November 12, 2009

Not so fast on more A-stan troops

That’s the word from Karl Eikenberry, U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan and also a retired three-star general. From the tone of the story, it appears he may well be behind President Obama now asking “exit strategy” questions.

It’s amzong that Bush was too dumb, arrogant, or both, to ask those questions about either Afghanistan or Iraq, long after both wars started.

That said, if Obama is serious about wanting the answers, he needs to stick by them once he makes a public decision.

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A dinosaur ‘missing link’

A new South African fossil illustrates how quadriped sauropods may have evolved.

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Iraq WAS about the oil

At least, for John Kenneth Galbraith’s son.

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‘Internet triumphalism is not a public good’

Near the end of a long article in the New Republic, arguing why transparency in government issues can sometimes have ambiguous results or worse, Lawrence Lessig goes beyond that near the end he jumps into how the Internet has more generally been a two-edged sword:

Reformers rarely feel responsible for the bad that their fantastic new reform effects. Their focus is always on the good. The bad is someone else’s problem. … But as we see the consequences of changes that many of us view as good, we might wonder whether more good might have been done had more responsibility been in the mix. … No one can dislike Craigslist (or Craig), but we all would have benefited from a clearer recognition of what was about to be lost. Internet triumphalism is not a public good.

Something to ponder further, I hope, by the “new media right or wrong” types. But, I’m not holding my breath.

A certain segment of these folks, even if not in tones of conspiracy, talk about “old media” as “gatekeepers.” But, in light of my previous blogpost, if the flip side of “gatekeeper” is to instill a sense of professional ethos, then new media citizen journalists need some gatekeeping.

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Ego, skill, taste and citizen journalism

At Tech Crunch, in the wake of the Fort Hood shootings, Paul Carr totally nails a lot of things on my mind about what happens when you mix “new media” social media tools with “citizen journalism.” It ain’t pretty.

CJR has some good follow-up. But Megan Garber misses part of the point on the ethics of citizen journalists being framed by their audiences. What if the audiences of more and more “citizen journalists” wants non-detached stuff like this? What if they boost reputations of people who write like the Fort Hood Tweeter? Without necessarily having the same political angle, and while acknowledging that MSM sources did the same (that’s you, above all, Judith Miller), aren’t we opening the doors to “cheerleader journalism”?

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November 11, 2009

Reid plans Senate jobs bill

While I wish the Senate would move more quickly on a climate bill, I understand indeed that something like this is both a social and a political reality and need. Let’s hope that, unlike Obama’s stimulus bill, it’s not watered down.

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November 10, 2009

David Brooks, even worse than normal

Just Muslims, and only them, are ultimately to blame for Iraq, Afghanistan, etc. No mention of neocons. No mention of Huntington’s “clash of civilizations,” etc.

At the local level? Nidal Hasan was a dirty, stinking, Muslim fanatic, not a person under stress who then turned to more radical thought. So, is Joe Lieberman the same for supporting Israeli war crimes — a dirty, stinking Zionist?

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November 09, 2009

US in A-stan for the long term

Or, at the least it certainly looks that way, as we build as much military infrastructure as we did in Iraq.

And, a lot of it is going toward “contractors” of various sorts. It’s ridiculous.

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Three dates: Berlin Wall, 9-11, Lehman collapse

Michael Lind weaves a compelling story of how they link together as three transition points of the last 20 years most worth note and why.

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Did Chrysler lie to government?

With it now rejecting plans to build an electric car, one most wonder whether Chrysler really planned to do that in the first place, or just said that as part of angling for government bailout money.

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US govt overstates productivity

Why? The government doesn’t even have a handle on how much imports, whether manufacturing or services, actually contribute to the economy.

Brilliant!

So, the economy could suck even worse, and perhaps has been for some time, while the current neolib occupant of the White House is no more likely to address this at a structural level, IMO, than his predecessor.

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Murdoch ready to cut Google out of the loop?

Rupert Murdoch says that, as part of putting paywalls up on News Corporation websites, the company will remove its articles from Google searches. Sounds like a smart idea.

And, he claims it’s what the Wall Street Journal already does with the part of its content that is paywalled. However, that’s not exactly true:

Users who click through to screened WSJ.com articles from Google searches are usually offered the full text of the story without any subscription block.

Sounds like you might want to fix that.

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‘The G.O.P. has been taken over by the people it used to exploit’

Krugman nails it, using last week’s tea-party rally sponsored, officially, by the GOP, as his starting point.

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