Top Items:
David Weigel / Reason Magazine:
It's Something About Those Orange Backgrounds... In the future, all journalism will be done for us by important people posting their thoughts on blogs. Two examples from Daily Kos, where, over the weekend, Cindy Sheehan had announced she was quitting the Democrats. Here's Sheehan again, quitting... the anti-war movement!
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Rick Moran / Right Wing Nut House:
MOTHER SHEEHAN, "GODDESS OF PEACE," ASCENDS TO HEAVEN
MOTHER SHEEHAN, "GODDESS OF PEACE," ASCENDS TO HEAVEN
Discussion:
NewsBusters.org, Blogs of War, Right Wing News, Sister Toldjah, The American Mind, Sigmund, Carl and Alfred and CJR
David Paul Kuhn / The Politico:
Social conservatives bite bullet, back Rudy — Rudy Giuliani, whose positions on abortion and homosexuality mark him as the most socially liberal Republican presidential candidate in more than a generation, is so far winning the contest for the support of social conservatives, according to a new analysis of recent polls.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice, TIME, Central Sanity, Betsy's Page, Captain's Quarters and JammieWearingFool
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Michael Powell / New York Times:
TO TEMPER IMAGE, GIULIANI TRADES GROWL FOR SMILE — ATLANTA — Oh, baby, here it comes. The gray-haired woman raises her hand and compliments His Honor for his Sept. 11 bravery. Then she asks him: — Why does so much of the world hate us? Haven't we failed to understand Arab grievances?
Julian E. Barnes / Los Angeles Times:
Progress in Iraq likely to miss target — Military officers doubt any of the three top goals will be achieved before the September assessment. — BAGHDAD — U.S. military leaders in Iraq are increasingly convinced that most of the broad political goals President Bush laid out early this year …
Kirk Semple / New York Times:
U.S. and Iranian Officials Meet in Baghdad, but Talks Yield No Breakthroughs — The United States and Iran held rare face-to-face talks in Baghdad on Monday, adhering to an agenda that focused strictly on the war in Iraq and on ways the two bitter adversaries could help improve conditions here.
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Dennis Cauchon / USA Today:
Rules 'hiding' trillions in debt — Liability $516,348 per U.S. household — The federal government recorded a $1.3 trillion loss last year — far more than the official $248 billion deficit — when corporate-style accounting standards are used, a USA TODAY analysis shows.
Richard Cohen / Washington Post:
Bush the Neoliberal — Years ago, someone coined the term "neoliberal." I was never sure what it meant, and it has since fallen into disuse, but whatever the case, I'd like to revive (and mangle) the term and apply it — brace yourself — to George W. Bush. He's more liberal than you might think.
Eoin Callan / Financial Times:
Zoellick frontrunner to lead World Bank — Robert Zoellick, former US deputy secretary of state, has emerged as the frontrunner to be the next president of the World Bank. — Senior US administration officials expect a decision on the successor to Paul Wolfowitz, who steps down as bank president …
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Edmund L. Andrews / New York Times:
Lawmakers Push for Big Subsidies for Coal Process — Even as Congressional leaders draft legislation to reduce greenhouse gases linked to global warming, a powerful roster of Democrats and Republicans is pushing to subsidize coal as the king of alternative fuels.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Matt Zeitlin, Wampum, The Washington Note, The Huffington Post …, MyDD and Chicago Tribune
The Prowler / American Spectator:
Sooner Rather Than Later — COBURN OK — Sen. Tom Coburn is mulling an entry into the Republican presidential primary, according to sources inside and outside the Senate. Coburn, a senator from Oklahoma, is believed to be receiving encouragement from a small group of wealthy businessmen …
David A. Patten / Middle East Quarterly:
Is Iraq in a Civil War? — Many politicians have determined Iraq to be in a civil war. "We're not fighting terrorism in Iraq," Rep. John Murtha (Democrat-Penn.) said on January 27, 2006, "We're fighting a civil war in Iraq." [1] He is not alone. On November 27, 2006 …
Spencer S. Hsu / Washington Post:
Campaign Puts New Strain on Secret Service — Big Field and Early Start Force Cuts in Other Efforts — The U.S. Secret Service expects to borrow more than 2,000 immigration officers and federal airport screeners next year to help guard an ever-expanding field of presidential candidates …
Discussion:
This ain't Hell …
Jennifer Loven / Associated Press:
Analysis: The Bush take on U.S. opinion — WASHINGTON — Confronted with strong opposition to his Iraq policies, President Bush decides to interpret public opinion his own way. Actually, he says, people agree with him. — Democrats view the November elections that gave them control …
Peter Berkowitz / Opinion Journal:
The Conservative Mind — The American right is a cauldron of debate; the left isn't. — The left prides itself on, and frequently boasts of, its superior appreciation of the complexity and depth of moral and political life. But political debate in America today tells a different story.
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report
New York Times:
Editorial: Make a Bad Bill Better — The great immigration struggle of 2007 has moved from the Senate chamber in Washington to the continent at large. With Congress taking the week off, it's time for constituents to weigh in. You can be sure of this much: The debate will get louder before it gets better.
Katherine Zoepf / New York Times:
Desperate Iraqi Refugees Turn to Sex Trade in Syria — MARABA, Syria — Back home in Iraq, Umm Hiba's daughter was a devout schoolgirl, modest in her dress and serious about her studies. Hiba, who is now 16, wore the hijab, or Islamic head scarf, and rose early each day to say the dawn prayer before classes.
Mike Glover / Associated Press:
Obama offers universal health care plan — IOWA CITY, Iowa - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama (news, bio, voting record) on Tuesday offered a sweeping health care plan that would provide every citizen a means for coverage and calls on government, businesses and consumers to share the costs of the program.
Darrell Issa / Washington Post:
The Case for Talking to Syria — As distasteful as the Syrian government is, Washington must reconsider its policy of non-engagement with Damascus. Negotiations alone cannot fix the U.S.-Syrian relationship, and we should hold no illusions about the regime of Bashar al-Assad.
Discussion:
democracyarsenal.org
Ron Haskins / Washington Post:
The Rise Of the Bottom Fifth — How to Build on the Gains Of Welfare Reform — Imagine a line composed of every household with children in the United States, arranged from lowest to highest income. Now, divide the line into five equal parts. Which of the groups do you think enjoyed big increases in income since 1991?