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12:10 PM ET, March 7, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Washington Post:
Democrats Struggle To Seize Opportunity  —  News about GOP political corruption, inept hurricane response and chaos in Iraq has lifted Democrats' hopes of winning control of Congress this fall.  But seizing the opportunity has not been easy, as they found when they tried to unveil an agenda of their own.
RELATED ITEMS:
E. J. Dionne Jr / Washington Post:
The Democrats' Real Problem  —  It is now an ingrained journalistic habit: After a period of bad news for President Bush, media outlets invariably devote time and space to "balancing" stories that all say more or less: "Yes, the Republicans are in trouble, but the Democrats have no alternatives, no plans," etc.
Lydia Saad / Gallup:
Democrats Stretch Lead in Vote for Congress  —  Fourteen-point Democratic lead is among the widest since 1994  —  PRINCETON, NJ — The latest CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll, conducted Feb. 28 to March 1, finds the Democrats holding a substantial lead over the Republicans as the party …
Discussion: Eschaton
Associated Press:
DeLay to spend election night with lobbyists
Chris Bowers / MyDD:
Two Stories and Two Primaries … Next, from the front-page of the Washington Post:
Discussion: Eschaton
John Ward Anderson / Washington Post:
Iraqi Tribes Strike Back at Insurgents  —  In Turbulent Areas, Zarqawi's Fighters Are Target of Leaders and a New Militia  —  BAGHDAD, March 6 — First they killed the chief of the Naim tribe and his son.  Then they killed a top tribal sheik who headed the Fallujah city council.
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Shiites Try to Block Start of Parliament Amid New Violence  —  BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 7 — The struggle to get the country's sclerotic political process inching forward ran into a new complication today, as Shiite politicians sought to block the new parliament from holding its first meeting on Sunday.
Discussion: TAPPED
Edward Wong / New York Times:
U.S. Takes Steps to Reduce Shiite Domination in Iraqi Military  —  BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 6 — As the threat of full-scale sectarian strife looms, the American military is scrambling to try to weed out ethnic or religious partisans from the Iraqi security forces.
Washington Post:
Now Repeal the Ban  —  THE SUPREME Court's unanimous decision yesterday upholding the Solomon Amendment is no surprise.  It offers the correct answer to the legal question the case posed: Can the government deny federal money to universities that, in protest of the military's discrimination …
RELATED ITEMS:
Washington Post:
A Victory For Military Recruiters  —  Schools Must Give Access Despite Objection to Policy On Gays, Justices Say  —  The Supreme Court yesterday unanimously upheld a federal law that forces colleges and universities to permit military recruiting on campus, despite the schools' objections …
Jane Roh / Fox News:
Supreme Court Rules Against Schools in Military Recruiting Case
Michael Barbaro / New York Times:
Wal-Mart Enlists Bloggers in Its P.R. Campaign  —  Brian Pickrell, a blogger, recently posted a note on his Web site attacking state legislation that would force Wal-Mart Stores to spend more on employee health insurance.  "All across the country, newspaper editorial boards …
Monica Davey / New York Times:
South Dakota Bans Abortion, Setting Up a Battle  —  Gov. Michael Rounds of South Dakota signed into law the nation's most sweeping state abortion ban on Monday, an intentional provocation meant to set up a direct legal challenge to Roe v. Wade, the 1973 United States Supreme Court decision that made abortion legal.
Nicholas Wade / New York Times:
Still Evolving, Human Genes Tell New Story  —  Providing the strongest evidence yet that humans are still evolving, researchers have detected some 700 regions of the human genome where genes appear to have been reshaped by natural selection, a principal force of evolution, within the last 5,000 to 15,000 years.
Discussion: Secular Blasphemy and Tim Worstall
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
House Conservatives Prepare Austere Alternative Budget  —  WASHINGTON, March 6 — With Congress heading into a politically perilous budget season, influential House conservatives plan this week to propose an austere alternative spending plan that would pare more than $650 billion over five years …
Digby / Hullabaloo:
Democratic Sin Eaters  —  Speaking of Amy Sullivan's new article in the Washington Monthly about evangelicals leaving the Republican fold to join the Democrats, Kevin says: … Sullivan's article is only partially persuasive to me.  I'm with Atrios on this.
Ed Lavandera / CNN:
Dodge City showdown at funeral  —  DODGE CITY, Kansas (CNN) — This past Saturday morning I found myself in a five-car caravan cutting across the Kansas plains with about 30 religious protesters.  In the back of a truck, there were signs that read "Thank God for IED's" and "Thank God for Dead Soldiers."
Mark Goodman / Washington Times:
Clinton cover-ups  —  Lost in the tumult over Islamic port deals and Katrina video capers is the recently released — and willfully ignored — Barrett Report.  David Barrett, you'll recall, is the independent counsel appointed in 1995 to investigate allegations of impropriety …
Discussion: The Strata-Sphere
Jane Hamsher / firedoglake:
Unchristened Embryos, Destination: Hell  —  I brought up one of my favorite forced birth conundrums the other day, guaranteed to make wingnut "life begins at conception" heads explode.  If a fire breaks out in a fertility clinic and you can only save a petri dish with five blastulae or a two-year old child, which do you save?
New York Times:
Mr. Bush's Asian Road Trip  —  There is a lot of good a president can do on a visit to another country: negotiate treaties that enhance American security, shore up a shaky alliance, generate good will in important parts of the world.  Unfortunately, President Bush didn't do any of those good things …
 
 
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 More Items: 
Michael Reynolds / Donklephant:
The World: Not Going Away.  —  Here is the foreign policy truth …
Leon De Winter / Opinion Journal:
Soft Europe  —  Is the Continent willing to fight for anything, besides a welfare check?
BBC:
Woman loses frozen embryos fight
John Mainelli / New York Post:
AIR AMERICA TUNED OUT?
Discussion: NewsBusters.org and Iowa Voice
Mark Finkelstein / NewsBusters.org:
Lauer for the Defense: Matt Asks Colorado Teacher "Were You Set Up?"
Bloomberg:
Bush Perceived Blunders on Iraq, Katrina Buoy Democrats in 2006
Discussion: The Moderate Voice
TalkLeft:
Embedded Torture  —  Investigative journalist Dahr Jamail …
Libby Quaid / Associated Press:
Foes of Food Labeling Bill Criticize Law
 Earlier Items: 
Christopher Hitchens / Slate:
Survey Says  —  Let the exchange of trade and ideas with Iran begin.
Ben Fox / Associated Press:
Some Gitmo Prisoners Don't Want to Go Home
Associated Press:
Driver at UNC Cites Vengeance for Muslims
Fox News:
Transcript: Joran van der Sloot Goes 'On the Record,' Part 3
Discussion: TalkLeft and Scared Monkeys
Larry Margasak / Associated Press:
Guards Fault Homeland Security Protection
Borzou Daragahi / Los Angeles Times:
U.S. Envoy to Iraq Warns of Wider War
Mark Schmitt / Washington Monthly:
Backseat Strategists  —  Do the Democratic Party's harshest …
Wonkette:
Our Boys Need Gossip!
 

 
From Techmeme:

Amanda Silberling / TechCrunch:
Some founders say TikTok ban won't impact creator economy startups much, as they have diversified across multiple platforms after Trump tried banning it in 2020

William Brown / Firstyear's blog-a-log:
Google and Apple use passkeys to capture users by locking credentials into their platforms and have made the UX of passkeys worse than that of password managers

Sarah Perez / TechCrunch:
EyeEm, the bankrupt photo sharing network acquired by Freepik last year, will license users' photos to train AI if the images are not deleted within 30 days

 
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