Word: postings
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Dates: during 2010-2019
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...plan, while still in its infancy, appears to be targeting the website's most frequent readers. Most of the visitors to NYTimes.com pop in infrequently, directed there by search engines and Web aggregators like the Huffington Post or the Drudge Report. For those people, things will not change much come 2011, when the plan is due to go into effect. But heavier users of the site, like those who fire up the computer in the morning to see what the Times has to say, will have to spend. The plan appears similar to that pursued by London's Financial Times...
...wrong about the last part. As the news business continues to struggle across the country - the owners of the Denver Post have just become the 13th newspaper company in as many months to announce their filing for bankruptcy protection - many newspapers are trying to figure out ways of cauterizing the losses. Charging for content is a favorite; Rupert Murdoch has announced he will do the same for all his newspaper companies in the near future...
...majority to kind of push things through is leaving a bad taste in people's mouths, especially as you noted the fact that President Obama made [changing the way business gets done in Washington] one of his campaign themes. You knew he was going to be transparent, he would post all these bills on the Internet, and you'd have three days to comment on them. None of that's happened. So people are disappointed in that regard...
...quite sure what you are talking about, what are they trying to do?" - When asked what he thought of the tea-party movement (The Huffington Post...
Like the knee-jerk decision to dismantle the Iraqi army, the U.S. decision in 2003 to ban members of the former ruling Baath Party from joining the new Iraqi government was one of the biggest blunders of the early American occupation of post-Saddam Hussein Iraq. It instantly alienated an entire spectrum of civil servants and politicians, many of whom didn't have much loyalty to the old regime and could have been enlisted in the construction of a new government. And because many of them were Sunni, it helped widen the sectarian split in Iraqi society that eventually...