MITT ROMNEY’S MYSTERIOUS VIEWS ON IMMIGRATION BY EUGENE ROBINSONWASHINGTON POST…[I]f taking action on the immigration issue is good politics for Obama and the Democrats, then Republicans have only themselves to blame. The GOP has made a conscious decision to offer nativists and xenophobes a comfortable home where their extremist views go unchallenged. No one should be surprised if voters who think differently about immigration issues – including some who are recent immigrants themselves – feel unwelcome.DON’T LOOK DOWNBY FRANK BRUNINEW YORK TIMESSomewhere between Nik Wallenda’s first step onto a tightrope over Niagara Falls and Greece’s most recent retreat from the brink, it hit me: teetering needlessly on the precipice of disaster wasn’t just the story of the weekend. It’s the story of our days. …Greece’s limbo underscores Europe’s inability to determine once and for all how much it’s willing to invest in the future of the euro. The Continent’s leaders make micro adjustments in lieu of a macro commitment or big decision of any kind. The suspense sometimes shifts locus – today Greece, tomorrow Spain or Italy – but doesn’t end. That mirrors the serial uncertainty on the opposite side of the Atlantic, where the United States Congress, inept at so very much, excels at catastrophic scenarios and suffixes. It has mastered the -mageddon.
Must-Read Op-Eds for Monday, June 18, 2012








