Iraq Reviews > Middle East and North Africa Friday Blog Roundup
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[Legless in perpetuum] at least Britain has something to smile about: A Texan, a Frenchman... of red wine Internal Links Blog Home Login Pages Categories Uncategorized (393...
[Mike Butler] Lincoln, NB: Can't sleep now. I fell asleep after dinner. There is just tons of coverage on London on any decent blog on my sidebar. I found myself ubnable to read them all. The volume was huge, there was a lot of repitition and much of it was just trying to sort out the facts and paying tribute to the way Londoners handled themselves. I'm in awe of the latter. From what I read and watched people were amazingly calm and level-headed and prepared not to give in. I expected the stoic resolve after decades of ordinary people being bombed and not giving in to the IRA. M also heard from friends in the UK that they are safe. One friend walked accross London to catch a train in Finsbury Park to Buckden where we used to live. It sounds like there was a lot of walking and ad hoc travel planning happening throughout the day. I think the one issue I'm most interested in now is the attitude of British authorities to radical Muslim behaviour in their country. I think it's especially important that radical Clerics are shut down now. Those guys have been given pretty much free reign to spread their tawdry, uncivilized message at will. Surely now there is ample evidence that some Muslims are influenced by the Clerics' poisonous invective to the point of murder. We'll see.
[Scott's Conservative News & Commentary] Friday Roundup II: The currently underway Yankee Sailor's Daily Reading Boards get us started with two items. First, sounding eerily similar to the beginning of a dark period in American history, U.S. military advisors are headed to Vietnam to train Vietnamese forces under an agreement reached when Vietnamese Prime Minister Phan Van Khai's visited Washington this week.
[Whimsy Speaks] Sunday Roundup: Craig Morgan Teicher could be channeling my thoughts in his bemused and generally favorable review of Heidi Lynn Staples' Guess Can Gallop, a killerbee collection that includes "her air flowed / down past her ask, till he flipped the hare off // her shoulders and that drove him Why old? // till he wanted to no Everything .
[ Global Voices Online] Friday Global Blog Roundup: While Ochoa has so far complied with the demand, Mexican blogger Eduardo Arcos opines [es] that what Ochoa did was legal under article 83 of Ecuador’s Intellectual Property Law [es]. Ochoa now satirically proposes [es] doing away with the letter “M”, which seems to be the intellectual property of a single company.
[Uggabugga.blogspot.com] uggabugga: John Russell, an archeologist at the Massachusetts College of Art, described the destruction as a blow to "the world's human history." Noting that the museum's collection included some of the earliest examples of mathematics and some of the first legal codes ever written, the British Museum's Dominique Collon described the damage in Baghdad as "truly a world heritage loss."
[Acsblog.org] ACSBlog: The Blog of the American Constitution Society: Friday ...: According to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, a Web site that compiles official casualty reports, June was one of the deadliest months of combat for U.S. troops since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq 28 months ago. At least 68 U.S. soldiers, Marines and sailors were killed by hostile fire in Iraq, the fifth highest number since the war began.
[Blogforamerica.com] Blog for America: Their influence, however, went beyond New York as advocates for the proposed Constitution in other states reprinted them in their publicationsand eventually they appeared collectively in a two volume book (Numbers 1-36 appeared in March of 1788, after six states had ratified, and the remainderincluding the last eight which had never appeared in a newspaperconstituted the second volume published in May of 1788, a month before New Hampshire, as the ninth state to approve the new Constitution's ratification.).
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