Top Items:
Mark Mazzetti / New York Times:
Intelligence Chief Is Shifted to Deputy State Dept. Post — John D. Negroponte, whom President Bush installed less than two years ago as the first director of national intelligence, will soon leave his post to become the State Department's second-ranking official, administration officials said Wednesday.
Discussion:
Captain's Quarters, Booman Tribune, First Draft, The Reaction, The Democratic Daily and The Moderate Voice
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Associated Press:
Angry Nixon vowed to 'ruin' diplomatic corps … WASHINGTON (AP) — Embittered by career diplomats during his first term, President Nixon said he wanted to "ruin the Foreign Service" before leaving office, according to newly released State Department documents.
Associated Press:
Negroponte stepping aside as top spy to become deputy secretary of state — WASHINGTON (AP) — National Intelligence Director John Negroponte will resign to become deputy secretary of state, a government official said Wednesday night. — Negroponte took over in 2005 as the nation's …
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo
Deborah Sontag / New York Times:
In Padilla Wiretaps, Murky View of 'Jihad' Case — In 1997, as the government listened in on their phone call, Adham Hassoun, a computer programmer in Broward County, Fla., proposed a road trip to Jose Padilla, a low-wage worker there. The excursion to Tampa would be his treat, Mr. Hassoun said …
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Digby / Hullabaloo:
Psikhushka — I have written before about this amazing essay, with which many of you are no doubt familiar. It was written in December 2005, by former Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky, who knows a lot about its subject — torture. — Bukovsky was a very brave dissident and was widely touted …
Fox News:
SHEEHAN, IRAQ WAR PROTESTERS BREAK UP HOUSE DEMOCRATS' PRESS CONFERENCE — Jan. 3: Peace activist Cindy Sheehan speaks on Capitol Hill. — WASHINGTON — Iraq war protesters broke up a press conference by House Democrats on Wednesday with chants to bring American troops home from Iraq.
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David Edwards / The Raw Story:
Cindy Sheehan, anti-war activists interrupt Democratic press conference — Print page sponsored by Velvet Revolution. — While President Bush and his fellow Republican lawmakers have been the target of many protests since the invasion of Iraq in 2002, this time around …
Bob Fertik / Democrats.com:
BREAKING: Cindy Sheehan Hijacks Pelosi Press Conference
BREAKING: Cindy Sheehan Hijacks Pelosi Press Conference
Discussion:
Redstate
Stephen Singer / Associated Press:
Lieberman Party Now in Hands of Critic — HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - The party Sen. Joe Lieberman created to mount his independent re-election campaign has been seized by one of his critics, and the secretary of state's office said Wednesday that it won't challenge the takeover.
Discussion:
SOTUblog
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Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush Signals Budget Accord — President Bush promised yesterday to produce a plan to balance the federal budget in five years and challenged lawmakers to slash their special pet projects in half next year, embracing priorities of the new Democratic leadership that will assume control of Congress today.
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New York Times:
In Meetings With Allies, Clinton Hones '08 Strategy — The topic was the Democratic sweep in New Hampshire in November, and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton couldn't get enough of it. — Dining in Washington recently with three allies from New Hampshire, which has the first-in-the-nation primary …
Christopher Drew / New York Times:
U.S. Bars Lab From Testing Electronic Voting — A laboratory that has tested most of the nation's electronic voting systems has been temporarily barred from approving new machines after federal officials found that it was not following its quality-control procedures and could not document that it was conducting all the required tests.
Discussion:
CorrenteWire
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Dean Barnett / Hugh Hewitt's TownHall Blog:
A Moment of Savagery - Now a New Hope? — If you're looking for a blogger to feel some pity for Saddam Hussein because his executioners were primitive and rude, you've come to the wrong place. Punch up the Daily Kos and you'll find countless diarists eager to express some sympathy for this particular devil.
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Olivier Guitta / Counterterrorism Blog:
Did Moqtada Al Sadr take part in the actual hanging of Saddam Hussein?
Did Moqtada Al Sadr take part in the actual hanging of Saddam Hussein?
Discussion:
Hot Air
Foreign Policy:
Why Hawks Win — Why are hawks so influential? The answer may lie deep in the human mind. People have dozens of decision-making biases, and almost all favor conflict rather than concession. A look at why the tough guys win more than they should. — National leaders get all sorts of advice in times of tension and conflict.
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Ginny / Chicago Boyz:
We May be Biased Toward Hawks, but We've Become Doves
We May be Biased Toward Hawks, but We've Become Doves
Discussion:
Foreign Policy
Mike Males / New York Times:
This Is Your Brain on Drugs, Dad — WHEN releasing last week's Monitoring the Future survey on drug use, John P. Walters, the director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, boasted that "broad" declines in teenage drug use promise "enormous beneficial consequences not only for our children now …
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TRex / Firedoglake:
Late Nite FDL: And They Call Us 'Unhinged', Partie Deux — We'll, there's just nothing like that good old Right Wing Civility, now is there? … Isn't that special? — Can you imagine the s**t-storm that would erupt if a liberal posted an entry like that on their blog?
Discussion:
Hullabaloo, The People's Republic …, The Radio Equalizer, Polimom Says and The Unapologetic Mexican
George F. Will / Washington Post:
The Right Minimum Wage — A federal minimum wage is an idea whose time came in 1938, when public confidence in markets was at a nadir and the federal government's confidence in itself was at an apogee. This, in spite of the fact that with 19 percent unemployment and the economy contracting …
Tony Mauro / LAW.com:
Rehnquist FBI File Sheds New Light on Drug Dependence, Confirmation Battles — The late Chief Justice William Rehnquist's Senate confirmation battles in 1971 and 1986 were more intense and political than previously known, according to a newly released FBI file that also offers dramatic …
Defense Tech:
THE LAW CATCHES UP TO PRIVATE MILITARIES, EMBEDS — Since the start of the Iraq war, tens of thousands of heavily-armed military contractors have been roaming the country — without any law, or any court to control them. That may be about to change, Brookings Institution Senior Fellow P.W. Singer notes in a Defense Tech exclusive.
Digby / Hullabaloo:
The Healing Process — Following up on my post below, I noticed that the transcript of last night's Shields and Brooks was available and I think it deserves a little bit more attention: … There are so many things in that little exchange that I find apalling I don't know where to start.