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who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
View Article  United 93: Why it's worth seeing

While United 93 powerfully captures the drama of the final moments of that doomed flight, you should also see it for the depiction of what went wrong that terrible morning on Sept. 11, 2001.

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View Article  Musharraf on tensions in his tribal areas

Gen. Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, held forth on fighting terrorism in his country's tribal areas in this interview with the Guardian published April 28.

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View Article  Iran in the news

NYT: Iran strategy: Cold War echo (analysis)

BBC: Iran nuclear plan 'irreversible' 

BBC (April 28): Long, hot summer of confrontation with Iran (analysis)

BBC (April 28): Iran 'flouts UN nuclear demands'

BBC (April 28): US says Iran top terror sponsor

View Article  Bush administration considers prosecuting reporters in leak cases

From the NYT:

Earlier administrations have fired and prosecuted government officials who provided classified information to the press. They have also tried to force reporters to identify their sources.

But the Bush administration is exploring a more radical measure to protect information it says is vital to national security: the criminal prosecution of reporters under the espionage laws.

Such an approach would signal a thorough revision of the informal rules of engagement that have governed the relationship between the press and the government for many decades. Leaking in Washington is commonplace and typically entails tolerable risks for government officials and, at worst, the possibility of subpoenas to journalists seeking the identities of sources.

But the Bush administration is putting pressure on the press as never before, and it is operating in a judicial climate that seems increasingly receptive to constraints on journalists.

In the last year alone, a reporter for The New York Times was jailed for refusing to testify about a confidential source; her source, a White House aide, was prosecuted on charges that he lied about his contacts with reporters; a C.I.A. analyst was dismissed for unauthorized contacts with reporters; and a raft of subpoenas to reporters were largely upheld by the courts.

It is not easy to gauge whether the administration will move beyond these efforts to criminal prosecutions of reporters. In public statements and court papers, administration officials have said the law allows such prosecutions and that they will use their prosecutorial discretion in this area judiciously. But there is no indication that a decision to begin such a prosecution has been made. A Justice Department spokeswoman, Tasia Scolinos, declined to comment on Friday.

View Article  Here's hoping this works!

The Ontario government has launched a plan to reintroduce Atlantic salmon to Lake Ontario, a species that got wiped out more than a century ago.

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View Article  The high cost of spreading democracy via military means

The cost of fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could eventually cost the U.S. government $811 billion US, says a new Congressional study.

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View Article  Info czar Reid slams Harper's ATI proposals

John Reid, the federal access to information commissioner, has blasted the Conservative government's proposed changes to the federal access to information law.

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View Article  Two Canadians to work for Al-Jazeera International

Richard Gizbert, late of ABC News, and Global Television correspondent Kimberly Halkett are joining the new al-Jazeera International venture.

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View Article  United 93: A harrowing story, but to what point, asks NYT

The NYT's Manohla Dargis thinks Paul Greengrass's United 93 is the American feel-bad film of the year. There's just one problem ...

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View Article  Journo calls for Myron Thompson to quit over outburst

In the flap over allowing the media to cover repatriation ceremonies, Alberta Conservative MP Myron Thompson, first elected as Reformer, said if it were his son coming home from Afghanistan in a body bag, he'd "shoot the first media" covering the arrival.

My friend Deborah Jones is a journalist who has a son serving in the military as a reservist. Here's a copy of a letter she sent to Thompson, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, her own MP (Stephen Owen) and Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor.

She wrote a related essay in Time magazine recently.

View Article  Al-Jazeera's Cairo bureau chief arrested

Hussein Abdel Ghani has been charged with making a false report in connection with the Sinai bombings.

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View Article  Federal budget preview pieces

I did a couple of features for CTV.ca. One profiles Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, or as Paul Martin liked to call him during the 2006 federal election, Mike Harris Plus. :)

Another is headlined Budgeting for a majority, and it looks at the political purpose of this first budget and the role of tax cuts within it.

View Article  Double standards in U.S. leak probes?

Investigative journo Murray Waas (the new Bob Woodward, sez Jay Rosen) on the case of Sen. Pat Roberts vs. CIA staffer Mary McCarthy.

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View Article  NYT editor talks web journalism - II

More Jonathan Landman. I like this guy's online style. His answers have the ring of truth, which means he's either being honest or is a supremely gifted spinner! :)

I clipped out some online highlights, but he also answered some print questions.

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View Article  Online Budget-o-rama en francais

The French government is putting up an online budget game for French citizens to hack around with.

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View Article  'MEPs reveal extent of CIA flights'

This story has me wondering whether CIA employees get frequent flyer miles for any extraordinary renditions they perform using Company aircraft.

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View Article  BBC: Al-Qaeda jihad vs. U.S. 'long war'

The Beeb's Paul Reynolds looks at Osama bin Laden's state of the jihad speech and compares it to U.S. plans for fighting the long war.

No big surprises in his analysis.

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View Article  The scientific breakthrough of the century
From the BBC: Experts make flatulence-free bean
View Article  Filmmaking and the politics of heroism

To make a movie, you need a manageable number of characters. If you're basing it on a true story, some people will be the light shone on them, and some won't. This dilemma confronted director Paul Greengrass and his new 9-11 film United 93.

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View Article  I'm presuming he won't even have to switch desks

Fox News commentator Tony Snow is Dubya's new press secretary.

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View Article  Tartar sauce and perogies -- not as crazy as it sounds

Got home from work tonight feeling famished (making tonight pretty much the same as any other night).

Put a snack-sized pack of perogies (found a good Polish supplier very near Howard Park and Roncesvalles) in the microwave, and proceeded to defrost them.

However, when that process had finished, I discovered to my horror that the sour cream in the fridge had morphed into a brand new life form.

What to replace it with? I didn't have any Ranch-style salad dressing.

But I did have tartar sauce, and by God if it didn't work!

Try it yourself sometime!

View Article  NYT editor talks web journalism

The NYT's Jonathan Landman, the paper's deputy managing editor for digital journalism, talks about j-school and the coming age of the multiplatform journalist.

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View Article  A terrorist, eh? Well I'll show you: I'll burn these newspapers!

From The Nation, based in Lahore, Pakistan:

'Taliban' set newspapers on fire

From Our Correspondent
PESHAWAR – Alleged Taliban set on fire bundles of local and national newspapers before their delivery in Mirali town of NWA Monday morning, reports said.
The alleged Talibans told the tribesmen that they committed this act because they are dubbed as terrorists and miscreants in the newspapers and vowed to continue such acts, they also asked the local media representatives to mend their ways. Later these Talibans while brandishing their weapons fled from the scene.
, without being offered any resistance.

The story then takes a turn from the unintentionally amusing to the serious:

It is pertinent to add that ongoing war on terror and growing trend of militancy resulted into wide range of unrest amongst the tribal journalists. Almost all of tribal journalists from North and South Waziristan Agency have either left their profession or shifted to some other place. The whereabouts of Hayat Ullah, Correspondent of The Nation, mysteriously abducted from his residence on December 5 2005, are still not known. His relatives allege that he is in custody of the secret agencies, whereas government is contradicting such allegations. Some 17 months back two correspondents of The Nation Allah Noor Wazir and Amir Nawab Khan were mysteriously assassinated by armed persons.

View Article  'Al Qaeda Central'

The BBC's Aamer Ahmed Khan describes South Waziristan, Pakistan -- which isn't adjacent to Afghanistan's Kandahar province, but isn't that far either.

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View Article  Next door to 'Al Qaeda Central'

The province of Zabul is right next to South Waziristan, Pakistan, and just north of where Canadian troops are operating in Kandahar province. This BBC story looks at how the U.S. military is trying to ...   more »

View Article  Sound familiar?
The Harper government plans to keep the media away from witnessing the return of the bodies four soldiers killed in a bombing in Afghanistan. Pop question: Can anyone think of any other government on this continent that's adopted such restrictions?

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View Article  CBC's National Playlist, I hardly knew ye

Funny. You wake up one morning, and you find something you didn't really listen to disappeared almost a month ago.

I speak of CBC's The National Playlist -- strangely, without Peter Mansbridge. :)

I'm glad they killed it. The 50 Tracks list from which it sprang was one thing, but listening to music hipsters have formulaic arguments five days per week , culminating in people voting online for their favourite tracks, struck me as a forced exercise in interactivity.

And it proved impossible to keep the energy level up. I certainly tuned it out.

Save that idea for perhaps an end-of-year special.

While I hear the dulcet tones of Bill Richardson on CBC Radio One as I write, I'm not entirely sure what the replacement show is about.

View Article  2006 Pulitzers reaffirm adversarial relationship between press, gov't

NYT media columnist David Carr said this year's crop of Pulitzer Prizes, awarded last Monday, show the press has resumed its adversarial role in its relationship with the U.S. federal government. The reaction of some conservative critics would suggest that's true.

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View Article  'Minority Report'-style newspapers not SciFi any more

This NYT story talks about how a thin, plastic, foldable newspaper with constantly changing text is a thing of the present.

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View Article  LAT columnist loses blog for posting comments using a false handle

Pulitzer Prize winner Michael A. Hiltzik had been an LA Times business columnist and blogger. The blog has been taken away. His offence? Posting comments on other blogs (and his own) under an assumed name.

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View Article  If you're a diehard Islamist and Hamas and Sudan blow you off, who's left?

Osama bin Laden calls for holy war in Sudan and Palestine, and the ingrate governments there distanced themselves from him. The nerve!

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View Article  'Google's China Problem (and China's Google Problem)'
Tech journalist Clive Thompson takes a look at Google's presence in China. I haven't read the whole thing yet, but what I've seen so far is both informative and fascinating. Check it out.
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