Top Items:
James C. McKinley Jr / New York Times:
Houston Is Largest City to Elect Openly Gay Mayor — HOUSTON — Houston became the largest city in the country to elect an openly gay mayor Saturday night, as voters gave a solid victory to the city controller, Annise Parker. — Cheers erupted at Ms. Parker's campaign party as her opponent …
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway, Houston Chronicle, Off the Kuff, Taylor Marsh and Alan Colmes' Liberaland
RELATED:
Clifford Pugh / CultureMap:
Annise Parker is Houston's next mayor — In a close run-off race of historic proportions, Houston voters chose City Controller Annise Parker as Houston's next mayor. Parker defeated attorney Gene Locke Saturday with over 53 percent of the vote. When sworn in in early January …
Erick Erickson / RedState:
Fight. — “If you will not fight for the right when you can easily win without bloodshed, if you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a small chance of survival.
Rajeev Syal / Guardian:
Drug money ‘saved banks from crisis’ — Drugs and crime chief says $352bn in criminal proceeds was effectively laundered by financial institutions — Drugs money worth billions of dollars kept the financial system afloat at the height of the global crisis, the United Nations' drugs and crime tsar has told the Observer.
Frank Rich / New York Times:
Hollywood's Brilliant Coda to America's Dark Year — ON Christmas Day, Hollywood will blanket America with a most unlikely holiday entertainment. That's when “Up in the Air,” the acclaimed new movie starring George Clooney, will spread from its big-city engagements to more than 2,000 screens.
Ann Althouse / Althouse:
CNN idiotically imagines: “Al Qaeda offers ‘condolences’ for innocent victims.” — That is a CNN headline purporting to summarize an English-language apology that is phrased thusly: … In the body of the article, outside of the quotes, CNN says things like: … Is this willful misreading or crashing idiocy?
New York Post:
Times Sq. gunman held weapon like rapper — A Times Square bloodbath was narrowly avoided because the machine-pistol-toting thug who fired at a cop flipped the gun on its side like a character out of a rap video, causing the weapon to jam after two shots, law-enforcement sources said yesterday.
Nomaan Merchant / Wall Street Journal:
Judge Blocks U.S. Ban on Funding for Acorn — A federal judge blocked U.S. officials from enforcing a funding ban on Acorn, the beleaguered community organizer. — Congress cut off funding for Acorn — the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now — in September after Web sites …
Matt Taibbi / Taibblog:
On Obama's Sellout … When we went to print with the latest Rolling Stone piece about Obama's economic hires, a couple of my sources advised me to expect some nastiness in the way of a response from Obama apologists. One jokingly suggested that there would be a waiting period to see if anyone …
John / Power Line:
What Astroturf Looks Like — Earlier today, thousands of protesters turned out in Copenhagen to demonstrate in favor of an economy-wrecking climate deal. This is how they looked: — Note the identical, professionally printed, color-coordinated yellow and black signs.
Discussion:
Maggie's Farm
iowahawk:
Fables of the Reconstruction — (Or, How to Make Your Own Hockey Stick) — Please pardon the departure from the usual Iowahawk bill of fare. — What follows started as a comment I made over at Ace's last week which he graciously decided to feature on a separate post (thanks Ace).
New York Times:
Senate Hits New Roadblocks on Health Care Bill — WASHINGTON — Democratic leaders hit a rough patch Friday in their push for sweeping health care legislation, as they tried to fend off criticism of their proposals from a top Medicare official, Republicans and even members of their own party.
Discussion:
The Caucus, Commentary, Prescriptions, Prairie Weather, The Corner on National … and TPMDC
RELATED:
Duff Wilson / New York Times:
Poor Children Likelier to Get Antipsychotics — New federally financed drug research reveals a stark disparity: children covered by Medicaid are given powerful antipsychotic medicines at a rate four times higher than children whose parents have private insurance.