And Ray Robison, for one, is disgusted that a news service appears to be using their resources to cover for a Democratic presidential candidate who recently accused US forces in Afghanistan of indiscriminately bombing and killing civilians. — Mostly women and children, is my guess. Orphaned children. And their puppies. Who only have three legs. Because they lost one of their legs under the treads of a Bradley driven by
August 14, 2007
Controlling the narrative, continued
Interesting bit from LGF on efforts to edit Wikipedia anonymously — and the software developed by a Caltech grad designed to flag those anonymous edits and track them back to high profile IP sources, such as the NYT or al-Jazeera. See also, from Wired, “See Who’s Editing Wikipedia – Diebold, the CIA, a Campaign”. One of the struggles open-source reference sources will have to combat are concerted efforts to shade
“World’s oldest person dies in Japan at 114: report”
Sadly, another “world’s oldest person” will just pop up to take this one’s place. They’re a lot like “the poor” that way: every time one person pulls out of that lowest 10% of earners, another person slips down to fill the void. We can only stand by and hope that a brave man — someone like John Edwards, for example — steps up to put an end to this kind
Que?
Republican Lincoln Diaz-Balart, addressing a La Raza conference in South Florida last month, tells the radical separatist group, “It is important that we emphasize the Spanish language.†Because, you know, assimilation is a racist enterprise, and English is the language of the oppresser class. Diaz-Balart’s pro-business, free-market stance is laudable. But the irony of his railing against totalitarianism while addressing La Raza and promoting the kind of multiculturalist pap that,
“Hope and Despair in Divided Iraq”
Writing in Der Spiegel, here’s Ullrich Fichtner: Ramadi is an irritating contradiction of almost everything the world thinks it knows about Iraq — it is proof that the US military is more successful than the world wants to believe. Ramadi demonstrates that large parts of Iraq — not just Anbar Province, but also many other rural areas along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers — are essentially pacified today. This is
