Top Items:
Manuel Roig-Franzia / Washington Post:
Mexican Presidential Rivals Both Claim Win in Tight Vote — MEXICO CITY, July 2 — Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Felipe Calderón each claimed victory in Mexico's presidential election late Sunday night, even though the country's electoral commission said the race …
Discussion:
The Glittering Eye, The Heretik, Booman Tribune, Liberty and Justice and Beautiful Horizons
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James C. McKinley Jr / New York Times:
Electoral Crisis in Mexico as Top 2 Declare Victory — Mexicans voted Sunday in Candelaria Tlapala, near Mexico City. The election capped the most competitive political race in the nation's history. — MEXICO CITY, July 2 — Election officials declared Sunday that they could not immediately determine …
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.
Pete Yost / Associated Press:
War on terror ruling worries GOP lawmakers — WASHINGTON - Two Republican senators said Sunday that Congress must rein in the Supreme Court ruling that international law applies to the Bush administration's conduct in the war on terror. — Thursday's Supreme Court decision embracing Article 3 …
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Robin Toner / New York Times:
Lawmakers Seek Action After Ruling on Detainees
Lawmakers Seek Action After Ruling on Detainees
Discussion:
The Heretik
Haaretz:
Israel rejects militants' ultimatum on prisoner exchange — The bureau of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Monday that Israel rejected an ultimatum issued earlier in the day by Palestinian militants holding an Israel Defense Forces soldier, saying that Israel would not give in to blackmail.
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Jimmy Carter / Washington Post:
We Need Fewer Secrets — The U.S. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) turns 40 tomorrow, the day we celebrate our independence. But this anniversary will not be a day of celebration for the right to information in our country. Our government leaders have become increasingly obsessed with secrecy.
Associated Press:
Al-Zarqawi's cell phone reportedly yields surprises — BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had the phone numbers of senior Iraqi officials stored in his cell phone, according to an Iraqi legislator. — Waiel Abdul-Latif, a member of former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's party …
Discussion:
Liberty and Justice, Outside The Beltway, Power Line, The Jawa Report v3.0 Beta and Blue Crab Boulevard
Agence France Presse:
Britons tire of cruel, vulgar US: poll — LONDON (AFP) - People in Britain view the United States as a vulgar, crime-ridden society obsessed with money and led by an incompetent president whose Iraq policy is failing, according to a newspaper poll. — The United States is no longer a symbol …
Discussion:
AMERICAblog
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Jason DeParle / New York Times:
On Right and Left, a Push for Government Openness — WASHINGTON, July 2 — Exasperated by his party's failure to cut government spending, Senator Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma, is seeking cyberhelp. — Mr. Coburn wants to create a public database, searchable over the Internet …
Discussion:
Democracy Project, Blog for Bell, Thoughts of an Average Woman, Porkbusters and Tapscott's Copy Desk
Glenn Greenwald / Unclaimed Territory:
What is left of Malkin, Hinderaker and Horowitz's credibility? — (updated below) — As I documented at length this weekend, Michelle Malkin, John Hinderaker, Red State, David Horowitz and many others of that sort spent the weekend engaged in the most vicious and self-evidently misguided attacks …
The Big Trunk / Power Line:
THEY ALREADY KNEW THE COLONISTS WERE FED UP — (Courtesy of reader Les Baitzer.)
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.
Warren E. Leary / New York Times:
Crack Is Found in Shuttle's Foam Insulation — CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., July 3 —Inspectors found a crack in the foam insulation of the space shuttle Discovery's external fuel tank early today. NASA managers are meeting to determine whether it will affect a planned liftoff Tuesday afternoon, according to the space agency.
Spengler / Asia Times:
The fraud of primitive authenticity — Two billion war deaths would have occurred in the 20th century if modern societies suffered the same casualty rate as primitive peoples, according to anthropologist Lawrence H Keeley, who calculates that two-thirds of them were at war continuously …
Discussion:
One Hand Clapping
Christopher Mason / New York Times:
Canada to Upgrade the Military and Its Mobility — TORONTO, July 1 — Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservative government has announced the most aggressive upgrade of Canada's military equipment in decades, laying out new expenditures of $15.3 billion to improve transportation capacities.
Discussion:
Blue Crab Boulevard
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 …
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report, Outside The Beltway, The Heretik, Wonkette, Pam's House Blend and BrothersJudd Blog