Kennedy’s Good Common Sense: Help Those Most in Need Now — Ponder the Supreme Court Nominations Later

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This is Ted Kennedy‘s statement last night on the death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist: This is a time of great loss for our nation. Vicki and I join the nation in mourning the death of Chief Justice Rehnquist and we hold his family and friends in our thoughts and prayers.

Terrorism Conference: Latest Schedule Linked Now

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There will be live web-cast of the Terrorism, Security and America’s Purpose conference on this website all day and evening Tuesday next week — and most of the day on Wednesday. C-Span has just informed us that they will be airing the conference all day Tuesday live — but we will hear tomorrow about Wednesday….

Living (and Dying) on the Edge: The Consequences of America Being Spread Too Thin

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This is an important article that suggests that while hurricanes may not be preventable, there is much that should have been done to protect infrastructure and lives in the Gulf Coast states that was preempted by other priorities the Bush administration had.

General Wesley Clark & Steve Clemons on Air America’s “The Majority Report” with Sam Seder at 8 p.m.

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Tonight, I will be on “The Majority Report” with Sam Seder talking about the big terrorism conference, the impact of Hurricane Katrina on the National Guard, John Bolton and the U.N. Millennium Summit, and other topics.

Richard Clarke on What Can be Done in Four Years

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The Washington Post‘s Walter Pincus joined us yesterday for a lunch that the American Strategy Program of the New America Foundation hosted with Richard Clarke and wrote this article which appears today. Clarke made some excellent points — but among those not covered in the Pincus article was that “four years is a long time.

Katrina and an Overstretched Military: The Perfect Storm. . .

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Sorry for being AWOL the last few days. I have been deep in conference-planning messiness and am only now able to surface. In between calls, I have been following the devastating impact of Hurricane Katrina. The National Guard has been called out in New Orleans — and I would imagine in Mississippi and Alabama.