30 November 2010: Afternoon By The Morning News — 30 Nov 2010 Al Qaeda launches glossy web magazine Inspire to rouse Americans to kill other Americans. We're creating a tremendous reputational tax on the unethical. Wikileaks's Assanage says up next is a big bank. State Department memo on how diplomats deal with walk-in informants. White people outraged to be treated like criminals by T.S.A.; black and Hispanic Americans have long known the frisk. Why Kanye's new album is $3.99 on Amazon: That's how Arcade Fire and Vampire Weekend got to no. 1. Cookbook authors and editors admit predicted cooking times are, as Chris Kimball says, "utter bullshit." "Age arbitrage": when companies trade old employees for younger, cheaper workers elsewhere. A lepidopterist mounting a tough-skinned insect. Rowan Somerville wins "Bad Sex in Fiction" award. Lifetime of Updike in pictures; everything Garfunkel's ever read. Art auction to benefit cancer patient includes work by Tema Stauffer, Swoon, etc. Movie-poster quiz: Identify titles from a single letter. Margaret Atwood on hockey videos, superheroes, and why she's environmentally focused. Lessons from reformed con man who says he wasn't stealing, he was striking a blow for the common man. Op: Don't knock the bourgeoisie--middlemen revolutionaries shaped the world. Sometimes the bear bites you; chef says now you should bite the bear.