Weary sigh greets end in Iraq
M.W. Guzy says, conceived in hubris and mistakenly executed, this expensive and bloody misadventure will now yield the bitter harvest of folly.
M.W. Guzy says, conceived in hubris and mistakenly executed, this expensive and bloody misadventure will now yield the bitter harvest of folly.
M.W. Guzy plays spoilsport with an email purporting to reveal nefarious dealings in by Al Gore and Bill Clinton.
M.W. Guzy says the current movie may be filled with every Western and flying saucer cliche imaginable, but it is a good metaphor for today's politics.
The country has to figure out how to pay its bills. And M.W. Guzy says everyone is going to have some skin in the game.
The campaign against Gadhafi brings unfortunate parallels to M.W. Guzy's mind.
M.W. Guzy asks whether Egyptian popular opinion has reached the point at which Mubarak has no hope of regaining sufficient confidence.
When M.W. Guzy examines the tax options available to the president and Congress, he finds options that George Bailey would love, as well as one for Mr. Potter and more.
M.W. Guzy says the country should draft Keith Jackson to do the play-by-play on the new Congress, as it's setting up to be a Mizzou-Kansas rivalry.
Liberals and conservatives are locked in dubious debate over the 10th and 14th Amendments. M.W. Guzy says neither side seems to recognize that as amendments, both of these writings represent modifications of the original text.
The U.S. says it's a nation of peace, but M.W. Guzy looks at a long history of wars, big and small.