CIA employee identities discoverable via web searches
Posted by
Lippard
at
3/12/2006 05:24:00 PM
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Posted by
Lippard
at
3/11/2006 08:45:00 PM
2
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Labels: technology
Posted by
Lippard
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3/11/2006 06:19:00 PM
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Labels: technology
Posted by
Lippard
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3/11/2006 06:13:00 PM
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Labels: religion, Scientology
Posted by
Lippard
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3/11/2006 11:58:00 AM
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Posted by
Lippard
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3/11/2006 11:37:00 AM
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Labels: politics
Posted by
Lippard
at
3/11/2006 10:49:00 AM
5
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Labels: Arizona, education, politics, religion, Scientology
It finally started raining last night, ending a five-month drought in Phoenix. It last rained on October 18, 2005, which was while I was having my house hooked up to the city sewer system (I have an older home that had two cesspools).
Posted by
Lippard
at
3/11/2006 10:37:00 AM
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Labels: Arizona
Posted by
Lippard
at
3/10/2006 05:17:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, housing bubble
The Bush administration has appointed 28-year-old Douglas Hoelscher to be executive director for the Homeland Security Advisory Committee, an amalgam of 20 panels of outside experts and officials who advise the administration on homeland security matters.
Hoelscher is said to have no management experience. He came to the White House in 2001 as a $30,000-a-year scheduler.
And more at Effect Measure:Suppose you are a young 28 year old with no management experience but, according to your Friendster.com profile a good listener and someone whose favorite books include William Bennett's The Death of Outrage: Bill Clinton and the Assault on American Ideals. You aren't entirely inexperienced. In 2001 you were a $30,000 a year low level White House staffer who arranged presidential travel. Not enough for you? How about a top level job in the Department of Homeland Security? That can be arranged.(Via Tara Smith at Aetiology.)
Welcome Douglas Hoelscher, the new executive director of the Homeland Security Advisory Commitees (plural). Hoelscher is nowthe "primary representative" of department Secretary Michael Chertoff in dealing with more than 20 advisory boards. Among them is the Homeland Security Advisory Council, which includes such high-powered figures as Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, former Lockheed Chairman Norman Augustine, and former Defense and Energy Secretary James Schlesinger. (Shane Harris in the National Journal)
Posted by
Lippard
at
3/10/2006 04:17:00 PM
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Labels: politics