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22 March 2003
 

Is it just me? A quick look at the main US news sites, ABC, CNN, FOX - and I can't find the story of the missing ITV journalists anywhere? The BBC has the story here. Can anyone enlighten me on this? Is this important story being reported?


5:40:29 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

Chris Gulker is pointing to a brilliant article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Read his take on it here, with link to the piece.


5:34:19 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

Radio has been driving me crazy the last few days. When I try to update and post to weblog, it point blank refuses to upload 'index.html'. It is also only uploading parts of the links on the right - that I have to keep fixing - the calendar keeps breaking and I have had to reload the themes on several occasions just to get it working again. When it is uploading it is not doing it right - it is getting tiresome and frustrating.


5:08:37 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

Mark Lawson in today's Guardian. He makes some valid points with regard to the propaganda war - a staggering amount of propaganda is coming from the allied side, I believe little of it. Here he talks about embedded journalists.

Yet when asked to explain what is actually happening in these violently pretty pictures, politicians contemptously refuse to give "a running commentary", while press secretaries hide behind the sandbags of "classified" information. This trick of appearing open while being closed is also seen in the military tactic of attaching reporters to army units. It looks fantastically democratic but even the most skilled journalists risk becoming, in the jargon, "clientised": coming to share the fear, excitement and eventually triumphalism of the troops beside them. And if heaps of charred bodies should occur on either side, these "embedded" journalists will be kept well away from them.


5:05:33 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

Richard Dawkins is in today's Guardian:

Osama bin Laden, in his wildest dreams, could hardly have hoped for this. A mere 18 months after he boosted the US to a peak of worldwide sympathy unprecedented since Pearl Harbor, that international goodwill has been squandered to near zero. Bin Laden must be beside himself with glee. And the infidels are now walking right into the Iraq trap.

As I pointed in my essay on the war, Dawkins makes a smiliar point:

The claim that this war is about weapons of mass destruction is either dishonest or betrays a lack of foresight verging on negligence. If war is so vitally necessary now, was it not at least worth mentioning in the election campaigns of 2000 and 2001? Why didn't Bush and Blair mention the war to their respective electorates?

Crucially, Dawkins now goes on. Well known for his atheistic stance, Dawkins now brings religion into the fray.

Bush seems sincerely to see the world as a battleground between Good and Evil, St Michael's angels against the forces of Lucifer. We're gonna smoke out the Amalekites, send a posse after the Midianites, smite them all and let God deal with their souls. Minds doped up on this kind of cod theology have a hard time distinguishing between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden. Some of Bush's faithful supporters even welcome war as the necessary prelude to the final showdown between Good and Evil: Armageddon followed by the Rapture. We must presume, or at least hope, that Bush himself is not quite of that bonkers persuasion. But he really does seem to believe he is wrestling, on God's behalf, against some sort of spirit of Evil.

His argument continues, and addressing the America people he says, along the same lines as Michael Moore.

My American friends, you know I love your country, how have we come to this? Yes, yes, Bush isn't quite as stupid as he sounds, and heaven knows he can't be as stupid as he looks. I know most of you didn't vote for him anyway, but that is my point. Forgive my presumption, but could it just be that there is something a teeny bit wrong with that famous constitution of yours? Of course this particular election was unusual in being a dead heat. Elections don't usually need a tie-breaker, something equivalent to the toss of a coin. Al Gore's majority in the country, reinforcing his majority in the electoral college but for dead-heated Florida, would have led a just and unbiased supreme court to award him the tie-breaker. So yes, Bush came to power by a kind of coup d'état. But it was a constitutional coup d'état. The system has been asking for trouble for years.

He concludes, brilliantly - and I agree with him:

Saddam Hussein has been a catastrophe for Iraq, but he never posed a threat outside his immediate neighbourhood. George Bush is a catastrophe for the world. And a dream for Bin Laden.


4:37:03 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

In yet another nail-biting finish Ireland managed to beat the Welsh. We were in the lead for most of the game but coming to the end Wales managed a drop goal - putting them in the lead with just a few minutes left in the match. 30 seconds later and Ronan O'Gara, of Cork, replied with a similar drop goal - securing Ireland's victory. Our next match is for the Grandslam against England in Landsdowne Road, Dublin.


4:28:49 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments

ITV news is reporting that one of it's news crews, headed by Terry Lloyd, have gone missing in Iraq. The military unit they were embedded with came under fire near Basra. One cameraman managed to escape and is now back in Kuwait. Reuters has the story here


4:19:10 PM    Click here to add to the [] comments


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Collecting for Guinness

My daily reads

Dave Winer

Karlin Lillington

Bernie Goldbach

Chris Gulker

Venomous Kate

Dan Shafer

Nick Denton

John Robb

Back Seat Drivers

Roger Ridey

Dan Gillmor

Onlineblog

Meg Hourihan

Deborah Branscum

Tim Porter

Dan Bricklin

Horst Prillinger

Tom Murphy

My other reads

Ryan the Madman

Trish Amundrud

Justin Mason

Green Violet

David O'Neill

David Havelin

Jeremy Allaire

Tom Cosgrave

Jamie Lawrence

Matthew Haughey

Natalie d'Arbeloff

Maura McHugh

Ben Hammersley

Stewed Tea

Cocoa Pulp

Farrellblogger

Keith Gaughan

Glenn Reynolds

Andrew Sullivan

The Volokh Conspiracy

Bryan Preston

Counter Revolutionary