Exercising the full majesty of his office, and bringing to bear his full powers of oratory, the President used his press conference this morning to tell the American people, who remain under the most massive consumer debt ever compiled on the face of the planet (and who live in a country where many knowledgeable people are warning of an overall "debt bomb") this:
The U.K.'s Independent has a piece on David Cameron's views of Iraq and British foreign policy that pretty much state the obvious (though Blair disagrees with the obvious, much as Bush would).
Proving that "we" never learn our lesson, the SEC and Federal Reserve Board have teamed up to produce a proposed new regulation that just might be setting the stage for yet another series of future scandals.
Like all regulatory agencies, the FCC is bound to regulate a specific industry to ensure that it serves the public interest, not to serve as cheerleaders for the industry. Recent comments by FCC member Robert McDowell leave little doubt that he, and by extension the agency, really have no intention of exercising their authority in the public interest.
But let's give credit where credit is due - few people can get in front of a camera and make stuff up with the bravura of Bill O'Reilly. He seems to believe what he's saying, though no one should know better than him that it's not true. And he sells it - you can see why so many people in his audience believe it. (Well, sort of; don't these folks have memories?)
John Whiteside, on his Blue Bayou blog for the Houston Chronicle.
The right wing die-hards may still want to quibble about definitions when it comes to Iraq, but two "experts" from opposite ends of the think tank spectrum think quibbling time is over: it's a civil war in Iraq.
I have to say I'm as pessimistic about the Middle East as the next guy, but most of this broader existential gloom about America is absurd. The U.S. is in extraordinarily strong shape economically and socially.
David Brooks, with yet another projection of a rosy American future, in his column titled
This Age of Anxiety in today's NY Times.
Now that Rumsfeld is actually gone, the media can't get enough of the latest form of navel-gazing: have we all been too hard on poor Rummy?
If your neurological system is functioning properly and you've managed to avoid the coma state, you know that offshoring/outsourcing is alive and well, and making many workers in this country unwell.
As a sidebar to a story on the religious right, The Independent newspaper from the United Kingdom offers a brief review of some of the incredibly large Evangelical churches that are at the forefront of the movement: