libertarianrant.com: Who Protests the Protestors?
A rundown the slogans and antics of the anti-Bush, anti-war, anti-Republican protestors in NYC, with occasional commentary. Read the full story.
wired.com: We're All Journalists Now
Wired interviews respected columnist Dan Gillmor about how mass media has changed with the advent of blogs and other market-shifting technologies. Read the full story.
dissidentfrogman.com: Gone in Thirty Seconds
Everyone's favorite libertarian amphibian does the math, and figures out that Congress' daughters and sons are far from under-represented in the American armed forces. Read the full story.
reason.com: Jabbing JibJab
I don't know what's more surprising: that the owners of copyright to "This Land is Made for You and Me" are threatening to sue the creators of the Flash parody "This Land", or that the writer of the original song was a communist. Read the full story.
wired.com: The Empire Blogs Back
An article about how businesses are using blogs to stay in touch with -- and react to -- their customers. Read the full story.
samizdata.net: The Cost of Cowardice
Comments on the of the capitulation of the Philippines government to Iraq terrorists. Read the full story.
wired.com: Bloggers Suffer Burnout
Some bloggers are finding the demands of keeping up with their sites just too much work for a hobby. Burned out, they're either turning off comments or dropping out all together. Read the full story.
wired.com: America's War With Blogistan
Say something controversial in a blog, and in a few hours the entire world may know about it ... with consequences you may not have expected. Read the full story.
bureaucrash.com: Green Party National Convention Crashed!
Too funny -- the Bureaucrashers infiltrated the Green convention, and began handing out over-the-top socialist/communist propoganda with obvious contradictions (i.e. anti-tech petitions were signed while being taped by camcorders). Unfortunately, the Greens didn't pick up on the humor. Read the full story.
whatever: A Little Libel
Sci-fi writer John Scalzi gives readers a little lesson on the nature of libel. Read the full story.
