Top Items:
Associated Press:
Across Mideast, Arabs hail shoe-hurling journalist — BAGHDAD — Thousands of Iraqis took to the streets Monday to demand the release of a reporter who threw his shoes at President George W. Bush, as Arabs across many parts of the Middle East hailed the journalist as a hero and praised …
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Alistair Lyon / Reuters:
ANALYSIS-Iraqi shoe-thrower captures Mideast rage at Bush — The hurling of shoes at U.S. President George W. Bush on his farewell visit to Iraq strikes many in the Middle East as a fittingly furious comment on what they see as his calamitous legacy in the region.
Discussion:
The Corner
Riyadh Muhammad / Baghdad Bureau:
Brother Explains Shoe-Tossing Iraqi Journalist's Anger
Brother Explains Shoe-Tossing Iraqi Journalist's Anger
Discussion:
Gothamist
Waleed Ibrahim / Reuters:
Iraqi shoe-throwing reporter becomes the talk of Iraq
Iraqi shoe-throwing reporter becomes the talk of Iraq
Discussion:
All Our Might
Washington Wire:
The Real Story Behind the Rushed Blagojevich Bust: How the Feds Are Frustrated by Losing (Maybe) Half of Their Case — Cam Simpson reports on the Rod Blagojevich case in Chicago. — Conventional wisdom holds that U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald ordered the FBI to arrest Rod Blagojevich …
Discussion:
This ain't Hell …, The Corner, Gawker, Stop The ACLU, Flopping Aces, Betsy's Page, Patterico's Pontifications, Althouse, RADAMISTO and Times of London
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Monica Davey / New York Times:
Two Sides of a Troubled Governor, Sinking Deeper — CHICAGO — Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich is a polished speaker who can win over elderly women at luncheons in southern Illinois with his earnest attention and eloquently recite historical anecdotes from the lives of the leaders he says he most admires …
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Political Machine, Commentary, TIME.com, PoliBlog, marbury, The Raw Story and The Capitol Fax Blog
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Amit R. Paley / Washington Post:
Limits on Executive Pay May Prove Toothless — Loophole in Bailout Provision Leaves Enforcement in Doubt — Congress wanted to guarantee that the $700 billion financial bailout would limit the eye-popping pay of Wall Street executives, so lawmakers included a mechanism …
Richard Whitt / Google Public Policy Blog:
Net neutrality and the benefits of caching — One of the first posts I wrote for this blog last summer tried to define what we at Google mean when we talk about the concept of net neutrality. — Broadband providers — the on-ramps to the Internet — should not be allowed to prioritize traffic based …
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Ali Frick / Think Progress:
Bush On Al Qaeda Not Existing In Iraq Before Invasion: ‘So What?’ — Yesterday, after an Iraqi journalist used “[t]wo of the worst insults in Islam” against him, an unfazed President Bush sat down with ABC's Martha Raddatz for an exit interview in Iraq. When Raddatz asked Bush about his legacy …
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City Journal:
The (Really) Moderate Muslims of Kosovo — On February 17, 2008, Kosovo declared independence from Serbia, becoming the newest country in the world—and one of the most unusual. Most of its citizens are Muslim, an oddity in Europe; further, unlike most Muslim-majority nations …
Reid Wilson / The Hill:
Hoekstra to announce retirement — Less than a week after being reappointed as the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Pete Hoekstra (Mich.) will announce that he will not seek a tenth term in 2010, according to a source with knowledge of the decision.
Michael J. Totten:
On the Hunt in Baghdad — BAGHDAD — “If your men conduct any raids,” I said to Captain Todd Looney at Combat Outpost Ford on the outskirts of Sadr City, Baghdad, “I want to go.” — “We might have something come up,” he said. “If so, I'll get you out there.”
CNN:
McCain unsure if he'll support Palin for president — (CNN) — Sen. John McCain said Sunday he would not necessarily support his former running mate if she chose to run for president. — Speaking to ABC's “This Week,” McCain was asked whether Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin could count on his support.
Washington Post:
Roads, Trains Can't Handle Jan. 20 Droves — With Street and Bridge Closures, Expect ‘Long Lines, Long Walks’ — Even if only half of the projected 2 million to 4 million people show up for next month's presidential inauguration, the Washington region's roadways and transit systems …
New York Times:
The 17th Floor, Where Wealth Went to Vanish — The epicenter of what may be the largest Ponzi scheme in history was the 17th floor of the Lipstick Building, an oval red-granite building rising 34 floors above Third Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. — A busy stock-trading operation occupied the 19th floor …
Discussion:
Washington Post
New York Times:
Spousal Ties to Lobbying Test a Vow From Obama — WASHINGTON — Linda Hall Daschle is one of the most important aviation lobbyists in town. Ms. Daschle is also the wife of Tom Daschle, whom President-elect Barack Obama has chosen to be the next secretary of health and human services.
Josh Marshall / Talking Points Memo:
TROUBLING THOUGHT — Like most of us, if I'm honest with myself, I really only know how Secret Service protection works from the movies or how, going on my own common sense, I figure it works. The folks who protect the president are professionals. So I want to be extremely tentative …
Bloomberg:
Grand Jury Probes Richardson Donor's New Mexico Financing Fee — A A A — Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) — A federal grand jury is investigating how a company that advised Jefferson County, Alabama, on bond deals that threaten to cause the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history …
Katherine Burton / Bloomberg:
Fairfield Sent Madoff $7.3 Billion as Funds Took Fees — A A A — Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) — Walter Noel's Fairfield Greenwich Group would have collected about $135 million in fees this year for peddling Bernard Madoff's investing acumen to clients from South America, the Middle East and Asia.