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11:40 AM ET, October 10, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Michelle Malkin:
Democrat poster-child abuse, the nutroots' pushback, and the continued campaign to silence the Right  —  I received an e-mail from a NYTimes reporter this afternoon: … I gave him these comments: … I also told him this: … Here's the NYTimes story, which actually turned out much fairer and more balanced than I expected.
RELATED:
Matthew Hay Brown / Baltimore Sun:
Frost family draws ire of conservatives  —  Halsey and Bonnie Frost, in front of their Butchers Hill house.  Critics question whether the Frosts should be eligible for a federal insurance program.  (Sun photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor / October 9, 2007)  —  When Halsey and Bonnie Frost agreed …
David M. Herszenhorn / New York Times:
Capitol Feud: A 12-Year-Old Is the Fodder  —  There have been moments when the fight between Congressional Democrats and President Bush over the State Children's Health Insurance Program seemed to devolve into a shouting match about who loves children more.  —  So when Democrats enlisted …
Shaun Mullen / The Moderate Voice:
Graeme Frost & Why I'm Ashamed to Be a Blogger Today (Update II)
Discussion: Heading Right and Adventus
USA Today:   Insurance bill debate focuses on Frost family
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Smile, Though Your Head Is Aching  —  House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was in a determinedly good mood when she sat down to lunch with reporters yesterday.  She entered the room beaming and, over the course of an hour, smiled no fewer than 31 times and got off at least 23 laughs.
RELATED:
Sabrina Eaton / OPENERS:
Pelosi defends refusal to put "God" on flag certificates  —  House Speaker Nancy Pelosi today defended the Architect of the Capitol's refusal to permit use of the word "God" on official certificates enclosed with flags flown over the U.S. Capitol.  —  Dayton-area GOP Rep. Michael Turner …
Naftali Bendavid / Chicago Tribune:
Pelosi 'proud' of her House: 'We've drained swamp'
Discussion: Redstate
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
From Former Bush Aide, A Candid Assessment Of the GOP Candidates  —  A former adviser to President Bush has a brutally candid analysis of the Republican presidential nomination contest: Fred D. Thompson is the campaign's "biggest dud," Mitt Romney has "a real problem in the South" …
RELATED:
Steven Pearlstein / Washington Post:
Two Hours, Nine Candidates, and Almost Nothing New
Maureen Dowd / New York Times:
Bomb, Bomb Iran  —  Hillary seemed rattled.  —  Up until now, she has displayed remarkable imperturbability — gliding along with the help of good lighting, a hearty guffaw and a clever husband.  —  But on Sunday in New Hampton, Iowa, Hillary lost her cool at last.
RELATED:
New York Times:
An Israeli Strike on Syria Kindles Debate in the U.S.  —  A sharp debate is under way in the Bush administration about the significance of the Israeli intelligence that led to last month's Israeli strike inside Syria, according to current and former American government officials.
Thomas L. Friedman / New York Times:
Generation Q  —  I just spent the past week visiting several colleges — Auburn, the University of Mississippi, Lake Forest and Williams — and I can report that the more I am around this generation of college students, the more I am both baffled and impressed.
Discussion: MoJoBlog, Brian Beutler and Gawker
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
4 Democrats Pull Out of Michigan Primary  —  Four of the Democratic presidential candidates announced today that they would not take part in the Democratic primary in Michigan, all but ceding the contest in that major battleground state to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is ahead in the polls there and is staying in.
RELATED:
John Distaso / New Hampshire Union Leader:   Gardner: Michigan ballot has no effect on NH's date
The Corner:
Ups and Downs for Gore  —  While Al Gore is the favorite to win the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, a British court has found that his film is both partisan and contains no fewer than eleven material inaccuracies that need to be drawn to students' attention if it is going to be shown in schools.
Discussion: Jules Crittenden
RELATED:
Iain Murray / globalwarming.org:   Court Finds Truths Inconvenient for Gore
San Francisco Chronicle:
Residents of a famously liberal city appear to be changing views  —  San Francisco - the liberal, left-coast city conservatives love to mock - could be undergoing a transformation when it comes to homeless people.  Although the city would still be a poor choice for a pep rally for the war in Iraq …
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Isn't This Privatization?  —  Does anyone get the idea that Hillary Clinton has decided to toss out entitlements like sugared almonds at a Sicilian wedding as a campaign strategy?  Fresh off the laugher "baby bonds" program she endorsed without much thought, she announced a new plan yesterday …
Discussion: The Newshoggers and MSNBC
RELATED:
Washington Post:
Free Trade and Low Taxes Star in Republican Debate
Discussion: MSNBC
Audrey Hudson / Washington Times:
Blogs target jihadis online  —  Ordinary Americans are tracking down U.S. Web sites used by al Qaeda and jihadi sympathizers and then using the Internet to persuade the service providers to snuff out the sites.  —  "I do this because it has to be done," says one blogger who calls himself a …
Discussion: The Jawa Report and PrairiePundit
Alan Fram / Associated Press:
AP Poll: More see economy as top problem  —  WASHINGTON - A growing number of people say the economy is the nation's top problem, with the less educated among the most worried, an Associated Press-Ipsos poll showed Tuesday.  —  Yet even with a credit crunch and soft housing market …
Michael Gerson / Washington Post:
Why Fight For Anyone's Freedom?  —  In the backlash against President Bush's democracy agenda, conservatives are increasingly taking the lead.  It is inherently difficult for liberals to argue against the expansion of social and political liberalism in oppressive parts of the world — though …
Peter Funt / Washington Post:
It's Not Democracy.  It's a Sub.  —  Americans Seem Willing to Vote for Everything but an Actual Candidate  —  What's your vote?  Is America's newfangled fascination with being polled, minute by minute, on every imaginable topic, reflective of (a) a more informed electorate, (b) …
Discussion: Wonkette and Comment Central
 
 
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 More Items: 
Camille Paglia / Salon:
The paranoid withdrawal fantasy
Discussion: UrbanGrounds
Eric Lichtblau / New York Times:
Immunity Crucial in Talks on Eavesdropping Rules
Discussion: PrairiePundit and Corrente
Harold Meyerson / Washington Post:
The Silenced Majority  —  We are condemned, the smart guys tell us, to stay in Iraq.
USA Today:
GAO study reveals boot camp 'nightmare'
Discussion: CBS News and Greatscat!
Suevon Lee / New York Times:
Gang Members Illegally in U.S. Are Arrested in Federal Sweep
Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
White House And Turkey Fight Bill On Armenia
Mark Leibovich / New York Times:
In Debate Reviews, Thompson Survives
Eugene Volokh / Opinion Journal:
President Spock  —  What if Barack Obama told his wife he wouldn't say …
Discussion: PrairiePundit
 Earlier Items: 
Senator Sam Brownback / New York Times:
The Republican Debate
Washington Post:
Clinton Cites Lessons of Partisanship
New York Magazine:
The Rise of Mailerism  —  Norman Mailer's God, not surprisingly …
Discussion: normblog
KPIX-TV:
Foreclosures Spurring Blight In Central Valley
Spiegel Online:
Iranian-Born German Soccer Player Refuses to Play Israel
Guardian:
Killer law  —  Last November it became a crime for a woman …
Discussion: Digg and Crooks and Liars
Eric Roper / media.www.gwhatchet.com:
Seven GW students admit to hanging controversial posters
 

 
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Hayden Field / CNBC:
Anthropic launches a free iOS app and Team, its first enterprise plan, which offers access to its Claude 3 Opus, Sonnet, and Haiku models for $30/user/month

Asa Fitch / Wall Street Journal:
New Jersey-based CoreWeave, which offers GPUs in the cloud, raised $1.1B led by Coatue at a $19B valuation, up from $7B after raising $642M in December 2023

Ash Parrish / The Verge:
Meta unveils Batman: Arkham Shadow, a VR game and the next entry in the iconic Batman: Arkham game series, launching exclusively on the Quest 3 later in 2024

 
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