Ffei Bryan Cranston may possibly be up for Lex Luthor in Batman/Superman
Pakistan s president is convinced that the al Qaeda terrorist organization, with so many of its leaders either captured, killed or on the run in the wake of Sept. 11, has lost its effectiveness.President Pervez Musharraf, attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, spoke with CBS News correspondent Tom Fenton about the terror group. I don t think they are an effective organization, Musharraf told Fenton. They are on the run. To be effective, an organization needs good command and control, I d
stanley bottle on t think they have that, he added.While conceding to Fenton that he didn t know for sure where al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was, he reflected on his military experience Musharraf is Pakistan s Chief of Army staff and a career military man to speculate that Osama s probably in the frontier territories along the Pakistani and Afghan border. But, he said there was no possibility of a large co
stanley mug ntingent of American troops entering Pakistan to search for bin Laden, adding that
stanley becher it was a very sensitive subject. Musharraf s comments come just days after a U.S. official said the al Qaeda terror network was under catastrophic stress but still posed a threat.Cofer Black, the U.S. ambassador at large for counterterrorism, said some two-thirds of the al Qaeda leadership have been detained or put out of action since the Sept. 11 attacks mdash; a claim also made by President Bush in Tuesday s State of the Union address.Black told British Broadcasting Corp. radio that a Knqp How Fast the Elevators in the World s Tallest Buildings Go
Tim Wu, the guy who coined the phrase net neutrality, went nose-to-nose with the House
botella stanley Judiciary subcommittee on Friday morning to fight for the future of the internet. Congress wants to know if somebody other than the FCC should decide the fate of net neutrality. Wu, for one, thinks that a pretty silly idea. On one hand, the FCC been regulating鈥攐r, maybe more importantly, not regulating鈥攖he internet for decades. Then again, the FCC has also been doing some floating its own set of silly ideas in the form of proposed rules that would allow fast lanes on the internet. Maybe it time the pass the baton. The Federal Trade Commission FTC ,
stanley taza for one, tends to do a go
stanley thermobecher od job protecting American consumers. Maybe they ;re up to the task. Meanwhile, Congress certainly thinks it knows how the internet should work, so maybe they should take a swing. Barack Obama arguably has the internet to thank for his ascent to office. How about a more authoritarian approach There are a lot of options out there, but for the sake of reality, it makes sense to take a closer look at what the House Judiciary subcommittee discussed at Friday hearing. The FCC has a decent track record鈥?Flanked by a current FTC commissioner and a former FCC commissioner, Wu did not mince his words, when speaking to Congress. At stake in the net neutrality debate is the protection of the American political process, he said. We can ;t leave a matte