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6:05 PM ET, November 29, 2010

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Peter Baker / New York Times:
Obama Freezes Pay for Federal Workers  —  WASHINGTON — President Obama announced a two-year pay freeze for civilian federal workers on Monday as he sought to address concerns over sky-high deficit spending and appeal to Republican leaders to find a common approach to restoring the nation's economic and fiscal health.
RELATED:
The White House:
Fact Sheet: Cutting the Deficit by Freezing Federal Employee Pay  —  Because of the irresponsibility of the past decade, the President inherited a $1.3 trillion projected deficit upon taking office and an economic crisis that threatened to put the nation into a second Great Depression.
Scarecrow / Firedoglake:
Obama Flunks Economics with Pointless Federal Wage Freeze  —  (photo: amboo who?)  —  The Obama White House just announced details of a two-year federal wage freeze as a means to reduce federal spending and deficits.  [David Dayen has more.]  The move is obviously political and only symbolic …
Discussion: Daily Kos and Economist's View
Brian Beutler / TPMDC:
Obama's Federal Worker Pay Freeze Was Blasted By Democrats Months Ago
Discussion: The Atlantic Online and Daily Kos
Ed Morrissey / Hot Air:
Obama to freeze federal worker pay, save $5 billion over two years
New York Times:
Answers to Readers' Questions About State's Secrets  —  The New York Times is publishing State's Secrets, a series of articles about a trove of more than 250,000 American diplomatic cables that were originally obtained by WikiLeaks, an organization devoted to exposing official secrets.
RELATED:
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
The Starr Report Of American Foreign Policy?  —  Beinart yawns while reading Wikileaks' latest.  A surprising number of writers have been taking this position: … I have not yet plumbed the depths of all these documents, but I agree with Peter that we have learned nothing new in terms …
Raymond Bonner / The Atlantic Online:
‘By Whatever Means Necessary’: Arab Leaders Want Iran Stopped  —  LONDON — Rather than prosecuting Julian Assange for what he calls his “outrageous, reckless, and despicable” action in leaking thousands of sensitive government cables, Joe Lieberman might want to consider praising the head of WikiLeaks.
Megan Carpentier / TPMMuckraker:
Bomb, Bomb Iran: The Top 5 Most Shocking Things About The Wikileaks  —  Yesterday, Wikileaks released a selection of more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables dating from the mid-sixties to the present day — widely presumed to have been provided to them by the currently-incarcerated Private Bradley Manning …
Pvictorwins / CBS New York:
King: WikiLeaks Release ‘Worse Than Military Attack’
Jon Ward / The Daily Caller:
Rep. Peter King, a New York Republican who is scheduled …
Discussion: Hot Air and Erick's blog
Michael O'Brien / The Hill:
Republican wants WikiLeaks labeled as terrorist group
RELATED:
Jennifer Epstein / The Politico:
Sarah Palin blasts Obama administration for WikiLeaks ‘fiasco’  —  Sarah Palin says the U.S. government's inability to stop the latest WikiLeaks release is all President Barack Obama's fault.  —  Sunday's document dump of classified State Department cables is the result of the …
Discussion: The Note
The Note:
Palin Tweets About WikiLeaks
Discussion: The Politico and Wonkette
Erik Wasson / The Hill:
Liberal groups blast Obama pay-freeze proposal, release alternative plan  —  Representatives of three liberal advocacy groups on Monday blasted President Obama's proposed two-year freeze on federal civilian worker pay.  —  John Irons of the Economic Policy Institute, Tamara Draut of Demos …
RELATED:
Myglesias / Yglesias:
The Left and the Budget
Jackie Calmes / New York Times:
Liberal Groups to Propose Routes to Smaller Deficit
Jeffrey Toobin / New Yorker:
PRECEDENT AND PROLOGUE  —  Momentous Supreme Court cases tend to move quickly into the slipstream of the Court's history.  In the first ten years after Brown v. Board of Education, the 1954 decision that ended the doctrine of separate but equal in public education, the Justices cited the case more than twenty-five times.
RELATED:
CNN:
Justices turn aside another challenge over Obama's citizenship
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
The Spanish Prisoner  —  The best thing about the Irish right now is that there are so few of them.  By itself, Ireland can't do all that much damage to Europe's prospects.  The same can be said of Greece and of Portugal, which is widely regarded as the next potential domino.  —  But then there's Spain.
Lori Montgomery / Washington Post:
Democrats warm to tax-cut compromise  —  A faction of congressional Democrats is making a push to persuade President Obama to consider a compromise on tax policy that would leave only the nation's 315,000 richest households facing higher taxes in January.  —  Over the past few days …
Washington Post:
‘The criminalization of politics’  —  THERE IS LITTLE DOUBT that former House majority leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) schemed to get around a Texas law prohibiting corporate contributions to political campaigns.  Mr. DeLay's state political action committee accepted $190,000 in (legal) corporate contributions.
Discussion: National Review
Borzou Daragahi / Los Angeles Times:
Blasts target Iranian nuclear scientists  —  One professor dies, another is injured on their morning commutes.  The attacks prompt a stern warning by the head of IranÂ's atomic energy agency.  —  Reporting from Beirut — Two separate explosions killed a nuclear scientist and injured another …
Josh Rogin / Foreign Policy:
WikiLeaked: John Kerry calls for Israel to cede Golan Heights and East Jerusalem  —  On a February trip to the Middle East, Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman John Kerry (D-MA) told Qatari leaders that the Golan Heights should be returned to Syria, that a Palestinian capital …
Associated Press:
APNewsBreak: NJ must pay $271M for killing tunnel  —  TRENTON, N.J. - New Jersey owes the federal government more than $271 million after canceling a rail tunnel connecting the state with New York, according to a debt notice obtained Monday by The Associated Press.
Discussion: Philly.com
Ezra Klein:
What happens when Medicare controls costs too well  —  There's one school of thought that says Congress is incapable of controlling costs in Medicare, and then there's, well, this: … One of the dirty little secrets of the health-care system is that Medicare has done a much better job controlling costs …
BBC:
Picasso's electrician reveals artist's ‘treasure trove’  —  The works include a portrait of the late artist's first wife, Olga  —  A retired electrician in southern France who worked for Pablo Picasso says he has hundreds of previously unknown works by the artist.
Karen Tumulty / Washington Post:
American exceptionalism: an old idea and a new political battle  —  Is this a great country or what?  —  “American exceptionalism” is a phrase that, until recently, was rarely heard outside the confines of think tanks, opinion journals and university history departments.
Ross Douthat / New York Times:
The Partisan Mind  —  Imagine, for a moment, that George W. Bush had been president when the Transportation Security Administration decided to let Thanksgiving travelers choose between exposing their nether regions to a body scanner or enduring a private security massage.
The Independent:
John Kampfner: Wikileaks shows up our media for their docility at the feet of authority  —  Mr Assange is an unconventional figure, a man who lives in the shadows and enjoys doing so  —  You should never shout “fire” in a crowded theatre.  Once you have accepted this old adage, you accept that there are limits to free expression.
Louise Gray / Telegraph:
Cancun climate change summit: scientists call for rationing in developed world  —  Global warming is now such a serious threat to mankind that climate change experts are calling for Second World War-style rationing in rich countries to bring down carbon emissions.
Tom Jensen / Public Policy Polling:
Palin not seen as electable  —  Sarah Palin might think she could get elected President in 2012, but few Americans agree.  Only 28% of voters in the country think that Palin is capable of defeating Barack Obama while 60% think she is not and 12% aren't sure.
 
 
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 More Items: 
John Cook / Gawker:
White House Refuses to Release Donors to David Axelrod's Charity
Jedediah Bila / Human Events:
Exclusive Interview: Governor Sarah Palin
Kevin Bogardus / The Hill:
Vilsack looks to House to finalize black farmers' settlement
Delen Goldberg / Las Vegas Sun:
Latino leaders swirl around idea of Tequila Party
Myglesias / Yglesias:
Deadweight Loss of Liquor License Restrictions
Mark Kleiman / The Reality-Based Community:
Of WikiLeaks and the Pentagon Papers
Discussion: The Daily Dish and New Atlanticist
Lyle Denniston / SCOTUSblog:
Judges for Prop. 8 hearing
Discussion: The Volokh Conspiracy and Law Blog
Azi Paybarah / The Empire:
Source: GOP tries blocking George Soros' ballot
Discussion: Ben Smith's Blog and The Wire
 Earlier Items: 
Doug Mataconis / Outside the Beltway:
Fox News Legal Analyst Andrew Napolitano A 9/11 Truther?
Robert Jablon / Associated Press:
‘Empire Strikes Back’ director Irvin Kershner dies
Discussion: The Jawa Report
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
Killing the omnibus would deal blow to Republican senators' earmarks
Discussion: Hot Air
Megan McArdle / The Atlantic Online:
Are We Entering Another Phase of Financial Crisis?
Andrew Abramson / Palm Beach Post:
Big names on sidelines in West Palm Beach mayoral race
Susan Crabtree / The Hill:
Rep. Waters wants ethics trial now
Peg Tyre / New York Times:
A's for Good Behavior  —  A few years ago, teachers …
 

 
From Techmeme:

Thomas Barrabi / New York Post:
Google fires 28 employees over their participation in a 10-hour sit-in at the company's New York and Sunnyvale offices to protest its business ties with Israel

Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
The US CFPB fines BloomTech, formerly Lambda School, and CEO Austen Allred $164K and bans BloomTech from lending for 10 years over deceiving students on loans

Brian Heater / TechCrunch:
Boston Dynamics debuts an electric version of humanoid robot Atlas for commercial use, a day after retiring the hydraulic Atlas, with a pilot starting in 2025

 
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