Our oopsie of the day comes to us courtesy of Nick Baumann at Mother Jones, who brings us this story of an FBI agent who thought it would be a good idea to submit a copy of a secret interrogation manual to the U.S. Copyright Office -- which means it ended up in the Library of Congress, unredacted and available to anyone who wants to see it. And that's just the biggest of the craptacular snafus in the way the document was handled. These stories of multiple bureaucratic screw-ups gladden our hearts and make us unaccountably happy -- it's somehow reassuringly humanizing to know that the top spies lock their keys in the car now and then, too. Just as long as nobody does that while handling nerve gas, at least.
T.E. Lawrence (yes, "of Arabia") published an expensive, limited-edition of one his books - and refused to let the newspapers review it. An enterprising reporter went to the LIbrary of Congress (since it was copyrighted), read it, and reviewed it.
Ok I know Bamz aka dstructo kneegrow is the guilted one,he is just tryin to alert the Muslins as what to lookey out for iffin they get caught on the secret army base afore they go out to kill the jeebus folks
<i> To serve <strike>Man</strike> as a Bad Example</i>
T.E. Lawrence (yes, &quot;of Arabia&quot;) published an expensive, limited-edition of one his books - and refused to let the newspapers review it. An enterprising reporter went to the LIbrary of Congress (since it was copyrighted), read it, and reviewed it.
Ok I know Bamz aka dstructo kneegrow is the guilted one,he is just tryin to alert the Muslins as what to lookey out for iffin they get caught on the secret army base afore they go out to kill the jeebus folks
In subzero weather.