Top Items:
Tahman Bradley / Political Radar:
Giuliani Says He is Equal to 9/11 Recovery Workers — ABC News' Jan Simmonds Reports: In Ohio on Thursday, Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani R-NY handed his critics new ammunition regarding his role surrounding 9/11. — Speaking to reporters in Cincinnati, Giuliani said …
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report, Eschaton, bustardblog, Shakespeare's Sister, The Right's Field and State of the Day
RELATED:
E. J. Dionne Jr / Washington Post:
Why the Democrats Caved — Shortly before noon last Saturday, about 20 House Democrats huddled in Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office to decide what to do about a surveillance bill that had been dumped on them by the Senate before it left town. — Many of the Democrats were furious.
RELATED:
Sudhin Thanawala / Associated Press:
Peace activist Cindy Sheehan announces candidacy — Citing her son as inspiration, a tearful Cindy Sheehan announced her candidacy Thursday for the U.S. House of Representatives. — The anti-war activist is running as an independent against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has represented San Francisco in Congress since 1987.
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Thanks, Cindy — Nancy Pelosi has a challenger for her seat in Congress.
Thanks, Cindy — Nancy Pelosi has a challenger for her seat in Congress.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times
Agence France Presse:
US public sees news media as biased, inaccurate, uncaring: poll — More than half of Americans say US news organizations are politically biased, inaccurate, and don't care about the people they report on, a poll published Thursday showed. — And poll respondents who use the Internet …
Discussion:
Captain's Quarters, Booman Tribune, Central Sanity, On Deadline, Dyre Portents, The Moderate Voice, Gateway Pundit, digg, At-Largely and Wizbang
RELATED:
Pew Research Center:
Internet News Audience Highly Critical of News Organizations — Views of Press Values and Performance: 1985-2007 — Summary of Findings — The American public continues to fault news organizations for a number of perceived failures, with solid majorities criticizing them for political bias …
CNN:
Poll: Giuliani leads for GOP nomination — WASHINGTON (CNN) — Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani is leading the pack of Republican presidential hopefuls, supported by 29 percent of respondents in a poll released Friday. — Unannounced candidate former Sen. Fred Thompson is close behind with 22 percent …
RELATED:
Mary Jacoby / Wall Street Journal:
Romney Bets Big on Ames Poll
Romney Bets Big on Ames Poll
Discussion:
The Politico, Portsmouth Herald, New York Times, Bloomberg, New York Times, Townhall.com and TIME
McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Cheney urging military strikes on Iran — WASHINGTON — President Bush charged Thursday that Iran continues to arm and train insurgents who are killing U.S. soldiers in Iraq, and he threatened action if that continues. — At a news conference Thursday, Bush said Iran had been warned …
Joel Rubin / Los Angeles Times:
Democrats quizzed at LA gay-rights forum — Six candidates, including the front-runners, come to Hollywood to voice support for an influential voting bloc in cable event. — Underscoring the importance of gays and lesbians in Democratic politics, most of the party's presidential hopefuls gathered …
RELATED:
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
The Baghdad Fabulist — For weeks, the veracity of the New Republic's Scott Thomas Beauchamp, the Army private who has been sending dispatches from the front in Iraq, has been in dispute. His latest "Baghdad Diarist" (July 13) recounted three incidents of American soldiers engaged in acts of unusual callousness.
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, Brian Beutler, Redstate, QandO, Betsy's Page and Blue Crab Boulevard
RELATED:
Carpetbagger / The Carpetbagger Report:
Right and wrong — GOP style — In 2001, the president gave an interesting speech about what Americans should expect from their government. "We must always ask ourselves not only what is legal, but what is right," Bush said. "There is no goal of government worth accomplishing if it cannot be accomplished with integrity."
RELATED:
Ellen Goodman / Boston Globe:
E-male — IT'S WORTH remembering that the blogosphere is still so new it baffles spell check. For that matter, if I type "blogger" on my screen, my retro software offers alternatives like "loggers," "floggers," and "boggler." — It "boggles" my mind to realize how quickly a piece of Internet terrain has gained power in politics.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Captain's Quarters, Eschaton, Althouse, The Atlantic Online and Corrente
Bill / INDCJournal:
Programming Note: Back to Fallujah — I'm headed back to Iraq on August 30th, to gauge and report on the situation in Fallujah prior to Gen. Petraeus's September report. I'm accredited with Bill Roggio's Public Multimedia, Inc., and would sincerely appreciate (tax deductible) donations through his shop.
Hassan M. Fattah / New York Times:
U.S. Backs Free Elections, Only to See Allies Lose — Lebanon's political spin masters have been trying in recent days to explain the results of last Sunday's pivotal by-election, which saw a relatively unknown candidate from the opposition narrowly beat a former president, Amin Gemayel.
Discussion:
The Peking Duck
Neil A. Lewis / New York Times:
Federal Effort on Web Obscenity Shows Few Results — Tom Rogers, a retired Indianapolis detective, toils away most days in his suburban home office reviewing sexual Web sites and other Internet traffic to see whether they qualify as obscene material whose purveyors should be prosecuted by the Justice Department.
The Big Trunk / Power Line:
WILLIAM KATZ REMEMBERS: STOP THE PRESSES! JUST KIDDING — William Katz has had a long and varied career, as an assistant to a U.S. senator; an officer in the CIA; an assistant to Herman Kahn, the nuclear war theorist; an editor at The New York Times Magazine; and a talent coordinator at The Tonight Show.
Guardian:
Keep these quislings out — Calls from pro-war bloggers for Britain to grant asylum to Iraqi interpreters are truly nauseating. — I love the Yiddish word chutzpah. I first came across it while working at the Jewish Theological Seminary in Budapest in the mid-1990s.