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Herding Cats and Lacking Tasers

Matt’s response to Derek Chollet’s post warning against a Democratic timetable for withdrawal from Iraq is worth thinking seriously about: I appreciate what Derek Chollet is getting at with his warning that advocacy of a nuanced timetablish withdrawal from Iraq could turn into a political fiasco for the Democrats. Still, the general form of argument […]

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Taxes: Coming to an Election Near You

Over at TPM Cafe, the Piper sounds the alarm over tax reform. Good man, somebody needs to be doing it. The logic for the Bush administration here is fairly simple: they lost on Social Security reform, Iraq isn’t going to be a selling point, the election needs something else to turn on. Why not run […]

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Brave New World

I’m not going to get in the way of Matt’s open-source advocacy, it’s very much a heart says yes, head says no issue for me. I do think he’s being a bit obtuse on the distinction between “making stuff” and infringement (it’s fairly well understood that many of these programs are specifically made for the […]

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All Around the World, People Stop and They Say…

Survey USA has released a 50-state poll of Bush’s approval ratings. So if you were wondering what, say, Hawaii thinks of the Commander-in-Chief, now you’ll know. I’m not quite woken up yet, so serious number crunching will have to be done by others. Suffice to say that Bush only hits the magic 50% mark in […]

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Speechwriting

John Kerry’s penned an op-ed in today’s Times called “The Speech the President Should Give”, offering Bush a helpful outline for how tonight’s Iraq address should be structured. What’s not mentioned anywhere is that this is exactly the speech John Kerry should’ve been giving during the election, over and over again, rather than continuing with […]

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Thoughts From the Magazine Rack

Why does the right seem to have so many more serious, policy-oriented journals dedicated to hashing out intramovement questions? The National Interest, the newly-defunct Public Interest, and all the others lacking “Interest” in the title and traction in my memory comprise a pretty impressive group on the shelf. The left has Dissent, but even that’s […]

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Democracy Bonds

A big howdy-ho to our newest advertiser, the DNC. They — and their new online director, my former blog mate Joe Rospars — are pushing Democracy Bonds, an idea I like: Your “Democracy Bond” is a commitment to make a monthly contribution the Democratic Party in order to: * Reform the political process by building […]

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Why the FDA is in tatters

This is Matthew Holt from The Health Care Blog getting in a piece that I meant to publish while I was guesting last week: It’s time to dip into the murky waters of the FDA once more. This is a classic tale of politics intruding into an agency that should have science as its prime […]

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The Carpenters Find a Fold

Looks like the Carpenters have joined the breakaway unions (more officially known as the Change to Win Coalition). Jonathan Tasini has an excellent analysis up at Working Life, and I’ll have more to say on all this later. Bottom line, though, is that I’m happy to see Labor shook to the core. It’s become trite […]

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