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- Ginni Thomas Lie - Workflow + (Ginni Thomas, the controversial wife of Su … Ginni Thomas, the controversial wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, says her activities on behalf of Donald Trump and other conservative causes have no bearing on the work of her husband.</br></br>https://www.npr.org/2022/03/14/1086535100/wife-of-justice-thomas-rebuts-claims-of-conflict-of-interestomas-rebuts-claims-of-conflict-of-interest)
- Voter Fraud - Workflow + (Here are the partial truths and facts that … Here are the partial truths and facts that show how they are misleading.</br>A machine-readable thumbprint can be easily forged using common software of scans of a thumbprint. Thumbprints of individuals are easily obtained particularly if they appear by the thousands on mailed in envelopes. Societies where thumbprints are used for voting lack access to such software and have moved to digital signatures based on national ID cards as they modernized.</br>“Machine-readable” is a lie. Fingerprint / Thumbprint scanning for identity has long been known to be susceptible to failure to read by machine without high error rates. It is true that modern scanners can create “machine-readable” likenesses of fingerprints which are indistinguishable from the original fingerprint. But it is NOT TRUE that modern pattern recognition software can reliably read the fingerprint as proving who provided the fingerprint and how.</br>This method provides an open opportunity for voter fraud by a knowledgeable elite wishing to manipulate vote counts. Years ago, when people did not have signatures or modern cell phones, and could not write, it made sense.</br>This method does not eliminates many of the problems with ballot signature verification, witness signatures, and unscrupulous ballot harvesting. None of these is true. These are mail in ballot registrations.</br>Note, significantly, that this policy ONLY APPLIES TO MAIL IN BALLOTS!</br>It is horribly misleading to say “The state will encrypt the captured thumbprints as alphanumeric values with a one-way hash using a secure key.” Technically the way this works is that the thumbprint as a digital image can be viewed by anybody. It is not hidden from people wishing to have this person’s reputed thumbprint.</br>A one-way hash using a secure key can mean any number of things depending on whether the hash is cryptographically secure or not and whether the secure key is a private key in a public-private key cryptographically secure key-pair. If not properly done, the security is a sham.</br>Even then, the new thumbprint on the ballot will NOT have the same hash value as the one on the ballot application! The signatures for the fingerprint will not match. This is guaranteed to fail using any known techniques.</br>Such shams are common in practice (see my book).</br>The fact that the signed hash value can be represented as a long string of alphanumeric characters is immaterial. Any digital value, any picture, any information, can be represented this way. That requirement is intended to mislead people that such a string can be verified by a human in a meaningful way. It cannot. You can easily show a different fingerprint with the right hash.</br>The fact that a law will be prohibited from sharing raw thumbprint data with any other government agency does not mean it will be prohibited from sharing with a company or any private individual. And how much can we trust a prohibition of sharing among government agencies in the first place. The major problem with a fingerprint is that it presumably does not change for the life of the person and once the fingerprint is known for a person by anyone, it is public knowledge.</br>Add to that the fact that the error rate in proving a particular instance of a fingerprint is uniquely identifying one person, and this proposed system is not at all preserving security or privacy of votes in modern society.</br>There are ways to do get the right assurances, but they are not being proposed. Why? Precisely because this method, while it may sound good, is even more susceptible to voter fraud by governmental and private entities than existing methods.nd private entities than existing methods.)
- Hoax School Attack Lies - Workflow + (Hoax calls are lies typically using phone … Hoax calls are lies typically using phone or internet media that</br>threaten violence. This is called swatting. </br></br>The question is how to dissect such calls if indeed they do turn out of be lies. Here the motive appears to be</br>in question. This article suggests a general motive.</br></br>They are intended to set off a massive and immediate deployment of armed law enforcement to a specific target, including SWAT teams. The results can be quite dangerous, as they were in a fatal incident in 2017, when police swatted a man in Wichita, Kansas.</br></br>A shift from bomb threats to false calls about active shooters may also reflect that bad actors understand how heavily school shootings have come to factor into communities' fears in the U.S.</br></br>"The underlying reason that it is effective as a disruption or as an emotional, psychological attack is because we know it could be real," said Amanda Klinger, director of operations for the Educator School Safety Network, a national nonprofit organization that does school safety for primarily K-12 educators. "Our fear of school shootings and school-based violence is being weaponized against us."</br></br></br>The background is given on the NPR page.</br>False calls about active school shooters are rising. Behind them is a strange pattern</br>October 7, 20229:49 AM ET</br>Odette Yousef headshot</br>ODETTE YOUSEF</br></br></br>In response to a false call about an active shooter, police and emergency workers descended on Robert Anderson Middle School in Anderson, South Carolina, on Oct. 5. Parents rushed to pick up their children, causing a traffic jam in front of the school.</br>Ken Ruinard/USA TODAY Network/Reuters</br>When Emmi Conley first heard in September about a rash of hoax calls reporting active shooters in schools, she dismissed it. Conley, an extremism researcher who studies groups and people behind public displays of violence, said she found no indication that these calls were connected to fringe online spaces where these pranks often originate.</br></br>But as the number of these reports swelled over time, Conley said she began to discern some very strange patterns — including the possibility that the calls may have come from overseas, and perhaps specifically from Africa.</br></br>"The scale and the timeline of the events is highly, highly unusual," she said. "The calls are consistent. They are coordinated. They are grouped state-by-state and district-by-district, and they're also sustained. So somebody is putting significant effort to keep these going."</br></br>As Conley began digging further, more questions emerged. Elements of these calls were notably different than what she has typically seen in school-based threats. Nobody has taken credit for these calls, even as they stretched over several weeks, and the technological planning and research behind the calls betrayed a level of sophistication not typically seen.</br></br>Sponsor Message</br></br>In a statement, the FBI has said it is aware of the incidents, but has "no information to indicate a specific and credible threat."</br></br>The agency said it is working with law enforcement at every level to investigate the cases. But some news reports, including in Minnesota and Louisiana, have cited local authorities who said the calls may be originating in Africa or, specifically, Ethiopia. The FBI would not comment on this detail.</br></br>For Conley, particulars around these calls suggest that the people or person behind them are, indeed, overseas.</br></br>"Our big questions now are whose attention are they after?" she said. "Is it the public? Law enforcement? Media? Something else? And why they're after it?"</br></br>Swatting as the new 'bomb threat'</br>The hoaxes are called "swatting," a term that refers to calls that falsely report an act of violence in progress or about to occur. They are intended to set off a massive and immediate deployment of armed law enforcement to a specific target, including SWAT teams. The results can be quite dangerous, as they were in a fatal incident in 2017, when police swatted a man in Wichita, Kansas.</br></br>"It was popularized by extremely online communities with proclivities toward violence and perceived ideological enemies," said Conley. Those have included live-gaming communities and extremist groups, where perpetrators aim to harass specific individuals. The recent targeting of institutions, namely schools, appears to be a new development.</br></br>NPR has found, primarily through local news reports, at least 113 instances of hoax calls across 19 states between Sept. 13 and Oct. 5. Louisiana, Minnesota and Virginia tallied the greatest number. This is likely an undercount, as many locations may not have garnered media attention. School safety experts worry that these hoaxes could inspire copycats, putting school communities and law enforcement officers at significant risk.</br></br>"You know, for decades, those of us in the school safety world have dealt with false bomb threats," said Mo Canady, executive director for the non-profit organization National Association of School Resource Officers (NASRO). "If we get a call that someone is actively shooting, injuring, killing people, that's a whole different matter. That requires really an all-out response."</br></br>Canady said swatting presents a higher set of risks than bomb threats. In Ohio, one father was reportedly detained for arriving at Licking Valley High School with a gun after hearing that there may be an active shooter at that location. That response from a parent is understandable, said Canady, particularly as the horror of a school massacre in Uvalde remains fresh in many parents' minds. But, he notes, it could lead to confusion and worse at the scene.</br></br>A shift from bomb threats to false calls about active shooters may also reflect that bad actors understand how heavily school shootings have come to factor into communities' fears in the U.S.</br></br>"The underlying reason that it is effective as a disruption or as an emotional, psychological attack is because we know it could be real," said Amanda Klinger, director of operations for the Educator School Safety Network, a national nonprofit organization that does school safety for primarily K-12 educators. "Our fear of school shootings and school-based violence is being weaponized against us."</br></br>'A connection to overseas'</br>In audio obtained by NPR of some calls in Ohio and one call in Minnesota, the person reporting an active shooting breathes heavily and follows a nearly identical narrative. He identifies himself as a student at the school, although he sounds like an adult male. He also speaks with a heavy accent. NPR also requested call records from locations in other states, but many were denied on the basis that the incidents are under investigation.</br></br>Drew Evans, superintendent at the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, said he has also heard audio of hoax calls that were placed in states other than Ohio and Minnesota. He said they sounded very similar.</br></br>"There was an accent here and it appeared to be a similar person or the same person in all the calls either heard or reported in to us," Evans said. The MBCA is investigating 17 swatting calls that occurred Sept. 21 in Minnesota.</br></br>Evans said that the calls in his state were all made directly to schools or to non-emergency dispatch lines, rather than to 911. He said they appeared to be coming from Internet-based phone numbers, which either originated in or were routed through foreign countries through a VPN connection.</br></br>"There's indications that there's a connection to overseas," he said. "What we don't know is whether or not overseas could have been used as a mask."</br></br>Conley said the possibility that the calls came from a foreign individual or entity may be bolstered by details that the caller provided that are atypical of school shootings in the U.S. For example, the particular model of gun the caller referenced as the weapon was often different from what is commonly used in school shootings.</br></br>"America has a very particular relationship with guns," she said. "The the cultural object of the mass shooting in the United States is the AR-15."</br></br>But both Conley and Evans noted this campaign indicates a tremendous level of detailed local knowledge or research.</br></br>"Whoever is doing this has managed to make phone calls relating to specific schools, reach the correct dispatchers, and give specific information about local school districts and threats within them without being caught," Conley said. "You couldn't do that without some considerable effort and investigation into knowing where you're targeting, how you're targeting it and how you were avoiding detection."</br></br>An earlier wave</br>Some are considering the possibility that the person or group behind the calls is building on prior experience. In the spring, schools in several states reported receiving false calls about bomb threats. In Minnesota, the MBCA confirmed that nine schools were targeted. Evans said there were similarities between how those calls were placed, and the more recent wave of false active shooter reports.</br></br>"There [were similarities] in terms of the specificity in which they were calling in the particular threat, it appeared to be one individual that was making the calls, and they certainly seemed to be one individual that was a live person," he said. Evans said that those calls, as with the calls in September, were also made to non-emergency lines.</br></br>"Some of the schools believe there's a potential they could be connected," he said.</br></br>NPR identified at least six states where schools received bomb threats starting in mid-March and mostly concentrated through April. Minnesota, North Carolina, Maine, Louisiana and Hawaii each saw multiple hoax calls on a single day.</br></br>In Louisiana, where at least five schools received false calls about bomb threats on April 21, one local report said that investigators had linked the IP address of the caller to Ethiopia. More recently, a report from Minnesota cited Alexandria Police Chief Scott Kent saying that he believed the calls made in September to schools in his state were linked to an IP address in Ethiopia. Kent did not respond to interview requests.</br></br>Evans said the investigation into the April calls to Minnesota schools remains open.</br></br>The difficulty of discerning a motive</br>Whether the source of these hoaxes is domestic or foreign, one perplexing question remains the same: Why?</br></br>"I would find myself wondering, especially if it's coming from another country, is someone potentially trying to test our systems to see how we respond to those types of events?" said Canady.</br></br>NASRO recently issued guidance to schools on handling swatting calls. Chief among it, said Canady, is to continue to operate under the assumption that each call is a real threat.</br></br>"If we hesitate, it can cost lives," he said. "So unfortunately, we have to continue to proceed in an emergency manner... until we know for a fact that it's not a real incident."</br></br>But there's also concern that if the dramatic uptick in swatting sustains or continues to rise, that emergency response itself can create trauma. Klinger said even hoaxes can create fearful situations that exact a psychological and emotional toll upon students, educators and parents. She said she would like to see more federal guidance on how to keep school communities safe, but still nurturing.</br></br>"If I continue to just shut down the schools, shut down the school, shut down the school... how does it end? How do you ever stop it?" she said.</br></br>Without a clear ideological aim behind these calls, or any known organization, the effort may not clearly qualify as terrorism under the FBI's definition of the term. But many note that its effect may be the same.</br></br>"There's a significant amount of intentionality based on the information that's been reported," said Evans. "They were doing this with a purpose to cause fear in our communities."purpose to cause fear in our communities.")
- CNN Collapse Lie - Workflow + (I think this was a lie. Indeed, it is a m … I think this was a lie. Indeed, it is a mix of lies and truth by</br>the way the opinion piece was written to back the truth of the title.</br>The actual ratings in 2020 were the best ever while 2021 was lower and the</br>second half still lower, but they fired the top producer Cuomo then. </br>My suspicion was that Zucker...the guy who made Trump by giving him the "Apprentice"</br>job, and who probably manipulated the 'attacks' on Trump in CNN (with Cuomo)</br>was actually a Trumpist Their opinion was less credible and left Zucker as </br>an anti-Trumpist and incompetent.</br>https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/592969-cnns-collapse-is-now-complete</br></br>The actual ad ratings that fell 90% happened just recently but only for prime time (it is still the 3rd best cable channel .. and has been that solidly). And,</br>they fired their top producer (by far) in the second half.</br></br>The title in any even is a big lie. No matter what.</br>https://www.adweek.com/tvnewser/2021-ratings-cnn-has-its-2nd-most-watched-year-ever-but-sees-sharp-declines-in-2nd-half/496930/</br>https://www.adweek.com/tvnewser/2020-ratings-cnn-averages-most-viewers-in-its-40-year-existence-and-ends-year-by-dominating-in-demo/466472/</br></br>CNN will also close out 2021 as one of the five-most-watched networks in all of cable in all dayparts. In Total Day, the network ranks No. 3 in total day and No. 5 in primetime. CNN was also among the 10-most-watched cable networks in 2021 among adults 25-54, coming in at No. 5 in Total Day and No. 9 in primetime.</br></br>Overall, CNN averaged 1,078,000 total viewers in prime time, 268,000 adults 25-54 in prime time, 773,000 total viewers across the 24-hour day and 185,000 adults 25-54 across the 24-hour in 2021.</br></br>What do these figures look like compared to its final 2020 ratings? Well, CNN fell -40% in total prime time viewers, -48% in the prime time demo (adults 25-54), -32% in total viewers across the 24-hour day and -40% among adults 25-54 across the 24-hour day.</br>TheHill.com</br>CNN's collapse is now complete</br>BY JOE CONCHA, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR — 02/06/22 11:00 AM EST 3,817THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY CONTRIBUTORS ARE THEIR OWN AND NOT THE VIEW OF THE HILL</br>936</br>Share to Facebook Share to Twitter </br> </br>Just In...</br>US figure skater tests positive for COVID-19 at Olympics</br>INTERNATIONAL</br> — 5M 33S AGO </br>Frontier, Spirit Airlines merge in $6.6B deal</br>BUSINESS & LOBBYING</br> — 15M 42S AGO </br>Investigation finds top Biden science adviser bullied subordinates: report</br>ADMINISTRATION</br> — 21M 5S AGO </br>New Jersey governor ending school mask mandate: report</br>HEALTHCARE</br> — 44M 4S AGO</br>VIEW ALL</br>It all began 42 years ago — Ted Turner's creation of a 24/7 news network that would exist on something called cable TV. Few believed it could succeed. </br></br>And, for its first decade, CNN largely chugged along but wasn't seen as a game-changer or a true competitor to big broadcast news entities based in New York in the form of CBS, NBC and ABC. That all changed when war broke out between the United States and Iraq in 1991. </br></br>On the night war exploded over Baghdad, CNN was the only news organization that was able to broadcast from the city under siege as the U.S. onslaught began, all courtesy of the CNN team’s ability to convince the Iraqi government to grant them a line out of the city to broadcast, one that the competition could not secure.</br></br></br>"How CNN Won the War" was the glowing headline from The Washington Post on a story that perfectly chronicled the events that led to CNN officially becoming a major player. And off it went. </br></br>Until 2002, CNN was No. 1 in the cable news race. But competition that hadn't existed before ended its dominance forever, primarily in the form of Fox News and, to a lesser extent, MSNBC. Despite the ratings results, CNN continued to carry itself as a credible, facts-first network of integrity that leaned heavily on solid reporting with a sprinkling of opinion and infotainment mixed in via programs such as "Larry King Live" and "Crossfire." </br></br>In 2013, the network hired former NBC Universal President Jeff Zucker to take the reins as ratings continued to be below average at best. This gave Zucker a mandate to radically change the network from its journalistic roots of more than three decades — the months-long wall-to-wall coverage of a missing Malaysian airliner being an early example.</br></br>But two years later, the move to insert heavy doses of partisan opinion into its news reports only accelerated when former President Trump — a Zucker hire at NBC for "The Apprentice" — jumped in to the 2016 presidential race. At first, CNN bear-hugged Trump's every move. (Hillary Clinton's giving a speech somewhere? Screw it. Let's show an empty Trump podium with chyrons stating "Trump to speak soon" instead.) The real estate mogul's 17 Republican challengers never had a shot; Trump blotted out the sun in terms of media coverage on his way to winning the nomination.</br></br>At that point, Zucker and CNN began to worry. Because while it was a ratings boon for the network to make Trump the centerpiece, there was growing concern that the guy could actually beat Hillary and become the nation's 45th president. So Zucker unleashed the hounds, but it was too late. Trump would go on to shock the world in November 2016.</br></br>Undeterred, CNN decided there would be no honeymoon period for the new president. Talk about Russian collusion handing Trump the White House began even before the inauguration. And after the nonstop Trump-bashing, Harvard University concluded that CNN led the way, along with Zucker's former home of NBC, in giving Trump 93 percent negative coverage in his first 100 days. </br></br></br>For the next four years, CNN served as the leading media resistance to Trump, throwing objectivity out the window. And after President Biden got elected, the network cheered the new president as it had throughout the entire campaign while still making Trump a prime centerpiece for over-the-top negative coverage despite his being out of office. </br></br>But as much as CNN tried to resurrect its lead character — who was banned from social media and largely off the grid for the year — his absence clearly showed the network was a one-trick partisan pony. Ratings fell 90 percent overall when comparing January 2021 to January 2022. That’s hard to do. </br></br>Which brings us to the events of this week: Zucker released a statement saying he had to resign because of a consensual affair with an executive named Allison Gollust. WarnerMedia apparently has a rule against this, so Zucker — instead of a slap on the wrist for a benign offense — simply had to go abruptly. </br></br>Nobody believed this excuse. Turns out they may have had plenty of reason to be skeptical. </br></br>Per several reports, Zucker and Gollust allegedly advised then-New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) – the older brother of then-CNN anchor Chris Cuomo — on what to say during his COVID-19 daily briefings in the spring of 2020. They also reportedly told Cuomo how to respond to and how to criticize Trump, to make it more compelling TV. (Gollust is a former communications director for Andrew Cuomo.) </br></br>Let's unpack all of this: </br></br>In the spring of 2020, the country was in a horrific place. Businesses shut completely; people were scared. There were no COVID-19 therapeutics, no vaccines. Hospitals were overwhelmed, thousands were dying each day. If ever there was a time for news organizations to educate and inform the public, this was it. </br></br>Instead, Zucker apparently believed it was the perfect time to exploit the situation for political gain and to help the network's ratings.</br></br>Andrew Cuomo benefited from briefings that made him appear to be the adult in the room regarding COVID-19 and Trump appear to be the villain. Cuomo got a $5.1 million book deal as a result.</br></br>Chris Cuomo and Zucker/Gollust/CNN benefited from marathon interviews with Cuomo's governor/brother, which didn't touch the governor's alleged nursing home scandal. Ratings soared.</br></br>So, was Zucker's departure simply about a consensual relationship with a co-worker? One might be forgiven for questioning that.</br></br>Moving forward, what's next for CNN when the company falls under the Discovery Channel umbrella later this year? Let's hear from its soon-to-be largest shareholder, John Malone of Liberty Media. </br></br></br>"I would like to see CNN evolve back to the kind of journalism that it started with, and actually have journalists, which would be unique and refreshing," Malone said in an interview that recently aired on CNBC. </br></br>Espresso's popularity is booming. Now is a great time to learn how to...</br>Andrew Yang in now-deleted tweet: 'I don't think Joe Rogan is a...</br>The collapse of CNN is now complete: 9 out of 10 viewers, gone. Its top-rated anchor, Chris Cuomo, gone. Its network president, gone. Its integrity in shambles.rk president, gone. Its integrity in shambles.)
- The line is a future utopia, but are people going to live there - Workflow + (In 2021, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin S … In 2021, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman revealed the country's plans to build The Line, a smart linear city that will be constructed vertically, have no roads or cars and run purely on renewable energy. Now, the Saudi government has released image renders of what The Line could look like once it's done. The city was designed to only be 200 meters (656 feet) wide, but 500 meters (1,640 feet) tall and 170 kilometers (105 miles) long. It will house multiple communities encased in a glass facade running along the coast and will eventually be able to accommodate up to 9 million residents. </br></br>A dutch design specialist says: "it won't be likely people in modern cities of this day and age will accept a big change like this and move into cities simaler to this futuristic concept"cities simaler to this futuristic concept")
- Biden's Infrastructure Claim - Workflow + (In his State of The Union Address, Biden, … In his State of The Union Address, Biden, speaking about his Infrastructure Bill, said: “The single biggest investment in history was a bipartisan effort.”</br></br>—The fact is, it wasn’t that historic. The bill was big, adding $550 billion in fresh spending on roads, bridges, and broadband Internet over five years. But measured as a proportion of the U.S. economy, it is slightly below the 1.36% of the nation’s gross domestic product that was spent on infrastructure, on average, during the first four years of the New Deal, according to an analysis by the Brookings Institution. It is even further below the roughly 2% spent on infrastructure in the late 1970s and early 1980s.</br>https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/ap-fact-check-bidens-claims-in-his-state-of-union-address</br></br>—Whatever Biden’s or Buttigieg’s lip-service to climate goals, this money to DOTs is likely to go in large part to expanding capacity in ways that ramp up driving nationwide,” says Jeff Speck, author of the book Walkable City. It does not further climate goals.</br>https://www.governing.com/now/the-infrastructure-bill-may-not-be-so-historic-after-all</br></br>—Historians, economists and engineers interviewed by The Associated Press welcomed Biden’s efforts. But they stressed that $1 trillion was not nearly enough to overcome the government’s failure for decades to maintain and upgrade the country’s infrastructure. The politics essentially forced a trade-off in terms of potential impact not just on the climate but on the ability to outpace the rest of the world this century and remain the dominant economic power. </br>https://fortune.com/2021/11/15/historians-economists-joe-biden-1-trillion-infrastructure-bill-big-deal-not-transformational/ucture-bill-big-deal-not-transformational/)
- S&P 500 ESG describes Exxon as being more sustainable as Tesla - Workflow + (It just isn't the whole truth, one makes e … It just isn't the whole truth, one makes electric vehicles and the other produces oil </br></br>https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exxon-knew-about-climate-change-almost-40-years-ago/</br>They knew about climate change 40 years ago </br></br>https://www.vox.com/22429551/climate-change-crisis-exxonmobil-harvard-study</br>our objective is to wrap yourself in the good phrases while sticking your opponents with the bad ones,” he wrote in 1986.</br></br>From the 1970s through the 1990s, most of the company’s PR efforts focused on casting doubt on the scientific consensus that burning fossil fuels was warming the planet. But by the mid-2000s, it was taking a more sophisticated, nuanced approach.</br></br>one of 20 companies responsible for one-third of energy-related global carbon emissions since 1965</br></br>The metrics and methods used are not reflecting logical thinking but weird rules.flecting logical thinking but weird rules.)
- Janet Yellen misleads about cryptocurrency - Workflow + (Janet Yellen on Crypto April 7, 2022 at A … Janet Yellen on Crypto</br></br>April 7, 2022 at American University’s Kogod School of Business Center for Innovation.</br></br>https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0706</br></br>https://www.forbes.com/sites/danrunkevicius/2022/04/15/national-security-yellen-let-slip-her-plan-to-regulate-crypto-as-the-price-of-bitcoin-ethereum-bnb-xrp-solana-cardano-and-dogecoin-sink/?sh=267b48e6ad75</br></br>Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen gave her first speech about cryptocurrencies and their regulation. While her address had an unexpected pro-crypto undertone, Yellen called for a tougher regulatory stance.</br></br>"Proponents believe distributed ledger technology will transform other aspects of financial services like trading, borrowing, and lending. They point to capabilities, like smart contracts, which use computer code to automatically execute an agreement if certain prespecified conditions are met. To the extent that setup is more convenient, and costs are competitive with those required for traditional financial services, digital assets offer the potential to expand access."</br></br>“Consumers should be protected from fraud regardless of whether assets are stored on a balance sheet or distributed ledger…. Money-laundering and other illicit activity should be deemed illegal, and it doesn’t matter whether you’re using checks, wires or cryptocurrency,” she said.</br></br>The Digital Dollar</br></br>For much of the past century, the dollar enjoyed the benefits of the world’s reserve currency. And Yellen stressed that retaining this privilege should be regulators’ priority in their approach to digital assets.</br></br>Yellen believes, that while the government should push for financial innovation that ensures “competitiveness and growth,” it should also pursue its “national security interests.”</br></br>She suggested that a central bank-issued digital currency (CBDC) could fulfill the need for a digital currency while retaining America’s reserve currency privilege.</br></br>"... a CBDC could be the next evolution in our currency. A recent report by the Federal Reserve opened a public dialogue about CBDCs and the potential benefits and risks that could be associated with issuing one in the U.S."</br></br>Later she made an explicit remark that clarified her stance on the decentralized vs. centralized currency debate: "Sovereign money is the core of a well-functioning financial system," she said.l-functioning financial system," she said.)
- Rogan Spotify AntiVax Lie - Workflow + (John Oberlin @OMGno2trump · 8h When Spotif … John Oberlin</br>@OMGno2trump</br>·</br>8h</br>When Spotify pays Joe Rogan $100 million dollars they aren't supporting him, they're sponsoring and subsidizing him, his politics, his disinformation and antivaxxers.</br>Quote Tweet</br>Pink Peonies 2014</br>@PinkPeonies2014</br> · 14h</br>Now that Willie Nelson, Bruce Springsteen, Barbra Streisand, Queen, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, Dave Grohl, Joni Mitchell, & Pearl Jam have joined Neil Young, how do you think Spotify feels about its decision to support Joe Rogan?</br></br></br>lie</br>Replying to </br>@NoLieWithBTC</br>Spotify takes the money from subscribers and pays Joe Rogan to spread misinformation that may harm and kill people. So, subscribers are sponsoring pain and death</br></br>No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen</br>@NoLieWithBTC</br>Spotify isn’t just hosting Joe Rogan. They signed a $100 million contract with him to host his content exclusively on their platform.</br></br>This isn’t about censorship. It’s about the misinformation that Spotify is financially SPONSORING.</br></br>https://twitter.com/raven_valkyrie/status/1487958722508996612?s=20&t=yzot7W-cGu77pGW_klULzw</br>google search confirming 100M pay to Rogan by Spotify that "depends on performance"</br></br>Spotify IS supporting him, even if they say they aren't and say they cannot tell him what to say. They had the option of not signing him if he was going to be evil.ion of not signing him if he was going to be evil.)
- Elon Musk actually does pay taxes - Workflow + (Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Pe … Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Person of the Year will actually pay taxes and stop freeloading off everyone else.</br></br>While he is paying around 12 bilion dollar worth of taxes over 2021. </br></br>He also said it is the largest tax payment an US individual has ever done.ax payment an US individual has ever done.)
- Elon Musk actually does not pay taxes - Workflow + (Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Pe … Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Person of the Year will actually pay taxes and stop freeloading off everyone else.</br></br>While is going to pay around 12 bilion dollar worth of taxes over 2021. </br></br>He also said it is the largest tax payment an US individual has ever done.ax payment an US individual has ever done.)
- - Workflow + (Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Pe … Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Person of the Year will actually pay taxes and stop freeloading off everyone else.</br></br>While is going to pay around 12 bilion dollar worth of taxes over 2021. </br></br>He also said it is the largest tax payment an US individual has ever done.</br></br>The filings he has made with the Securities and Exchange Commission about his recent stock trades back up that massive number. stock trades back up that massive number.)
- Test Case # 239456.345.b - Workflow + (Liars never lie...)
- Putin Loves Children and Parents - Workflow + (Meeting with Commissioner for Children's R … Meeting with Commissioner for Children's Rights Maria Lvova-Belova </br></br>This is a meeting after the world had started condemning Putin for killing children and mothers in UKraine. In a day of meetings with world leaders not internet Russian groups.</br></br>The lie is that this is propoganda to make Putin looks like he cares about children and mothers in Ukraine or Russia for that matter.hers in Ukraine or Russia for that matter.)
- Test case for the rehearsal this afternoon - Workflow + (Merel can repair the wiki, the wiki was broken)
- Debating transgender athletics is not transphobic - Workflow + (On Transgender Athletes Debate David Whar … On Transgender Athletes Debate</br></br>David Wharton, latimes.com, tweeted the following on Jun 20, regarding an article the LA Times published on transgender athletic issues (As Title IX turns 50, it plays a surprise role in transgender athlete access debate):</br></br>"The 1st thing you should know: Lots of people on both sides of the #transgender athlete argument are passionate & sincere. Not just politics, but real concern for the sports they love & for human dignity. @feliceduffy"</br>https://twitter.com/LATimesWharton/status/1538923817979981824</br></br></br>Solomon Georgio tweeted the following response</br></br>"Both sides my ass. This is a direct attack on trans women and an insult to all women. It is indirectly saying that trans women are men and men are better athletes than women. There is a right and wrong side to this debate and it’s not the transphobic one."</br>https://twitter.com/solomongeorgio/status/1538982308794859520</br></br>I think the Georgio tweet is dishonest on it's face and attempts to present a false dilemma.</br></br>1) Wharton doesn't explicitly reference trans women athletes in his tweet (although they are prominent in his published LA Times article); 2) Wharton's article attempts to present both sides - it is not "a direct attack on trans women and an insult to all women."; 3) There are separate men's and women's sporting competitions because men and women are physically different and in many sports male size, muscle mass and strength are advantageous. This is not valuing male athletic achievement over female athletic achievement but recognizing the physical factors that contribute to athletic performance, which in many instances give men and advantage over women in heads-to-head competition. To explicitly discuss these differences is not transphobic, in my opinion. One can support transgender identity and equal protection under the law on the one hand, but not necessarily support transgender athletes as "equivalent" when it comes to athletic competition.equivalent" when it comes to athletic competition.)
- Heading towards total anarchy - Workflow + (On the Tim Ferris show podcast Balaji made the following statement: far Left and far right agree that institutions with power are terrible. His prediction is that we are moving towards a anarchy where police gets defunded and government has less control)
- The US is a Christian Nation - Workflow + (Politico reports that Doug Mastriano, the … Politico reports that Doug Mastriano, the Republican nominee for governor in Pennsylvania, has argued that America is a Christian nation and that the separation of church and state is a “myth.” https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/09/21/most-republicans-support-declaring-the-united-states-a-christian-nation-00057736 The " The Establishment Clause," the first clause in the Bill of Rights, states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” respecting an establishment of religion.”)
- Representative Perry Calls January 6 Committee Hearings a "Soviet-Style Show Trial" - Workflow + (Rep. Scott Perry, Republican-PA, blasts th … Rep. Scott Perry, Republican-PA, blasts the January 6 Committee ahead of a series of public hearings on the attack on the Capitol for wasting millions of taxpayer dollars for a "Soviet-style show trial" that is "an affront to our American republic, and to the order and the rule of law and to justice."</br></br>I contend that this not only partisan hyperbole but also and intentional mis-characterizion of the committee's purpose and process.</br></br>Perry is chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, a congressional caucus consisting of conservative Republican members of the United States House of Representatives. It is generally considered to be the most conservative bloc within the House Republican Conference. Its members hold socially and fiscally conservative views, and most are supportive of Donald Trump.</br></br>Perry was also specifically mentioned by Rep. Liz Cheney during the first hearing as being one of several House Republican lawmakers that contacted the White House in the weeks after Jan. 6, 2021 to seek presidential pardons for their roles in attempting to overturn the presidential election results. He was supoenaed by the committee about to testify about his role in the insurrection which he defied.</br></br>A show trial is a public trial in which the judicial authorities have already determined the guilt or innocence of the defendant. The actual trial has as its only goal the presentation of both the accusation and the verdict to the public so they will serve as both an impressive example and a warning to other would-be dissidents or transgressors.</br></br>Show trials tend to be retributive rather than corrective and they are also conducted for propagandistic purposes. When aimed at individuals on the basis of protected classes or characteristics, such trials are examples of political persecution. </br><a rel="nofollow" class="external free" href="https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Show_trial">https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Show_trial</a></br></br>Was Benghazi a show trial?</br>June 28, 2016</br>The Benghazi Select Committee, a Republican-lead effort that cost about $7 million dollars and held 33 hearings over more than two years into a topic that had already been investigated by seven other Congressional committees. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton loomed large in the House Republican probe of the deaths of the U.S. ambassador to Libya in the Benghazi attack. Hauled before a GOP panel, she was grilled for eight hours. On Tuesday, an 800-page report landed and House Benghazi Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-SC, denied the probe was ever about Clinton. </br></br>In a Sept. 29 [2015]interview with Fox News Channel, House Majority Leader (and then-speaker-in-waiting) McCarthy was pressed by Sean Hannity to name an accomplishment in the Republican-led Congress. He finally said:</br></br>"Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was unbeatable, right? But we put together a Benghazi special committee, a select committee. What are her numbers today? They're dropping."mittee. What are her numbers today? They're dropping.")
- satire of Sen Johnson lie - Workflow + (Ron Johnson lied about a pledge he had sig … Ron Johnson lied about a pledge he had signed, and a commenter on Twitter responded with a satirical lie. The question is whether the commenter was lying or telling the truth. I argue that the commenter was lying, but in this case the lie was a good satirical remark. A good lie.</br></br>BREAKING: Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson, one of former President Trump’s most vocal supporters, says he will seek reelection. Johnson had pledged not to run for a third time, but he, says circumstances have changed now that Democrats control the Senate.</br>https://twitter.com/AP/status/1480185599114027010?s=20</br></br>This is the satirical response. </br>Chris America</br>@Chris_America</br>·</br>22h</br>Replying to </br>@AP</br>He went back on his word? Shocking.</br>https://twitter.com/Chris_America/status/1480191953509789697?s=20is_America/status/1480191953509789697?s=20)
- satire of Sen Johnson lie - Workflow + (Ron Johnson lied about a pledge he had sig … Ron Johnson lied about a pledge he had signed, and a commenter on Twitter responded with a satirical lie. The question is whether the commenter was lying or telling the truth. I argue that the commenter was lying, but in this case the lie was a good satirical remark. A good lie.</br></br>BREAKING: Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson, one of former President Trump’s most vocal supporters, says he will seek reelection. Johnson had pledged not to run for a third time, but he, says circumstances have changed now that Democrats control the Senate.</br>https://twitter.com/AP/status/1480185599114027010?s=20</br></br>This is the satirical response. </br>Chris America</br>@Chris_America</br>·</br>22h</br>Replying to </br>@AP</br>He went back on his word? Shocking.</br>https://twitter.com/Chris_America/status/1480191953509789697?s=20is_America/status/1480191953509789697?s=20)
- viral rumor lie - Workflow + (Rumors are lies. This slide looks at princ … Rumors are lies. This slide looks at principles for causing rumors </br>to go viral. One is a slogan. </br>#Disinformation 101 - helping you to understand and recognize cognitive attacks and attempts to manipulate you from an offensive perspective. The success of such attacks heavily depends on you NOT understanding and recognizing them.</br>Rumors #18</br></br>Rand Waltzman</br>@cogsec</br></br></br>The slogan type rumor (WWII rumor in England.. "England will fight to the last Frenchman") </br>is especially adapted to summarizing opinions or attitudes that are</br>already widely accepted. Slogan type rumors will gain acceptance </br>only when the ground has been prepared for them by narrative type </br>rumors or by other forms of propaganda.</br></br>Analysis of the motivation in this slogan rumor lie: We English </br>should not be fighting for the French. They aren't worth it.</br></br>note: #disinformation for finding ICoL suit materialinformation for finding ICoL suit material)
- Cruz wants to abolish doors - Workflow + (Senator Ted Cruz of Texas has continually … Senator Ted Cruz of Texas has continually put forward a lie—that we don’t need gun control in the US. Now he is spreading a lie about that lie! He says the best way to avoid school shooting is to make schools more like prisons or military facilities, to “harden” them. The general idea, apparently, is that if a school has one point of entry, and that doorway is well guarded, a gunman might have greater difficulty killing people inside. Who needs gun control, the argument goes, when all we really need is door control.</br></br>There are a variety of reasons this is a difficult idea to take seriously.</br></br>First, I’m reasonably sure this would be a serious fire hazard in many school buildings nationwide.</br></br>Second, a lot of schools have windows.</br></br>Third, what about schools made up of several buildings, with students walking outdoors between them. Mandating “one door that goes in and out of the school” would be literally impossible.</br></br>Fourth, mass shootings don’t just happen in schools — and I’m not sure having one entry point to a grocery store is realistic.</br></br>Finally, there’s also reason to be skeptical of the underlying point. Juliette Kayyem, a veteran of the Obama administration’s Department of Homeland Security, and currently a lecturer in international security at Harvard, wrote on Twitter, “The ‘one door’ theory of schools is not how we think about education or design, but it’s also not how we think about security. It actually is bad safety planning. A ‘psychopath’ would then just target the kids backed up in line and waiting for this ‘one door’ to let them through.”</br></br>Or put another way, those looking at Cruz’s idea as a credible policy proposal are almost certainly making a mistake.</br></br>https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/latest-school-shooting-ted-cruz-focuses-doors-rcna30630</br></br>URL: https://www.salon.com/2022/05/26/ted-cruz-thinks-he-has-a-better-solution-to-uvalde-school-than-control-door-control/o-uvalde-school-than-control-door-control/)
- Short phrase - Workflow + (Short phrase)
- Confirmation Bias - Workflow + (Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn said of … Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn said of nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson that “You have made clear that you believe judges must consider critical race theory when deciding how to sentence criminal defendants.”</br></br>Blackburn was referring to a 2015 speech in which Jackson described how she encouraged students to study federal sentencing policy as an academic area implicating many topics.</br></br>“Sentencing is just plain interesting on an intellectual level, in part because it melds together myriad types of law — criminal law, of course, but also administrative law, constitutional law, critical race theory, negotiations, and to some extent, even contracts,” Jackson said in her speech. “And if that’s not enough to prove to them that sentencing is a subject ... worth studying, I point out that sentencing policy implicates and intersects with various other intellectual disciplines as well, including philosophy, psychology, history, statistics, economics, and politics.”</br></br>In other words, she indicates that critical race theory might be one of many potential factors in play in sentencing, not a mandatory consideration.sentencing, not a mandatory consideration.)
- Bas Couwenberg - Workflow + (Test)
- Test - Workflow + (Test)
- Test - Workflow + (Test)
- Test - Workflow + (Test)
- test - Workflow + (Test)
- test22222 - Workflow + (Test)
- testing - Workflow + (Testing)
- Testing in Safari - Workflow + (Testing in Safari)
- Bull and Crow: Crow says Farmer Lies to Bull - Workflow + (The Crow is trying to convince the Bull that the Farmer does not tell the whole truth of his situation to the Bull. He provides a series of arguments that the Bull needs to believe to run away from the farmer before the farmer slaughters him.)
- Bull and Crow: Crow says Farmer Lies to Bull - Workflow + (The Crow is trying to convince the Bull th … The Crow is trying to convince the Bull that the Farmer does not tell the whole truth of his situation to the Bull. He provides a series of arguments that the Bull needs to believe to run away from the farmer before the farmer slaughters him. These truthful arguments are the evidence...and we all know the crow is telling the truth.we all know the crow is telling the truth.)
- Bull and Crow: Bull says Crow Lies - Workflow + (The Crow tries to tell Bull why he is factually lying to himself. Bull thinks Crow is lying but in fact Bull is factually lying to himself. The evidence is self-evident by anyone with any experience with raising Cattle.)
- Apple doesn't want to be forced to use usb-c - Workflow + (The EU has forced apple to use USB type c on their next devices. This will allow people to use one cable to charge all their new devices, but apple isn't happy with this. Greg Joswiak said this mandatory standard hinders innovation.)
- Bull and Crow : Farmer says Crow Lies - Workflow + (The Farmer says it is OK to not reveal everything and to keep the cows happy while he is raising them by what he does and does not do.)
- Trump Declassified Everything - Workflow + (The Justice Department said in a court fil … The Justice Department said in a court filing this week that the search of Mar-a-Lago resulted in the seizure of more than 100 unique documents with classification markings. But in posts on his social media platform, Trump has argued that he had declassified all of the documents in his possession.</br></br>"Number one, it was all declassified," he wrote in a post on August 12. "Lucky I Declassified!" he wrote in a post this Wednesday.</br></br>Trump's comments about this supposed declassification have been very vague. But conservative writer John Solomon, one of the people Trump named as a representative in his dealings with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), was more specific in a Fox appearance on August 12. Solomon read a statement, which he said was from Trump's office, claiming that Trump "had a standing order...that documents removed from the Oval Office and taken to the residence were deemed to be declassified the moment he removed them."</br>This is patently false. Trump and his team have not provided any proof that Trump actually conducted some sort of broad declassification of the documents that ended up at Mar-a-Lago. What's more, eighteen former top Trump administration officials, including two former White House chiefs of staff who spoke on the record, told CNN in August that they never heard of a standing Trump declassification order when they were serving in the administration and that they now believe the claim is false. The former officials used words like "ludicrous," "ridiculous" and "bullsh*t."</br></br>"Total nonsense," said one person who served as a senior White House official. "If that's true, where is the order with his signature on it? If that were the case, there would have been tremendous pushback from the Intel Community and DoD, which would almost certainly have become known to Intel and Armed Services Committees on the Hill."nd Armed Services Committees on the Hill.")
- Ronald de Boer as aambassader of Qatar lies about working conditions - Workflow + (The bad working conditions and high heat h … The bad working conditions and high heat have caused a lot of working migrants to die a by Qatar so called "natural death". UN studies have found that the high temperatures and pour working conditions have a significant impact on the high death rate under migrant workers. </br></br>As a tv personal Ronald de Boer supports Qatar and says that the numbers in the news and in particular 6500 workers that died is taken out of context. And supports Qatar in their work around the World Cup preparations.</br>I believe it is a bad lie to support a dictatorship like Qatar in the harm they do to hard working immigrants. </br></br>https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/feb/23/revealed-migrant-worker-deaths-qatar-fifa-world-cup-2022</br></br>https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2021/08/qatar-failure-to-investigate-migrant-worker-deaths-leaves-families-in-despair/-worker-deaths-leaves-families-in-despair/)
- Sleep-Lies-Walker - Workflow + (The book How We Sleep by Matthew Walker i … The book How We Sleep by Matthew Walker </br>is filled with lies that imply causation for what</br>is only established correlation. As such a loss</br>of sleep is blamed on many things which can cause</br>a loss of sleep. As if the loss of sleep is always under </br>your control. Walker seems to believe that you can just</br>go to sleep whenever you are told to do it.</br></br>The intro shows the fallacy in his reasoning.</br>Ultimately, asking “Why do we sleep?” was the wrong question. </br>It implied there was a single function, one holy grail of a reason that </br>we slept, and we went in search of it. Theories ranged from </br>the logical (a time for conserving energy), </br>to the peculiar (an opportunity for eyeball oxygenation), </br>to the psychoanalytic (a non-conscious state in which we fulfill repressed wishes). </br>This book will reveal a very different truth: sleep is </br>infinitely more complex, profoundly more interesting, </br>and strikingly health-relevant. We sleep for a rich litany of functions, </br>plural—an abundant constellation of nighttime benefits that service both our brains and our bodies. </br>There does not seem to be one major organ within the body, or process within the brain, </br>that isn’t optimally enhanced by sleep (and detrimentally impaired when we don’t get enough).</br> That we receive such a bounty of health benefits each night should not</br></br>Walker, Matthew. Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams (p. 6). Scribner. Kindle Edition. </br>be surprising. After all, we are awake for two-thirds of our lives, </br>and we don’t just achieve one useful thing during that stretch of time. </br>We accomplish myriad undertakings that promote our own well-being and survival. </br>Why, then, would we expect sleep—and the twenty-five to thirty years, </br>on average, it takes from our lives—to offer one function only? </br>Through an explosion of discoveries over the past twenty years,</br> we have come to realize that evolution did not make a spectacular </br>blunder in conceiving of sleep. Sleep dispenses a multitude of </br>health-ensuring benefits, yours to pick up in repeat prescription </br>every twenty-four hours, should you choose. Within the brain, </br>sleep enriches a diversity of functions, including our ability </br>to learn, memorize, and make logical decisions and choices. </br>Benevolently servicing our psychological health, sleep recalibrates </br>our emotional brain circuits, allowing us to navigate next-day social and psychological</br></br>Walker, Matthew. Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams (pp. 6-7). Scribner. Kindle Edition. </br>Other questions that can draw out signs of insufficient sleep are: </br>If you didn’t set an alarm clock, would you sleep past that time? </br>(If so, you need more sleep than you are giving yourself.) </br>Do you find yourself at your computer screen reading and then rereading </br>(and perhaps rereading again) the same sentence? </br>(This is often a sign of a fatigued, under-slept brain.) </br>Do you sometimes forget what color the last few traffic lights were while driving? </br>(Simple distraction is often the cause, but a lack of sleep is another culprit.)</br></br>Correlation is Not Causation Lieulprit.) Correlation is Not Causation Lie)
- Flowers - Workflow + (The camelia would bloom in the spring, but it not spring and he is blooming)
- Bird Names for Birds - Workflow + (The concern about eponymous and honorific … The concern about eponymous and honorific common bird names is not new. But the movement to see these names changed is.</br></br>Eponyms (a person after whom a discovery, invention, place, etc., is named or thought to be named) and honorific common bird names (a name given to something in honor of a person) are problematic because they perpetuate colonialism and the racism associated with it. The names that these birds currently have—for example, Bachman’s Sparrow—represent and remember people (mainly white men) who often have objectively horrible pasts and do not uphold the morals and standards the bird community should memorialize.</br></br>The vast majority of eponymous common names were applied to birds by European and American naturalists during a period of time known as colonialism, when (primarily) European countries subjugated, exploited, and populated territories held by non-white peoples. To legitimize this endeavor, the concept of race as a classification system was developed, and the white “race” and civilization were considered superior to all others. The impacts of colonialism were global, and the false concept of race used to justify colonialism resulted in the reality of racism, a reality which has structured societies, interactions, and even survival ever since.</br></br>Eponymous common names are essentially verbal statues. They were made to honor the benefactor in perpetuity, and as such reflect the accomplishments and values that the creator esteemed. We are not bound by either the intention or the regard; we should make decisions about who and what we honor based on our own values, values that create a more equitable world for all. By continuing to use eponymous common bird names, we continue to reference and honor our distressful colonial heritage and the racism that was a direct consequence of this malicious exploitation. This is unacceptable, and we must do better.</br></br>Current events in 2020 renewed societal emphasis on social justice and have shown that the time to reevaluate is now, and are largely why this initiative formalized. We are overdue individually, as groups and communities, and as a society to reevaluate our biases, remove barriers of all kinds, and be better. </br></br>Bird Names For Birds—both the initiative and the actual bird names—will not end racism. It won’t even end all of the EDI problems within the bird community. However, it is one step. It is one problem that the bird community can be self-aware of, acknowledge, and rectify. </br>A growing movement to reexamine names bestowed on everything from college campuses to city streets has swelled to encompass birders, ornithologists, and conservationists. Doing away with honorifics, they say, and renaming birds for the qualities that make each special, could make the birding world more inclusive for those who have long been left out or pushed away. Once unthinkable, the scientific body that governs bird names is finally embarking on a process that could redefine not only what we call myriad birds but also birding itself. </br></br>About 150 of the roughly 2,000 North and Central American bird species have honorifics. Most were named for naturalists, such as Alexander Wilson, a chronicler of birdlife during the early 19th century and widely considered the father of American ornithology. The handful of names that commemorate women mostly use first names; Anna’s Hummingbird is a tribute to French courtier Anna Masséna, wife of an amateur ornithologist. While these figures don’t stir up much controversy, other species are saddled with heavier burdens.</br></br>Audubon’s Shearwater and Audubon’s Oriole honor renowned avian artist John James Audubon (also the namesake of this magazine), an enslaver who collected skulls from Texas battlefields during his travels. His contemporary John Kirk Townsend plundered Native American graves; his legacy lives on with Townsend’s Warbler and Townsend’s Solitaire. Scott’s Oriole carries a banner for General Winfield Scott, who willingly accepted a leading role in the genocide of Native Americans on the Trail of Tears.of Native Americans on the Trail of Tears.)
- ballot stuffing lie - Workflow + (The court filing contradicts the actual vo … The court filing contradicts the actual vote that took place. It was said that there was "egregious ballot stuffing" Yet, the canidate for which it was against, actually in all the counties the court action was about.</br></br>The judge threw this case out (judges threw out all the cases filed by the Trump group). More credence this is a factual lie.up). More credence this is a factual lie.)
- A lie - Workflow + (The evidence)
- Ornstein Filibuster Lie 2 - Workflow + (The framers feared 'the tyranny of the maj … The framers feared 'the tyranny of the majority.'</br>Filibuster proponents often argue that the Constitution’s framers intended to </br>obstruct decisions by simple majorities. In defense of the filibuster, Lewis & Clark Law School professor </br>James Huffman wrote in the Hill that James Madison “would likely think it a brilliant innovation for </br>preventing majority tyranny.” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) wrote in the New York </br>Times in 2019 that the filibuster is “central to the order the Constitution sets forth,” citing Madison’s view </br>that the Senate ought to function as an “additional impediment” and a “complicated check” on the House.</br></br>Ornstein says this is a lie. McConnell is lying.</br>But other than the explicit constitutional requirements for supermajorities, </br>such as to approve treaties, the framers were foursquare for majority votes. </br>Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist 22 that allowing minorities to overrule </br>the majority would cause “tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue; contemptible </br>compromises of the public good.” Congressional Research Service scholar Walter J. Oleszek has noted:</br> “Overall, the Framers generally favored decision-making by simple majority vote. </br>This view is buttressed by the grant of a vote to the Vice President (Article I, section 3) in </br>those cases where the Senators are ‘equally divided.’” </br>This provision makes clear that the Constitution’s drafters expected</br> that most decisions would be made by majority vote.most decisions would be made by majority vote.)
- Ornstein Filibuster Lie 2 - Workflow + (The framers feared 'the tyranny of the maj … The framers feared 'the tyranny of the majority.'</br>Filibuster proponents often argue that the Constitution’s framers intended to </br>obstruct decisions by simple majorities. In defense of the filibuster, Lewis & Clark Law School professor </br>James Huffman wrote in the Hill that James Madison “would likely think it a brilliant innovation for </br>preventing majority tyranny.” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) wrote in the New York </br>Times in 2019 that the filibuster is “central to the order the Constitution sets forth,” citing Madison’s view </br>that the Senate ought to function as an “additional impediment” and a “complicated check” on the House.</br></br>Ornstein says this is a lie. McConnell is lying.</br>But other than the explicit constitutional requirements for supermajorities, </br>such as to approve treaties, the framers were foursquare for majority votes. </br>Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist 22 that allowing minorities to overrule </br>the majority would cause “tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue; contemptible </br>compromises of the public good.” Congressional Research Service scholar Walter J. Oleszek has noted:</br> “Overall, the Framers generally favored decision-making by simple majority vote. </br>This view is buttressed by the grant of a vote to the Vice President (Article I, section 3) in </br>those cases where the Senators are ‘equally divided.’” </br>This provision makes clear that the Constitution’s drafters expected</br> that most decisions would be made by majority vote.most decisions would be made by majority vote.)
- Testing a lie about the cold winter - Workflow + (The girl said it was cold. But i looked at the temperature and it was like 26 degrees celsius. SO it was not cold)
- Hunter Bidens Laptop - Workflow + (The intelligence 'experts' who falsely dis … The intelligence 'experts' who falsely discredited Hunter Biden's laptop -- and still won't say sorry.</br></br>https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2020/10/giuliani-and-the-new-york-post-are-pushing-russian-disinformation-its-a-big-test-for-the-media/ Mother Jones</br></br>Susan Walsh/AP</br></br>Fight disinformation. Get a daily recap of the facts that matter. Sign up for the free Mother Jones newsletter. A newly discovered laptop, the FBI, a trove of emails, October, a presidential election—it sounds familiar. Especially when you add in a Russian disinformation campaign. On Wednesday, the New York Post released what it hailed as a bombshell: an unidentified computer repair store owner in Delaware had come to possess a laptop that contained Hunter Biden emails (and purportedly a sex tape), the hard drive and computer was seized by the FBI, the store owner at some point passed a copy of the hard drive to Rudy Giuliani, and one of the emails suggested that Hunter, who served on the board of Ukrainian energy company Burisma, may have in 2015 introduced a Burisma official to his dad, Vice President Joe Biden. The story depicts this as a big scandal, and Guiliani tweeted, “Much more to come.” </br></br>But the key point of the article was predicated on false information that Giuliani</br> has been spreading for a long time—and that appears to be linked to a Russian disinformation operation that the Post neglected to note in its article. That is, the Post piece, based on an unproven smear, is in sync with Moscow’s ongoing effort to influence the 2020 election to help President Donald Trump retain power. (The FBI and other parts of the US intelligence community have stated that Vladimir Putin is once again attacking the US political system to boost Trump.) </br>And this story presents a challenge to the American media: how to report on an orchestrated campaign to affect the election that relies on disinformation, salacious and sensational material, and the revival of allegations that have already been debunked.legations that have already been debunked.)
- Washington Post's slogan vs their paywall - Workflow + (The slogan of the Washington post is: Democracy Dies in Darkness. But they do put their news behind a paywall so it isn't accessible for everyone. Are they hypocritical or is it acceptabel?)
- Smoketest 12/8 - Workflow + (The work that is done is not working Or does it?)
- Economic Support and Inflation - Workflow + (There is a popular narrative making the ro … There is a popular narrative making the rounds that theUS government's stimulus aid to Americans during the height pandemic had big economic benefits — but it also fueled inflation. How do we know that government aid isn’t the reason the economy’s tanking now? Just by looking around the world, and observing. If it were the case that stimulus led to inflation, then of course countries with the greatest support would have the highest inflation. But that’s not true. Europe, which offered people way, way more support than America and the UK, has lower inflation rates. And plenty of countries which offered people no support — because they’re poor nations — have skyrocketing inflation rates. </br></br>It’s not about stimulus.</br></br>This isn’t demand-led inflation. When people subscribe to this naive pop myth that “printing money during the pandemic caused inflation,” what are they really saying? That the economy’s cratering right now because people have too much money. LOL. Do you know anyone who has too much money? That’s an absurd thing to say.</br></br>This is supply side inflation: for example, tampons and baby formula at the moment.</br></br>Why? One reason is Covid — it caused labour shortages across sectors from healthcare to transportation. But the bigger picture here is about climate change and resource depletion. And the failure of industrialized capitalism, which is extractive, Exploitative. Rent-seeking. It doesn’t nourish, create, care, give birth to, just manufactures lowest-common-denominator stuff and literally turn life into death: plastic, fossil fuels, forests ripped down, oceans polluted, skies full of carbon, rivers turned to poison. They take without giving,</br></br>As the resources of the planet dwindle, in anticipation, warlords and oligarchs start conflicts to try and seize what of them they can.ts to try and seize what of them they can.)
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