Boshed figures

One More Cruel Hoax - Iraqi Refugees Return 
...the much-hyped success of the surge and the return of the refugees is as big a bosh as Bush's WMDs. The streets of Baghdad and Mosul remain deadly killing grounds and the refugees are being manipulated like pawns in a political bunko game to get a U.S. president elected. Moreover, the myth of their return is a cruel hoax that could shred them of the legitimacy of sanctuary.

The campaign to foist these lies on the U.S. electorate began congruently enough just a few hours into this past November election day. On November 7th, the Washington Post reported on a Baghdad press conference by the U.S.-Iraqi Joint Pacification Command at which General Quassin al-Moussawi insisted the city had grown so safe that over 46,000 refugees had returned in October. Moussawi was seconded by his U.S. counterpart Major General Joseph Fils: "there is no question that families are returning to Baghdad." The next day, New York Times correspondent Damien Cave met with General Fils over egg rolls in the Green Zone and later wrote "by all accounts, Iraq families who fled their homes in the past two yeas are returning to Baghdad."

Then on November 12th, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki announced that 7000 families had already returned to Baghdad thanks to the good offices of Bush's surge and invited the millions of Iraqis still displaced by the carnage to come home. A spokesperson for the Displacement Ministry backed up the Prime Minister, estimating that 1600 families a day had returned from internal and external exile during October, many of them on free buses the Iraqi puppet government had sent to Damascus to transport refugees home.

Days later, even Cave had to concede the numbers were bogus. General Moussawi's 46,000 seems to represent all Iraqi citizens crossing the borders from Syria and Jordan during October 2007 and included returning vacationers, business travelers, religious pilgrims, and exiles temporarily returning to retrieve money or for medical care or to bury a relative - in addition to a few refugees going home for good. Even foreign fighters and three insurgents who had fled to Syria and were arrested in Baqouba days later are thought to be in the mix.

The 1600 families who had reportedly returned daily during October were more like 50, a representative of the bus line chartered by the Maliki government to bring them home, told Cave. Once more, thousands were still fleeing Baghdad - more than were returning according to a bulletin issued by the Iraqi Red Crescent.

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Borg collectivised

YIKES! I've Been Assimilated

The bigger the group, the more I distrust and dislike it. Beginning right with kindergarden I instinctively knew that group size and efficiency were inversely proportional. The larger the group the less real stuff gets done, and what does get done costs more and misses the original goals by a mile.

Large working groups are especially vulnerable to a form of social affirmative action. At least a third of the people who make up a large working group are always useless as tits on a boar. Still everyone has to treat them as valuable members of "the team." They never do anything useful, say anything useful and, when given a task that requires them to actually produce something, they scurry from cubicle to cubicle bothering the other two-thirds: "Hey, Steve, can I pick your brain for minute." Then they turn in their (your) report. If these people were not allowed to be part of a group they would most surely die of starvation.

Living his life faster 1998-2006

The Adaption to my Generation - A Daily Photo Project

NYT: "A video from New York artist Jonathan Keller gives you a glimpse. Every day for more than eight years he has taken a photo of himself. The result is a striking time-lapse video depicting a man in his 20s turning into a man in his 30s."




Living My Life Faster - 8 years of JK's Daily Photo Project from c71123 on Vimeo.

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Read all about it!

The Blogosphere Gets a Newspaper in The Issue
Brooklyn, NY-based The Issue aims to bring the best of the wider blogosphere into focus via a daily, human edited online newspaper that aggregates quality blog content in a single place.

The Issue is presented with a very clean, newspaper-esque design that organizes content into six main categories: US, world, business, science & health, art & culture, and musings (think: editorials).

The paper also highlights a handful of "featured stories" (major headlines) across multiple topic areas, and each day The Issue presents one "Issue of the Day," which it explores in depth with a handful of insightful posts.


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Merry (electronic) Christmas

Audioholics.com's Top 10 Electronics Gifts for Christmas 2007
What do you buy for that loved one who has everything? If your spouse or significant other is a consumer electronics, gadget, or home theater buff then hunker down and check out our list of the top 10 "best-of" Christmas gift items that will satisfy any enthusiast at any price range. This list spans the entire price range from pauper to golden-pockets, so everyone is bound to find something that is the absolute best item of the season. Now, you may think that this is a subjective list (and you'd be right.) In our minds, however, you simply can't go wrong and you can trust us to know what's best for your loved one this Christmas season (yeah, that won't come back to haunt us later!) Without further ado, here are the top 10 Christmas gifts you can give this holiday season.

A good list which includes the iPod Nano (which I've bought for my granddaughter), the Canon Rebel XTi which is a superb digital camera, and the Flip camcorder which is a brilliant little device but, as far as I can tell, not available in the UK.


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Journalistic ethics

Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins -  Citizen Journalism: Dangerous and Irresponsible

Mark Hopkins points to some ruffled MSM feathers lately. It seems that 'proper' journalists are getting mighty pissed-off at the amateur newcomers in New Media. This is Helen Thomas (I love the wicked picture quote) who, to be fair, has a long history of challenging Bush and has been a respected journalist in her time:

Q: Do you think technology is changing [journalism]? That a good reporter will always find a venue because there are so many media outlets now?
 
Thomas: No, but I do think it is kind of sad when everybody who owns a laptop thinks they’re a journalist and doesn’t understand the ethics. We do have to have some sense of what’s right and wrong in this job. Of how far we can go. We don’t make accusations without absolute proof. We’re not prosecutors. We don’t assume. Q: So if there’s this amateur league of journalists out there, trying to do what you do…
 
Thomas: It’s dangerous.

Helen Thomas, her senile dementia shielding her from the irony in the whole situation, goes on to make a lot of the same points that David Hazinski makes in his piece in the AJC. The most compelling points the Old Media seems to be making these days is that no one in the blogging community has the scruples to adhere to the “unwritten ethical principals” of the mainstream media.

I’ll give you a minute to compose yourself while you laugh out loud.





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Joint operations

Army 'losing battalion' to drugs
The Army is dismissing the equivalent of almost a battalion of soldiers every year for taking drugs, a report says.She said that in 2003 cannabis accounted for 50% of all CDT positive tests and cocaine 22%, but by 2006 the figures were 30% for cannabis and 50% for cocaine. Major Justin Featherstone, also a former soldier, said the figures did not surprise him because young people often came from a culture where drug use was common and they faced huge stress with tours of duty coming around every 18 months.

However, a former chief of staff, Chris Parker, told BBC Radio Oxford that some soldiers who were "not stupid" took drugs to cut short their contract with the Armed Forces. "Young soldiers if they want to leave the Army have to give a year's notice, and if you take drugs, and you are basically found out by the Army's drug testing programme - which is a regular and random programme that's run - you could be discharged almost immediately," he said.
So there you have it. Good soldiers can be kicked out for having a toke at the weekend (but not for getting utterly pissed on a regular basis) and anyone who wants out can engineer a discharge by, erm, having a toke at the weekend (but not for getting utterly pissed on a regular basis). Yep, it all makes perfect sense.

If service personnel back from duty in such godforsaken shitholes as Iraq and Afghanistan can't relax with a big fat joint or a nice line of Charlie at the weekend what's the world coming to? What a change from the Great War when soldiers were provide with cocaine tincture in their ration packs and, if they were lucky, sent coke-laced products by kindly relatives.  The sale or supply of cocaine to soldiers was eventually outlawed in 1916, (except for medical use), partly because of rumours that German manufactured cocaine was being supplied to British soldiers.

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Paranoia is it?

Tim Worstall - Polly on Civil Liberties
Polly: '...social democrats should guard against the individualistic my-rights culture of our times that simply ignores the rights of those whose needs are most urgent, in favour of often relatively frivolous paranoia about an overmighty state.'

The one thing the 20th century really ought to have taught us is that paranoia about an overmighty state simply isn’t frivolous. It should be the default position for us all.
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