Jon Stewart (right) and Stephen Colbert perform a duet during the Rally To Restore Sanity in Washington DC. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images Jon Stewart (right) and Stephen Colbert perform a duet during the Rally To Restore Sanity in Washington DC. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images 11.20am: Good morning. On the weekend before the US midterms, Jon Stewart, the presenter of the satirical
An Iraqi criminal prisoner was tortured and beaten to death within three days of being turned over to police in Basra by British troops. This latest detailed evidence of previously covered-up Iraq atrocities has emerged following the leak of a vast number of Iraq war logs compiled by the US army and containing hour-by-hour military field reports. The 391,832 previously secret field reports, passed
UN funding is being used to run a brutal internment camp for the destitute in Cambodia where detainees are held for months without trial, raped and beaten, sometimes to death, former inmates have told the Guardian. The Prey Speu facility, 12 miles from Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, is officially described as a "social affairs centre" offering education and healthcare to vulnerable people. But
I cannot imagine that anyone who has come under fire in combat would describe the sensation as friendly – no matter who is pulling the trigger. "Friendly fire" is the prime example of an institution's attempt to sanitise language to the extent that we know what a phrase is trying to tell us, yet reflect little on its actual meaning. The US military has mastered newspeak in a manner that would be t
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