The Conservative Challenge

From Powerline an answer to many of the questions we discussed at the 912 meeting last night. Where are we going? How are we going to accomplish it?
Scott Johnson discusses an article by Charles Kesler, editor of the Claremont Review of books. See links at the bottom of this post.

He quotes:

“If we could first know where we are, and whither we are tending, we could then better judge what to do, and how to do it,” Abraham Lincoln counseled in his great 1858 House Divided speech.

In Lincoln’s spirit, Professor Charles Kesler situates the dire position of the conservative movement confronting Barack Obama. Apart from this, there are viagra sales online numerous medicines that come at a high price. The pills of Forzest for sale are certainly the best http://www.cerritosmedicalcenter.com/pid-2465 canadian cialis pharmacy way to treat Erectile Dysfunction (ED). The prevalence of NAFLD varies among buy viagra pill ethnic groups and probably relates, at least in part, to genetic differences. Sildenafil acts on the parasympathetic nervous system of our bodies. soft cialis cerritosmedicalcenter.com “In President Barack Obama, conservatives face the most formidable liberal politician in a generation, perhaps since John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson,” writes Kesler:

Charles Kesler is of course the editor of the Claremont Review of Books (subscribe here) and professor of government at Claremont College. His brilliant essay “The conservative challenge” leads the new issue of the CRB and has been made available online at our request.

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