memeorandum

Political Web, page A1 … for 6:05 PM ET, December 27, 2005
Current Politics Page     Also:   Tech

Top Items:

Washington Post:
Chalabi Lacks Votes Needed to Win Spot in Iraqi Assembly  —  BAGHDAD, Dec. 26 — Unexpectedly low support from overseas voters has left Ahmed Chalabi — the returned Iraqi exile once backed by the United States to lead Iraq — facing a shutout from power in this month's vote for the country's …
RELATED ITEMS:
Juan / Informed Comment:
Top Ten Myths about Iraq in 2005  —  Iraq has unfortunately become a football in the rough and ready, two-party American political arena, generating large numbers of sound bites and so much spin you could clothe all of China in the resulting threads.  —  Here are what I think are the top ten myths …
Deborah Howell / Washington Post:
The Whole Story on Military Recruiting?  —  Numbers aren't just facts.  They can be interpreted in many ways, even if they come from the same or similar sources.  —  Ann Scott Tyson, a respected military reporter just back from Iraq, wrote in a front-page story Nov. 4 that …
RELATED ITEMS:
Digby / Hullabaloo:
Truthiness  —  Jane appropriately excoriates the WaPo ombudsman …
Discussion: The Sideshow
Wretchard / The Belmont Club:
Who is a journalist?  —  A Washington Post story about information warfare in Iraq mentions Bill Roggio.  The WP article said: … The article occasioned a lot of commentary in the blogosphere.  Blogger Scout Prime says "Blogging isn't journalism.  I am not a journalist.
RELATED ITEM:
Bill Roggio / ThreatsWatch.Org:
Disinformation Operations  —  Monday's Washington Post featured an article written by Jonathan Finer and Doug Struck titled Bloggers, Money Now Weapons in Information War - U.S. Recruits Advocates to the Front, Pays Iraqi TV Stations for Coverage, of which my embed in Iraq was the subject of scrutiny as a military information operation.
New York Times:
Unwarranted Complaints  —  SHORTLY after the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush ordered surveillance of international telephone communications by suspected members of Al Qaeda overseas, even if such calls also involved individuals within the United States.  This program was adopted …
Washington Post:
Policy Adrift on Darfur  —  For two years the Bush administration has made commendable efforts to improve the lives of people in Darfur.  Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick has become personally invested in the crisis, recently completing his fourth trip to the region in the past seven months.
C.J. Karamargin / Arizona Daily Star:
McCain brings his message to MTV audience  —  "Let the student decide."  With those well-chosen words John McCain summed up his view on the teaching of "intelligent design" along with evolution in public schools.  —  Even — or perhaps especially — with controversial topics …
Eugene Robinson / Washington Post:
Power That Bush Can't Just Take  —  Since the holiday season is a time of generosity and goodwill toward all — even those who torture the Constitution and hoodwink the nation into ill-advised wars — let's do a little thought experiment.  —  Let's assume that George W. Bush's claim …
BBC:
'Worst' historical Britons named  —  Historians have put together a list of the 10 "worst" Britons of the last 1,000 years.  —  They chose one rogue from each century of the last millennium to compile the list for the BBC History Magazine.  —  Jack the Ripper, King John and Oswald Mosley …
Jason Leopold / rawstory.com:
Rice authorized National Security Agency to spy on UN Security Council in run-up to war, former officials say  —  President Bush and other top officials in his administration used the National Security Agency to secretly wiretap the home and office telephones and monitored private email accounts …
Evelyn Nieves / Washington Post:
S.D. Makes Abortion Rare Through Laws And Stigma  —  Out-of-State Doctors Come Weekly to 1 Clinic  —  SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — The waiting room at the Planned Parenthood clinic was packed by the time the doctor arrived — an hour late because of weather delays in Minneapolis.
James Bone / Opinion Journal:
Where Is the Car?  —  Why Kofi Annan said I'm not a "serious journalist."  —  UNITED NATIONS—Kofi Annan, U.N. secretary-general and Nobel peace laureate, is normally the meekest of diplomats.  He is so accommodating he once described Saddam Hussein as a man "I can do business with."

About This Page:

This is a snapshot of memeorandum at 6:05 PM ET, December 27, 2005.

View another snapshot:

About memeorandum:

The Web is humming with discussions on politics and current affairs.  memeorandum is page A1 for these conversations.  Auto-updated every 5 minutes, it uncovers the most relevant items from thousands of news sites and weblogs.

Site News:

See blog.memeorandum.com for all site news.

Subscribe:

Add memeorandum to:
XML

More Items:

BBC:
Mass grave unearthed in Iraq city
Reuters:
Munich mastermind spurns Spielberg's peace appeal
Verena Dobnik / Associated Press:
Bloomberg's Word Choice Still Under Fire
Stanley Kurtz / The Corner on National Review Online:
HOLLYWOOD FAMILY VALUES
C. J. Chivers / New York Times:
Putin's Senior Economic Adviser Abruptly Resigns
Jeff Leeds / New York Times:
The Net Is a Boon for Indie Labels
Discussion: Off the Kuff and BuzzMachine
Jeffrey Hart / Opinion Journal:
The Burke Habit  —  Prudence, skepticism and "unbought grace."
Ben Feller / Associated Press:
History Texts Take Up Clinton Impeachment

Earlier Picks:

Brian McGuire / New York Sun:
Schumer, Clinton Earmark Funds For Contributors
The Poor Man:
Yes, Virginia, there really is a John Gibson.
Discussion: Hullabaloo
Susan Goodkin / Washington Post:
Leave No Gifted Child Behind
USA Today:
Iraq debate eclipses heroic acts
Discussion: Gateway Pundit
James Wolcott:
HEADHUNTERS  —  The dainty stench of burnt envy drew …
Aljazeera:
'My kidnappers were not criminals'  —  A former German hostage …
Jim VandeHei / Washington Post:
White House Press Room To Be Closed For Makeover
Shankar Vedantam / Washington Post:
A Political Debate On Stress Disorder
 
© 2005 Memeorandum