Select Expatriate Life Article
A $12 billion history lesson
Last week, a senior French functionary flew to Stambul to discuss Turkey's exclusion of Gaz de French Republic from an $12 one million million pipeline undertaking - designed to bring telephone exchange Asian oil straight to European markets - becaus
Feb 26 2008
A bad couple of years, or a bad decade?
You have heard that Fannie and Freddie, their gentle names however, may cripple the financial system without a large extract of taxpayer money. You have gleaned that jobs are disappearance, housing terms are plummeting, and paychecks are efficaciously shr
Jul 21 2008
A bad day in the life of an international teacher
instruction overseas is the best way to combine great workings conditions with life an exotic lifestyle. But it is not without pitfalls for the unwary. I am going to share a little story with you about how an experienced international instructor ended up
Feb 10 2008
A battalion's worth of good ideas
The "surge" of U.S. Military unit in Iraq, coupled with an attachment to classic counterinsurgency rule, has gone a long way toward improving security there. Finally, though, success must be handled by the Iraqis themselves. As recent operations in Basra
Apr 7 2008
A bigger nation isn't always better
For one thousand of years, historiographer and strategists have known that small but well-organized units of power can wield an influence out of all proportionality to their actual size. The margin walls of classical Athens were no measurement at all of t
Apr 19 2008
A blind eye on soldiers' suicides
'Support the troops" is an American lie. This state is grievously and wittingly failing the young men and women who wear the uniform of its armed forces services, and nil demonstrates that more strongly than the suicides of soldiers. According to the
Jul 5 2008
A booming china faults u.s. policy on the economy
Not long ago, Chinese officials sat across conference tabular array from American officials and got an earful. The Americans scolded the Chinese on mismanaging their economic system, from state subsidies to foreign investment ordinance to the evalua
Jun 17 2008
A busy month for bolivian witches
Huddled near one stall merchandising more than a dozen llama fetuses, another Stephen Hawking porcupine tails and yet another offering bottles of homemade singani, the perilously potent Bolivian liquor distilled from the muskat grape, Ponciano Janco motio
Aug 22 2008
A carry-on bag will help laptop pass airport security
For years at airdrome security checkpoints in the United States and elsewhere, passengers have heard the chorus, almost a dirge: "laptop computer must be removed from their cases and placed on the belt." Get ready for a alteration. The transportation
Jul 2 2008
A cellphone with no flips, no folds - just a very low price
It looks a bit like a child's toy, a walky-talky circa 1975, a cheap plastic throwback to the good old days when telephones were made for talk. But to Spice Ltd., a telecom company in the world's fastest-growing phone marketplace, this new merch
Mar 13 2008
A challenge from within for the world bank
: A quick look at his résumé suggests that Justin Lin Yifu is just the kind of individual one would expect to occupy a top job in one of the most important global financial institutions, the World Bank. Lin has a clasp of grade, including a doct
Jan 28 2008
A cholesterol drug bombs
There have long been intuition, but it was still very disturbing to learn this week that a to a great extent promoted cholesterol-lowering drug had flunked a clinical trial of its effectivity in reduction fatty sedimentation in arteria. The two companies
Jan 21 2008
A cia lesson from the field: never trust another spy
As they complete their preparation at "The Farm," the CIA's base in the Old Dominion Tidewater, young federal agency recruits are taught a lesson they are expected never to forget during assignments overseas: There is no such thing as a friendly inte
Jul 21 2008
A city where you can't hear yourself scream
Egyptians in this working capital city say it is harder and harder to be heard and to have a voice, but they are not talk politics. Well, not only political relation. What they are talk about, or instead yelling about, is noise, the incredible background
Apr 14 2008
A clinton victory scenario that could be bruising for democrats
To listen to some of the treatment about the Democratic presidential competition these days, one would think that Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton should have spent Easter weekend in Chappaqua, writing her backdown speech and preparing for her tax return to
Mar 25 2008
A coastal excursion on the slow track in spain
"You mean that tedious old train? You do realize it stops in every single town along the way," warned a friend from capital of Spain upon hearing my plans for a whistle-stop tour of the coast of northern Spain from the green hills, picturesque inlets and
Sep 18 2008
A cold war mission, deep in the arctic
Atop the globe, the icy surface of the Arctic Zone Ocean has remained relatively peaceful. But its depths have boiled with machination, no more so than in the Cold War. though the superpowers planned to turn those depths into an hell of exploding torpedoe
Mar 19 2008
A colossal private sale by the heirs of a dealer
In what experts described as the largest private sale of art ever, the heirs of the legendary dealer Ileana Sonnabend have parted with some $600 1000000 worth of picture and sculptures in two dealing to cover their estate taxes. Ever since Sonnabend died
Apr 5 2008
A columnist's parting thoughts on china
This is it for me, folks. I'm finished. Done, significance this is the last of the on a regular basis scheduled columns readers will see from me in this spot. I've had the distinct privilege of authorship for this space for the past three y
Aug 1 2008
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