This blog is now read by more machines than humans: RSS robots, spam-laying insectopoids, echoes of blog-gathering .edu projects. This essentially is the state of affairs that all human activities w
Cleaning Up the Nation
Austin Bay:
If Air America were a conservative radio network its corrupt funding trail and cynical abuse of a poverty program would be front page news at the NY Times and full-time mega-scandal at
Rank Materialism
Freedom. I am now the proud new owner of a Gateway 6020GZ laptop, perfect for students and others with limited means. I can now go into a Starbucks or a Barnes & Noble and look like I'm doing some
Fallujah Fonda
Uh-oh. From the Telegraph comes this exciting news:
Jane Fonda is returning to anti-war activism and embarking on a cross-country tour to call for an end to US military operations in Iraq.
Acros
John Pilger: Partner in Terrorism
In an outrageous piece of terrorist propaganda appearing on the cover of today's New Statesman, John Pilger puts the blame for the 7/7 London attacks not on the terrorists, but rather on Tony Blair:
Two Separate Occasions
I was entertaining the possibility that Sandy Berger's removal of highly classified documents could be put down to sloppiness. It was all one big inadvertant mess, and the right side of the blogosphere would have a jolly good laugh, but nothing much would happen beyond that.
But now there's this from the Washington Post:
Breuer [Berger's lawyer] said Berger removed the documents on Sept. 2 and Oct. 2, as he sifted through thousands of pages to determine which should be turned over to the commission. He said Berger inadvertently slipped drafts of the review -- each of which he said runs 12 to 15 pages -- into a leather portfolio he routinely carries.
So Berger inadvertantly removed classified documents from the National Archives on two separate occasions. Well, fool me once, etc. With two instances of these... takings, it seems highly unlikely to me that they could have been accidental. And if it is believed that they were accidental, Berger should still be prosecuted. I wouldn't necessarily recommend jail time at this point, but there's enough disregard for procedure to prosecute, at least.
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Amen brother. I read the Times report yesterday morning and came away with the impression that Berger made a simple mistake. Fortunately, I always follow a read through the Times with a careful look at other sources on the Internet to find out what information has been "inadvertantly" left out. The blogsphere gave a rather more sinister set of facts.
http://www.soldierofthemind.com/archives/2004/07/21/the_times_spins_sandy_berger.html
© 2002-2006
Brian O'Connell.





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