Top Items:
Ross Douthat / New York Times:
Palin and Her Enemies — If Sarah Palin's political career ended last Friday, 10 tumultuous months after she was introduced as the Republican Party's vice-presidential nominee, those five words will be its epitaph. — Had she refused John McCain, Palin would still be a popular female governor …
Discussion:
The New Republic, The Daily Dish, The Huffington Post, Washington Monthly, The League of Ordinary …, The American Scene, Feministe, The Monkey Cage, alicublog, Washington Post, Blogs and Stories, pandagon.net, The Agitator, Riehl World View, No More Mister Nice Blog, The Anonymous Liberal, Runnin' Scared and Balloon Juice
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Fred Barnes / Weekly Standard:
Palin's Prospects — She dashed her chances of winning the 2012 nomination, but a path to the presidency remains open to Sarah Palin. — Forget about Sarah Palin as the Republican presidential candidate in 2012 and probably ever. She may have no interest in seeking the GOP nomination.
New York Times:
Legal Bills Swayed Palin, Official Says — Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell of Alaska said Sunday that Gov. Sarah Palin's decision to resign was largely prompted by the personal legal costs of the ethics investigations against her. — Ms. Palin announced on Friday that she would quit her job near …
Discussion:
Say Anything, The Mudflats, The New Ledger, Raw Story, Atlantic Correspondents and Alan Colmes' Liberaland
Wall Street Journal:
The Palin Puzzle — This isn't the way to win in 2012. — Printer — Friendly — The political class is flummoxed by Sarah Palin's decision to quit as Alaska Governor, and understandably so. Giving up on an executive job a year and a half early isn't the best way to persuade voters you're ready …
Violet / Reclusive Leftist:
Feminists and the mystery of Sarah Palin — I don't usually comment on other blogs; I have little enough time to keep my own gig in working order. But the other day I was over at I Blame The Patriarchy, where I was dismayed to find in the comment threads some of the same Palin-bashing …
Tim Weiner / New York Times:
Ex-Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara Dies at 93 — Robert S. McNamara, perhaps the most influential defense secretary of the 20th century, who helped lead the nation into the maelstrom of Vietnam and spent the rest of his life wrestling with the war's moral consequences …
Discussion:
The Atlantic Politics Channel, Time, Runnin' Scared, FP Passport, RealClearWorld, MoJo Blog Posts and The BLT
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Thomas W. Lippman / Washington Post:
Robert McNamara, Architect of Vietnam War, Dies at 93 — Robert Strange McNamara, the former secretary of defense whose record as a leading executive of industry and a chieftain of foreign financial aid was all but erased from public memory by his reputation as the primary architect …
Discussion:
Democracy in America, Firedoglake, Mudville Gazette, Paul Kedrosky's …, AmSpecBlog and Lawyers, Guns and Money
Mike Allen / The Politico:
Presented by The First Five Years Fund: Offers pour in for Sarah Palin from left, right and center - Next two weeks could be make-or-break for health care - Al Franken to be sworn in tomorrow — BIRTHDAY: DNC's Cloe Axelson (hat tip: Mike Czin) — BREAKING - Bloomberg …
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Andy McCarthy / The Corner:
Obama: Student Radical — During the campaign, I wrote a piece called “Why Won't Obama Talk About Columbia? — The years he won't discuss may explain the Ayers tie he keeps lying about.” So now, nearly six months into the Obama presidency, the mainstream media has finally done a bit …
Washington Post:
Former Lawmakers and Congressional Staffers Hired to Lobby on Health Care — Firms Are Enlisting Ex-Lawmakers, Aides — The nation's largest insurers, hospitals and medical groups have hired more than 350 former government staff members and retired members of Congress in hopes of influencing …
Kevin Hassett / Bloomberg:
California's Nightmare Will Kill Obamanomics: Kevin Hassett — Last week, we discovered that the state of California will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today. — With California mired in a budget crisis, largely the result of a political impasse that makes spending cuts …
Discussion:
Donklephant, Don Surber, The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, Confederate Yankee, Shot in the Dark and Wake up America
Matthew Goldstein / Commentaries:
A Goldman trading scandal? — Did someone try to steal Goldman Sachs' secret sauce? — While most in the US were celebrating the 4th of July, a Russian immigrant living in New Jersey was being held on federal charges of stealing top-secret computer trading codes from a major …
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Nadia Gilani / Times of London:
Wife blows MI6 chief's cover on Facebook — The wife of the new head of MI6 has caused a major security breach and left his family exposed after publishing photographs and personal details on Facebook. — Sir John Sawers is due to take over as chief of the Secret Intelligence Service in November …
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Mark Norris / Dallas Morning News:
Tea party protest at Southfork Ranch falls short of estimated 50,000 attendees — mnorris@dallasnews.com — It was more than the heat that had people hot under the collar this Independence Day at Southfork Ranch. A range of issues from taxes to universal health care brought a crowd out to America's Tea Party.
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Andrea Lorenz / Postcards:
Sen. Cornyn booed at Capitol “tea party”
Sen. Cornyn booed at Capitol “tea party”
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Think Progress, MyFox Austin, Burnt Orange Report and The Washington Independent
Marc Lynch:
Say it ain't so, Joe — It's hard to tell exactly what Joe Biden was trying to say this morning on “This Week” with George Stephanopolous. But his remarks are being widely interpreted as a green light for an Israeli strike on Iran. If that isn't the case, Biden needs to issue a strong clarification immediately.
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Jeffrey Young / The Hill:
Schumer promises public option in healthcare bill — The healthcare reform bill that emerges from Congress this year will include a government-run public health insurance option, regardless of the bipartisan negotiations seeking a compromise in the Senate, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Sunday.
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Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Just the Messenger — Mediaite.com Focuses on Celebrity of Journalism — Few would quarrel with the notion of Oprah Winfrey as the most influential television host, with Bill O'Reilly coming in second. — But Elisabeth Hasselbeck at No. 4 and Jon Stewart at No. 15 — ahead of Bob Schieffer …
Discussion:
TalkLeft
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Michael Calderone / Michael Calderone's Blog:
Dan Abrams' Mediaite launches
Dan Abrams' Mediaite launches
Discussion:
Clusterstock
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
HELP Is on the Way — The Congressional Budget Office has looked at the future of American health insurance, and it works. — A few weeks ago there was a furor when the budget office “scored” two incomplete Senate health reform proposals — that is, estimated their costs and likely impacts over the next 10 years.
Wall Street Journal:
Scores Reported Dead After Unrest in China — SHANGHAI — The official death toll in riots in China's northwestern Xinjiang region rose sharply Monday, with the government saying that 140 had been killed in what appears to be one of the deadliest episodes of unrest in China in decades.
Discussion:
RealClearWorld, Clusterstock, Gateway Pundit, QandO, Barcepundit and And So it Goes in Shreveport
Spiegel Online:
‘Obama Is Like a Chess Player’ — Part 2: 'A Unique Chance To Conduct Peaceful American Foreign Policy" — SPIEGEL: So you are calling for a kind of realistic idealism? — Kissinger: Exactly. There is no realism without an element of idealism. The idea of abstract power only exists for academics, not in real life.
BBC:
Coffee 'may reverse Alzheimer's' — Drinking five cups of coffee a day could reverse memory problems seen in Alzheimer's disease, US scientists say. — The Florida research, carried out on mice, also suggested caffeine hampered the production of the protein plaques which are the hallmark of the disease.