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Attorney General Michael Mukasey collapsed while giving a speech to the Federalist Society tonight. It appears to have been a stroke. Prayers.
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Some incredible photos from the newly-central front in the War on Terror.
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What we’ve seen in the smears against Sarah Palin go beyond the normal post-election squabbling.
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Thank you to our heroes. It’s you who make this grand experiment called America possible.
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All is not lost. An Obama presidency does provide an opportunity for Conservatives.
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“What an old anecdote about Mo Udall in the hospital reveals about McCain’s character.” A must-read.
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More video evidence that “hope” and “change” really mean “typical politician.” The man has flip flopped more than John Kerry did in 2004.
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You have to admit that Saturday Night Live has done a spectacular job at becoming relevant again during the campaign. (Olbermann-bashing bonus)
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Rumors have been swirling, at least among the netroots nutroots, that John McCain’s story about his captor drawing a cross in the ground is actually a rip off of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago.
Byron York has some proof at The Corner at National Review to the contrary:
You’ve probably seen that there are some out there in the blogosphere questioning the authenticity of John McCain’s “cross in the dirt” story, which McCain told Saturday night at the Saddleback Summit. But there doesn’t seem much mention of the fact that McCain had a lot of fellow POWs in Vietnam, and they can be asked for their recollections. So I called Orson Swindle, a fellow POW who is campaigning for McCain, to ask him about it.
“I recall John telling that story when we first got together in 1971, when were talking about every conceivable thing that had ever happened to us when we were in prison” Swindle told me a few minutes ago. “Most of us had been kept apart or in small groups. Then, in 1970, they moved us into the big cell. And when we all got to see each other and talk to each other directly, instead of tapping through walls, we had 24 hours a day, seven days a week to talk to each other, and we shared stories. I vaguely recall that story being told, among other stories.”
Megan McArdle touches on it today, too, discussing ”Megan’s Fourth Law of Politics”:
The party that starts looking for implausible and unprovable conspiracy theories about the opposition candidate is in trouble…
Comment Policy
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