Hillary webcast, Frank Luntz replay, Victor Davis Hanson replay.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – Hugh continues along commenting on Hillary Clinton’s first web-only town hall meeting, then replays his first-hour interviews with Frank Luntz and Victor Davis Hanson.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – Hugh continues along commenting on Hillary Clinton’s first web-only town hall meeting, then replays his first-hour interviews with Frank Luntz and Victor Davis Hanson.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – Hugh gets some pre-state of the union reaction from pollster and author Frank Luntz, and military historian and classicist, Victor Davis Hanson.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – House Rules Committee ranking member David Dreier helps preview the state of the union speech tomorrow night, plus we have to sit through the first of many endless Hillary campaign sessions.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – Kondracke and Krauthammer examine the war, and both parties’ political maneurvering of it, then John Campbell recaps Nancy Pelosi’s first 100 hours, then Lt. Smash gets serious about the war once again.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – Hugh remembers the loss of a particular soldier named Mark Daily, who was killed in Iraq on Monday. He later plays audio from the Democrats who seem determined to lose this war, and takes calls.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – Emmett continues his countdown of the 100 movies you must have on your Netflix list, then Tarzana Joe composes a poem in honor of the late Lt. Mark Daily.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – Hugh continues his analysis of the news and takes calls.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – Hugh gives his take on the news and takes calls.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – Mark Steyn reacts to the surge policy and Republicans’ weak-kneedness to it, Bellow and Bay talk about the new pamphlet featuring the modern military dictionary, and Lileks talk about what he does and does not like about 24.
Hewitt: Hour 1 & 3 – Vanity Fair columnist Christopher Hitchens discusses his recent trip to Kurdistan and Baghdad, and compares moral culpability between a withdrawal in Iraq versus our withdrawal in Vietnam. Later in the hour, Harvard professor and historian Niall Ferguson ponders whether the U.N. should take the lead in Iraq now.