Washington Examiner / Magazine
September 14, 2021 Issue
September 14, 2021 Print Edition
Cover Story
Yes, Biden blew it
Contingencies are messy things. The Biden administration’s improvisatory scramble after the fall of Kabul to the Taliban was one of several such messes America witnessed in the final weeks of August. Another was President Joe Biden’s impromptu effort to explain that the shambolic disgrace was among the best possible outcomes. Biden set an artificial deadline and sleepwalked toward it, igniting a frantic effort in which NATO and non-NATO nations engaged to transit as many of their citizens, residents, and terrified Afghan allies as possible out of the country while Biden contracted with the Taliban to provide perimeter security at the Kabul airport. Over 100,000 people got out, but many more were left behind, including American citizens and permanent residents. Biden congratulated himself. “No nation has ever done anything like it in all of history,” he insisted, “and only the United States had the capacity and the will and ability to do it. And we did it today.” That American and allied troops were able to solve a sizable portion of the problem the president created was taken as proof that no one could have done better than Biden did. And for anyone who claimed otherwise, Biden appealed to his own ignorance. “I know of no conflict as a student of history, no conflict where when a war was ending, one side was able to guarantee that everyone they wanted to be extracted from that country...

Stories that matter—told with clarity and conviction.

Your Land

A Rolling Stone gathers no facts
Magazine - Your Land
A Rolling Stone gathers no facts
The saying “just because you read something on the internet doesn’t mean it’s true” really ought to be...
At college, it’s not raining men
Magazine - Your Land
At college, it’s not raining men
Everyone knows women are smarter than men. Anyone who says differently is, well, probably a man. I’m only...
College football is back, as is the heartbreak for some fans
Magazine - Your Land
College football is back, as is the heartbreak for some fans
Packed college football stadiums are back across the country, bringing with them all of the hype and misery...
Surprise! Your dating app probably loves abortion!
Magazine - Your Land
Surprise! Your dating app probably loves abortion!
Most of the time, when big corporations suddenly get woke on an issue, it has nothing to do...
Magazine - Your Land
Dolce & Gabbana is saved from cancellation (again)
Dolce & Gabbana has been revived from the obscurity of cancellation (again). It’s easily understandable if you missed the Italian fashion house being canceled as the fashion industry’s...

Business

Too many people are hardly working, not working hard
Business
Too many people are hardly working, not working hard
The Labor Department recently reported there are now a record 10.9 million job openings in America....
A semiconductor shortage is negatively affecting the auto industry
Business
A semiconductor shortage is negatively affecting the auto industry
The heads of major automotive companies say there’s no immediate end in sight to a global...

Washington Briefing

Magazine - Washington Briefing
Biden tries to build back his poll numbers with domestic issues
Two days after Labor Day, President Joe Biden held an event for unions at the White...
Business
Big Tech companies shift to making semiconductors in-house
Some of the largest tech companies have decided to respond to the semiconductor shortage by designing...
Healthcare
Taxing e-cigarettes could have adverse consequences
Health economists warned that taxes on e-cigarettes and vape products alone would not be enough to...
Business
Malware-loaded documents making a comeback
While cybercriminals are constantly looking for new ways to compromise IT systems, sometimes the old ways...
Letter from editor
Democrats discover ‘rigged’ elections
Remember when it was bad to describe elections as “rigged?” Such terminology was Exhibit A proving President Donald Trump’s anti-democratic...

Stories that matter—told with clarity and conviction.