Pretty great profile of the United States’ premier conspiracy-monger.
by Will on February 21, 2010
Pretty great profile of the United States’ premier conspiracy-monger.
Tagged as: alex jones, conspiracy theories
Will writes from Washington, D.C. (well, Arlington, Virginia). You can reach him at willblogcorrespondence at gmail dot com.
Borat, Art, and the Eye of the Beholder
Borat: “I do a picture, only small, of the Tishnik Masacre. Where many Uzbeks…crushed!”
Kindly Gray Hippie: “How did you feel when you drew this?”
Borat: “Very proud!”.
KGH: “I’m just listening with sadness…a little sadness for your people…?”
Borat: “Yes…no, it is not sad. It is us who do the kill!”
When in doubt, consult the classics [5:30 mark].
( 2 comments)
Over on the Mindless Diversions site...
Our intrepid commenter A Teacher tells the story of how he published his NaNoWriMo book (and, of course, tells us how we can get a copy of it for ourselves). ( 1 comments)
Nobel Peace Prize Jury Faces Formal Inquiry
Read the story here. Here’s the paragraph that would make clicking through worthwhile, if you’re still undecided:
If the Stockholm County Administrative Board, which supervises foundations in Sweden’s capital, finds that prize founder Alfred Nobel’s will is not being honored, it has the authority to suspend award decisions going back three years — though that would be unlikely and unprecedented, said Mikael Wiman, a legal expert working for the county. ( 9 comments)
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Will, dude -
You linked to an article from a local newspaper that, in order to read, we have to be willing to subscribe to?
Whoa, that’s totally weird. It was free when I first put it up, and now it’s stuck behind a paywall. My apologies, because it’s a great article.
It looked pretty good at the outset. Almost worth subscribing to read the rest. (But not quite.)
Don’t know what else to say, Will, except you are now the Oprah of blogging, with the rest of the web dying to cash in on your influence over the masses. :)
I’ll vouch for Will on that. It was free earlier today.
I suspect the magazine threw up a paywall to cash-in on the all-important League of Ordinary Gentlemen traffic.
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