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8:15 AM ET, June 25, 2013

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Julian Pecquet / The Hill:
US-China relations chill over Snowden  —  Press secretary Jay Carney blasted China in unusually blunt terms as the administration hunted for Snowden, the leaker of National Security Agency documents who is now believed to be hiding out in Russia.  —  Carney dismissed Hong Kong's legal justification …
Discussion: Reuters and CNN
RELATED:
ABC News:
Officials: How Edward Snowden Could Hurt the U.S.  —  PIERRE THOMAS (@PierreTABC), MIKE LEVINE (@mlevinereports), JACK DATE (@jackdate), LUIS MARTINEZ (@LMartinezABC) and JACK CLOHERTY (@jjclo) report:  —  As the U.S. intelligence community struggles to complete a damage assessment …
Discussion: Prairie Weather and Hot Air
Miriam Elder / Guardian:
Edward Snowden never crossed border into Russia, says foreign minister  —  Sergei Lavrov's comments about fugitive US whistleblower deepen mystery surrounding his whereabouts  —  Russia's foreign minister has said the surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden never crossed the border into Russia …
John Cassidy / News Desk:
Demonizing Edward Snowden: Which Side Are You On?  —  As I write this, a bunch of reporters are flying from Moscow to Havana on an Aeroflot Airbus 330, but Edward Snowden isn't sitting among them.  His whereabouts are unknown.  He might still be in the V.I.P. lounge at Sheremetyevo International Airport.
Discussion: ABC, Althouse, Daily Kos and Politico
Philip Rucker / Washington Post:
Obama's hands-off approach to extraditing Snowden draws criticism
Garrett Epps / The Atlantic Online:
Justice Alito's Inexcusable Rudeness  —  A justice of the Supreme Court should not act like a high schooler on the bench; when the target is a fellow justice, the offense is even greater.  —  I suspect that the cause of cameras in the Supreme Court suffered a blow on Monday.
RELATED:
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Justice Samuel Alito's middle-school antics  —  The most remarkable thing about the Supreme Court's opinions announced Monday was not what the justices wrote or said.  It was what Samuel Alito did.  —  The associate justice, a George W. Bush appointee, read two opinions …
Discussion: Taegan Goddard's …
Stephanie Condon / CBS News:
Obama to lay out three-part plan for addressing climate change  —  With little to no hope on Capitol Hill for action on climate change, President Obama on Tuesday plans to bypass Congress and move forward with executive actions designed to reduce carbon emissions.
RELATED:
John M. Broder / New York Times:
Obama to Outline Ambitious Plan to Cut Greenhouse Gases  —  WASHINGTON — President Obama will propose a sweeping plan to address climate change on Tuesday, setting ambitious goals and timetables for a series of executive actions to reduce greenhouse gas pollution and prepare the nation for the ravages of a warming planet.
Andrew Restuccia / Politico:
Experts weigh in on climate plan
Discussion: CNN, New Republic, ThinkProgress and Hot Air
Alan Fram / Associated Press:
IRS chief: Inappropriate screening was broad  —  WASHINGTON (AP) — The Internal Revenue Service's screening of groups seeking tax-exempt status was broader and lasted longer than has been previously disclosed, the new head of the agency said Monday.  —  An internal IRS document obtained …
RELATED:
Ian Swanson / The Hill:
Immigration reform passes key Senate test in 67-27 vote on border measure  —  Fifteen of the “yes” votes were Republicans, suggesting supporters could hit the 70-vote threshold they hope to reach in the final vote.  It is thought a big, bipartisan vote could put pressure in the GOP-held House …
RELATED:
Seung Min Kim / Politico:
Immigration reform: Senate backs ‘border surge’ in test vote
Michael Warren / Weekly Standard:
Senate Passes Cloture Motion on Hoeven-Corker Immigration Amendment
Tor.com Frontpage Partial:
Richard Matheson, 1926-2013  —  Tor.com is saddened and staggered to learn of the passing of Richard Matheson, the esteemed author of I am Legend, The Shrinking Man, What Dreams May Come, Hell House, the script for the Steven Spielberg film Duel, and many Twilight Zone scripts, among many more works.
Politico:
Obama in the doldrums  —  Not yet six months into his second term, Barack Obama's presidency is in a dead zone.  —  A combination of familiar Washington intransigence and a more recent run of bad news and political setbacks have left him with less influence over his circumstances …
Reuters:
Mitch McConnell Is Either Very Bad at Math or Horribly Disingenuous  —  The Senate minority leader took me to task on Friday.  Unfortunately, he had his facts wrong on virtually every count.  —  Last Friday morning, I attended a ballyhooed speech given by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell at AEI …
Discussion: Brad DeLong
Robert Costa / National Review:
Bolton Plans a Tour of Early-Primary States  —  Watch out, Rand Paul.  —  As Paul, a Kentucky senator, plans for a 2016 presidential run, he is talking up his views on foreign policy, which, broadly speaking, include less intervention in foreign conflicts and a smaller military budget.
Discussion: Weasel Zippers and Yahoo! News
Mirwais Harooni / Reuters:
Afghan forces put down attack on presidential palace: police  —  (Reuters) - Afghan forces put down an early morning attack by Taliban insurgents on the presidential palace and nearby buildings in central Kabul on Tuesday, with police saying all the assailants had been killed after a 90-minute gunfight.
Discussion: Spiegel Online and Weasel Zippers
Jon Favreau / The Daily Beast:
When Journalists Attack  —  With its rush to compare Obama to Nixon and to overhype any and all scandals, the media is ruining America's ability to engage in nuanced debate, says Jon Favreau.  —  If you saw the news at any point in the last month, chances are that you heard Barack Obama compared …
Discussion: Ed Driscoll and The Moderate Voice
Mike Hogan / The Huffington Post:
Was Hastings' Car Hacked?  —  The peculiar circumstances of journalist Michael Hastings' death in Los Angeles last week have unleashed a wave of conspiracy theories.  —  Now there's another theory to contribute to the paranoia: According to a prominent security analyst, technology exists that could've allowed someone to hack his car.
Patrick Gavin / Politico:
Ralph Nader outlines 2016 plan  —  Ralph Nader insists that he's done with his own presidential races, but he still has some plans for 2016.  —  “I'm going to find at least ten enlightened billionaires or multibillionaires and I'm going to have a criteria.  Have they spoken out about where they think the country is going?
 
 
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 More Items: 
Kyle Mantyla / Right Wing Watch:
Gohmert: Kids Don't Need Sex-Ed Because This Isn't The Soviet Union
Fox News:
Why did China let Edward Snowden leave?
Discussion: The Raw Story and NewsHounds blog
James Hohmann / Politico:
Obama energy push could loom large in 2014
New York Times:
Make Gun Companies Pay Blood Money
Sally Gardner / Guardian:
Dyslexia is not a disability, it's a gift | Sally Gardner
Discussion: Samizdata and Natalie Solent
 Earlier Items: 
Cenk Uygur / The Huffington Post:
How We Will Crush CNN  —  The Young Turks is the largest online news show in the world.
CNN:
Santorum jumps into show business
Discussion: Politico
David Carr / New York Times:
The Other Snowden Drama: Impugning the Messenger
Bloomberg:
U.S. Surveillance Is Not Aimed at Terrorists
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Devin Coldewey / TechCrunch:
As the NYT Tech Guild goes on strike, Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas offers the AI company's services to the NYT to help ensure election coverage is available

Joshua Benton / Nieman Lab:
Around 75% of the largest US newspapers aren't endorsing anyone for president this year, as publishers try not to annoy any sliver of their remaining customers

Elisabeth Egan / New York Times:
An interview with Craig Garnett, the publisher of The Uvalde Leader-News, about his new book Uvalde's Darkest Hour, the aftermath of the school shooting, more

 
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