Top Items:
Jeffrey Gettleman / New York Times:
Shiite Fighters Clash With G.I.'s and Iraqi Forces — BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 26 — American and Iraqi government forces clashed with Shiite militiamen in Baghdad on Sunday night in the most serious confrontation in months, and Iraqi security officials said 17 people had been killed in a mosque, including its 80-year-old imam.
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
16 Sadr Loyalists Killed in Assault — U.S.-Iraqi Mission Heightens Tensions With Shiite Cleric — BAGHDAD, March 26 — U.S. and Iraqi special forces killed at least 16 followers of the Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on Sunday in a twilight assault on what the U.S. military said was a …
Discussion:
The Reality-Based Community
Jeffrey Gettleman / New York Times:
30 Beheaded Bodies Found; Iraqi Death Squads Blamed — BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 26 — The bodies of 30 beheaded men were found on a main highway near Baquba this evening, providing more evidence that the death squads in Iraq are becoming out of control. — Interior Ministry officials …
Washington Post:
Iraqi Doctor Admits to Killings — BAGHDAD, March 26 — A doctor in the northern city of Kirkuk has admitted to killing at least 35 Iraqi police officers and Army soldiers by giving them lethal injections, reopening their wounds and engaging in other deadly acts as they were being treated in Kirkuk Hospital …
Don Van Natta Jr / New York Times:
Bush Was Set on Path to War, Memo by British Adviser Says — LONDON — In the weeks before the United States-led invasion of Iraq, as the United States and Britain pressed for a second United Nations resolution condemning Iraq, President Bush's public ultimatum to Saddam Hussein was blunt: Disarm or face war.
Los Angeles Times:
500,000 Pack Streets to Protest Immigration Bills — The rally, part of a massive mobilization of immigrants and their supporters, may be the largest L.A. has seen. — A crowd estimated by police at more than 500,000 boisterously marched in Los Angeles on Saturday to protest federal legislation …
Discussion:
JunkYardBlog, The Corner on National …, PA Pundits, Don Surber, Pensito Review and Washington Post
RELATED ITEMS:
Nathan / NathanNewman.org:
The Future Marches in LA — and Denver, Chicago and... 500,000 people marched yesterday in Los Angeles against making being a global economic refugee a felony — and they were joined by hundreds of thousands more in Denver (50,000), Phoenix (20,000) Houston, and other cities across the country …
John Amato / Crooks and Liars:
Markos of Daily Kos on "Reliable Sources" — Markos of Daily Kos on "Reliable Sources" — Markos appeared on "Reliable Sources," today and explained the impact bloggers are having in politics today. He also talked about the Republican noise machine and James Brady's lack …
Discussion:
Right Wing News, Firedoglake, Daily Kos, Brilliant at Breakfast, AMERICAblog, CorrenteWire and Media Blog on National …
RELATED ITEMS:
Steven Senne / Newsweek:
Supreme Court: Detainees' Rights-Scalia Speaks His Mind — Scalia at the New England School of Law on March 15 — April 3, 2006 issue - The Supreme Court this week will hear arguments in a big case: whether to allow the Bush administration to try Guantánamo detainees …
Discussion:
Stop The ACLU, MyDD, Big Brass Blog, Think Progress, Donklephant, Below The Beltway, JunkYardBlog, Obsidian Wings, Atlas Shrugs, AMERICAblog, PunditGuy and Preemptive Karma
RELATED ITEMS:
Marty Lederman / SCOTUSblog:
Justice Scalia Announces Opposition to Trials in Civil Courts …
Justice Scalia Announces Opposition to Trials in Civil Courts …
Discussion:
OrinKerr.com
Sarah Kershaw / New York Times:
Seeking Fiscal Health Without Gas Tax — CORVALLIS, Ore. — Two professors were cruising around the campus of Oregon State University here in a Ford Explorer. A wireless black box, mounted on the dashboard, tracked the miles in a test of a per-mile fee system that state officials said might …
RELATED ITEMS:
Jane Galt / Asymmetrical Information:
Healthcare, Part IV — So here are the things I care about, when I think about healthcare: … All that's very nice . . . but how do we bell the cat? — Here is my suggestion. It is simple and elegant enough to be explained in a single sentence, yet powerful enough to meet all the criteria above:
Joe Garofoli / San Francisco Chronicle:
Evangelical teens rally in S.F. — More than 25,000 evangelical Christian youth landed Friday in San Francisco for a two-day rally at AT&T Park against "the virtue terrorism" of popular culture, and they were greeted by an official city condemnation and a clutch of protesters who said their event amounted to a "fascist mega-pep rally."
Andrew G. Bostom / The American Thinker:
Under the Scimitar of Damocles — Abdul Rahman faced death at the hands of our Afghan allies for the "crime" of converting to Christianity. This fate is no fluke, not a brutal Afghan variant on the practice of "tolerant" Islam. Death for apostacy is part and parcel of Islamic scripture and tradition.
Discussion:
neo-neocon, The Glittering Eye, Chicago Tribune, Rantings of a Sandmonkey, Demonrats, Church and State, sugiero and Dr. Sanity
Joy Jones / Washington Post:
'Marriage Is for White People' — I grew up in a time when two-parent families were still the norm, in both black and white America. Then, as an adult, I saw divorce become more commonplace, then almost a rite of passage. Today it would appear that many — particularly in the black community …
Michael Sokolove / New York Times:
Why Is Michael Steele a Republican Candidate? — It was last spring when Karl Rove called Michael Steele, the lieutenant governor of Maryland, to sell him on running for the Senate, and to close the deal, Rove paused to put President Bush on the phone. As Steele recalls it …
Washington Post:
Terrorist 007, Exposed — For almost two years, intelligence services around the world tried to uncover the identity of an Internet hacker who had become a key conduit for al-Qaeda. The savvy, English-speaking, presumably young webmaster taunted his pursuers, calling himself Irhabi — Terrorist — 007.
Randy Lewis / Los Angeles Times:
Singer Found Gold and Inspiration in California — Buck Owens, the Bakersfield rebel who brought a distinctly California flavor to country music in the 1950s and '60s and built a Central Valley-based multimedia empire belying his "Hee Haw"-bred bumpkin persona, died Saturday. He was 76.