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Filed by The Ugly American on May 31st, 2006 at 18:48 under Uncategorized

President Bush and Secretary of State Condeleza Rice both extended the carrot to Iran today.

The United States is willing to join European nations in direct talks with Iran if the Iranian government first agrees to suspend its programs to enrich uranium and reprocess spent nuclear fuel, activities that Washington charges are part of plans to build nuclear weapons.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, announcing the U.S. policy shift at a State Department news conference today, warned that if the Iranian government does not choose the path of negotiations and continues to pursue atomic weapons, “it will incur only great costs.”

As many were hailing this as a positive step forward and offering new hope for a peaceful settlement with the Mullahs and Achmadinawhackjob; the Iranian theocracy quickly dismissed the offer as a propoganda move.

(more…)

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 31st, 2006 at 12:29 under Secure Borders, Walls and Fences

If you are planning on having a discussion or argument about illegal immigration anytime soon then please read this op-ed by Professor Mary Ann Glendon first.

Professor Glendon touches on many points in her piece and all of them are important when discussing illegal immigration in particular and all immigration in general.

Hugh Hewitt highlights her explanation of Americans visceral reaction to any form of amnesty being given to illegal immigrants.

To comprehend the depth of feeling attached to that issue, one has to keep in mind that there is no country on Earth where legal values play a more prominent role in the nation’s conception of itself than the United States. That was one of the first things Tocqueville noticed in his travels here in the early 1830s, and, as the country has grown larger and more diverse, its reliance on legal values has become ever more salient.

But the piece covers much more like the demographics of immigration.

Despite what population-control advocates had predicted in the 1960s and 1970s, the chief demographic problem facing most countries today is not overpopulation but its opposite. All over the world, even in developing countries, populations are aging.

Opinion leaders in the aging societies of Europe and the United States have generally avoided mentioning the relation between the birth dearth and the need for immigration. Consequently, there has been little discussion of what should be obvious: An affluent society that, for whatever reason, does not welcome babies is going to have to learn to welcome immigrants if it hopes to maintain its economic vigor and its commitments to the health and welfare of its population. The issue is not who will do jobs that Americans don’t want. The issue is who will fill the ranks of a labor force that the retiring generation failed to replenish.

She correctly points out that extremists on both sides are guilty of demagogy.   

To make matters worse, the community structures and religious groups that once played crucial roles in integrating immigrants have themselves been weakened. The old Democratic-party political machines that once brought new citizens into the political process at the local level have vanished. In their place, a new immigrant today encounters political institutions that were developed in response to the black civil-rights movement of the 1960s. The newcomer from Mexico, Brazil, or El Salvador becomes a generic “Latino” in preparation for initiation into the game of divisive racial minority politics. 

There are also some in the United States who want to close the door to newcomers simply because they are outsiders. Over the course of the twentieth century, that attitude seemed to be fading away, but in recent years sleeping nativist sentiments have been irresponsibly inflamed by anti-immigration groups.

***Update***

I actually touched on some similar themes as the professor a while back with my post Mexico The West’s Best Chance of Survival. (Now I feel really smart).

 I will have more to say on this later but I hope you take the time to read Professor Glendon’s article. 

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 31st, 2006 at 02:30 under Interviews, News From Iraq

I am very happy to bring you part two of a series of posts featuring questions and answers from American Soldiers and Iraqis. In Part one Baghdad resident, Iraqi blogger and journalist 24 steps to liberty had a list of questions for Sergeant Tim Boggs who is currently serving his second tour of duty in Iraq and blogging from somewhere near Mosul.

In part two Sgt. Boggs has a list of his own questions for 24. Here is their latest exchange:

Sgt. Boggs: Do you have any relationships with Americans, whether soldiers or civilians in Iraq right now?

 

24 Steps: Yes. I work with them daily. Civilians I mean.

 

Sgt. Boggs: Do Iraqis have any misconceptions about Americans that you know about?

 

24 Steps: Yes. I know many Iraqis who think the Americans came to Iraq to fight “Islam” and steal the country’s wealth and also to make it easier for Israel to grow safe in the region! You know, the traditional conspiracy theory.

Sgt. Boggs: What do you think America has done best in Iraq?

24 Steps: Gave me the freedom to choose between being a loser and fighting my way to be a successful and productive human being. I chose the second one!

Sgt. Boggs: What do you think has been America’s biggest mistake in Iraq?

 

24 Steps: Not paying attention to the youth and only depend on the old-fashioned politicians, who haven’t witnessed the changes in the community and economy in Iraq for the last 40 years. As a matter of fact, I am still amazed how little they gave to and took from the youth of this country. Who said politicians and advisors should be at least 40 years old? It is my friends and I who suffered here and it is us who know how to deal with it. It is us who know exactly what we need to continue living, not only the outsiders who didn’t know, and still don’t know what Baghdad or any other city in the country looks like from behind the curtain.

Sgt. Boggs: Would you rather America never came into Iraq in the first place?

 

24 Steps: No. without that, I wouldn’t be freely expressing myself and thoughts with you now.

Sgt. Boggs: Do you think a unified Iraq (Sunni, Shia, and Kurds living together under one government) is possible?

 

24 Steps: No. when we mention sects and religions, that means we have differences. If you ask me about “Iraqis” it would be a different answer. I just don’t know why should we care about religion and backgrounds!

Sgt. Boggs: A lot of people accuse Americans of being intolerant of other people’s cultures and religions, however, in my experience Iraqis seem to be even more intolerant
and nationalistic then Americans. Do you agree with me or do you see this where you live?

 

24 Steps: Yes. People with more than 7000 years of history and heritage cannot understand or justify how fast their culture was destroyed and for no reason!

 

Sgt. Boggs: In my experience a lof of American soldiers have no clue why they are in Iraq and have no clue what is at stake in your country. I believe their lack of knowledge is their own fault and I blame them for not accurately researching what is going on and why. Do you see this as a fault of some of your own countrymen?

 

24 Steps: No. no one has come to me and asked me to lecture American soldiers in Iraq’s history or traditions. When this happens and I refuse, them it would be my fault.

 

Sgt. Boggs: Where do you see Iraq in 5-10 years?

 

24 Steps: The same place it is in now!

 

 

Sgt. Boggs: How do you think Iraqi history will look upon what Americans have tried to do in your country?

 

 

24 Steps: History books for most of the time lie. Also, it depends on what country’s history we are talking about? For instance, I believe the Iraqi Shiite books will say America and its allies helped Iraq rid its people of Saddam Hussein and create justice and democracy. The Sunnis books will say America invaded Iraq and destroyed its infrastructure and killed its people. The American books will say that America has paid sacrifices and money to build a new democracy in the Middle East and rid it of one of the strongest dictatorships ever. They are all right by the way.

 

 

Sgt. Boggs: Do you have any advice to American soldiers who are in Iraq right now or will come in the future?

 

24 Steps: For those who are in Iraq now, I say “take care and be safe. Thank you.”

 

 

For those who are yet to come, I say “try to learn more about this country’s culture. Half of the time, you can win people by just showing them that you care and know about their life and traditions. Take care and thank you.”

 

 

I hope to have more of these exchanges for you in the near future. If you have questions or something you would like to say to either of these brave men who are fighting for a better future in Iraq, please leave them in the comment section.

 

***Update***

 

Gateway Pundit has another great post today that puts the American Military and Iraqi civilian death tolls in perspective compared to other wars. Every person killed is a tragedy and my heart breaks every time I hear the new reports of violence from my Iraqi friends 24 Steps to Liberty and Treasure of Baghdad. I doubt these graphs will mean much to them and cliches are hard to swallow when your friends and family are the ones that are dying.

That makes it all the more important for those of us who are removed from the violence to keep some perspective and understand that although horrible on a personal level the death toll in Iraq is very low compared to other recent conflicts.

We must to continually remind ourselves and our Iraqi friends of the choice they are facing. They can either submit to Islamofascists and would be dictators who wish to imprison them all again and who will not give up power easily, or they must fight for their freedom and their safety. They must fight to live in a free Iraq. They must fight for their their childrens future.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 30th, 2006 at 17:26 under News From Iraq

Sgt. Boggs of T.F. Boggs is one of my favorite bloggers and a man I admire greatly. He has written scores of fantastic posts while serving his second tour of duty in Iraq. His post yesterday titled Of Marines and Congress”men” deserves special mention. I hope you follow the link to Sgt. Boggs blog and read the whole thing but here is an excerpt.

Is it too much to ask that our politicians defend their military when it sacrifices so much for them? Is it too much to ask that our government stand behind these marines when they need their help the most? Is it too much to ask that the marines be given a fair trial before lowlifes like John Murtha condemn them in the court of public opinion before their real trial even takes place?

Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?

Please be sure to thank him for his service when you are there.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 30th, 2006 at 17:01 under Blogrolls Best!

Sorry for not getting anything up sooner today. It was my first day back in the office in nearly 3 weeks so not much time for blogging. Here are a few things I came across in the blog roll today.

Wizbang is launching a new site Wizbang Politics.

Wizbang Politics reunites former PoliPundit writers Alexander K. McClure and Lorie Byrd in a new project focused on politics, campaigns, and elections.

Lorie says among other things the new blog will feature candidates and incumbents blogs.My suggestion for one of her early features Bob Krumm’s blog. Bob was a blogger before he was a candidate. Which may be a first. Bob is a great blogger and it would almost be worth it to move to Tennesee in order to vote for him.
Jim at Gateway Pundit has lots of photos and video to go with this headline:
After Fence Assault, Anti-War Port Mob Eats Pepper Spray

After trying to break open a fence at the Port of Olympia, police pepper sprayed anti-war youth protesters in Olympia last night:

Police fired pepper spray as about 150 anti-war protesters tried to enter the Port of Olympia as part of ongoing demonstrations against the shipment of Army equipment to Iraq.

Protesters chanted “Out of Olympia, Out of Iraq” as they rocked a chain-link gate to the port late Monday, and at least three tried to use wooden boards to pry the gate open,

Police and sheriff’s deputies clad in riot gear fired at least four rounds of pepper spray in an hour after asking the demonstrators several times to stop, authorities said. No one was arrested, but paramedics were dispatched to treat some activists.

Dozens of demonstrators crouched in the port plaza, dousing each other’s eyes with water and offering slices of onion to soothe their throats.

“It burned. I couldn’t open my eyes for 20 minutes,” said Rachel Graham, among those hit. “My face is burning. I dunked my face in water and in Puget Sound.”

I wonder how many of these guys are up for another protest?

Before you get all high and mighty about free speech etc, I will say I support free speech as much or more than anyone. Consider the facts; these folks were destroying private property. There is a time and a place for everything and there is a proper way to conduct yourself at a protest. These people crossed the line and got what they deserved.

The Gun Toting Liberal says border security is an issue average Democrats and Republicans agree on and blames the leadership and elected politicians in both parties for the failure. I couldn’t agree more.

You have all heard and grossed out on the Lorena / john Bobbit incident. Well Blue Crab Boulevard has an indonesian man who just topped it.

DSOTW has a story that proves sometimes good things happen to good people.

Two Army reservists are instant millionaires.

New York State lottery officials said Thursday that two jackpots of $1 million each have been won in the Fort Drum area. The lottery said the coincidence is unprecedented.

Ex-Donkey is rooting for Al Gore in 2008.

Whenever I read about Al Gore’s latest shenanigans, I’m reminded of that scene in the movie “Scrooged” where Bill Murray unveils his trailer for the network’s Christmas special. It’s designed to scare people into watching it, ending with the tagline: “Your life just might depend on it!”

Gore gave a speech in the UK this weekend where he referred to global warming as the impending “planetary emergency”. Declaring to the audience that he was devoting himself to thwarting this threat, Gore assured them that the world was facing “a danger that could bring the end of civilization”.

I don’t think he is going to run in 08. A Washington non lobyist (his words) told me a couple weeks back if Gore can be patient he may have a decent shot in 2012.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 29th, 2006 at 12:50 under Supporting The Troops

Hey all, of course today is a busy day for most people with Bar-B-Ques and family get togethers and hopefully everyone is taking time to remember what Memorial Day is really about and recognizing the sacrifice of so many men and women who laid down their lives to protect our freedoms and our great country. No words can express my gratitude for these patriots and heroes.
God bless you all on this solemn day and Godspeed to our men and women in harms way.

I don’t have much more to say so please take a look at a few items that capture the meaning of Memorial day for me.

The history of Memorial day:

The story of Memorial Day begins in the summer of 1865, when a prominent local druggist, Henry C. Welles, mentioned to some of his friends at a social gathering that while praising the living veterans of the Civil War it would be well to remember the patriotic dead by placing flowers on their graves. Nothing resulted from this suggestion until he advanced the idea again the following spring to General John B. Murray. Murray, a civil war hero and intensely patriotic, supported the idea wholeheartedly and marshalled veterans’ support. Plans were developed for a more complete celebration by a local citizens’ committee headed by Welles and Murray.

On May 5, 1866, the Village was decorated with flags at half mast, draped with evergreens and mourning black. Veterans, civic societies and residents, led by General Murray, marched to the strains of martial music to the three village cemeteries. There impressive ceremonies were held and soldiers’ graves decorated. One year later, on May 5, 1867, the ceremonies were repeated. In 1868, Waterloo joined with other communities in holding their observance on May 30th, in accordance with General Logan’s orders. It has been held annually ever since.

HT/Hugh Hewitt

The first casualty of the Cold War:

Capt. John Morrison Birch

In the spring of 1942, a group of stranded U.S. servicemen huddled inside a Chinese riverboat, hiding from Japanese soldiers in the invaded country. Suddenly, they heard what seemed to be an American voice: “Anyone in there?” The hidden men feared trickery and capture until they heard the voice again; it was a full-blown Southern accent.

That voice belonged to missionary John Morrison Birch, and the men he rescued from the boat were Col. Jimmy Doolittle and his famed “Tokyo Raiders.” Birch brought the group down the Chienteng River to the town of Lanchi, from where they were able to move on to safety.

Doolittle was much taken with the young missionary, whose native garb and near-fluent grasp of Mandarin Chinese allowed him to continue his goal of bringing the Christian gospel to the Chinese mainland despite its occupying force. Birch had sought a position as a chaplain, but when Doolittle told Gen. Claire Chennault about his rescuer, Chennault recognized Birch’s potential as an intelligence resource. Commissioned a first lieutenant on July 4, 1942, Birch became “the eyes of the 14th Air Force (the Flying Tigers)” — with a stipulation that he be allowed to preach whenever possible.

By war’s end, Birch had achieved the rank of captain and his duties had come under the spreading auspices of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).

Shortly after the war ended, Birch and a party of 11 Chinese were sent by the OSS to accept the surrender of a Japanese base. On Aug. 25, 1945, they met a group of Chinese communists who refused to allow them to pass. They disarmed Birch, and shot his aide Lt. Tung when he tried to intervene (Tung lived to tell the tale of Birch’s treatment). Birch’s ankles were bound and he was made to kneel for execution, then shot in the back of his head. Birch, who had spent the war working behind enemy lines to serve both God and country, is considered by many to be the first casualty of the Cold War.

1st Lt. Michael Blassie

After Years As Vietnam ‘Unknown,’ Pilot Now Buried At Home

For decades, the United States has honored its wartime dead by designating for burial at Arlington National Cemetery an unknown soldier, one whose anonymous tomb represents all the dead comrades and honors all their deeds.

For 14 years, the remains of Air Force 1st Lt. Michael Joseph Blassie lay beneath the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington. The nature of combat in Vietnam and advances in forensic medicine had made it difficult for officials to bury a Vietnam unknown. Unidentified remains from that war had been analyzed over a decade and a half. No one wanted to inter someone who might eventually be identified.

The president meant to assure families of soldiers with MIA status that their loved ones would not be forgotten, but his words were prescient of the Vietnam unknown’s fate. “X-26″ remained in Arlington with his unknown comrades, watched by the solemn Old Guard, until 1998, when new questions about Blassie’s whereabouts surfaced. His sister Pat described the evidence succinctly: “The trail leads to the tomb.” In May 1998, the remains were disinterred for mitochondrial DNA “fingerprinting.” Advances made since the early 1980s had made it possible to identify the remains, which consisted of only six bones — far below the usual 80 percent of a corpse required for burial at Arlington.

Blassie, a decorated pilot, was 24 when he died in May 1972. His 138th combat mission ended near An Loc, South Vietnam, when the wing was blasted off his plane by enemy fire. The aircraft went down in flames.

On July 10, 1998, Michael Blassie’s body was released to his family. They brought him home for burial in Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery near St. Louis. There, a plaque holds words from the Gettysburg Address: “We can not dedicate — we can not consecrate — we can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here have hallowed it far above our poor power to add or detract.”

Visit Military.com for these stories and many many others of valiant, men and women who sacrifced much and sometimes everything for our country.

The Only Medal of Honor awarded in Iraq or Afghanistan:

The most recent act to merit the Medal of Honor came on April 4, 2003. On that day, Sgt. 1st Class Paul Smith, his position near the Baghdad airport nearly overrun, hastily organized a defense.

Under fire, Smith climbed onto a damaged armored vehicle and attacked the enemy with a .50-caliber machine gun. He killed as many as 50 enemy soldiers and helped save the lives of 100 Americans.

On April 4, 2005, President Bush presented the Medal of Honor to Smith’s widow, Birgit.

Home Of The Heroes has lots of fantastic and moving information about the sacrifices of our men and women in uniform. Among them is a list of every recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor in our nations history.

A very special tribute to a fallen hero that I was blessed to witness personally.

This Thursday I was in Las Vegas for the SEMA Show. I attended the awards banquet that evening. It was your usual trade show banquet. What completely stole the show however was the unveiling of The Colton Camaro. On September 1, 2004, Gary Anderson the President of SoffSeal, Inc, and his wife were watching the Evening News with Dan Rather. That night Their Fallen Hero’s series featured the story of Chief Warrant Officer Lawrence (Shane) Colton of the Army’s 1st Battalion, 227th Aviation Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division, based in Fort Hood, Texas. The Feature told how Chief Warrant Officer Colton lost his life in Iraq on April 11th, 2004 when his Apache helicopter was shot down west of Baghdad while protecting a fuel convoy, killing him and his fellow crewmember. Shane Colton left behind his wife Inge` and their eleven year old son Lance.


The story moved Mr. Anderson to action when it mentioned how CWO Colton and his then 11 year old son Lance had started building a 1968 Camaro before he was deployed to
Iraq. The news reported that with his father’s passing, Lance now wanted to finish the car in his father’s honor.

The project culminated this Thursday when the car was unveiled at the SEMA Banquet. When Mrs. Colton and Lance came on stage the crowed erupted in applause. She said a few words in remembrance of her husband and gave a very heartfelt and moving thank you to everyone involved in the project. When asked if he would like to say anything Lance replied: “My dad died for a great cause. He did not die in vein.” When asked if the car met his fathers specifications. He said “As long as it doesn’t catch on fire when it starts up its good”.

At that moment there were no political parties. We were all just proud to be Americans who felt privileged to be present at such a moving event, Mournful for the Colton’s loss and Chief Warrant Officer Colton’s sacrifice.

Here is a story that a Vietnam veteran passed on to me titled The Last Goodbye.

The Last Goodbye By Lynne Duke

They lie in a pile on the red clay of Vietnam.

Four dead men. One already is smoldering. The elephant grass is on fire. Three other Marines are still alive for now, but if the North Vietnamese Army doesn’t get them, the fires surely will.

It is late morning, May 10, 1967, on Hill 665 northwest of Khe Sanh. A Marine reconnaissance patrol named Breaker is in trouble, picked off or blasted apart for 12 hours by NVA snipers and grenades.

U.S. forces throw hellfire onto that hill. Jets crater the area. Gunships rocket enemy bunkers; Gatling guns fire 6,000 rounds per minute, pulverizing flesh and bone. And the napalm fires burn.

But the NVA is relentless. It turns chopper after chopper into Swiss cheese. One takes 182 hits, wounding the whole crew; in another, a pilot dies.

Moving posts on this Memorial Day:

Michelle Malkin: Freedom Isn’t Free, Riehl World View: The History of Haditha, Patriot Files has a list of servicemen who have been awarded medals for their distinguished service in Iraq and Afghanistan in Hall Of Heroes. Wizbang has 2 posts you should read. The first is titled Remember and contains lots of links to other Memorial Day posts. The second is Go and Find a Soldiers Grave by Kim Priestap. HT/ to Jay Tea at Wizbang for a link to a another moving post by Smash also titled Remember. In the post Smash talks about his visit to Fort Rosecrans National Cemetary, where he attended an annual ceremony and planted flags along with several boy scout troops.

Growing up and living most of my life in San Diego I have driven by Fort Rosecrans as Smash describes many many times. I have actually stopped and walked among the graves and thought about the men burried there. Having never served in the military I can only offer a civilians perspective and tell Smash that I for one never pass that cemetary without being touched by what it represents.

One last link for the day. Smash has a follow up to one of the graves he visited on Saturday. This post is titled Memorial Day: A Mother Remembers.

If this is your first time visiting Smash’s blog I hope you realize what an exceptional man he is and hope you add his blog to your daily reads.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 27th, 2006 at 08:14 under Judges Lawyers and Courts Oh My!, SCOTUS Issues, Washington Politics

These days the Republican base has been complaining a lot about George Bush’s policies and I understand why. As I have said many times before in a lot of ways George W. Bush is a liberal. Thats why I like him so much.

One thing they can’t complain about (yet they still did with Harriet Miers) is his record of nominating solid conservative judges and getting them confirmed.

Yesterday he won another one. Here is the Washington Post headline: Bush Aide Confirmed to U.S. Bench.

White House aide Brett M. Kavanaugh won Senate confirmation as an appeals judge yesterday after a three-year wait, a new victory for President Bush in a drive to place a more conservative stamp on the courts.

Bush said Kavanaugh who was confirmed 57 to 36, will be “a brilliant, thoughtful and fair-minded judge.”

Ultra left ultra liberal Ted Kennedy is upset and that should make the GOP faithful even happier.

“Mr. Kavanaugh is a political operative,” said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), a member of the Judiciary Committee. “I can say with confidence that Mr. Kavanaugh would be the youngest, least experienced and most partisan appointee to the court in decades.”

He is no Ruth Baider Ginsburg that for such. Better luck next time Ted.

One thing this does not do is help Bill Frist. The post says it does and maybe 3 or 4 of his family members will vote for him based on this but no one else is going to vote for Bill Frist for President.

The confirmation represented a victory for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), a possible 2008 presidential candidate, whose efforts to fill more federal court seats with Bush’s nominees have been bedeviled by Democratic objections. Five weeks ago, he told the Senate he expected Kavanaugh, 41, to be confirmed by Memorial Day.

Good for him. If Senator Frist really wants to do the best thing for his country he will stay right where he is now that he is finally getting some legislation through and judges confirmed. Maybe he really does just want to retire and go fishing. He is never, qoute me on this ever going to get close to being President.

Others covering the story:

Captain’s Quarters and The Democratic Daily.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 26th, 2006 at 09:34 under Blogs Bloggers and Blogging, MSM, MoonBat Alert

You have to read this. This takes pulling a Hiltzik to a whole new level.

Someone apparently from the Reuters news organization has sent this message to Little Green Footballs.

I look forward to the day when you pigs get your throats cut….

Charles’ team has done a little investigating and it looks like this message came from someone who works for the Reuters news organization or at least someone in their office building. Go read the whole thing. I can’t wait to see where this goes.

***Update Sunday 7:22 am***

Charles has updated his post at LGF. He has been coresponding with someone at Reuters who has confirmed a Reuters employee (not with the news division) has been suspended pending further investigation.


From Charles: And I’ve received another email from Reuters’ Global Head of Communications:

Following your email regarding the posting of an offensive message that was sent from a Reuters IP address, I can confirm that an employee has been suspended pending further investigation. The individual was not an employee of Reuters’ news division.

Yours sincerely

Ed Williams

LGF asked if a Mr. Inayat Bunglawala could have sent the email as he has publicly called Little Green Footballs a racist site.
Mr. Inayat Bunglawala has responded and says he “detests LGF” and he’s going to the police:

No Nick223, that is not enough. The insinuations behind the posts that you and the others have sent seem pretty clear and slanderous to me. I will repeat: I did not send any message to LGF. I have never sent any message to LGF either by email or through posting on their website. I wholeheartedly detest LGF and the space it gives to racist and anti-Muslim tirades. I suggest you and the others clearly identify yourselves and apologise. I will certainly be referring this matter to the police in the morning.

This is starting to get good. What do you think the UK police will say to Mr. bunglawala?

Is anyone familiar with UK law on these type of things? It certainly doesn’t seem like LGF has crossed any lines let alone legal ones to me.

Is Charles about to add another MSM head to his trophy room?

In case you missed the link to the original post at Little Green Footballs here it is again.

sugiero is also covering this story.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 26th, 2006 at 08:46 under Breaking News

The Reuters headline reads Hayden confirmed as CIA director.

By Richard Cowan and David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on Friday confirmed Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden as CIA director in a vote that gave a broad bipartisan endorsement to the architect of President George W. Bush’s domestic spying program.

Hayden, 61, who has served as principal deputy to U.S. intelligence chief John Negroponte up to now, replaces Porter Goss, who forced to resign earlier this month.

The 78-15 vote to confirm Hayden included the support of several Senate Democrats.

I know this just ruined someones day.

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Filed by The Ugly American on May 26th, 2006 at 07:50 under Breaking News

Reuters, Fox, and The Associated Press are reporting people have heard shots have been fired in the Rayburn (sp) office building.

Major Garret of Fox is in the building cafeteria and is reporting that part of the building has been locked down. He has been ordered by Capitol police to stay where he is and is not allowed to leave the cafeteria.

The shots were reportedly fired in the parking garage. Capitol police are investigating now. I will update as I hear more.

I will continue live blogging with updates as long as possible.
***Updates***

Garret is reporting now an email from the Capitol police advising all personell staff and members of congress to seek shelter, stay away from windows, and close doors behind them but do not lock doors.

(more…)

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