#Boston Marathon Bombing

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“Self-Radicalization,” the Boston Bombings, and Why Nobody is to Blame
May 16, 2013 11 min. read

I like to write my own blogs, and too often have too much to say to readers who want it short and sweet. But the push to attribute past and future attacks on U.S. citizens on U.S. to “self-radicalization” is the kind of linguistic legerdemain too sweet not to invite more than one response. The […]

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FPA’s Must Reads: April 19-26
April 26, 2013 3 min. read

The Rise of Big Data By Kenneth Neil Cukier and Viktor Mayer-Schoenberger Foreign Affairs The Internet may have transformed the way we do business, live and govern, but a lesser-known technological trend, “big data,” has also been making waves. The premise — that we can learn more from a large body of information things than […]

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Boston Bombers: Is America’s Skewed Asylum System to Blame?
April 22, 2013 8 min. read

As a Russian who first came to America as a small child and later spent his university years in Cambridge, Mass., I felt particularly gripped by the ongoing Boston bomber saga. There remain so many questions about why these two brothers, to whom the U.S. had given shelter, passports, schooling and acceptance, turned so violently […]

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U.S. Scrambles to Control Boston Marathon Investigation and Control Media Coverage. Why?
April 16, 2013 6 min. read

Bostonians are stunned by the marathon “pressure cooker bombings” that killed three people, including an eight-year-old boy, and injured hundreds of others — spectators and participants — with the kinds of battlefield injuries we’ve only read about until now in reports about Afghanistan and Iraq — shrapnel injuries, amputations, burns and disfigurements that one NPR […]

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