Top Items:
New York Times:
Musharraf Declares Emergency Rule — The Pakistani leader, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, declared a state of emergency on Saturday night, suspending the country's Constitution, firing the chief justice of the Supreme Court and filling the streets of the capital with police officers.
Discussion:
BAGnewsNotes, Informed Comment, American Footprints, Obsidian Wings, The Heretik, Jihad Watch and Shakespeare's Sister
RELATED:
Guardian:
Musharraf's mini-martial law — The Pakistani president has imposed emergency rule, taking a swipe at the judiciary while promising to continue democratisation. — Pakistan's General Musharraf has issued a Provisional Constitutional Order (PCO), imposing emergency rule in Pakistan.
New York Times:
Musharraf Declares State of Emergency — The Pakistani leader, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, declared a state of emergency tonight, suspending the country's constitution, blacking out all independent television news reports and filling the streets of the capital with hundreds of police and soldiers.
Discussion:
DAWN, State of the Day, The Moderate Voice, All Spin Zone, Right Wing Nut House, Telegraph, SteveAudio, Associated Press, At-Largely, Taylor Marsh, Liberty Street, Weekly Standard, Wake up America, Is That Legal?, The Carpetbagger Report, Middle Earth Journal, THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS, Washington Post, Mercury Rising, Prairie Weather, Seeing the Forest, Washington Times, Macsmind, Captain's Quarters and TPMCafe blogs
The Earth Times Online Newspaper:
Pakistan considers Taliban rule in volatile valley - Summary
Pakistan considers Taliban rule in volatile valley - Summary
Discussion:
Weasel Zippers
Matthew Mosk / Washington Post:
Thompson Adviser Has Criminal Past — Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson has been crisscrossing the country since early this summer on a private jet lent to him by a businessman and close adviser who has a criminal record for drug dealing. — Thompson selected the businessman …
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Jeralyn / TalkLeft:
Fred Thompson Campaign Advisor Has Drug Crimes in His Past — The Washington Post reports that Republican candidate Fred Thompson's good buddy since the mid-90's, Philip Martin of Tennessee, who also supplies the plane for Thompson's campaign trips, has a criminal past:
William Glaberson / New York Times:
New Detainee Rights Weighed in Plans to Close Guantánamo — Administration officials are considering granting Guantánamo detainees substantially greater rights as part of an effort to close the detention center and possibly move much of its population to the United States …
Discussion:
TalkLeft
Kevin Drum / Washington Monthly:
ALL-TIME WINGNUTTIEST BLOG POST CONTEST....While the rest of the blogosphere concerns itself with the worthy task of choosing the all-time best blog posts, I'm keeping my focus where it belongs: on the all-time worst blog posts. And thanks to help from my commenters, plus commenters over at FDL …
Discussion:
Lawyers, Guns and Money
N. Gregory Mankiw / New York Times:
Beyond Those Health Care Numbers — WITH the health care system at the center of the political debate, a lot of scary claims are being thrown around. The dangerous ones are not those that are false; watchdogs in the news media are quick to debunk them. Rather, the dangerous ones …
David Kopel / The Volokh Conspiracy:
FRED THOMPSON VS. THE UN'S ANTI-SELF-DEFENSE CAMPAIGN Earlier this week, Sen. Fred Thompson wrote to Field & Stream magazine, criticizing the UN's campaign against the human right of self-defense. The Thompson campaign touted the letter on its website, and the letter got a favorable reception among many pro-Second Amendment bloggers.
Frank Rich / New York Times:
Noun + Verb + 9/11 + Iran = Democrats' Defeat? — WHEN President Bush started making noises about World War III, he only confirmed what has been a Democratic article of faith all year: Between now and Election Day he and Dick Cheney, cheered on by the mob of neocon dead-enders, are going to bomb Iran.
Matt Richtel / New York Times:
Devices Enforce Cellular Silence, Sweet but Illegal — One afternoon in early September, an architect boarded his commuter train and became a cellphone vigilante. He sat down next to a 20-something woman who he said was "blabbing away" into her phone. — "She was using the word 'like' all the time.
Discussion:
Corrente
Matthew Kaminski / Opinion Journal:
Dissident — Natan Sharansky's passion for democracy isn't always welcome in the West. — JERUSALEM—An eternity ago, in 2004, the former Soviet refusenik and Israeli government minister Natan Sharansky called George W. Bush "a dissident President"—"jokingly," he tells me, thinking back to that first White House meeting.
Discussion:
neo-neocon
Brian Braiker / Newsweek.com:
Survivor — In a new NEWSWEEK poll, Hillary Clinton took the heat at this week's Democratic debate and emerged undamaged. — Stan Honda / AFP-Getty Images — The New York senator listens to John Edwards during the Oct. 30 Democratic debate in Philadelphia
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report
New York Times:
Even Cut 50 Percent, Earmarks Clog a Military Bill — Even though members of Congress cut back their pork barrel spending this year, House lawmakers still tacked on to the military appropriations bill $1.8 billion to pay 580 private companies for projects the Pentagon did not request.
Discussion:
Let Freedom Ring
New York Times:
Justice Nominee Gets 2 Key Votes From Democrats — The confirmation of Michael B. Mukasey as attorney general appeared to be all but certain on Friday after two key Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee announced they would support the nomination despite complaints over Mr. Mukasey's refusal …
Discussion:
Norwegianity, The Seminal, Big Brass Blog, Power Line, The Democratic Daily and Los Angeles Times
RELATED:
Richard B. Schmitt / Los Angeles Times:
Mukasey all but a shoo-in for approval
Mukasey all but a shoo-in for approval
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report