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Free Brian Conley Right Now


From FreeTibet2008.org

Beijing - Brian Conley, creator of the well-known videoblog, Alive in Baghdad,
was detained with his friend, Jeffrey Rae, early Tuesday, August 19th
in Beijing. Their detention appears to have taken place at the same
time as that of international artist James Powderly, whose detention
was reported Tuesday. Three other bloggers and activists, Jeff Goldin,
Michael Liss, and Tom Grant, have also been missing since Tuesday
morning. Conley, 28, Rae, 28, Goldin, 40, Liss, 35, Grant, 39 are all
American citizens.

So first off, let me just point out how absolutely pathetic it is that, as I’m sitting down to write on this terrible no-name unpopular zit of a blog, the big time zillion dollar mainstream media CNN is showing Larry King reruns and not bothering at all to cut away to the story of 5 American citizens being arrested by a foreign government. Now, I know Brian Conley. We’re not buddies, we don’t send each other christmas cards or nothin,’ but I have talked to him enough to know the he understands and cares way more about this stuff than any of the blowdried corporate chuckleheads the big networks have covering Beijing.  The fact that my unheard of ass has to blog about this while CNN sits back and runs repeats is absolutely outrageous and a complete and utter disgrace. These cheesy dipshit network goons in Beijing are all drooling and prawning around for the next chance to give Michael Phelps a handjob on live television while the real journalists who came to cover actual important stories are left to rot in a Chinese jail. I could puke.

And here’s the thing: I actually like China! Or at least I did until they threw my friend in jail. But I had their back on Tibet. I looked at it from the point of view of an American. We engaged in all kinds of wickedness and genocide in our quest to conquer North America. I understand that China is absolutely convinced that Tibet belongs to them. It’s “their California,” as so many people are fond of saying. I was willing to be very lenient with them during their growing pains as a superpower.  It doesn’t make it okay for the Chinese since the US did it first, but I was willing to be…patient.

But then I remembered this article I read a while ago about some writer or another visiting and reviewing the Native American museum in Washington, DC. It was in Salon, or Slate, or one of those similar snotty liberal rags that you wind up at on one of those days where you just want to read something you agree with. Anyways, what the reporter found was that the US government was essentially whitewashing the entire native affair. No mention of the forced deportations, the broken treaties, the naked genocide. None of it. The timeline basically went thanksgiving, civil war, casinos, visit the gift shop on your way out. I remember very distinctly sharing the author’s shame with our country’s blatant cover up of crimes against humanity. I remembered that, and that’s when I decided what we can do about our pal Brian.

Even though we can’t stop China, whatever happens, we can’t let China get away with the same cover up we did. The slobbering, snaggletooth old slags who run the Communist Party in China must be exposed, must be laid bare as the vicious, psychopathic war criminals that they are. And how are we going to do that? By supporting independent journalism, of course! Obviously, we can’t count on the prostitutes at the big networks to cover these issues, so we need to make sure people like Brian Conley are completely free to tell the truth about China. Let’s make sure that when Brian gets back to America, he has absolutely nothing to do but kick ass for human rights, independent journalism, and let’s be honest, for us.

To do that, let’s head over to the support page at Brian’s flagship project “Alive in Baghdad.”

Alive in Baghdad was started with money primarily gathered through
grants and donations. Today we are struggling to get by, and have made
it this far on a combination of donations and footage licensing. We
have begun taking voluntary monthly subscriptions, in the hope that our
viewership will step forward and provide financial support for the
Baghdad reports you have come to love. Please make a subscription
pledge today of 5, 10, or 25 dollars. If you don’t feel you can make a
regular commitment, consider donating even a few dollars in a one-time
donation today.

If you go to that link above to the support page, you’ll also notice that you can pick up a copy of the Alive in Baghdad DVD and also some t-shirts and assorted swag and stuff. In fact, if you haven’t been watching AiB, now would be a great time to pick up a copy of the vol. 1 DVD. Iraq will be a major issue in this year’s election, and Alive in Baghdad will teach you everything you need to know about life in Iraq. Grab one for yourself, for somebody else, whatever you want. Besides that, just give whatever you can. It is absolutely critical that we support independent journalists like Brian Conley. If he doesn’t have the funds to keep bringing you the truth about Iraq, China and so many other places, these stories will not get covered, period. Please, give whatever you can so that when Brian gets back he’ll know that even though the Chinese government doesn’t like citizen journalists, the rest of us are hungry for more.

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What will I bring to the DNC


So here it is Monday morning, I leave saturday to head to Denver, and I still don’t have a very clear idea as to what I’m bringing with me. Well I have the hardware figured out, but I’m still not totally settled on the software side of things.

Maybe you can help me figure out what to use on this wacky adventure of mine. So let’s break this down by hardware shall we?

First up I’ll be bringing the iPhone. Incidentally I’m typing this post on my phone, so by the end of it we can safely say that I’ve tested wordpress’s mobile capability. For communication, I’ve got palringo so I can connect to all my IM services like aim and google talk and such. I’ve got twinkle for updating my Twitter although I’ve noticed a lot of people prefer twitterific. Am I making the right choice on that? For photos i’m using standard email to post to Flickr. Pretty sure this doesn’t geotag or mark them by location though which is something I’d like to be able to do. Is there a better app to post to Flickr from the iPhone than just standard email?

On the laptop, I’m of course already settled with my communication apps like digsby and twhirl. What I’m really concerned with is video. Since my video camera only records to tape (ugh I know) any video I shoot on it won’t be available until I get back from BOTH conventions. I’ll be relying on the built in webcam on my vaio as well as a logitech USB webcam which I’m still not sure I’m bringing. My question to you is what video streaming software should I use? I already have a blogtv account and one with operator11. Not sure I like either of them though. I like what I’ve seen so far from oovoo, is it worth checking out? I don’t have a Qik account but I sure wouldn’t turn down an invite ;)

So what do you think? What should I use to geotag my Flickr photos from the iPhone? What software should I use to stream live video? Drop me a line and let me know.

UPDATE: Wordpress on the iphone worked great, although I did have to log in from the dashboard to add in the special tags for the front page icons. Oh well, small price to pay for blogging on the go, I guess!

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Welcome back!


Hey everybody. Since I’ll be taking on a lot of new projects soon, it’s best that I give up the foolishness or trying to maintain eleventy billion sites and just consolidate everything at this one site. Don’t worry, it’ll still be the same Read or Alive as before, and I’ll still be the same Ultimate Josh I’ve always been, but now it’s in one nice little package for you! See, this won’t be so bad.

And since it’s me, you know there’s gonna be lots of sharing and yakking and sundry new media nefariousness. Let’s start with sharing, since it’s my favorite.

You can find my Google Reader Shared feed here. I use it share stuff like funny things I find on Digg, the Onion, useful apps from Lifehacker, and just generally interesting bits I come across on the web. I update it quite frequently, most of the time daily. If you’re my friend on Gmail or Google Talk, you’ll see this stuff automatically in your Google Reader under Friends. If you’re not using Google Reader, why not? It’s so easy. Jump into RSS here.

My Google Reader Starred feed is also public here. I separate the stories in this feed from my Shared Feed because this feed is for hard news only. It’s all stiff-lipped foreign policy stuff. It’s good stuff if you’re interested in foreign affairs and what’s going on in your world, but hey, it’s 2008. I know you’re busy.

I’m also a big fan of seeing what other people share, so if you use Google Reader, drop me a line!

As for the caustic and obnoxious histrionics you enjoy so much, I always have my micro-blog at Twitter. I can’t get enough of Twitter and its beautiful 140 characters. I follow just about everyone that friends me, so follow away!

So, what social sites do you use? Drop me a comment and let me know.

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