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Kevin Sites blog from Iraq: Road to Nowhere







Kevin Sites bl0g from Iraq: Road to
Nowhere

Kevin Sites bl0g from Iraq: Road to
Nowhere
05/03/2004 12:13 PM

Blogging live from Iraq, MSNBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites posts a new entry today. Last week, he and the the military unit with which he was traveling near Ramadi were hit by an IED, also known as a "roadside bomb."

We will take four humvees on this trip, including a gun truck or technical with a mounted 240 SAW, squad assault weapon and about 20 marines carrying M-16 and M4 assault rifles. As the captain speaks, the marines pass out smoke grenades that could be used to obscure a disabled vehicle from enemy fire. They also pass out fragmentation grenades, olive green orbs with strips of red duct tape wrapped around the handles to keep them from exploding in case the pin is pulled inadvertently.

The captain (who doesn't wanted to be identified by name) reads off a checklist that covers everything from the military grid coordinates for our travel to recent intel on enemy forces in the area, radio frequencies and procedures if we come under attack. "I'm not reading this for my own amusement," he says gruffly, "if something happens to me or Gunny you want to know how to get back so you better be fucking writing it down."

Link, discuss




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Kevin Sites blog from Iraq: Road to Nowhere

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Kevin Sites bl0g from Iraq: Hilla SWAT


Kevin Sites bl0g from Iraq: Hilla SWAT 09/23/2004 11:14 AM
Xeni Jardin: NBC combat correspondent and blogger Kevin Sites is back in Iraq, and posts a new dispatch with some amazing photos on his blog today.
We've been up since 3am--waiting for Hilla SWAT. It's now 4:30. Despite their annoyance--the Force Recon squad from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit seems extremely patient--at least around Kuni Takahashi, a photographer for the Chicago Tribune and me. Instead they look at their watches--bullshit each other about their individual depravities--like masturbating in sweat socks. Typical life details at a military FOB or forward operating base in Iraq.

These marines at FOB Kalsu still sleep in tents, shit in porta-johns, live in the dirt. This is no Camp Victory green zone paradise with guys chilling in air-conditioned trailers and eating at the Bob Hope Dining Facility--a zeppelin hangar of a building just down the road from Baghdad International Airport. Everyone here has heard the stories--or maybe, been on a convoy through the green zone, briefly glimpsed the way that other half lives. They piss and moan about it--but don't denounce its existence. They are, after all, Americans--it's about aspirations--still believing that hard work and perseverance may someday get you to the Promised Land.

Link, and link to Discuss

Kevin Sites Iraq bl0g: "Paying Back in
Blood"


Kevin Sites Iraq bl0g: "Paying Back in
Blood"
05/10/2004 03:02 PM
Blogger and MSNBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites is in Iraq, and has posted a new entry to his blog today.
When he was nine years old Carlos Gomez crossed the Rio Grande from Mexico to the U.S. with his father, mother and two sisters. They had heard stories about the opportunities in America, dreamed about them, wanted them so badly they ran through oncoming traffic on the 805 freeway to get to them. They didn't stop until they reached San Diego. Fear, fatigue and La Migra slowly fading into the southern horizon like their homeland.

They stayed. Dealt with the slurs--beaners, greasers, wetbacks. Overcame them. Paid back America's opportunities with hard, menial labor. Made a fraction of what citizens and legal immigrants made--but never complained.

And 12 years later, in Falluja, Iraq, Marine Lance Corporal Gomez would pay it back again--but this time with his blood.

Link, Discussion Forum

Latest Kevin Sites bl0g-post from Iraq:
Hearts and Mines


Latest Kevin Sites bl0g-post from Iraq:
Hearts and Mines
11/05/2003 12:08 PM
New photos and first-person accounts from northern Iraq, from MSNBC combat corrrespondent Kevin Sites:
"Well sir, it's been a rough deployment. This -- then the stuff at home -- my wife's probably cheated on me 15 times," he shakes his head and takes a long drag from the stub of his cigarette. Many of the men we see tonight are doing a version of the same thing, smoking -- shaking their heads.

"I looked around town today," one lieutenant told me, "I was hoping to find someone doing something bad, somebody I could hurt -- but there wasn't one. Just people that needed my help."

It's just that kind of mission whiplash that has confused and demoralized so many troops in Iraq. Soldiers are ordered to go on a night patrols or raids--where danger can lurk at every corner or behind every door -- and life and death decisions have to be made within the hair-fraction of time it takes to pull the trigger on M4 assault weapon -- then the next day, they're told to monitor the selection of a new local mayor or to rebuild a school.

Link to photos, Link to story.

Live warbl0gging from Iraq: CNN's Kevin
Sites launches bl0g at kevinsites.net


Live warbl0gging from Iraq: CNN's Kevin
Sites launches bl0g at kevinsites.net
03/13/2003 07:32 PM
CNN foreign correspondent Kevin Sites, whose first-person accounts we've posted here on BoingBoing previously, now has a blog at www.kevinsites.net. Recent journal entries from Kuwait are available at this site, and Kevin's now also phoning in live audblog reports via his mobile phone, as he travels throughout the region covering the apparently imminent conflict.
Audb log post: crossing the border into northern Iraq
I'm calling in from the highly-guarded border of Iran and Kurdistan. A truck is waiting for us to transport CNN staff, our personal belongings, and our television gear into kurd-controlled northern Iraq. We're crossing into this region to cover the northern front of a potential war with Iraq, in an area dense with oil-rich fields along the northern no-fly-zone.
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Kevin Sites Blog


Kevin Sites Blog 03/14/2003 02:52 AM
Kevin Sites' Blog .. blog

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Kevin Sites in Iraq -- "Toppled"


Kevin Sites in Iraq -- "Toppled" 04/12/2004 11:33 AM
Blogger and MSNBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites has returned to assignment in Iraq after a short break home in the US. A year ago last Friday, the famous statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad was toppled; Kevin has posted a new essay about the state of Iraq since then. But in light of the multiple hostage situations in Iraq right now, I want to mention one thing that he does not. This also marks the one year anniversary of his capt ure and subsequent release by Iraqi Fedayeen soldiers. We're glad that this story ended with Kevin free and unharmed. Snip from his latest post:
How did things turn so bad so quickly--in which a scattered insurgency gains broader support and the coalition Shiite alliance begins to crack? Some critics say it's a combination of a year of mismanagement by the Coalition Provisional Authority in which the lives of most Iraqis have not improved much since the reign of Saddam Hussein and the hardball tactics of occupation military forces that are alienating the people they were intending to help.

One member of a Ramadi-based Sunni insurgent cell who calls himself "Continuous Jihad" says the Coalition hasn't delivered on anything. "They break into houses in the middle of the night and arrest innocent people," he says, "and they've given us less then we had under Saddam. People are jobless, they distort our religion, and they're taking our oil and living in Saddam's palaces. Nothing has changed. They've become like him, yet they pretend they're here to help us."

Link to "Toppled", blog post from Iraq by Kevin Sites, Link to discussion forum.

Kevin Sites: back *from* Iraq, here's
his latest.


Kevin Sites: back *from* Iraq, here's
his latest.
12/08/2003 02:21 PM
Blogger and MSNBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites posted a final dispatch from Iraq before returning home to the US for a brief break. He returns to Iraq shortly after the holidays.
It is the eve of Eid or the end of the Ramadan and the end of the month long dawn to dusk fasting for many Muslims. It is a time of celebration on par with Christmas for Christians. But the night has begun with a bang. Literally. An IED (improvised explosive device) has exploded just outside the north gate of the 4th Infantry Division's headquarters. I hop in the back of Bressette's Humvee as the patrol heads out to investigate. Bressette gets on his two-way and in the guise of a flight attendant giving the pre-flight briefing, tells the squad the plan. (...)

I videotape Bressette as he walks back to his Humvee with the 1-22's commanding officer Lt. Col. Steve Russell. They at the curb to discuss what's next, when Bressette looks down. He sees something strange; wires sticking out of a concrete block. Suddenly this inert object is filled with potential energy.

"Sir, we better back up," Bressette says, already doing the moonwalk away from the block. "We're standing next to an IED!" The Humvee shoots forward away from the bomb, while the rest of back away. The concrete block has been hollowed out and is packed with enough plastic explosives to kill us. Bressette just shakes his head, still in disbelief that all of us, the Colonel, Bressette and his squad, myself and reporter named Betsy Heil from the Pittsburgh Tribune, were all standing next to a device that could've taken our lives within a fraction of a second.

Link

New Kevin Sites dispatch from Iraq:
Under Steel Rain


New Kevin Sites dispatch from Iraq:
Under Steel Rain
06/29/2004 06:50 PM
A new weblog dispatch from NBC correspondent and blogger Kevin Sites, about life in the militarized zone with the distinction of having been mortared more than any other in Iraq -- 400 times in the last three months
[S]oldiers aren't the only ones in danger. Civilian employees of Kellog. Brown and Root -- which provide many of the civilian services on base -- are also at risk. Many of the food service employees, mostly foreign workers from poor nations like the Philippines, Pakistan and Bangladesh; say theyre very frightened by the mortars. One says he sleeps on the ground pulling sandbags around him, but while the mortars haven't got him yet, the sand fleas have. He shows me the red bites on arms.

Four Philippine workers were killed at the largest Army supply base in Iraq last April when insurgent rockets hit their living quarters at Camp Anaconda. But those inside the camp aren't completely surrounded by hostility. At dusk in Guard Tower 7, soldiers watch Iraqi boys play soccer not more than a hundred yards away. Some Iraqi civilians even live in shacks right next to the massive walls surrounding the base.

"Hi Nora," one of the soldiers says, waving to a shy ten year old Iraqi girl popping her head out from behind a sheet that covers the opening to the mud and clapboard shack. "Hi Michael," she says in a high-pitched voice, waving then quickly ducking back inside.

Link

Kevin Sites returns to Iraq, new photos
and essays from Baghdad


Kevin Sites returns to Iraq, new photos
and essays from Baghdad
01/26/2004 12:42 PM
NBC combat correspondent and weblogger Kevin Sites has returned to Iraq, and posts two new entries to his blog today: "Coming Home," an essay about the psychological challenge for soldiers to "turn off the killer switch" as they prepare to return to their families in the US -- and a photo essay, excerpted here.

"These families of a rural neighborhood called Albo Eatha, south of Baghdad, were awakened at dawn by the 82nd Airborne's Alpha Company, 2nd Platoon, so their houses could be searched and their cooperation requested in stopping insurgent activities. Despite the early hour, the woman and children seemed cheerful. The imposition became an opportunity for them to socialize -- while helicopters and jet fighters flew overhead."

Links: Photos: Women and Children of Albo Eatha, and Coming Home Essay. Discussion forum here.

New Kevin Sites dispatch from Iraq:
Dirty for Dirty


New Kevin Sites dispatch from Iraq:
Dirty for Dirty
06/01/2004 02:09 PM
NBC combat correspondent and weblogger Kevin Sites is in Iraq today. He's just posted a new entry on his blog -- a series of interviews with American soldiers.
[O]nce they finally do get home--they will still be faced with the complex task of finding their way in a civilian society again. And while they're eager to leave their weapons and Kevlar behind, the violence they've experienced here will likely be with them in one way or another, always.

Derek Ellyson says his memories have already hardened, fixed in his mind. "You never forget the faces. I can describe to you every dead person I've seen out here. What their faces looked like, the position they were laying in." Sorokin agrees, "War brings a lot of ugly things, you see a lot of ugly things you see other people dead and sometimes when you see somebody dead you see the face of death--the way the guy died. It could be an enemy it could be an ally it doesn't matter."

Yet living with those images of death is part of the job--the same one that requires them to pull the trigger. Before going to war soldiers have always had to ask themselves if they'd be willing to die for their cause. But there is a second part to that question which for some, is more difficult to answer: would they kill for it? For most if not all in the 3rd Platoon--the question is already moot.

Link, Discuss

Kevin Sites bl0gging from Thailand


Kevin Sites bl0gging from Thailand 12/29/2004 08:31 PM
Xeni Jardin: Blogger and NBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites was in Southeast Asia on a break from reporting duties when the tsunami disaster took place. He's now in Thailand, reporting -- and back on the blog again, dispatching photos and first-person accounts. Snip:
One-hundred and fifty-nine pine coffins have been stacked in the garage -- many of them big enough to hold refrigerators -- built to accommodate the now bloated and rapidly decomposing bodies inside.

Thai soldiers, wearing surgical masks, race against time to arrest the process -- before the bodies become impossible to identify.

In a well-choreographed drill -- they use hammers to smash square blocks of dry ice, carrying the shards on sheets of plastic and dumping them inside the coffins with the remains. They work at a very high tempo -- almost as if they were trying to rescue the living -- rather than preserve the dead.

On the sides of the coffins are photographs of the deceased as they were found, special attention paid to jewelry or tattoos, anything that can help in identifying who they once were.

The pictures are grisly -- bruised, blackened, bodies misshapen from the ferocious force of an angry ocean and all that travels with it. Old, young, small, large, South Africans, Australians, Canadians, English, Thais –- all victims of the earth's unrest on a day when she seemed to have precious little mercy.

Link.(Photo: Coffins bearing digital photographs of the deceased. image: Kevin Sites.)

Kevin Sites dispatch from Tikrit:
"You're Either With Us..."


Kevin Sites dispatch from Tikrit:
"You're Either With Us..."
11/18/2003 02:03 PM
NBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites has just posted a new update to his blog, live from Tikrit. Excerpt:
So in some ways, embedded in this unit, I begin to feel I've betrayed the people that depend on me to be skeptical; to question the dominant powers and institutions of my nation and the actions it undertakes in the name of its citizens. I am not a military or American cheerleader, not a mouthpiece signed on some institutional agenda whether I believe in it or not. I am here to ask the hard questions of the people who make the hardest decisions; ones that result in people dying or people being killed. I must remember as one journalist advised, "write in your notepad every day 'I am not one of them.'"

But in this room, where every piece of information is broken down quantitatively--number of patrols, number of raids, number of IEDs (improvised explosive devices), number of detainees, number of weapons -- and put back together in the form of a task completed or a mission to be accomplished, Operation Thunder Road, Operation Ivy Cyclone, the problems and solutions seem remarkably clear an seductively simple. (...)

Image above: Al Auja is the birthplace of Saddam Hussein. The community here was very pampered during his rule. But now U.S. forces feels it's a nest of former regime loyalists and anti coalition fighters. It's wrapped the entire town in triple layered razor wire. Male residents must register and carry ID cards. There is only one checkpoint that all four-thousand residents must enter and leave through. This man was already cleared to exit, but spun his wheels in anger on the way out. A U.S. soldier had a bead on him with his M-16 before he stopped his car. The second search was bit more invasive.

Link to esssay, Link to photos

Kevin Sites wins 2005 Payne Award for
Ethics in Journalism


Kevin Sites wins 2005 Payne Award for
Ethics in Journalism
04/13/2005 03:52 AM
Xeni Jardin: I'm very happy to blog the news that Kevin Sites, for whom I have endless respect and admiration, has been honored with a Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism. Bravo, and a huge congratulations, Kevin!
At a time when studies show the credibility of the media in steady decline and sensational stories make headline news, there are journalists and news organizations whose ethical decision-making processes set new standards for the keepers of the public trust. The 2005 Payne Awards for Ethics in Journalism will honor The Denver Post, freelance journalist Kevin Sites, and Arizona State’s independent student newspaper The State Press for exemplifying the highest standards of their profession in the face of political or economic pressures.(...)

Kevin Sites, a freelance photojournalist for NBC and military pool reporter, is the Payne Awards’ professional winner for his “courage, deliberate thinking and outreach” after filming a U.S. soldier killing an unarmed Iraqi man. Sites, an experienced war reporter, shared the videotape with the military, then worked with NBC to create a well-nuanced story that aired 48 hours after the incident. As was required, the footage was also given to others in his pool. When he became a lightning rod for those reacting to the story and for foreign journalists using the footage without context, he responded by using a web blog (www.kevinsites.net) to explain his decision and its reasoning to the public. The judges felt the blog and reactions to it added a new dimension to the story.

Winners will be honored in a ceremony on May 12 at the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication. Link to award info, and Link to Kevin's blog.

Kevin Sites' bl0g: How a "sojo" files a
live report -- or doesn't.


Kevin Sites' bl0g: How a "sojo" files a
live report -- or doesn't.
11/10/2003 11:22 PM
Kevin Sites, blogger and NBC News correspondent in Iraq, has posted a fascinating account of the unbelievable lengths to which solo journalists must go to file live satellite transmissions from remote battlefields. Equipment breaks, unexpected technical snafus come up, but news has to get through. Sometimes, the means disassembling gear to make a temporary laptop modem out of a videophone. Sometimes, that means your dinner becomes a tripod.
"At left -- adjusting the camera. See that dirt berm? That's Syria on the other side. See that guy with a gun? That's a new Iraqi border guard. Nice pose, huh. See that guy in camo -- that's Lt. Col. Arnold (he's going to be bummed because he wanted to take off his cold weather gear before going on camera -- too late. It's an Army macho thing).

See that guy behind the camera? That's me. See that tripod? It's a piece of crap -- one of the legs fell off en route to the border and will never be found. See that box of MRE's (Meals Ready to Eat)? That's my new tripod leg. See the Colonel's helmet? That's the counterweight that keeps the camera from tipping over. It's amazing how desperation can push you to new levels of creativity in the middle of the desert."

Link (note: this round of photos shot by Joe Raedle of Getty Images)

A Blog for Baseball Fans Builds a League
of Sites


A Blog for Baseball Fans Builds a League
of Sites
04/17/2005 09:50 PM
New York Times Apr 18 2005 2:00AM GMT

The Road Map for A Sovereign Iraq


The Road Map for A Sovereign Iraq 06/09/2004 10:30 AM
today's Opinion Journal .. Paul Wolfowitz's

opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110005192track this site | 5 links


Iraq: Intel Failures On the Road to War


Iraq: Intel Failures On the Road to War 07/11/2004 06:39 AM
MSNBC Jul 11 2004 9:22AM GMT

Kerry Slams Bush on Road to Iraq War
(AP)


Kerry Slams Bush on Road to Iraq War
(AP)
01/25/2004 05:21 PM
AP - Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry says President Bush has breached a faith to keep young people from dying needlessly in combat, which he said was a lesson from the Vietnam War.

RSSTop55 - Best Blog Directory And RSS
Submission Sites - Robin Good\\\'
Sharewood Tidings


RSSTop55 - Best Blog Directory And RSS
Submission Sites - Robin Good\\\'
Sharewood Tidings
02/10/2004 02:54 AM
http://www.masternewmedia.org/2004/02/05/rsstop55_best_blog_directory. htm As more and more people get involved with the Internet and as more Web sites, blogs, news services and other online resources continue to grow in number and variety it becomes increasingly important to maintain high visibility and exposure for the content being generated by closely following the major distribution media. HUGE list of links for submiting your RSS/Blog sites for traffic.

Civilian's Ill-Fated Road to Iraq Was
Paved With Derring-Do


Civilian's Ill-Fated Road to Iraq Was
Paved With Derring-Do
05/25/2004 11:57 PM
An adventurous entrepreneur, Nicholas E. Berg, who was beheaded in Iraq, had a passionate belief in capitalism's power to transform poor nations.

Reuters AlertNet - Anti-U.S. insurgents
disrupt Iraq road network


Reuters AlertNet - Anti-U.S. insurgents
disrupt Iraq road network
04/19/2004 04:19 AM
Have you perhaps seen these names recently? .. Reuters report .. More

alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/OWE751830.htm
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For White House, Reversed Iraq Tactics
Are Billed as Bumps on Road to Peace


For White House, Reversed Iraq Tactics
Are Billed as Bumps on Road to Peace
05/01/2004 02:43 PM
The Bush administration seems increasingly willing to alter its occupation strategy in Iraq and shows a new hesitation to engage in military confrontations that may inflame the people.

Inspectors: Iraq weapons sites destroyed


Inspectors: Iraq weapons sites destroyed 06/07/2004 03:35 PM

"The Iraq War Was Wrong Blog"


"The Iraq War Was Wrong Blog" 08/16/2004 02:39 AM

"Where is Raed" Iraq bl0g: hoax? real?


"Where is Raed" Iraq bl0g: hoax? real? 03/20/2003 04:23 PM
Interesting blog post by Paul Boutin regarding whether the much-talked-about "Where is Raed?" blog is a hoax or not:
Speculation continues that Dear Raed, the weblog of a young man in Baghdad who posts under the name Salam Pax, is a hoax, perhaps even a disinformation campaign by the CIA or Mossad. A month after Computerworld published a story quoting a "terrorist" who turned out to be a one of their former writers pranking them, it would be foolish not to wonder.

Rather than guess, I emailed Salam and asked for proof of his location just before the first attack on Baghdad this morning. "how can i do that?" he emailed back. "you don't expect me to run out in the street and take a picture near something you'll recognize." Actually, I pointed out, a +964 phone number where I could reach him would do. Dialing into Iraq from here is tough right now, but not impossible, and rerouting a phone number would be much tougher than posting a blog from outside the country. Salam hasn't given me one, but that's understandable.

Instead, I mixed what I learned as a Unix sysadmin in the 80s with what I learned as a daily reporter in the 90s. A barrage of late-night phone calls and emails to bloggers, Google, and network engineers produced the following evidence...

Link, Discuss

News of early Iraq Power handover broken
by a bl0g


News of early Iraq Power handover broken
by a bl0g
06/28/2004 11:35 AM
Biggest story ever broken by a blog? It appears that blogger/BBC News correspondent/ landmine survivor Stuart Hughes was first to break news of the early handover of authority in Iraq today, on his weblog. Link. Hughes was in Istanbul at the Bush/Blair press conference after that, and filed live text and audblog coverage here: Link

TiVo unveils portable transfer service
Troops stationed in Iraq turn to gaming
Internet sites allow


TiVo unveils portable transfer service
Troops stationed in Iraq turn to gaming
Internet sites allow
01/03/2005 03:06 AM
Seattletimes.nwsource.com - Mon Jan 3, 06:32 am GMT

Troops stationed in Iraq turn to gaming
Internet sites allow gift card exchanges
Indian state eyes f


Troops stationed in Iraq turn to gaming
Internet sites allow gift card exchanges
Indian state eyes f
01/04/2005 02:30 AM
Seattletimes.nwsource.com - Tue Jan 4, 06:36 am GMT

Amy Ridenour's National Center Blog: A
New E-Mail from the Front in Iraq: "I
Ask That the American People Be Brave"


Amy Ridenour's National Center Blog: A
New E-Mail from the Front in Iraq: "I
Ask That the American People Be Brave"
05/12/2004 08:18 PM
A New E-Mail from the Front in Iraq: "I Ask That the American People Be Brave" .. email from Army Spc. Joe Roche

nationalcenter.org/2004/05/new-e-mail-from-front-in-iraq-i-ask .html
track this site | 5 links


Scam sites start spoofing secure sites


Scam sites start spoofing secure sites 12/12/2003 10:26 AM
Personal Computer World Dec 12 2003 9:16AM ET

"KEVIN"


"KEVIN" 06/17/2004 10:44 PM

"Kevin Aylward"


"Kevin Aylward" 05/12/2004 05:27 PM

Congratulations, Kevin


Congratulations, Kevin 03/17/2005 03:47 AM

So Kevin Martin has been named the new Chairman of the FCC. This is not exactly a surprise, although I'm a bit curious why it took so long -- there must have been some Congressional horse trading in the background.

As a told a reporter earlier this afternoon, Kevin has all the tools to be a successful FCC Chairman. He knows the agency and the White House, and he's more flexible and intellectually sophisticated than people give him credit for.

On the other hand, Martin has his work cut out for him. Michael Powell is a tough act to follow. And many critical issues raised during Chairman Powell's tenure -- from regulation of voice over IP to spectrum policy to universal service reform -- remain unresolved.

Moreover, to be an effective FCC Chairman in the 21st century, you have to grok technology. Deep down, you have to appreciate how quickly the world can change, and how many of the assumptions the communications industry is based on will likely be overturned. This doesn't mean being a professional technologist. Powell got it. So do some executives who come from the telephone business, like Jim Crowe and Dave Dorman.

Martin is certainly smart enough and interested in what the tech sector thinks, but the question is whether he's willing to step out of the FCC's Beltway box. Listening to what the telcos say about fiber deployment isn't the same thing as promoting technological innovation. I'll keep my fingers crossed.


"Kevin Drum"


"Kevin Drum" 01/22/2004 02:49 AM

" Kevin Drum "


" Kevin Drum " 05/22/2004 02:19 AM

"IRAQ SARIN UPDATE: Blaster's Blog has
an interesting observation --
apparently, it can't be an old shell, as
some are claiming. And scroll down for
lots of other interesting stuff that
deserves more attention..."


"IRAQ SARIN UPDATE: Blaster's Blog has
an interesting observation --
apparently, it can't be an old shell, as
some are claiming. And scroll down for
lots of other interesting stuff that
deserves more attention..."
05/20/2004 02:30 AM

An Evening with Kevin Smith


An Evening with Kevin Smith 09/15/2004 11:30 PM
I just finished watching the first DVD of the two DVD set An Evening with Kevin Smith (get it via Netflix). If you're a fan of Kevin Smith movies, I can't recommend it enough. It's mostly composed of clips from Q&A sessions from his visits to various college campuses. Not only is it very entertaining, but you also get some real insight into what shaped bits of his movies. That reminds me, I need to buy several of his...

Three Questions for Kevin Drum


Three Questions for Kevin Drum 06/05/2005 11:17 PM
(Number One: Is the press, properly understood, a political animal?) "It's not clear to me what big news organizations would do if they took Drum's advice seriously and started 'fighting back.'" Plus: Matt Taibbi hits a triple.

Zap Video: Kevin J. O'Brien


Zap Video: Kevin J. O'Brien 12/30/2003 12:03 AM
"Kevin O'Brien, of Prince Edward Island's home-grown ISP, Island Services Network, told us a bit about himself while a slideshow of his impressive photos played behind him. Kevin J. O'Brien speaks at Zap 15.6MB QuickTime - 5min - Kevin O'Brien of Island Services Network speaks at the Zap..." (53 words - posted by steven) no replies
Grok Description matches for Kevin Sites blog from Iraq: Road to Nowhere
GrokA matches for Kevin Sites blog from Iraq: Road to Nowhere

Kevin Sites blog from Iraq: Road to Nowhere

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Va. Lottery Is Broke
(AP)

Bloglines - very
cool blog reader

New Virus Snarls
Thousands of
Computers (AP)

factually challenged
David Brock starting
a web site to fight
"erroneous
assertions" by the
conservative media

EFI to show new,
updated products at
drupa

Flashforward 2004
coming in July

Meeting Maker
acquires WebEvent

what is grok?