MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
By Paul Amar, Al Jazeera Opinion, February 10, 2011
Suleiman considers the business fraternity friendly, but it is the nation's women and youth who are driving the unrest.
Highly, highly, recommended analysis of who makes up the "revolution" in Egypt, who doesn't, and why. Well worth the time. Not the same-old-same-old that you've already read. That is all.
Comments
Not the easiest, breeziest reading. But you're right, fascinating in its detail. Worth the effort.
by acanuck on Fri, 02/11/2011 - 1:31am
Providing commentary essentially saying: "You've gotta read this article and take it in the context of demonstrating a specific a point I want to make." in place of the teaser/synopsis seems to undermine the entire purpose of having a news leader separate from the reader blogs ... no?
by kgb999 on Fri, 02/11/2011 - 3:33pm
take it in the context of demonstrating a specific a point I want to make.
???
Where do you see me trying to make a point here? The only point I was trying to make here is that I thought it was a great piece of analysis that I recommended reading. I don't make any other point!
Yes, I used a clip from this piece regarding only one point it makes to argue something on Seaton's thread. I am not allowed to use pieces of articles I recommend elsewhere? That strikes me as kind of wacky, if that's the rule, then bloggers shouldn't use links and quotes.
I genuinely thought it was a really great and helpful piece of analysis that I wanted to recommend to others, others that might not be reading all the comments at the end of an old thread by Seaton. I really don't see why do you have a problem with that.
Furthermore, I am challenging you about this rather than ignoring it only because I really don't like the idea of people bitchin about what someone else posts on "In the News." I think that sort of thing discourages people from contributing.
by artappraiser on Fri, 02/11/2011 - 4:33pm