Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Peter Pace went off-message today, telling reporters he’s seen no evidence linking explosives killing Americans in Iraq and top Iranian officials.
* U.S. News: “A federal judge has ruled that a CIA agent identified only as ‘Doe,’ allegedly fired after he gathered prewar intelligence showing that Iraq was not developing weapons of mass destruction, can proceed with his lawsuit against the CIA. The judge has ordered both parties to submit discovery requests — evidence they want for their case — to be completed by March 15, according to the CIA agent’s lawyer and a spokesman for the Justice Department, which is defending the CIA in court.” Sounds like an interesting case, doesn’t it?
* If you haven’t already seen the PowerPoint presentation shown to reporters in Baghdad yesterday about Iranian involvement in Iraq, TPM Muckraker has a copy.
* Highlighting intellectual dishonesty on The Wall Street Journal editorial page is, as a rule, a little too easy, but Jonathan Chait said what needed to be said anyway.
* When even Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska.) is ready to raise CAFE standards, you know raising fuel mileage standards is an idea whose time has come.
* Stuart Rothenberg has a new Roll Call column suggesting that Dems have a realistic shot, depending on strategy and conditions, of having a 60-seat Senate majority in 2010, which should be the party’s target. Sounds good to me.
* Keeping this speculation in mind, Joe Klein suggested over the weekend that Joe Lieberman and the Dems just aren’t getting along, and he’s still mulling a party switch. Considering the GOP’s numbers and long-term prospects, it seems like common sense should keep Lieberman right where he is.
* And speaking of Joe Klein, he had a good post today with some necessary skepticism about the administration’s claims about Iran.
* Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), during a House hearing on the IPCC report on global warming, questioned the authors of the report about a period of dramatic climate change that occurred 55 million years ago. “We don’t know what those other cycles were caused by in the past. Could be dinosaur flatulence, you know, or who knows?” And Republicans wonder why they’re not credible in the climate change debate.
* Ezra’s post today about prison rape is chilling, but worth reading. Ezra accurately notes, “There is no greater, or more common, human rights abuses in America than those occurring in our overcrowded, constantly expanding, jails.”
* U.S.-Russian diplomatic tension went up a notch over the weekend when Russian President Vladimir Putin, in some of his harshest criticism of the United States since he took office seven years ago, said Bush’s unilateral, militaristic approach had made the world a more dangerous place than at any time during the Cold War. To his credit, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, asked about Putin’s comments, took the high road.
* And, finally, my friend Ron Chusid noted a very odd story recently. Apparently, the Breast Cancer Society of Canada is accepting contributions — unless they come from strippers. “Local strippers who hold an annual event to raise money for cancer research were shocked this year to discover their offer to donate part of the proceeds to the society was turned down. Last year, the same group of dancers donated $3,000 to the society without incident. Former stripper Trina Ricketts, an organizer with the Exotic Dancers for Cancer fundraising event, said they planned again this year to donate half of the money raised to the Breast Cancer Society, but when she contacted the society recently, she was rejected.” As Ron put it, “It’s a strange value system where the opinions of some on strippers is more important than fighting breast cancer.”
If none of these particular items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.