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Economist , Feb. 7
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(posted
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Saturday, Feb. 7)
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A
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cover editorial pegged to Tony Blair's U.S. visit argues
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that he and Bill Clinton are not as similar as they seem. While they share
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broad principles (fiscal responsibility, free trade, etc.) and political
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tactics (artful repackaging of conservative ideas), Blair is much more
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left-wing than Clinton (as Britain is much more left-wing than the United
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States). Blair has banned all handguns and favors Britain's national
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health-care system, policies that would be inconceivable for Clinton.
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... A piece dampens enthusiasm about recent rises in Asia's stock
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markets: Asian economies are still in dire shape and governments are not doing
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nearly enough to restore fiscal stability. ... Also, a long survey on
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Central Asia. Conclusion: oil and chaos.
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New
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Republic , Feb. 23
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(posted
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Friday, Feb. 6)
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The cover
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package reiterates TNR 's line that the United States should try to
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overthrow Saddam Hussein. One piece argues that anything short of toppling
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Saddam would be pointless: Iraq will be recalcitrant till he falls. (It also
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notes that Turkey and our Arab allies don't favor U.S. military intervention
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nearly as much as they did during the Gulf War: We'll have to go it alone.)
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Another article says the United States should not limit itself to a few days of
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bombing (the current battle plan): Only a long, insistent air campaign will
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persuade Saddam's troops to attempt a coup. ... A story mocks a
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right-wing, Clinton-hating group called Commission to Restore the Presidency to
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Greatness: One leading member predicted that Bill Clinton would announce that
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he was a woman ("Wilma Clinton") during a guest appearance on Ellen .
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New
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York Times Magazine , Feb. 8
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(posted
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Thursday, Feb. 5)
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Would-be
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Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa is a pale imitation of his father, argues the
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cover profile. Hoffa fils shares his father's virulent
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anti-federal-government streak, but he lacks Dad's fire, organizing skill, and
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toughness. Hoffa will likely win the next Teamsters election, but the union is
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too weakened by corruption and too bullied by management and the feds to be the
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force it once was. ... A survey of suburban Americans finds they are
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tolerant of atheists, people of other races, working mothers--everyone but
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gays. Reason: They consider homosexuality an active choice. If they believed
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homosexuality was innate, they'd tolerate gays, too. ... A photo essay
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depicts Dzerzhinsk, Russia, the world's "least-habitable," most-polluted city.
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Once the center of Soviet chemical-weapons production, it has a reservoir of
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toxic waste called the "White Sea." Life expectancy for its 300,000 residents:
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47 years for women, 42 years for men.
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Time and Newsweek , Feb. 9
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(posted
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Tuesday, Feb. 3)
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Lewinsky, Week 2:
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Newsweek 's cover story is "The Secret Sex Wars"; Time's is Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. Inside both
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magazines: maps of the connections in the alleged "right-wing
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conspiracy" against Clinton, profiles of Al Gore (steely-eyed in this time of crisis), and
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still more pop-psychologizing about Clinton's personality.
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Newsweek 's package
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tracks the "secret war" behind the scenes, where Clinton's staffers, lawyers,
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and private detectives labor to contain bimbo eruptions. It runs several new
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pictures of Lewinsky, including two that are embarrassingly revealing. An
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article says other nations might turn to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin for
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stability while Clinton reels. Rubin is calm and confident. A piece argues that
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the media should stop reporting on the scandal because the public has spoken in
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favor of the president. Wag the Dog director Barry Levinson writes that
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his movie was just a joke but compares Hillary Clinton's allegation of a
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right-wing conspiracy to the distraction ploys found in the film.
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Time 's profile of Kenneth Starr depicts him as conservative,
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overzealous, and nerdy. In junior high, "his hobby was polishing shoes," says
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his mom. Time also wonders how the scandal will affect kids. From one 10-year-old
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pundit: "I would rather see happy news. About Leonardo DiCaprio." A Time
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rundown of how the scandal played across the world includes these words from a
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Thai government spokesman: "Great leaders are very good at sex: Cleopatra,
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Genghis Khan, Napoleon, Mao Zedong. Clinton is also a capable leader, so it is
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normal for him to be very good at sex." ... Also in Time , an
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essay makes the case for human cloning. The risk is small,
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and cloning could benefit victims of Parkinson's disease, leukemia, and severe
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burns.
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Feb. 9
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(posted
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Tuesday, Feb. 3)
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The cover
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package on the president's swift comeback asserts that a right-wing conspiracy does exist, though it is less monolithic
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than Hillary Clinton suggests. An essay claims the independent counsel wields too much power:
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Starr's current investigation is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy.
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Psychiatrist Peter Kramer ( Listening to Prozac ) says the same
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qualities that make Clinton a good politician (risk-taking, abundant energy,
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and narcissism) make him a likely womanizer. ...
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U.S. News finds
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a new marketing ploy for classical music: The Mediaeval Baebes
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perform Gregorian chants, wear flimsy garb, and chat about all things gothic.
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Just like the Spice Girls, each baebe has a nickname. (Our favorite: Dragon
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Baebe.)
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The
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New Yorker , Feb. 9
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(posted
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Tuesday, Feb. 3)
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The
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Clintons' marriage is "stupefyingly weird" but founded on genuine passion,
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affection, and respect, argues a piece. She's not loyal for cold political
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reasons, she's loyal because she " 'literally decides that she believes him.' "
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... The magazine publishes a reconstructed image of Kennewick Man, the
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9,000-year-old Caucasoid skeleton found in Washington state. (He is evidence
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that Caucasians settled North America before American Indians.) Based on the
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clay model, Kennewick man looked like the actor Patrick Stewart. ...
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Karla Faye Tucker, the pickax murderer scheduled for execution today, is
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profiled. Once a drug-addled, vicious "Miss Tough Guy," she is now smart,
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sweet, good, and truly religious. (For more on the story, see what the international papers are saying.)
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Weekly Standard , Feb. 9
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(posted
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Tuesday, Feb. 3)
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A
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10-story, glee-filled cover package. (Cover headline: "Yow!"; cover image:
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Clinton as a centaur, cavorting with naked girls on the White House lawn.) A
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piece proposes Clinton's best-case "alternative narrative": He bonded with
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Lewinsky over her unhappy childhood and gave her career advice; she became
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obsessed with him and sent him gifts; he tried to help her while gradually
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pushing her away. The problem with the story: It's not credible, given
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Clinton's sexual history. ... Two weeks after U.S. News and
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Time gushed about "Clintonism," the Standard offers its own
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definition (pegged to the State of the Union): "Clintonism transforms your most
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parochial worries into matters of state," dealing with picayune issues rather
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than genuine ones. The Republican Party--"Clintonism lite"--is just as vapid.
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... An article upbraids some conservatives for their anti-American
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foreign policy. Libertarians say America should stop wasting money on imperial
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power, and cultural conservatives say America should stop exporting its
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horrible values to the rest of the world. They're both wrong, says the
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Standard .
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The
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Nation , Feb. 16
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(posted
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Tuesday, Feb. 3)
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The
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Nation shrugs about the scandal. General takes: 1) The sex was consensual.
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2) Kenneth Starr is corrupt and ideological. 3) The punditocracy is ignoring
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the real story (Starr's Grand Inquisition) in favor of salacious sex. 4)
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Lewinsky is payback for Clinton's real sins--the destruction of social welfare
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and support for the death penalty. ... Ex-Labor Secretary Robert Reich,
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who wrote a piece in last week's New York Times Magazine about the need
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to renew America's social compact, writes a piece about the need
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to renew America's social compact. While America is prosperous, we should
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reduce inequality, strengthen public education, etc.
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--Seth
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Stevenson
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