Thomas Sowell: After Iraq: Part II

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Historians in the future will undoubtedly find many and varied lessons from the war in Iraq. But we in the present do not have the luxury of waiting for all the evidence to be in before we start to understand what has gone wrong and what has gone right in Iraq.

Ann Coulter: The ‘bumper sticker’ that blows up

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For six years, the Bush administration has kept America safe from another terrorist attack, allowing the Democrats to claim that the war on terrorism is a fraud, a “bumper sticker,” a sneaky ploy by a power-mad president to create an apocryphal enemy so he could spy on innocent librarians in Wisconsin. And that’s the view of the moderate Democrats. The rest of them think Bush was behind the 9/11 attacks.

Emily Baldwin: Additional, extended "Les Miserables" videos

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I've had requests for additional footage from Twilight Theatre's production on "Les Miserables" so I complied.

I have to mention that I failed to include very much footage or credit to the lead of the show- call it oversight or pre-vacation brain freeze- but I want to make sure I say what a great job Trevor Martin did as Jean Valjean.

Father David Epps: God is in control

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God is either in control or He is not. If He is not, then we are on our own to work out things as best we can and the whole of life is senseless, futile, and without meaning. If, however, God is in control, then whatever comes, both the good and the difficult, has meaning and ultimate purpose.

Rick Ryckeley: The 400-pound gorilla

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Ever wondered where all those inconsiderate people that infest our county come from? You know the ones: people who use the 10 items or less check-out lanes when they have 20 items or more and scowl if you dare to point out their mistake.

Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: The Grays of Line Creek, Part 3

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We're going to wrap up the Grays this week with the final installment of Carol Hoyt's beautifully written story about her own branch of the Gray family. Carol writes:

Cal Beverly: Some minor thoughts on some major local issues

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Having chicken pox revisit one a half century later — albeit under the innocuous name of shingles — provides one some involuntary leisure time.

Cal Thomas: ‘All we are saying is . . .’

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“All we are saying is give peace a chance,” says John Lennon’s anti-war protest song.

But though President Bush’s recent remarks to the Greater Cleveland Partnership may have borrowed a page from Lennon’s songbook, they sang quite a different tune to a pro-war beat. All Bush is saying is give Gen. David Petraeus a chance.

Ronda Rich: Scotch-Irish is what we call ourselves

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One day I was lamenting to my friend, Patti, who helps me in my office, about my smart-aleck mouth.

“I just can’t help myself,” I complained as she looked over some files. “Somebody says or does something that I don’t cotton to and I just pop right back at them with a dagger-sharp comeuppance. Then, I feel terrible because I smarted off like that. It’s not Biblical.”

Sallie Satterthwaite: Calm anticipation may be only a veneer

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Leesburg, Va.: “Calm anticipation” is the only way I can describe the feeling here. I’ve been involved in a wedding or two and by the time they’re less than 24 hours away, there’s usually a degree of hysteria just under a surface that is often very thinly veneered.

Father Paul Massey: Ask Father Paul ...

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Answers to your questions about life, religion and the Bible

Pastors get some of the darndest, most interesting questions from people in their churches and people they meet. Here are a few that I’ve gotten over the years and recently via email since this column started.

Kevin Wandra: Meeting an Atlanta Brave

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If the Atlanta Braves called you tomorrow and said you could meet one Brave, whom would it be? What questions would you ask him?

Emily Baldwin: "Les Miserables" at the Fred

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I went to see the Twilight Theatre Company's production of "Les Miserables: the School Edition" this past Friday night at the Frederick Brown Jr. Amphitheater in Peachtree City, and I have to say I was very impressed with the caliber show that they put on.

Father David Epps: I click when I walk

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I click when I walk. It’s a bit odd, but I’m getting used to it. It’s better than the alternative.

I had been falling quite a bit — enough to alarm one of my sons, who suggested that I might want to sell my house and move into a ground-level dwelling that would eliminate stairs.

Rick Ryckeley: Real men get facials

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This one could possibly get me kicked out of the Men’s Club. At the very least it will certainly be the source of constant ribbing for years to come. The guys at the fire department will never let me live it down, but I’m not ashamed to admit it.

Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: The Grays of Line Creek, Part 2

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We continue this week with the story of the Gray family of the Line Creek area, written and submitted by Carol Hoyt of Kansas. Carol had said that Abraham and his wife had several children but we have information on only three, Nancy, Benjamin and Hosea. Carol's story continues:

James M. Taylor: Hot air cause of Kilimanjaro ‘crisis’

New findings from glacier experts signal it’s time to remove another catastrophe from the list of alarmist global-warming predictions.

Cal Beverly: Free speech and problem (read: aggressively abusive) posters: A proposal

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Tonight (July 10) in response to many and repeated requests I banned a long-time poster from this site.

This poster finally crossed the civilized line once too often, and he (or it) is gone.

Sallie Satterthwaite: How dry is it?

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The drought – one of the worst ever – is on everyone’s mind this summer.

How dry is it?

It’s so dry that turtles are trying to drink from the bird bath.

Cal Thomas: Hillary talks about her faith

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Some unknown author once said, “Everybody should believe in something; I believe I’ll have another drink.”

Democratic senator and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton took a less cynical and more substantive approach to faith in a recent interview with The New York Times. The quality and depth of one’s relationship with God should be personal and beyond the judgment of others, unless one is running for president and chooses to talk about it as part of a campaign plan to win the election.

Ronda Rich: The diva and the Bobcat

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You’re not gonna believe what I’ve done now. In fact, it is probably the last thing you’d expect.

I learned to drive a skid-steer loader.

Dr. David L. Chancey: Another Peachtree Road Race in the Books

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I ran my third Peachtree Road Race Wednesday, July 4th. It was fantastic! You hear a lot about the famous Atlanta tradition, but you donít hear much about the marathon that it takes to get to the race itself. It takes months to prepare for the 10K, but it also takes some gearing up and perseverance to get to the event. Itís worth it!

Michael Boylan: Take the "drive" to Greenville

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On Sunday, July 1, I decided to get in my car and travel up I-85 to Greenville, SC. I wanted to see the ball park that some had called a “mini Fenway” and the Greenville Drive, a single A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox (my favorite team). If I went on this particular day I would also get to see Sandy Creek graduate Brent Brewer play. Brewer is the starting shortstop for the West Virginia Power, a single A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers.

Robert Novak: An Iraq “scouting trip”

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WASHINGTON — National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley visited Capitol Hill just before Congress adjourned June 29 for the Fourth of July. Meetings with a half-dozen senior Republican senators were clearly intended to extinguish fires set by Sen. Richard Lugar’s unexpected break from President Bush’s Iraq policy. They failed.

Cal Thomas: Most believe Bush has lost his way

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If you believe the Bush presidency is a failure, what then?

Do you delight in whacking him like a piñata for the next 18 months with your only objective a Democratic blowout victory in the 2008 election?

Walter Williams: Do people care?

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Back in the late 1960s, during graduate study at UCLA, I had a casual conversation with Professor Armen Alchian, one of my tenacious mentors. Professor Alchian is among the top 20th-century contributors to economic knowledge. During our graduate student/faculty coffee hour conversation, I was trying to impress Professor Alchian with my knowledge of type I and type II statistical errors.

Matt Towery: GOP presidential race: If you want to look thin, hang out with fat people

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The line about looking thin by hanging out with fat people is Rodney Dangerfield’s. To apply his comic wisdom to the presidential race, just look at the fat guys as the ones who started their campaigns too soon, and their skinny compatriots as those who waited until America started giving a hoot about presidential politics.

Thomas Sowell: Taking America for granted

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When my research assistant and her husband took my wife and me to dinner at a Chinese restaurant, I was impressed when I heard her for the first time speak Chinese as she ordered food.

Mark Shields: Democrats change their tune on fund-raising

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Extended stretches of my youth and early middle age were spent joyfully, if not triumphantly, working in political campaigns in some 38 states and Venezuela. My duties included fund-raising, an experience that left an “anti-Calvinist,” convinced that the Creator bestowed large amounts of money on the least appealing and interesting of His creatures.

Marvin Olasky: The all-heart team

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ST. LOUIS — Barring a last-minute switch, Cardinals shortstop David Eckstein will not be at next week’s All-Star Game — but Sports Illustrated gave him a more important recognition this spring. The magazine asked 413 Major League Baseball players, “Which player gets the most out of the least talent?” — and Eckstein received 77 percent of the votes. No other player received more than 3 percent.

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