17 June 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 17 Jun 2009 Andrew Sullivan's compendium of tweets from Iran shows the revolution really will be twittered. State Dept. official emails Twitter, requests delay of scheduled maintenance at this "crucial time." This second miles-long rally was conducted, like the first, largely in silence. Iranian state television asks patriots to protest the rioters. Startling photos of Iran's disputed election at the Big Picture. Living in an Israeli settlement offers entry-level rentals, though homes may be bulldozed without warning. Syria's web-savvy dictator is loved by the young; he's not a natural-born tyrant, but a potential reformer. Perhaps it's not a coincidence that we call totalitarian leaders "dictators." Learning to deal with conversational bores. 277 survey respondents reported no positive correlation between a professional focus on ethics and actual moral behavior. A writer unwittingly becomes caught in a conspiracy theorist's web. We did not evolve a baloney-detection device in our brains. Science explains humans' susceptibility to conspiracy theories. Anonymous confessions of a Wall Street wife secretly trying to live frugally. Alongside Freakonomics, and Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, a history of spinoff-book titles. Yarn bombing, moonshining, collecting obscure airline memorabilia: a series on the beauty of hobbies.