Top Items:
David S. Broder / Washington Post:
Bloomberg And Hagel For 2008? — Chuck Hagel, the senator from Nebraska, describes himself as a "tidal" politician, one who believes that larger forces in society shape careers more than the ambitions of individuals. "The only mistakes I've made," he told me last week, "were when I tried to go against the tide."
Discussion:
PoliBlog (TM), The Van Der Galiën Gazette, Betsy's Page, Daily Kos, Outside The Beltway and JammieWearingFool
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Steve Benen / Talking Points Memo:
WHEN SILLY MEETS PREDICTABLE — When a rock band's creativity grows stale, their songs become formulaic. They take an old hit, change the key, alter the lyrics a little, and voila. A new single. — When a newspaper columnist's creativity grows stale, the same problem emerges.
Discussion:
Lawyers, Guns and Money
Hope Yen / Associated Press:
Warner may back Dems' bill on withdrawal — WASHINGTON - GOP Sen. John Warner, who wants U.S. troops to start coming home from Iraq by Christmas, said Sunday he may support Democratic legislation ordering withdrawals if President Bush refuses to set a return timetable soon.
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Evan Thomas / Newsweek:
The Ongoing Hunt for Osama bin Laden — He's still out there. The hunt for bin Laden. — The Americans were getting close. It was early in the winter of 2004-05, and Osama bin Laden and his entourage were holed up in a mountain hideaway along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
Andrew Sullivan / The Atlantic Online:
In the Twilight of His Deployment [Steve Clemons] — I just came across this blog of an American military guy that the Pentagon has not yet shut down called "Army of Dude." — Here are some choice entries: — Stupid S**t of The Deployment Awards! … I Can Taste It
Douglas Brinkley / Washington Post:
Reckless Abandonment — Over the past two years since Hurricane Katrina, I've seen waves of hardworking volunteers from nonprofits, faith-based groups and college campuses descend on New Orleans, full of compassion and hope. — They arrive in the city's Ninth Ward to painstakingly gut houses one by one.
James Kirchick / Providence Journal:
The Obama Doctrine — EVERY AMERICAN president since Harry Truman has formulated a crucial aspect of foreign policy that later takes his name. The "Truman Doctrine," framed in the aftermath of World War II and in direct response to the Soviet Union's expansion into Eastern Europe …
David McFadden / Associated Press:
Call at National Guard conference for U.S. withdrawal from Iraq greeted with standing ovation — SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - A call by Puerto Rico's governor for a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq earned a standing ovation Saturday from a conference of more than 4,000 National Guardsmen.
Discussion:
The Newshoggers
The History Channel:
9/11 Conspiracies — Examines the various conspiracy theories espoused on the Internet, in articles and in public forums that attempt to explain the 9/11 attacks. It includes theories that the World Trade Center was brought down by a controlled demolition; that a missile, not a commercial airliner …
Discussion:
Jules Crittenden
New York Times:
Op-Chart: A New, Improved Congress? — JUST before Congress adjourned for its August recess, Democrats engaged in a flurry of legislative activity, while Republicans complained about a "do-nothing" Congress's meager policy accomplishments. Deep partisan differences, narrow majorities …
New York Times:
As China Roars, Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes — No country in history has emerged as a major industrial power without creating a legacy of environmental damage that can take decades and big dollops of public wealth to undo. — But just as the speed and scale of China's rise …
Cernig / The Newshoggers:
Still Stupid After All These Years — The U.S. military are amazed that Afghanis are upset about the name of Allah being on soccer balls the military dropped from helicopters over Afghan villages. Did no-one think to ask an actual Muslim if the soccer balls were acceptable first, just for sh**ts and giggles?
Discussion:
Little Green Footballs
David Ignatius / Washington Post:
Post-Iraq Strategy — The Bush administration, beyond the daily temperature readings about the progress of the U.S. troop surge in Baghdad, is making a subtle but important shift in its strategy for the Middle East — establishing containment of Iranian power in the region as a top American priority.
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Another Brace Of Dhimmitude From American Newspapers — Twenty-five years ago, I followed the comic strip Bloom County avidly. Berkely Breathed's sense of the absurd and his flair for political and social satire surpassed anything on the comics page in the 1980s.
Discussion:
QandO
Jonathan Martin / The Politico:
Thompson warns of weaker, troubled America — INDIANAPOLIS — Fred Thompson thinks the country faces a tough road ahead and he's not glossing over the problems we face. In fact, he's anxious to outline the daunting litany and appears to be basing his forthcoming campaign on the assumption that his party shares the same outlook.
Shailagh Murray / Washington Post:
After Iraq Trip, Unshaken Resolve — CHICAGO When Rep. Jan Schakowsky made her first trip to Iraq this month, the outspoken antiwar liberal resolved to keep her opinions to herself. "I would listen and learn," she decided. — At times that proved a challenge, as when Deputy Prime Minister …
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