Top Items:
David Ignatius / Washington Post:
An Arrogance of Power — There is a temptation that seeps into the souls of even the most righteous politicians and leads them to bend the rules, and eventually the truth, to suit the political needs of the moment. That arrogance of power is on display with the Bush administration.
RELATED ITEMS:
David E. Sanger / New York Times:
Handling of Accident Creates Tension Between White House Staffs — WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 — When the White House press secretary, Scott McClellan, came to the press room just before 10 a.m. Tuesday and suggested he was wearing an orange tie to avoid a stray shot from Vice President Dick Cheney …
Discussion:
The Next Hurrah
Craig Gordon / Newsday:
Cheney's shot gives critics ammo — WASHINGTON — He had a father-knows-best quality beside a relatively green White House hopeful, the strong-but-silent political type George W. Bush picked to help reassure voters he was up to the job. — In Vice President Dick Cheney …
Los Angeles Times:
Cheney Lacked $7 Hunting Credential — CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — Although he was not cited with breaking any laws, Vice President Dick Cheney did not have proper hunting credentials when he accidentally shot a fellow hunter at a private ranch over the weekend, authorities said Monday.
Media Matters for America:
CNN's Morton: Bush "likes to hunt quail"; Cheney "loves to hunt" — but Kerry "spent time posing with guns" … During a report on hunting and politics on the February 13 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, CNN national correspondent Bruce Morton commented that President Bush …
Paul Burka / Slate:
Full of Holes — The gossip about Cheney's bad shot. — Austin, TEXAS—The headquarters of Harry Whittington, the 78-year-old Austin lawyer who was shot by Vice President Dick Cheney in a hunting accident Saturday, is the nondescript 10-story Vaughn Building, located a block from the Texas Capitol in downtown Austin.
Kevin Sites / Agence France Presse:
Democrats blast Cheney secrecy after shooting — WASHINGTON (AFP) - Democrats in Congress accused Vice President Dick Cheney of a pattern of secrecy, and demanded that he "level" with the public, after keeping mum about accidentally shooting an associate over the weekend.
New York Times:
Fellow Hunter Shot by Cheney Suffers Setback
Fellow Hunter Shot by Cheney Suffers Setback
Discussion:
CNN, protein wisdom, Amygdala, PunditGuy, Michael Bérubé Online, Suitably Flip and Don Surber
Joe Strupp / Editor and Publisher:
Ari Fleischer Joins Criticism Of Cheney's Response to Shooting
Ari Fleischer Joins Criticism Of Cheney's Response to Shooting
Discussion:
Taegan Goddard's …
Opinion Journal:
Cheney's Coverup — The Vice President shoots a man. Questions must be asked.
Cheney's Coverup — The Vice President shoots a man. Questions must be asked.
Discussion:
Say Anything
Charles Babington / Washington Post:
Congressional Probe of NSA Spying Is in Doubt — Congress appeared ready to launch an investigation into the Bush administration's warrantless domestic surveillance program last week, but an all-out White House lobbying campaign has dramatically slowed the effort and may kill it, key Republican and Democratic sources said yesterday.
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
Cheney's Response A Concern In GOP — Vice President Cheney's slow and unapologetic public response to the accidental shooting of a 78-year-old Texas lawyer is turning the quail-hunting mishap into a political liability for the Bush administration and is prompting senior White House officials …
Matthew Moore / Sydney Morning Herald:
The photos America doesn't want seen — MORE photographs have been leaked of Iraqi citizens tortured by US soldiers at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad. — Tonight the SBS Dateline program plans to broadcast about 60 previously unpublished photographs …
Discussion:
Tim Blair, Hullabaloo, Liberty Street, Booman Tribune, Amygdala, Bring it On! and The Washington Monthly
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
325,000 Names on Terrorism List — Rights Groups Say Database May Include Innocent People — The National Counterterrorism Center maintains a central repository of 325,000 names of international terrorism suspects or people who allegedly aid them, a number that has more than quadrupled since …
Jonathan Ewing / Associated Press:
Scalia Dismisses 'Living Constitution' — PONCE, Puerto Rico - People who believe the Constitution would break if it didn't change with society are "idiots," U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia says. — In a speech Monday sponsored by the conservative Federalist Society …
Carlotta Gall / New York Times:
Afghan Suicide Bombings, Tied to Taliban, Point to Pakistan — KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Feb. 12 — Arrests and interrogations of suspects in a recent series of suicide bombings in Afghanistan show that the attacks have been orchestrated from Pakistan by members of the ousted Taliban government …
Michael J. Totten:
The Dream City of the Kurds — ERBIL, IRAQ - Kurdistan is a place of the mind. It doesn't exist on any maps unless the maps are made by the Kurds. Southern Kurdistan is known to the rest of the world as Northern Iraq. Northern Kurdistan is described as Eastern Turkey.
Discussion:
Captain's Quarters
USA Today:
Poll: Americans fear Iran will develop, use nukes — WASHINGTON — Americans are deeply worried about the possibility that Iran will develop nuclear weapons and use them against the USA, a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll finds, but they also fear that the Bush administration will be "too quick" to order military action against Iran.
David S. Cloud / New York Times:
Quick Rise for Purveyors of Propaganda in Iraq — WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 — Two years ago, Christian Bailey and Paige Craig were living in a half-renovated Washington group house, with a string of failed startup companies behind them. — Mr. Bailey, a boyish-looking Briton, and Mr. Craig …
Discussion:
CorrenteWire
CNN:
Poll: Fifth of Americans think calls have been monitored — WASHINGTON (CNN) — About a fifth of Americans think federal agents have listened in on their phone calls, a CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll released Tuesday suggests. — Twenty-one percent of the 1,000 adults who replied …
Guardian:
Denmark's new values — What was once a liberal country lurched to the far right while the world was not looking — Kiku Day — Denmark has at last managed to catch the world's eye, after so many years of failing to get credit for being at the cutting edge of liberalism.