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<title>The Editorialist</title>
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<updated>2007-08-31T13:30:16Z</updated>

<id>tag:blog.washingtonpost.com,2007:/editorialist/279</id>
<rights>Copyright (c) 2007, WashingtonPost.Newsweek Interactive</rights>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Hot Topic: The Larry Craig Saga</title>
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<updated>2007-08-31T13:30:16Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-31:/editorialist2007/08/todays_hot_topic_the_larry_cra.html</id>
<summary type="text">The Larry Craig Saga: In the NYT, the editors claim that &quot;the rush to cast [Craig] out betrays the [Republican] party&apos;s intolerance, which is on display for the public in all of its ugliness.&quot; The WSJ, meanwhile, declines to go that far, merely observing that the party &quot;needs to get its house in order.&quot; Elsewhere in the Journal, Naomi Schaefer Riley explains why sex scandals still get so much attention in &quot;a culture awash in sex.&quot; USA Today says &quot;pity and compassion seem a more fitting response than outrage&quot; for the Idaho senator. And in the WaPo, Ruth Marcus remembers the Walter Jenkins scandal and writes that &quot;the story of Craig&apos;s encounter with a police officer in an airport bathroom underscores the continuing grip of homophobia on American society.&quot;</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Columns: Poverty vs. Celebrity</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_columns_poverty_vs_cele.html" />
<updated>2007-08-31T13:10:10Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-31:/editorialist2007/08/todays_columns_poverty_vs_cele.html</id>
<summary type="text">WaPo: E.J. Dionne wonders: &quot;Why is it that the poor -- and, for that matter, the struggling middle class, too -- disappear in the media, barricaded behind our fixation on celebrity, our titillation with personal sin and public shame, our fascination with every detail of every divorce and affair of every movie star, rock idol and sports phenom?&quot;.... Des Browne and David Miliband say British forces have not failed in Basra.... Michael Gerson hears &quot;rumors of hope&quot; about Iraq.... Charles Krauthammer continues his campaign for Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki&apos;s removal. USA Today: Raul Reyes says Alberto Gonzales&apos;s story is &quot;a genuine Latino tragedy.&quot; &quot;The last time I checked,&quot; he writes, &quot;the American dream did not include leaving national office in disgrace.&quot; LAT: Rosa Brooks writes that &quot;we long ago squandered any capacity to guarantee a happy ending for the Iraqis&quot; and that we should withdraw.... Ian Buruma reminds President</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Editorials: Public Safety and Privacy Rights</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_editorials_public_safet.html" />
<updated>2007-08-31T12:55:21Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-31:/editorialist2007/08/todays_editorials_public_safet.html</id>
<summary type="text">WaPo: Responds to the Virginia Tech Review Panel&apos;s findings: &quot;In the aftermath of such a devastating tragedy, it&apos;s easy to say, but nonetheless true, that public safety must trump privacy rights&quot;.... Asks who hired the people who killed Anna Politkovskaya -- and offers a guess. NYT : Says that the new GAO report on Iraq proves that the administration &quot;went to great lengths to pretend that victory was at hand when nothing could be farther from the truth&quot;.... Cautions that &quot;as homeowner woes mount, Wall Street may have a harder time justifying its pleas for special treatment.&quot; LAT: Wonders if &quot;South Park&quot; can make money online under its creators&apos; new deal with Viacom.... Says that coal should &quot;not be cheap&quot; because &quot;the only way to encourage cleaner alternatives is to make coal producers and the consumers of coal-fired power pay the true cost of their pollution.&quot;</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Hot Topics: Early Primaries and Public Restrooms</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_hot_topics_early_primar.html" />
<updated>2007-08-30T13:52:39Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-30:/editorialist2007/08/todays_hot_topics_early_primar.html</id>
<summary type="text">Early Primaries: In the LAT, the editors say voting for president tomorrow &quot;would be the logical extension of the states&apos; battle to get to, or at least near, the presidential primary starting line,&quot; and argue that the Democratic National Committee&apos;s harsh response to Florida&apos;s decision to move its primary to Jan. 15 was an example of &quot;welcome party rigor.&quot; USA Today is relieved that &quot;finally some adult supervision is coming to the process of picking presidential nominees&quot; and praises the national political parties for punishing states that are moving their primaries before Feb. 5. But Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) insists that the situation is &quot;a case of fundamental rights vs. party rules&quot; and calls for a long-term fix, &quot;perhaps a system of rotating regional primaries.&quot; Larry Craig: In the WaPo, an editorial calls the Republican senator from Idaho &quot;yet another willing accomplice in the machinery of intolerance that has stunted</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Columns: Do You Care Enough to Read This?</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_columns_do_you_care_eno.html" />
<updated>2007-08-30T13:37:11Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-30:/editorialist2007/08/todays_columns_do_you_care_eno.html</id>
<summary type="text">WSJ: Daniel Henninger ponders the declining influence of the &quot;established media&quot; -- which presumably includes the Journal -- and wonders whether &quot;too many people now simply don&apos;t care about major media anymore.&quot; WaPo: David Ignatius reports on the fate and fallout of secret American plans to manipulate Iraqi democracy.... Robert Novak explores the challenges facing France&apos;s top deregulator .... Tova Andrea Wang says that her work on a bipartisan Election Assistance Commission report was compromised by partisanship and its findings suppressed.... Kyle Teamey is concerned that &quot;Party politics matters more than the results&quot; in the war in Iraq.... Robert Novak says &quot;the high caliber of possible selections&quot; to replace Alberto Gonzales &quot;means President Bush is not content with a placeholder sure to get Senate confirmation.&quot; USA Today: Education Secretary Margaret Spellings defends No Child Left Behind in a question-and-answer session. LAT: Benazir Bhutto says she knows that &quot;Time, justice and</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Editorials: In the Air, on the Ground</title>
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<updated>2007-08-30T13:23:49Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-30:/editorialist2007/08/todays_editorials_the_wrong_ge.html</id>
<summary type="text">WSJ: Warns that high property taxes could pose a big obstacle to rebuilding New Orleans. USA Today: Says the Census Bureau&apos;s report of the &quot;disturbing rise in the number of people without health insurance ... helps explain why health care is again becoming a defining domestic issue.&quot; WaPo: Praises the courage of pro-democracy protestors in Burma and calls for an international response. NYT : Is disappointed by the verdict in the &quot;court-martial of the only officer to be tried for the abuse, sexual assault and torture of prisoners that occurred&quot; at Abu Ghraib in 2003, calling it &quot;a remix of the denial of reality and avoidance of accountability that the government has used all along to avoid the bitter truth behind Abu Ghraib: The abuses grew out of President Bush&apos;s decision to ignore the Geneva Conventions and American law in handling prisoners after Sept. 11, 2001.&quot;.... Criticizes Republican Sen. Tom</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Hot Topic: What&apos;s Next for the Big Easy?</title>
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<updated>2007-08-29T13:04:47Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-29:/editorialist2007/08/todays_hot_topic_whats_next_fo.html</id>
<summary type="text">The Future of New Orleans USA Today warns against broadening the National Flood Insurance Program to cover wind damage, warning that doing so is akin to &quot;inviting reckless development&quot; and &quot;will only ensure a new catastrophe with the arrival of the next great storm.&quot; Gene Taylor disagrees, writing that the plan would &quot;would benefit every taxpayer in America by ensuring that more disaster costs are covered by insurance premiums instead of by costly and inefficient disaster assistance programs.&quot; In the WSJ, Nicole Gelinas argues that two years after Katrina, what New Orleans needs most is law and order. The LAT argues that &quot;It would compound the tragedy of Katrina to leave the [rebuilding] job half-finished or to bury the region&apos;s will to rebuild under a mountain of red tape.&quot; Also in the LAT, Michael Tisserand reports that some children in New Orleans are developing post-traumatic stress disorder. Tisserand warns that</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Columns: Bush&apos;s Crisis -- and Mother Teresa&apos;s</title>
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<updated>2007-08-29T12:53:46Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-29:/editorialist2007/08/todays_columns_bushs_crisis_an.html</id>
<summary type="text">WSJ: Andrew Stark wonders how Kyle MacDonald pulled off trading a paper clip for (eventually) a house. LAT: Ronald Brownstein says President Bush can learn some lessons from Ronald Reagan that might help him salvage the last months of his presidency.... Nick Gillespie hopes that Sen. Larry Craig &quot;will eventually draw on traditional Republican principles and stand up for his right to engage in consensual sex in toilet stalls with men.&quot; WaPo: Harold Meyerson advises against dumping Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and writes: &quot;It&apos;s Bush, not Maliki, whose term must come to an end before we can close out our misadventure in Iraq&quot;.... Robert Samuelson says we&apos;re in the &quot;&apos;blame phase&apos; of the economic cycle&quot;.... Janusz Reiter says tough visa rules are hurting American relations with Central Europe. NYT: Jack Miles worries that the American occupation of Iraq may soon lose its justification under international law.... Thomas Friedman says</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Editorials: The Economic Punch Bowl</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_editorials_the_economic_1.html" />
<updated>2007-08-29T12:38:01Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-29:/editorialist2007/08/todays_editorials_the_economic_1.html</id>
<summary type="text">WaPo: Says it&apos;s time for Pakistan&apos;s &quot;autocratic leader&quot; Gen. Pervez Musharraf to &quot;make a deal&quot; with Pakistan&apos;s secular political parties. &quot;A compromise between Mr. Musharraf and former prime ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif may offer the best chance to check extremism and mounting instability in that nuclear-armed country,&quot; the editors advise. NYT : Analyzes the latest Census Bureau report and complains that &quot;the economic party is winding down and most working Americans never even got near the punch bowl.&quot; In a separate editorial, says the report&apos;s findings on the U.S. health-insurance industry were &quot;as disturbing as its statistics on poverty and income.&quot; WSJ: Says that Nicolas Sarkozy has &quot;signaled that France means to be something more on the international scene than an anti-American nuisance player.&quot; LAT: Insists that Hillary Clinton should &quot;help the National Archives comply&quot; with a conservative group&apos;s request for papers from her time as first lady.</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Hot Topics: Bring Me The Head of Alberto Gonzales</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_hot_topics_bring_me_the.html" />
<updated>2007-08-28T14:30:42Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-28:/editorialist2007/08/todays_hot_topics_bring_me_the.html</id>
<summary type="text">Alberto Gonzales Resigns: The NYT praises the impending departure of the Bush administration&apos;s embattled attorney general. &quot;But his departure alone cannot remove the dark cloud that hangs over the justice department,&quot; the editors write, urging the President to nominate &quot;a new attorney general of unquestioned integrity&quot;.... The LAT seconds that emotion, saying President Bush should &quot;look for the opposite of Alberto R. Gonzales&quot;.... The editorial board of the WSJ thinks other qualities are more important in Gonzales&apos; replacement, arguing that &quot;Mr. Bush needs above all an AG willing to explain and defend his policies on the vital and related areas of Presidential power and the war on terror&quot;.... The USA Today joins the WSJ and the NYT in focusing on what&apos;s next for the justice department, arguing that the search for a replacement would be &quot;best expanded beyond the president&apos;s circle of buddies&quot;.... In the WaPo, the editors say that</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Columns: Insidious New Rules</title>
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<updated>2007-08-28T14:28:31Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-28:/editorialist2007/08/todays_columns_insidious_new_r.html</id>
<summary type="text">WSJ: Bret Stephens confesses that he believes in man-made global warming.... Arch Puddington remembers New York City teachers union chief Albert Shankar. WaPo: Alex de Waal and Julie Flint warn that &quot;In Darfur today, knowing who is on which side is not straightforward&quot;.... Danielle Pletka calls several Iran divestment measures pending in Congress &quot;ill-timed.&quot; Plus ... Sally Squires warns of increasing rates of childhood obesity. NYT: Amy Liu and Nigel Holmes offer a graphical update on the state of New Orleans.... Bob Herbert says that the &quot;insidious new rules&quot; restricting health insurance for poor children are tantamount to holding children &quot;hostage to policies driven by a desire to protect the big insurance companies.&quot; USA Today: James Alan Fox reminds parents that college campuses are statistically safe places.... Peggy Drexler provides an update on the place of women in business.</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Editorials: A Chance of Being Saved</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_editorials_a_chance_of.html" />
<updated>2007-08-28T14:25:57Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-28:/editorialist2007/08/todays_editorials_a_chance_of.html</id>
<summary type="text">WaPo ... Praises John Edwards&apos; support for public financing, saying that &quot;the system has a chance of being saved&quot; now that &quot;two of the three leading Democrats have agreed to the deal.&quot; NYT ... Warns that &quot;even if the Fed succeeds in managing&quot; the credit squeeze crisis, &quot;its actions stir questions anew about the longer-term sustainability of the debt-fueled state of the American economy&quot;.... Notes the &quot;groundbreaking new contract&quot; the creators of the television show &quot;South Park&quot; have signed with media giant Viacom. USA Today ... Writes that the judge sentencing football player Michael Vick &quot;Has an opportunity to send a strong message that society will not tolerate gratuitous violence against defenseless animals -- no matter how rich, famous or athletically gifted the perpetrator.&quot; LAT ... Slams the student loan industry, arguing that lax regulation has led to &quot;serious abuse&quot; and that &quot;Now it is time to help those whose</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Hot Topics: Katrina&apos;s Aftermath and Insuring Poor Children</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_hot_topics_katrinas_aft.html" />
<updated>2007-08-27T17:29:58Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-27:/editorialist2007/08/todays_hot_topics_katrinas_aft.html</id>
<summary type="text">Katrina&apos;s Aftermath: &quot;Katrina hit two years ago this week.&quot; In the LAT, &quot;A newspaper editor, resident of the Lower 9th Ward, engineering professor and others give their thoughts&quot;.... In the USA Today, the editors celebrate the &quot;brain gain&quot; that&apos;s bringing talented individuals to New Orleans to help rebuild. But they warn that &quot;There are limits to the individualistic approach to solving major problems. The energetic, idealistic people flooding into New Orleans are unlikely to stay if basic government functions such as health care and education are substandard&quot;.... Also in the USA Today, Oliver &quot;Buzz&quot; Thomas says that &quot;New Orleans is ... wounded and needs our help,&quot; and calls for Americans to visit the Big Easy &quot;as a volunteer, or simply ... a tourist&quot;....in the WaPo, the editors praise efforts to improve public housing in New Orleans in the wake of Katrina. Insuring Poor Children: In the WaPo, an editorial criticizes</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Columns: A Long-Overdue Purge</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_columns_a_longoverdue_p.html" />
<updated>2007-08-27T17:29:07Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-27:/editorialist2007/08/todays_columns_a_longoverdue_p.html</id>
<summary type="text">WaPo: Nina Shea argues that &quot;It is in America&apos;s national and moral interests to help Iraq&apos;s Christians and other non-Muslims&quot;.... Robert Novak says Democrats deserve the credit for Columbia&apos;s &quot;long-overdue purge of corruption in the military,&quot; but wonders if Democrats will now approve the free-trade agreement with that country.... Jane Danowitz says &quot;The threat of hundreds of mining claims for uranium, gold and other metals within a stone&apos;s throw of the Grand Canyon should serve as a wake-up call&quot;.... Jackson Diehl celebrates the impending election of Abdullah Gul to the Turkish Presidency as further evidence that democracy and Islam are, in fact, compatible. Plus ... Susan Goodkin and David Gold warn that the No Child Left Behind Act is &quot;causing many concerned parents to abandon public schools that are not failing. LAT: Lawrence Summers writes that &quot;by the beginning of 2007, the world was long overdue for a major financial</summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>
<entry>
<title>Today&apos;s Editorials: Bad Ideas That Won&apos;t Die</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/editorialist/2007/08/todays_editorials_bad_ideas_th.html" />
<updated>2007-08-27T17:24:15Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2007-08-27:/editorialist2007/08/todays_editorials_bad_ideas_th.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[USA Today ... Wonders, late, if Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki should be replaced. NYT ... Warns that the Bush administration is again trying to "legalize mountaintop mining &mdash; a cheap, ruthlessly efficient, environmentally destructive means of mining coal from the mountains of Appalachia." They "just won't let a bad idea die," the editors write.... Slams colleges for failing to "protect their students from taking on credit card debt that can severely damage their economic prospects once they graduate from school and join the world of work".... Calls for improvements in the comfort and on-time performance of air travel. LAT ... Says that "the United States should redouble its efforts to save Afghanistan from a resurgent Taliban".... Sings the praises of Axel Friedrich, a "top German environmental regulator" who "hired a bunch of engineers to take a Volkswagen Golf and make it more environmentally friendly using existing technology, without compromising]]></summary>
<author>
<name>Nick Baumann</name>
</author>

</entry>

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