Top Items:
Haaretz:
Nine killed, dozens hurt in Tel Aviv suicide bombing — A Palestinian suicide bomber killed nine people and wounded at least 40 others, six of them seriously, in an explosion near the old central bus station in southern Tel Aviv on Monday afternoon. — Two of the victims died after they had arrived at Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv.
Discussion:
Jerusalem Post, Firedoglake, Yourish.com, Vital Perspective, Outside The Beltway and The Big Pharaoh
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Agence France Presse:
Palestinian militant leaders rally behind Iran — TEHRAN (AFP) - Palestinian militant leaders have rallied behind Iran, vowing to resist pressure to recognise Israel and supporting the Islamic republic in its stand-off with the West over its nuclear programme.
Discussion:
BBC, A Blog For All, Stop The ACLU, PrairiePundit, The Real Ugly American.com, Blue Crab Boulevard and Alternate Brain
Charles Babington / Washington Post:
Anger at Bush May Hurt GOP At Polls — Intense and widespread opposition to President Bush is likely to be a sharp spur driving voters to the polls in this fall's midterm elections, according to strategists in both parties, a phenomenon that could give Democrats a turnout advantage over Republicans for the first time in recent years.
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New York Times:
New Worry Rises After Iran Claims Nuclear Steps — Of all the claims that Iran made last week about its nuclear program, a one-sentence assertion by its president has provoked such surprise and concern among international nuclear inspectors they are planning to confront Tehran about it this week.
Discussion:
Bull Moose, Times of London, Once Upon a Time, QandO, Daily Kos, Captain's Quarters and AMERICAN FUTURE
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Belle Waring / Crooked Timber:
No One Is That Crazy. Right? Ummm...right? — One thing that strikes me as funny about this whole "let's invade Iran" thing...wait, did I actually just type that? I'm looking at the desk and I don't see any glass tube with burnt-up brillo pad in it, so I probably didn't just smoke a glittering rock of yeyo.
Malcolm Moore / Telegraph:
Muslims outraged by new cartoon of Prophet in Hell — An Italian magazine has infuriated Muslims by publishing a cartoon showing the Prophet Mohammed cut in half and burning in Hell. — The drawing appears in Studi Cattolici, a monthly magazine with links to the ultra-conservative Roman Catholic group, Opus Dei.
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Media Matters for America:
Post ombudsman defended editorial's falsehoods as a difference in "views" … In an April 16 column purportedly explaining the inconsistencies between The Washington Post's April 9 editorial titled "A Good Leak" and an article published the same day by staff writers Barton Gellman and Dafna Linzer …
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John Leo / Real Clear Politics:
Bush Was Right About Iraq's Quest For Uranium — In a surprising editorial, The Washington Post deviated from the conventional anti-Bush media position on two counts. It said President Bush was right to declassify parts of a National Intelligence Estimate to make clear why he thought Saddam Hussein was seeking nuclear weapons.
David D. Kirkpatrick / New York Times:
Demonstrations on Immigration Harden a Divide — SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., April 14 — Al and Diane Kitlica have not paid close attention to the immigration debate in Congress. But when more than 100,000 mostly Hispanic demonstrators marched through Phoenix this week, the Kitlicas noticed.
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Ronald Brownstein / Los Angeles Times:
Blame Builds More Barriers in Immigration Debate — Does chutzpah translate into Spanish? — It's a reasonable question after the joint statement House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) issued last week about the impasse blocking congressional action …
Lydia Saad / Gallup:
Congress Approval at 12-Year Low — Rating slipped four percentage points since March — PRINCETON, NJ — Public approval of the job Congress is doing has dipped to its lowest level of 2006, and is now the worst Gallup has recorded since the closing days of the Democratic majority in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1994.
Lizette Alvarez / New York Times:
Outrage at Funeral Protests Pushes Lawmakers to Act — Members of Westboro Baptist Church demonstrating in February in Anoka, Minn., near the funeral for Cpl. Andrew Kemple, who was killed in Iraq. People opposed to the church's views carried flags nearby.
USA Today:
'Roe v. Wade': The divided states of America — COLUMBUS, Ohio — Two hours after South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds signed an abortion ban last month, NARAL Pro-Choice America blasted an e-mail to its supporters: "Is your state next?" — The South Dakota legislation and the abortion rights group's warning …
Time:
America's 10 Best Senators — Those who make a difference in the U.S. Senate — and five Senators who are falling short — By law, just about anyone can be a U.S. Senator. The Constitution requires only that you have reached your 30th birthday, reside in the state you represent and have held American citizenship for nine years.
Tbogg / ...a somewhat popular blogger:
We were liberals once and had dry pants — Expect the bedwetting set and their neocon overlords to attempt to make a big hoohah over the the Euston Manifesto for the next week or so. — What is the Euston Manifesto, you might rightly ask. — Well, since you asked so nicely …
Andrew Buncombe / Independent:
Neil Young sets his sights on Bush — He is country rock's biggest icon, and he is angry. Recorded in secret, his forthcoming album savages the war in Iraq. One track says it all: 'Impeach the President' — It started as a rumour - gossip shared by fans on internet chat sites.
Discussion:
Stephen Taylor
Bill Crawford / National Review:
Generals, See Progress — The struggle to form a unity government in Iraq continues, but signs of hope are emerging. One of the sticking points continues to be Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari, who has so far refused to resign; however, on Sunday the Iraqi Shia Alliance reported it was close to a deal to replace him.