Sign in
NetworkOfCare.org
April 2013 - Foreign Policy Public Health Blog
Blog Help
Foreign Policy Public Health Blog
Home
Syndication
RSS for Posts
Atom
RSS for Comments
Recent Posts
Japan Finally Got Inflation. Nobody Is Happy About It.
The Panama Canal Is Running Dry
The Davos Paradox
What Gulf States Want in Gaza
What’s the Deal With Javier Milei?
Tags
Africa
China
Culture
East Asia
Eastern Europe
Economics
Egypt
Election 2012
Europe
Fun Stuff
Human Rights
Iran
Israel/Palestine
Latin America
Media
Middle East
Military
Morning Brief
North America
Obama Administration
Passport
Politics
Russia
Terrorism
U.S. Foreign Policy
View more
Archives
January 2024 (33)
December 2014 (7)
November 2014 (34)
October 2014 (50)
September 2014 (47)
August 2014 (42)
July 2014 (48)
June 2014 (131)
May 2014 (212)
April 2014 (61)
March 2014 (65)
February 2014 (63)
January 2014 (91)
December 2013 (87)
November 2013 (93)
October 2013 (95)
September 2013 (65)
August 2013 (93)
July 2013 (120)
June 2013 (124)
May 2013 (174)
April 2013 (185)
March 2013 (154)
February 2013 (101)
January 2013 (88)
December 2012 (86)
November 2012 (113)
October 2012 (125)
September 2012 (127)
August 2012 (131)
July 2012 (124)
June 2012 (81)
May 2012 (81)
April 2012 (99)
March 2012 (113)
February 2012 (87)
January 2012 (86)
December 2011 (77)
November 2011 (77)
October 2011 (87)
September 2011 (86)
August 2011 (68)
July 2011 (135)
June 2011 (140)
May 2011 (110)
April 2011 (93)
March 2011 (101)
February 2011 (115)
January 2011 (117)
December 2010 (96)
November 2010 (112)
October 2010 (105)
September 2010 (111)
August 2010 (143)
July 2010 (125)
June 2010 (162)
May 2010 (112)
April 2010 (139)
March 2010 (162)
February 2010 (153)
January 2010 (169)
December 2009 (132)
November 2009 (120)
October 2009 (112)
June 2007 (20)
April 2007 (25)
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Viewed
|
Most Commented
McCain: On foreign policy, I may have more in common with Obama than with some in own party
Sen. John McCain sounded a civil note at the beginning of his remarks at a Center for a New American Security event on Thursday, April 18. "What Republicans need now is a vigourous contest on ideas on national security and foreign policy," he...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 6:20 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Diplomacy
,
Politics
,
U.S. Foreign Policy
,
International Relations
,
U.S. Congress
,
Barack Obama
Anonymous is entering the news business
Anonymous, the hacktivist movement meant to simultaneously be the voice of everyone and no one at the same time, is getting a bit more institutionalized. How? They're starting a news organization: Your Anon News, a.k.a. YAN. On Wednesday, YAN's...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 5:40 PM
by
FP Passport
What prisoners at Gitmo are reading
New York Times reporter Charlie Savage recently traveled to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba to cover the violent raid at the prison earlier this week. But Savage did more on his visit than just interview prison officials: On April 17, he posted his first photo of...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 5:00 PM
by
FP Passport
Reuters accidentally publishes obit for George Soros
It's an editor's worst nightmare. Someone over at Reuters hit the publish button a little too early today -- and the sneak peak at the famous financier's obituary isn't too flattering. (See "a predatory and hugely successful financier...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 4:08 PM
by
FP Passport
If the New York Post isn't correcting its terrible marathon coverage, what does it correct?
It's been a tough week at the New York Post . When news first broke of the bombing at the Boston Marathon, the Post was far ahead of other media outlets, reporting that 12 people had been killed in the attack. It all seemed very plausible, and it...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 3:30 PM
by
FP Passport
The world according to Google: 5 crazy predictions from Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen's new book
Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen, the 31-year-old director of Google Ideas, make some pretty bold predictions in their new book, The New Digital Age , to be published by Knopf on April 23. The future they envision is full of technological...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 11:50 AM
by
FP Passport
The epic Bahrain protest videos emerging ahead of the Grand Prix
The Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix is scheduled for this Sunday, April 21. But if the country's protest movement has its way, the race won't take place at all. For months, opponents of Bahrain's monarchy have pressed for the race to be canceled...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 11:30 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Human Rights
,
Middle East
,
Democracy
Watch Pervez Musharraf flee a Pakistani courtroom
Pervez Musharraf's bizarre return to Pakistan from self-imposed exile, which has already been marked by the former president being disqualified from upcoming elections and live-tweeting his bail hearing (and exercise routine), just got even more bizarre...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 7:00 AM
by
FP Passport
Morning Brief: Assad frames Syrian uprising as Western plot
Assad frames Syrian uprising as Western plot Top news: In an interview broadcast on television Wednesday, embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad rejected the idea of negotiations and described what he said was a Western plot to recolonize his country...
Published
Thu, Apr 18 2013 5:38 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
An alternative soundtrack for Maggie Thatcher's funeral
In death as in life, Margaret Thatcher inspires endless controversy. The former prime minister was buried today at St. Paul's Cathedral, and even the hymns chosen for the service have sparked debate -- never mind the lavish trappings of the ceremony...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 2:50 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Europe
,
Britain
,
Fun Stuff
Could the U.S. be the world's most populous country in 2100?
The United States, currently the world's third-most populous country behind China and India, could have the largest population in the world by 2100, according to new projections by Joseph Chamie, the former director of the United Nations Population...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 1:00 PM
by
FP Passport
The Texan who stole the show at Margaret Thatcher's funeral
After being carried through the streets of London in a flag-draped coffin aboard a gun carriage, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was laid to rest this morning in St. Paul's Cathedral. But the big story of the day wasn't Maggie...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 11:40 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Europe
,
Britain
,
Politics
,
Media
,
Religion
What the Chinese exchange student killed in Boston thought of the United States
While the Chinese Consulate in New York has, at the request of family members, withheld personal details about the Chinese graduate student at Boston University who was killed in Monday's bombings, the New York Times is reporting that "a classmate...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 10:30 AM
by
FP Passport
Am I sleeping with my cousin? There's an app for that
In a country with a population of just 325,281 , it turns out it's not very hard to accidentally hook up with a close relative. "Everyone has heard of (or experienced) it when someone goes all in with someone and then later runs into that person...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 9:40 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Europe
,
Science & Technology
,
Fun Stuff
,
Cool
Morning Brief: Boston Marathon investigation focuses on pressure cooker bomb
Boston Marathon investigation focuses on pressure cooker bomb Top news: Police investigating the bombing at the Boston Marathon on Monday said that explosives housed in a pressure cooker had likely been used in the attack that killed three and wounded...
Published
Wed, Apr 17 2013 5:48 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
« First
...
< Previous
3
4
5
6
7
Next >
...
Last »