Top Items:
Media Matters for America:
Robertson blamed Sharon stroke on policy of "dividing God's land" … On the January 5 edition of Christian Broadcasting Network's (CBN) The 700 Club, host Pat Robertson suggested that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's recent stroke was the result of Sharon's policy, which he claimed is "dividing God's land."
Discussion:
www.AndrewSullivan.com, The Next Hurrah, The Washington Note, Eschaton, The Washington Monthly and Obsidian Wings
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Associated Press:
Iranian President Hopes Sharon Perishes — TEHRAN, Iran - Iran's president said Thursday he hoped for the death of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, the latest anti-Israeli comment by a leader who has already provoked international criticism for suggesting that Israel be "wiped off the map."
Discussion:
Centerfield
ynetnews.com:
Iranian leader hopes for Sharon's death — President Ahmadinejad says he hopes 'criminal of Sabra and Shatila has joined his ancestors' — Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted Thursday as saying he was hoping for the death of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Daniel Pipes / danielpipes.org:
[After Sharon:] Israeli Politics Will Revert to Its Past
[After Sharon:] Israeli Politics Will Revert to Its Past
Discussion:
Front Page Magazine, Soccer Dad, Power Line, irishpennants.com and Israel news and commentary …
Omri / Mere Rhetoric:
MR Political Roundup - 2006-01-04
MR Political Roundup - 2006-01-04
Discussion:
Israel Insider, MSNBC, Vodkapundit, Yourish.com, Haaretz, THE BELGRAVIA DISPATCH, Kesher Talk and Winds of Change.NET
New York Times:
The Sago Mine Disaster — In the long history of coal mine tragedies in Appalachia, few have borne the compound misery suffered in Sago, W.Va., where a dozen families were plunged from exultation to furious grief by a false report that their loved ones had survived a deadly mine explosion on Monday.
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TBlumer / BizzyBlog.com:
The New York Times' Disgraceful (and Wrong) …
The New York Times' Disgraceful (and Wrong) …
Discussion:
Dr. Sanity, The Anchoress, Right Wing News, Betsy's Page, Mark in Mexico and Sister Toldjah
Scott Shields / MyDD:
Responding to a Right Wing Smear
Responding to a Right Wing Smear
Discussion:
The RCP Blog, Legal Fiction, Sirotablog, Left in the West, Daily Kos and Fired Up! America
Glenn Greenwald / Hullabaloo:
Attacking Bush's only weapon: Fear — Among those who now recognize that the Bush Administration has not just deliberately and repeatedly broken the law, but is literally claiming that George Bush has the "wartime" power to continue to break the law, there is a growing impatience to move to the next step …
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Bill Gertz / Washington Times:
NSA whistleblower asks to testify — A former National Security Agency official wants to tell Congress about electronic intelligence programs that he asserts were carried out illegally by the NSA and the Defense Intelligence Agency. — Russ Tice, a whistleblower who was dismissed from the NSA last year …
Discussion:
Power Line, The American Thinker, Macsmind, Cold Fury, Right Wing Nut House, The Mahablog, Booman Tribune, The Strata-Sphere, Elephants in Academia, Defense Tech, Media Blog on National …, The Washington Monthly, Big Lizards, IntoxiNation-News …, Shakespeare's Sister, Abracadabrah and The American Mind
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Mike Kalil / Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Reid says Chertoff should resign — Senator echoes sheriff after city falls off list — U.S. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid called for the resignation of Homeland Security Department Secretary Michael Chertoff on Wednesday, one day after the government dropped Las Vegas from a list …
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Peggy Noonan / Opinion Journal:
The Steamroller — The road to big government reaches a dead end at Jack Abramoff. — The problem with government is that it is run by people, and people are flawed. They are not virtue machines. We are all of us, even the best of us, vulnerable to the call of the low: to greed …
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Andrea Mitchell / MSNBC:
Reporter defends release of NSA spy program — James Risen says his sources are 'patriots,' CIA calls them 'unreliable' — New York Times reporter James Risen first broke the story two weeks ago that the National Security Agency began spying on domestic communications soon after 9/11.
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Jennifer Loven / Associated Press:
Bush Listens to Suggestions on Iraq — WASHINGTON - President Bush promised to "take to heart" suggestions on Iraq he heard Thursday from former secretaries of defense and state who have disagreed — sometimes sharply in the past but apparently only mildly in person — with his approach there.
Discussion:
The Next Hurrah, firedoglake, The Carpetbagger Report, Gateway Pundit, The RCP Blog and IntoxiNation-News …
Pascal Riche / tpmcafe.com:
Foreign Affairs — The Cost of The War — Nobel Laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard budget expert Linda Bilmes plan to present this week a paper estimating the cost of the Iraq War at between $1-2 trillion. This is far higher than earlier estimates of $100-200 billion. — Here is their statement:
Hotline On Call:
Ed Gillespie Joins Team Allen — Of all the stories in today's Hotline, this one has more '08 ramifications than just about any other: — Ed Gillespie, one of the most well-respected, most well-connected Republicans in Washington — he's the RNC chair once removed …
Discussion:
TAPPED
Ian Johnston / Scotsman:
Welcome to Mars express: only a three hour trip — AN EXTRAORDINARY "hyperspace" engine that could make interstellar space travel a reality by flying into other dimensions is being investigated by the United States government. — The hypothetical device, which has been outlined in principle …
Discussion:
Defense Tech
James Moore / The Huffington Post:
Branded — There are times in which it is easy to be suspicious. We can get to that feeling fairly quickly if we even pay slight attention. I've been trying to get over this odd emotion for at least a year. I can't find any rationale for letting it go, though I want desperately not to have these thoughts.
Martin Crutsinger / Associated Press:
Jobless Claims Plunge to Five-Year Low — The number of newly laid-off workers filing claims for unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level in more than five years last week, providing strong evidence that the labor market is shaking off the effects of a string of devastating hurricanes.