Top Items:
Telegraph:
Saddam's end: tormented as his death loomed — In pictures: Life and times of Saddam Hussein — Hands tied behind his back, feet bound, Saddam Hussein shuffled on to the red-painted metal gallows for his execution yesterday. — Iraqi TV showed Saddam Hussein being taken to the gallows and the noose being put over his head
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John F. Burns / New York Times:
Hussein Video Grips Iraq; Attacks Go On — After nearly three decades of living with the brutal repression of Saddam Hussein and the violent aftermath of his overthrow by American troops, Iraq responded with a mixture of rejoicing, violence and muted reflection on Saturday to the news …
David Kaspar / Davids Medienkritik:
Post Execution Media Reaction: The Death Penalty - Really a Wedge Issue? — (By Ray D.) — Majorities in USA and Europe Favor Saddam Execution — The recent results of a poll conducted by Novatris/Harris for the French daily Le Monde on the death penalty shocked the editors and writers at Germany's left-leaning SPIEGEL ONLINE.
Najmaldin Karim / New York Times:
Justice, but No Reckoning — MY personal battle with Saddam Hussein — which began in 1972 when I abandoned my medical career in Mosul, Iraq, and joined the Kurdish armed resistance — is at an end. To execute such a criminal, a man who reveled in his atrocities, is an act of justice.
Discussion:
normblog
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Video: Saddam's execution uncut; Update: Translation added; Update: Buried in Tikrit
Video: Saddam's execution uncut; Update: Translation added; Update: Buried in Tikrit
Byron Calame / New York Times:
Truth, Justice, Abortion and the Times Magazine — THE cover story on abortion in El Salvador in The New York Times Magazine on April 9 contained prominent references to an attention-grabbing fact. "A few" women, the first paragraph indicated, were serving 30-year jail terms for having had abortions.
Times of London:
Science told: hands off gay sheep — Experiments that claim to 'cure' homosexual rams spark anger — SCIENTISTS are conducting experiments to change the sexuality of "gay" sheep in a programme that critics fear could pave the way for breeding out homosexuality in humans.
New York Times:
And Now, a Word From Chile ... Everyone who followed the debate about privatizing Social Security back in 2005 has vivid memories of the Chilean model. Sometimes it seemed impossible to get through any discussion of fixing Social Security without hearing a free-market paean to the way Chile …
Richard A. Clarke / Washington Post:
While You Were at War . . . In every administration, there are usually only about a dozen barons who can really initiate and manage meaningful changes in national security policy. For most of 2006, some of these critical slots in the Bush administration have been vacant …
Washington Post:
Localities Operate Intelligence Centers To Pool Terror Data — 'Fusion' Facilities Raise Privacy Worries As Wide Range of Information Is Collected — Frustrated by poor federal cooperation, U.S. states and cities are building their own network of intelligence centers led by police to help detect and disrupt terrorist plots.
Dahlia Lithwick / Slate:
THE 10 MOST OUTRAGEOUS CIVIL LIBERTIES VIOLATIONS OF 2006. — I love those year-end roundups—ubiquitous annual lists of greatest films and albums and lip glosses and tractors. It's reassuring that all human information can be wrestled into bundles of 10.
Andy Soltis / New York Post:
HEZ PAY-PER-SLAY — 'REWARDS' ROCKETS VS. ISRAEL — Hezbollah and its Iranian backers are rewarding Palestinian terrorists with thousands of dollars for each homemade rocket that hits southern Israel, according to Israeli intelligence. — The size of the payoffs depends on the number …
Discussion:
Atlas Shrugs
Nick Cohen / Observer:
Labour's NHS is a real tonic for the Tories — The sight of Hazel Blears standing on a picket line outside a Salford hospital seemed a traditional scene from the last days of a Labour government. From 1929 to 1974, radical politicians would come to power determined to make the lives of the majority a little bit better.
Michael Beschloss / Newsweek:
Ford's Long Shadow — An unlikely president, Gerald Ford steadied America and, in an unpublished interview, mused about her fate. — Vice President Gerald Ford and wife Betty escort First Lady Pat Nixon and President Richard Nixon across the South Lawn to Marine 1 following Nixon's farewell statement on Aug. 9, 1974.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo
Rob Crilly / Times of London:
Hunt for Al-Qaeda men in Mogadishu — SOMALIA's prime minister has asked clan elders in Mogadishu to surrender Al-Qaeda suspects who are believed to be sheltering in the city after his forces, with Ethiopian military support, drove out Islamic militias which controlled the capital.
Discussion:
PrairiePundit
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Sydney Morning Herald:
Pakistan could become next US nightmare — IT HAS more than twice as many people as Iran, six times more than Iraq, many primed for Islamic extremism by a legacy of poverty and illiteracy left by decades of misrule by corrupt secular leaders, civilian and military.