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Post-Prandial Information Digestion: Daily News Roundup

Friday, September 5th, 2008

“Shaking up Washington,” McCain’s Fight In his speech, McCain promised to “shake up Washington” and that this country’s citizens should “Fight with me. Fight for what’s right for our country. Fight for the ideals and character of a free people.” CNN reprinted bits of the speech in which the senator also praised his VP choice Sarah Palin, describing her as someone who has “tackled tough problems like energy independence and corruption” as well as an individual who “stands up for what’s right and she doesn’t let anyone tell her to sit down.” Not the most mellifluous speaker, McCain concentrated on conveying other strengths, such as the battles he has fought and will “fight” (see above) for the country.

Deceased Lebanese Singer Suzanne Tamim, Photo Courtesy of AFP/Getty Images

The Femmempire Strikes Back As Sarah Palin picks up steam and a following, Hillary Clinton may be bearing her claws and preparing to fight back to woo those who stood by her for the 18 million cracks she made in the glass ceiling, but who could begin to dance to the tune Palin’s piping if, The New York Times wrote, they see the Alaskan as a glass-breaker. Clinton, on the way to Florida to campaign for Obama, has not lashed out against Palin, and Clinton’s advisors have emphasized she will not be doing so. We’ll know soon enough. The Times highlighted the fact that Clinton may be a huge asset to Obama, but likely fears too much association with him as much as she does a face-off with Palin, both people/situations presenting potential for Clinton reputation-damage should Obama lose the election and Palin win that theoretical confrontation.

Egyptian Embroglio Lebanese singer Suzanne Tamim’s (pictured left) brutal murder (stabbed multiple times, throat slashed) in Dubai spurred a series of theories that Egyptian real-estate tycoon Hisham Talaat Moustafa paid to have the singer, possibly his former lover, killed. CNN reported that because Egyptians feel their government is in bed with its businessmen, many were very surprised to read that Moustafa had been arrested. But any corruption fears his arrest quelled have been revived by citizen-spawned musings, as the article described, regarding their country much along the lines of ‘if that’s what a typical mogul, who has so much power here, is up to, what else is rotten in the upper echelons of this state?’

Berlusconi and The Economist’s Legal Tussle Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, the third longest running PM for the Mediterranean republic, also serving in that office in 2001, pursued a lawsuit against British The Economist in that year after the self-described newspaper published a piece titled “An Italian Story” in the edition bearing “Why Silvio Berlusconi is unfit to lead Italy” on its cover. Shockingly, the politician found both the line and the article unsavory. As of today, however, the paper gleefully announced Berlusconi will be paying it recompense as the Court in Milan rejected his claims. The Economist didn’t specify how much Berlusconi would have to cough up, but the judgment can be found (if in Italian) here.

The weekend roundup

Monday, May 19th, 2008

roundup

Here at P+P, we are constantly re-thinking the best ways to organize content and deliver a reading experience outside the punditry and beltway-blogger echo chamber. As such, we’d like to offer up a new permanent Monday fixture that will throw out some hand-picked stories from the weekend for your reading pleasure, along with some brief news analysis for that tangy P+P twinge. Enjoy!

My wife recently endured the pharmaceutical gauntlet with a failed Yaz experiment and a system-ravaging run with the mega-antibiotic Cipro, so this skewering of Big Pharma that got a ton of run on Digg struck particularly close to home. Like any debate worth having, it’s complex and too easy to generalize. Sure, many people out there take many drugs that save their lives or keep them stable without any severe side effects. It’s no secret, however, that Big Pharma is rivaled only by oil, tobacco, and Israel when it comes to lobby power in Washington. No other country in the world markets drugs the way we do in the US. One has to step back and wonder, as noted in the blog entry linked above, how is it legal to market anti-depressants wide instead of administering only under strict psychiatric recommendation? Doesn’t that constitute baiting people who just may be having a bad week? When money changes hands between doctors, HMOs, and pharmaceutical companies, aren’t the best interests of the patient lost somewhere in the capitalist shuffle?

*****

As I was reading the LA Times’ news analysis piece of Bush’s Middle East tour, a quote from Bush directed at Arab nations struck me as pretty preposterous, even by his standards:

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