Iran Reviews > American image abroad needs green makeover
[Global Warming Watch] Under a program starting next month, several big US companies will give employees going abroad a "world citizen's guide" featuring 16 etiquette tips on how they can help improve their country's battered international image.
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[TurcoPundit] Foreign Press Review - March 02 2006: Face Iraq's Past Phony National Reconciliation Is a Bad Choice By Jim Hoagland, To promote an enforced phony national reconciliation in Iraq built on concessions to Sunni extremists, as Washington has repeatedly attempted, is self-defeating.
[The Unknown Candidate] Redeeming King George?: But President Bush has begun moving on Darfur, and the Olympian Joey Cheek donated his gold-medal and silver-medal cash bonuses to the Darfur survivors. So come on, Bill ” and Oprah, and the rest of you on the little screen ” and visit the world's most awful place.
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[Tennessee Guerilla Women] Bob Herbert: The Nixon Syndrome: This is, in my view, one of Herbert's better columns. In 723 words, the New York Times columnist lays out the chilling consequences of having a poorly educated man with monarchial ambitions in charge of our nation's fate.
[International Views] On the Newstand: American Prospect on Francis... : In his original 1989 National Interest article, “The End of History?”, he singled out Islam as the only viable theocratic alternative to liberalism and communism, although one he doubted would have “any universal significance.” In the preface to Our Posthuman Future, he dismissed the threat of Islamic radicalism as “a desperate rearguard action that will in time be overwhelmed by the broader tide of modernization.” Critics have faulted Fukuyama for clinging to his end-of-history thesis, accusing him of systematically underestimating events that challenged it, whether it was Yugoslav nationalism in the 90s or Islamic radicalism today. “Fukuyamas an optimist, which blinds him to a lot,” says Paul Berman, the author of Liberalism and Terror.
[citizen x] uhhhh ..I missed that story..i guess?: uhhhh ..I missed that story..i guess? Filed under: General ” citizen X @ 5.02 pm Project Censored presents the 10 stories the mainstream media ignored over the past year Just four days before the 2004 presidential election, a prestigious British medical journal published the results of a rigorous study by Dr. Les Roberts, a widely respected
[It's J Hill's World] What We Missed: The media always is accused of being biased and missing stories. According to San Francisco's Guardian, here's the top-10 stories the media has completely missed or under-reported.
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[Tpmcafe.com] Death in Iraq | TPMCafe: When our research is complete, and watertight, we will publish the results along with the sources In addition to the evident falsification of the death rolls, at least 5,500 American military personnel have deserted, most in Ireland but more have escaped to Canada and other European countries, none of whom are inclined to cooperate with vengeful American authorities. (See TBR News of 18 February for full coverage on the mass desertions) This means that of the 158,000 U.S. military shipped to Iraq, 26,000 either deserted, were killed or seriously wounded.
[Uscpublicdiplomacy.com] USC Center on Public Diplomacy | Middle East Media Project: That this post has been vacant for months, even amid general agreement that America’s image overseas is in need of a radical makeover, is itself testimony to the depth of the challenges the new undersecretary faces.
[Huffingtonpost.com] The Blog | Mark Kleiman: Wesley Clark on Iraq and Iran | The ...: Wesley Clark makes more sense than all the other "potential" Democratic presidential candidates put together, but he doesn't have a chance because too many Americans are too stupid to follow a logical line of reasoning. If it ain't black and white, Joe Sixpack can't process it.
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