May 18, 2007

Web Reconnaissance for 05/18/2007

A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention.


In the News: (Registration may be required to read some stories)
Senate immigration deal forged - Senators and the Bush administration yesterday reached an immigration deal that offers a multistep path to citizenship to millions of illegal aliens in exchange for better border security and a new way of choosing how future immigrants are selected. (READ MORE)

Bush, Blair take one last stand - President Bush yesterday said the fight against radical Islam demands "courage," as Tony Blair, standing in the White House Rose Garden for his final time as British prime minister, said he has "never doubted" tying his fate to the vagaries of the U.S.-led… (READ MORE)

World Bank chief resigns - Embattled World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz yesterday announced that he will resign at the end of June, saying it was time for the bank to continue under new leadership. (READ MORE)

Envoy eyes visit to N. Korea - Senior negotiators in the six-party talks with North Korea -- including U.S. representative Christopher R. Hill -- are considering a visit to Pyongyang soon after it shuts down its Yongbyon nuclear reactor, diplomats said yesterday. (READ MORE)

For 25 years, a paper to stand 'for free people' - George H.W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, last night told the 25th anniversary gala for The Washington Times that when the Cold War raged, he and President Reagan before him were supported by "a newspaper that would stand for free people. (READ MORE)

White House, Senate Strike Immigration Deal - Sprawling overhaul grants temporary legal status to virtually all illegal immigrants, stiffens border protections; stage set for battle in Congress. (READ MORE)

Israel Backs Fatah in Gaza Fight - Troops' deployment illustrates partisan role Israel, U.S. are taking in Palestinian political situation. (READ MORE)

Searchers in Iraq Intensify Effort - Massive manhunt for 3 missing soldiers hardens core military values, tests character of troops. (READ MORE)


From the Front:
SGT DUB: 18 May 2007, Happy Dance Friday! “Although, at this minute I don't feel like dancing. I began my day at 0400 this morning. By 0445 we were rolling out the front gate. Yes, I know, stay inside the wire. Well, I didn't. In my 20 months (both deployments) there was something I hadn't done till this morning. The Ghar. Yes, the dreaded mountain that people just feel they need to climb, for entertainment purposes. I didn't understand why until today.” (READ MORE)

Outlaw 13: Banning the Blog “I have watched from a distance...literally, while a lot of folks have been sounding off about the Army's latest update of the AR (Army Regulation) which covers soldiers use of e-mails, blogging et al, as well as the uproar about You Tube being banned from Army servers. These of course are two separate issues that have their own explanations and facts surrounding them.” (READ MORE)

Badger 6: Dropping the AK-series for the M4/M16 platform “Iraqi Security Forces are dropping the AK-47 as their standard issue rifle and adopting the M4/M16 series of rifles. Stars and Stripes has a good story about it here. In my view this is good news and has a more than meets the eye quality to it. Although there have been highly trained and proficient military units that have used the AK-series of weapons, the rifle has been used by many insurgents, terrorists, and what were once classified as "Third World" armies because of its ruggedness and ease of use.” (READ MORE)

Acute Politics: Karma, Karma, Always Karma “We took another trip up into Karma tonight. We patrolled up through the town and cut east, out through the area in which coalition forces recently took a bite out of al-Qaeda's anti-aircraft capability. One bomb crater nearly blocked the road in one spot- another was visible a short distance off the road. We spent four or five hours heading out to our turnaround spot, with dark clouds menacing their showers over the entire trip.” (READ MORE)

Afghanistan JAG: Personal Investment “I will be heading home soon so I probably won't post again for some time. Thanks to all who have supported me through your encouraging words and prayers. A big thanks to everyone who donated to our humanitarian efforts. A whole new group of soldiers has arrived to take our place. Please don't forget about them or their families. Those soldiers will be here for at least twelve months, and with the recent extension, many will be gone for fifteen months.” (READ MORE)

Jack Army: What We Fathers Sacrifice “There have been a few Soldiers killed here in Iraq that I personally knew. I named one yesterday and of those brave Americans, SGM Conner was the one I probably knew the best despite the fact that I haven't seen him in over ten years. These are not the first Soldiers that I've personally known to have died during my career in the Army. I have attended several other memorial and funeral services before the GWOT started. And yes, I usually got teary-eyed and sniffley during the services then too. Until the last few years, though, my thoughts about the deceased usually projected my feelings into the situation.” (READ MORE)


On the Web:
John Hawkins: Republicans Really Are the Stupid Party “The ‘stupid party’ moniker has often been applied to the GOP, but seldom has it been more applicable than it is to today's Republican Party.” (READ MORE)

Fred Thompson: Those Who Cannot Remember the Past “If for no other reason than that we want to avoid war whenever we can, universities should at least offer the option of studying it.” (READ MORE)

Mike Gallagher: Remember who the good guys are “I am sitting here watching TV coverage of another shooting death of a police officer - this time, two sheriff’s deputies from Henderson County, Texas were killed by some creep - and I find myself getting angrier and angrier.” (READ MORE)

Ken Blackwell: Illusion of Safety: The False Promise of Gun-Free Zones “Recent news accounts of the bittersweet commencement exercises at Virginia Tech University refueled debate in my university neighborhood and reinvigorated our search for the real cause of the threat to our safety. The debate centered on the need to mandate gun-free zones on college campuses.” (READ MORE)

Paul Greenberg: When protestors drop by “I was chagrined when I got word at home that there was going to be a protest that morning at the newspaper. A protest against our editorials. It was billed as a News Conference and Call to Action - and I wouldn't be on hand to meet and greet our visitors. Or even offer them a cup of coffee. Shucks. What kind of host am I?” (READ MORE)

Lorie Byrd: John Edwards says celebrate Memorial Day the anti-war way “John Edwards has a Memorial Day message that is not earning high marks with many of the troops he claims to want to support. The Washington Post loved it, though. Enough, in fact, that they directly linked it from their website -- free of charge. (I am sure they will do the same for the GOP candidates with support the mission messages.)” (READ MORE)

Diana West: Forget winning 'hearts and minds' - win the war “Consider the ‘surge.’ Even if our troops achieve the goal of ‘securing the population’ by securing Baghdad, success still rides on subsequent Iraqi behavior.” (READ MORE)

Oliver North: A 60th Birthday? “If Israelis want to celebrate a 60th birthday, they better not count on Washington. If it had been up to this crowd, the Jewish state would have been destroyed long ago.” (READ MORE)

Charles Krauthammer: Israel's 40-year reluctance “There has hardly been an Arab peace plan in the past 40 years -- including the current Saudi version -- that does not demand a return to the status quo of June 4, 1967. Why is that date so sacred? Because it was the day before the outbreak of the Six Day War in which Israel scored one of the most stunning victories of the 20th century. The Arabs have spent four decades trying to undo its consequences.” (READ MORE)

Jonah Goldberg: Who says it's wrong to take sides in a civil war? “Without much notice and even less discussion, ‘civil war’ has become the new abracadabra phrase for American foreign policy.” (READ MORE)

Mona Charen: Abortion, Torture And The Candidates “The discussion of torture was -- aside from Mr. Paul's historical analysis -- the least edifying part of the debate. None of the candidates seemed to grapple with just how difficult a question this is.” (READ MORE)

Patrick J. Buchanan: But Who Was Right -- Rudy or Ron? “Hearing Rep. Ron Paul recite the reasons for Arab and Islamic resentment of the United States, including 10 years of bombing and sanctions that brought death to thousands of Iraqis after the Gulf War, Rudy Giuliani broke format and exploded:” (READ MORE)

David Limbaugh: The Paradoxical Hatred of Christopher Hitchens “I was actually surprised to hear writer Christopher Hitchens' attitude toward Reverend Jerry Falwell's death, given the good sense this liberal has exhibited on the war issue.” (READ MORE)

Fred Thompson: You’re Listening to Radio Free Congress “I had planned on talking a bit today about Venezuela. The president there doesn't like the way his media is covering him, so he's doing away with the free press.” (READ MORE)

Jon Sanders: Democrat opponents of free speech squash that "Dissent Is Patriotic" stuff “‘Why don't you go f--- yourself?’ That was how House Democrat Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel reportedly responded to a Politico reporter's request - made ‘in the effort for openness and disclosure’ - to sit in on a caucus debate over the language of a lobbying bill.” (READ MORE)

Victor Davis Hanson: The New Penance doesn't Offset Much “What do leftist, mostly secular elites share with medieval sinners? They feel bad that the way they live sometimes doesn't quite match their professed dogma.” (READ MORE)

WSJ Review & Outlook: World Bank Justice “So after weeks of nasty leaks and media smears, the World Bank's board of executive directors yesterday cleared President Paul Wolfowitz of ethical misconduct for following the board's own advice on how to handle a conflict of interest involving his girlfriend. And Mr. Wolfowitz in turn will resign from the bank at the end of June. Run that by us again?” (READ MORE)

Peggy Noonan: The Man Who Wasn't There “Having watched the second Republican debate the other night, it's clear to me the subject today is Fred Thompson, the man who wasn't there. While the other candidates bang away earnestly in a frozen format, Thompson continues to sneak up from the creek and steal their underwear--boxers, briefs and temple garments.” (READ MORE)

Kimberly A. Strassel: Ethanol's Bitter Taste “It was a scant two years ago that Georgia's Saxby Chambliss voted with 73 other giddy senators for an energy bill that required the nation to use 7.5 billion gallons of ethanol. Georgia's farmers loved corn-based ethanol; Georgia's agri-businesses loved corn-based ethanol; and all that meant that then-Agriculture Committee Chairman Chambliss loved corn-based ethanol, too.” (READ MORE)

John R. Bolton: Pyongyang's Perfidy “Over a month has passed since sweetness and light were due to break out on the Korean Peninsula. On Feb. 13, the Six-Party Talks in Beijing ratified a bilateral agreement between the U.S. and North Korea, providing for Pyongyang to give up its nuclear programs. The first step, 60 days after ratification, was to be that North Korea ‘will shut down and seal for the purpose of eventual abandonment’ the Yongbyon nuclear facility, and readmit inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).” (READ MORE) *reg req*

The Anchoress: Immigration, the right and time constraints “I left the Democrats when it became clear that I was no longer allowed to have my own opinions, that I was expected to simply fall in line with the conventional wisdom of the left. I won’t “fall in line,” for the right, either - indeed, there is no reason why I should have to. The center-right has always seemed to me to be a place willing to allow people some freedom of thought, appreciating that differing opinions are valuable. Perhaps a thing you say will make me consider what I had not. Perhaps one of my lines might similarly speak to you.” (READ MORE)

Army Girl: Welcome Home “Let us have a bit of happy news today.. shall we? I have been up since 0400 hrs this morning... I don't know how long it will be this way... but it's necessary. It's the very least I could do.. and all that's within my power to do. This morning information was released which gives the general public a better idea of what happened. Many questions still go unanswered and I despise with all of my being that there's even the remotest possibility that some of them, many of them even, will continue to go unanswered. With all of our manpower…and all of our power as a country, we stand impatient and frustrated for more news.” (READ MORE)

The Belmont Club: Denied Knowns “Ralph Bennett argues at Tech Central Station that our tacit assumptions about the fate of 3 American soldiers captured in Iraq reflect an intuitive understanding of the nature of our enemy. ‘One which we must at all events never acknowledge explicitly. Think about it. If three Islamic fighters had been captured by the Americans, would there be any apprehension about their fate? Of course not. Despite all the fervid Abu Ghraib and Gitmo propagandizing of assorted leftists, pseudo-peaceniks and Democrat apologists, the general presumption is they would be treated decently.’” (READ MORE)

Austin Bay: The Palestinian Civil War– Arafat’s Legacy “The Israeli airstrike reported in this Financial Times article was launched in retaliation for Hamas attacks on Israel. That noted, Israel is essentially Fatah’s ally in this latest phase of the Palestinian Civil War. Palestinian President Abbas wants to disband Hamas’ ‘Executive Force.’ The Israelis just attacked the Executive Force’s headquarters.” (READ MORE)

Baldilocks: Illegal Immigration Reform? “The executive and legislative branches of the US government are celebrating their bipartisan efforts to solve the illegal alien conundrum. A question has been sitting in the back of my mind since it became apparent that the majority of national politicians—Democrats and Republicans--were inclined not to crack down hard on illegal immigrants nor follow through on meaningful methods to prevent further large scale illegal immigration via both borders.” (READ MORE)

Dafydd: Grand Outline of Provisions of "the Compromise" “The main purpose of this post is to pull together everything we currently know about the immigration-reform deal announced today. I had to go through six different sources to find it all; but here it is, all in one place. For future reference, as this stuff works its way through Congress, I will repost the outline below and make changes, additions, and emendations as required. So consider Big Lizards your one-stop shopping center for the grand plan that will occupy as much of Congress's time as can be spared... after the urgent requirement to investigate every Republican, living or dead, who ever worked for George W. Bush (or said anything nice about him).” (READ MORE)

Big Dog: Allow Me To Clarify Hillary’s Position “Hillary Rodham is catching some heat for her positions on the recent war funding bill. Hillary voted on a cloture motion to cut off funding for the war. Yesterday she stated that she voted for that to allow discussion but that she did not know if she would vote for the actual bill to cut off funding. Then she indicated that she would vote for it. Her opponents have seized on this and indicated that there is no time to conduct a poll before acting.” (READ MORE)

Bear Creek Ledger: Update on the Sgt Christian DeJohn (PA NG) discrimination case “A little over a year ago I had posted the story of Sgt Christian DeJohn who had filed a discrimination lawsuit against Temple University: ‘The crass and blatent discrimination displayed by Temple University against Christian DeJohn is beyond belief. The amazing component about this story is that DeJohn wasn’t deployed to Iraq he was deployed to Bosnia. While serving in Bosnia DeJohn would receive emails from the History Department inviting him to anti war events, sit ins and demonstrations.’” (READ MORE)

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross: Kuwait: American Contractors on the Withdrawal Timetable “When I touched down in Kuwait on the morning of May 17, I was greeted by severe sandstorms. From the air, the sandstorm looked like a cloud covering -- except we touched down on the runway a few seconds after the plane entered the sand. The weather conditions kept me in Kuwait for the day, mainly recovering from jet lag. But I also had the opportunity to speak with some American contractors who were working on reconstruction efforts in the Shia south. Since one of the main things I’m interested in during this trip is the effect that a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops will have on Iraq, I wanted to get the contractors' perspective.” (READ MORE)

Dadmanly: Unwitting Propagandists? “Jonathan Foreman presents a convincing indictment of the media, writing at National Review Online. Foreman faults a “selective skepticism,” in which western journalists accept every enemy propaganda claim at face value, while at the same time, discounting any statement from US or other Coalition spokesperson as necessarily biased. ‘Make no mistake, the Taliban and their allies, like the Sunni insurgents in Iraq, know perfectly well that they don’t have to defeat the Coalition militarily; all they have to do is undermine the political will of the Western electorates.’” (READ MORE)

Don Surber: ‘Government is not the speech police’ “I have admired Mitch McConnell of Kentucky since well before he became the Senate Republican leader. In the euchre of Washington, he is a bower, true, but he also is willing to stand up for the First Amendment.” (READ MORE)

Flopping Aces: 1992, The Year America’s War With Saddam Set Off America’s War With Al Queda “In early 1991, Saddam Hussein’s army (at the time, it was the fourth largest in the world preceded only by China, Russia, and the United States) was summarily decimated by 500,00 American forces and 100,000 forces from around the world. Saddam’s army had been battle tested and hardened in a decade long war with Iran, but once ground operations began, the primarily American forces were able to invade Iraq, surround the Iraqi Army, reduce it to tatters, and only the surrender of tens of thousands of Iraqi troops could slow down the advance. Within 100 hours of almost exclusively conventional warfare, American forces were within 150miles of Baghdad, and the Americans offered a cease-fire.” (READ MORE)

Bill Roggio: The search in the Triangle of Death continues “The search for the 3 missing U.S. soldiers enters its fifth day and the U.S. military pours more troops into the region south of Baghdad known as the Triangle of Death. The U.S. military has offered a $200,000 reward for information leading to the discovery of the U.S. soldiers, as significant resources have been diverted from Baghdad and Taji to assist with the search operations.” (READ MORE)

Baron Bodissey: All Jihad is Local “An Israeli doctor, responding to my post about Kassam rocket attacks on Sderot, recently sent us this email: ‘I am writing to you from Jerusalem, Israel. I have a suggestion how to impress upon the readers of your blogs the essence of the complete insanity of the Israeli defense policy. Compare the distances from one point to another in two different reference systems.’” (READ MORE)

Dean Barnett: Re: McCain - This is the End “If I may be so bold, I’d like to embellish on Hugh’s point on why this immigration bill is dreadful news for the McCain candidacy. McCain has been a stalwart on Iraq; he’s also been appropriately hawkish on the wider war, although I’ve yet to see any indications that he actually understands it. Although his position on coercive interrogation techniques is outside the party’s mainstream, even McCain’s critics sense that he’ll fight the war aggressively. This is all good, and his greatest asset as he seeks the Republican nomination.” (READ MORE)

Ian: (Video) Dean cites “propaganda outlet” as reason to ditch Fox News debate “Appearing on ‘The Colbert Report’ last night, DNC chair Howard Dean said Democrats dropped out of the Fox News debate because the network is a ‘propaganda outlet.’ Yet, appearing on the same network as Chris Matthews and Keith Olbermann is okay.” (READ MORE)

The Marching Camp: Palestine and Perspective. “Well, the Palestinians, in the interest of keeping their unbroken streak of doing the stupidest and most self-destructive thing possible, are holding a civil war. Note that this war is actually a civil war, unlike Iraq. There are clearly defined factions separated by ideology and approach to religion and few, if any, foreign players trying to invade the Gaza Strip (as, for instance, al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia is in Iraq). I find this via the Belmont Club, who got it from Instapundit, who got it from The Times Online.” (READ MORE)

Kobayashi Maru: Assassins Sans Frontieres “Drudge led with this story early this morning. Reuters has expanded on it. Google News finds less than a dozen mentions. Inexplicably, it's now completely absent from Drudge's site. It is an assassination plot story. If the target were George Bush or Tony Blair, this would be big news--perhaps of the gleeful kind, given the tilt of the MSM, but big news nonetheless. Mazab Bashir 25, a Palestinian in Gaza working with Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) was indicted this morning in Jerusalem District Court on charges that he: ‘plotted to assassinate Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and other Israeli officials’.” (READ MORE)

Jules Crittenden: Unillegal “Brilliant plan to eliminate illegal border-crossing: legalize it. Problem solved. It’s an border-crossing rights thing. Works on the principle that when sneaking across the border is illegal, only illegals sneak across the border. I think that’s it.* Presidential Senator Kennedy Bush Specter McGraham-Feinstein, R-D, D.C.: ‘Practically imperfect but not an amnesty, with very strong sanctions. We agreed!’” (READ MORE)

Kat in MO: Small Wars: Religion in Warfare II “In response to discussions here and here. I think we are fighting over semantics and, possibly, by trying to make the argument with short, simplistic points, we are missing the obvious connections between both arguments. The first we can essay from an old cliche, ‘all politics are local.’ In layman's terms, people first care about what is important to them, close at home, that affects them personally.” (READ MORE)

Kim Priestap: Murtha Brazenly Violates Ethics Rules Once Again “Democrat Jack Murtha violated ethics rules on the floor of the House, right out in the open. This is what happened: ‘According to the draft resolution, Murtha shouted at Rogers on the House floor Thursday for offering a motion last week to expose $23 million Murtha requested in an intelligence bill. Murtha had requested the money to prevent the administration from shuttering the National Drug Intelligence Center in Johnstown, Pa.. in Murtha's district.’” (READ MORE)

Lorie Byrd: Bill Maher Thinks he Knows More than the Troops about Iraq “This is shocking even for Bill Maher. In a recent post at HuffPo, Maher actually claims to know more than the troops in Iraq -- about what is going on in Iraq. ‘Since this war began the number of soldiers in Iraq who think Saddam Hussein was responsible for 9/11 has stunned us all. We continue to be surprised by the number of troops over there who still think we're winning, convinced we're doing good, and that if America pulls out they will follow us home.’” (READ MORE)

TigerHawk: The Democrats oppose military planning? “Power Line makes a rather good point: ‘One of the Democrats' frequent talking points about Iraq is that the administration failed to plan the mission there adequately. It is ironic, then, that nearly all of the Democrats in the House of Representatives have voted to bar the administration from planning for the contingency of hostilities with Iran.’ The bill in question is really quite astonishing:” (READ MORE)

The Sundries Shack: An Army of Cartmans “Ace is as pissed as I’ve ever seen him about the illegal immigration amnesty bill and he’s encouraging every Republican who thinks this deal stinks on toast to change their party affiliation to anything but the Republican Party and mail a copy of that form to their nearest Republican member of Congress. I think that’s a heck of an idea. The Republicans may not notice much, but they’ll notice when their voter rolls start dropping, even if it’s by a few thousand. Glenn Reynolds likes to talk about an “Army of Davids” - ordinary citizens who, by dint of taking similar actions in similar ways, can do some pretty big things.” (READ MORE)

Right Wing Nut House: An Invitation to Disaster “As the Senate gleefully races toward the immigration reform gasoline dump sporting a lit match and a truckload of nitroglycerin, an outline of their handiwork shows the true nature of the disaster that is about to befall the republic. Think I’m exaggerating? A little “Nuthouse nuttery” that I’m inclined to indulge in from time to time? Think again. What these guardians of our national security have wrought is nothing short of a surrender to lawlessness, a pandering to an interest group so nauseating in its totality and so base in it calculated appeal for their electoral loyalty that it takes one’s breath away to contemplate how easily our safety has been compromised in the name of a few, lousy, votes.” (READ MORE)

McQ: Saying it again: the impact of mixed signals “I’ve cited Bernard Lewis previously. I’ve also cited Osama bin Laden’s references to the US being a ‘paper tiger’ and how that has been internalized by the terrorists as a positive which helps drive their recruiting and gives hope to their jihadist agenda. As Lewis points out in this latest article, the jihadis saw the Soviet Union as their biggest threat because they were so ruthless. They matched atrocity with atrocity and did so without qualms or second thoughts. Lewis relates an incident, well known to most, which occurred in Lebanon. Terrorists attacked Soviet citizens and killed them.” (READ MORE)

Paul Mirengoff: Misunderstanding Republicans “There's no denying that, for various reasons, the current Republican field of presidential contenders lacks a first-tier candidate with a consistent record of traditional, across-the-board conservatism. But E.J. Dionne overstates his case when he asserts that the campaign ‘has become an occasion for the collapse of conservative othodoxy.’ Indeed, the same complaint about the absence of a traditional conservative candidate in the first tier could have been lodged in 2000, which featured a ‘compassionate conservative’ and a maverick.” (READ MORE)

Ed Morrissey: Chasing The Pipe Dream “I want to address -- again -- the arguments against the concepts outlined in the proposed immigration compromise announced yesterday. I've received a few angry e-mails and comments, but also a number of thoughtful objections to my post yesterday, attempting point-by-point rebuttals. Those members of the CQ community deserve the same thoughtful consideration.” (READ MORE)

Alexander Baldwin: The Saudi Initiative - A Genuine Opportunity “The famous Israeli diplomat Abba Eban once quipped that ‘the Arabs never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity [for peace].’ With Israel's refusal to-date to accept the recently re-tabled Saudi Peace initiative offering Israel peace with the entire Arab World, it seems that it may be Israel this time that is guilty of Abba's charge. For years there has been no substantive progress concerning the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The Israeli position has been that there is no ‘viable’ partner from the Palestinian side to negotiate with. It seems as though the tide has changed in dramatic fashion over the course of the past few months.” (READ MORE)

War Historian: Cheers on Corridor Three "10:30 hours (local EST), Friday, 11 May 2007: Third Corridor, Second Floor, The Pentagon: It is 110 yards from the “E” ring to the “A” ring of the Pentagon. This section of the Pentagon is newly renovated; the floors shine, the hallway is broad, and the lighting is bright. At this instant the entire length of the corridor is packed with officers, a few sergeants and some civilians, all crammed tightly three and four deep against the walls. There are thousands here. This hallway, more than any other, is the “Army” hallway. The G3 offices line one side, G2 the other, G8 is around the corner. All Army. Moderate conversations flow in a low buzz. Friends who may not have seen each other for a few weeks, or a few years, spot each other, cross the way and renew. Everyone shifts to ensure an open path remains down the center. The air conditioning system was not designed for this press of bodies in this area. The temperature is rising already. Nobody cares." (READ MORE)

Have an interesting post or know of a "must read?" Then send a trackback here and let us all know about it. Or you can send me an email with a link to the post and I'll update the Recon.

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