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Associated Press:
U.S. Prepares for 'Day Without Immigrants' — Thousands of illegal immigrants and their allies across the country plan a show of force Monday to illustrate how much immigrants matter in the U.S. economy. — Some will skip work, others will protest at lunch breaks, school walkouts or at rallies after work.
Discussion:
Confederate Yankee, Hot Air, RightWinged.com, The Green Knight, True Blue Liberal and Sweetness & Light
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StrategyPage:
Why Al Qaeda Is Retreating From Iraq — April 30, 2006: Despite the many brickbats of the media, al Qaeda has been defeated in Iraq, and is now retreating to lick its wounds where it can. If it can. Just over four and a half years, al Qaeda has gone from being the dominant terrorist group …
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway, Newsweek, NewsHog, The Belmont Club, The Heretik, TigerHawk, Dr. Sanity, The Strata-Sphere and Blue Crab Boulevard
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William Kristol / Weekly Standard:
"Iran Is Not Iraq"
"Iran Is Not Iraq"
Discussion:
The Corner on National …, Dinocrat, A Daily Briefing on Iran, Power Line and Middle Earth Journal
New York Times:
Sharp Reaction to G.O.P. Plan on Gas Rebate — WASHINGTON, April 30 — The Senate Republican plan to mail $100 checks to voters to ease the burden of high gasoline prices is eliciting more scorn than gratitude from the very people it was intended to help. — Aides for several Republican …
Discussion:
JustOneMinute, Captain's Quarters, Observer, MyDD, NewDonkey.com, TalkLeft, Donklephant, Billmon, The Next Hurrah, TAPPED, The Moderate Voice, Bark Bark Woof Woof, Shakespeare's Sister, Brilliant at Breakfast, Brendan Nyhan, QandO, PoliBlog, Midtopia, The All Spin Zone, Betsy's Page, Pam's House Blend, Middle Earth Journal, KnoxViews, The Left Coaster, ScrappleFace and BlondeSense
John O'Neil / New York Times:
Bush Hails a 'Turning Point' in Iraq — President Bush today called the formation of a new Iraqi government "a turning point," after hearing from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld about their weekend meeting with that country's prime minister designate.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo
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John Miner / lfpress.ca:
Pesticides may affect penis size — A renowned U.S. scientist supports a ban on the chemicals for cosmetic purposes. — A renowned U.S. scientist who has documented fertility and sex changes — including decreasing penis size — due to environmental contamination says he wouldn't apply pesticides on his own lawn.
Discussion:
The LLama Butchers, Blue Crab Boulevard, Outside The Beltway and Environmental Economics
Washington Post:
Blog Readers Unmasked — Think the people who while away their hours reading and commenting on political blogs are slovenly twenty-somethings with nothing better to do? — Think again, said a survey last week by Blogads, a company that many leading political blogs have used for ad placements.
Libby Quaid / Associated Press:
Sen. Biden Suggests Decentralized Iraq — WASHINGTON - The senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee proposed Monday that Iraq be divided into three separate regions — Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni — with a central government in Baghdad. — In an op-ed essay in Monday's edition …
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Charles Lane / Washington Post:
Alito May Tilt Vote in Reargued Cases — The Supreme Court's newest justice, Samuel A. Alito Jr., has yet to write a signed opinion — majority, concurring or dissenting. His vote has been recorded in only two cases so far. — But it won't be long before Alito makes his mark.
Discussion:
BrothersJudd Blog
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Sudarsan Raghavan / Washington Post:
Divisions Cast Aside in Cry for Darfur — Clutching signs that read "Never Again," thousands of protesters from across religious and political divides descended on the Mall yesterday along with celebrities and politicians to urge President Bush to take stronger measures to end the violence …
David Thomson / New York Times:
Films of Infamy — IN the week or so before the film "United 93" opened, there were fretful questions being asked, like "Is America ready?" and "Is such a movie a form of exploitation?" — Now that it has opened — and Paul Greengrass's film is a good one — a small wave of self-congratulation has begun to break across the country.
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Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush's New Top Aide Makes His TV Debut — White House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten made his television debut in his new role yesterday, describing his West Wing shakeup as an attempt "to get our mojo back" at a time when a politically weakened President Bush faces election-year challenges over war, immigration and energy costs.
Fouad Ajami / Opinion Journal:
A Sage in Christendom — A personal tribute to Bernard Lewis. — Bernard Lewis came to the New World in the nick of time. Fate—or, more appropriately, history—decreed his American journey and the direction it would take. The historian, who will turn 90 in a handful of days …
Discussion:
FIRST THINGS
Telegraph:
UN is like the Twilight Zone, says Bolton — In his first interview with a British newspaper, America's ambassador to the United Nations tells Alec Russell why it is in dire need of reform — John Bolton was in his element. America's famously blunt UN ambassador and hundreds …
Eric / Is That Legal?:
The Puzzling Case of "Mixed" Lawprof Blogs — esponding to Ann Althouse's paper for Paul Caron's Bloggership Conference on the virtues of multi-topic blogging, Larry Solum blogs here for the proposition that a lawprof who wishes to blog about serious scholarly stuff and other topics probably ought …
Discussion:
Discourse.net, Concurring Opinions, 3L Epiphany, Ideoblog, Timothy K. Armstrong, Althouse, Conglomerate Blog and OrinKerr.com
Dexter Filkins / New York Times:
Votes Counted. Deals Made. Chaos Wins. — TENT CITY The number of Shiite families in refugee camps is growing. About 14,000 families have been displaced. — BAGHDAD, Iraq — THE country's new leaders were only five days into their jobs Thursday morning, when a BMW filled …
Washington Post:
Polygraph Results Often in Question — The CIA, the FBI and other federal agencies are using polygraph machines more than ever to screen applicants and hunt for lawbreakers, even as scientists have become more certain that the equipment is ineffective in accurately detecting when people are lying.
New York Times:
Mock Iraqi Villages in Mojave Prepare Troops for Battle — FORT IRWIN, Calif. — Three years into the conflict in Iraq, the front line in the American drive to prepare troops for insurgent warfare runs through a cluster of mock Iraqi villages deep in the Mojave Desert, nearly 10,000 miles …