Today’s edition of quick hits.
* New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine (D) signed a civil unions bill into law today, making New Jersey the third state to institute a law that grants gay couples “all the rights and responsibilities of marriage under state law.”
* One more argument against Rep. Virgil Goode’s (R-Va.) ridiculous anti-Ellison, anti-Muslim thesis: Ellison traces his American ancestors back to 1742 and isn’t an immigrant.
* I’ve mildly critical of Sandy Berger and his handling of classified materials, but I probably haven’t been nearly critical enough. The guy’s recklessness, irresponsibility, and stupid conduct was truly ridiculous.
* The New Year’s Eve declassification of hundreds of millions of classified government documents — including 275 million from the FBI alone — should keep historians, researchers, and scholars busy for a very long time. The fact that Bush didn’t block the documents’ release (though he still has 10 days to change his mind) is one of the better decisions he’s made.
* I think Hillary did quite well on “The View” this morning.
* Not surprisingly, McCain-Feingold provisions are running into some legal trouble.
* Kudos to Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire (D) for getting behind a plan for publicly-financed campaigns. May other governors follow her example.
* Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), caught on film welcoming the assassination of Fidel Castro, blammed filmmakers for having doctoring the video. She was lying. Blatantly.
* Eric Kent made it through two tours of duty in Iraq and one in Afghanistan with hardly a scratch — but had to go to the hospital after trying to open one of those awful plastic containers used with electronics products.
* It’s encouraging to see that “An Inconvenient Truth” will be made available, for free, to so many teachers.
* Any new Koufax Award categories you’d like to see?
* If I didn’t know better, I’d say Bill O’Reilly doesn’t actually watch Fox News.
* Publius has some good advice for the GOP today. I don’t think they’re listening, but it’s good advice anyway.
* And, even in defeat, Rick Santorum is as bitter and bizarre as ever: “I have always said that if World War II was covered like this war, I really, very seriously, doubt that we would have ever won that war. … The bottom line is, the media — and I am not saying that they are intending to do this — but simply by what they are doing, without question, it is aiding the terrorists and their objective.”
If none of these particular items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.