What do you make of the claims that Amedy Coulibaly had pledged allegiance to ISIS/L? It seems odd he would have been working in tandem with the Kouachis if they were aligned with rival organizations.
France has few qualms about intervening militarily in their former colonial possessions. That wouldn't apply to Yemen.
I'm all for anything that reduces fossil fuel use, but Fukushima showed that nuclear power also requires backup, can also be knocked offline, and the consequences of the backup failing at the same time are extremely dire.
To be blunt, I think the lack of any deaths is the biggest reason the national media has provided so little coverage of New Orleans. However, I wouldn't assume that means nobody else is paying attention either. On the day it happened, it was the top story on the local news where I live, despite New Orleans being 1500 miles away; and when I caught a glance at lunch yesterday of the list of stories on CBS's website that people were actually reading most often there that day, none of the Washington scandals the media's been hyping this week made the list while both New Orleans and the Belize pyramid demolition mentioned above did.
Every ratings period, the number of Americans still watching the TV news shrinks some more.
What do you make of the claims that Amedy Coulibaly had pledged allegiance to ISIS/L? It seems odd he would have been working in tandem with the Kouachis if they were aligned with rival organizations.
France has few qualms about intervening militarily in their former colonial possessions. That wouldn't apply to Yemen.
I'm all for anything that reduces fossil fuel use, but Fukushima showed that nuclear power also requires backup, can also be knocked offline, and the consequences of the backup failing at the same time are extremely dire.
I wasn't aware the nation ruled by Mao Zedong a few short decades ago has long had an in-built disdain for ‘cults of personality.’
To be blunt, I think the lack of any deaths is the biggest reason the national media has provided so little coverage of New Orleans. However, I wouldn't assume that means nobody else is paying attention either. On the day it happened, it was the top story on the local news where I live, despite New Orleans being 1500 miles away; and when I caught a glance at lunch yesterday of the list of stories on CBS's website that people were actually reading most often there that day, none of the Washington scandals the media's been hyping this week made the list while both New Orleans and the Belize pyramid demolition mentioned above did.
Sunil Tripathi has been missing since March 16.