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Friday, Jan 29, 2010 11:30 PM UTC2010-01-29T23:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The Week in Pictures

Baby baptisms in Tblisi, Nancy Kerrigan's grief, Tony Blair in mock jail, and more

Khaled bin Sultan

Saudi soldiers occupy a position on Mt. Doud, Wednesday Jan. 27, 2010, a high strategic position in the southern Saudi province of Jizan, near the border with Yemen, that was occupied by Houthi rebels from Yemen, and was retaken by the Saudi military a week ago. At least 133 Saudis soldiers died, mostly in the ground fighting to retake the strategic high ground on the frontier. It is not clear how many rebels were killed. Saudi joined the 5-year-old fight when Yemeni rebels crossed the border and killed two Saudi soldiers. The northern rebels have been battling Yemen's government since 2004 complaining of neglect and discrimination. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) (Credit: Hassan Ammar)

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Friday, Jan 29, 2010 11:30 PM UTC2010-01-29T23:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

On foreign influence, experts back Obama

Conservatives claim the president lied in his State of the Union speech -- but nonpartisan experts agree with him

President Obama delivers the State of the Union speech Wednesday.

President Obama delivers the State of the Union speech Wednesday.

Today the Wall Street Journal editorial page joined the chorus of usual suspects claiming the president lied when he said the following about the recent Supreme Court decision in Citizens United:

“I believe [that decision] will open the floodgates for special interests — including foreign corporations — to spend without limit in our elections.”

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Joe Conason blogs in Salon several times a week and writes a weekly column for the New York Observer. His latest book is "It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush."  More Joe Conason

Friday, Jan 29, 2010 11:20 PM UTC2010-01-29T23:20:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Opportunities abound, but cash may be a problem for the GOP

While the Democrats are looking vulnerable in 2010, the GOP may not have the cash to take them on

The outlook for the GOP this November has been undeniably bright. Every other day, it seems, some new poll comes out showing that yet another incumbent Democrat may be in trouble  — even in the bluest of states, conservatives have reason to hope.

But amidst all this optimism, Republicans may be forgetting about one thing their party will need if it’s to reclaim a chunk of seats in the House and the Senate: Money. The GOP’s various campaign committees are entering the election cycle with significantly less cash on hand than the Democrats.

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Emily Holleman is the editor of Open Salon.  More Emily Holleman

Friday, Jan 29, 2010 10:29 PM UTC2010-01-29T22:29:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Sundance: Searing portrait of a top lobbyist

Oscar-winner Alex Gibney talks about his new Jack Abramoff expos

Washington lobbyist Abramoff leaves courthouse in Miami

18 Aug 2005, MIAMI, FL, USA --- Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff leaves the courthouse in Miami August 18, 2005. Abramoff, a central figure in investigations involving House Majority Leader Tom Delay, plans to fight charges he defrauded two lenders of $60 million to buy a casino cruise line, his lawyer said on Thursday. Abramoff, a well-connected Republican lobbyist, and Adam Kidan, his partner in the $147.5 millions buyout of SunCruz Casino five years ago, were indicted by a federal grand jury in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on August 11. --- Image by © CARLOS BARRIA/Reuters/Corbis (Credit: © Carlos Barria/reuters/corbis)

PARK CITY, Utah — Alex Gibney’s new documentary, “Casino Jack and the United States of Money,” which premiered at Sundance this week, is much more than a shocking and highly entertaining movie about Jack Abramoff, the über-lobbyist at the center of the biggest corruption scandal in congressional history. It’s a portrait of a political system that has been poisoned down to the root by the pernicious influence of big money, by the buying and selling of connections and influence, and by a radical free-market ideology that has been systematically employed to undermine the principles of representative democracy.

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Friday, Jan 29, 2010 10:19 PM UTC2010-01-29T22:19:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Obama channels Michael Douglas

A little bit of deja vu in the exchange with House Republicans

As Mike Madden noted in his post on President Obama’s Friday meeting with House Republicans, Democratic operatives in Washington, D.C. spent the time watching in amazement and wondering: “Where the hell has this guy been?” Nearly everyone on the left, it seems, has had that kind of reaction to the president’s performance; at once complimentary and puzzled, wondering why this side of Obama — kicking ass, taking names, and doing it like the old professor he is — doesn’t show more often.

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Alex Koppelman is a staff writer for Salon.  More Alex Koppelman

Friday, Jan 29, 2010 9:30 PM UTC2010-01-29T21:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Beijing’s baffling chocolate wonderland

China's newest theme park opens with a bizarre fashion show -- and edible Louis Vuitton bags

A model wears a creation made of chocolate during a fashion show at the World Chocolate Wonderland, a chocolate theme park, in Beijing.

A model wears a creation made of chocolate during a fashion show at the World Chocolate Wonderland, a chocolate theme park, in Beijing.

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How hard can it be to make Chinese people eat chocolate? While we’re struggling to convince Americans to eat less candy, China is trying to get its newly solvent consumer class hooked on the sweets—and wants reel in some international candy business investment while they’re at it. How? By opening World Chocolate Wonderland, a chocolate theme park in Beijing that welcomed its first visitors today.

Looking at the Wonderland exhibit, it becomes obvious that the Chinese are not all that familiar with chocolate. The museum misses the mark so many times it’s almost hard to watch. A 30-foot replica of The Great Wall? OK. Louis Vuitton handbags? Not so delicious. A chocolate basketball player suspended from the ceiling, about to make a slam-dunk? Let’s just say that if you made that in the US you would never be allowed to touch another Hershey bar. The worst of it, though, is the legion of chocolate soldiers, replicas of the famed Terracotta soldiers buried with the First Qin emperor. This stern-faced, armored candy crew is scary like a clown; something that’s supposed to be fun turns desperately creepy. And for the ultimate in yuck, the opening ceremony featured a fashion show with models not only working chocolate garments but also sporting chocolate wigs.

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Sara Breselor is an Editorial Fellow with Salon Food.  More Sara Breselor

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