Today’s edition of quick hits.
* If you haven’t already, be sure to check out The Real McCain, a new website created by Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films to highlight the Arizona senator’s flip-flops, equivocations, and general lack of principles. My good friend Cliff Schecter will even be hosting a blog at the site, and I might contribute a guest item or two over there from time to time. It’s already off to a great start with a terrific video compilation. Take a look.
* Speaking of videos that are worth watching, I don’t know who VoteVets.org hired as a media/advertising consultant, but the group hired wisely. The organization’s latest ad is as powerful as its previous spots. Take a look.
* I’ll report on the subject in more detail tomorrow, but let’s just say Ari Fleischer’s testimony today in the Scooter Libby trial was more bad news for the defendant, and more bad news for the White House. (thanks to K.Z. for the tip)
* Good news for fans of Air America Radio (of which I am one): Manhattan real estate developer Stephen L. Green has agreed to buy the radio network.
* Bad news for fans of Air America Radio: Al Franken is leaving his radio program in advance of his U.S. Senate campaign in Minnesota in 2008. (Franken will be replaced on the air by Thom Hartmann.)
* Bush: Cheney is a “glass-half full kind of guy.” Is that some kind of new euphemism for dishonest demagogue?
* Is it possible that 13% of Americans have never heard of global warming? I find that hard to believe.
* Which science fiction writer are you? (I took the quiz and it told me I’m Gregory Benford. Gregory Benford took the same quiz and it told him he’s Arthur C. Clarke.)
* Great quote from John Dean: “No wonder that with each appearance he makes on Capitol Hill, [Attorney General Alberto] Gonzales increases his standing as one of the least respected Attorney Generals ever, in the eyes of both Congressional cognoscenti and the legal community. His most recent appearance bordered on the pathetic.” (thanks to E.T. for the tip)
* WaPo ombud Deborah Howell addressed John Solomon’s “controversial” (read: awful) article about John Edwards and did a solid job criticizing it. The article “seemed like a ‘gotcha’ without the gotcha,” Howell said.
* No Googlebombs for you: “A favored online tactic to mock the president — altering the Google search engine so the words ‘miserable failure’ lead to President Bush’s home page at the White House — has been neutralized.”
* Have I mentioned Florida lately? “Hundreds of criminals were able to obtain concealed-weapons permits in Florida because of loopholes, errors and miscommunication, a newspaper reported yesterday…. ‘I had no idea,’ said Baker County Sheriff Joey B. Dobson, who sits on an advisory panel for the state Division of Licensing, which issues permits for carrying concealed weapons. ‘I think the system, somewhere down the line, is broken. I guarantee you the ordinary person doesn’t know [that] … and I’d venture to guess that 160 legislators in Florida don’t know that, either.'”
* Cully Stimson’s ridiculous shot at law firms representing Guantanamo Bay detainees continues to reverberate: “Two weeks after a senior Pentagon official suggested that corporations should pressure their law firms to stop assisting detainees at Guantanamo Bay, major companies have turned the tables on the Pentagon and issued statements supporting the law firms’ work on behalf of terrorism suspects.”
* O’Reilly thinks Sunnis and Shia are killing each other for “fun“?
* Molly Ivins, who had hoped to write a column a week on the issue of ending the war in Iraq, may not have the chance — Ivins has been hospitalized again, as she continues to struggle with breast cancer.
* And finally, be sure to check out the bizarre run-in between Arianna Huffington and John McCain at Davos. One gets the impression the GOP candidate is more than a little thin-skinned.
If none of these particular items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.