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7:45 AM ET, July 9, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Rasmussen Reports:
Skeptical of Performers' Motives, Public Tunes Out Live Earth Event  —  The Live Earth concert promoted by former Vice President Al Gore received plenty of media coverage and hype, but most Americans tuned out.  Just 22% said they followed news stories about the concert Somewhat or Very Closely.
RELATED:
Tahira Yaqoob / Daily Mail:
Live Earth branded a foul-mouthed flop  —  Live Earth has been branded a foul-mouthed flop.  —  Organisers of the global music concert - punctuated by swearing from presenters and performers - had predicted massive viewing figures.  —  But BBC's live afternoon television coverage attracted …
Discussion: Hot Air
Reuters:
Live Earth Internet streaming sets record: MSN
Discussion: The Huffington Post
David E. Sanger / New York Times:
White House Debate Rises on Iraq Pullback  —  White House officials fear that the last pillars of political support among Senate Republicans for President Bush's Iraq strategy are collapsing around them, according to several administration officials and outsiders they are consulting.
Washington Post:
All Grown Up — and Going to War  —  July is a month I sincerely hoped would never come.  —  At the end of this month, my young son, my only child, deploys with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit.  His departure had been six months away, three months; now it is a matter of weeks.
RELATED:
The Corner:   It's All About Me  —  Here's a primal scream that appeared in today's WaPo.
Faiz / Think Progress:
Kristol: Bush Timed Clemency To Get Political Cover By Attacking Clinton  —  This morning, the Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol — who accurately predicted the President's decision to commute Libby's sentence — suggested the order was timed to provide political cover for the decision by attacking President Clinton.
Discussion: Angry Bear and Norwegianity
RELATED:
ABCNEWS:
White House Subpoena Battle Escalates
R.J. Hillhouse / Washington Post:
Who Runs the CIA?  Outsiders for Hire.  —  Red alert: Our national security is being outsourced.  —  The most intriguing secrets of the "war on terror" have nothing to do with al-Qaeda and its fellow travelers.  They're about the mammoth private spying industry that all but runs U.S. intelligence operations today.
Art Moore / WorldNetDaily:
Muslims declare sovereignty over U.S., UK  —  Hear Islamic leaders in London: 'Queen Elizabeth, go to hell!'  —  Across town from the site of the recent attempted car-bomb attacks, several thousand Muslims gathered in front of the London Central Mosque to applaud fiery preachers prophesying …
Joe Hagan / New York Magazine:
Alas, Poor Couric  —  But pity her not.  —  F  —  rom outside the sleek glass chamber of the CBS Evening News set, you can see her: alone in a prim black pantsuit and pearls, shuffling a stack of papers at the wide, half-moon desk.  Sitting stiff and still, she looks dwarfed under …
Joby Warrick / Washington Post:
Tunneling Near Iranian Nuclear Site Stirs Worry  —  The sudden flurry of digging seen in recent satellite photos of a mountainside in central Iran might have passed for ordinary road tunneling.  But the site is the back yard of Iran's most ambitious and controversial nuclear facility …
Discussion: The Washington Note
RELATED:
Ynetnews:
US closer to cracking Iran's nuclear secrets
Discussion: The Strata-Sphere
Bill Roggio / The Fourth Rail:
Muqtada al Sadr back in Iran  —  Muqtada al-Sadr.  —  Mahdi Army leader leaves Iraq and goes to Iran for second time this year  —  Muqtada al Sadr, the leader of the Shia Mahdi Army and the Sadrist bloc in parliament, has left Iraq and is in Iran, military sources told Reuters.
RELATED:
Reuters:
Iraq's Sadr back in Iran - U.S. military sources
Spencer S. Hsu / Washington Post:
Job Vacancies At DHS Said To Hurt U.S. Preparedness  —  A Fourth of Top Positions Not Filled, Report Says  —  The Bush administration has failed to fill roughly a quarter of the top leadership posts at the Department of Homeland Security, creating a "gaping hole" in the nation's preparedness …
Discussion: AMERICAblog and State of the Day
Daily Mail:
The terrorist who became a London traffic warden  —  A terrorist jailed for his involvement in a bomb attack on the Paris Metro - which killed eight people and wounded 80 - has been working as a traffic warden in England.  —  Mustapha Boutarfa, 32, was arrested by Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist squad …
David Weigel / Reason Magazine:
Ron Paul on This Week  —  In case you accidentally switched on your TV's George Stephanopoulos filter, here's the freshly YouTubed video of Ron Paul on This Week.  —  Here's the closing exchange on Paul's viability. … Also, Stephanopoulos starts off the broadcast with some video of the …
Mike Allen / The Politico:
Edwards to announce poverty tour  —  Can JRE pull off a JFK, or an RFK (asks Politico chief political writer Mike Allen, who is sharing guestblogging duties while Ben is on vacation)?  John Edwards plans to announce Monday that he'll take a break from fund-raising and campaigning …
Discussion: Sister Toldjah and protein wisdom
RELATED:
Chicago Sun Times:
CIA leak: Now it can be told  —  Sun-Times columnist and famous Washington insider Robert Novak is one of the most controversial political reporters in America.  In the sweeping memoir The Prince of Darkness, the private man opens up for the first time about his life and career.
Discussion: Macsmind
Steven Weber / The Huffington Post:
What does Al know that we don't?  —  Why, given the opportunity that's been presented to him on a silver Prius, is this man not going to run for (and win) the presidency of the United States?  If ever there was a clarion call to be answered it is this one: heed the will of the majority of the people …
Associated Press:
Pennsylvania government partially shuts down  —  HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (AP) — Gov. Ed Rendell said he was optimistic that he and the Legislature could soon break a budget stalemate that caused him to order a partial shutdown of government services Monday.
Maha / The Mahablog:
The Wisdom of Doubt, Part V  —  The late Susan Sontag once tried to explain American religiosity to a German audience: … I don't know how George W. Bush views his own religion.  For all I know, he believes himself to be a sincere Christian.  He may very well read the Bible and pray as much as he says he does.
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 More Items: 
New York Times:
The Public Editor  —  Clark Hoyt became The Times's third public editor on May 14, 2007.
Discussion: The Moderate Voice
Kevin Drum / Washington Monthly:
LEAD ABATEMENT....YES, IT'S BORING, BUT READ THIS POST ANYWAY. …
Jonathan Gurwitz / Opinion Journal:
The Troubled Texas GOP
Discussion: The Strata-Sphere
Raleigh News & Observer:
Blackwater manager blamed for 2004 massacre in Fallujah
Neil A. Lewis / New York Times:
Justice Secures His Place as a Critic of Integration
Linda Greenhouse / New York Times:
On the Wrong Side of 5 to 4, Liberals Talk Tactics
Discussion: Althouse
Michael Daly / NY Daily News:
Son is Gore's Al-batross
 Earlier Items: 
Dean Baker / American Prospect:
Jobs Report: Sagging Employment Rates
Discussion: Economist's View
Dean Nelson / Times of London:
Brainwashed children plead to die as martyrs in Red Mosque siege
Telegraph:
Islamic charity linked to car bomb suspect
Pundit Review Radio / BLACKFIVE:
KIKI MUNSHI MEET MICHAEL YON
Andrew Sullivan / The Atlantic Online:
Why She Still Rocks  —  Madonna turns La Isla Bonita …
Florida Times Union:
Files show talks on 'vote caging'
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Gene Maddaus / Variety:
WGA East members working for PBS member stations reach a deal, averting a strike; the union says the deal expands protections to animation writers

Dominic Ponsford / Press Gazette:
Jason Cowley, the editor-in-chief of UK magazine the New Statesman, is stepping down from the position at the end of December after 16 years

Ayodeji Rotinwa / Columbia Journalism Review:
A look at the Agora Center for Research, a Ugandan newsroom sitting between activism and investigative reporting, posting its work on various social media sites

 
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