Top Items:
Sudarsan Raghavan / Washington Post:
Iraq's Sadr Overhauls His Tactics — NAJAF, Iraq — The movement of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has embarked on one of its most dramatic tactical shifts since the beginning of the war. — The 33-year-old populist is reaching out to a broad array of Sunni leaders, from politicians to insurgents …
Discussion:
Informed Comment, The Newshoggers, Unqualified Offerings, Talking Points Memo and The Atlantic Online
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Robert H. Reid / Associated Press:
Military: 7 U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq — BAGHDAD - Bombings killed seven U.S. soldiers in Baghdad and a southern city, the U.S. military said Sunday, and the country's Sunni vice president spoke out against a proposed oil law, clouding the future of a key benchmark for assuring continued U.S. support for the government.
Jerry Seper / Washington Times:
Border agents hit illegals bill — The leadership of all 11,000 nonsupervisory U.S. Border Patrol agents yesterday criticized an immigration compromise by senators and the Bush administration as "piecemeal" legislation that invites future terrorist attacks and fails to secure the nation's borders.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice
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Michael Kranish / Boston Globe:
Bush removes provision requiring back taxes from illegal immigrants
Bush removes provision requiring back taxes from illegal immigrants
Discussion:
Obsidian Wings, Slate, Cadillac Tight, JOSHUAPUNDIT, QandO, Hot Air and Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler
Richard Schickel / Los Angeles Times:
Not everybody's a critic — Sure, anyone with a blog can express an opinion about a book, but true criticism is more than just an opinion. — THE MOST grating words I've read in a newspaper recently were in a New York Times report on the shrinkage of book reviewing in many of the nation's leading newspapers.
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Rick Weiss / Washington Post:
Tainted Chinese Imports Common — Dried apples preserved with a cancer-causing chemical.
Bryan Burrough / New York Times:
Or No Conspiracy? — I have no idea what book wears the crown of longest nonfiction title ever published. Whoever holds the record, it is about to be challenged by Vincent Bugliosi, whose new work, "Reclaiming History," a cellular-level re-examination of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, clocks in at 1,612 pages.
Salena Zito / PittsburghLIVE.com:
Fred's watershed? — TRIBUNE-REVIEW — On the day of the first Southern-state Republican debate on the Fox News Channel, one undeclared GOP candidate performed a media leapfrog. — With the help of one 38-second video clip and a great sense of humor, Fred Thompson …
Michael D. Shear / Washington Post:
Gingrich Assails 'Radical Secularism' — In Speech, Ex-Speaker Praises Falwell, Offers No Hints About His Political Plans — Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich decried a "growing culture of radical secularism" Saturday morning as he hailed the life of Liberty University's late founder …
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, The Carpetbagger Report, TPMCafe blogs, Liberal Values and Rising Hegemon
Des Moines Register:
Mitt Romney leads Republicans — Mitt Romney has sprinted ahead of presidential competitors John McCain and Rudy Giuliani in a new Iowa Poll of likely Republican caucus participants. — The Des Moines Register poll shows Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, is the top choice of 30 percent …
David S. Broder / Washington Post:
Western Allies In the Twilight — The two wounded warriors stood side by side in the sunshine of the White House Rose Garden. Tony Blair and George Bush, partners in a transatlantic alliance that has come a cropper in Iraq, tried to shield each other from the slings and arrows of two nations' reporters.
Greg Miller / Los Angeles Times:
Influx of Al Qaeda, money into Pakistan is seen — U.S. officials say the terrorist network's command base is increasingly being funded by cash coming out of Iraq. — WASHINGTON — A major CIA effort launched last year to hunt down Osama bin Laden has produced no significant leads on his whereabouts …
Discussion:
Counterterrorism Blog, AMERICAblog, Democratic Underground …, The Heretik and Rising Hegemon
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Mark Steyn / National Review:
Re: Why doesn't this surprise me? — Mark, I always thought the requirement in last year's bill was pretty sweet: You had to pay two out of three years' back taxes. Most legal Americans would love that deal: Pay any two years of tax and we'll give you the third for free!
Ruth La Ferla / New York Times:
The Once and Future Pee-wee — IN the 1985 movie "Pee-wee's Big Adventure," the title character turns to a friend and murmurs darkly, "There are a lot of things about me, things you wouldn't understand, things you couldn't understand, things you shouldn't understand."
Discussion:
Liberty Street
Irwin Stelzer / Times of London:
Afghan soldiers mass on border, ready and willing to take on old foe — Anthony Loyd in Ghumruk, eastern Afghanistan — In the late-morning lull that followed the thump of shellfire and chatter of machineguns, the preparations for a small war seemed to be unfolding in the orchards …
Charles Ornstein / Los Angeles Times:
Tale of last 90 minutes of woman's life — County officials express dismay at the events surrounding the recent controversial death at King-Harbor hospital. One nurse has resigned. — In the emergency room at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital, Edith Isabel Rodriguez was seen as a complainer.
Peter Howell / Toronto Star:
Canadians don't care for Sicko — Moore's health-care film gets rough reception — Michael Moore is handing out fake bandages to promote his new film Sicko, an exposé of the failings of the U.S. health care system. — But he may feel like applying a couple to himself after the mauling …