Top Items:
Examiner:
La Shawn Barber: Supreme Court hears race-based school assignment arguments — WASHINGTON - During legalized racial segregation, students were assigned to schools based on race. Whites and blacks were educated in separate facilities. In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that this practice …
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Linda Greenhouse / New York Times:
Court Reviews Race as Factor in School Plans — By the time the Supreme Court finished hearing arguments on Monday on the student-assignment plans that two urban school systems use to maintain racial integration, the only question was how far the court would go in ruling such plans unconstitutional.
David Stout / New York Times:
At Hearing, Gates Says U.S. Not Winning War in Iraq — President Bush's nominee to be Secretary of Defense said today that the United States is not winning the war in Iraq, and that an American failure there could help to ignite "a regional conflagration" in the Middle East.
Discussion:
liberal catnip
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Sheryl Gay Stolberg / New York Times:
Bush Meets With Rival of Iraqi Leader
Bush Meets With Rival of Iraqi Leader
Discussion:
Unqualified Offerings, The Road to Surfdom, Informed Comment, Matthew Yglesias, LiberalOasis and War and Piece
Des Moines Register:
Clinton reaches out to Iowans about 2008 — The senator is calling Democrats to gauge support for a possible White House run. — Sen. Hillary Clinton began making calls Monday to Iowa Democrats about the state's political landscape with an eye toward its 2008 presidential nominating caucuses, aides to Clinton said.
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Marc Kaufman / Washington Post:
NASA Plans Lunar Outpost — Permanent Base at Moon's South Pole Envisioned by 2024 — NASA unveiled plans yesterday to set up a small and ultimately self-sustaining settlement of astronauts at the south pole of the moon sometime around 2020 — the first step in an ambitious plan to resume manned exploration of the solar system.
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Warren E. Leary / New York Times:
NASA Plans Permanent Moon Base — NASA announced plans on Monday for a permanent base on the Moon, to be started soon after astronauts return there around 2020. — The agency's deputy administrator, Shana Dale, said the United States would develop rockets and spacecraft to get people to the Moon and establish a rudimentary base.
Examiner:
How to end AP's "60 Minutes Moment" on Iraqi Sources — You've probably not read much about it because only a handful of mainstream media outlets have covered it, but the Associated Press - for decades America's largest and most trusted wire news service - is at the center of a credibility crisis largely of its own making.
Glenn Greenwald / Unclaimed Territory:
Howard Kurtz speaks on Jose Padilla: just some leg shackles for the Dirty Bomber — Howard Kurtz, the media critic for both CNN and The Washington Post, participated in an online chat yesterday, and was asked about the Jose Padilla story in yesterday's New York Times. This is what ensued:
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Will Wilkinson / Cato-at-liberty:
Is Rawlsekianism the Future? — I see the man every day, but today I can't go two mouse clicks through the political opinion thinkosphere without tripping over Brink Lindsey, Cato's own VP for research, and his article on liberal-libertarian fusionism in this week's New Republic. [Free version at Cato.]
Discussion:
TAPPED, Political Animal, Matthew Yglesias, Ezra Klein, QandO, Reason Magazine, Greg Mankiw's Blog, The Volokh Conspiracy and Dynamist Blog
jules crittenden:
A Dream of Mature Nations — A number of Canadians took offense recently to a Boston Herald column in which I slammed Canada and Europe in general for failing to hold up their end in this war for democracy, freedom and security. Specificially, I slammed them for being smug democracies …
Robert Tait / Guardian:
Hardliners turn on Ahmadinejad for watching women dancers — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, who flaunts his ideological fervour, has been accused of undermining Iran's Islamic revolution after television footage appeared to show him watching a female song and dance show.
CNN:
Car bombs, gunmen kill 29 in Baghdad … BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — A trio of car bombs ripped through a southwestern Baghdad neighborhood Tuesday morning, killing at least 14 people and wounding 25 more, Baghdad emergency police said. — The attack took place near a gasoline (petrol) station around 10 a.m. (2 a.m. ET)
Political Radar:
Nearing '08 Decision, Pataki Heads to New Hampshire and Iowa — ABC News' Teddy Davis and Karuna Seshasai Report: As he nears a decision on whether to run for president in 2008, Gov. George Pataki (R-NY) is planning to travel to New Hampshire and Iowa on Wednesday.
Vanity Fair:
I: About That Cakewalk ... I remember sitting with Richard Perle in his suite at London's Grosvenor House hotel and receiving a private lecture on the importance of securing victory in Iraq. "Iraq is a very good candidate for democratic reform," he said. "It won't be Westminster overnight …
Discussion:
Roger Ailes
Renae Merle / Washington Post:
Census Counts 100,000 Contractors in Iraq — There are about 100,000 government contractors operating in Iraq, not counting subcontractors, a total that is approaching the size of the U.S. military force there, according to the military's first census of the growing population of civilians operating in the battlefield.
Daniel Zwerdling / NPR:
Soldiers Say Army Ignores, Punishes Mental Anguish — Medical records show that when Tyler Jennings returned from Iraq last year, he was severely depressed and used drugs to cope. When the sergeants who ran his platoon found out, they started to haze him.
Bill Roggio / The Fourth Rail:
The Military and The Media — FALLUJAH, IRAQ: I've completed the first leg of the journey to Iraq, after having moved through Dubai, Kuwait and Baghdad. I am now at Camp Fallujah. While in Fallujah, I'll embed with a Marine Police Transition Team (PTT) and also meet with the Civil Affairs Group.
Raymond Ibrahim / Los Angeles Times:
Islam gets concessions; infidels get conquered — What they capture, they keep. When they lose, they complain to the U.N. — IN THE DAYS before Pope Benedict XVI's visit last Thursday to the Hagia Sophia complex in Istanbul, Muslims and Turks expressed fear, apprehension and rage.