Tuesday on Lake Champlain
- In comments, Assaf Moghadam notes that his Studies in Conflict and Terrorism critique of Bob Pape’s work is free to download (PDF).
- In light of the 5 August 40-year anniversary of the LTBT, the National Security Archive notes its 2003 collection, “The Making of the Limited Test Ban Treaty, 1958-1963.”
- Erin Jenne compares and contrasts ethnic politics in Macedonia and Kosovo.
- Tom Murphy notes the prevalence of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis in North Korea.
- Joshua Foust blasts The Guardian for continued problems in its coverage of the NSA-Snowden-panoptican affair.
- A.C. McKell: “International Relations as Historical Political Theory.”
And also:
- SEK laments the continued white maleness of the Doctor.
- Making the rounds: “40 maps [that] they didn’t teach you in high school.”
- Maybe he should have just shipped it?
Apparently a black actor, Paterson Joseph, was offered the role as the Doctor but turned it down. So it seems it wasn’t for lack of trying, even if that trying was not very persistent (https://www.radiotimes.com/news/2013-08-06/doctor-who-writer-neil-gaiman-a-black-actor-has-already-turned-down-the-role-of-the-doctor )
Having read Foust’s long (recent) piece on the Snowden affair, it struck me as being mostly speculation and dodgy historical comparisons, or little more than ‘mendacious narrative-building’
Not that this excuses Greenwald or the Guardian