Showing posts with label Help Wanted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Help Wanted. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2014

NYT Cut and Paste: As Iraq falls back, our fight here is over control of the narrative

As the threat from Sunni militants in western Iraq escalated last month, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki secretly asked the Obama administration to consider carrying out airstrikes against extremist staging areas, according to Iraqi and American officials.

But Iraq’s appeals for a military response have so far been rebuffed by the White House, which has been reluctant to open a new chapter in a conflict that President Obama has insisted was over when the United States withdrew the last of its forces from Iraq in 2011. (read more)

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I used to be a polemicist. I was an editorial cartoonist, and wrote what I called “artist’s statements” to accompany my cartoons each week, which over the two terms of the George W. Bush administration lengthened and sharpened from rants into something more like essays. I became practiced at using language as a weapon. My role models were hilarious, elegant and brutal humorists from Mark Twain and H.L. Mencken through Hunter S. Thompson and Matt Taibbi, who raised American invective to an art form. This is a fine and honorable tradition when practiced with a certain amour-propre and panache, but in the last couple of decades it’s become our dominant mode of public discourse, degraded by hacks and amateurs who ape its cruelty but are rhetorically illiterate and tone-deaf to humor. They’re just parroting talking points with profanity.

I’m no longer an active combatant in that fight. As the grim, endless decade of the War on Terror dragged on I began to get a bad aesthetic conscience about my screeds, and grew concerned that I might be doing cirrhotic damage to what let’s call, for old times’ sake, my soul. I found a second career as an essayist, and made a conscientious effort to be more intellectually honest, fair-minded and empathetic, to get out there and try to help instead of just cheerfully jeering from the bleachers. (read more)

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

With A Little Help From My Friends

With A Little Help From My Friends
 
 
Do not skip this video!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Help Wanted - Insider Threat Analyst Job

Location:  Washington D.C., US

Insider Threat Analyst - 01155488

Key Role:
Work with government and commercial organizations to develop and implement insider threat program solutions.  Apply knowledge of cyber, counterintelligence, security and information assurance to support baseline functional standards to facilitate the development and refinement of insider threat programs at the enterprise level.  Develop and use assessment methodologies to identify risks and recommend threat countermeasures.

Clearance:
Applicants selected will be subject to a security investigation and may need to meet eligibility requirements for access to classified information.  TS/SCI clearance with polygraph is required.

This is the job you've been waiting for, isn't it?  No more pecking away at blog comments here and there, this is the real deal, the opportunity to use your mad skillz.  And you are Jack Ryan or MacGyver or Mitch Rapp.

It's time for you to come in from the cold and search for insider threats.

Contact Booz Allen for more information.

Monday, December 16, 2013

"British Library uploads more than a million public domain images to Flickr"

"More than 300 years of illustrations from the archives of the British Library have been uploaded to Flickr Commons, and now the organisation wants help sifting through them."
 
sample

"We're looking for new, inventive ways to navigate, find and display these unseen illustrations," said wrote Ben O'Steen in a British Library blog post. "There are maps, geological diagrams, beautiful illustrations, comical satire, illuminated and decorative letters, colourful illustrations, landscapes, wall-paintings and so much more that even we are not aware of."

"The images come from the pages of books from the 1600s, 1700s and 1800s and were digitised by Microsoft, who then gifted them back to the British Library. In turn the British Library released them into the public domain."