Wednesday, December 29, 2004

Medals of Distinktion

...courtesy of the Economist (Dec 16 issue):

Mr Bush bestowed the presidential medal of freedom, America's highest civilian honour, on three men closely associated with the Iraq war: George Tenet, responsible for the intelligence beforehand; Tommy Franks, who led the invasion but was responsible for security afterwards; and Paul Bremer, who was in charge of the occupation and disbanded the Iraqi army.

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

News from Saudi Arabia...

...courtesy of the Economist (Dec 9 issue):

When the government was short of cash, the royals appeared to consider liberal reforms, which many Saudi journalists and businesspeople were demanding. But now that their money worries have lifted, and their worries about security have grown more acute, they have gone back to their old reactionary habits.

In March, a group of reformists were jailed for calling for a constitutional monarchy. Three are still awaiting trial. In September, the government issued an edict banning all state employees, which means most working Saudis, including academics, from publicly questioning state policy. In October it announced that long-promised elections for 178 town councils, now due in February, would be for only half of their seats, with women entirely excluded. Few people have bothered to register to vote, prompting one columnist to lament that Saudis show less interest in polls than in the stock index.

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

On message

All the issues Democrats like to run on—education, the environment, the deficit, energy independence—would be vastly more powerful if united under a single theme. Clean up your mess. Take care of your children. Pay your debts. Stand on your own two feet. It all comes down to responsibility.
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Slate's William Saletan

Corruption without delay

Slate on the Republicans' slide into sleaze.