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1:20 PM ET, March 17, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Charles Babington / Washington Post:
Bill Would Allow Warrantless Spying  —  GOP Plan Would Bring Surveillance Under Review of Congress, FISA Court  —  The Bush administration could continue its policy of spying on targeted Americans without obtaining warrants, but only if it justifies the action to a small group of lawmakers …
RELATED ITEMS:
Significantly Loosening Its Requirements / Unclaimed …:
The new Nixon Law is introduced — that which the President does is legal  —  (updated below)  —  Michael DeWine yesterday introduced what he is calling The Terrorist Surveillance Act of 2006 (.pdf), co-sponsored by those independent maverick Republicans Olympia Snowe, Chuck Hagel and Lindsay Graham.
Discussion: Balkinization and Lean Left
ABCNEWS:
New Documents from Saddam Hussein's Archives Discuss Bin Laden, WMDs  —  U.S. Government Releases Papers From Saddam's Reign  —  March 16, 2006 — Following are the ABC News Investigative Unit's summaries of four of the nine Iraqi documents from Saddam Hussein's government, which were released by the U.S. government Wednesday.
RELATED ITEMS:
David Morgan / Reuters:
US releases confiscated prewar Iraqi documents
Discussion: Sadly, No! and AMERICAblog
apnews.excite.com:
Witness Tampering Cited in Moussaoui Case  —  WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawyers for two airlines being sued for damages by 9/11 victims prompted a federal lawyer to coach witnesses in the trial of al-Qaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui so the government's death penalty case would not undercut their defense, victims' lawyers allege.
Discussion: Big Lizards
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Dafydd / Big Lizards:
Moussaoui Case - Shocking Allegation  —  In Salvaging Death From Life, we discussed the insane decision by Clinton-appointed Judge Leonie Brinkema to throw out the better half of the prosecution's case for the death penalty against Zacarias Moussaoui, on the grounds that a lawyer working …
Investor's Business Daily:
Declassified Truth  —  The War On Terror: The government is finally getting around to unloading some of Saddam Hussein's secret documents.  A look at just a few pages already leads to some blockbuster revelations.  —  In the early stages of the war that began three years ago …
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
Congress Raises Ceiling for Borrowing  —  $100 Billion Is Spent Without Offsetting Cuts  —  Congress raised the limit on the federal government's borrowing by $781 billion yesterday, and then lawmakers voted to spend well over $100 billion on the war in Iraq, hurricane relief, education …
RELATED ITEMS:
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
Senate Approves Budget, Breaking Spending Limits
New York Times:
U.S. and Iranians Agree to Discuss Violence in Iraq  —  TEHRAN, March 16 — Iran and the United States agreed Thursday to hold direct talks on how to halt sectarian violence and restore calm in Iraq, offering the first face-to-face conversation between the sides after months of confrontation over Iran's nuclear program.
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Time for Facts, Not Resolutions  —  We understand the frustration that led Senator Russell Feingold to introduce a measure that would censure President Bush for authorizing warrantless spying on Americans.  It's galling to watch from the outside as the Republicans and most Democrats refuse …
Discussion: Firedoglake and AMERICAN FUTURE
RELATED ITEMS:
Robert F. Worth / New York Times:
Kurds Destroy Shrine in Rage at Leadership  —  HALABJA, Iraq, March 16 — For nearly two decades, Kurds have gathered peacefully in this mountainous corner of northern Iraq to commemorate one of the blackest days in their history.  It was here that Saddam Hussein's government launched …
Discussion: The American Street and Needlenose
Jim Dwyer / New York Times:
Police Memos Say Arrest Tactics Calmed Protest  —  In five internal reports made public yesterday as part of a lawsuit, New York City police commanders candidly discuss how they had successfully used "proactive arrests," covert surveillance and psychological tactics at political demonstrations in 2002 …
Jack Shafer / Slate:
Judith Miller's New Excuse  —  The former Times reporter tells Vanity Fair the "slanderous" bloggers destroyed her.  —  Judith Miller has a new alibi—the blogs done her in!  —  Writer Marie Brenner presents Miller's latest defense in an April Vanity Fair feature story about the fallout from the Valerie Plame investigation.
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
Pandora and Polygamy  —  And now, polygamy.  —  With the sweetly titled HBO series "Big Love," polygamy comes out of the closet.  Under the headline "Polygamists, Unite!"  Newsweek informs us of "polygamy activists emerging in the wake of the gay-marriage movement."
David Ignatius / Washington Post:
Fighting Smarter In Iraq  —  BAGHDAD — Three years on, the U.S. military is finally becoming adept at fighting a counterinsurgency war in Iraq.  Sadly, these are precisely the skills that should have been mastered before America launched its invasion in March 2003.
Matt Stoller / MyDD:
Campaign Finance and Blogs: A Simple and Non-Legal Explanation  —  I updated this to include the media exemption, which I had forgotten.  —  Ok, so campaign finance regulations make my head hurt, so I'm going to try to explain the basic idea behind the differing bills instead of the legal ins-and-outs …
Michael Kinsley / Slate:
To Your Health  —  Why modest reform is preferable to single-payer health care.  —  In the March 23 New York Review of Books, Paul Krugman makes the case for a health-care system that is not only "single payer," meaning that the government handles the finances, but in some respects …
Steven R. Weisman / New York Times:
Democracy Push by Bush Attracts Doubters in Party  —  Even as it presents an updated national security strategy, the Bush administration is facing fresh doubts from some Republicans who say its emphasis on promoting democracy around the world has come at the expense of protecting other American interests.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Jamie Coomarasamy / BBC:
US evangelicals warn Republicans
Discussion: PoliBlog
Mandi Bishop / woai.com:
Flying Cow Leaves Two Police Cars in Flames
Jennifer McKee / helenair.com:
Keenan may oppose Burns
Discussion: TPM Muckraker
Bloomberg:
U.S., Iraqi Forces Enter Day Two of Anti-Insurgency Operation
Discussion: The Fourth Rail
Roger Friedman / Fox News:
Neverland Nevermore for Jacko
Discussion: The Moderate Voice
Jay Rosen / PressThink:
Twelve Newspapers in a State of Nature
Gateway Pundit:
AP Pops Another Bogus Anti-Bush Story on America
Discussion: Power Line and PoliPundit.com
Leslie Wayne / New York Times:
Same Washington, Different Office
 Earlier Items: 
Clifford D. May / USA Today:
Inaction failed  —  United States can't just sit back and wait to be attacked.
Associated Press:
Bush names Idaho Gov. Kempthorne interior secretary
Gregory Crouch / New York Times:
A Candid Dutch Film May Be Too Scary for Immigrants
Radio Blogger:
Mark Steyn's position on commissions.
Discussion: Hugh Hewitt and Wizbang
Washington Post:
FACT SHEET: THE PRESIDENT'S NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY
Jim VandeHei / Washington Post:
GOP Irritation At Bush Was Long Brewing
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Peter White / Deadline:
Fox and Hulu extend their content partnership, including in-season streaming rights for Fox's programming; sources: the deal is worth $1.5B over four years

Peter Kafka / Business Insider:
A Q&A with Chris Balfe, CEO of Red Seat Ventures, which has helped Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly set up their podcast and streaming businesses and sell ads

Shawn Musgrave / The Intercept:
A federal court rejects OpenAI's effort to toss a lawsuit by The Intercept, which argued that the DMCA prevents OpenAI from stripping a story's title or byline

 
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