Hiatus.
Have a good one, or something.
Labels: Ed Miliband, hiatus
Labels: Ed Miliband, hiatus
Labels: BBC, BSkyB, media analysis, media ownership, News Corporation, News International, Rupert Murdoch, Vince Cable
There are suggestions for low-cost operations in the US soil, such as shooting sprees in restaurants catering for government workers (such as in Washington DC), and using trucks to mow down pedestrians on crowded streets. The latter tactic can be further refined, Khan suggests, by welding sharp blades to the front of the truck so as to create “the ultimate mowing machine.”
- Do not travel abroad for jihad – act on US soil instead.
- Do not use mobile phones and the Internet for any jihad-related communication – if you have to, use coded language and encryption tools.
- If you are clean stay clean – do not interact with other activists.
- Do not access jihadi websites – get your jihadi propaganda fix from anti-jihadi monitoring sites such as MEMRI and SITE.
Labels: jihadists, online jihadists, spree killings, takfirists, terror, terrorism
Labels: Brass Eye, Claire Rayner, obituaries
The problem at the core of the whole fiasco was that the police had got themselves in too deep to be able to retreat with dignity. The more they dug themselves a hole, the more they were determined to turn something up.
Labels: Blairites, books, Gordon Brown, Jonathan Powell, New Labour, politics, Tony Blair
Labels: Alan Johnson, Ed Balls, Ed Miliband, John Denham, Labour, Labour leadership contest 2010, Labour shadow cabinet election, New Labour, politics, Yvette Cooper
Labels: Ed Miliband, Labour, Labour leadership contest 2010, Labour shadow cabinet election, New Labour, politics