Paul Weyrich
Paul Weyrich
Paul Michael Weyrich was an American religious conservative political activist and commentator, most notable as a figurehead of the New Right. He co-founded the conservative think tanks, the Heritage Foundation, the Free Congress Foundation, and the American Legislative Exchange Council. He coined the term "moral majority", the name of the political action group Moral Majority that he co-founded in 1979 with Jerry Falwell. He switched from the Roman Rite of the Roman Catholic Church to that of the Melkite Greek...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionCritic
Date of Birth7 October 1942
CountryUnited States of America
I don't want everybody to vote
Conservative voters increasingly understand that the one legacy a president can leave is his judicial appointments.
Every Arab nation votes against us at least two thirds of the time.
Judges were not the biggest issue for most voters in Georgia in 2002.
The average voter has to hear a point seven times before it registers.
The reason that conservative talk radio works is because there is an audience for it.
I agree with Dreher when he writes, 'we can't build anything good unless we live by the belief that man does not exist to serve the economy, but the economy exists to serve man...A society built on consumerism must break down eventually for the same reason socialism did'
Dreher is correct in saying that traditionalist conservatives also have been conservationists...I think most conservatives should agree that this is an area we need to think more about.
So along with several very popular Internet sites, talk radio has served as alternative media that gives listeners information that they otherwise would not hear.
If the Army wants witches and satanists in its ranks, then it can do it without Christians in those ranks. It's time for the Christians in this country to put a stop to this kind of nonsense. A Christian recruiting strike will compel the Army to think seriously about what it is doing.
For one, the Qur'an is considered by Muslims to consist entirely of words spoken by Allah himself.
What changed their mind was Jimmy Carter's intervention against the Christian schools, trying to deny them tax-exempt status on the basis of so-called de facto segregation.
Second, a quarter to a third of those who listen to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity are liberals.
Politics aside, it will be hard for any new liberal radio network to outdo the professionalism of NPR.