Blasphemous Metablogging
Secular Blasphemy is blogging about blogging

 




















































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  1. oktober 2003


Back home in Iraq

A fascinating story about a group of exiled Iraqi students returning home to see for themselves how their country fared. They found reality to be dramatically at odds with western media reports.

Swinging her legs, happy and relaxed like I have never seen her before, Sama says: "If we hadn't been to Iraq, we'd be really depressed right now. I came back, saw the news and thought, `Are they talking about the same Iraq?'" Is this, I wonder, because the media can only deal with Arabs as victims or terrorists? The IPO members don't think so. Rather, Yasser says, there are several reasons why the reporting from Iraq is stressing the negative over the positive. "First, buildings being bombed is a much better story than the formation of the Baghdad city council to clear up the rubbish and sort out the sewers. Angry Iraqis make a better story than hopeful Iraqis."

"Second, a lot of the media was openly anti-war, so now that there are hundreds of thousands of mass graves being opened up and all the evidence shows that the Iraqis supported [the war], the media are latching on to the few things, like the looting and, of course, the weapons issue - that was always a red herring - that seem to vindicate their position. And third - I know this sounds like a petty point, but it's very important - a lot of journalists are using the same guides and translators that they used before the war, because they know them. They don't seem to realise that those people were carefully selected by the regime because of their loyalty to Saddam's line. So most journalists are getting a totally distorted picture."

You should absolutely read the whole thing. Via Steven Den Beste.


11:13:41 PM    comment []

Does the world need more of this?

HowTo: Write bad documentation that looks good. It portrays to be a satire, but I think a lot of people actually follow this advice.

Spend lots of time on the appearance and presentation of your documentation. Your management is easily distracted by shiny things, and will not realize that your binders contain information that could easily be recreated by anyone.

This works for presentations, so surely it should work for documentation, too.


2:25:42 AM    comment []


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