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Google News Has Russian Army Invading Savannah, GA

theodp writes "If you checked out Google-wannabe Cuil, you learned that mapping search results to relevant images isn't a trivial task. But even Big Dog Google isn't immune to embarrassing graphics gaffes. Readers of Google News were shown that Russian troops are thrusting into the outskirts of Savannah, Georgia, thanks to the Google Maps graphic accompanying a story about Russian incursions into Georgia — the nation-state in the Caucasus, not the Caucasian-pride-ridden state in the southern US. Yahoo! Answers also had some fun with the GA-Georgia mix-up — 'I live in georegia but i dont see rusia no where not even sound but they says theres tanks should i be worrie' (Google cache) — before a spoilsport deleted the question."

9 of 413 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What's so funny about an illegal war? by ya+really · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's another thing to worry about as well. A major pipeline that delivers over 1% of the world's supply of oil (most of it bound for Western Europe) could be at risk. The pipeline flows from Azerbaijan (A major oil producer and non-OPEC nation), into Georgia and finally to the Black Sea. We need that pipeline to stay intact to keep the amount of oil we get from OPEC to stay at the level it is now. I'm sure Russia wouldnt mind "accidentally" destroying this or other oil related structures in Georgia. In fact they already have come close.

    The Interior Ministry said Russian warplanes also bombed the Vaziani military base on the outskirts of the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and struck near the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. The ministry said two other military bases were hit, and that Russian warplanes also bombed the Black Sea port city of Poti, which has a sizable oil shipment facility.

  2. Re:A local radio station was having fun by andb52 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You are only partially correct. Georgia did start an offensive in South Ossetia against the independence movement there. However, Russia has most definitely gone beyond any peacekeeping role that it claimed. The Russians have bombed the Georgian town of Gori, which is well outside of the combat zone. If anything, it seems that Russia is using the Georgian attacks on South Ossetia as a pretense to invade the entire country. This has gone well beyond anything the Russians should be doing, regardless of what Georgia did in the first place. It is, as the Georgian president has put it, an act of war. Oh, and if you won't take this American's word for it, try the BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7551595.stm

  3. Re:Editorializing in summary? by elnico · · Score: 4, Informative

    You also may have missed that it was intended mostly as a play on words.

    ...the nation-state in the Caucasus, not the Caucasian-pride-ridden state...

    Get it? Caucasus, caucasian? Nothing?

  4. Re:A local radio station was having fun by Cyberax · · Score: 5, Informative

    Georgian army shelled a sleeping Tskhinvali, killing more than 1500 people. Without warning.

    Let me repeat: Georgia killed more than 1500 civilians by shelling a sleeping city.

    That's a war crime.

    Then Georgia moved in with tanks and infantry. And _only_ _then_ Russian forces moved in. You just can't blame this conflict on Russia.

    Gori was not the target of bombing, a military base and ammo warehouses were targeted. The civilian losses were, probably, a result of a stray bomb or caused by exploding ammo warehouse.

    I have friends in Georgia, one of them has been mobilized yesterday. So I watch the situation carefully (I also speak Russian).

    Russia _definitely_ overstepped its peacekeeping mandate, sure. But by now nobody cares about it.

  5. Re:Anyone at the pentagon use google news? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Informative

    That may actually be a more insightful comment than you know. Georgia has been making progress towards NATO membership, and under article 5 of the NATO treaty this attack by Russia would have to be responded by all of NATO.

  6. Re:A local radio station was having fun by anaesthetica · · Score: 4, Informative

    They invaded a defacto sovereign nation

    South Ossetia is not a sovereign nation, de facto or otherwise. It's recognized by no one, not even Russia. It's a province of Georgia with a separatist militia operating. Georgia has every right to put down an internal insurgency, Russia has no right to invade another nation.

    This would be like if the United States invaded Russia in 1999 after Putin ordered the army in to put down Maskhadov's separatist forces. Chechnya was de facto sovereign by your standards, having signed a peace treaty with Yeltsin after the first Chechen War.

  7. Re:Dear theodp: You're a bigot. by X86Daddy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Never have I seen whites and minorities live more harmoniously that in Georgia (the ghettoization of minorities in northern cities is NOT "harmony").

    Wow... Maybe you were in Atlanta or something. I attended high school in the aforementioned Effingham County in the mid-1990s, after moving there from southern California. The racism in that area astounded me. I was shocked and disgusted during my entire time there. There was "harmony" in that black people everywhere exhibited a constant air of fear and overt politeness. There was nearly zero social crossover between populations. The bloody high school even had officially separate Black and White prom queen and king elections, I shit you not. People wrote essays about the "War of Northern Agression" for class projects, etc... The high school mascot was a confederate soldier... My dad found KKK meeting announcements on break-room bulletin boards at his job in Savannah. I am not making any of this up. People joke about it, but it's because of the ring of truth to it. It's seriously messed up, and I doubt it has improved significantly over the last decade.

  8. Re:aha! by Pantero+Blanco · · Score: 4, Informative

    There aren't a lot of black groups running around Georgia terrorizing and lynching white folk...

    Well, they aren't lynching people, per se. There are plenty of "black groups" terrorizing hispanic immigrants in the region I live in, though, since they tend to carry cash and don't arm themselves. Most of the murders happen in Atlanta, which is blacks terrorizing blacks.

    116 whites were arrested for murder in Georgia 2007. 411 non-whites were.

    639 whites were arrested for robbery, 3101 non-whites.

    Even if half of those arrests resulted in acquittals the figures would be ridiculous.

    http://gbi.georgia.gov/00/channel_modifieddate/0,2096,67862954_88103906,00.html

    And for those of you who are about to blame "racist police officers", don't make an ass of yourself.

    http://www.fultonsheriff.org/ (that's the county that Atlanta is in)

    I don't "hate black people". I'm just sick of watching this, and hearing about non-existent lynchings.

  9. Re:aha! by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Lynching went out of practice MANY years ago.

    Yeah, keep up with the times already.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"