Top Items:
New York Times:
Markets Fall as Global Worries Multiply — HONG KONG — Stock markets plunged in the Asia-Pacific region on Friday, following the sharp sell-off that had battered U.S. and European markets the previous day as investors' fears about European debt levels and U.S. growth prospects intensified.
Discussion:
Prairie Weather and naked capitalism
RELATED:
Graham Bowley / New York Times:
Stocks Plunge on Fears of Global Turmoil — What began as a relatively weak day in the stock markets ended in the worst rout in more than two years, as investors dumped stocks amid anxiety that both Europe and the United States were failing to fix deepening economic problems.
Annalyn Censky / CNNMoney.com:
Dow plunges 350 points on ‘total fear’
Dow plunges 350 points on ‘total fear’
Discussion:
Hot Air, Bloomberg, Money & Company, Dow Jones Newswires, Pajamas Media, The Atlantic Online and AMERICAblog News
Wall Street Journal:
U.S. Stocks Slide 3%
U.S. Stocks Slide 3%
Discussion:
Calculated Risk, Gothamist, CNBC, American Power, The Consumerist, AllThingsD, The Hill, Daily Kos, Gawker and Michelle Malkin
Keith Laing / The Hill:
Reid announces deal to end FAA furloughs — The Senate will pass the House's bill to fund the Federal Aviation Administration through September to end the week-and-a-half-long partial shutdown of the agency, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) announced Thursday.
Discussion:
Mother Jones, Washington Post, Washington Monthly and Crooks and Liars
RELATED:
Andrew Stiles / National Review:
Pelosi's Secret ‘Anti-Terror’ Strategy
Pelosi's Secret ‘Anti-Terror’ Strategy
Discussion:
TPMDC, Weasel Zippers, Pat Dollard, Washington Post and The Huffington Post
Roger L Simon / Pajamas Media:
Dow Down 500: Should Obama Resign? — The worldwide market plunge since the signing of the U.S. debt agreement tells us one thing above all: Almost no one on the planet has confidence in the leadership of Barack Obama. — A CEO with such a disastrous first three years as our president …
Zeke Miller / Politics:
The White House: We Don't Create Jobs — As President Barack Obama once again pivots to focus on economic growth, Press Secretary Jay Carney declared Thursday that “the White House doesn't create jobs.” — While undoubtedly true, it was certainly not a sentiment Obama wants to project …
Discussion:
Conservatives4Palin and The Lonely Conservative
RELATED:
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Jay Carney: “The White House doesn't create jobs”
Jay Carney: “The White House doesn't create jobs”
Discussion:
RealClearPolitics Video Log, Betsy's Page, Weasel Zippers and Moe Lane
New York Times:
Disapproval Rate for Congress at Record 82% After Debt Talks — The debate over raising the debt ceiling, which brought the nation to the brink of default, has sent disapproval of Congress to its highest level on record and left most Americans saying that creating jobs should now take priority …
Discussion:
Politics, Hot Air, Gawker, Daily Kos, Taegan Goddard's …, New York Magazine and The Monkey Cage
Kevin Drum / Mother Jones:
Presidential Power — I apologize in advance for indulging in a wonky process post yet again today ("more boy talk," as Twitter follower Stella calls it), but I want to repeat a point that I haven't made for a while. It got kicked off by this tweet from Dave Roberts: — My answer: No, he just has the easiest job.
Discussion:
PERRspectives, ThinkProgress and TalkLeft
RELATED:
Steve Benen / Washington Monthly:
Political efficacy in the Obama era
Political efficacy in the Obama era
Discussion:
AMERICAblog News, The Impolitic and Firedoglake
Ezra Klein / Washington Post:
The reason the markets are diving — (Scott Olson - GETTY IMAGES) Washington likes to talk about the economy in terms of things it can control. Spending and deficits. Stimulus. Policy uncertainty. — But the Dow Jones isn't diving because spending has risen, deficits have grown or stimulus policy has changed.
Discussion:
FrumForum and Associated Press
Jonathan Chait / The New Republic:
What Caused The Deficit? A Reply To Megan McArdle — One of the most effective Republican themes of the last two years has been blaming President Obama for the explosive growth in the budget deficit since 2009. The accusation that “Obama's spending binge” has blown up the deficit …
Discussion:
Balloon Juice, TBogg, The Impolitic and The Daily Dish
mdn.mainichi.jp:
Highest indoor radiation level detected at Fukushima Daiichi plant — TOKYO (Kyodo) — Radiation dosages of 5 sieverts per hour were detected indoors on the second floor of the No. 1 reactor at the crisis-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on Tuesday, the highest figure yet indoors, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. said.
Discussion:
Sky Dancing, The Moderate Voice and beyondnuclear.org
Chris Halsne / KIRO-TV:
Cartoonist Targeted With Criminal Probe For Mocking Police — RENTON, Wash. — The Renton City Prosecutor wants to send a cartoonist to jail for mocking the police department in a series of animated Internet videos. — The “South-Park"-style animations parody everything from officers having sex …
Discussion:
Hit & Run and iOwnTheWorld.com
David Frum / FrumForum:
If Conservatives Were Right About the Economy — Further to yesterday's post about the respective economic acumen of the Wall Street Journal editorial page vs. Prof. Paul Krugman: — My conservative friends argue that the policies of Barack Obama are responsible for the horrifying length and depth of the economic crisis.
Discussion:
Modeled Behavior, American Spectator, The Daily Dish, Washington Monthly, Pajamas Media, Donklephant and Paul Krugman
Noel Sheppard / NewsBusters.org:
Arianna Huffington: Nobody Believes Obama's Top Priority Is Jobs - It's Getting Reelected — In the wake of liberal disappointment over December's budget agreement and this week's debt ceiling deal - both not including tax hikes - there's been a lot of squabbling from far-left media members about Barack Obama betraying them.
Discussion:
Shot in the Dark
Clive Crook / The Atlantic Online:
Time for QE3, and Then Some — The global beating shares just took had many causes, no doubt. Still disgusted by the US debt-ceiling fiasco, I am apt to give that masterclass in malice and incompetence more of the blame than it really deserves: the talk in markets today was more about signs …
Discussion:
Grasping Reality … and Modeled Behavior
Floyd Norris / New York Times:
Time to Say It: Double Dip Recession May Be Happening — Double dip may be back. — It has been three decades since the United States suffered a recession that followed on the heels of the previous one. But it could be happening again. The unrelenting negative economic news of the past …
Discussion:
Mother Jones
Matt McGrath / BBC:
Arctic ‘tipping point’ may not be reached — The team said they had found an indirect method to give a picture of the ice cover dating back 11,000 years — Scientists say current concerns over a tipping point in the disappearance of Arctic sea ice may be misplaced.
Discussion:
The Gateway Pundit, Biased BBC and Pajamas Media
Ned Potter / ABCNEWS:
Afghanistan War: Hobbyists' Toy Truck Saves 6 Soldiers' Lives — Staff Sgt. Christopher Fessenden is on duty in Afghanistan now after tours with the Army in Iraq. He has traveled with standard-issue equipment — weapons, helmet, uniform, boots and so forth — plus a radio-controlled model truck his brother sent.
Discussion:
The Jawa Report and Don Surber
Fareed Zakaria / Washington Post:
Why defense spending should be cut — The scary aspect of the debt deal meant to force all of Washington to its senses is the threatened cut to defense spending. If the congressional “super-committee” cannot agree on cutbacks of $1.5 trillion, the guillotine will fall and half …
Discussion:
Daily Kos, FrumForum, National Review and OpenMarket.org
Wall Street Journal:
Behind a GOP Contender's Iowa Surge — MARION, Iowa—To understand why presidential candidate Michele Bachmann has surged in Iowa, watch when she is handed a baby. On a recent stop here, she took off her bracelet, dangled it before the infant and cradled him while he teethed on the pearls.
Gillian Tett / Financial Times:
Eurozone crisis resembles US turmoil in 2008 — A few weeks ago, I wrote a column warning investors against taking a long summer holiday this year. — Sadly, I was right: no sooner did the markets breathe a sigh of relief over the resolution of the US debt ceiling dramas, they started gyrating with alarm over the eurozone.
Discussion:
The Curious Capitalist and AMERICAN FUTURE
Elizabeth MacDonald / FOXBusiness.com:
Former White House Counsel to IRS: Pull Media Matters' Tax-Exempt Status — C. Boyden Gray, former White House counsel to President George W. Bush, filed a civilian complaint with the IRS against the nonprofit Media Matters on July 27, demanding the agency yank its “tax-exempt status.”
Discussion:
Big Government, Nice Deb, Big Journalism and FoxBusiness.com, more at Mediagazer »
Jonathan Capehart / Washington Post:
Time for Obama to be feared by the Tea Party — Progressives and other peeved supporters of President Obama who aren't happy with the all-cuts-no-revenue deal to raise the debt ceiling need to see it as the beginning of a very long (and necessary) process to get the nation's fiscal house in order.
Discussion:
Don Surber and neo-neocon
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
The Reality We Face — Politico has a classic piece today on the grim background for the president's re-election campaign next year. I think it overdoes things a bit - I guess they had to sell the piece somehow - but its content tells us something important, even if it's something we already know.
Discussion:
FiveThirtyEight
Michael Graham / Boston Herald:
Matt Damon's got a lot to learn — Matt Damon is not a genius. He just plays one in the movies. — At last week's “Save Our Teachers” rally in Washington ("save them" from what — the private sector?) Damon announced that incentives — like bonuses for good performance or ending tenure for bad ones — don't work for teachers.
Discussion:
Opinion L.A.
Seth Hanlon / Center for American Progress:
Making More, Contributing Less — Millionaires' Tax Rates Have Declined While Everyone Else Contributes to Deficit Reduction — The final budget deal struck this week won't ask America's millionaires to contribute a single dime. That's unfortunate because they certainly can afford it.
Discussion:
Reuters, ThinkProgress and Daily Kos