Top Items:
Michelle Malkin:
THE "INTERNATIONAL DAY OF ANGER" — Watch out. The London Telegraph reports: … Qaradawi heartily endorses terrorist suicide bombings. Previous coverage of Red Ken Livingston's terrorist sympathies here. — Just as a visual reminder that this Islamist conflagration is a violent global phenomenon, look and learn:
RELATED ITEMS:
Telegraph:
Day of anger threatened over cartoons of Prophet — A leading Islamic cleric called for an "international day of anger" today over publication of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed, and a Danish activist predicted that deadly violence could break out in Europe "at any minute".
Discussion:
BBC, Outside The Beltway, Gates of Vienna, The Brussels Journal, expatica.com, Drinking From Home, bRight & Early, Jay Currie, Classical Values, Blinq, Captain's Quarters, Daimnation!, Brainster's Blog, The Glittering Eye, The American Mind, Marathon Pundit, The Belmont Club, Gateway Pundit and Dr. Sanity
Washington Post:
Tension Rises Over Cartoons of Muhammad — Publication Widens In Europe as Protests Grow in Islamic World — PARIS, Feb. 2 — Protests against European newspapers' publication of cartoons lampooning the prophet Muhammad gained momentum across the Islamic world Thursday …
Chris Tryhorn / Guardian:
BBC joins cartoon controversy — The BBC has involved itself in a growing Europe-wide controversy by broadcasting cartoons of the prophet Muhammad that have caused outrage in the Islamic world and led to the sacking of a French newspaper editor. — The corporation showed the images …
David Rennie / Telegraph:
Newspapers challenge Muslims over cartoons of Mohammed
Newspapers challenge Muslims over cartoons of Mohammed
Discussion:
Gateway Pundit, The Daily Ablution, protein wisdom, Viking Observer and The Officers' Club
Scott Shane / New York Times:
Senate Session on Security Erupts in Spying Debate — WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 — Senate Democrats on Thursday angrily accused the Bush administration of mounting a public relations campaign to defend the National Security Agency's domestic surveillance program while withholding details …
RELATED ITEMS:
Katherine Shrader / Associated Press:
CIA Says Disclosures Damage Work — WASHINGTON - U.S. intelligence officials told Congress on Thursday that disclosure of once-classified projects like President Bush's no-warrant eavesdropping program have undermined their work. — "The damage has been very severe to our capabilities …
Jim Dwyer / New York Times:
Surveillance Prompts a Suit: Police v. Police — The demonstrators arrived angry, departed furious. The police had herded them into pens. Stopped them from handing out fliers. Threatened them with arrest for standing on public sidewalks. Made notes on which politicians they cheered and which ones they razzed.
National Review:
Fitzgerald: Was Any Damage Done By the Valerie Wilson Leak? I Don't Know. — Watchers of the CIA leak investigation are buzzing over a series of letters between prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and lawyers for former Cheney chief of staff Lewis "Scooter" Libby.
RELATED ITEM:
Washington Post:
Rumsfeld Offers Strategies for Current War — The United States is engaged in what could be a generational conflict akin to the Cold War, the kind of struggle that might last decades as allies work to root out terrorists across the globe and battle extremists who want to rule the world …
mysanantonio.com:
NEW: Bush-Cuellar photo prompts donations to Rodriguez — A well-traveled photograph of U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar being embraced by President Bush prior to Tuesday's State of the Union address triggered a rush of Internet donations to one of Cuellar's Democratic primary rivals Thursday.
Discussion:
dailykos.com, Daily Kos, AMERICAblog, Vichy Democrats, firedoglake, Off the Kuff, Eschaton and Blanton's and Ashton's
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
A Cry of Concern by Republicans at Voter Unease — WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 — The surprise election of Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio as House majority leader was a cry of concern by an entrenched Republican majority, acutely worried that voter unease about corruption and partisan excesses …
Salah Nasrawi / Associated Press:
Dozens of Bodies From Egyptian Ship Found — An Egyptian passenger ship carrying about 1,300 people sank in the Red Sea overnight during bad weather, and rescue ships arriving at the scene Friday pulled dozens of bodies from the water, an official said. About 30 survivors were rescued, some in lifeboats.
Discussion:
Air America Radio
Guy Gugliotta / Washington Post:
NASA's Inspector General Probed — Failure to Investigate Safety Violations Is Among the Charges — An FBI-led watchdog agency has opened an investigation into multiple complaints accusing NASA Inspector General Robert W. Cobb of failing to investigate safety violations and retaliating against whistle-blowers.
Adam Nossiter / New York Times:
New Orleans Facing Election and New Order — NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 2 — In great confusion and peculiar circumstances, this city has suddenly found itself in the midst of an unexpected mayoral election campaign. The result may once again upend this city's old order: a white man might …
Discussion:
PoliBlog
David Harris / NJDC's Blog:
New GOP Leader Chosen: What Every American Jew Should Know About John Boehner — This afternoon, the House GOP voted to elect Rep. John Boehner (OH) as the new House GOP Leader. The facts are clear: Rep. Boehner has for years advocated positions that run counter to the issue agenda of the vast majority of American Jews.
Discussion:
The Corner on National …, The Stakeholder, TalkLeft, Talking Points Memo, PBD and TAPPED
Mark Benjamin / Salon:
Out of jail, into the Army — Facing an enlistment crisis, the Army is granting "waivers" to an increasingly high percentage of recruits with criminal records — and trying to hide it. — Pages 1 2 — Print EmailFont: S / S+ / S++ … It was about 10 p.m. on Sept. 1, 2002 …
Bloomberg:
U.S. Envoy Bolton, as Security Council President, Vows Shakeup — Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Ambassador John Bolton began his February presidency of the United Nations Security Council today by telling envoys from the other 14 member governments that he wants to shake up the way they've done business.