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Common Ground Common Sense > National & International News > Op-Ed Articles from the Mainstream Media > Op-Ed Articles from the Mainstream Media Archive
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Snuffysmith
CAMPAIGN OUTSIDER
McCain's supremely
cynical VP option

In the US, presidential candidates' running mate choices are almost always chosen with a sneer toward the electorate and the putative choice does not always end up sitting a heartbeat from the presidency. The Republicans can take it to a new level with their selection this year. (Mar 11, '08)
Muhammad Cohen puts the US presidential campaign into sharper focus from afar.
Snuffysmith
THE SHAPE OF US POPULISM, Part 1
A rich free-market legacy - for some

The sight of businessmen such as E Stanley O'Neal of Merrill Lynch and Citigroup's Chuck Prince pocketing millions of dollars as they quit companies losing billions in value sticks in the throat of those whose money has been lost. Even some congressmen have figured something is wrong with such rewards for failure. Fair game, say others. - Henry C K Liu (Mar 11, '08)
This is the first part of a four-part series
Snuffysmith
BEAR'S LAIR
The unequal impact of war
War can appear an attractive option to failed authoritarian states that can fund violence through ownership of natural resources that pull in foreign exchange income. An assault on hard-working neighbors with finely-tuned economies can appear particularly attractive. Only a few such aggressors are around - bringing down the price of oil would limit even their threat. - Martin Hutchinson
Snuffysmith
Bush family touched
by subprime crisis

The subprime financial crisis, which started with low-skilled workers in the US struggling to come up with their mortgage payments, has now worked itself through the country's ranks to lap at the country's elite - including the family of former president George H W Bush. - F William Engdahl
Snuffysmith
Bernanke gets
it backwards

When Ben Bernanke implies that the whole monetarist school of economics was wrong and that inflation is caused by rising commodity prices, especially the rising price of oil, why does nobody ask the one question burning a hole in the brains of Mister, Miz and Missus America, namely, "Why do you believe that?" High prices are the result of the ridiculous excesses of the Federal Reserve, not the cause.
Snuffysmith
CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
What is left that is sellable?
Burst credit bubbles, underlined by the Fed's latest Flow of Funds data, and impairment of US securities mean growth in overseas holdings of US assets has become unsustainable, forcing the question of how the US will sustain smooth recycling of its current-account deficits. The concurrent widening of certain risk premiums and accelerated dollar weakness is no coincidence. (Mar 10, '08)
Doug Noland reviews the previous week's events each Monday.
Snuffysmith
An Illegal Girl's Best Friend by Monica Crowley There goes another Hillary Superdelegate.
Snuffysmith
Government Bully Gets Bustedby Timothy P. CarneySpitzer was a reformer? In truth Spitzer is a government bully who preys on rivals and convenient targets.
Snuffysmith
To Die for NAFTA by Patrick J. Buchanan"The commonest error in politics," said Lord Salisbury, "is sticking to the …
Snuffysmith
Hope For The Best, Prepare For The Worstby Doug FabianThe Street is brimming with speculation about what's going to happen next, now that we've managed to hold above the January lows. Yes, so far we have passed the retest of those lows, but I still am suspect because this market has had so many false signals of late...

The Russian Elections: A Sham With Consequencesby Nicholas A. VardyWhile Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton battle it out in today's primaries, the elections in Russia this weekend offered no surprises. Dmitry Medvedev, Vladimir Putin's handpicked successor, won the Russian presidency by a landslide 70% of the vote. Not that there was ever any doubt about the outcome.

Breakout or Bear Market Blip?by Doug FabianThere is no denying that stocks are back on the move, and during the past several days the equity markets have rallied in the face of some really bad news...
Snuffysmith

Will Republicans Pick the Next Presidential Nominee of the Democratic Party?
by Jerry D. Rose / March 11th, 2008

The day before the Texas and Ohio presidential primaries were held on March 4, Rush Limbaugh was saying, on an O’Reilly Factor interview for Fox News, that he was “urging his Republican friends” in these states to vote in the Democratic primary and to vote for Hillary Clinton. Since Limbaugh marches close to the head of an endless parade of Hillary-haters, this might seem incongruous. Not so, however, if you consider his logic in making the recommendation. He says he wants “his” party (the Republican) to win in November, and that keeping Clinton “in the race” by winning these two states would prolong the internecine struggle among the Democrats and increase the chance of “his” party to win the general election after the Democratic contenders had knocked themselves out….not that he was necessarily wanting the other party to select his “weakest” candidate. Probably were Obama on the verge of elimination, he would have urged his friends to vote for him. (Full article …)

Snuffysmith

The Commander Threshold
Hillary's Bait & Switch Tactics

by Jack Random / March 11th, 2008

One of the great wrongs of the current presidential campaign is that Hillary Clinton is being allowed to define the terrain. (Full article …)

Snuffysmith

The Heritage Foundation’s Thirty-Five Year Smackdown of Liberalism
by Bill Berkowitz / March 11th, 2008

In November, President Bush told a Heritage Foundation audience that while he only had 14 months left in his presidency he was going to be “sprinting to the finish line.” Bush complained about the Senate being slow to confirm Michael Mukasey for attorney general, urged Congress to make the Protect America Act permanent, and blasted “MoveOn.org bloggers” and “Code Pink protesters.” (Full article …)

Snuffysmith
From 54th Gov to Client No. 9 - Bill Hammond, New York Daily News
Spitzer Engulfed in Sex Scandal - L. Cohen & A. Efrati, Wall Street Journal
'Moral Crusader' Gets His Comeuppance - Terence Corcoran, National Post
An Ouch Moment for Hillary Clinton - John Nichols, The Nation
Gov Longshot? David Paterson's Unusual Rise - Fred Siegel, New York Post
The Specter of McCain Democrats - Froma Harrop, RealClearPolitics
How the Democrats Could Lose - Richard Cohen, Washington Post
Hillary's Still in It to Win It - Rich Lowry, National Review
Red Phone Ad Plays on Racial Fears - Orlando Patterson, New York Times
The Case for a Revote in FL & MI - Govs. Corzine & Rendell, Washington Post
Winning in November is What Counts - Marie Cocco, RealClearPolitics
McCain's Veepstakes: An Obvious Winner - Fred Barnes, Weekly Standard
An Interesting Option: Condi Rice for VP? - Hendrik Hertzberg, New Yorker
Reality and the Iraq War - Michael O'Hanlon, USA Today
George W. Bush's Jimmy Carter Imitation - Steve Forbes, Forbes
The Costs of Crime - Thomas Sowell, RealClearPolitics
Culture Wars? How 2004. - E.J. Dionne, Washington Post
RCP Blog: Memo Wars | Daily 2008 / Politics Nation: AM Thoughts
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The Dems' Struggle to Maintain Unity - Terence Samuel, American Prospect
Special Election is Bad News for GOP - Charlie Cook, National Journal
Clinton's Exaggerated Foreign Policy Experience - Greg Craig, Obama '08
Team Obama: Ready for Prime Time? - Jack Kelly, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Can Clinton Make Mississippi a Race? - Jay Newton-Small, Time
Should Eliot Spitzer Be Called a Hypocrite? - Roger Kimball, PJM
Assessing the Spitzer Fallout - Chris Cillizza, Washington Post
Pakistan's Progress - Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, Wall Street Journal
RCP Blog: Clinton Campaign Responds to Craig Memo
Snuffysmith
Obama Leads, But Clinton Might Have the Edge - Rick Klein, ABC News
The Democrats Fight to The Death - Gabor Steingart, Der Spiegel
Eliot Spitzer's Media Enablers - Kimberley Strassel, Wall Street Journal
Gutless Governor Hangs Wife on Line - John Kass, Chicago Tribune
Poetic Justice for Spitzer - Charles Gasparino, New York Post
OPEC is Winning the Battle Against the U.S. - Robert Samuelson, Newsweek
Fed Hopes to Ease Economic Strains - Edmund Andrews, New York Times
Inside Wall Street's Black Hole - Michael Lewis, Portfolio
Adm. Fallon: Man Between War & Peace - Thomas P.M. Barnett, Esquire
Fallon Didn't Get It - Max Boot, Los Angeles Times
The Left's War on Military Recruiters - Michelle Malkin, NRO
Who's the Best General Election Candidate? - Tom Edsall, Huffington Post
Primary Results May Not Predict November - Jay Cost, RealClearPolitics
Obama's Constitution - Edward Whelan, Weekly Standard
Michelle Obama is No Hillary Clinton - Michelle Cottle, The New Republic
The Air Force Tanker Deal - Thomas Lifson, American Thinker
Why I Am No Longer a 'Brain-Dead Liberal' - David Mamet, Village Voice
Delegate Count: Obama 1,614 - Clinton 1,487 / Videos: Ferraro Responds
RCP Blog: A Lover and a Fighter / Politics Nation: Hil's Philly Problem
Snuffysmith
MILITARY
First Casualty Of The Iran War
On Tuesday, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced that CentCom commander Adm. William Fallon, who had been in the position for roughly a year, had submitted his resignation. Fallon's resignation came a week after news first leaked of an article in Esquire magazine by former Naval War College professor Thomas P.M. Barnett that suggested Fallon was the "one man" standing between the Bush administration and war with Iran and that it could cost him his job. "Well-placed observers now say that it will come as no surprise if Fallon is relieved of his command before his time is up next spring," wrote Barnett. Though Fallon publicly rejected the article, he told Gates upon resigning that "the current embarrassing situation, public perception of differences between my views and administration policy, and the distraction this causes from the mission make this the right thing to do." White House aides told the Wall Street Journal that "senior Bush administration officials saw the article as a sign that Adm. Fallon was trying to publicly undercut" President Bush. "It was seen as a form of insubordination," said one White House aide. While Iran has been the focus of much of the commentary surrounding Fallon's exit, Gates called Fallon's resignation "a cumulative kind of thing" that "isn't the result of any one article or any one issue." In fact, Fallon's public disagreements with the administration over Iraq may have had as much influence on his falling out of favor.

A DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW: "There was no question that the admiral's premature departure stemmed from what were perceived to be policy differences with the administration on Iran and Iraq," writes Thom Shanker in the New York Times. Especially "where his views competed with those of Gen. David H. Petraeus, the American commander in Iraq, who is a favorite of the White House." As a nominee for the CentCom position in January 2007, Fallon refused to endorse Bush's surge strategy, saying that he's "always been someone who felt more comfortable in smaller numbers." Since then, he has been a proponent of "developing plans to redefine the U.S. mission and radically draw down troops" in Iraq in order to "balance deployments across the volatile region" he commanded. Last month, after Gates endorsed a "pause" in troop withdrawals this summer, Fallon told the New York Times that it should only be "temporary and brief" and that U.S. strategy should shift focus to a "supporting, sustaining, advising, training and mentoring role." A "senior Pentagon official" told Slate's Fred Kaplan that Fallon's comments were "unauthorized," which Kaplan says amounts to "challenging the president's policy...at his own initiative."

'NOT HELPFUL' WHEN IT COMES TO IRAN: Although Fallon's preference for diplomatic engagement with Iran rather than saber-rattling has been echoed by Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Michael Mullen, Fallon's manner of delivering that message differed considerably from the administration script. In Barnett's Esquire article, Fallon says a narrow focus on Iran is not wise because "in a part of the world with 'five or six pots boiling over, our nation can't afford to be mesmerized by one problem.'" "This constant drumbeat of conflict" with Iran "is not helpful and not useful," Fallon told al Jazeera in September 2007. In December 2007, he told the Financial Times, "Another war is just not where we want to go." Last year, he was quoted as saying an attack on Iran "will not happen on my watch." In November, after meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Fallon allowed it to be reported that he had "ruled out a possible strike against Iran and said Washington was mulling nonmilitary options instead." According to Newsweek, Fallon's main mistake was that he never included the caveat "of course, no options are off the table" in order to stay within administration policy.

RIGHT WING REJOICES: Right-wing war hawks are glad to see Fallon go. The Wall Street Journal Editorial board wrote yesterday that Fallon's resignation is "good news" because it will allow Bush to begin "to pay attention to the internal Pentagon dispute" over Iraq withdrawal. The New York Sun editorial board concurred, arguing that the "real news" of Fallon's resignation is that Petraeus might get to take over as CentCom commander. Writing an op-ed titled "Fallon didn't get it" in the Los Angeles Times yesterday, Council on Foreign Relations Senior Fellow Max Boot ridiculed Fallon as one of the "guys who think they're smart" and is "undermining" Bush's Iran strategy. "Fallon makes it more likely, not less, that there will ultimately be an armed confrontation with Iran," wrote Boot. Writing for National Review, conservative hawk Frank Gaffney attacked Fallon as "a military man who has proven himself utterly unserious about the Iranian threat" and "had engaged in serial acts of insubordination and sabotage."



IRAQ -- IRAQIS FEAR RETURN TO VIOLENT DAYS: A parked car bomb exploded in a Baghdad commercial district just outside the heavily fortified Green Zone today, killing 11 and wounding nearly 60. The bombing coincides with a recent spate of violence that has many in the Iraqi capital "feeling the unease of the period before violence eased partly as a result of the U.S. troop buildup, which is now coming to a close." The Associated Press recently interviewed many Iraqis who "said they were not necessarily changing their daily routines," but "the growing bloodshed was present in their minds, clouding what had until recently been a more hopeful time." Civilian deaths per day are up to 39 from a low of 20 last January, while at the same time, there has been "a sharp increase in attacks resulting in the deaths of U.S. soldiers. Twelve Americans have been killed in the past four days, bringing the overall U.S. military death toll since the start of the war near 4,000."

ENVIRONMENT -- EPA ADMINISTRATOR AGAIN IGNORES STAFF ADVICE ON SMOG REGULATIONS: Yesterday, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen Johnson announced "a modest tightening of the smog standard," from the current 84 parts of ozone per billion to 75 ppb. In reaching his decision, Johnson "overrul[ed] the unanimous advice of [the agency's scientific advisory council for a more protective standard." Johnson has a long history of making partisan decisions over the advice of his staff. In January, he denied a permit to California that would have allowed the state to strengthen its emissions caps on cars -- a decision that directly contradicted the advice of his staff. In fact, a staff memo prepared for Johnson warned that if he were to deny the permit, "the credibility of the agency that we both love will be irreparably damaged." Today, the LA Times reports that, regarding the latest smog decision, "President Bush intervened at the 11th hour" to reject "a second proposal by the EPA staff that would have established tougher seasonal limits on ozone based on its harm to forests, crops and other plants."

INTELLIGENCE -- PENTAGON BLOCKS REPORT SHOWING HUSSEIN HAD NO TIES TO AL QAEDA: On Monday, McClatchy reported that a Pentagon-sponsored "review of more than 600,000 Iraqi documents," scheduled for release this week, confirmed that Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda had no "operational links," even though President Bush said as late as 2004, "The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq and Saddam and al Qaeda: because there was a relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda." ABC reports that the Pentagon apparently doesn't want the study "to get any attention" as it has canceled "plans to send out a press release announcing the report's release and will no longer make the report available online." One Pentagon official said initial press reports on the study made it "too politically sensitive." Navy Capt. Dennis Moynihan, a spokesman for the Joint Forces Command, said, "We're making the report available to anyone who wishes to have it, and we'll send it out via CD in the mail."




The rapidly falling dollar "marked a milestone in Japan as it <a target="_blank" href="http://app.mx3.americanprogressaction.org/e/er.aspx?s=785&lid=2086&elq=D52FCABDC23D43469EF77C7DFB5DE815">fell below 100 yen for the first time in 12 years" amid growing concerns about the health of the U.S. economy.

"The U.S. federal government ran a monthly budget deficit of $175.56 billion in February, a record for any month, the Treasury Department said Wednesday."

Sixty percent of Americans think the Iraq war was a mistake, according to a new USA Today poll. The same number also favors a timetable for troop withdrawal, regardless of the situation in Iraq, while 54 percent believe that history will judge the war as mostly or a total failure. A Pew poll found that 53 percent of Americans think the U.S. will ultimately achieve its goals in Iraq.

"A barrage of rockets targeting an American military base in southern Iraq on Wednesday morning killed three U.S. soldiers, bringing to 12 the number of Americans killed in Iraq in the past three days."

Top FBI officials "repeatedly approved the use of 'blanket' records demands to justify the improper collection of thousands of phone records." These blanket demands -- which do not require the approval of a judge -- were used at least 11 times in 2006 alone, "as a quick way to clean up mistakes" made since 9/11.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), traveling to Europe next week, said he wouldn't discuss differences with President Bush while abroad. "There are obvious differences," he said. "I certainly won't articulate them overseas."

When a Justice Department proposed rule requiring U.S. contractors "to report waste, fraud or abuse they encounter while doing work for the government" was published by the White House Office of Management and Budget last year, it included "language that would exempt from such reporting all U.S. contractors who do work overseas" including in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Pentagon has recorded nearly 50 videotapes of its interrogations of terrorism suspects Jose Padilla and Ali al-Marri, "the first official acknowledgment that military interrogators had videotaped some sessions with detainees."

And finally: Most senators and aides are dreading the "vote-o-rama" planned for the next few days. The dozens are votes will mostly focus on "obscure procedural motions." Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS), however, is "truly thrilled at the prospect" of these votes. "I'm going to get my percentages up!' he gleefully told Roll Call, reportedly "pumping his arms in the air in the universal gesture of celebration." During his bid for the GOP presidential nomination, his voting record took a hit; he missed 28.2 percent of votes.



Snuffysmith
Editorial - Let the Bush revisionism begin
Snuffysmith
he Other Prostitution Scandal by Steve ChapmanPoliticians take people's money with a promise to fulfill desires that supposedly can't be … W.'s Gun Battle by Robert NovakPreparing to hear oral arguments Tuesday on the extent of gun rights guaranteed by the … The Democrats' Problem With Race by R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr.I, for one, shall not join the raucous mob in pursuing this unfortunate man, Eliot SpRitzer.In …
Snuffysmith
Obama on Offense - Dorothy Rabinowitz, Wall Street Journal
Scrutinizing Clinton's Experience - Tumulty, Duffy & Calabresi, Time
McCain Leaves Social Conservatives Cold - Rick Santorum, Philly Inquirer
What I Couldn't Teach Spitzer at Harvard Law - Susan Estrich, Fox News
Spitzer a Fraud and a Hypocrite From Day One - Fred Dicker, NY Post
Race Issue Bubbles Up Again for Dems - Healy & Zeleny, New York Times
Ferraro's Insult to Democrats - Eric Deggans, Huffington Post
Psst!--Ferraro Was Right - Mickey Kaus, Slate
The Fall of Admiral George B. McFallon - Mackubin Owens, Wkly Standard
Fallon's Headstrong Demeanor Costs Him - David Ignatius, Washington Post
The Puerto Rico Wild Card - Jay Cost, RealClearPolitics
Party Rules Don't Trump the Constitution - Robert Sanchez, Miami Herald
The Tired Gaza Two-Step - Victor Davis Hanson, RealClearPolitcs
Dream Ticket Won't Happen - David Broder, Washington Post
The Administration's Gun Battle - Robert Novak, Chicago Sun-Times
A Nation of Dolts, Under God? - Heather Wilhelm, RealClearPolitics
Are We In (Or Headed For) a Recession? - D. Furchtgott-Roth, American
Videos: Olbermann Blasts Clinton | GMA: Obama's Pastor a Liability?
RCP Blog: U.S., Over The Top? | Daily '08 / Politics Nation: Perfect Storm


Snuffysmith
Petreaus: Iraqi Government Not doing Enough for Peace
March 14, 2008
Top commander in Iraq General David Petreaus is dissatisfied with the progress being made by the Iraqi government toward reconciliation: More

Holocaust survivors deserve immediate access to hidden archives
March 14, 2008
Sixty three years after the Holocaust, my mother, who is an eighty-year-old survivor does not know under what circumstances her parents, 2 brothers, and sister died. More

Snuffysmith
Senator Obama's Foreign Policy Judgment
Ed Lasky
Presidents have vast powers in the realm of foreign policy, providing reason to worry about the possible presidency of Barack Obama. More

The Wages of Race-and-Gender Socialism
James Lewis
Barack Obama has promised that he will rise above race. But will the race and gender industry go out of business iof he is elected? There's not a chance in the world. More

Everyone Makes Mistakes
Christopher Chantrill
When the Democratic candidates talk about Change, what they really mean is that they will redeem the mistakes of the Bush Era. More

Snuffysmith
Do-Over Primary in Michigan idea gaining steam
March 13, 2008
Another primary in Michigan, run by the state but financed by the state party, may be in the offing according to party sources: More

So much for the Gaza 'Truce'
March 13, 2008
A day after Israel and Hamas agreed to an "unofficial truce," a barrage of 15 rockets targeted the western Negev: More

The State Dept's foolish question
March 13, 2008
The State Dept. is in a hole and can't stop digging. More

Snuffysmith
Some refreshing candor from a liberal
March 13, 2008
Yeah, but you better not call them unpatriotic. More

Surge in Public Support for the War
March 13, 2008
A significant surge in public support for the war in Iraq threatens to upend expectations for the November election from president on down. More

Snuffysmith
The first Winter Soldiers
March 14, 2008
Neither the VVAW or the IVAW, discussed yesterday by Kyle-Anne Shiver, are the original Winter Soldiers. That honor goes to those who stood by George Washington through the winter of 1776-77. More

Tony Rezko's Dew Drop Inn
March 13, 2008
There is a certain type of business promoter who solicits money from wealthy overseas private investors, and proves his bona fides and influence in America by displaying access to powerful politicians. More

Worse than hypocrisy
March 13, 2008
John Berlau of the Competitive Enterprise Institute identifies the best reason of all to be thankful Eliot Spitzer is gone, and it involves federalism. More

Snuffysmith

The group blog of The American Prospect
Depressing campaign news to start your day.
Posted at 9:38 a.m.


A respectable liberal blog
Health integration and cost control.
Posted at 4:29 p.m.
[/color]

Dean Baker's economic commentary
[color="#800000"]Oil priced in dollars...again!
Posted at 5:48 a.m.
Snuffysmith
The FundamentaList
Sarah Posner
March 12, 2008 | web only
This week in the religious right: A possible explanation for the Churchill images in McCain's most recent ad, Craig Unger on the relationship between neocons and fundamentalists, and has the evangelical center arrived?



The American Recession and the World's Emerging Economies
Robert B. Reich
March 11, 2008 | web only
The world's developing nations are no longer nearly as dependent as they used to be on consumers in the United States and other rich nations to keep them going by buying their exports.
Snuffysmith
Power Grab
Tara McKelvey
March 14, 2008
Two new books, one by a Boston Globe reporter, the other by the former head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, recount the Bush administration's efforts to expand the presidential powers at the expense of the law.



What $5,500 an Hour Buys
Harold Meyerson
March 13, 2008 | web only
The amount Eliot Spitzer paid for a prostitute buys a lot more than secrecy, and a lot more than sex. It buys a confirmation of status and power, though it remains -- or is supposed to remain -- inconspicuous.
Snuffysmith

Is There a Dark Side in All of Us?

Elizabeth Heathcote, The Independent UK

Maverick academic Philip Zimbardo says we are all capable of evil. Is he right?


Why Men Do Stupid Things: The Psychological Appeal of Prostitutes

Michael Bader, AlterNet

Sex and Relationships: A psychotherapist explains what might go on in the deeper recesses of the minds of men like Eliot Spitzer.


Military Stigmas Treat War Trauma as Admission of Weakness

Penny Coleman, AlterNet

War on Iraq: Army studies say one in three soldiers will return from Iraq with significant mental health problems, but the system isn't there to help them.
Snuffysmith

The United States Needs a New Image

Public Opinion by Ruy Teixeira
Contrary to conservative commentators’ opinions, America’s image is declining rapidly around the world.

  • Endgame

    A Responsible Intelligence Compromise. Again.
    Mark Agrast writes that House leaders have proposed a responsible compromise on intelligence surveillance. Again.

  • Unanswered Questions in Iraq

    The Fifth Anniversary of the War
    Brian Katulis talks with Charles Ferguson about his new book, No End in Sight, Bush administration mistakes, and the war's future.
Snuffysmith

Video: The “R” Word

Issue Pulse on the Recession
Bush won’t say it, but consensus is the economy is either in a recession or soon will soon be. Conservatives have a lot to answer for.
Snuffysmith
What's in Your Wallet?: Congress Investigates Credit Card Terms
Catch-22 Revisited: Think Again by Eric Alterman
A Green Banner Event: Groups Unite Around Green Jobs
Don't Let Expansion Cause Division: U.S. Should Support NATO Expansion
Bringing a Goal to Life: House Considers Anti-Poverty Funding
Economic Snapshot for March 2008: The State of the Economy
ReUsing Buildings in Buffalo: It's Easy Being Green
Our Surprising Technology Trade Deficit: Imports Overtake Exports
Listen to the Top Brass: Don't Make Them Quit Early
Are We Losing Our Competitive Edge?: Gates Testifies on Innovation
Snuffysmith
Credit: Westrick on Promoting Credit Card Safety (The Washington Post)
Iran: Grotto on BBC Public Opinion Poll (Arms Control Wonk)
Russia: Boyer on Democracy and Stability (The Root)
Economy: Sperling on Bob Ball and Social Security (Bloomberg)
Iraq: Podesta and Korb on a War We Must End (The Washington Post)
Kosovo: Violence Over The Declaration of Independence (TheRoot.com)
Economy: Weller on Recession, Foreclosures, and Stimulus (Credit Slips)
Afghanistan: Wadhams on Changing Course (International Affairs Forum)
Economy: Weller on Why Banks Lend More (Credit Slips)
Pakistan: Katulis on Pakistan's Leap of Faith (The Guardian Online)
Snuffysmith
The Risks and Rewards of Obama - Ronald Brownstein, National Journal
Is Clinton Making Obama Unelectable? - Jonathan Chait, The New Republic
Adventures In Identity Politics - Charles Krauthammer, Washington Post
Monsters & Racists & Sexists, Oh My! - Kathleen Parker, RealClearPolitics
Hillary's New Conservative Friends - Steve Kornacki, New York Observer
Obama and the Minister - Ronald Kessler, Wall Street Journal
Don't Discount Clinton's Strength in Ohio - John Fortier, The Politico
What Will Happen With Florida? - Jay Cost, RealClearPolitics
Do Voters Want a More Isolationist Foreign Policy? - Andrew Kohut, NYT
Obama's Iraq Inconsistencies - Michael Gerson, Washington Post
How Not to Deal with Iran - Arthur Herman, New York Post
Sometimes the Fed's Magic Doesn't Work - Paul Krugman, New York Times
Predicting Our Uncertain Economy - Edmund Phelps, Wall Street Journal
NRCC Audits Forged, Nearly $1M Missing - Reid Wilson, RealClearPolitics
Fall of the Alpha Males - David Brooks, New York Times
Paterson: The Anti-Steamroller - E.J. Dionne, Washington Post
Eliot Spitzer's "Emperor's Club" - Robert Tracinski, RealClearPolitics
RCP Blog: Dly 08 / Politics Nation: AM Thghts: Welcome to Washington
Snuffysmith
Gold Tops an incredible $1,000 an ounce
March 14, 2008
Take a deep breath folks. The next few months are liable to get very bumpy and very wild: More

Barack Obama and judgment (continued)
March 14, 2008
Barack Obama exposes his daughters to the rants of Pastor Wright. How is that for judgment and responsibility? More

Surprise! MSM Misses the mark on Saddam-al-Qaeda report
March 14, 2008
Incredible stupidity? Or rank bias? You decide. More

Obama releases earmark requests for last three years
March 14, 2008
I don't know if this revelation will hurt Obama or not. More

Pastor Wright and Barack Obama: The media finally notices
March 14, 2008
Dr. Jeremiah Wright Jr. has been saying things like "God damn America" for a couple of decades to a congregation that has grown to the thousands, and his sermons only go out via webcast, podcast, telecast, broadcast, cable cast. More

Snuffysmith
Fed Races to Steady Financial System - Kelly, Ip & Sidel, Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Domino Thoery - Anderson & Bajaj, New York Times
Controversial Minister Leaves Obama Campaign - Alex Johnson, MSNBC
Story Behind the Story: Obama's Pastor - Mike Allen, The Politico
This is Why Hillary is Staying in the Race - John Podhoretz, Contentions
Why McCain Might Win - Michael Hirsh, Newsweek
The Conservative Case for McCain - Gov. Mark Sanford, Wall Street Journal
For Progressives, A Sea-Change Election? - Robert Borosage, The Nation
Infighting Risks Dems' Key Voters - David Shribman, Pitt Post-Gazette
The Keys to Pennsylvania - Terry Madonna & Michael Young, RCP
How McCain Turned It Around - Chris Jones, Esquire
Why Bill Endured But Eliot Fell - John Heilemann, New York Magazine
Spitzer Quit Boosts Bloomberg - Robert Novak, Chicago Sun-Times
The GOP's Band of 13 - Reid Wilson, National Journal
The Importance of Fallon's Fall - Michael Barone, US News & World Report
The Rise of American Incompetence - Daniel Gross, Slate
In Iraq, We See What We Want - Victor Davis Hanson, National Review
Snuffysmith

Editorials
Bear Essentials - Wall Street Journal
Exports and the Economy - The Economist
All Eyes On China - London Times
Leaving Musharraf Behind - New York Times

Political News & Analysis
Obama Denounces His Pastor's Statements - New York Times
Iowa's Delegate Selection Adds Zing to Race - Des Moines Register
Michigan Dems Move Toward June 3 Re-Do - Associated Press
Clinton Preaches to Her Choir - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Snuffysmith
William Jefferson Obama
Lee Cary
I now have reason to suspect that Barack Obama has a skill of proven value to a U.S. President: the ability to look straight into the camera and not tell the truth, without lying. More

The Lawyers' Party
Bruce Walker
The Democratic Party has become the Lawyers' Party. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are lawyers. Bill Clinton and Michelle Obama are lawyers. Every Democrat nominee since 1984 went to law school (although Gore did not graduate.) More

Iraq Vets for Congress
Kieran Michael Lalor
To help counter the alliance of the Democratic leadership with the antiwar Left, I recently formed Iraq Vets for Congress, a group of thirteen Republican Iraq veterans who are seeking office in the U.S. House of Representatives. More

Snuffysmith
Snuffysmith
Fed Acts to Avert Panic
March 17, 2008
Over the weekend, the Federal Reserve opened a $30 billion line of credit for the purchase of troubled investment bank Bear Sterns and promised an open ended lending program for the biggest investment firms on Wall Street: More

Pastor Wright goes down the Obama memory hole
March 16, 2008
Steve Gilbert of Sweetness & Light notices that Pastor Jeremiah Wright, Jr. has become a non-person on the Barack Obama campaign website. More

Kissing Robert Malley
March 16, 2008
Today's New York Times carries a puff piece on Robert Malley, a figure of some controversy because of his views on Israel. More

Snuffysmith
Missile Strikes Targets Pakistani Terrorists
March 16, 2008
At least 7 missiles struck a house near the Afghan border identified by local tribesmen as a militant's home, killing a reported 20 people. More

Obama picks up 9 more delegates in Iowa
March 16, 2008
Iowa Democrats convened their county conventions yesterday and thanks to the withdrawal of John Edwards, Barack Obama picked up 9 of the 14 delegates at stake: More

Obama's poor judgment and poorer excuses
March 16, 2008
Barack Obama showed very poor judgment when he accepted $250,000 of campaign funds from indicted slumlord Tony Resko, who was Obama's first substantial contributor More

Snuffysmith
Swooning: Then and Now
March 16, 2008
For old-timers like me, there's nothing new about women shrieking and swooning while an anemically thin, bony faced young man croons to them. More

'Cultural genocide' in Tibet: Dalai Lama
March 16, 2008
Rioting spread to several other provinces in Tibet after demonstrations in Lhasa become violent: More

Reflections on Our Fifth Year in Iraq
March 16, 2008
Richard Perle reminds us why we invaded, what we achieved, where and why we erred and the present situation More

Snuffysmith
McCain in Iraq
March 16, 2008
While his Democratic rivals clobber each other back home, John McCain is in Iraq getting a feel for the situation on the ground and talking with military and diplomatic leaders about the future: More

Did the Prosecution Illegally Withhold Exculpatory Evidence in Enron? (updated)
March 16, 2008
Former Enron Chief Skilling's is making a very explosive charge, apparently with evidentiary warrant, that the prosecution in Enron improperly withheld exculpatory evidence in its possession More

Are the Obamas Among Wright's Wrong Congregation?
March 16, 2008
Much has rightly been made of Wright's tirades, but somehow less of the agitated anger of his congregants. More

Snuffysmith
Urged by Feds, J.P. Morgan Buys Bear Stearns - Sidel, Berman & Kelly, WSJ
Why a Federal Bailout is Inevitable - Paul Krugman, New York Times
The Growing Democratic Racial Divide - Robert Novak, Chicago Sun-Times
White Male Vote Will Be Critical for Dems - Dan Balz, Washington Post
Stop Pitting Race Against Gender - Gary Younge, The Guardian
Pastor Calls Into Question Obama's Judgment - Peter Wehner, Nat'l Review
What is Obama's Church Really Like? - Lisa Miller, Newsweek
Generation Obama? Perhaps Not. - William Kristol, New York Times
Dems Risk Losing a Generation With Clinton - Ron Dzwonkowski, Detroit FP
Don't Bet Against a Clinton/Obama Ticket - Clive Crook, Financial Times
Time to Buy Hillary Clinton - John McIntyre, RealClearPolitics
Dems Need to Resolve Race Sooner Rather Than Later - Mike Cohen, WSJ
McCain's Free Ride Will Cost Dems in Fall - Drew Westen, The New Republic
Security Gains Reverse Iraq's Downward Spiral - Gary Langer, ABC News
Stuck in the Iraq Loop - Fareed Zakaria, Newsweek
3rd Wave of Democratization Has Stopped - Larry Diamond, Foreign Affairs
Salvaging Our North Korea Policy - John Bolton, Wall Street Journal
Politics Nation: Real World / Dem Race: Popular Vote | Delegate Count
The RCP Blog: Nightmare on Dem Street | Poll: Iraqis See Progress | D08
Snuffysmith
10 Most Popular Stories Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times/Redux Gov. Eliot Spitzer of New York during a news conference in New York on Feb. 27, 2008.

1. Was Spitzer Destined to Fall? By John Cloud A lurid sex scandal ends the brash, ambitious career of New York's governor, but the clues to his demise go years back

2. The Spitzer Scandal: Lust Plus Pride By Nathan Thornburgh The New York governor, the vaunted enemy of corruption is accused of patronizing a prostitution ring. Will he survive?

3. The Perilous Future of Eliot Spitzer By Alex Altman/New York Can the ferocious fallen governor avoid possible legal repercussions and potential disbarment after a sex scandal?

4. The New Face of New York By Alex Altman/New York As Spitzer resigns, David Paterson becomes New York's governor and a pioneer. But can he end the state's gridlock?

5. Is Our Happiness Preordained? By Laura Blue New studies suggest that our daily ups and downs affect us less than things out of our control, like genes and age

6. Obama Win Defined by Race By Michael Duffy Obama easily took Mississippi, but the voting divide was a reminder of the racial turmoil the campaign verges on

7. Obama's Big Problem: Neophytes By Mark Halperin Controversies over his advisors' comments show the danger of giving green academics big campaign roles — and the need to sometimes play by the old rules

8. How Google Earth Ate Our Town By Rob Shaw The search engine has mapped virtually every block of this small Canadian coal town — though locals have responded with not much more than a shrug

9. So Who Really Won Texas? By Michael Duffy/Washington and Hilary Hylton/Austin Clinton, according to the polls, but as the complicated caucus counting goes on, the outcome appears much murkier

10. The Shamu Lady Is Back!</h3> By M.J. Stephey Amy Sutherland's essay on how she trained her husband like an animal became an internet phenomenon. She hopes her new book has just as much bounce
Snuffysmith
CAMPAIGN OUTSIDER
Checklists for the next big vote
There are weeks or months to go until the next vote that matters for US presidential candidates, but it's no time to relax - each campaign needs a to-do list to keep them on the winning path. (Mar 18, '08)
Muhammad Cohen puts the US presidential campaign into sharper focus from afar.
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