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I'm Scott Orr, a tech writer, political reporter and blogger in Washington, formerly with Newhouse News Service and the Newark Star-Ledger. I'm seeking a full time gig in communications and accepting freelance work in the meantime.
After years in the business, I can write. But there's more: I've been online since I got my first Apple IIe when the Internet was a mere dirt road back in the 80s.
So here's the package: Your news, press releases, speeches, ad copy, I can write 'em. Your web site, blog, and online presence, I can maintain 'em. Your message, I can polish it, present it and make it sparkly and accessible.
I'm an early and frequent adopter and my data are fresh. I tend toward non-linear thinking, but with a balance that enables me to translate even weapons-grade complications into simple, understandable prose. Read some of my writing samples, you can see for yourself.
Over the years, I've written about everything. No, really. Space shuttle crashes, I've covered two of them. Presidential elections, four. Also: disasters, murders, terrorism, the environment, business, federal policy, courts, breaking news, features and, most lovingly, technology.
I know the media and it is me. Get to know me, read my stuff. Google "j. scott orr" for some 15 pages of hits. Hire me.

Email me at: scott@jscottorr.com

 

 

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Scott's Blog

Do Terror Alerts Keep Us Safe? 

Apparently not, according to an online survey that accompanied this story I did for PARADE Magazine: http://www.parade.com/news/intelligence-report/archive/do-terror-alerts-keep-us-safe.html.

Seventy-nine percent of respondents said no.

President Obama once referred to the Homeland Security Advisory System as “the color-coded politics of fear,” and now his administration is taking a close look at the five-tiered public-alert system.The threat-advisory chart was unveiled six months after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and critics have charged ever since that threat-assessment decisions have as much to do with political expediency as with national security. After changing hues 10 times in its first two years, the chart fell into limited use following the departure of Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge and the system’s other champion, former Attorney General John Ashcroft. Ridge later said that use of the system was driven by others in the Bush Administration, sometimes over his objections.

Read the rest and vote in the poll at the above link.