Blogs > Cliopatria > Week of July 21, 2008

Jul 24, 2008

Week of July 21, 2008




  • Matthew Yglesias

    Patrick Ruffini slams the Obama campaign for using a foreign language in its promotional material for an event in Germany. Apparently it's now unpatriotic to so much as concede that they speak foreign languages in foreign countries. Or maybe American politicians should only be allowed to speak in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and the UK.

  • Talking Points Memo

    Attorney General Michael Mukasey is having a lovely time in front of the House Judiciary Committee today, bantering about college football with Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) and quoting America's archetypal socialist during questioning with Rep. Ric Keller (R-FL):

    KELLER: Back to my original questions. You've got less than six months on the clock here with the end of the Bush administration, uh, will you commit today to sitting down with our congressional leaders to try to fashion a compromise relating to these national security issues that would ultimately result in you being able to reccomend that the president sign the bill or in the alternative is there no bill that you would recommend being signed?

    MUKASEY: Um, I'm in the same position as, um, a Socialist candidate for president named Eugene Debs who said,"I'll talk to anybody who'll talk to me." I'll sit down with anybody that wants to sit down and have a serious conversation about what can be done and what can't be done, but first we need to talk about what's there and what's there is not acceptable.

  • Juan Cole

    McCain keeps boasting about being"right" about the"surge" and saying Obama was"wrong." Look, it is more important that McCain was consistently wrong. He was wrong about the desirability of going to war against Iraq. He was wrong about it being a cakewalk. He was wrong about there being WMD there. He was wrong about everything. And he was wrong about the troop escalation making things better. The casualty figures dropped in al-Anbar, where few extra US troops were ever sent. They dropped in Basra, from which the British withdrew. Something happened. Putting it all on 30,000 extra troops seems a stretch. And what about all the ethnic cleansing and displacing of persons that took place under the nose of the"surge?" McCain has been wrong about everything to do with Iraq. And he is boasting about his wisdom on it!

  • Subject Line in Spam Email 7/21/08

    Al Qaeda Reports Declining Revenues in Fiscal '08

  • Ambrose Evans- Pritchard

    It feels like the summer of 1931. The world's two biggest financial institutions have had a heart attack. The global currency system is breaking down. The policy doctrines that got us into this mess are bankrupt. No world leader seems able to discern the problem, let alone forge a solution.



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