If Obama underperforms on Election Day compared to the latest polls, the reason may not be race.
Team Obama seeks to muzzle critics through smears, intimidation, and censorship.
In the eyes of the "women's movement," the right woman is never a woman of the right.
Pundits insult our intelligence when they claim that Obama's struggles are due to his race.
As a “citizen of the world,” Obama must recognize that socialism creates misery everywhere it's tried.
Some liberals are concerned by his pivots towards the middle. They needn't be.
The senator pontificates that his countrymen must better themselves by becoming more European. Pourquoi?
Father Pfleger epitomizes those Caucasians who regard their history with scorn. Here's why I don't join in the self-flagellation.
Once again, the media pushes politically correct fantasies about men.
Did gender bias sink Hillary's ship? No, it was equality — and she’s bitter over it being foisted upon her.
Barack Obama might have grudgingly left his south side congregation of twenty years, but its radicalism will never leave him.
Rush Limbaugh is the conservative that the left loves to hate — more than ever since he appears to be the real winner of the Democrats' deadlocked primary season.
Beset by scandal, Barack Obama and his pastor are trying to deflect criticism by highlighting their more humble and patriotic youths. Irrelevant! People change — and it's who we are today that really counts.
No member of the Fourth Estate ever cited "contextualizing" or the misuse of sound bites whenever a white person was excoriated for uttering the N-word.
The romantic comedy writer said that the Democratic race will come down to whether white men hate blacks more than they hate women. Here's why she's the one filled with hate.
To understand Hillary, one must start at her strong but nontraditional relationship with Bill, based largely on their love of politics and quest for power.
The former First Daughter's rebuke of a student who dared to ask about Monicagate highlighted the triumph of emotion over reason in the public square.
"Politics is the art of the possible" and there is a decent possibility that John McCain can win — thus forestalling the disaster that would result from the foreign and domestic policies of a President Clinton or Obama.
Discrimination and prejudice are not inherently evil, writes Bernard Chapin. Theodore Dalrymple's new book shows that they make civilization possible.
Obama's past is key to understanding the fervor surrounding his campaign, writes Bernard Chapin -- and the way to figure out what we can expect from him if elected.
The David Shuster vs. Hillary Clinton imbroglio offers many lessons, writes Bernard Chapin. Most notably, political correctness reigns supreme and emotion runs America.