Cheryl Chumley is online opinion editor, commentary writer and host of the “Bold and Blunt” podcast for The Washington Times, and a frequent media guest and public speaker. She is the author of several books, the latest titled, “Lockdown: The Socialist Plan To Take Away Your Freedom,” and “Socialists Don’t Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall.” Email her at cchumley@washingtontimes.com.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions has taken a huge public relations hit for daring to quote scripture while explaining why borders should be secure, even if it means separating children from the adults who've carted them into the nation illegally in the first place. But let's get this straight, and straight-away: Borders are indeed biblical.
The July cover of Time Magazine will show a picture of a stern-faced President Donald Trump staring down and towering over a little crying migrant girl. The message being: Trump hates kids?
ABC has worked it so they'll get their money's worth from this whole Roseanne Barr fiasco with a spin-off called "The Conners." Let's just say that a Roseanne show minus the Roseanne isn't going to make the most-watched list any time soon.
When Peter Fonda tweeted his thoughts on the border by calling for Barron Trump to be caged with a bunch of pedophiles, it didn't take Melania Trump long to call for the Secret Service to investigate. But why isn't the left calling out this Fonda tweet for the horrific content it contains?
Michael Bloomberg, the Democrat who turned Republican so as to better his chances to become New York City mayor -- and who later morphed again and became an Independent -- is now turning back to his blue roots and pledging $80 million to help the party of donkeys win in coming elections.
The left has certainly been crying their share of tears over the border kids who've been pulled from their illegally crossing parents' sides -- in fact, almost as many tears as the little kids themselves. Who knows. Maybe they really are that sad.
Facebook, in just the span of a few days, raked in more than $6 million in donations to help reunite families who were detained then separated at the border because they tried to enter the country illegally. That's the power of a crying child -- a price tag of $6 million.
Move over, ADHDers and PTSDers. There's a new mental health condition in town and it's called -- video gaming. And all the teenage-to-millennial-age boys go -- eh, it's better than getting a job.
Kathy Griffin went on a Twitter rant against first lady Melania Trump, calling her, among other things, "feckless" and "complicit" and an all-around "piece of s--t."
Laura Bush, say it ain't so. The former first lady is the latest to jump on the anti-President Donald Trump train to slam this White House over largely fabricated, media-frenzied stories of child separations at the border.
A great deal has been made in recent times about this so-called "loyalty pledge" members of the Republican Party must make to President Donald Trump, else face the wrath of the -- umm, the voters? The White House? Ghosts of right-wing pasts? Exactly. Who knows. But let's not confuse a loyalty pledge with voter will.
President Donald Trump, in a somewhat freewheeling interview on Friday with Fox News' Steve Doocy, told the watching and listening cable news audience that he's clearly beaten many of the political world's entrenched players at their own game. Moreover -- he's not hiding his pride in accomplishment. Nor should he.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley is just about killing it at the global body. In recent remarks to the General Assembly, Haley first condemned the anti-Israel faction of the bunch for using the global body for politics, not peace promotion. And then, dramatically enough, she brought to vote a U.S.-penned measure that explicitly faulted Hamas for violence at the Gaza border
Hillary Clinton, move over. And take your "what difference, at this point, does it make" soulful query about truth with you. 'Cause there's a new shocking phrase in town and it's one that goes like this: Dear Lisa Page, don't worry, Trump won't be president, "we'll stop it." Love, Peter Strzok.
Pollster Frank Luntz has come a long way since the presidential race days when he used to trade public barbs with Donald Trump and call out the then-candidate as little more than a circus act who ought to shut his campaign shop and go home. Now? he's defending Trump from "fake news."
Target Corporation has apologized and pulled Father's Day greeting cards from its stores that use the phrase "baby daddy." But it's hilarious that they're facing this public relations ding. Hilarious and sad.