Today’s edition of quick hits.
* The House failed to pass its so-called “fetal pain” bill yesterday, though it won surprisingly strong support. In fact, a 250 to 162 majority backed the legislation, though it was short of the two-thirds majority required under rules in place at the time. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it knows of no legitimate scientific evidence that shows that fetuses are capable of feeling pain at 20 weeks, as the bill states. (See how your lawmaker voted)
* Professional blowhard Bill Bennett lashed out at the Iraq Study Group yesterday, writing in the National Review that, “In all my time in Washington I’ve never seen such smugness, arrogance, or such insufferable moral superiority. Self-congratulatory. Full of itself. Horrible.” One wonders if he appreciates the irony of Bill Bennett using these words to describe others.
* We may be witnessing amazing technological advances in American society, and the military may spend billions creating the most sophisticated weaponry imaginable, but in the end, sometimes it’s Silly String that ends up saving U.S. troops’ lives. Seriously.
* Thanks to Keith Olbermann, we may not refer to MSNBC as the “perennial third place” finisher much longer.
* Robert Gates was confirmed by the Senate yesterday as the new Secretary of Defense, following a 98 to 2 vote. And who were the two? Radical left-wing senators who can’t stomach anyone Bush nominates to head the Pentagon? Not exactly — the two were Sens. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) and Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), both of whom believed Gates isn’t nearly right-wing enough.
* The Council on American-Islamic Relations has a very reasonable argument that Dennis Prager should be removed from his government post on the taxpayer-funded United States Holocaust Memorial Council. White House press secretary Tony Snow called the matter “an issue that the president does not need to adjudicate and, therefore, will not.”
* CNN’s Dana Bash’s report on Democratic responses to the Iraq Study Group report really didn’t make any sense.
* Howard Dean is still trying to raise awareness about the voting problems in Florida’s 13th. Good for him; this is a story that still needs attention.
* Arguing that Americans need oil to live, Bill O’Reilly argued yesterday that the United States “may have to … level cities like Tehran, kill hundreds of thousands of people” if Iran takes over Iraq and then fosters a revolution inside Saudi Arabia. Wow.
* Harold Meyerson: “[T]he Southern problem, it turns out, is really the Republicans’. They’ve become too Southern — too suffused with the knee-jerk militaristic, anti-scientific, dogmatically religious, and culturally, sexually and racially phobic attitudes of Dixie — to win friends and influence elections outside the South.” (thanks to SKNM for the tip)
* No more Friedmans for Friedman.
* Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.) apparently raised a few eyebrows yesterday when he said that the Democratic plan to actually work five-day weeks in Congress means that “Democrats could care less about families.” Today, on Fox News, Kingston defended his comments, saying, “With BlackBerrys, cell phones, you can stay in touch with what’s going on in Washington.” Too bad that hasn’t worked.
If none of these particular items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.