Fred Kaplan thinks that the Clark McCain conflict is rooted in an old military rivalry: "Clark was an Army infantry commander during the Vietnam War while McCain was a Navy aviator. As a rule, the grunts hated the flyboys." I... Full story...
This story is fascinating in its coverage of a big shift in Alaskan politics last March 14.
God knows how many times I send people to National Review: they have a policy of not linking to this site, although obviously not a policy of not reading it.
Kevin Drum thinks he may have found an actual policy proposal in McCain's speech.
Michael Wolff has been interviewing Rupert Murdoch for the last nine months. This is fascinating: Obama.
He takes issue with this sentence of mine: So the first reason we have Palin is the Christianist veto, not some reform fantasy that exists in David’s and Ross’s and Reihan’s brilliant heads.
Rasmussen finds that Palin is more popular than either McCain or Obama. Survey USA reports that voters reacted favorably to her speech.
James Poulos wrestles with the claim that Palin represents national reform: For Sarah Palin to come to terms with America, and for America to come to terms with Sarah Palin, she must make good on the promise of her lot.
A reader writes: The 40+ million figure includes PBS' estimate. Without PBS, Palin's speech was watched by 37.
Is the party of traditional marriage aware that the vice-presidential nominee actually eloped with her now-husband? And just in case you missed it: Scott Richter, Todd Palin's former business partner, has just filed an emergency motion to seal his divorce.
You know it's rough: The gamble is enormous. In a stroke, McCain gratuitously forfeited his most powerful argument against Obama.
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