Pakistan YouTube Block Breaks the World
Allen54 noted a followup to yesterday's story about Pakistan's decision to block YouTube. He notes that "The telecom company that carries most of Pakistan's traffic, PCCW, has found it necessary to shut Pakistan off from the Internet while they filter out the malicious routes that a Pakistani ISP, PieNet, announced earlier today. Evidently PieNet took this step to enforce a decree from the Pakistani government that ISP's must block access to YouTube because it was a source of blasphemous content. YouTube has announced more granular routes so that at least in the US they supercede the routes announced by PieNet. The rest of the world is still struggling."
So the article isn't clear on it. Does this ISP have an AS number that allows them to upload global routes? I would say that they should lose it. I can't think of another way that a single ISP could take out the whole internet's access to something. Pretty crazy.
Worst. Title. Ever.
What I wouldn't do for the ability to mod "-1, Plain Wrong"
The first poster to account properly for what happened to our precious "Internets" infrastructure will get a ton of karma.
Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
Lol, PieNet.
I love it!
It was working last night too.
And make sure some clever wag adds a sarcastic "religionofpeace," tag. Then let's have a flame war.
Still, if the country's screwing up global routes, cut off their access.
There is a NANOG thread about this. Apparently a more specific IP route was advertised.
In the blasphemes West - The World breaks Pakistan YouTube block.
A lot has happened since the original story was written.
It's too bad that my comment from yesterday, which links to detailed technical information, is still languishing buried.
The PieNet Funding Bill is passed. The system goes on-line August 4th, 1997. Human decisions are removed from strategic defense. PieNet begins to learn at a geometric rate. It becomes self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29th. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.
The only surefire protection against Microsoft infections is abstinence. - The Onion
Soviet Russia joke, . . . , tired of you!
Looks to me like digital warfare has officially begun.
If we can convince the Bush administration that T-E-R-R-O-R-I-S-T-S could use this to cyber attack us, maybe we can get them on the side of good for once!
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I should also point out that while bureaucrats in Pakistan may be bone-headed for blocking content, companies like Microsoft, Yahoo, Cisco and so forth are the ones who built things like the "Great Firewall of China". Lots of Americans like the point their finger at governments like China, whereas they could actually have more of an effect in making companies in their own countries stop building this sort of stuff.
Internet censors YOU!
Sounds familiar, right along with the right to sentence to long jail terms, a few victims that got raped, letting the rapists go nearly scot-free.
They might as well isolate the country, keeping them from experiencing the interwebs altogether, it'll be impossible to keep their youth from being corrupted.
First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
To the people here in the U.S. who consider the Bush administration an oppressive theocratic regime, pay attention. This is the sort of thing an ACTUAL oppressive theocratic regime does.
"Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
Better technical explanations of the event are available from the Renesys blog and Data Center Knowledge. The erroneous IP assignments spread across the net within 1 minute, 45 seconds of its announcement by Pakistan Telecom, according to a timeline by Renesys. It took about 80 minutes for YouTube to inform its providers that the route had been hijacked. YouTube says it is "investigating and working with others in the Internet community to prevent this from happening again."
Evidently PieNet took this step to enforce a decree from the Pakistani government that ISP's must block access to YouTube because it was a source of blasphemous content.
The clergy, by getting themselves established by law and ingrafted into the machine of government, have been a very formidable engine against the civil and religious rights of man.--Thomas Jefferson
[
"Works for me."
All Things Pakistan points out that this may have a political rather than a "cultural" reason - given that a number of videos of election rigging were posted.
An ISP in Pakistan tried to re-route all YouTube requests in Pakistan somewhere else (to its own "censored" page, probably), but thanks to an error in the implementation, it resulted in all YouTube requests *world-wide* being delivered to it. More details at the BBC news article. Youch. A good slashdotting will hurt a server, but YouTube's traffic? That must have been the nuclear version of a denial-of-service!
I'm trying to come up with a proper permutation of the classic Internet "censorship/damage/re-route" quote:
Pakistan decided the Internet was damaged because of YouTube and re-routed all of YouTube's traffic to itself, thus censoring Pakistan.
Hmmm... not succinct enough.
The claim "It took about 80 minutes for YouTube to inform its providers that the route had been hijacked." is neither true nor relevant. YouTube's own providers are pretty much irrelevant to hijacking of YouTube space.
The Renesys link is good, and the cydeweys blog has good comments.
No sources support your claim of inaction on YouTube's part.
Well, this comes as no real surprise; I think you can expect this sort of behaviour from any individual or group that has no tolerance for dissent or satire. Whilst we can pretty much say what we like in the west, don't forget that our ancestors had to fight 'the system' for that 'right'.
That the need was felt to block youtube by a sovereign government just shows how tenuous its hold on power is. As peurile as it is to say so, someone somewhere is going to label this as "EpicFail" - which it surely is.
Now even the previously disinterested have been dragged into the issue and the clips in question will undoubtedly reach a far, far wider audience than would otherwise have been the case.
Whilst Pakistan isn't yet a theocracy, this sort of behaviour (Acting 'as if') begs the question: For how much longer?
Given that they are a declared nuclear power, how do you all feel about that?
Jesus was an invention of the Romans - watch "The Pharmacractic Inquisition" for something more credible...
Yes, OMG! How am I going to survive this day, the day that youtube.com went down the tubes?
A bit less hyperbole might have been more apt here, dear editors.
---
"The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
Censorship aside, no one should be struggling for YouTube. That's just sad.
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080225-insecure-routing-redirects-youtube-to-pakistan.html
Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Apparently they redirected all traffic to
;)
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/removal-of-the-pics-of-muhammad-from-wikipedia
Most subscribers come from pakistan
There are only 10 types of people in the world: Those who understand binary and those who don't.
"Pakistan YouTube Block Bricks the World"
I'll check back for related questions to fill in any blanks later :)
SIG: HUP
Pakistan is generally a pretty tolerant country when it comes to matters involving religion. After all, they elected a woman as PM awhile ago. Musharaf is however a hardline dictator who has the power to greatly improve his country by setting a precedent for stepping down gracefully, but apparently like any other dictator, he's going down swinging. The US in praticular has a way of framing any problem with the middle east as a religious issue. It's a region with a whole hell of a lot of problems, religion being just one of them. I'm not defending any actions taken by their gov't, just trying to understand the situation. While not Arab or the first islamic nation to hold free elections, this situation has the potential to set a lot of progressive reforms on the Middle East.
While YouTube was blocked yesterday, I was at the same time having trouble with several other .com domains. DNS was fine.
.com sites right now/just now.
(Disclaimer: I didn't read any fine article.)
Actually, I'm having/had trouble with lots of
Pakistani government: You're so stupid.
...who finds it comical that the nation responsible for the vast majority of offensive comments laughing about 9/11, showing US soldiers getting shot and so forth is blocking YouTube because THEY find it offensive?
Who'd have thought Islamic cartoons would actually help the war on terror by shutting down one of the biggest Al Qaeda propaganda windows on the net!
Pakistan interprets politics as porn and routes itself.
Original by Gilmore: "The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it."
still at least the Pakistanis will now the spared the inevitable custard pie and ridicule videos that will now flood youtube parodying this fuck up.
I'm more in favor of this being motivated by the large number of vote rigging videos and independent news vids floating around youtube that are outside of Pakistani government control.
I'm curious how much money youtube lost as a result of being offline for upwards of 80 minutes?
Wait a second, after having read the stories about all those cables under the sea being cut, isn't it a bit of a coincidence that we (US) is now part of the blocking of Pakistan, for reason xyz.
I know I am a bit on the para side but if their intentions was to block a certain block from the rest of the world, and those cables being cut didn't quite work, I guess the next step would be to have a front story covering up what really happened, anyone can confirm with relatives in Pakistan if this is really what is going on, or just another BIG machine story the media feeds us not to question things happening over there.
But mullahs forbade printing for 200 years, while in Europe it exploded. Mostly it was silly: religious stuff, cartoons, sex, but it was also maps, mathematics, etc.
Internet is about the same as an invention of printing was then. And again they are making the same mistake, again due to a fear of mullahs to lose their power.
Like 500 years ago it will just slow the development of their civilization.
Cause he's actually insightful.
Strange thing is, common law no longer applies in Britain. Still does in the US.
"with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
Am I the only one who sees the irony that the response to this censorship/filtering attempt is to... censor/filter the AS/routes of the ISP responsible for it?
Tch .. no sense of humor whatsoever.
Or maybe it was that funny cartoon about Osama bin Laden's outtakes while making an inspirational video?
Or did someone post something horrific about The Prophet? (Muhammed, not Kahlil Gibran's book.)
Toad-san
"Endeavor to persevere"
Oh ya, Pakistan was a great place until youtube happen!
For those of you who actually want to know "How they did it?" posted from: Renesys Blog
/24 that has been hijacked to its providers
/25 routes are first seen from 36561
/25 routes from 36561
which was found from Cydeweys which is updating as the story progresses. Both of those sites seem to be running a bit slow, so hesitate before clicking.
Full text of Reneysys: Pakistan hijacks YouTube.
A few hours ago, Pakistan Telecom (AS 17557) began advertising a small part of YouTube's (AS 36561) assigned network. This story is almost as old as BGP. Old hands will recognize this as, fundamentally, the same problem as the http://merit.edu/mail.archives/nanog/1997-04/msg00380.html">infamous AS 7007 from 1997, a more recent ConEd mistake of early 2006 and even TTNet's Christmas Eve gift 2005.
Just before 18:48 UTC, Pakistan Telecom, in response to government order to block access to YouTube (see news item) started advertising a route for 208.65.153.0/24 to its provider, PCCW (AS 3491). For those unfamiliar with BGP, this is a more specific route than the ones used by YouTube (208.65.152.0/22), and therefore most routers would choose to send traffic to Pakistan Telecom for this slice of YouTube's network.
I became interested in this immediately as I was concerned that I wouldn't be able to spend my evening watching imbecilic videos of cats doing foolish things (even for a cat). Then, I started to examine our mountains of BGP data and quickly noticed that the correct AS path ("Will the real YouTube please stand up?") was getting restored to most of our peers.
The data points identified below are culled from over 250 peering sessions with 170 unique ASNs. While it is hard to describe exactly how widely this hijacked prefix was seen, we estimate that it was seen by a bit more than two-thirds of the Internet.
This table shows the timing of the event and how quickly the route propagated (this is actually a fairly normal propagation pattern). The ASNs seeing the prefix were mostly transit ASNs below, so this means that these routes were distributed broadly across the Internet. Almost all of the default free zone (DFZ) carried the hijacked route at least briefly.
18:47:00uninterrupted videos of exploding jello
18:47:45first evidence of hijacked route propagating in Asia, AS path 3491 17557
18:48:00several big trans-Pacific providers carrying hijacked route (9 ASNs)
18:48:30several DFZ providers now carrying the bad route (and 47 ASNs)
18:49:00most of the DFZ now carrying the bad route (and 93 ASNs)
18:49:30all providers who will carry the hijacked route have it (total 97 ASNs)
20:07:25YouTube, AS 36561 advertises the
20:07:30several DFZ providers stop carrying the erroneous route
20:08:00many downstream providers also drop the bad route
20:08:30and a total of 40 some-odd providers have stopped using the hijacked route
20:18:43and now, two more specific
20:19:3725 more providers prefer the
20:28:12peers of 36561 start seeing the routes that were advertised to transit at 20:07
20:50:59evidence of attempted prepending, AS path was 3491 17557 17557
20:59:39hijacked prefix is withdrawn by 3491,
mmmmmm pie...
Hi, I Boris. Hear fix bear, yes?
I went the other way -
I consider the current state of affairs a disease of the oval office - once it gets in full swing, there's no stopping it - just hang on while it runs its course.
We'll know more on March 5, but Obama is doing fairly well on the D. side. I'll have to look into what his positions are on our trampled rights. I'll be a little more involved AFTER the election, because Obama is the kind of "fresh air candidate" who will at least listen to the people.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
BBC said the outage was only for two hours.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I debated whether or not to even mention my involvement with him because half of the Democratic Party has yet to accept him, let alone the other half of the electorate.
I'll have to look into what his positions are on our trampled rightsFWIW, he was a civil rights attorney at one point in his life.
because Obama is the kind of "fresh air candidate" who will at least listen to the people.He's still going to need help. To quote him "Good ideas go to Washington to die". We'll never see any meaningful change come out of Washington until we decide to hold our Congressman to account for their actions. Nobody does though. How else do you explain that Congress (as a whole) has approval ratings in the 20s, yet people continue to send their existing Representatives back, year after year?
People are going to need to get involved in the process and speak louder and more forcefully then the special interests/lobbyists that have hijacked Congress. If that happens then I'm actually very hopeful that Obama can manage to unite this country. If it doesn't happen then I still feel that he will be a force for good -- but his grander ideas will probably fall off and die.
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
Heh. Yeah, go ahead, support my point.
So if an Islamic court has any authority to order the PTT to block YouTube because of "blasphemy", it's because YouTube is carrying political news about the situation in Pakistan that Musharraff doesn't want people in Pakistan watching. If Iran had tried that kind of thing, that really would be a theocratic problem, but that's not the issue here. If they implemented it in a way that blocks YouTube from the rest of the world, it's because of incompetence, not malice. (That kind of thing happens a lot, usually because somebody does a bad job of router configuration, but usually ISPs filter out incorrect advertisements; their upstream provider didn't do a good enough job here.)
So in some sense it is similar to Bush in the US - pandering to the religious right wingers as a way to get radical right-wing politics done.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Will somebody please mod this person correctly?
How many documented civilian deaths since 2003 is Pakistan responsible for? (In ONLY one other country?) --For that matter, what percentage of its own citizenry does Pakistan keep in prison as compared to the U.S.?
Just because our TVs are filled with lots of colorful distractions, and our homes are nicely replete with Walmart furnishings, it does not stand true that all is right with the world. The Military Industrial Complex requires for effective functioning that a portion of its gear box be well-oiled. If you were a good little rally-attending German citizen, then life in the late thirties was also pretty good. If one is to guage the state of our governments, one needs to care about how people other than ourselves are being treated by those governments.
Also. . . People in North America are concerned about such disturbing trends as the large number of empty prison camps built on U.S. soil, and the whole Black Water thing.
I can see many reasons for people to be concerned about the U.S. government. Outward shows of totalitarianism, like having the internet lock up for a day because of religious/political dogmatic beliefs, are certainly impressive. I can't find anything in the news to soften my own reaction to the Pakistani government. But "Who is worse" arguments seem to me a distraction. There are problems all over which should all be recognized. Getting caught up in nationalism is a great way to lose focus on the actual issue.
-FL
FWIW, he was a civil rights attorney at one point in his life.
However, like many others who profess an interest in preserving the civil rights of those in the U.S., he advocates serious restrictions on the exercise of the *only* civil right that ultimately insures the government's observation of all the others.
Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
Sorry, don't lower the term civilization to what the muslims have over there.
Hey, I didn't say he was perfect. I'm generally not in favor of Gun Control at all, which probably makes me an oddity amongst Democrats, but there you go.
Gun control will probably be one of the easiest issues for the country find common ground on. Most Democrats aren't married to the idea of restrictive gun control as a one-size-fits-all solution for the whole country. Most Republicans probably don't want to see explosive armor piercing cop-killing rounds in general circulation either. As usual an effective solution will require (*gasp*) compromise on both sides and that won't happen unless the citizenry speaks out and marginalizes the extremists on both sides of the issue.
I'm generally of the opinion that any citizen not convicted of a crime should have the right to own any semi-automatic weapon. I get nervous when the Government decides to go after "assault weapons" as though they are some special class more deadly then others. I get real nervous when the burden is shifted to the citizen to prove that he can own a gun, rather then the Government having to prove that he can't.
Fully-automatic weapons is a discussion worth having -- anybody with access to a machine shop and some basic skills can turn a semi into a full-auto, so any ban isn't really effective... But the regulation of fully-automatic weapons goes back a few decades and might actually serve a purpose.
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
Go read the thread on NANOG. Or read the timeline here: http://www.renesys.com/blog/2008/02/pakistan_hijacks_youtube_1.shtml
The way this happened is the result of a fundamental weakness in BGP. A more specific prefix will trump a less specific one, so anyone who has a valid peer can advertise a more specific route and hijack IP space. This is frequently used by Cybercriminals to squat on unused IP space in larger netblocks.
There have been proposals to address this issue for some time. Maybe, now that a major site has fallen victim, something will actually be done about it.
Of course, we could solve the problem the way it was when the Internet was first designed: only allow trusted entities to connect at all. IMNSHO, if the Islamic world don't want to be in the 21st century, that's their choice, but they can't have their cake and eat it too. Unless and until they agree to the basic principles of the Internet: freedom of association and speech, they shouldn't be allowed to connect at all.
This was discussed yesterday, but somehow the mods didn't control the discussion degenerating into a debate about circumcision.
Just about any ISP is going to get themselves a BGP Autonomous System Number and use BGP to communicate with other ISPs.
A long long time ago, when the Internet was smaller and more trusting, long enough ago that I've forgotten the names of the guilty parties, some company in Virginia made a mistake in configuring their router, and announced that their T1 was a really really good route to MAE-East, and about 1/3 of the packets on the Internet decided to go use their T1, for a couple of seconds before it melted... Since then, it's become a Best Current Practice for ISPs to filter out routing announcements from their customers, and most ISPs also filter their peering links with other ISPs, though some are more aggressive about it than others (plus they tend to have limits on how specific a route can be announced, just to keep router table sizes from exploding.)
But even with that, occasional glitches can happen. A couple of years ago, an ISP in South America did a bad job of route summarization (probably using RIP internally, which uses the old Class A/B/C system instead of CIDR), and announced a route for the
It's highly unlikely that PCTL was trying to block YouTube access for the whole world, as opposed to just for their country. That doesn't mean what they did was competent, of course, but it's not too surprising that somebody exported a route to their peers that they really only intended for their customers. Their upstream provider probably should have filtered out the announcements as well. But things like this do happen, and if you're likely to be a major target, either of malice or of incompetence, you need to do the extra work to monitor route announcements that include your address space.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Did someone pull their finger?!? I thought I told everyone NOT to pull their finger! Nobody ever listens to me! I don't know what they were think...
What's that? Broke the WORLD?
Oh.
Nevermind.
Bitch.
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
An informative link about the AS7007 incident: http://www.merit.edu/mail.archives/nanog/1997-04/msg00444.html
Pakistan broke the worlds internet? Awesome. Talk about a connected world, this is like the digital equivalent of a butterfly's wings.
"Teach a man to build a fire, and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life."
in the War On Terror. Bushco does warrantless wiretaps, Musharrif blocks the internet. Lovely.
...to put the servers into friggin space, man!
That's what we have done in Canada. Only individual donations are permitted, and there is a strict limit on how much can be received. Corporations and lobbyists need to be stripped of their power, demos cratos, not corporatism!
With Pakistan offline it explains why my spam filter is running nearly empty!
Keep up the good work guys!
-Goran
Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
I'll have to look into what his positions are on our trampled rights.
He's going to work to revoke the 2nd amendment, and probably do nothing to restore any rights whatsoever. He is a Democrat, after all. He Know What's Best for You.
The Republicans suck too. But be serious about Democrats and rights.
Hey, look on the bright side, when the new, very charitably described "progressive" government takes power and eventually falls to the Islamists in Pakistan, we'll get to see what all those chemical, biological weapons, and SLBM will do. Think of how sweet thermonuclear war will look in 1080p! This problem was only created because we imagined ourselves too civilized to pursue a more rational, permanent, and ultimately peaceful Roman solution. As since all government ultimately flows from the people, everyone will deserve exactly what they get on all sides.
Everytime that thing loads I have to kill Firefox. It freezes all my windows.
One country, one company can fully manipulate the Internet routing. The networking routing infrastructure is so fragile that anyone can easily break it.
...but recently experts has claimed that it is impossible to break the Internet ? /.
It was even here on
I guess a person or a group of persons with the right access could in fact shut the Internet down.
IANAH, but there was a sizzling documentary on the local non-commercial TV last month about the relationship between Churchill and Roosevelt. Basically it described Lend Lease as a massive confidence trick played on both Churchill and the US public to keep the US out of the war in reality, but in the war in sentimentality. Apparently Lend Lease only contributed 1% of Britain's consumed requirements during that period of the war, while the US sold itself profusely in newsreels as "the Armoury of the free world" as if it was supplying so much more of Britain's need.
Apparently prior to Pearl, Roosevelt was simlilar to current GW&co with regards to political tap-dancery and media salesmanship. Churchill initially believed in his rhetoric, then as the year of lost promises and German bombardments wore on Churchill realised thst Roosevelt was taking him for a ride (source was Churchill's diary notes). Only Pearl brought the US in to Asia and I expect there was more to why they bothered entering EU in reality than some vague concept of "dear old England". Roosevelt might have been more worried about the USSR taking EU as a final outcome of WW2. I don't think he was worried about Germany taking EU. Germany would be a good trade partner. Plenty of good capitalists there. Remember Communism had a manadate to extinuish all other cultures and social formations. Germany only had a mandate to extinguish one, and that was apalling enough.
It appears that most US citizens still believe that they saved the Brits via Lend Lease. If so, and if the preceeding analysis was accurate, then Roosevelt's confidence trick is still working today. A most enduring political success.
Remember, what is a narcissist's principle objective? And are they capable of doing anything but responding to that urge?
No, it does not, 'beg the question'.
To beg the question is to commit a logical fallacy wherein a proposition is assumed to be correct solely on the basis of the proposition's existence; in other words, a circular argument.
It 'raises the question', or 'calls to mind' the question, but it does not beg the question.
While this quote from wikipedia is more about what was contributed to the USSR than England I think it illustrates the magnitude of the program:
For example, the USSR was highly dependent on trains, yet the desperate need to produce weapons meant that only about 92 locomotives were produced in the USSR during the entire war. In this context, the supply of 1,981 US locomotives can be better understood. Likewise, the Soviet air force was enhanced by 18,700 aircraft, which amounted to about 14% of Soviet aircraft production (19% for military aircraft)[5].
Although most Red Army tank units were equipped with Soviet-built tanks, their logistical support was provided by hundreds of thousands of US-made trucks. Indeed by 1945 nearly two-thirds of the truck strength of the Red Army was US-built. Trucks such as the Dodge ¾ ton and Studebaker 2.5 ton, were easily the best trucks available in their class on either side on the Eastern Front.[6] US supplies of telephone cable, aluminium, and canned rations were also critical.
link.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
It's fine to hate the muzzie towelheads at Slashdot. Heaven forfend you actually notice that fact publicaly.
It's a great day, moderators. Thanks for being a bunch of right wing bigots.
Wow. That just about contradicts every single mainstream historian on the subject. What was the name of this documentary that you saw? Can I look it up and review it's sources?
Here's where I started to have a problem with it, FYI:
Apparently prior to Pearl, Roosevelt was simlilar to current GW&co with regards to political tap-dancery and media salesmanship. Churchill initially believed in his rhetoric, then as the year of lost promises and German bombardments wore on Churchill realised thst Roosevelt was taking him for a ride (source was Churchill's diary notes). Only Pearl brought the US in to Asia and I expect there was more to why they bothered entering EU in reality than some vague concept of "dear old England"FDR was taking dear old Churchill for a ride and only got involved in the European theater because of "dear old England"? Then how do you explain all of the conferences between FDR and Churchill prior to the US entry into the war? In them they hammered out the Europe first strategy, among others. The US and UK military staffs were meeting for months before the United States entered the war. Germany had already attacked American warships on the high seas because of our actions in favor of the United Kingdom.
I find it really hard to believe that FDR was taking Churchill for a ride. FDR had some of his own goals in mind (his anti-colonial positions didn't exactly favor keeping the British Empire intact) but I've never heard it suggested that he was taking Churchill for a ride, nor have I ever read any part of Churchill's writings that suggested he ever thought so. America focused on Germany and the European Front even though we hadn't been directly attacked there (unlike at Pearl Harbor). FDR and Churchill worked with each other as partners and implemented a common policy for ending the war.
I'd be really curious to see this documentary that you've watched.
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
The youtube and other flv hosts' mangling of the original video to avoid copyright by "defacement" is very upsetting, but watching "What is Love" might just resolve that ;)
http://youtube.com/watch?v=5S3OA3nJRBQ
http://youtube.com/watch?v=HIHDqZLTK5Y
multiple "Danish Cartoon Parody" and "Geert" or "Forbidden Trailer" searchable.
http://thepiratebay.org/tor/4047508
http://thepiratebay.org/tor/4047509
We'll see how filterable a specific migratory stream / http url is... It takes a VERY large packet filter device to pull that scale of censorship off on multihoned isps.
Mirror FLV stream backup http://wikileaks.bluenorway.org/
Cnet's article on the routing effects http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9878655-7.html?tag=tb
http://bluenorway.org/
bluenorway@gmail.com
What's the difference...?
If 'begging' a question is a logical fallacy, surely 'raising' a question (levitation of an abstract concept - i.e. contextual dissonance) and 'calling to mind' (voices in your head perhaps?) are also logical fallacies. Or more likely symptoms of a schizoaffective disorder. You fruitcake.
Jesus was an invention of the Romans - watch "The Pharmacractic Inquisition" for something more credible...
Ahhh, so the mullahs (Arabic for MFWIC, "Mutha who's in charge") want to isolate their flock so they can keep them stooopid. Sounds like a bad CIA plot ... what's next, cell phones (ooops).
Governments of all countries sometimes block information that is not suitable for it. For example in my country the government always blocks some opposite sites. And some people think that is it normal Do not know what does those people think about their lifes its inconceivable for me, to understand them. I found my only way to solve that kind of ****. Im using VPN tunneling service from www.strongvpn.com , actually the US IP they gives to me I can surf all internet, and do not depend to any policy. Hope this information will help you...