Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Coordinated truck bombs in Iraq killed at least 48 people today and wounded dozens more. The attacks in Tal Afar, the second in four days, occurred about five minutes apart at popular markets in the northern and central parts of the city, 260 miles northwest of Baghdad. As of right now, these bombings are not mentioned at all anywhere among the dozens of headlines on CNN.com. Mass killings in Iraq are apparently too routine.
* Remember the recent briefing in Iraq on the Iranian EFP bombs? The NYT offers an extensive back-story today. As you might have guessed, the administration’s recent rhetoric was incomplete.
* If you haven’t seen it, the Blogging Heads discussion between Ann Althouse and Garance Franke-Ruta was easily the most “lively” BHTV debate to date. After about four minutes, Althouse appears to completely lose it. Orcinus has a transcript of the anger eruption. These chats aren’t usually so filled with rage, but the good news is, Blogging Heads has never enjoyed this much publicity.
* Why is the Carol Lam’s firing so uniquely suspicious, out of the eight U.S. Attorney firings? Paul Kiel goes point by point.
* A bank robbery spun out of control in Miami today when a suspect was arrested and his sidekicks threatened to start shooting people if he wasn’t released. Just a normal Tuesday in South Florida.
* Alberto Gonzales today “cut short a press conference about Internet safety, leaving the room at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago when reporters questioned him about the firings of U.S. attorneys. The questioning was to have lasted about 15 minutes, but it ended after less than three.” Poor guy is getting shy.
* I want to like The Politico, but they’re not making it easy.
* When the RNC is using an AP article as a press release, chances are, there’s something wrong with the AP article.
* The president tends to enjoy stronger support from Mormons than any other religious group, but a new poll shows Mormons rejecting the war in Iraq in much greater numbers: A poll by The Salt Lake Tribune “showed a precipitous drop in support for Bush’s handling of the war among Utah’s Latter-day Saints. In the survey, just 44 percent of those identifying themselves as Mormon said they backed Bush’s war management. That’s a level considerably higher than Bush gets from Utah’s non-Mormon population and the nation at large, but it’s also a 21 percentage point drop from just five months earlier.”
* Here’s an interesting clip of Karl Rove, in 1972, talking to Dan Rather about his work in helping re-elect Richard Nixon.
* C&L and Cliff Schecter are both hosting fundraisers.
* Blake Hounshell has a good piece about ending unconditional support for Pakistan’s Pervez Musharraf.
* Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) is less concerned about setting a timeline for withdrawal from Iraq and more concerned about anyone knowing what the timeline says. “My strong preference would be to have a classified plan and a classified timetable that should be shared with Congress,” Pryor said yesterday. A public deadline would tip off the enemy, “who might just bide their time and wait for us to leave,” he added. Um, senator? They’re already biding their time and waiting for us to leave.
* And finally, Rudy Giuliani appeared on Sean Hannity’s radio show today and said, “I support the First Amendment right to carry and to bear arms.” And here I thought Giuliani didn’t take conservatives’ concerns about guns seriously….
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.