Top Items:
Washington Post:
A Dictator's Double Standard — Augusto Pinochet tortured and murdered. His legacy is Latin America's most successful country. — AUGUSTO PINOCHET, who died Sunday at the age of 91, has been vilified for three decades in and outside of Chile, the South American country he ruled for 17 years.
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Robin Wright / Washington Post:
Saudi Ambassador Abruptly Resigns, Leaves Washington — Prince Turki al-Faisal, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States, flew out of Washington yesterday after informing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and his staff that he would be leaving the post after only 15 months on the job …
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The Washington Note, The Next Hurrah, FP Passport, American Footprints, The Agonist, Outside The Beltway and First Draft
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Washington Post:
Car Bombing Kills at Least 59 in Baghdad — A powerful car bomb exploded in central Baghdad early Tuesday morning near a crowd of mostly Shiite day laborers, killing 59 people and wounding 149, Lt. Col. Mahmoud Abdul Aziz of the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.
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CNN:
Suicide truck bomb kills at least 60 in Baghdad … BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — Many of the 60 killed and 220 wounded by a suicide truck bomb blast in central Baghdad Tuesday morning were unemployed Iraqis lured toward the explosion by an offer of work, according to an official with the Iraqi Interior Ministry.
Associated Press:
Dual bombing in central Baghdad kills 57 — BAGHDAD, Iraq - Two car bombs targeting day laborers looking for work exploded within seconds of each other Tuesday on a main square in central Baghdad, killing at least 57 people and wounding more than 150, police said.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice
Gene Johnson / Associated Press:
Trees Being Returned to SeaTac Airport — SEATAC, Wash. (AP) - Christmas trees are going back up at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. — Pat Davis, president of the Port of Seattle commission, which directs airport operations, said late Monday that maintenance staff would restore …
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jules crittenden:
Kofi Annan's Farewell Speech — (Please put on your headphones if you wish to hear this speech translated from the original Bulls**t) — In Missouri today, departing UN Secretary General Kofi Annan delivered these thoughtful reflections on 10 years of learning:
Discussion:
New York Sun, WILLisms.com, Villainous Company, protein wisdom, Gateway Pundit, Power Line and Little Green Footballs
E. J. Dionne Jr / Washington Post:
A Battle Hillary Clinton Should Relish — Hillary Rodham Clinton faces a maddening challenge. Many of the people who like and admire her, who believe she has good values and would make an excellent president, are not sure they are for her because they don't think she can win.
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Beth Fouhy / Associated Press:
Gore chases Oscar nod, possible 2008 bid — NEW YORK - Al Gore is waging a fierce campaign for recognition and an Oscar statuette for his global warming documentary, while reviving talk that he's pursuing a bigger prize: the presidency. — His recent itinerary has been the ultimate in high profile.
USA Today:
USA more pessimistic on Iraq war — WASHINGTON — As President Bush weighs changing course in Iraq, Americans are increasingly pessimistic about the war and want most U.S. troops withdrawn within a year, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Friday through Sunday says.
Jon Cohen / Washington Post:
Poll: 7 Out of 10 Americans Disapprove of Handling of Iraq War — Negative assessments of the war in Iraq — the central issue in last month's midterm election — continue to hold down President Bush's job approval ratings and could cast a pall on the final two years of his presidency.
Washington Post:
To Stem Iraqi Violence, U.S. Aims to Create Jobs — As Iraq descends further into violence and disarray, the Pentagon is turning to a weapon some believe should have been used years ago: jobs. — Members of a small Pentagon task force have gone to the most dangerous areas of Iraq …
Michael Kinsley / Slate:
It's Not Apartheid — JIMMY CARTER'S MORONIC NEW BOOK ABOUT ISRAEL. — In the six decades since the founding of Israel, there have been about one and a half new ideas for solving the most intractable problem on the map of the world. In fact, ever since Britain's Balfour Declaration …
Kevin Carey / The Quick and the Ed:
Why Is It So Important That American Students Learn a Foreign Language? — I ask this after reading the summary of the new Time magazine cover story, "How to Build a Student for the 21st Century." In quoting the chairman of UPS it says that country needs:
Edward Wong / New York Times:
Iraqis Consider Ways to Reduce Power of Cleric — After discussions with the Bush administration, several of Iraq's major political parties are in talks to form a coalition whose aim is to break the powerful influence of the radical Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr within the government, senior Iraqi officials say.
Discussion:
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CNN:
THE SITUATION ROOM — President Bush Stops At State Department To Show He's Listening To New Ideas About Iraq; Rumors Say There May Be Some Effort To Get Rid Of Nouri Al-Maliki; Space Shuttle Discovery Docking With International Space Station In Series Of Dangerous Maneuvers …
Dante Chinni / Christian Science Monitor:
The value of a pro-war blogger's reports from Iraq — Bill Roggio's accounts bring home a feel for what US troops are facing in Iraq. — WASHINGTON - In recent months, the gruesome images and stories emanating from Iraq have hardened the public's perception about the conflict there.
WorldNetDaily:
A devil food is turning our kids into homosexuals — There's a slow poison out there that's severely damaging our children and threatening to tear apart our culture. The ironic part is, it's a "health food," one of our most popular. — Now, I'm a health-food guy, a fanatic …