

According to Ronald Ehrenberg, economist and professor of labor and industrial relations at Cornell, tuition at selective private colleges and universities has grown at two to three percentage points over the rate of inflation for over a century.  However, “it

Rising Student Debt, Declining Personal Responsibility

Term Limits: Enough Is Enough

A libertarian friend, when asked about term limits, replied that if he had to make a choice he would opt against them, regardless of how many years one candidate had been in office. People should have the right, it was

Term Limits: Enough Is Enough

Thought of the Day: Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

I was reminded of Mark Twain’s appropriate comment (or maybe it was Disraeli’s?) when reading an article in Monday’s Wall Street Journal, entitled “Government Payrolls are Facing New Pressures.” Somewhat hyperbolically, the author Sudeep Reddy writes: “The cuts in the public

Thought of the Day: Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

Thought of the Day: Cyprus — Is Nothing Sacred?

From the island of Cyprus came Pygmalion and Aphrodite, symbols of love and beauty. That was long ago. Now we have an agreement by its President to concede to a request from Brussels that might have equally far-reaching consequences, but of a less

Thought of the Day: Cyprus — Is Nothing Sacred?

Coolidge: A Primer for Obama

“I am for economy. After that I am for more economy.” Generations of Americans have been taught that it was a frugal, laissez-faire, “Silent Cal” who served as our 30th President. “Weaned on a pickle,” was the way Alice Roosevelt Longworth

Coolidge: A Primer for Obama

America In Decline?

Niall Ferguson subtitles his most recent book The Great Degeneration, “How Institutions Decay and Economies Die.” It is a short treatise on the way in which well-intentioned political leaders can cause the failure of that which they have been charged with

America In Decline?

Thought of the Day: Kim-Jong-un, a Tinderbox

Despite allegations by President Obama that Hilary Clinton ranks among the greatest Secretaries of State the country has known, it is difficult to see any part of the world as being safer today than it was four years ago. The

Thought of the Day: Kim-Jong-un, a Tinderbox

Thought of the Day: From Fiscal Cliff to Debt Ceiling

A crisis seems to be the only thing that gets the attention of those in Washington. And certainly Democrats have proved better than Republicans in passing legislation during such periods of acute pressure. In fact, it would seem that they

Thought of the Day: From Fiscal Cliff to Debt Ceiling

Thought of the Day: Republicans Rolled

It wasn’t just Republicans that got rolled on New Year’s Eve; it was common sense and fiscal responsibility, all in pursuit of an ideology that specifically avoids a hard look at spending. President Theodore Roosevelt coined the term “power of

Thought of the Day: Republicans Rolled

Thought of the Day: Size of Government Is the Real Debate

Winter came early to Washington, as “Plan B” failed in the House. Stubborn Republicans, along with equally obtuse Democrats, refused to grant tax increases even on those earning a million dollars. While Mr. Obama will celebrate the disjointedness of Republicans,

Thought of the Day: Size of Government Is the Real Debate

HSBC: Too Big to Jail

It is not often that I find myself in agreement with the editorial page of the New York Times, but I did on Wednesday. The Times criticized the $1.92 billion settlement agreed to by HSBC as “a dark day for

HSBC: Too Big to Jail

Thought of the Day: US Births, Positives Outweigh the Negatives

In the long term, as John Maynard Keynes once wrote, we are dead. But it is also true that over the long term economic growth depends upon on an expanding population. Historically, the United States has been unique among developed

Thought of the Day: US Births, Positives Outweigh the Negatives

Thought of the Day: Who Is Grover Norquist? Part II

“Politics is the art of the possible.” The quote is attributed to Otto von Bismarck, a man not known for warm and fuzzy relations with political opponents. First as a Prussian general and later as Germany’s first Chancellor, he dominated

Thought of the Day: Who Is Grover Norquist? Part II

Thought of the Day: Who Is Grover Norquist?

The twelve members of Congress who constituted the Deficit Committee have failed. The stock market, on Monday, certainly voted with its feet, fleeing equities as though the New York Stock Exchange were infested with Scarlet Fever. (An estimated trillion dollars

Thought of the Day: Who Is Grover Norquist?

Thought of the Day: Taxpayers to Be Stuck with Another Bill

Since entering conservatorship in September 2008, $188 billion in taxpayer funds have been used to prop up Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Granted, the two companies have repaid $45 billion in dividends to the Treasury, but most of the funds

Thought of the Day: Taxpayers to Be Stuck with Another Bill

Thought of The Day — The Fiscal Cliff: A Compromise?

The President will meet this morning with Congressional leaders to discuss the nation’s head-long dash toward a date that will cause tax rates to rise and sequestration for government programs, primarily Defense. In preparation, on Tuesday the President met with

Thought of The Day — The Fiscal Cliff: A Compromise?

Thought of the Day: Pocahontas Goes to Washington

Before anyone says anything, I know that Pocahontas was Algonquian, while Elizabeth Warren claims to being Cherokee. Nevertheless, of all the elections on Tuesday, the one that most astonished me was the decision to send Ms. Warren to the Senate,

Thought of the Day: Pocahontas Goes to Washington

Thought of the Day: The Election, a Victory for Incivility

The electorate has spoken. Mr. Obama has been re-elected, but in winning his campaign has set back any hope of civility ever returning to Presidential politics. No matter one’s political views, no one can deny that Mr. Romney is a

Thought of the Day: The Election, a Victory for Incivility

Thought of the Day: Twenty Four Hours

Tomorrow evening we should know who the next President will be. It is possible of course that we won’t know until the early hours of Wednesday. While half of Americans will be disappointed, almost all of us will be relieved.

Thought of the Day: Twenty Four Hours

Thought of the Day: Stark Choices

A wag once said, with no disrespect meant to the beast, that a camel is a horse designed by a committee. That characterization almost perfectly describes most government prescriptions. Too often government committees combine corruption with inefficiency. Incompetence is thy

Thought of the Day: Stark Choices

Inflation: Reports of Its Demise Are Greatly Exaggerated

Paul Volcker may be right when he said on Monday at the New York Athletic Club, regarding the Federal Reserve’s latest bond-buying program, that “…it’s not going to have any effect on inflation in the short run…The basic situation is

Inflation: Reports of Its Demise Are Greatly Exaggerated

Early Voting: A Game Changer?

The process for electing a President is undergoing a sea change. The cause is early and absentee voting. Absentee voting has been here since colonial times. Early voting began more than a quarter century ago, but has recently been gaining

Early Voting: A Game Changer?

Thought of the Day: Who Is Mitt Romney?

First a caveat: As will be of no surprise to anyone, I prefer Mitt Romney to Barack Obama. While I have a prejudice about giving money to any politician – I feel about gifts to politicians as P.J. O’Rourke once

Thought of the Day: Who Is Mitt Romney?

Thought of the Day: Intentional and Unintentional Consequences

The law of unintended consequences is immutable. It happens most often when the desire to achieve a particular end is so focused it ignores the consequences of the means employed to reach that goal. In contrast, there are times when

Thought of the Day: Intentional and Unintentional Consequences

Thought of the Day: 'Godfather II' Redux

With less than three months to go before the election (Tuesday, November 6), the rhetoric has already heated up. Once the conventions are behind us – Republicans will convene in Tampa the week of August 27th and the Democrats in

Thought of the Day: 'Godfather II' Redux

Thought of the Day: Leftist Intolerance

Dan Cathy, the CEO of Chick-fil-A, recently responded to a question as to whether he supports “traditional” marriage. His answer, “We are very much supportive of the family, the biblical definition of the family unit.” Now I understand that Leviticus,

Thought of the Day: Leftist Intolerance

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire

In response to a question Wednesday morning in Europe, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said that Congress should be taking advantage of low interest rates and increase investment (spending) to bolster growth. He said that the low rates on U.S. debt

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire

The Moral Case for Capitalism

In 1978, Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote in National Review: “It is almost universally recognized that the West shows all the world a way to successful economic development.” He then added a cautionary note: “Many people living in the West are dissatisfied

The Moral Case for Capitalism

The Olympics: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

The Games have begun, in more ways than one. The opening ceremonies were broadcast on Friday evening. They began with forty-minutes of a British extravaganza that included dancing, fireworks and Mary Poppins (along with the Queen) dropping from the sky.

The Olympics: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Words Matter

Words do matter. They can be used to praise or hurt. They can be used to lie or to tell the truth. They can be used eloquently, or they can be mumbled. In our youth, we were taught to think

Words Matter

Violence and Tragedy in Aurora

Any untimely death is tragic. “The world,” as Ernest Hemingway wrote in A Farewell to Arms, “kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially.” Most of the 2.5 million Americans who die each year succumb

Violence and Tragedy in Aurora

The LIBOR Scandal and Regulators Who Knew

The headline in Saturday’s New York Times said it all: “New York Fed Knew of False Barclay’s Reports on Rates.” The article quotes a Barclay’s employee telling a New York Federal Reserve official in April 2008 that “we know we’re

The LIBOR Scandal and Regulators Who Knew

Gardenbrain: An Arcadian World of Make Believe

Patronizing blather in the newspaper noted for reporting only the news they find fit to print is not uncommon, even when it is presented in what the authors would term a fair-minded, light-hearted fashion. These referenced authors, Eric Liu, a

Gardenbrain: An Arcadian World of Make Believe

Evening in America?

Of course, it doesn’t have to be. Evening in America that is. But that seems to be the direction we are headed. Pessimism abounds. Our high school students lag behind their counterparts around the world in almost every field. Federal

Evening in America?

The Euro: A Failed Experiment

The summit that began this morning in Brussels for the 27 members of the European Union is the 19th since the Greek crisis began two and a half years ago. While the meeting is for the entire EU, the focus

The Euro: A Failed Experiment

Cronyism Alive and Well in Washington

Despite pledging to send special interests to the woodshed, President Obama has practiced his own form of crony capitalism, laying out taxpayer funds on businesses that have helped him politically – green energy (Solyndra) being of particular note, but also,

Cronyism Alive and Well in Washington