Today’s edition of quick hits.
* The band-aid: “The Federal Reserve slashed a key interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point Tuesday, in the central bank’s continued effort to restore confidence in the economy and battered financial markets. Although some experts cautioned that the cut may lead to more inflation, stocks soared as Wall Street cheered the news. The Fed cut its federal funds rate, an overnight bank lending rate, to 2.25%. It is the sixth cut in the past six months and comes at a time when the Fed is trying to keep the economy from slipping into recession – although many think it’s already entered one.”
* Uh oh: “The thickest, oldest and toughest sea ice around the North Pole is melting, a bad sign for the future of the Arctic ice cap, NASA satellite data showed on Tuesday.”
* The likelihood of a re-vote in Michigan is looking kind of shaky, but some in-state Dems are suggesting it probably wouldn’t matter: “One of Hillary’s most important supporters in Michigan, former Governor Jim Blanchard, went way off message in a conversation with me moments ago, saying that even if a revote were held in the state, it would likely be so close that it wouldn’t make much of a material difference in the delegate count. ‘I think if we had a vote in Michigan, it could easily be close,’ Blanchard told me. ‘The amount of delegates wouldn’t make much difference.'”
* I’ve neglected to mention developments in Tibet: “The Dalai Lama said on Tuesday he would step down as head of Tibet’s government-in-exile if that would stop bloodshed in his homeland, but China repeated its charge that he was the mastermind of a violent uprising. His officials, based in the Indian Himalayan foothills, said they believed 99 people had died in clashes between Chinese security forces and Tibetans over the past week, including 19 on Tuesday alone. Chinese state-run media said more than 100 people had given themselves up to police after taking part in Tibet’s most intense unrest against Chinese rule for nearly two decades.”
* Do you get the sense that Bear Stearns’ employees will soon be in the same boat as Enron’s?
* On a related note, USA Today had a good primer on the Bear Stearns collapse. Question #1: “What is an investment bank, and why should I care what happens to one?”
* I think we can guess how the case is going to be decided, but this debate at the high court is fascinating.
* I’m going to guess the Obama campaign wants more quotes like this one, as published by McClatchy: “I’ve never heard anybody give a speech like that, ever. It transcends John F. Kennedy’s speech on his faith and his politics,” said G. Terry Madonna, director for the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Pennsylvania’s Franklin & Marshall College. “I think his candidacy was in serious, serious trouble. I think that this speech saved his campaign.”
* The disbanding of the public integrity unit in the U.S. Attorney for Los Angeles’ office really is absurd.
* The EPA library system is the latest agency decimated by hacks.
* British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will hold a formal inquiry on the lessons to be learned from the war in Iraq “at some point.” Do we get one, too?
* Hey look, Fox News is lying about Obama’s church. Who would have guessed?
* The reporters covering Iraq for the newspaper chain formerly known as Knight Ridder really do deserve greater recognition.
* Classic: “U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn, told the editorial board of The Advocate and Greenwich Time he’s supporting Republican John McCain for president because he’s the most likely to bring about change in Washington.” The 72-year-old senator who’s been in Congress for a quarter-century and agrees with Bush on practically all of the major issues is “most likely to bring about change”? Seriously?
* And finally, the problem with the president in a nutshell: “In some ways it was a throwaway line, the kind of praise a boss tosses out casually. But as the economy teetered Monday, President Bush’s words to Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson struck many as discordant and disengaged. ‘I want to thank you, Mr. Secretary, for working over the weekend,’ Bush said as he met with his economic advisors at the White House. ‘You’ve shown the country and the world that the United States is on top of the situation.’ Actually, many analysts and critics said, by focusing on Paulson’s working hours instead of on the fear gripping Main Street and Wall Street, the president seemed to show just the opposite — that he has failed to grasp the gravity of the country’s economic crisis.”
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.