about an hour later i get an e-mail, correction, mr. boyar did not visit the archives. documents were provided to him by a member of the family. that's not research. when you go and you talk to an organization and you say, hey, how do you see yourself, that's a q&a. it's useful. i'm glad for what he did, the access they gave him. you go and look at some of the discussions the group was having working with a pr man named a. larry ross who was in correspondence between the ugandans and the americans promoting the new yorker as a bigger magazine than harper's, an excerpt i had had pleasured which was true. and one of the things i found most disturbing because i know there are people in the family who are concerned about that case in uganda, would not like it to be like that. someone suggested, you know, sharlet is not the problem, the press isn't the problem. this guy in uganda proposing this idea and doing it as one of us and not being held accountable, that's the problem. that's what's making us look bad. and the answer was sharlet is the enemy. i would argue that's a ca