Top Items:
MSNBC:
Transcript for July 2 — MS. ANDREA MITCHELL: Our issues this Sunday: Partisan battles on Capitol Hill, Iraq, immigration, flag-burning, and a Supreme Court ruling against the president's claim of wartime powers, all setting the stage for the November midterm elections.
Discussion:
Firedoglake, NewsBusters.org, Angry Bear, Obsidian Wings, Outside The Beltway, Pensito Review, Eschaton and Daily Kos
RELATED ITEMS:
Mark Steyn / Chicago Sun Times:
Court finds a right to jihad in the Constitution — There are several ways to fight a war. On the one hand, you can put on a uniform, climb into a tank, rumble across a field and fire on the other fellows' tank. On the other, you can find a 12-year-old girl, persuade her to try …
Mark / Mark in Mexico:
Mexico presidential election - too close to call — TV Azteca's exit polling calls it a tie. TV Azteca won't release actual data if it falls within the margin of error (+/-1.6% — according to TV Azteca). — I'll update this post as things develop. — UPDATE I, 8:48 pm: Per TV Azteca …
RELATED ITEMS:
Gateway Pundit:
Mexican Presidential Election Roundup — Exit polls have the presidential election between the more Conservative Felipe Calderon of the ruling party and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador the Leftist candidate of Hugo Chavez locked in a tie. — Presidential candidate Felipe Calderon …
Discussion:
Assorted Babble
Traci Carl / Associated Press:
Mexico Presidential Race Too Close to Call — Mexico's presidential election was too close to call Sunday, with a leftist offering himself as a savior to the poor and a conservative free-trader both declaring themselves the winner. Officials said they won't know who won for days.
Discussion:
Big Lizards
Richard Stengel / Time:
No One Gets a Blank Check — The tension between liberty and security is as old as the Republic—and as new as the latest high-tech listening device. In wartime, that tension very often plays itself out as a battle between the White House and the press. It is doing so again now.
RELATED ITEMS:
Associated Press:
NYT: Bank program not news to terrorists — NEW YORK - Published reports that the U.S. was monitoring international banking transactions were not news to the terrorists who were its target because the Bush administration had already "talked openly" about the effort, The New York Times' top editor said Sunday.
New York Times:
A New Partnership Binds Old Republican Rivals — John McCain and George W. Bush had notable differences in the 2000 Republican primary season, left. But by Mr. Bush's re-election bid in 2004, the relationship had mellowed, at least publicly. — After years of competitive and often contentious dealings …
Philip Recchia / New York Post:
COPYCATTY COULTER PILFERS PROSE: PRO — July 2, 2006 — Conservative scribe Ann Coulter cribbed liberally in her latest book, "Godless," according to a plagiarism expert. — John Barrie, the creator of a leading plagiarism-recognition system, claimed he found at least three instances of what he calls …
Discussion:
James Wolcott, The Rude Pundit, Bark Bark Woof Woof, Firedoglake, The Heretik, COUNTERCOLUMN and PoliPundit.com
RELATED ITEMS:
The Raw Story:
Paper confirms Coulter plagiarism reported online first — "Conservative scribe Ann Coulter cribbed liberally in her latest book, Godless, according to a plagiarism expert," reports The New York Post today. — "John Barrie, the creator of a leading plagiarism-recognition system …
Discussion:
News Hounds
T. F. Boggs / t.f. boggs:
Interview With An Iraqi General — I wrote a story for Michael Yon's Frontline Forum a week ago about the town I am stationed in right now named Qayyarah. Qayyarah is a model for other Iraqi cities because it was once a haven for terrorists but is now safe enough for anyone to travel around in without fear of terrorists.
RELATED ITEMS:
MisterSnitch / physorg.com:
Nanotechnology 'fertile' for energy breakthrough — Thinking small may help solve one of the world's biggest problems — the need for alternative energy sources — according to scientists attending the first Energy Nanotechnology International Conference held June 26-28 at MIT.
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
The Unstoppable Cuban Spring — By Oswaldo José Payá Sardiñas — HAVANA — In March 2003 dozens of leaders of Cuba's Varela Project and other human rights defenders were detained, subjected to summary trials, condemned to many years in prison, and confined in the most inhumane and cruel conditions.
Discussion:
jameshudnall.com
Charles Lane / Washington Post:
Kennedy Reigns Supreme on Court — With O'Connor's Departure, Sole Swing Voter Wields His Moderating Force — It was the O'Connor court. Now it may be the Kennedy court. — The Supreme Court's just-concluded 2005-2006 term was a historic one, in which two new justices …
Discussion:
SCOTUSblog
RELATED ITEMS:
WoW Team / Winds of Change.NET:
Monday's Winds of War: 3 July 2006 — Welcome! Our goal at Winds of Change.NET is to give you one power-packed briefing of insights, news and trends from the global War on Terror that leaves you stimulated, informed, and occasionally amused every Monday & Friday.
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Hardcover Business Best Sellers — THE WORLD IS FLAT, by Thomas L. Friedman. (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $30.) A columnist for the New York Times analyzes 21st-century economics and foreign policy and presents an overview of globalization trends. — FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner.
Discussion:
David Sirota
Matt / The Great Society:
Bush Reportedly Instituted NSA Surveillance of Calls 7mos. Prior to 9/11 — Bloomberg is reporting that the Bush administration began spying on the phone calls of Americans months before the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, according to lawyers dealing with the AT&T lawsuit.
Discussion:
AMERICAblog
RELATED ITEMS:
Time:
The Democrats' New Populism — The best symbol of how the party hopes to take back the Senate this year may be Montana candidate Jon Tester's flattop — When Jon Tester was 9 years old, he lost the middle three fingers of his left hand in a meat grinder.