Links With Your Coffee - Monday
- Reporters sans frontières - Annual Worldwide Press Freedom Index - 2007
There were slightly fewer press freedom violations in the United States (48th) and blogger Josh Wolf was freed after 224 days in prison. But the detention of Al-Jazeera’s Sudanese cameraman, Sami Al-Haj, since 13 June 2002 at the military base of Guantanamo and the murder of Chauncey Bailey in Oakland in August mean the United States is still unable to join the lead group.
tip to Swedes for Obama - Save the Planet: Vote Smart - New York Times
People often ask: I want to get greener, what should I do? New light bulbs? A hybrid? A solar roof? Well, all of those things are helpful. But actually, the greenest thing you can do is this: Choose the right leaders. It is so much more important to change your leaders than change your light bulbs.
Why? Because leaders write the rules, set the standards and offer the tax incentives that drive market behavior across a whole city, state or country. Whatever any of us does individually matters a tiny bit. But when leaders change the rules, you get scale change across the whole marketplace. And the energy-climate challenge we face today is a huge scale problem. Without scale, all you have is a green hobby. - Emptybottle.org: First Paragraphs From Stories I'll Never Write Episode 1
Hmm, that happens to me too, paragraphs appearing in my brain right before I fall asleep. I think I'll write some of them down. It never occured to me that I could start stories and feel no guilt over not finishing them. I like it.
- Every novel on Man Booker Prize shortlist to be available free for online readers - Times Online
I'm not a big fan of reading novels on a computer screen, but it is a way to see if you'd like your own copy.
- KR Blog » Blog Archive » Sunday Funnies: Coffee or Tea?
Coffee of course.
- Caravan: An exclusive short story by Booker prize winner Anne Enright
The clothes hissed as she wrung them out and a little fizz of bubbles sprang out of the weave. "I thought we were supposed to be doing well?" she said.
More from Anne Enright - BBC NEWS | A question of belief
It may be daring to say it but America seems to be experiencing an atheist moment. Although "In God We Trust" was declared the national motto by an act of Congress more than 50 years ago and has been stamped on the currency for longer than that, some considerable doubt has developed of late.


Comments
When writing, tea.
One coffee, one tea, I'm betting coffee comes out ahead, though there is certainly nothing wrong with a good cup of tea.
Nothing for me, thanks, I don't need to be drugged up. If I ever do start drinking one or the other regularly, I notice that I don't feel and perform as well overall as I do when I'm drug-free. Then after a week or so, I need the drug that used to make me feel jazzed just to feel normal.
What's the story behind "Swedes for Obama"?
Just a onegoodmove reader with a blog that sends me lots of interesting links, and oh yeah, they support Obama for president.
But why? It's like Texans for Oluf Palme or something -- I don't see the connection. Why would Swedes have a particular interest -- hell, why would they even have any knowledge about Barak Obama? I heard about this a long time ago, and I could never figure out what the deal was. It's like some international, political dadaism movement or something...
Oh, and I like tea. :)
Dzwonka, If you simply go to their website, you have your answer.
It may be difficult to understand because here in the U.S. we are infamous for not being that interested in what's going on in the rest of the world. However, the rest of the world is very interested in what's going on here.
Coffee 95% of the time. Tea for colds and when a evening warm drink is needed.
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