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Edited on Thu Aug-18-05 12:21 PM by dutchdemocrat
Firefox saves bookmarks into HTML and they can easily be imported and exported (shared). Since I recently put together a links section at www.chris-floyd.com with over 1600 well-organized, progressive links using Firefox and importing the bookmarks into a component called "bookmarks" that is used in Mambo (the site software) I thought I would offer them up here. They are all in one folder so a single folder has all 23 categories in it - rather than dumping loose links all over bookmarks. You can see the actual links section I built on the site here. http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com_bookmarks&Itemid=45The HTML page that can be imported into Firefox (File>Import) can be seen here. http://www.chris-floyd.com/bookmarks/bookmarks.htmThe actual file is zipped here. http://www.chris-floyd.com/bookmarks/bookmarks.zip The site is not live yet - Chris is still warming up his voice for podcasting and - making the transition with be a gradual thing with his blog and site both running at the same time... for some time. His original cookie cutter blogspot is here. http://www.empireburlesquenow.blogspot.com/Chris is my favourite progressive journalist. Full stop. His voice is one that needs to be heard more. If anyone wants to join up or help me BETA test all the functions on the site - feel free, and please email me at expatforums@gmail.com with any comments or bugs that you may find. Mind you, if you join up you can message me on the site. (I am admin). Who is Chris Floyd? Chris Floyd is an American journalist. He writes the weekly Global Eye political column for The Moscow Times and St. Petersburg Times. His work also appears in The Ecologist, The Nation, CounterPunch, Christian Science Monitor, Bergen Record, Columbia Journalism Review and elsewhere around the world. He is the author of the book, Empire Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime. His columns are featured each week on Bush Watch. He has been a writer and editor for more than 20 years, working in the United States, Great Britain and Russia for various newspapers, magazines, the U.S. government and Oxford University.
His career began in the hills and valleys of Tennessee and down in the piney swamps of southern Mississippi, covering moonshine raids, shotgun murders, drug-running evangelists, racial conflicts, the economic ravages of the Reagan Administration, and the relentless, turbulent campaign of the Religious Right to gain political power and cultural dominance throughout the "heartland." He returned to his home ground in the late 1990s, where he won awards for his coverage of a deadly hostage shootout and a bloody melee between county officials – swapping charges of corruption and adultery – at a school board meeting.
Floyd spent several years in the depths of the military-industrial complex, working for a security-restricted federal research laboratory on projects dealing with energy conservation, global warming, space travel, transportation, robotics, artificial intelligence and military logistics. On the side, he published fiction and poetry in various now-forgotten journals and taught Russian literature at the University of Tennessee. Later, he annotated Shakespeare, 19th century British poetry and American literature for a start-up company producing multi-media CD editions of literary works for colleges and schools.
In 1994, he made his way to Russia, where he joined the Moscow Times, an English-language daily and one of the first independent newspapers of the post-Soviet era. There he spent two years – the high casino of the tumultuous Yeltsin era – and began writing the "Global Eye" column, which he continued after returning to the United States in 1996. He was also the Times' movie reviewer from 1996 to 2000.
From 1998 to 2000, Floyd was the editor of Science & Spirit, an Oxford quarterly journal dealing with the contentious relationship between science and religion. His work there included interviews with such thinkers as Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Steven Pinker, Frans de Waal, V.S. Ramachandran and others. He also worked with contributors from around the world – Islamic scientists, Jewish theologians, militant atheists, Nobel Prize-winning physicists, and authors such as Freeman Dyson, Paul Davies, Lisa Jardine, A.N. Wilson, John Polkinghorne and others.
Since 2000, Floyd has worked as a freelance journalist and as a writer and researcher for Oxford University. In addition to the "Global Eye," his work is also published weekly in CounterPunch and the Bergen Record, and he is a regular contributor to The Ecologist magazine and the Anderson Valley Advertiser. His work has also appeared in The Nation, The Guardian, Columbia Journalism Review, The Christian Science Monitor, the Baltimore Chronicle, and on innumerable websites around the world, including Common Dreams, Buzzflash, Democrats.com, BushWatch, The Smirking Chimp, Cursor, Make Them Accountable and many others.
His story, "Into the Dark: The Pentagon Plan to Foment Terrorism," was chosen as one of Project Censored's "Top 25 Stories of 2002/2003." His pieces have been anthologized in Media Democracy in Action: Censored 2004, and the I Hate Republicans Reader. He also speaks occasionally on American radio, where his mumbling Southern drawl has befuddled listeners in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
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