Booman Tribune

President Relies on Forged Letter in Today's Speech

by BooMan
Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:26:03 PM EST

Are you craving more proclamations from the administration based on forged documents (quite possibly) of their own making? Are you having withdrawals from the Niger document fiasco? Never fear. Today the President cited another forged document, a document probably thought up by some half-ass Arabist in some latter day Office of Special Plans. We already know that the myth of Zarqawi is being used to personalize every attack of every civilian target on more than one continent. The myth of Zawahiri's letter to Zarqawi is now being cited as the main justification for staying the course in Iraq. From the President's Veteran's Day speech today:

In his recent letter, Zawahiri writes that al Qaeda views Iraq as, quote, "the place of the greatest battle." The terrorists regard Iraq as the central front in their war against humanity. We must recognize Iraq as the central front in our war against the terrorists.

Third, these militants believe that controlling one country will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all modern governments in the region and establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia. Zawahiri writes that the terrorists, quote, "must not have their mission end with the expulsion of the Americans from Iraq." He goes on to say the jihad requires several incremental goals -- expel the Americans from Iraq, establish an Islamic authority over as much territory as you can to spread its power in Iraq, extend the jihad wave to the secular countries neighboring Iraq. End quote.

See the evidence that this letter is a rank forgery below the fold. Also, I'll provide some links for how the right-wing wurlitzer is trying to utilize this blatant fraud to buck up support for an endless war on terror:

The leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, claims the letter found by US soldiers in Iraq, which is said to be written by al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri, is false. In a statement released over the Internet he denies the authenticity of the letter, and accuses the US forces of making up the story as a slur on al-Qaeda. In the letter the Pentagon says al-Zawahiri warns that the tactics used by insurgents in Iraq risk alienating the wider Muslim population. He also writes that they have lost many of their key leaders.

"Everything in the letter attributed to Ayman al-Zawahiri is false," al-Zarqawi's statement says. "We don't know where they found it or when they found it. We from the al-Qaeda organisation announce that this news is completely unfounded. It is a lie which comes from the military camp of the infidels, from the Green Zone and the command of the crusader campaign, whose news are always far from the truth of the battlefield." AKI

Mohannad Hage Ali of the London-based Arabic-language newspaper Al-Hayat, cites the tone of the letter as a reason he doubts its authenticity.

In the letter, al-Zawahiri urges al-Zarqawi to stop the beheadings that were carried out by his group and to downplay his vicious attacks on Iraq's Shiite majority because "we are in a media battle in a race for the hearts and minds" of the Sunnis.

However, Ali says: "The writer, who is supposed to be Zawahiri, sounds like a moderate with pragmatic views. The most recent tape of Zawahiri shows this is not the case. He is as adamant as ever."

Still, the al-Zawahiri of the recent letter sounds remarkably like the al-Zawahiri from 2001, in both cases saying the jihad could go only so far, and that popular support was crucial.

Others cite instances of bad grammar, a plea for money by the author to send 100,000 (it doesn't say what), and the almost-chatty mention that he is the father of a new daughter named Nawwar, as out of character for al-Zawahiri.

And even though the letter is supposed to be addressed to al-Zarqawi, the last line says, "By God, if by chance you're going to Fallujah, send greetings to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi," another puzzling inconsistency.

At least one skeptical analyst says clues that one would use to verify the letter -- including al-Zawahiri's mention of how his son, daughter and one of his wives were killed by a U.S. bomb in Afghanistan -- were almost too obvious.

The eagerness with which the U.S. military seemed willing to talk about the letter to the media in places like Dubai also aroused suspicion among the already, to put it mildly, wary Arab media. CNN

The Arabic text uses the word Israel, terrorism analyst Stephen Ulph told United Press International.

Ulph, who works with the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation, said that typically, jihadists like Zawahiri would use a term like "Zionist entity" to refer to the Jewish state.

"But it could be," he acknowledged, "that in a private communication, you use it just for brevity."

Ulph has other reservations about its authenticity -- like the way the four stages of the war are spelled out in such detail, when that concept is part of the shared ideology of contemporary Mujahedin.

That same point was echoed by Raymond Ibrahim, a scholar of Arabic history and language. "That would be a given," he told UPI. "There's no reason to set it out in so much detail."

Ibrahim, who prepared a forthcoming collection of newly translated al-Qaida documents, and who has read a great deal of Zawahiri's writing, both public and private, said that the style of address was both "too chummy and too deferential."

Usually, he said, Zawahiri's tone was "more masterful, more commanding."

"He is the elder, he is the sheikh," said Ibrahim of Zawahiri, describing parts of the letter as almost a supplication. "He wouldn't take that tone."

At one point, the author urges Zarqawi to cease the televised beheadings which have become his gory trademark -- and which "the Muslim populace who love and support you will never find palatable" -- because hostages can be killed just as easily with bullets.

But to demonstrate his jihadi bona fides, the author confides that he "has tasted the bitterness of American brutality," and that his "favorite wife," son and young daughter had been crushed when the house they were in was leveled -- presumably by the U.S. military -- and he does not know where the bodies are.

"Were they brought out of the rubble, or are they still buried beneath it to this day?" the author plaintively inquires.

Ibrahim points out that Zawahiri and Zarqawi are not exactly old friends -- some believe they have never actually met.

"His other letters, even to people that he does know very well, don't have such intimate revelations in them," he said. "It doesn't sound too much like him."

On balance, Ibrahim said, "I tend to think it is a forgery." UPI

A letter purportedly written by a senior al Qaeda leader -- and said to be authentic by U.S. intelligence officials who released it last week -- may be a forgery, according to Washington analysts who cite numerous anomalies in the text.

Some analysts have gone so far as to label the letter a likely U.S. government "influence operation," which, if exposed, threatens American credibility in the Middle East.

"If this is a forgery, then either it was designed to blow up in the face of the American government; or someone in the 'coalition of the willing' has been caught with their pants down," said one analyst, who spoke with Cybercast News Service on the condition of anonymity. CNS News

Right wing wurlitzer:

Weekly Standard
Rush Limbaugh
Red State
Pardon My English
Powerline

This is how lies are spread from Cheney's office into the mainstream media. Will the media question why the President continues to cite crudely forged documents?
_______________________________

LINKED at Raw Story and InfoClearingHouse.



Display:
by BooMan on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:44:48 PM EST
Booman, haven't ya heard?  Foil helmets enhance mind control.  

Maybe that's been our problem all along.

by Swoof on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 11:02:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
They are getting desperate, aren't they?  This sounds like a quick put up job to try to change the subject.

Obama is a Patriot
by Steven D on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:46:53 PM EST
Yes, you are right.  They are getting desperate.

This whole administration is a forged document from day one!  It has always been false and not worth a damn.  That is what makes this whole thing so sickening.  well to me anyhow.

by BrendaStewart (stormyweather1@hotmail.com) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:51:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I think it's time for a review of the "Big Lie" school of propaganda.

The Bush administration (and its various mouthpieces from Mehlman to Rush) send out 50 lies, distortions and fabrications to the media.

We, the skeptics, then have to spend hours and hours debunking, analyzing and verifying what is said.

But the majority of the people never hear the analysis and don't have time to do it on their own.  They might doubt some of what they hear, but they can't doubt all of it.  It's just too ludicrous that it's a steady stream of deliberate lies!

It's like firing 300 missiles at a ship.  Some might get intercepted, some might fail due to technical reasons, but some will get through to the target.

We keep trying to shoot down these missiles of lies and spin and yet they keep getting through.

It's like the Bush administration is trying to wring the very last drop of credulity from the office of the White House.  Whoever is the next president is virtually going to be considered a liar no matter what he says, sort of like a "guilty until proven innocent" mentality.

Or maybe not.. most Americans have a pretty short memory.

Anthrax? Hmmm... sounds familiar.  Wasn't that an old heavy metal band? Oh, what's that?  It was a major terrorist attack in the USA? Oh yeah... I wonder whatever happened to that... hmmm..

Oh well, I forgot about it so it might as well never have existed.

Pax

Night and day you can find me Flogging the Simian

by soj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:55:22 PM EST
that's why I didn't bother to site any of the American intelligence assertions of authenticity.  The damn letter says to say 'hi' to Zarqawi if the recipient sees him.  How much time do I have to spend debunking that the letter was sent to Zarqawi?

As for being written by Zawahiri?  I not a moron.  

by BooMan on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:02:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The bush regime plays the odds. They know that the relentless repetition of a lie will eventually lead to that lie being seen as truth by a certain percentage of the population.

Propaganda works by repetition and the exploitation of emotion through the inculcation of fear. It is never based on reason or accurate logic. It's never based on what people do know, but always organized around what they don't know. And lies are frequently more believable than truth, if for no other reason than that we have such a strong propensity to believe what we want to believe and to reject those facts that might challenge those beliefs. (Just think of those parents who were so reluctant to believe that what their child was telling them about being molested by the parish priest was true. This is but one characteristic we have that is so easily exploited by deception professionals.)

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.

by sbj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:31:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
That letter is such a blatant and childlike attempt at manipulating public opinion it scares me. The only way the administration could flaunt letter is if they had no hand in generating it. So they sucked it up from some foreign curveball like everything else they use to justify this war. What a bunch of idiots. ITS FAKE GEORGE YOU FUCKING IDIOT!

"We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; now we know that it is bad economics;" - Franklin Delano Roosevelt
by Salunga on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:03:40 PM EST
Juan Cole didn't seem to believe the letter from Z to Z was genuine either, as described in his post here.

The Bush regime's capacity for rejecting the truth and propagating their own lies and fantasies will go down in history as one of the most shameful and destructive components of their brief reign.

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.

by sbj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:03:50 PM EST
That letter was such obvious bullshit. It hit far too many of the neocon talking points and was completely out of character with every other communication ever received or intercepted from al Queda.

I don't know who forged it but they suck as forgers.

The 10,000 Things

by Andrew C White (acwhite.nospam.@taconic.net) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:10:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The letter was such obvious bullshit that even our own negligent and criminally complicit MSM coverage of it lapsed after only 2 days of lukewarm and cursory coverage. Even they knew it wouldn't stand close scrutiny and none of them wanted to be held to account for supporting such an absurdity.

Leave it to the Bush gang to perpetuate the lie, using their resident imbecile, (Bush himself), as the mouthpiece. (This creature Bush is so dumb it defies description. He'll fall for anything.)

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.

by sbj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:18:41 PM EST
[ Parent ]
That's a good point. The MSM talked it up for about a day or so and then dropped it like a hot potatoe.

You know it's a bad lie when even those schmucks won't perpetuate it.

The 10,000 Things

by Andrew C White (acwhite.nospam.@taconic.net) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:30:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I was reminded of Cole's analysis as well, which he ends with:

My gut tells me that the letter is a forgery. Most likely it is a black psy-ops operation of the US. But it could also come from Iran, since the mistakes are those a Shiite might make when pretending to be a Sunni. Or it could come from an Iraqi Shiite group attempting to manipulate the United States. Hmmm.

Gee, isn't there a guy fitting that description running around Washington this week?

Nice piece of "evidence" for expanding the war, isn't it?

Remember too, there was an equally suspect letter last year, purportedly from Zarqawi to OBL.

". . . the more educated you are, the more indoctrinated you are. After all, propaganda is largely directed towards the privileged." -Noam Chomsky

by Arcturus on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 04:53:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Anybody notice that, the trick the US always use to put the fear in it's citizens or make them go along with some uber-patriotic oh-we-are-the-saviors-of-the-world?

Remember the cold war? You kept that one going by fearing the so called domino-effect: if we let one country strive into non-capitalist territory surely the rest will follow.

This time around for appetizing the public for the invasion of Iraq you deployed a somewhat domino-in-reverse: if we just get Iraq hooked on democracy the region will be oh so greatful to us that we don't even have to knock the rest of the dominos over, they will flat out kneel down by themselves in prayer at the altar of W.

Well. Sort of didn't happen. How the hell are we going to get out of this one? Ah, I know; why don't we employ that succesful eh domino-theory: "these militants believe that controlling one country will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all modern governments in the region and establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia."

That'll show'em! I think eh...

by high5 (high5104@yahoo.com) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:07:13 PM EST
The odious Nazi Goering summed up the rubric best;

"Naturally the common people don't want war.... But after all, it is the
leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it is always a
simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a
fascist dictatorship, or a parliament or a communist dictatorship.... all you
have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the
pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It
works the
same in any country."



Denial is our most dangerous adversary.
by sbj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:21:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.

The Continental Congress was formed by Ronald Reagan in order to support George Bush I in his great battles of Bunker Hill and Fallujah. George Bush's leadership during the heroic winter at Tikrit Forge and his saving the nation following the traitorous actions of Benedict Gore and Kerry Arnold at the battle of Saratoga have ensured our eventual victory over the Viet Queda.

All good citizens must be on the look out for agents of Emmanuel Goldstein and Osama Chi Minh. We have recently learned that agents such as Al Franken, Hillary Clinton, and Bernie Sanders walk free among us.

Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia.


The 10,000 Things

by Andrew C White (acwhite.nospam.@taconic.net) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:07:24 PM EST
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD--SENATE - S6302 - June 28, 2002 [Sen. Byrd]:

The President's chief of staff was quoted in The Washington Post on June 9, 2002, as saying, ``We consulted with agencies and with Congress, but they might not have known that we were consulting.'' How do you like that? I have been in Congress 50 years now. I have never seen anything like that, where the administration says we have consulted with Congress but they might not have known we were consulting.

   This does not even deserve to qualify for George Orwell's definition of double speak. Such a claim is plain, unmitigated garbage.

[edit]

 This Administration convenes meetings of its trusted few in little underground rooms, while sending decoy envoys to meet with Congress and members of the press, and the public.

   I have not seen such Executive arrogance and secrecy since the Nixon Administration, and we all know what happened to that group

The man has a way with words.  Read the whole speech here [.pdf].

by rba (nearnight12@yahoo.com) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 05:26:28 PM EST
Thanks Booman.  Very worthy notation.  I do agree with every word you have just said...

I think now is the time to terminate their distruction of our country, dont you?

This man relies on anything that is given for him to read.  This is not his origional thoughts on paper.  It is someone elses....

I hope this speech brings him further down to demise.

by BrendaStewart (stormyweather1@hotmail.com) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 02:31:39 PM EST

  I find encouragement when I see people that already have my respect take a controversial but necessary stand.

  I'm still new so maybe I've missed it but I wasn't sure where you stood on this issue. I seem to have created a distance between me and others here for some undesired reason. I thought it might be some of my opinions....hey, maybe it's just that I'm an inadvertant ass.

  To get real solutions we need to address the real problems.

by rumi on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 03:31:34 PM EST
I see it quite clearly in the headline almost every MSM outlet is using, "Bush Forcefully Attacks Iraq Critics" (emphasis added). Get it? Bush is FORCEFUL; he ATTACKS. He's not weak; he's not under attack by the indictment(s) of his staff and suspicions looming over his VP. Oh no, black is white, white is black. Got it? Pretty damn simple, really.

Jeez, I sure hope people aren't this dumb. Guess we'll have to wait and see if this approach buys him a point or two up-tick in the polls. Meanwhile, will some Democrat please stand up and remind everyone that they didn't know everything the WH knew before the war; they only knew what they were allowed to know. <sigh>

by sjct on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 04:12:47 PM EST
It'll be interesting to see if any of the MSM point to the location of the speech, and the fact that this President doesn't have the cojones to place the wreath @ Arlington.  Obvious his captive audience had no choice but to attend the "festivities".  

A president who can't even appear in public in the Nation's capitol.

by rba (nearnight12@yahoo.com) on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 04:43:24 PM EST
MSNBC's Matthews did note that bush conspicuously did not lay a wreath at Arlington but chose instead to deliver a political speech elsewhere. (Matthews, hack that he usually is, didn't remark on the "captive audience" aspect of the venue, but at least he made some remarks that seemed critical of Bush, noting something less than laudable about the [putative]#2 man Cheney beingthe one to show up at Arlington.)

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.
by sbj on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 09:11:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]
NPR noted this morning GW went to and from the event in a military helicopter.  Nothing in the print media so far.
by rba (nearnight12@yahoo.com) on Sat Nov 12th, 2005 at 10:39:26 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Then there's this about the fact that much of this speech was a duplicate of a speech he gave 5 weeks ago.

Here are links to the complete text of both speeches.

Speech to National Endowment For Democracy

Speech on Veterans' Day

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.

by sbj on Sat Nov 12th, 2005 at 12:47:41 PM EST
[ Parent ]
ICK!  I watched that speech he gave to the NDE and even wrote a bit about it here -- everything he said dripped with irony -- all you had to do was imagine someone like Hugo Chavez saying it and it would all apply to the grand ole US.  Glad I missed it the second time around ---- why do I get the feeling we'll be hearing it again?

I want something else, to get me through this, semi-charmed kinda life..
Third Eye Blind

by brinnainne on Sat Nov 12th, 2005 at 12:54:19 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The only thing that makes the Bush regime's message cohesive, the only unifying element of it is that it's all lies all the time.

Denial is our most dangerous adversary.
by sbj on Sat Nov 12th, 2005 at 02:21:40 PM EST
[ Parent ]
During CNN's endless coverage of the bombings in Jordan this week.......yes, the commentators kept referring to the letter.  So, I am sitting there watching..thinking to myself, how stupid...this letter is a forgery...why do they keep referring to it!  So the MSM just keeps on and on and on and on................
by avahome on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 05:01:40 PM EST

Were you watching CNN when that story on Jordan was breaking? I can't remember if it was CNN but I think it was had that McCain on for an interview at the time. The claims and explanations that McCain put forth were absolutely incredible. They were just like this letter in that it's an insult to our intelligence to even consider it plausable.

by rumi on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 05:22:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
and now they are forging to continue the war. Then  guess they will forge to justify the eventual loss of the war.
by observer393 on Fri Nov 11th, 2005 at 08:24:02 PM EST
In a statement released over the Internet he denies the authenticity of the letter, and accuses the US forces of making up the story as a slur on al-Qaeda.

A slur on al-Qaeda?

A demented group of sick, murderous, morally corrupt, religious wingnut, motherfu*#king whackjobs cites a false document as a slur on their character?

That's rich.

by AZnomad on Sat Nov 12th, 2005 at 01:40:37 AM EST
Yup, we're all literally held captive as the walls go up around us: disappearing middle-class, new prisons, dying businesses, bigger Walmarts, more Star*ucks, more surveillance, fewer opportunities, no federal $$$ for students, job-training, social work-fare, and Social Security.

Worse news. Millions of $$$$ dumped into Guantanamo!! You can't see any of the million $$$ "improvements", because the $$$ was spent on "infrastructure", on technology deep inside its walls, including Stealth anti-gravity discs.

Now the prison will be able to rise out of the sea, like a spaceship, able to fly around and attack each and every one of us with 24 hour torture!!!!! Pretty soon, we'll hear about it from the friends of the victims! "Did'ya hear about what happened to Johnny? He got GuantanaMOWED last night!!! YIKES!!!

by ravebyron (ravebyron@yahoo.com) on Sun Nov 13th, 2005 at 08:47:23 AM EST


Display:
Go to: [ Booman Tribune Homepage : Top of page : Top of comments ]
Menu
Login
. Make a new account
. Reset password





Find textbooks at Alibris!

NOTE: Overstock bests Amazon's prices and is "blue."

THE BOOKS WITH "BUZZ":
______________

Learn the real story behind the CIA's War on Terror:

The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals
by Jane Mayer

Read Barack Obama's vision for America:

The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
by Barack Obama

DaveW recommends:

I Am a Strange Loop
by Douglas Hofstadter

Need some laughs?

I Am America (and So Can You!)
by Stephen Colbert

rae recommends:

Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
by Morris Berman.

On BooMan’s shelf:

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin

This looks interesting:

Adventure Divas
by Holly Morris

Here’s a good one from
Elizabeth Gilbert:

Eat Pray Love
by Elizabeth Gilbert

"Crash" * Best Motion Picture, Academy Awards * Only $11.79 at Overstock * 2006 SAG Winner, Best Ensemble

Check out
Powell's new section:
NEW FAVORITES

Selected new arrivals at 30% off

Recommended by Indianadem and ejmw:
The Conscience of a Liberal
by Paul Wellstone

From northcountry’s bookshelf:

The New Golden Age:
The Coming Revolution Against
Political Corruption and Economic Chaos
by Ravi Batra

A novel about contractors in Iraq from the woman that runs The Spy That Billed Me:

Outsourced: A Novel
from RJ Hillhouse.


SOTW-120x90
Download Sleeper Cell on iTunes (Better than "24") Download Weeds on iTunes (Hilarious 1/2-hour adult comedy starring Mary-Louise Parker) Download Late Nite with Conan O'Brien on iTunes
John Belushi - SNL
Download South Park on iTunes
Verve Vault

James Hunter - People Gonna Talk:
James Hunter - People Gonna Talk
icon


Great Deals
----- * ^ * -----

Find mystery novels by Nancy Pickard ("Kansas")



Challenging Empire: How People, Governments, and the UN Defy US Power by Phyllis Bennis (interviewed on DN!)


Featured by Keith Olbermann, New (Powell's Sale): Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower by William Blum (whose other books merit serious consideration)


"Explosive" State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
by James Risen


The book the CIA doesn't want you to read: Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA's Key Field Commander
Larry Johnson's review


BT's all-time best seller:

PERMACULTURE:
A Designers' Manual

$79.95 * Sale: $59.95


Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History (Third Edition)


The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich Are Rich, the Poor Are Poor And Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
by Timothy Egan


Green Press Initiative
----- * ^ * -----


Journalistas: 100 Years of the Best Writing and Reporting by Women Journalists by Eleanor Mills * NYT review


Bury Me Standing: the Gypsies & Their Journey


1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus



Brokeback Mountain
by Annie Proulx
----- * ^ * -----
Check out Powell's
"At The Movies"


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky (Power & Terror: Post 9-11 Talks)


The Price of Privilege:

How Parental Pressure and
Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of
Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

by Madeline Levine


Save 35-70% on
name brand clothing,
footwear, and outdoor gear
at SierraTradingPost.com

:





We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris. (Selection (MP3) excerpted from "The Skin.")

Alibris - Books You Thought You'd Never Find
Banned Books * Are you a fan of Film Noir, Art House, Documentaries or Hong Kong Action? * Searching for a long-lost children's book or a first printing of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue on vinyl? Find it at Alibris!

:
:
www.Patagonia.com


Listed on BlogShares

© 2009 Booman Tribune