
A video of U.S. Army Sergeant Phillip Roach being hit with a large wooden mallet causing him to collapse, provoked an angry response from his father.
Roach was being promoted to Sergeant.
According to The Blaze, "Ken Roach of Michigan said his son, 22-year-old Sgt. Phillip Roach, suffered a seizure and required stitches after knocking his head on the ground when he fell.”
It sounds like Sgt. Roach will make a full recovery, which is good news.
Right now the video only has about 500 views on YouTube, but as the news spreads it's sure to grow quickly.
Source: The Blaze via Wish TV
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The United States Marine Corps’ official Facebook page (www.Facebook.com/Marines) which is managed by active-duty Marines has nearly 2.5 million likes as of today.
At the time of this story, the page has exactly 2,432,822 likes.
Assuming a rough estimate daily growth rate of over 1,000 likes, it’s possible the page will hit the 2.5 million milestone sometime in October.
But Facebook.com/Marines isn’t the top “liked” military page on Facebook.
It’s another related page though.
The top “liked” military page is currently Facebook.com/MarineCorps, which is operated by Marine Corps Recruiting Command.
It has over 2.7 million likes.
Other top military pages by likes include:
The U.S. Army - 1,584,410 likes
National Guard – 1,251,013 likes
United States Air Force - 1,105,517 likes
The U.S. Navy has yet to reach the 1 million milestone, but has broken over 700,000 likes.
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(Mail Online)
US Counters Taliban on Twitter. The U.S. military is taking steps to counteract the Taliban’s growing influence on Twitter by rebutting false information quickly and reporting abuses of the social media website’s guidelines on violent threats. The Taliban and other terrorist groups famously try to take credit for attacks, even if they didn’t take part and most of the information they post is false or exaggerated, Army Lt. Col. T.G. Taylor, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, told USA Today...
(NewsMax)
Butte veteran's Iraq war diary becomes dark, comedic novel. The characters are cartoons of the people he met in Baghdad, Abrams said. “They’re tiny bits and pieces of people I actually worked with,” he said. “I don’t think they’d recognize themselves, but the ethos and way people behave in the novel is similar.” Abrams went to war as a writer and knew he eventually would write something from his experience and kept a journal...
(Great Falls Tribune)
Pentagon may take legal action against SEAL author. The Pentagon's top lawyer has informed the former Navy SEAL who wrote a forthcoming book describing details of the raid that killed Osama bin Laden that he violated agreements to not divulge military secrets and that as a result the Pentagon is considering taking legal action against him. The general counsel of the Defense Department, Jeh Johnson, wrote in a letter transmitted Thursday to the author that he had signed two nondisclosure agreements with the Navy in 2007 that obliged him to "never divulge" classified information...
(The Associated Press)
14 army camps to allow camera equipped phones. SINGAPORE - Fourteen army camps will allow servicemen to bring in camera equipped mobile phones as part of a pilot programme starting today. The camps will be divided into two security zones and devices will be permitted in the Green Zones but not in the more sensitive Red Zones. Included in the list of Green Zones are the Central Manpower Base, Basic Military Training Centre and Singapore Armed Forces' (SAF) Fitness and Conditioning Centres at Bedok, Maju, Khatib and Kranji Camps. Medical centres, accommodation bunks and cookhouses will also be designated as Green Zones...
(TODAYonline)
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Rob Bates, a war-time illustrator with eight years of service in the Marine Corps infantry, will be going to Afghanistan this December.
Only, instead of deploying as an infantryman he will be embedding with a platoon of Marines and sketching and reporting on the drawdown in Afghanistan from a "boots on the ground" perspective.
Not only is Rob a talented artist, but he also blogs about his work and experiences at rb-portraits.com.
Rob wrote about his upcoming plans earlier this week in a post titled, “PLANNING TO EMBED”:
“UNC North Carolina Public Radio has agreed to freelance me to do journalistic work for The Story, a syndicated radio show broadcasted nationally on American Public Media. Step one to securing an embed is to get a letter of accreditation from a bonafide media organization. Check.
Step two is to obtain a passport and overseas medical insurance. I secured an appointment to get my passport Tuesday, September 4th. I also plan on purchasing my policy within the next few days.
Once I have my hands on the passport, I will be able to finish filling out any remaining paperwork needed to retrieve my Invitational Orders. These orders get me into country.”
His artwork is amazing.
If you haven’t seen it, you can see more at his online gallery here.
Rob has also started a fundraiser on indiegogo with a goal of raising $5,000 to help cover expenses that he is responsible for as part of his embed.
On indiegogo, Rob writes:
My name is Rob Bates. I am a former Marine, a war artist, and an illustration major at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. Several of my pieces form part of the prestigious combat art collection at the National Museum of the Marine Corps (accession number 2011.52). My work has garnered the attention of several news and media outlets, to include: The Los Angeles Times, The National Review, American Public Media, The Charlotte Observer, Great American Country Channel, and more.
I am a freelance war artist/correspondant for WUNC's The Story on American Public Media, one of the nation's leading news radio organizations. My intent is to embed with a platoon of Marines and to sketch/report the drawdown in Afghanistan for two weeks this December. The art that I produce will not only get published on their website, but will also seek accessioning into several major collections. I will also broadcast my stories on air nationally.
You can learn more about the funding campaign here, which at the time of this story has raised nearly $1,000 with just 20 days to go.
As always, a big thanks to my friend Kathi for the tip.
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According to AFP, "The 28-year-old captain was found guilty of posting comments on his account last December criticising Lee using foul language."
The Ministry of National Defense issued new social media guidelines as a result of the incident.
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(USA TODAY)
Madison Rising to Perform at 2012 Milblog Family Reunion This Labor Day Weekend in San Antonio. Patriotic rock band Madison Rising will be performing its #1 best selling rendition of the Star Spangled Banner along with a complete set of original music including Right To Bear, Walking Through That Door, American Dream, Soldiers of America, Hallowed Ground and others on Friday, August 31st at the 2012 Milblog Family Reunion event (http://www.vamortgagecenter.com/blog/2012/05/03/2012-milblog-family-reunion) in San Antonio, TX...
(PRWeb)
Pentagon Joins the Pin Craze. Servicemembers might not expect the U.S. military to adopt Pinterest, the fastest growing social medial site that's most popular with young mothers, as quickly as it did. This is the same organization that drug its feet for years debating whether to allow troops to go on Facebook. The National Guard jumped first in December and set up a Pinterest pinboard of its own. The pinboards are what drive the social media site. Users set up their own boards on the site and "pin" pictures, links and videos of their interests. They can then repin other pictures and share them on Facebook, Twitter and email...
(Military.com)
Ecuador declines to extradite Belarus blogger. The denial on Tuesday came in the wake of a diplomatic row with Britain over Quito's offer of asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, and as Ecuador has been criticized by rights groups over its treatment of its own local media. The court said it was unable to approve the extradition request for Barankov because he had been declared a refugee by the foreign ministry. Barankov, 30, a former army captain, fled to Ecuador in 2009 after being charged with fraud, allegations he says were trumped up after he blogged about widespread corruption linked to people close to Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko, often referred to as "Europe's last dictator."
(Times LIVE)
Romney Twitter Campaign vs Obama Reddit AMA: Who Won The Social Media Showdown? AMERICA! All the young whippersnappers are using Twitter and Facebook and Reddit these days, so if you're running for President of the United States of America, you'd probably want to channel some of that social media craze into your political campaign. Well, that's exactly what presumptive GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney and current President Barack Obama are doing. President Obama made history today when he decided to do an "Ask Me Anything" session on Reddit. Obama's session reportedly set a record on Reddit for generating the most concurrent visitors ever with 200,000. The Verge reports that general manager of Reddit Erik Martin said "Chaos here" when describing the Reddit offices...
(International Digital Times)
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Here in the U.S., the Veterans History Project, which was created by Congress in 2000, collects first-hand accounts of U.S. Veterans. The goal of the project is to preserve the personal accounts of American veterans so that future generations may hear directly from vets.
Canada has a similar project under way called The Memory Project, an initiative of The Historica-Dominion Institute.
From The Memory Project website, here’s a little bit of information:
“This nationwide bilingual project will create a record of Canada’s participation in the Second World War and Korean War as seen through the eyes of thousands of veterans. The Memory Project will provide every living Second World War and Korean War veteran with the opportunity to share their memories through oral interviews and digitized artefacts and memorabilia. These stories and artefacts will be available on this site for teachers, students and the general public.”
The site is very interactive with audio and video clips, photographs, transcripts and much more.
There is even a section called Inside the Classroom, which provides lesson plans and classroom activities to help students hear the experiences of thousands of servicemen and women who served in Canada’s military.
A recent news story in CBC News featured the project:
“Project manager Alex Herd said the project is more than just a database; it's also a way for today's tech-savvy generation to interact with Canada's military past. The growing military history is posted online at www.thememoryproject.com.
The average age of World War II veterans is 88 years old, while the average age of a Korean War veteran is 78 years old, he said, and that's given the project a sense of urgency.”
According to Global Edmonton, “there are almost 50 veterans’ profiles and stories posted right now, but this will likely increase as the project garners more attention from readers, veterans and their families.”
Learn more about The Memory Project here.
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(Popular Mechanics)
Syria regime blamed for false blogs about rebels. Supporters of the Syrian regime hacked the website of Amnesty International, posting items that falsely accused anti-government rebels of atrocities. The cyberattack, which occurred Monday, was similar to the targeting this month of blogs operated by the Reuters news service. In Amnesty's case, the primary target of the hacking appeared to be the group's Livewire blog, which offers first-person perspectives from Amnesty researchers and field workers. According to Amnesty officials, social media users began posting false items accusing the Syrian rebels of committing massacres that had been linked to government forces...
(StarTribune)
CEO refutes claim of developing social media software for Russian intelligence. The company Iteranet is not developing a system to monitor social media sites, or any other mechanisms to promote information in the blogosphere, CEO Igor Matskevich told the Russian Legal Information Agency (RAPSI/rapsinews.com) on Monday. Kommersant newspaper reported Monday that Iteranet is in the process of developing the system for the Foreign Intelligence Service. The paper reported that a customer by the name of Military Unit No. 54939 ordered the systems, which were codenamed Dispute, Monitor-3, and Storm-12...
(RAPSI)
Women Who Cheat on (or With) Soldiers Get Viciously Outed on Facebook. Appearing on Maury to expose a cheating ex is so 20th century. Now, spurned lovers — or anyone with a grudge — can go online to post photos and otherwise cyberbully people they claim have done them wrong. Nearly 15,000 people are fans of the Facebook group "Make Them Famous for Military Exes," which seeks to expose people who have cheated on military spouses while they were deployed...
(Jezebel)
Turkish journalist held captive in Syria is shown on video; Turkish FM alleges Syrian coercion. Turkish television has broadcast a video of a Turkish journalist who is reportedly being held in Syrian government captivity. NTV television on Monday showed the video of Cuneyt Unal, a cameraman who was working for the U.S.-funded al-Hurra network when he and a colleague, Bashar Fahmi, were believed to have been captured while covering fighting in the northern city of Aleppo a week ago...
(The Washington Post)
Malcolm Browne, AP Vietnam War correspondent who took iconic burning-monk photo, dies at 81. Malcolm W. Browne, a former Associated Press correspondent acclaimed for his trenchant reporting of the Vietnam War and a photo of a Buddhist monk's suicide by fire that shocked the Kennedy White House into a critical policy re-evaluation, has died. He was 81...
(Daily Journal)
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Now, just when you thought it couldn't get any crazier, a Facebook group called "Support Prince Harry with a naked salute!" has been launched. At the time of this story being published it has over 12,000 members and plenty of photos posted from all walks of life.
Fair warning if you visit the Facebook group, although members' “crown jewels” are covered in the photographs, it's not necessarily a safe-for-work website.
So what's the idea behind the group?
According to the ABOUT page, if you have served or are serving in the military you are encouraged to submit a photo of your naked salute in support of Prince Harry but you must cover your crown jewels, then tag yourself in your photo as proof of your support to Prince Harry.
The creator of the Facebook group has also launched a Twitter account @Salute4Harry, but it is nowhere near as popular as its Facebook counterpart. The Twitter account has a measly 77 followers.
And yes, there's even a Website: www.salute4harry.co.uk which has more on the story:
“This group was started after a few serving and ex military lads started posting naked salutes to each other in support of Prince Harry!
I suggested we start a group on facebook and went ahead thinking we would get around 75 people max in the group. This has now built to over 11k in less than 72hrs, we have had to ask lads we know to help admin the site, and it's now currently the fastest growing facebook group page and also we have a trending hashtag on twitter #Salute4Harry!
Many people have suggested ways to fundraise for a good cause using the support from these sites and we are looking at the options. Thank you for all your support!”
The Daily Mail and other news sites have more on the story including photos from the Facebook group.
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Prince Harry served on the frontlines in Afghanistan and went through training as an Apache helicopter in the U.S.
He may now face a reprimand over the Las Vegas photo scandal.
US Weekly writes:
"Because all of the Vegas drama he's frozen his account," the source explains. "No more Facebook for Harry for a while. He'll probably come back online in the future, but, for now, he's been advised to go offline."
Adds the insider: "It's best that he keeps a low profile for the moment."
Still, this Monday Aug. 27, the redhead will have to resurface a bit as he reports back to Royal Air Force Wattisham base. There, the helicopter pilot will have formal interviews with Lieutenant Colonel Thomas de La Rue and the Head of Army, General Sir Peter Wall, who will ultimately decide how reprimand Harry for the scandal.
Full story here.
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(RT)
Journalism 101: A recommended course for the IDF. Israeli army’s Facebook status chides journalists for not choosing sides and becoming active participants in conflict...
(+972 Magazine)
Faux social networks test disaster response. This year’s Vibrant Response, a massive U.S. homeland defense exercise, began for the first time with a tweet. Not a real tweet via Twitter but rather a simulated version of the social media site known as Bleater. One minute, social media role players were “bleating” about waiting for Lady Gaga. The next, they were tweeting about an explosion — from a 10-kiloton, vehicle-borne nuclear weapon...
(ArmyTimes)
Facebook Marine Brandon Raub: Should Vets Really Be Worried? The after shocks of US Marine Brandon Raub being detained on charges of posting on Facebook are seismic tremors in the minds of many veterans. With some of the most recent shootings in the United States, veterans are being targeted as potential terrorists. The question is: should they be worried?
(DeathRattleSports)
Egypt''s military council warns against bogus Facebook accounts. Egypt's Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) warned on Sunday against fake accounts in the social network website "Facebook" which disguises under SCAF name and disseminates information that would jeopardizes the country's national security and safety. The council said in a press statement, published also in their Facebook page, that discussion and exchange of sensitive information could benefit the enemy and hurt the country's national security...
(KUNA)
Facebook Israel-Arab youth group has rare meeting. A Facebook-based movement for Mideast youth says the group has held its first gathering, bringing young activists from Israel and Arab countries to Germany to promote peace. Nimrod Ben-Zeev of the YaLa-Young Leaders group says 18 members from Israel, the Palestinian territories, Tunisia, Algeria, Lebanon, Egypt, Sudan, Iraq and Kuwait met in Berlin over the weekend...
(KCAU-TV.com)
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This is the top thread on Reddit’s Military page today.
If you haven’t visited the Military Subreddit, some of today’s top links include threads about the ex-Navy Seal who wrote the bin Laden book, video of soldiers engaging Taliban, and even someone who is planning to join the Army but is afraid of losing his girlfriend.
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The online directory can be found at http://www.af.mil/socialmedia.asp and allows official U.S. Air Force social media pages to be submitted.
Using an official e-mail account, you can submit a link by providing the web address, your name, whether or not you are a PAO, and your phone number.
As of today, there are around 400 official U.S. Air Force Facebook pages listed on the site ranging from the United States Air Force page which has over 1 million fans to the Combat Airlifters page with just under 100 Likes.
There are dozens of YouTube links and Flickr links, but by far the most popular web presence for the U.S. Air Force is Facebook followed by Twitter.
Of course, my favorite section of the site is the blogs section, even though only a dozen blogs are listed.
If you’d like to learn more or submit a link, go here.
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(Gloucester Township, NJ Patch)
Georgia program to interview Vietnam War-era vets turns up some surprising opinions. “We didn’t really get their stories when they came home. They didn’t come home to much of a reception,” said Madeline Darnell, program coordinator for the “The Boomers,” a joint project of the Athens Regional Library System and the Lyndon House Arts Center. Working together, the two institutions got a three-year leadership grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services focusing on the baby boomer generation. They aim to develop a model for other libraries to use in serving the baby boomers as they start to retire...
(Jacksonville.com)
US General: We Hacked the Enemy in Afghanistan. The U.S. military has been launching cyberattacks against its opponents in Afghanistan, a senior officer said last week, making an unusually explicit acknowledgment of the oft-hidden world of electronic warfare. Marine Lt. Gen. Richard P. Mills' comments came at a conference in Baltimore during which he explained how U.S. commanders considered cyberweapons an important part of their arsenal...
(Military.com)
Marikana: The matter of embedded journalism. As police fired on miners rushing towards them at Lonmin’s Marikana mine, local media captured the bloody battle from a vantage point that saw them in the safe embrace of our country’s boys and girls in blue. What does this perspective mean about news, truth and events that could shape our very history? MANDY DE WAAL spoke to Rhodes University Journalism Professor Jane Duncan about media coverage of the Marikana massacre...
(Daily Maverick)
Military records abound for your genealogy research. Few families, over the 200+ years that this country has existed, have not had someone serve in the military. Military records abound and are fairly easily researched through a web site called: Fold3.com. Again, many people have exactly the same names and unless you have some background as to when your relative served, it may be difficult to trace. Pictured with this article are examples of how grave markers reveal information about the person's military background...
(McCook Daily Gazette)
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Though it’s been awhile since I’ve featured a military blog here, my friend Kathi reminded me about it.
And it’s worth pointing out that there are clearly all sorts of great people out there doing great things – and who are also taking the time to blog about it.
The blog’s name: Paving the Road Back – Serving Those Who Have Served in Combat.
Rod writes about his site:
“In this blog, I try to provide service professionals (e.g., mental health clinicians, physicians, attorneys, educators) in the broader community a deeper understanding of the psychological, social, and spiritual challenges faced by veterans returning to civilian life after serving in combat, so that professionals may more effectively “pave the road back” for these men and women to have meaningful lives relieved of the pains of their past and opened to the possibilities of their future.
To do this, I try to listen as carefully and as openly as I can to combat veterans, to their sufferings, their regrets, their pride, their camaraderie, their challenges and their hopes, both in person and in correspondence. My goal is to document as faithfully and as deeply as I can what they tell me and what others are trying to do for them.”
In a post published online earlier today, he wrote about the death toll in Afghanistan reaching 2,000.
“The past few days have been challenging ones, with many men and women having passed through my door, most of whom I know well. Fortunately many are doing well. Unfortunately some are not.
It’s the nature of my business.
Sadly, there is an additional factor in the nature of my business. It’s called reality.
Reality, this week, has not been kind. For as many readers may already know, this past week our Nation achieved–if one only could, without bitter irony, call it that–a milestone.
Two thousand service members have died in the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The New York Times published a powerful memorial for these men and women. In the print version, the pictures of all two thousand were laid out over the pages of the paper. On the website, however, was a memorial that simply left me, what, sighing, deeply, closing my eyes, rubbing the back of my neck, dropping my head back, opening my eyes toward a ceiling (a Heaven?), taking in a deep breath, letting it out, looking back down at a laptop screen, silent, staring.
I do the very same now.
Before me on that screen is a picture of man, pixilated. Two thousand pixels form his picture.”
Read more here.
Hat tip: Kathi.
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(Newsday)
Former Marine Pokes Fun at Military With Website. Former Marine Paul Szoldra first posted a fictional story about an Air Force colonel who banned all chairs on his installation to gain attention for another website he had created to help veterans use their education benefits. The post intended to poke fun at a common nickname other services have for the Air Force – the Chair Force – the satirical article quickly spread throughout the military ranks. There was soon an outcry for more comic posts by Szoldra, which inspired him to create The Duffel Blog – what many consider a military version of The Onion...
(Military.com)
Fake military news site gains traction. When a former marine started writing Onion-style stories on the satirical military news site he launched in March, he had little inkling how quickly they would spread. Five months since he started The Duffel Blog, 28-year-old Sgt. Paul Szoldra, who was honorably discharged from the the marines in 2010, has duped multiple outlets with his fake newsflashes. One, about the Department of Defense banning TapouT—a mixed martial arts clothing line—inspired a furious blog on Yell Magazine...
(CJR)
Govt. to departments: Tread carefully on social media. The government on Thursday issued guidelines for its departments using social media networks asking them not to post confidential information and “unverified” facts. With 40 million Facebook and 16 million twitter users in India, social media have emerged as a powerful platform for forming an opinion as well as generating mass support, the Information Technology Ministry said in its 38-page guidelines issued on Thursday. “Great care must be taken to avoid propagation of unverified facts and frivolous misleading rumours,” it said...
(The Hindu)
Ecuador mulls extradition of Belarus blogger Alexander Barankov. Ecuador's much-criticised record on press freedom has come under renewed scrutiny following its decision to grant asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, holed up in its London embassy to avoid extradition to Sweden. Alexander Barankov, a former army captain, fled to Ecuador in 2009 after being charged with fraud, allegations he says were trumped up after he blogged about widespread corruption linked to people close to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, often referred to as "Europe's last dictator".
(Herald Sun)
Military vet arrested over Facebook posts. Brandon Raub is a combat veteran who is being held against his will by the state of Virginia because they found his Facebook posts disturbing. State and county authorities say he is not under arrest because he is not facing any criminal charges. Technically they are correct. He is being held for psychiatric evaluation for post anti-government posts...
(Examiner)
Stories Of War Preserved With Veterans History Project. History will not be forgotten, and the Greater Long Beach Chapter of the American Red Cross is making sure of it. Area volunteers in the Service to Armed Forces Department have been working for more than a year-and-a-half to interview on video hundreds of veterans, who have fought in wars from World War II to the War in Iraq — all for the Veterans History Project. “What it does is allow the veterans to tell their story about what it was like during their time of service,” said Veterans History Project Director and volunteer Mike Farrar...
(GAZETTES.com)
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It's no shock to hear that the Taliban are using social media.
A year ago I briefly touched on the subject with this article: Why do Facebook and Twitter allow Taliban?
Now a major paper The Washington Times is covering the topic.
Bill Gertz writes, "The increasing use of the Internet and cellular telephones with access to the Web is a relatively new feature of life in Afghanistan, and military officials say the Taliban are exploiting the new social-media platforms for their Islamist aims."
Gertz points out that U.S. Central Command contacts sites like Facebook and Twitter urging them to take down the account because it violates their terms of service. Facebook is the most responsive according to the story, often deleting accounts that are used to recruit.
It's good to hear Facebook has been the most responsive, but Twitter has historically been slow to respond, if it’s responded at all.
One well-known Twitter account of the Taliban continues to be online, even after being named in the news over and over and getting into a war of words online with the U.S. military and other nations who send troops to Afghanistan.
While I’m not sure how Gertz came to this conclusion, he says in some cases, the Taliban’s use of social media has outpaced that of NATO and U.S. forces.
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(DVIDS)
Satirical website The Duffel Blog dupes news sites with bogus stories. The Duffel Blog — also on Facebook (13,600 fans) and Twitter (1,450 followers) — is starting to gain a following among service members and veterans. It aims not only to poke fun at military culture and foibles through humor and ridiculousness, but also to provide social commentary that can raise awareness on serious issues such as PTSD and suicide, said founder Paul Szoldra. It compares itself to The Onion, but with a military bent...
(NBCNews.com)
Veteran Japanese war correspondent killed while covering fighting in Syria. A veteran Japanese war correspondent was shot and killed while covering Syria’s civil war, her family and the government said Tuesday. Mika Yamamoto worked for The Japan Press, an independent TV news provider that specializes in conflict zone coverage. She was hit by gunfire Monday while she and a colleague were traveling with the Free Syrian Army in the northwestern city of Aleppo, said Masaru Sato, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo...
(The Washington Post)
Pentagon preps new social media rules. The Pentagon is late on issuing it’s latest set of rules for service members on how to use popular social media outlets such as Twitter, Facebook, and Pinterest. Defense Department officials have been working towards a new directive on social media to replace the old rules that were set to expire July 15. The expiration date was extended when it became clear leadership couldn’t settle on new guidance until later this year. No specific date has been given for the release...
(Defense Tech)
Quora makes answers embeddable for easier use by journalists. The social question-and-answer website Quora released a new feature today that makes it easier for journalists and other publishers to quote from the expert answers posted on the network. Just highlight specific text in an answer and click the “embed quote” button, or go to the bottom of the answer and click the “embed” link to grab the whole thing. The popup provides an embed code to paste into your story...
(Poynter)
India Debates Misuse of Social Media. India has blocked more than 250 websites after provocative online content spread panic among people from the country's northeast, prompting some of them to flee Indian cities. The crackdown has sparked a debate about how the country will cope with misuse of social media. Officials say the websites that were blocked had posted edited images and videos of victims of earthquakes and claimed they were those of Muslim victims caught in recent ethnic strife in India's northeastern Assam state and Burma...
(VOANews)
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Here’s a look at the Top 10:
#1 The Only Girl Among Boys
A sometimes humorous, always honest look at the life of a military family enduring the ups and downs of deployments while raising four little boys. Always trying to look for ways to encourage other wives and moms on this same ride!
http://www.theonlygirlamongboys.blogspot.com/
# 2 The Meat and Potatoes of Life
Lisa dishes up a heaping helping of hilarious and heartwarming stories about marriage, parenting and military life. Her syndicated humor column appears in newspapers, Stars & Stripes Military Moms website, Military Spouse magazine, and on her blog.
http://themeatandpotatoesoflife.com/
#3 The Deployment Diatribes, (News From the Commander In Chief @ Home)
Erin is a Navy Wife and Mom to 4 boys, including one with Autism. She writes about military family life, deployment issues, Autism, and no-nonsense parenting.
http://www.deploymentdiatribes.wordpress.com/
#4 Hooah and Hiccups
My journey from college grad, to Army wife, to new mom! I write about everyday occurrences, current events, and other topics relevant to Military life and motherhood.
http://hooahandhiccups.blogspot.com/
#5 Random Rants of an Army Wife
Updates on my life as the wife of an injured Special Operator in the US Army as we adjust to life with his brain injury, mother of an adorable toddler who loves to test my patience and an adorable 7 month old.
http://randomarmywife.blogspot.com/
#6 5 Nuts in a Nutshell
Just a crazy family trying to juggle 3 boys (4 if you include daddy-dearest), Army life, school, and everything in between!
http://nutsinanutshell.blogspot.com/
#7 Embracing This Life
A blog from a young military wife about embracing this life. We'll chat about the military, marriage, motherhood, weight loss, and all things around the house.
http://embracingthislife.com/
#8 Tips For Military Families
Daily tips posted to help military families and members not just survive military life but thrive. Tips on postings, deployments, re-integrations, etc.
http://blog.whileyouwereaway.org/
#9 This Fabulous Army Life
Living the Army life ... one fabulous day at a time! Musings include thoughts on parenting, raising boys, kids' crafts, Army life with its joys and challenges, and other fabulous events in this Army life!
http://fabulousarmylife.blogspot.com/
#10 Writings of an Air Force Wife
Air Force wife. Mom of 2. Currently undergoing our 7th deployment. I write about our everyday little moments. I live a creative life full of painting, photography, DIY projects, decorating & more. Life is either a grand adventure, or nothing. -Helen Keller
http://www.emily-roe.blogspot.com/
For a full list of winners, go here.
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(Fox News)
Military satire site manages to fool some people. If you're surfing the Internet and happen to land on The Duffel Blog — it's at duffelblog.com — don't do what the folks at Gizmodo and Yell! did and believe anything you read. That's because The Duffel Blog, the 5-month-old creation of University of Tampa senior and former Marine Sgt. Paul Szoldra, is a satire site, full of fake news about the military...
(TBO.com)
Burmese blogger speaks out against Islamophobia. Nay Phone Latt had been sentenced to twenty years in prison by the Burmese military junta for his links to the “Saffron Revolution” Buddhist monk led protests back in 2007. He was freed, along with hundreds of others at the beginning of the year, as part of a political prisoner amnesty decreed by the government which has recently undertaken a series of reforms. The 32 year old blogger is now one of the few people in Burma to speak out against Islamophobia...
(FRANCE 24)
American Legion finds unexpected treasure in attic with discover of World War I bond posters. We've all heard the stories. People rummaging around in their attics or cleaning out basements and stumbling upon relics of the past or priceless artifacts or heirlooms. TV programs would make you believe stuff like that happens every day ... it just never happens to us. But it has happened in Greencastle, and the Putnam County Museum has become the beneficiary...
(The Republic)
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