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Friday, Apr 04, 2003

al-aboard

english language al-jazeera up and running.

via agonist bbs


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youve got bank

"Pound for pound, who's the biggest, richest media mogul on the Web? Terry Semel? Nope. Sumner Redstone? Not exactly. Try Matt Drudge. Years after his big "scoop" -- leaking that Newsweek was sitting on a story about the tryst between President Clinton and Monica Lewinsky -- Drudge's website is bigger than ever. Run on a shoestring, the Drudge Report, a plain-Jane page of news links and occasional scoops, clears, by our back-of-the-envelope estimate, a cool $800,000 a year."

via gawker


[link]


red-tailed hawk

"Michael Kelly, 46, the Atlantic Monthly editor-at-large and Washington Post columnist who abandoned the safety of editorial offices to cover the war in Iraq, has been killed in a Humvee accident while traveling with the Army's 3rd Infantry Division."

via gawker


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mais oui

what better way to study up on your parlez vous than a bilingual franglais blog. been around for a while. surprised i didnt bump into it before.

via buzz machine


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baghdoodads

"As three U.S. combat divisions and assorted forces bear down on Baghdad, the big question of the war now is, how will U.S. troops take the Iraqi capital? This is a matter U.S. war planners pondered long before President Bush launched the war. Last summer, a secret team of high-level military officers and senior civilian Pentagon officials designed a tactical playbook for presentation to the Joint Chiefs of Staff "war-fighting group," a Pentagon outfit that oversees war plans. Titled "Joint Urban Operations," the report was developed by the team to study and enhance U.S. combat abilities in an urban environment. But a classified summary PowerPoint presentation of the study—made available to us by a source with access to the document—focused exclusively on one particular urban area: Baghdad. And this summary shows the various ways U.S. military planners considered conquering the city."


[link]


diplomania

"Welcome to H-Diplo, the H-NET discussion list dedicated to the study of diplomatic and international history."

via altercation


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Thursday, Apr 03, 2003

laurel canyon

anybody catch the joni mitchell episode of American Masters on pbs? heres a robot wisdom timeline of her life. i was at the 1986 amnesty international show where she was nearly booed off the stage. i never knew she was a last minute replacement for pete townsend.

got me thinking about who were the most influential women in music history. looks like vh-1 has had a series this past month with their list of The 100 Greatest Women of Rock & Roll. pretty good point of departure although any poll that has lucinda williams at 96 and alannis morissette at 52 is troubling. ill see if i can find other resources. anybody care to proffer a top 10?


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open road

"Welcome to OSS.NET. Since 1992, we have championed open source intelligence (OSINT), intelligence reform, and the creation of Smart Nations. Beginning in 2002 we are also championing a global intelligence grid that brings the seven tribes of intelligence (national, military, law enforcement, business, academic, NGO-media, and religious-clan-citizen) into effective relations with one another, in part through the creation of ISO standards for those elements of intelligence that are open, ethical, legal, and generic."

via kos


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century marketers

"100 People Who Changed New York"

via gawker


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prim objective

"You will be happy to learn that the former head of the KGB (the secret police of the former Soviet Union), General Yevgeni Primakov, has been hired as a consultant by the US Department of Homeland Security. Do you think he will share his expertise in "security" to prepare US citizens for domestic internal passports under the pretense of fighting the never-ending "War on Terrorism"?"

via american samizdat

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