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5:25 PM ET, March 19, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
New York Times:
The Stuff That Happened  —  Three years ago, the United States invaded Iraq.  We can all run the story through our minds: Shock and Awe, Coalition of the Willing, Mission Accomplished, looting, "Stuff happens," no W.M.D., suicide bombers, purple fingers, blasted shrine.
RELATED ITEMS:
George F. Will / Washington Post:
Bleakness In Baghdad
Dean Calbreath / San Diego Union-Tribune:
Congressman Doolittle, wife profited from Cunningham-linked contractor  —  Commissions taken on campaign cash  —  A week before former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham was sentenced to prison, he stressed to the court that a number of other lawmakers also helped arrange federal funding for the defense contractors who bribed him.
RELATED ITEMS:
Paul Kiel / TPM Muckraker:   Wilkes Campaign Money to Doolittle Is Just The Beginning
Joe Gandelman / The Moderate Voice:
Republican 2006 Strategy Will Be To Define Foes And "Change The Subject"  —  Independent voters, those who believe elections are job performance reviews, and those who want to see the quality of political debate elevated in this country will not be heartened by a piece by Fred Barnes detailing …
RELATED ITEMS:
Paul D. Eaton / New York Times:
A Top-Down Review for the Pentagon  —  DURING World War II, American soldiers en route to Britain before D-Day were given a pamphlet on how to behave while awaiting the invasion.  The most important quote in it was this: "It is impolite to criticize your host; it is militarily stupid to criticize your allies."
Benjamin Sand / Voice of America:
Afghan Man Faces Execution After Converting to Christianity  —  An Afghan man who recently admitted he converted to Christianity faces the death penalty under the country's strict Islamic legal system.  The trial is a critical test of Afghanistan's new constitution and democratic government.
Discussion: Rantingprofs and Below The Beltway
RELATED ITEMS:
Jennifer Egan / New York Times:
Wanted: A Few Good Sperm  —  One day last October, Karyn, a 39-year-old executive, pulled her online dating profile off JDate and Match.com, two sites she had been using, along with an endless series of leads, tips and blind dates arranged by friends and colleagues, to search for a man she wanted to marry and raise a family with.
RELATED ITEMS:
Fausta / Fausta's blog:
Sex and the City, shopping for shoes, and looking for Mr. Good Sperm
Jane Hamsher / firedoglake:
Let's Play Strategery  —  Ryan Lizza isn't a complete idiot, his piece on Gold Bars Luskin is the best I've read and I thoroughly enjoyed his portrait of McCain's unprincipled backdown from the steel-caged death match with Grover Norquist now that he's eyeing the white house.
BBC:
Iraq in civil war, says former PM  —  Iraq is in the middle of civil war, the country's former interim prime minister Iyad Allawi has told the BBC.  —  He said Iraq had not got to the point of no return, but if it fell apart sectarianism would spread abroad.
Jeffrey H. Birnbaum / Washington Post:
Lobbyists Foresee Business As Usual  —  Post-Abramoff Rules Expected to Be Merely a Nuisance  —  Some of Washington's top lobbyists say that they expect to find ways around congressional efforts to impose new restrictions on lobbyists' dealings with lawmakers in the wake …
Discussion: BrothersJudd Blog
Timothy L. O'Brien / New York Times:
Why Do So Few Women Reach the Top of Big Law Firms?  —  HUNDREDS of feet above Manhattan, the reception area of Proskauer Rose's headquarters boasts all of the muscular, streamlined ornamentation that symbolizes authority and power in a big city law firm — modern art, contemporary furniture …
Zev Chafets / New York Times:
Ministers of Debate  —  Correction Appended  —  The slogan of Lynchburg, Va., is engraved on the tile floor of its modest airport: "The most interesting spot in the state."  This was the assessment of an early resident of Lynchburg, Thomas Jefferson, who also suggested that someday Lynchburg would be a great metropolis.
Discussion: AtlanticBlog and Rantingprofs
Alan Brinkley / New York Times:
Clear and Present Dangers  —  Four decades ago, Kevin Phillips, a young political strategist for the Republican Party, began work on what became a remarkable book.  In writing "The Emerging Republican Majority" (published in 1969), he asked a very big question about American politics …
Jeanne / Body and Soul:
Camp Nama  —  There are a several very strange items floating in today's front page New York Times piece on Camp Nama, the torture chamber run by Special Operations forces at Baghdad airport.  —  Consider: American soldiers treated prisoners so viciously that even the CIA blanched …
Greg Mitchell / Editor and Publisher:
On 3rd Anniversary: Editorials Dither While Iraq Burns  —  Anyone who hoped that this landmark would inspire the country¿s leading newspapers to finally editorialize for a radical change in war policy has to be disappointed, again.  Calling for "urgent diplomacy" is about as strong as the proposals get.
Discussion: AMERICAblog
Chitra Ragavan / US News:
The Letter of the Law  —  The White House says spying on terror suspects without court approval is ok.  What about physical searches?  —  In the dark days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a small group of lawyers from the White House and the Justice Department began meeting …
Robert Mayer / Publius Pundit:
COME WITH FLOWERS  —  After a flawed — to say the least — referendum in 2004 to allow for unlimited consecutive presidential candidacies, Dictator Alexander Lukashenko is running for the third time for president again today.  People will go to the polls, voting without freedom of conscience …
Discussion: Gateway Pundit and Barcepundit
Anne E. Kornblut / New York Times:
But Will They Love Him Tomorrow?  —  MOST politicians spend their careers working to overcome flaws.  Then there are politicians like Barack Obama.  —  So charismatic that his greatest challenge has been trying to play down expectations during his first Senate term, Mr. Obama's enviable plight …
 
 
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 More Items: 
Todd J. Gillman / Dallas Morning News:
Texas legislators take issue with O'Connor's warnings
Sarah Baxter / Times of London:
'Impeach Bush' chorus grows
Hindrocket / Power Line:
A NEW LOW FOR LOVEN  —  As we've noted before, AP reporter …
Deborah Howell / Washington Post:
Newspapers in an Economic Storm
Judd / Think Progress:
Hume Lies: "No Politician Briefed" …
Tim B. / Tim Blair:
LARRY LATEST  —  Cyclone Larry is about four hours away from the north Queensland coast.
New York Times:
Kos Célèbre
Beth Macy / roanoke.com:
Mudcat crashes the Party
Discussion: MyDD
 Earlier Items: 
Juan / Informed Comment:
Right Blogosphere Scammed by Bogus Document Dump
Ken McCracken / WILLisms.com:
Pundit Roundtable
Discussion: Gateway Pundit
Vicki Haddock / San Francisco Chronicle:
Cindy Sheehan's year of living famously
Discussion: Kesher Talk
MSNBC:
'Patent trolling' firms sue their way to profits
Discussion: Vox Popoli
Zeyad / Washington Post:
One Week in Baghdad  —  BAGHDAD, Sunday, March 12 …
Washington Post:
McCain Campaign Hires 'Best Bricklayer'
Washington Post:
Veterans' Voices On Iraq
Mary Williams Walsh / New York Times:
Major Changes Raise Concerns on Pension Bill
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Jonathan Stempel / Reuters:
A New York judge finds Sirius XM liable for a difficult subscription cancellation process; Sirius says it will appeal but abide by a new “click-to-cancel” rule

Ashley Carman / Bloomberg:
A growing number of podcasters, including Tim Ferriss, are moving away from interviews to monologues or co-hosts, as some well-known guests can be overexposed

Brian Steinberg / Variety:
Sources: NBCUniversal Vice Chairman Bonnie Hammer plans to leave the company at the end of the year; she has been with the company since 2004

 
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