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What's up with that?
Should the District deploy firefighters on city streets to deter crime and protect participants in a summer jobs program on payday?
James Harrison: Separating Fact from Fiction
An ESPN.com columnist dropped the ball by not checking out his most damaging claim.
PICKET: Omaha public school stimulus money teaches kids to stop 'being a color-blind' society
Public schools in Omaha spent $130,000 in federal stimulus money on cultural diversity books for all 8,000 school staffers including: teachers, administrators, and even janitors that teaches that a color-blind society is not enough to end racism.
TRR: Where do the Bikini Cops Wear Their Badges?
Acapulco's answer to out of control drug-fueled violence? Sexy cops.
TRR: The Gay Muslim Pork Rib Ramadan BBQ
The Obama administration is actively promoting gay rights in the Muslim world. No wonder they hate us.
White House hits GOP leaders on debt votes
Raising the rhetorical stakes, the White House on Thursday called out Republican congressional leaders who administration officials said are being hypocritical in their reluctance to increase the nation's debt limit, saying the four lawmakers approved higher borrowing routinely until now.
TRR: The Hollywood Red (State) Underground
A new documentary on the Obama administration's ruinous economic policies shows that you can be a conservative filmmaker in Hollywood and survive to speak truth to power.
Boehner rejects Camp David meeting
House Speaker John A. Boehner has told President Obama he sees no need to go to Camp David this weekend to continue debt talks.
Nats: All-Star Break Fun Facts
Things for Curly W fans to look forward to in the second half of the season.
Report: Amazon.com to enter tablet market
The Wall Street Journal reported July 13 that Amazon.com is planning to offer a tablet computer allowing users to read Kindle-format eBooks, listen to music stored on Amazon's cloud-based service, and potentially run other applications. Is this a good idea, or just a stunt?
CRS analysis: Obama can't use 14th amendment to circumvent debt limit
The non-partisan Congressional Research Service has issued a new report saying that if Congress refuses to raise the government's borrowing limit, the White House cannot do so unilaterally under the Constitution's 14th Amendment.
WH reduces access to debt negotiations
Upset at the "circus" caused by reporters asking questions of the president at the beginning of Monday's debt negotiations meeting, the White House on Wednesday said it was restricting access to that day's meeting only to photographers. "The last time we had TV cameras in the meeting, it was less than three hours after the president had given a press conference, and people shouted questions at him, including people who had just had questions in the press conference," White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters. "The meeting [-] purpose of the meeting is not to create a circus but to negotiate," he said. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are beginning to rebel against the closed-door negotiations, which are being attended by President Obama and top Republican and Democratic leaders from Congress. Rank-and-file members say they don't want to be surprised by a last-minute deal that requires them to accept trillions of dollars in tax increases or spending cuts. Asked by a reporter why the White House doesn't shift to open talks considering that confidential negotiations have not produced a deal, Mr. Carney suggested the talks needed to be secret in order to ensure lawmakers would compromise on thorny issues. "I think that you know as well as I do that … this is difficult," he said. "And one of the reasons why when we talk about, and leaders of both parties have put it in these terms, that you have to get in the boat together, is because that there is -- that it's hard to get this done because of the differing opinions, and that it requires approaching it this way so that we can get in the boat together and it doesn't tip over." Before Wednesday, access to the negotiations had been granted to the full "pool," a rotating group of reporters that is given closer access to the president when he travels or holds noteworthy events. The pool had been let into the meetings for less than a minute and then ushered out, usually giving reporters a chance to shout a few questions, and giving both print and video photographers a chance to get images. Wednesday's meeting, though, was restricted just to the print photographers.
PICKET: Issa urges SEC to probe possible insider trading activity around DoED policy
The Department of Education has been under fire by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle as well as non-profit organizations ranging from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) to Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) since DoEd proposed and eventually published the Gainful Employment rule this year.
Maryland GOP names interim director
The Maryland Republican Party has appointed state Delegate Justin D. Ready as its interim executive director.
Total Obama cuts on table in 2012: $2 billion
The Senate's top Republican said Wednesday that in the closed-door budget talks, the White House was offering just an additional $2 billion in actual spending cuts for 2012 — compared to an expected deficit of $1.1 trillion for the whole year.
PICKET: Movie review site Rotten Tomatoes lists Palin film as 'science fiction & fantasy'
A popular movie review website lists the new Sarah Palin film as both science fiction and fantasy.
Maryland players raise $10,000 for cystic fibrosis research
Team doubles donation total in second year of Uplifting Athletes event
PICKET: Light bulb ban repeal bill fails in the House
The Hill reported on Monday that the House bill headed to the floor today that would repeal the ban on incandescent light bulbs would 'likely' go down in defeat, as it would be a vote under suspension and therefore require a 2/3 majority in order to pass the lower chamber.
Lightening Ovechkin’s Load
With Troy Brouwer around to play the heavy, maybe Alex can concentrate more on the offensive end.