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Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/feed/ 0
Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/feed/ 0
Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/feed/ 0
Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/feed/ 0
Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
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Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/feed/ 0
Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
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Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Broadband Politics » Fascism http://broadbandpolitics.com On the theory and practice of networking Wed, 18 Aug 2010 22:39:17 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Buy Ventolin No Prescription http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2009/06/iranian-protests/#comments Sat, 20 Jun 2009 19:02:29 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2009/06/iranian-protests/ Andrew Sullivan Buy Ventolin No Prescription, is the one-man, citizen journalism aggregator of the protests in Iran today. His collection of Tweets and YouTube videos convey the impression of a large-scale uprising that the government is trying to control with riot police, buy Ventolin no prescription, Where can i find Ventolin online, chemical weapons, and propaganda, online buying Ventolin. Buy no prescription Ventolin online, It certainly appears that the uprising is gathering steam and that the government is out-matched. Given that the Supreme Leader relies on his moral authority to govern, Ventolin from canadian pharmacy, Buy Ventolin from mexico, and that authority is now shot full of holes, it seems unlikely that he can hang on to power, where can i order Ventolin without prescription. Buy Ventolin in canada, Twitter and YouTube are certainly playing a role in getting the news out of the blackout the Iranian government has sought to impose. Buy cheap Ventolin no rx. Online buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin over the counter. Purchase Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin online c.o.d. Buy Ventolin without a prescription. Ventolin pharmacy. Ventolin samples. Buy generic Ventolin. Buy Ventolin online no prescription. Order Ventolin no prescription. Buy Ventolin online cod. Ventolin price. Buy cheapest Ventolin. Where can i buy Ventolin online. Purchase Ventolin online. Where can i buy cheapest Ventolin online. Ventolin for sale. Rx free Ventolin. Australia, uk, us, usa, canada, mexico, india, craiglist, ebay, paypal. Order Ventolin from mexican pharmacy. Order Ventolin.

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Summing-up the Beijing Games http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:34 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/summing-up-the-beijing-games/ their real essence:
Yet what planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable. The near-hysterical drive by Chinese leaders to put on the biggest, most spectacular sporting event ever, and to engineer a generation of Chinese medalists regardless of the financial or human costs, is rather more disconcerting to the outside world than convincing. If it was Beijing's intention to prove China's greatness via the Games, what it has demonstrated instead is the fragility of its ego.
Couldn't have said it better myself. So what does this say for the London Games?
British officials are no doubt wondering how they can possibly top the spectacle of Beijing when London hosts the Summer Games in 2012. They shouldn't even try. The British have nothing to prove, and it will be refreshing to watch an event in which athleticism matters more than image. The London Olympics will probably be messier and less awe-inspiring than the Chinese Games, but it's a good bet they'll be more fun
Sports is supposed to be fun, you know. That being said, an opening ceremony featuring Daleks and Cybermen would be welcome. ]]>
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Like I said http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/like-i-said-2/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:53:32 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4844 boosting his own work:
China's most famous film director, Zhang Yimou, who directed both ceremonies, said only Chinese performers were skilled, disciplined and obedient enough to lay on the sort of song and dance display seen on Sunday night and admired around the world... He also showed little concern for the few critical voices who found the mass organisation of thousands of performers reminiscent of the Soviet era. "I often joke with (foreign interviewers) and say that our level of human performance is second in the world," he said. "Number one is North Korea. Their performances are totally uniform, and uniformity in this way brings beauty. We Chinese can do it too. After hard training and strict discipline, Chinese achieve that as well."
It takes a peculiar aesthetic taste to find thousands of people acting in perfect unison beautiful, and there's no accounting for it. Either you do or you don't, and I'm among those who would rather see individual talent than such displays. The Brit segment during the closing stressed individualism and was therefore much more enjoyable. The Beijing Games were certainly well organized, with a minimum of cheating outside of boxing and women's gymnastics, and flowed well except for problems caused by the climate in Beijing and Hong Kong. Of course it rains in London as well, but it won't be so hot and muggy, and the equestrian events won't be shortened. It's kinda sad that baseball and softball won't be played, but all the events outside the core track and field competitions should be regarded as optional fluff anyhow; the Greeks didn't tumble and play ping-pong, because Britain didn't invent ping-pong until the 19th century.]]>
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Mao’s Little Helper http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/maos-little-helper/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:42:22 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/2008/08/maos-little-helper/ a fine review of "Snow Falling in Spring", a children's book about Mao's China. We join the narrative in the middle of the account of the Great Leap Forward:
...Neighbors contribute their cooking pots and cutlery for the cause. When Li’s grandmother asks if anyone has seen her cleaver, the little girl proudly responds, “Yes, I helped our country with it.” The family retrieves the big kettle and some spoons from the pile, but the cleaver, as she recalls, “had joined its comrades in the burning fire, doing its share for China.” Everyone has a good laugh over that one. Then there is the war on the sparrows, a crusade to eliminate the accused scourge of crops. Li and her brother, Di Di, cheer lustily as her father’s pellet gun fells one feathered threat after another. But things do not go as hoped. Making good steel, it turns out, is more difficult than it looks, and the government rejects the lot, leaving the neighbors downhearted and decidedly less well equipped in their kitchens. As for the sparrows, well, the government had not considered the fact that sparrows eat insects. Crops are ravaged. In coming years, as a result of natural and man-made disasters, millions die. And then things really begin to get bad.
I don't suppose China's youngsters are reading this book. And speaking of the Times' tech beat, Ashlee Vance has jumped to the Grey Lady from The Register. My condolences on the demotion.]]>
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Hail the new China, just like the old China http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/hail-the-new-china-just-like-the-old-china/ http://broadbandpolitics.com/2008/08/hail-the-new-china-just-like-the-old-china/#comments Sat, 16 Aug 2008 11:41:13 +0000 Richard Bennett http://bennett.com/blog/?p=4810 They weren't what they appeared to be:
Media reports said the children were from the Galaxy Children's Art Troupe, which involves young actors and actresses mainly from the dominant Han ethnic group which makes up about 92 per cent of China's 1.3 billion population. But the programme for the four-hour ceremony had said the children were from different ethnic groups. "56 children from 56 Chinese ethnic groups cluster around the Chinese national flag, representing the 56 ethnic groups," read the media guide for the opening ceremony. The fill-ins came as China struggles to keep conflicts with its ethnic groups out of the spotlight during the Olympics.
So we had fake singing, fake fireworks, fake ethnic harmony, fake passports, fake fans bussed in to fill empty seats, fake promises of free speech violated by visa denials and arrested journalists. The Olympics were supposed to be the coming-out party for The New China. Indeed they are, and we've learned that the New China is just like the Old China, only shinier. Don't take my word for it. ask any of the 900 soldiers working the controls under the stadium who had to wear diapers because they weren't allowed to leave their posts for 7 hours. And for more perspective. see Ruth Coniff of The Progressive on The Totalitarian Olympics:
I would be a lot more excited about the summer Olympics if the host country weren't fielding teams of athletes who are essentially forced laborers. Talk about taking the fun out of sports. Yang Wenjun, a gold medalist in flatwater canoeing, told The New York Times recently that he longs to quit, but can't. The Chinese government refused to let him retire after he won his gold medal in 2004, threatening to cut off the income he and his poor, rice-farming parents live on. Yang's situation is typical. The system of government-run Chinese sports schools takes children as young as 6 years old from their parents and trains them in their chosen sports, forgoing regular education. Stars are pushed to compete through injury, denied rest and medical care, and put through a grueling training regimen.
In the case of gymnastics, children are taken from their families at age three.]]>
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