From the OIG report:
Critics of the department’s handling of the matter say the actions of U.S. officials contradicted the spirit of the Courage awards, which since 2007 have honored women who “have demonstrated exceptional courage and leadership in advocating for peace, justice, human rights, gender equality, and women’s empowerment, often at great personal risk and sacrifice,” according to the State Department’s website.
“Secretary Pompeo should have honored a courageous journalist willing to stand up to Kremlin propaganda. Instead, his department sought to stifle dissent to avoid upsetting a president who, day after day, tries to take pages out of Putin’s playbook,” Menendez said. “The State Department owes Ms. Aro an apology.” —Washington Post
Similar:
On Stephen Hawking, Vader and Being More Machine Than Human
In one version of Hawking’s eulogistic s...
Cyberculture
Headlines: Why editors matter in journalism.
Headlines are important. (Send an editor...
Amusing
Is Google Making Us Stupid?
Nicholas Carr, in The Atlantic:
As the ...
Books
Can AI write good novels?
I expect that this is probably the year ...
Academia
Saturday morning cartoons are no more
I certainly have fond memories of Saturd...
Business
By the way, humans sent a robot to another planet, and the robot sent us the sound of a du...
Mars rover captures first sound of d...
Awesome



