Sotomayor Breaks Her Ankle

Empathy was so last week. This week, she’s got sympathy: WASHINGTON – The White House says Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor has broken her ankle after an airport stumble in New York City. Sotomayor fractured her right ankle Monday morning at New York’s LaGuardia Airport before boarding a shuttle to Washington for an afternoon of [...]

Dinner Reservations

It’s hard to see how the Republican Party is going to orchestrate a comeback if it’s having this much trouble organizing the seating chart for one dinner. Politico’s Jonathan Martin tells us: Sarah Palin’s on-again, off-again appearance at Monday night’s gala GOP fundraising dinner is off — again. After being invited — for a second [...]

Obama’s European Tour Of Humanity’s Failure, Resilience

My latest story from Air Force One: When it comes to humanity’s darkest moments, time is both a blessing and a curse. Firebombed cities get rebuilt. Saplings grow in abandoned death camps. Wounded soldiers heal or pass on. Yet with rebirth comes the danger of forgetting, of repeating old mistakes and of failing to learn [...]

1,000 Words

The National Doughnut Day edition of 1,000 Words comes our way via our White House Photo Blog.

Another Week That Was

It’s Friday, and we are glad to see that Paul Slansky is at it again. Really, can we ever say enough about Liddy, G. Gordon? And this week, Slansky gives us not one but two Cheneys! But surely he missed an important development or two. How about it, Swampland commenters? What will you remember this [...]

Elie Wiesel Joins Obama at Buchenwald

Barack Obama toured the Buchenwald concentration camp Friday, the same Nazi camp where the author and Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel was imprisoned as a 16-year old, a few months before the end of World War II. Wiesel walked the grounds with Obama, saying to the president at one point, “If only these trees could [...]

Obama In Dresden

Sometimes location is everything. Other times, it’s just a convenient place to spend the night. My story is here.

Sort Of Good News On The Jobs Front

That is, if you don’t happen to be 732,000 people who lost their jobs in May, or the 5.8 million who have since the recession began. Justin tells us about it.

Single Payer

Every time I write a story about the state of the health reform debate –like this one–commenters here want to know why I don’t include an extensive discussion of a single-payer option, which essentially would be a government-financed program like Medicare for everyone. The reason is that it is not going to pass. The House [...]

In the Arena

The Settlements

Charles Krauthammer has a misleading and evasive column about the Israeli settlements issue. He does not deal with the legality of these towns–he can’t, of course, because they are illegal under the fourth Geneva Convention, which provides rules for occupying powers. He does not deal with the illegality, and inhumanity, of building roads for the [...]