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10:15 AM ET, October 2, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Salon:
Foley fallout: Snow spins, Republicans scramble as more messages emerge  —  White House press secretary Tony Snow may be ready to dismiss Rep. Mark Foley's sexually explicit exchanges with underage House pages as nothing more than "naughty e-mails," but that's not the response we're hearing from most quarters.
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Washington Post:
FBI to Examine Foley's E-Mails  —  The FBI announced last night that it is looking into whether former representative Mark Foley (R-Fla.) broke federal law by sending inappropriate e-mails and instant messages to teenage House pages.  —  The announcement came hours after House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert asked …
Rachel L. Swarns / New York Times:
Former Pages Describe Foley as Caring Ally  —  Congressional pages live under a curfew in this building in Washington.  Former pages say Representative Mark Foley was unusually friendly.  —  In the hierarchy of Congress, the high school students who serve as Congressional pages fall somewhere near …
Chicago Tribune:
Ex-page says he saw suggestive e-mails  —  WASHINGTON — A former House page said Sunday that in 2003 he saw sexually suggestive e-mails that Rep. Mark Foley had sent to another former page.  —  Patrick McDonald, 21, now a senior at Ohio State University, said he eventually learned of …
New York Times:
Review of Messages Sent by Congressman Begins  —  Law enforcement officials said Sunday that the F.B.I. had begun a preliminary inquiry into whether former Representative Mark Foley broke any federal laws when he reportedly exchanged sexually explicit e-mail messages with under-age Congressional pages …
The Blotter:
GOP Staff Warned Pages About Foley in 2001
Carolyn Fox / Opinion:
Sexual abuse in Congress? Not on leaders' agenda
Lara Jakes Jordan / Associated Press:   Ex-Rep. Foley checks in to alcohol rehab
Bob Woodward / Washington Post:
Should He Stay?  —  The biggest question mark was Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld:  —  After President Bush won reelection in 2004, White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr. got out an 8 1/2 -by-11 spiral notebook, half an inch thick, with a blue cover.
RELATED ITEMS:
Jamie Holly / Crooks and Liars:
Woodward's 60 Minutes Interview on 'State of Denial'  —  Bob Woodward sat down with Mike Wallace to talk about his new book, State of Denial, and had many, many interesting things to report.  The title of the book really says it all; the Bush administration is so convinced that what they're doing …
Discussion: Firedoglake
Michael A. Fletcher / Washington Post:
White House Aides Take to Talk Shows to Dispute Book
Michael Gawenda / Sydney Morning Herald:
Woodward's book damns Bush team
StrategyPage:
The Joke's on Osama  —  Al Qaeda in particular, and Islamic terrorist groups in general, are desperate for a major success.  Islamic terrorists remember the 19 90s fondly as a time when they were kicking ass big time, or at least more effectively than they have since September 11, 2001.
Discussion: Dr. Sanity
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Karen DeYoung / Washington Post:
Letter Gives Glimpse of Al-Qaeda's Leadership
Discussion: The Jawa Report
Thomas Harding / Telegraph:
Muslim accosts injured Para in hospital  —  A paratrooper wounded in Afghanistan was threatened by a Muslim visitor to the British hospital where he is recovering.  —  Seriously wounded soldiers have complained that they are worried about their safety after being left on wards that are open …
Discussion: Daily Pundit and Samizdata.net
Mark Steyn / Chicago Sun Times:
At Gitmo, detainees get La-Z-Boys, pastries  —  'This is not just a bad bill," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee.  ''This is truly a dangerous bill."  And it's not just a dangerous bill.  It's also "unconstitutional" and "unconscionable" and represents the loss of the nation's "moral compass."
Patterico / Patterico's Pontifications:
Patterico's Exclusive Interview with a Man Who Has Spoken to the Terrorists at Guantánamo (Part One: Introduction)  —  I know Zarqawi, the terrorist said to the American. … The terrorist said it all in a matter-of-fact way, looking the American straight in the eye.  —  The American was not frightened.
Paul Kiel / TPMmuckraker:
Pelosi: House Ethics Should Act "Immediately"  —  In a letter to House Ethics Committee Chair Doc Hastings (R-WA) today, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi wrote "to insist that the Ethics Committee act as directed and immediately form the investigative Subcommittee and begin work on the preliminary report in 10 days.
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Brian Knowlton / New York Times:
Democrats Assail G.O.P. for Silence on Foley
Sebastian Mallaby / Washington Post:
A Party Without Principles  —  After years of single-party government, the prospect of a Democratic majority in the House ought to feel refreshing.  But even with Republicans collapsing in a pile of sexual sleaze, I just can't get excited.  Most Democrats in Congress seem bereft of ideas or the courage to stand up for them.
Jacqui Goddard / Times of London:
One small word is one giant sigh of relief for Armstrong  —  IT WAS the perfect quote to match a momentous occasion.  As Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the Moon in 1969, a global audience of 500 million people on Earth watched and listened with bated breath.
Tariq Ramadan / Washington Post:
Why I'm Banned in the USA  —  For more than two years now, the U.S. government has barred me from entering the United States to pursue an academic career.  The reasons have changed over time, and have evolved from defamatory to absurd, but the effect has remained the same: I've been kept out.
John Fund / Opinion Journal:
On the Waterfront—Still  —  Why did Congress kill a measure to keep felons out of U.S. ports?  —  Congress is patting itself on the back for passing the Port Security Act last Saturday.  But the day before, a House-Senate conference committee stripped out a provision that would have barred serious felons …
 
 
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 More Items: 
MSNBC:
Polls: Democrats run strong in Senate races
Linda Greenhouse / New York Times:
Roberts Court May Be Defined in Second Term
Discussion: PoliBlog
Frank Phillips / Boston Globe:
Patrick has a big lead in new poll
Ynetnews:
ADL: Concerned over Borat's depiction of anti-Semitism
Discussion: PunditGuy
The Observer / News from Norway:
Norwegian TV Channel TV 2 will show Mohammad cartoons.
Discussion: Gates of Vienna
Ron Bousso / Agence France Presse:
Gooood morning Tehran! This is Jerusalem
Ibrahim Barzak / Associated Press:
Fighting between Hamas and Fatah kills 7
 Earlier Items: 
Agence France Presse:
Military force won't stop illegal weapons entering Lebanon: Assad
Maureen Fan / Washington Post:
In China, Churches Challenge the Rules
Observer:
Meet the 'Prince of Marbella' - is he really supporting Iraq's insurgency?
Discussion: Amygdala
Kevin Drum / Political Animal:
CROSSWORD FOLLIES....Several weeks ago, with some spare …
Discussion: SteveAudio
David Bernstein / The Volokh Conspiracy:
CUT OFF THE HEAD OF THE PIG WHO SAYS OUR RELIGION "EXALTS VIOLENCE AND HATE" !:
Discussion: Bring it On! and Dean's World
Daily Kos:
UPDATE: FOX News Anchor Lays War Dead at Bush's Feet. (video)
George F. Will / Newsweek:
Speechless In Seattle  —  What has happened in Seattle prefigures …
 

 
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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