Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Pottersville Digest

 (As if the Osmonds weren't creepy enough already.)
     Once again, strictly a lucky, happy coincidence, I'm sure.

     Wow! You go, girl!

    "Given how well folks have taken to the '1619 Project,' and its undeniable truth that, in great measure, slavery built this nation, it will be interesting, not to mention disgusting, to see what excuses angry white people will concoct once the bodies start coming out of the ground on this side of the border, the lies and the crimes coming up with them like the roots of old poisonous trees." -Charlie Pierce.

     This is what happens when you put the professional son in law in charge.

     "Can I (puff) have my Ranger badge now?"

     Isn't this sort of a perversion of what an IRA should be? (Tip o' the tinfoil hat to Constant Reader, CC.)

     Shiftless shit weasel demands that another shiftless shit weasel pay his legal fees.

     This is huge. The Manhattan DA's office just announced charges will be filed as early as tomorrow. Jennifer Weisselberg found out about it in real time during a live interview. Listen to what she says about why her ex FIL hasn't flipped on Trump- "(I)ssues with the presidential inaugural committee."
    IOW, Trump & Weisselberg are both so steeped in corruption, they have each other by the short hairs.

     Why are we helping this lunatic continue this delusion that he's still in charge?

     As further proof that the deranged lunatic in Trump Tower IS a deranged lunatic, he still thinks he can get Gen. Milley fired.

     Like Sarah Palin, only stupider. (Yes it's a thing)

     Oh wonderful. Look who's on the loose again. Who's next, Harvey Weinstein?

     This shouldn't surprise anyone who remembers this clown thinks nothing of crashing weddings.

     He just got busted by the FBI. Thanks for backing the blue, moron.

     I've heard of cultural appropriation but this should be criminalized.

     Take the money and run. Typical corporate scum.

     You want some Tic Tacs for that ugly semen aftertaste, Chris?

     Spoken like a true, right wing sociopath, pardon the tautology.

     Enemy at the gate? These are the assholes who are supposed to be guarding the gate.

     Could January 6th have a sequel? Yes, according to DHS to Congress.

     Because he was so spectacularly effective during the Benghazi hearings and cow lawsuits?

    "He is done as a businessman. He's going to be out there selling pillows in about ten minutes."

     It's about time someone investigated Bevin for his screamingly obvious corruption. And finally...

    It's easy to laugh at Trump and the GOP for his savaging his Republican targets of late. But Democrats should see this as an opportunity.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Pottersville Digest

(Another great moment in Qanon signage.)
     We're violating people's 4th amendment rights for using their 1st amendment rights. So, no, it's NOT legal.

    Just when I think I've heard the stupidest statement possible, Republicans like Bill Cassidy say, 'Hold my beer..."

     Because shrinking if not outright destroying the middle class is a far superior agenda.

     "The department takes the security of information extremely seriously..."
     Obviously, not seriously enough, old chaps.

     Oh this is rich, considering this is coming from Tax Dodger Zero.

     Read about the first slave ever freed by Lincoln.

     Boy, I didn't envy their job yesterday.

     Moscow Mitch called up Bill Barr at least twice last winter and asked him to tell the truth about the election not to get the truth out so he could remain Majority Leader. In effect, he was using Barr as a political operative to keep Republican mail in ballots coming in.

     These pigs have learned nothing since Stonewall. Think the NYPD had a bitchy hissy fit over being banned from the Pride Parade by the organizers?

     Yes, he wore an ankle monitor to the January 6th riot.

     Toyota is anti democratic. You know what you need to do, peeps.

     "Business owners had complained that the assistance, as Gov. Mike Parson put it, 'incentivized people to stay out of the work force.' He made Missouri one of the first four states to halt the federal aid; a total of 26 have said they will do so by next month. But in the St. Louis metropolitan area, where the jobless rate was 4.2 percent in May, those who expected the June 12 termination would unleash a flood of job seekers were disappointed.
     Work-force development officials said they had seen virtually no uptick in applicants since the governor’s announcement, which ended a $300 weekly supplement to other benefits."
     Oops. So much for THAT conspiracy theory.

     Little Nazi calls AOC "a little Communist."

     Right Wing Watch got their Youtube channel axed while the extremist right wing channels they'd documented remain unscathed. Then, the next day, this happened....

     Nice try, you corporate cunts. "Mistakenly suspended", my ass. After several unsuccessful appeals?

     Yeah, I think it'll do, too.

     Looks like it's time for an intervention for Fredo. I'll get the fishing boat ready.

    "When I said Trump was guilty of fascism…. I was accused of overstatement. Nearly a year on, given what we're now reading and seeing, maybe the f-word in relation to Trump was an understatement."-Mehdi Hasan.

     Great moments in Customer Service.

     Your Brad o' the day: Florida Man edition.

     If the story's so fake, then why the outrage at Barr?

     Sorry, asshole, no July 4 Nazi rally this time around.

     Elect a clown, expect a circus.

     “It’s a failure. It’s a joke... The election is long over, time to look forward.”
    
Fox is officially a human rights abuser.
    
Those who sleep with Nazis wake up without a platform. And finally...

    
"Lost a step"? I'd say verbally speaking Trump has forgotten how to walk.

Sunday, June 27, 2021

Bill Barr Has Trump Derangement Syndrome?

  
(By American Zen's Mike Flannigan, on loan from Ari.)
"You must hate Trump. You must hate Trump." Trump to Bill Barr last December
In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” -Falsely attributed to George Orwell

In light of the GOP's breathtaking mendacity of late, it hardly rises to the level of irony that even when a Republ8ican tells the truth for a change, there's some self interest underpinning it, if not some criminal intent. Take Mitch McConnell's phone calls late last year to Bill Barr. In a bombshell article for the Atlantic, Jonathan Karl wrote,
 
          "Barr told me that Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell had been urging him to speak out since mid-November. Publicly, McConnell had said nothing to criticize Trump’s allegations, but he told Barr that Trump’s claims were damaging to the country and to the Republican Party. Trump’s refusal to concede was complicating McConnell’s efforts to ensure that the GOP won the two runoff elections in Georgia scheduled for January 5."
     
     In fact, this is what Moscow Mitch had said to Barr through his Russian interpreter:
 
    “Look, we need the president in Georgia and so we cannot be frontally attacking him right now. But you’re in a better position to inject some reality into this situation. You are really the only one who can do it.
 
     That's a lot to unpack from this admission and not a single bit of it looks flattering to either Barr, McConnell and especially Trump. In fact, this bombshell admission is so potentially legally actionable, it's difficult to parse why Barr thought saying this out loud to a reporter of Karl's standing was a good idea. So let's unpack it a little:
     McConnell, semen-flecked Russian fuck doll or not, isn't so far 'round the bend that he couldn't read the tea leaves from November 3rd. He knew Biden won, although he was loathe to publicly admit it for several weeks lest the orange baboon in the Oval Office have a brain seizure and start flinging his feces at McConnell's office door (which, of course, he wound up doing, anyway.)
     Knowing Biden would be the new president, McConnell wanted to hedge his bets by ensuring that either David Perdue or Kelly Loeffler would retain their seats so McConnell could remain Majority Leader and thwart Biden's agenda. So, rather than "frontally attacking" Trump, still seen at that moment as a useful idiot in the January 5th runoff elections, McConnell tried to use Barr as a political operative to shore up Republican voter confidence in the electoral process and especially regarding the mail in ballots that Trump still disparages to this day. Barr would do this by telling the American people the truth about the 2020 election:
    Namely, that there was no widespread voter fraud that would affect the 2020 election results. Barr had admitted as much to Michael Balsamo, a DOJ beat reporter at the AP. Later, Barr would repeat these asaertions on TV.
     Predictably, when the aforementioned baboon in the Oval Office heard about it, he called Barr on the presidential carpet and demanded to know if he'd said what he'd had to Balsamo. When Barr simply said, "Yes", the conversation kind of went downhill from that point on.

          “Did you say that?”
          “Yes,” Barr responded.
          “How the fuck could you do this to me? Why did you say it?"
          “Because it’s true.”
          The president*, livid, responded by referring to himself in the third person: “You must hate Trump. You must hate Trump.”
 
     In the third person, of course. Because he is, after all, the Donald. The Trump.
     The Donald, first and third person alike, wound up going off on McConnell, calling him "a dour,  unsmiling political hack" without the slightest trace of irony and would, of course, go on to sabotage both the Georgia Senate runoff races, thereby giving the Democrats the slightest possible advantage in the upper chamber.
    It was the biggest gamble ever taken in Moscow Mitch's long career and it blew up in his triple-chinned puss like a prank cigar the size of Long Island.
   So, Mitch's gambit cost Barr his job, although he would've been out in seven weeks, anyway, McConnell lost his position as Majority Leeder and the GOP lost control of the Senate for at least the next two years.
   And this is the guy, this political suicide vest bomber, to which the establishment GOP is still clinging in 2022?
     Yeah, good luck with that, old boys.

Saturday, June 26, 2021

Pottersville Digest

(No, you can't have the crumbs! They're mine! Nom nom!)

     The latest shocking brilliance from Madison Cawthorn (R-Eagle's Nest). The stupid does actually burn but is it truly asking too much for it to immolate those from whom it originates?
     No, I didn't think so.

     "But the three men were seeking minimum investments of $1 million and considered selling shares in the project to people outside of the United States..."
     In other words, THE PRODUCERS Part II.

    Whatever happened to Randall Scott?
    He got busted for accepting bribes.

     And as soon as next week, giving a whole new meaning to the acronym TGIF.
     "The top Ohio Republicans—Gov. Mike DeWine, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, and retiring Sen. Rob Portman—are all skipping Trump’s Saturday rally for various reasons."
     Let me guess: "Scheduling conflicts."

    He almost came in his pants when his red-hatted goons invaded the Capitol on January 6th. For those with deeper tans, he was willing to violate the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878.
     This piece of shit should've gotten a lot more than that but I guess it's something.
     He spread Qanon conspiracy theories on his social media then brazenly admitted he was lying the whole time.
     I can't wait until this Nazi on wheels is finally driven from office.
     I've always been a Democratic Socialist by nature. So please, call me a Socialist. I could always use an ego boost.
     It's about damned time. So, of course, Donnie Dumbo is screaming that we need to "save America" from black people voting.
    And, while over a third of us identify as Socialist, this came out according to Gallup. This is does not bode well for Republicans who are arrogantly predicting taking back Congress.
    White redneck old enough to remember the Civil War says black people shouldn't be taught about their past.
     "Police say Buttermoore was upset that one of his employees stopped working at his company, Signs Unlimited Sea, Inc., to work at Screaming Aero Graphix."
     OK, that makes perfect... wait, what?!

     Kevin McCarthy (R-Trump's lap) finally met with Officer Michael Fanone.
     It didn't end well.

     (Whispering) Shut the fuck up. None of you are doctors.

     Not a good look for the school.
     So much for the "good guy with a gun" theory. It's a miracle we ever got out of the 18th century.
    
I thought the Airing of Grievances was in December.
   
Remember all the disasters that piled up in the first five months of the Biden presidency? Me, neither. So stay in your lane, Bobo. And finally...

     I'm so tired of these lunatics.

Friday, June 25, 2021

Interview with Sherry Knowlton

Alexa Williams is a successful lawyer, volunteers weekly at a women’s clinic, and has a sexy weekend boyfriend—not to mention an endearing best friend in her giant English mastiff, Scout. But one autumn day, when Scout takes off into the Pennsylvania woods, Alexa discovers a nightmare she’d never imagined. From that fateful day, Alexa becomes entangled in a murder mystery—one that she tries to unravel by linking it to experiences and symbols in her own life.” - Dead of Autumn.

So begins the synopsis for the first entry in the “Dead” series by June’s Author of the Month, Sherry Knowlton.

15) Sherry, your creation, Alexa Williams, is a stand out character in a genre already crowded with interesting professional and amateur detectives. What brought about her invention?

Alexa is a young attorney who has returned to her home town and joined the family law practice after a decade of law school and a stint at a big law firm in New York City. She’s looking for peace and serenity, living in a forest cabin with her English mastiff Scout. Instead, she keeps finding dead bodies and stumbling into dangerous situations. I created Alexa as a strong female character, who’s smart and sometimes too fearless for her own good. She’s not a typical amateur sleuth but her tendency to stand up for causes and tilt at windmills ends up embroiling her in the midst of a mystery.

14) What do you see as Alexa’s strengths and weaknesses and which quality do you think makes her such an effective and compelling detective?

Strengths – Alexa’s smart, brave, and really cares about people and issues such as the environment.

Weaknesses – Alexa sometimes acts without thinking when confronted with a dangerous situation or one that outrages her sense of justice. She also has a terrible track record with men.

Both her strengths and weaknesses combine to make her a good detective.

13) In your Amazon author page, you wrote, “Sherry spent much of her early career in state government, working primarily with social and human services programs, including services for abused children, rape crisis, domestic violence, and family planning.” Had any of these social service and executive positions informed or inspired you in the “Dead” series?

Very much so. The themes in several of my books reflect areas of social and human services that I dealt with in my career. In my early days in human services, I was involved in programs relating to women’s issues such as family planning, rape crisis and domestic violence. Dead of Autumn visits all three of those topics. My days working in child welfare programs pop up in Dead of Summer which focuses on sex-trafficking but also involves the foster care industry. I also administered a program for Indochinese Refugees after the Vietnam War. Dead of Winter features a later-era family of refugees, these from Syria. Some of the other themes found in the books, like environmental/conservation issues, reflect my personal rather than job interests and experience.

12) Let’s fast-forward to the latest entry in the Williams series, “Dead on the Delta”. How does a lawyer from the mountains of South Central Pennsylvania wind up in Botswana battling the ivory poaching trade? 

If you haven’t read the earlier books, transporting Alexa halfway across the world to Botswana may seem like a huge plot leap. However, one of the main characters in the series, Alexa’s on-again, off-again boyfriend, Reese, has a background in lion research. And, in the fourth book in the series, Reese has moved in with Alexa, and is working in the US for an international wildlife conservation organization. So, it is reasonably plausible that, in book number five, he’s been asked by his employer to take on a four-month temporary assignment in Botswana managing a lion-research project. The permanent manager has returned to the States for surgery. And, Alexa wangles a sabbatical from the family law firm so she can accompany Reese on this adventure. Of course, since this is an Alexa Williams novel, the adventure becomes much more dangerous than Alexa ever imagined.

11) On your YouTube channel, you’d made a plea to your readers to write more reviews. However, it can’t be said that Amazon itself is helping in that regard, thanks to their data-sharing agreement with Facebook with which they weed out allegedly “biased” reviews. This whole thing was brought about because of the Harriet Klausner scandal. So do you see Amazon as being a help or hindrance in the interests of book reviews?

All in all, I appreciate the role that Amazon reviews play in book sales. And, I certainly endorse a level playing field in which the reviews posted on Amazon (and elsewhere) are honest reviews from people who’ve read the books they are rating and reviewing. However, I’ve heard anecdotal examples of Amazon setting the criteria for unbiased reviews too narrowly. Authors have many “friends” and followers on Facebook with whom they have no personal relationship. It’s one thing to preclude your husband or mother from reviewing a book. It’s another to eliminate legitimate, unbiased reviews because a reader who enjoys your books also follows you on Facebook. It’s unclear to me how often Amazon strips reviews where reviewer and author have a loose connection on Facebook and how many of the unsettling stories I hear are apocryphal.

10) Plotter, pantser or plantser?

I always start with a rough chapter-by-chapter outline of each book. However, when I begin to write, the story evolves and can take new directions. But I always know the bad guy and the essentials of the novel’s ending before I write. I also use a calendar to keep the story’s time-flow straight since all of my plots take place over a few months’ time.

9) Now that the Alexa Williams series and fanbase is established, are there any plans to launch another series? 

I have no current plans to start a new series. But I am well along on the manuscript for a non-fiction piece, a travel memoir which approaches my many journeys around the world through a series of essays on different topics. I plan to return to the Alexa series, book number six, soon.

Although I’m not yet contemplating another fiction series, I do have a fairly well-developed concept for a standalone suspense novel. I may take a stab at that after the next Alexa book.

8) How difficult or challenging was it for you to do the requisite research for Dead on the Delta?

I chose to base Dead on the Delta in Botswana, mostly because I’d been there several times on safari. In fact, my husband and I are hooked on African safaris and have taken seven in total to East and Southern Africa. However, I realized that enjoying myself on safari was different from mastering the details of a book about Botswana. I needed specifics about elephant poaching, animal behaviors, the day-to-day life of a lion researcher, and the politics/government of the country. So, it was the perfect excuse to go to Botswana on a research trip. My husband and I spent four weeks there doing research. Most of the time was spent on safari with an extremely knowledgeable and helpful guide who answered my questions on a wide range of subjects. I also traveled to the capital city, learning the city, the government, and interviewing an expert on Botswana wildlife conservation issues. Most fun of all, we spent three days on the Okavango Delta with a young lion researcher, Robynne Kotze, who educated me about her fieldwork and the nuances of lion research. This researcher works for a conservation program called WildCRU, which is sponsored by the University of Oxford in England. I had to obtain permission from Oxford to spend time with Ms. Kotze.

7) What are your greatest strengths and weaknesses as a writer?

This one’s hard. I think it’s difficult to be totally accurate when doing self-assessment. However, I’d say one of my biggest strengths in writing is the ability to write descriptive scenes. Readers often tell me that they can clearly visualize the story as they’re reading it. I am also able to construct fairly complex plots and subplots with multiple characters – and have all the pieces tie together.

In terms of weakness, I’m sure I have many. I still consider myself as a journeywoman writer. However, I know I’m frequently too wordy. I spent years working as a state bureaucrat where more words and complicated writing structure in regulations, legislation, etc., are the norm. Like so many, I aspire to write a sentence as clean as Ernest Hemingway’s but know that level of clarity is something I will never achieve.

6) You’ve described yourself as the kind of kid who’d bring a book and a flashlight under a blanket after bedtime. Who were some of your favorite authors while growing up and had any of them become influences on your own writing?

Yes. I loved to read from a very early age. Nancy Drew was a favorite series. Clearly, those books have influenced my current work. Sometimes I describe the Alexa Williams series as “Nancy Drew for grown-ups.” The list of authors I loved while growing up is long. Mary Stewart, Daphne DuMaurier, Helen MacInnes, and Alastair MacLean were popular suspense/thriller writers I gravitated to. Hemingway was and is a favorite. As a college English major, I did Independent Study semesters on two diverse authors, D.H. Lawrence and Thomas Hardy as well as read a wide range of classics. But the other author who I truly loved and probably influences my writing the most is John D. MacDonald and his Travis McGee series. McGee, who lived on a houseboat in Florida, never met a damsel in distress he’d refuse to help. I see a bit of Travis in my protagonist, Alexa.

5) Getting the hard copies from your publisher in the mail. Does it ever get old?

My books have all been printed as trade paperbacks with soft covers, but the sense of accomplishment is the same. Holding a book in your hand; one that you’ve spent so much time and effort perfecting is a unique thrill. I love it!!

4) Describe your typical writing day, if there’s any such thing. Do you draft in notebooks or your computer exclusively, use both and, if you set a daily word goal, what is it?

I draft my outlines on paper. And, I make lots of notes prior to and during writing that I jot down on paper as they come to me. I often get great ideas for plot points or dialogue when I’m driving, so I keep a notebook handy to make notes when I come to a stop.  However, when I write the actual manuscript, it’s on computer.

I break most of the other rules that I hear from writing experts. I don’t write every day. I don’t set word goals. I travel quite a bit and also still do some consulting work. If I have to put my work-in-process aside for either of those purposes, it’s no problem. I’ll just pick up my writing when I’m back home or the consulting project is complete. However, there are key times when I’m really on a roll with a book. Then, I spend days and nights immersed in the manuscript. I’m a night owl, so it’s not unusual to find me writing at one o’clock in the morning. This somewhat erratic approach to writing works well for me.

3) Are Alexa and Reese ever going to tie the knot?

At this point, even I don’t even know the answer to that question. Even if I knew, I wouldn’t tell.

2) What’s the one change you’d most like to see in the future of mystery/suspense fiction?

For Sherry Knowlton to join that elite list of automatic best-selling authors? Aside from that – and not unrelated - I’d like mystery/suspense fiction to embrace and elevate a wider range of authors. I read a fairly wide swath of authors in the genre and interview many on my podcast (Milford House Mysteries with co-host JM West). Those I read include best-sellers as well as authors published by smaller independent presses and some self-published works. So many of those in the latter group are wonderful, innovative writers with a distinct voice; in some cases, I consider their novels to be much better than those of other authors whose works continue to sell millions of copies the first day of publication. In an ideal world, some tectonic shift would occur to realign incentives in a way that would encourage key influencers (major booklists, reviewers, movie producers, and more) to take a serious look at books published outside the big publishing house tent. 

1) So, what’s next for Sherry Knowlton?

As I mentioned, I have a travel memoir I hope to see published soon. Then, I’ll be turning back to the next Alexa Williams adventure. On a personal front, I’m emerging from COVID hibernation, fully vaccinated and ready for some adventures of my own. I have a road trip West planned this summer and hope to travel to England, Scotland and Ireland later this summer on a trip postponed from last year (pandemic restrictions permitting).

If you’re interested in learning more about Sherry Knowlton and her work, then follow the handy links provided below:

Facebook author page.

Instagram

Twitter

LinkedIn

Pinterest

YouTube  channel

Goodreads

Amazon Author Page: The Amazon author page contains links to all five of her books.

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Pottersville Digest: Expanded edition

(Conspiracy theories are like any other recklessly-started fires. You need to starve them of oxygen.)

     Maddow lays out why Democrats can't take off for August.

     Take heart, buckos. There may be another Operation Paperclip.

     To put it in round figures, about $2.4 million.


     This is a fascinating story about baseball's baseballs.

     When "prophet guys" meet pillow guys, hilarity WILL ensue.

     You want to get rid of a holiday to offset Juneteenth, Mo? Here are some places to start...

     Fucking A.

     God, these people are morons.

     Keep Jeff fucking Bezos from returning to earth? Hell, I'll sign it.

     Keep your friends close and your enemies closer

     Qanon: Cosplay for the mentally challenged.

     More redneck, white grievance.

     Among the more batshit insane ideas: Turning Gitmo into a leper colony.

     A much-needed 60 second blast o' truth.

   Katie Hill never should've resigned. I've always believed that. Now. she's coming around and believing that. She may even run for her old seat.

     "Well, Kevin, I know one thing for sure, when the former president sees that poll where DeSantis did better than him, look for that other shoe to drop from Trump." -Michael Steele.

     Barely literate hack doctor busted for making racist posts.

     Fascist asshole rolls out plan to make the nation's whitest state even whiter.

     Do these lunatics honestly think the government won't go after them when they publicly threaten the president's life?

     Joey Scar lost his shit Tuesday morning laughing at how the GOP is now the party of Ron DeSantis.

     "Investigator of the Year", eh?

     Meme intermission.

     There's no way you can convince me there isn't a second Civil War on the horizon.
     I honestly want to know what is keeping this asshole out of a lunatic asylum.

     Florida Man, the world's worst super villain.


     SecDef Lloyd Austin lowered the boom on Matt Gaetz re: "critical race theory".
     The Qanon pandemic has now spread to the UK.
     Yet more white privilege. I half-expected her vacation to be in Narnia.

     Andy Biggs wants to investigate Jan. 6th riot after voting down bill to investigate Jan. 6th riot.

    Giuliani just got suspended from practicing law in New York. Couldn't've happened to a nicer, treasonous ambulance chaser.

     This is absolutely horrifying. I haven't seen anything like this since 9/11. Now we're going to hear news stories for months to come about the shoddy buildings and how they were allowed to flout building codes.

     What happened, Andy? Was Four Seasons' parking lot booked by Sidney Powell?

     Of course they're giving white nationalists a nation-wide platform. When has Fox NOT done that?
     Here are five of the biggest reasons why that New York appeals court suspended Giuliani. In short, Rudy is a delusional lunatic.
     The DOJ has now arrested and charged over 500 people in connection to the January 6th riot.
     Trump almost died last September and his pulse ox was below 90. And finally...

     OAN (Orwell's Absolute Nightmare) has officially gone full-blown fascist by calling for mass executions. (Tip o' the tinfoil hat to Constant Reader, CC.)

KindleindaWind, my writing blog.

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  • Pandagon.
  • Slackivist.
  • WTF Is It Now?
  • No Blood For Hubris.
  • Lydia Cornell, a very smart and accomplished lady.
  • Roger Ailes (the good one.)
  • BlondeSense.
  • The Smirking Chimp.
  • Hammer of the Blogs.
  • Vast Left Wing Conspiracy.
  • Argville.
  • Existentialist Cowboy.
  • The Progressive.
  • The Nation.
  • Mother Jones.
  • Vanity Fair.
  • Salon.com.
  • Citizens For Legitimate Government.
  • News Finder.
  • Indy Media Center.
  • Lexis News.
  • Military Religious Freedom.
  • McClatchy Newspapers.
  • The New Yorker.
  • Bloggingheads TV, political vlogging.
  • Find Articles.com, the next-best thing to Nexis.
  • Altweeklies, for the news you won't get just anywhere.
  • The Smirking Chimp
  • Don Emmerich's Peace Blog
  • Wikileaks.
  • The Peoples' Voice.
  • Dictionary.com.
  • CIA World Fact Book.
  • IP address locator.
  • Tom Tomorrow's hilarious strip.
  • Babelfish, an instant, online translator. I love to translate Ann Coulter's site into German.
  • Newsmeat: Find out who's donating to whom.
  • Wikipedia.
  • Uncyclopedia.
  • anysoldier.com
  • Icasualties
  • Free Press
  • YouTube
  • The Bone Bridge.
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