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Monday, July 31, 2017

Another Outster

Tesla Model 3 Impressions!

Scaramucci got fired, and it's not funny

Alex Jones: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Crusty Eyes

An excerpt from Now I Know -

Why We Wake Up With Crusty Eyes

They go by many names — crusties, eye boogers, sleep dust, goop, or sometimes simply “sleep.” But whatever you call it, you’ve experienced this: you wake up in the morning and, in the corner of your eyes, there are shards of a hard, yellowish-white crust hanging out. Why does this happen?

The short version: When we sleep, we don’t blink.

Eye crusties (or whatever you call this stuff) are made up of something called rheum, pronounced like the word “room,” which Wikipedia describes as a “thin mucus naturally discharged from the eyes.” Rheum protects our eyes from dust and whatever other bad stuff would otherwise irritate our eyes — it’s a barrier watch catches the bad stuff before it causes us any problems. Of course, we don’t want specks of dust or whatever floating around our eyes, so we have to get rid of the rheum pretty often. Blinking takes care of this. Blinking moves tears from the outside of the eyes inward, toward our tear ducts. And when that happens, the tears wash the rheum away ever so subtly; unless you’re thinking about it, you probably don’t even notice it happening.

http://nowiknow.com/why-we-wake-up-with-crusty-eyes/

Aggressive Incompetence

An excerpt from USA Today -

Anthony Scaramucci's aggressive incompetence
Tom Krattenmaker, Opinion columnist

Sure, take the flashy flatterer who has been singing the president’s praises on cable news and make him White House communications director, never mind the fact he has no communications experience. What could go wrong?

How quickly we learned.

The PR disaster during Anthony Scaramucci’s first week on the job — a profanity-laced diatribe to a national magazine in which the president’s new communications director blasted supposed colleagues and exposed the knife-fight chaos in the White House —tells us something worth remembering:

Communications is not for amateurs. Nor is governing.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2017/07/30/scaramucci-mess-demonstrates-communications-not-amateurs-tom-krattenmaker-column/521156001/

All Electric. All the Time.

An excerpt from the NY Times Editorial -

Britain Joins the Shift to Electric Cars
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The drive to switch to electric cars went a mile further last Wednesday when Britain joined France in pledging to end the sale of new gas and diesel cars by 2040. Norway and India have also said they want to get rid of gas and diesel cars, and at least 10 other countries have set targets for electric cars. All that is good news for the planet and for human health, even if caveats and challenges abound.

Cars powered by gasoline or diesel are major polluters. The Volkswagen emissions scandal in the United States put to rest the longstanding European faith in diesel as a more environmentally friendly fuel, not least because it generates large quantities of health-threatening nitrogen oxides. VW’s extensive efforts to conceal the true extent of that pollution has now turned consumers against the fuel.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/31/opinion/britain-electric-cars.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region&region=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region

Will we ever be able to teleport? - Sajan Saini

Durian Fruit: A Smell So Rotten, but a Taste So Sweet

Will He Listen?

An excerpt from the NY Times -

Sage Advice From the ‘Gold Standard’ of White House Chiefs of Staff
By PETER BAKER

When a new White House chief of staff takes over, the smart ones check in with James A. Baker III, the only man to have occupied the office two different times for two different presidents and who is widely considered to be the gold standard.

Mr. Baker has plenty of advice from running the White House during Ronald Reagan’s first term and again at the end of George Bush’s presidency, but it usually boils down to this: “You can focus on the ‘chief,’ or you can focus on the ‘of staff.’ Those who have focused on the ‘of staff’ have done pretty well.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/30/us/politics/john-kelly-james-baker-white-house.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosam&stream=top-stories&_r=0

In Peru, a 'Foggy' Solution to a Water Shortage

Sunday, July 30, 2017

The Way We Were (1973)

Let's Count the Ways

An  excerpt from Business Insider -

Trump may have just had his 'worst week' yet
 By Natasha Bertrand

The Boy Scouts were forced to apologize. the Pentagon was caught flat-footed. The GOP failed to pass a crucial healthcare vote.

The president openly undercut his attorney general. The White House communications director publicly attacked the White House chief of staff. The White House chief of staff was then ousted.

Congress backed the president into a corner on Russia, and the police department that hosted the president's speech on gang violence quickly denounced his remarks.

And that was just last week.

http://www.businessinsider.com/trump-scaramucci-reince-priebus-health-care-2017-7?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosam&stream=top-stories


Rocks Crying Out (feat. Allen Swoope & Anesha Birchett)

Donny Hathaway - You've Got a Friend

An Idiot and a Fool

An excerpt from NY Magazine - (Italics is mine)

Reince Priebus: Requiem for a Minion
By Jonathan Chait

Priebus’s replacement, John Kelly, is more appealing to the president because he is a general and is untainted by having recorded any doubts about the viability of a candidate who grabs women by their genitals. Another article (link below) notes approvingly, “He won’t suffer idiots and fools,” which might be a problem, since the president is both.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/07/reince-priebus-requiem-for-a-minion.html

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2017/07/29/john-kelly-trumps-new-chief-of-staff-wont-suffer-idiots-and-fools/?utm_term=.d733ae1f3237


Why alcohol doesn't come with nutrition facts

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Passport Issues: Can I Travel with Only 6 Months Left on My Passport? NO!

Why is sand in short supply?

The Secrets Of A Well-Fitting Italian Suit

Obamacare

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

Obamacare Is Alive Because It Has Made Life Better For Millions
Republicans could never admit this — and it came back to haunt them.
By Jonathan Cohn

The Affordable Care Act has survived yet another effort to snuff it out. And one reason is a simple reality that Republicans have rarely been willing to admit ― to their supporters, to the general public, and perhaps even to themselves.

It turns out “Obamacare” has made life better for a great many people.

Millions of Americans now have health insurance because the law has put it within financial reach. They are enrolling in Medicaid, or buying private insurance with the help of tax credits ― and taking advantage of laws that prohibit insurers from denying coverage because of pre-existing conditions. Millions more have insurance that is cheaper, better, or more comprehensive than what they could get before. They are more financially secure, they have better access to care, and they are probably getting healthier, too.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/why-obamacare-survived_us_597ae374e4b02a8434b5774f?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009


Irresponsible & Unprofessional

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

NYPD Calls Unreasonable Use Of Force ‘Irresponsible’ After Trump’s Speech
The department said suggestions for using another standard for use of force “sends the wrong message.”
By Carla Herreria

The New York Police Department released a statement on Saturday reiterating their use of force policies after President Donald Trump suggested police officers be more rough with their suspects during a Friday speech to invited law enforcement officers.

In a statement emailed to HuffPost, the NYPD called suggestions for police officers to use alternative standards for use of force “irresponsible” and “unprofessional.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nypd-responds-to-trump-speech-use-of-force_us_597cf58be4b02a8434b6d20e?9oa&ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009


British Airways safety video - director's cut

Angelina Jolie Exploiting Kids?

Black Beauty

FAMU Delta Sigma Theta sorority sisters gathered in Costa Rica for an induction anniversary and did what they're calling a #MelaninIllustrated photo shoot.(Photo: Courtesy of Amanda Byrd. Photo by Javier A. Mereb - Bidrop Images.)
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/07/29/sorority-sisters-celebrate-beauty-melanin-illustrated-photo/522774001/

We tried Tesla's 'Autopilot' feature in the Model X — here's what happened

Trump's Healthcare Fail

A Biodegradable Urn

From Wired -

TURN YOUR DEAD GRANDMA INTO A TREE WITH THIS SMART PLANTER
By Elizabeth Stinson

AFTER JAY JUNKER’S father passed away from cancer in 2014, the 33-year-old took his cremated remains and planted them in a field outside the family’s farm house in Vermont. His father, who Junker recalls as outgoing and nature loving, is now a white oak sapling that’s grown from 5 inches to just over 5 feet tall in the last two years. On nice days, Junker likes to take a stroll out to the meadow where his father is planted and spend some time reminiscing about how they used to ski and hike in the rolling green hills. “To me, this just seemed like the best way to keep in touch," Junker says. "The best way to keep someone in your life.”

Ashes by themselves don’t grow into trees, of course, but Junker had some help. He used a Bios Urn—a biodegradable urn that turns human ash remains into growth material for trees.

https://www.wired.com/story/turn-your-dead-grandma-into-a-tree-with-this-smart-planter/?mbid=nl_72917_p8&CNDID=


Friday, July 28, 2017

So True

A post shared by The New Yorker Cartoons (@newyorkercartoons) on

B.B. King - The Thrill Is Gone ft. Tracy Chapman

A Song For You | Ray Charles

A drone just flew over Auschwitz and captured something incredibly powerful

Horse Knocks off Rider and Finishes Competition Alone

‘My Black Is Beautiful’: Teaching Self Confidence Through Music

Homemade wheelchair gives toddler mobility for first time

Here's why most planes are white

What If Apple Was a Country?

What happens when you have a concussion? - Clifford Robbins

“One Note Samba” Guitar duo: Jake Reichbart & Walter Rodrigues Jr

Baby Driver's opening car chase, mapped

This is it, right?

An excerpt from NY Magazine -

A Week of Reckoning
By Andrew Sullivan

We have become, at this point, inured to having an irrational president in an increasingly post-rational America. We’ve also come to tell ourselves that somehow (a) this isn’t really happening, (b) by some miracle, it will be over soon, or (c) at some point the Republican Party will have to acknowledge what they are abetting, and cut their losses. And yet with each particular breach of decency, stability, and constitutionality, no breaking point seems to have arrived, even as the tribalism has deepened, the president’s madness has metastasized, and the norms of liberal democracy are hanging on by a thread.

But surely this week must mark some kind of moment in this vertiginous descent, some point at which the manifest unfitness of this president to continue in office becomes impossible to deny.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/07/a-week-of-reckoning.html

From His Mouth to God's Ears

An excerpt from Rolling Stone -

The Anthony Scaramucci Era Will Be Freakish, Embarrassing and All Too Short
Glad-handing hedge-funder turned White House press chief has reignited the comic potential of Trump presidency. It's too bad he won't last past the end of this sentence
By Matt Taibbi

It's hard to believe that it was barely a week ago, on July 21st, that Scaramucci was given Trump's top press job. It feels like it was millions of years in the past, back when Africa was still connected to Brazil, and Sean Spicer was still our idea of a national embarrassment. This is the way time works in the Trump era. Days seem like centuries, and weeks seem like millennia.

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/taibbi-anthony-scaramucci-era-will-be-freakish-embarrassing-short-w494718?utm_source=rsnewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=daily&utm_campaign=072817_10

Retiring at 98

An excerpt from Poynter -

He’s spent nearly 7 decades at The San Francisco Chronicle. This year, at 98, he’s retiring.
By Daniel Funke

David Perlman was born in 1918 — a decade before the discovery of penicillin and the Big Bang Theory.

And, for the majority of his career, he covered scientific progress in the 20th century and beyond, writing thousands of articles about everything from the beginning of the space age to the computer age.

Until now.

The 98-year-old science editor is retiring from The San Francisco Chronicle after nearly seven decades at the newspaper, a decision he said had been coming for a while.

http://www.poynter.org/2017/hes-spent-nearly-seven-decades-at-the-san-francisco-chronicle-this-year-at-98-hes-retiring/468149/

San Francisco Via Drone Part 1

Music is obnoxious.  You might consider muting it.  Otherwise great views.

Turmoil in the Trump Administration: The Daily Show

Slow & Painful

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

The Trump administration: Where your pride goes to die
By Aaron Blake

Getting close to President Trump, it seems, means checking your pride at the door and taking some very public abuse.

Trump's first big-name supporters in 2016 were Chris Christie and Jeff Sessions. He spent the bulk of the rest of the campaign embarrassing Christie before firing him as head of the Trump transition effort. And now he's spent the bulk of the last week haranguing Sessions, his own attorney general, apparently in hopes Sessions will resign.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/07/28/the-trump-administration-where-your-pride-goes-to-die/?tid=pm_politics_pop&utm_term=.eee8ef039074

Black Gun Owners

An excerpt from the Washinton Post -

‘It seems cool to be racist now’: The rising profile of the black gun owner
By Wesley Lowery

Mark Warner was hovering over the counter of handguns, about midway through the morning shift at Blue Ridge Arsenal, the black-owned gun store in Fairfax County where he’s worked for the past 18 years, when he spotted me.

“I heard you want to talk about black people buying guns,” Warner, himself black, declared in the matter of fact, teasing tone that has endeared him to the store’s regulars. “So what do you want to know?”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/07/27/it-seems-cool-to-be-racist-now-the-rising-profile-of-the-black-gun-owner/?utm_term=.c589dc2eff63&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

He's Smart Enough to Quit

From the Daily Mail -

Ravens star, 26, who is also pursuing a PhD in math at MIT, RETIRES abruptly after shock study shows 99% of NFL players' brains are affected by degenerative disease CTE
By James Wilkinson

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4736612/Math-whiz-Ravens-star-quits-NFL-brain-damage-study.html#ixzz4o8jYykur
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Blog Love

From http://www.freehomeschooldeals.com/free-printable-life-skills-checklist-for-kids/

comes a wonderful chart that lists life skills that kids should have at each from preschool through high school.


A Very Necessary Message Delivered in a Great Little Book

One of the best books I've seen that discusses the issues of black kids dying at the hands of folks hired to protect them is Momma, Did You Hear the News by Sanya Gragg.


It is a must read for anyone raising black kids in America.


Pilot Shortage

An excerpt from CNN -

The U.S. has a staggering pilot shortage
by Jon Ostrower

Over the next two decades, 87 new pilots need to be trained and ready to fly a commercial airliner every day in order to meet our insatiable demand to travel by air.

That's one every 15 minutes.

Passenger and cargo airlines around the world are expected to buy 41,000 new airliners between 2017 and 2036. And they will need 637,000 new pilots to fly them, according to a forecast from Boeing released this week. That staggering figure is matched only by how many will leave the profession in the next decade -- particularly in the U.S.

http://money.cnn.com/2017/07/27/news/companies/pilot-shortage-figures/index.html

Thursday, July 27, 2017

The Tesla Model 3: The Culmination of Elon Musk's Master Plan | WIRED

Heaven Forbid

School Segregation

An excerpt from Vox -

School segregation didn’t go away. It just evolved.
How parents are gerrymandering school borders and fencing out poor kids.
Updated by Alvin Chang

Their idea was simple: to create their own school district.

Their stated reason was simple: Schools do better when they’re part of smaller, city-based districts where they can make hyperlocal decisions.

So five years ago, organizers in Gardendale, Alabama, decided it was time to secede from the Jefferson County School District — because of the changing “dynamics.”

But this simple idea has historically caused a contentious debate about race, class, and education in America. And when the courts ruled on this issue, it resulted in the biggest setback to school integration since Brown v. Board of Education: a legal decision that allows parents to use borders to segregate their kids away from their less desirable peers.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/7/27/16004084/school-segregation-evolution


Falling Sperm Count

An excerpt from New Scientist -

Sperm count has fallen by nearly 60 per cent in richer countries
By New Scientist staff and Press Association

An analysis of research into male fertility suggests that there has been a steep decline in sperm counts for men living in richer nations.


The review pooled data from 185 different studies, and found a 59.3 per cent drop between 1973 and 2011 in the average amount of sperm produced by men from North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand. No similar pattern was seen in South America, Asia and Africa, although fewer studies had been conducted in these countries.

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2141784-sperm-count-has-fallen-by-nearly-60-per-cent-in-richer-countries/#link_time=1501018098

The Next Time You Have A Slice of Birthday Cake

An excerpt from the Atlantic -

Blowing Out Birthday Candles Increases Cake Bacteria by 1,400 Percent
But it’s okay, really!
By SARAH ZHANG

I can identify the exact moment when my relationship with birthday cake changed forever, and it was last week, when I read a study titled “Bacterial Transfer Associated with Blowing Out Candles on a Birthday Cake.”

Of course, the more cautious (aka germophobic) among us have already thought about it in gruesome detail. One colleague said she scrapes off the top layer of frosting, a habit that suddenly made perfect sense but which I for some reason had never before considered. I had been living in ignorant, saliva-splattered bliss.

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2017/07/birthday-candle-bacteria/534987/?utm_source=nl-atlantic-daily-072717

Here are the Trump administration's worst spelling errors

How fentanyl is making the opioid epidemic even worse

Why Is the ‘Mona Lisa’ So Famous?

'L-G-B-T' - James Corden Sings for Transgender Troops

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

The amount of time it takes for trash to break down is staggering

How does land surveying work?

You can take a seat anywhere with this wearable chair

Thailand’s Floating Markets Serve Up a Feast on the Water

Necessity is the Mother of Invention

An excerpt from Wired -

INSIDE CUBA’S D.I.Y. INTERNET REVOLUTION
by Antonio García Martínez

Every week, more than a terabyte of data is packaged into external hard drives known as el paquete semanal (“the weekly package”). It is the internet distilled down to its purest, most consumable, and least interactive form: its content. This collection of video, song, photo, and text files from the outside world is cobbled together by various media smugglers known as paqueteros, and it travels around the island from person to person, percolating quickly from Havana to the furthest reaches in less than a day and constituting what would be known in techie lingo as a sneaker­net: a network that transmits data via shoe rubber, bus, horseback, or anything else.

https://www.wired.com/2017/07/inside-cubas-diy-internet-revolution/?mbid=nl_72617_EIC_p1&CNDID=

Usher Carpool Karaoke

A Guitar Made of Trees

From Atlas Obscura -

Pedro Martín Ureta's Forest Guitar
Guitar made of trees, dedicated to a man's lost love. 

GENERAL LEVALLE, ARGENTINA
http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/guitar-forest

Brown Sugar Waffle Recipe

From the LA Times -

http://www.latimes.com/food/recipes/la-fo-sos-waffles-brown-sugar-kitchen-20170719-story.html#nws=mcnewsletter

Cap and Trade - Explained in 90 Sec

From the LA Times -

http://www.latimes.com/politics/94177818-132.html

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Brain Damage

From the NY Times -

110 N.F.L. Brains
A neuropathologist has examined the brains of 111 N.F.L. players — and 110 were found to have C.T.E., the degenerative disease linked to repeated blows to the head.
By The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/07/25/sports/football/nfl-cte.html?action=click&contentCollection=Television&module=Trending&version=Full&region=Marginalia&pgtype=article

The bizarre physics of fire ants

Monday, July 24, 2017

The Problem Isn't His Mouthpiece

Excerpts from the Washington Post -

Why Anthony Scaramucci won’t make a dent in Trump’s problems
By Michael Gerson

The Trump administration’s reality problem is a historically unpopular president, pushing historically unpopular legislation (at least on health care), in a historically divided party, to a historically polarized country. Hiring a new head of communications will not fundamentally alter this state of affairs.

~~~~~~~~~~

Trump’s greatest need is not someone who will defend him on cable television. It is an administration capable of even the baby steps of governing — defining a positive, realistic agenda and selling it to Congress, starting with one’s own party. Trump does not have a communications problem; he has a leadership problem.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-anthony-scaramucci-wont-make-a-dent-in-trumps-problems/2017/07/24/5db1d3b0-708b-11e7-8f39-eeb7d3a2d304_story.html?utm_term=.7a1e65a74c3b

The Future is Now

An excerpt from the Verge -

A Wisconsin company will let employees use microchip implants to buy snacks and open doors
by Adi Robertson

A Wisconsin company called Three Square Market is going to offer employees implantable chips to open doors, buy snacks, log in to computers, and use office equipment like copy machines. Participating employees will have the chips, which use near field communication (NFC) technology, implanted between their thumb and forefinger. It’s an extension of the long-running implantable RFID chip business, based on a partnership with Swedish company Biohax International. The vending kiosk company, also known as 32M, will “chip” employees at a party on August 1st. (According to an email to The Verge, chips and salsa will be served as snacks.) Around 50 people are supposedly getting the optional implants.

https://www.theverge.com/2017/7/24/16019530/three-sqaure-market-implant-office-keycard-biohacking-wisconsin

4 watermelon hacks that will impress your friends this summer

The Talk (Full Length)

Is Curiosity Nurtured in Schools?

An excerpt from the Atlantic -

Schools Are Missing What Matters About Learning
Curiosity is underemphasized in the classroom, but research shows that it is one of the strongest markers of academic success.
By SCOTT BARRY KAUFMAN

The power of curiosity to contribute not only to high achievement, but also to a fulfilling existence, cannot be emphasized enough. Curiosity can be defined as “the recognition, pursuit, and intense desire to explore, novel, challenging, and uncertain events”. In recent years, curiosity has been linked to happiness, creativity, satisfying intimate relationships, increased personal growth after traumatic experiences, and increased meaning in life. In the school context, conceptualized as a “character strength,” curiosity has also received heightened research attention. Having a “hungry mind” has been shown to be a core determinant of academic achievement, rivaling the prediction power of IQ.

Yet in actual schools, curiosity is drastically underappreciated. As Susan Engel has documented in her book, The Hungry Mind, amidst the country’s standardized testing mania, schools are missing what really matters about learning: The desire to learn in the first place. As she notes, teachers rarely encourage curiosity in the classroom—even though we are all born with an abundance of curiosity, and this innate drive for exploration could be built upon in all students.

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/07/the-underrated-gift-of-curiosity/534573/?utm_source=nl-atlantic-daily-072417

Unusual Musical Instruments From Around the World

From Atlas Obscura -

A Global Tour of Remarkable Musical Instruments
These 19 sonic contraptions are well worth experiencing in person.
BY MICHAEL INSCOE, PLACES FELLOW

http://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/19-of-the-worlds-most-unique-musical-instruments?utm_source=Atlas+Obscura+Daily+Newsletter&utm_campaign=ca1068a9ef-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_07_24&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f36db9c480-ca1068a9ef-63562045&ct=t(Newsletter_7_24_2017)&mc_cid=ca1068a9ef&mc_eid=866176a63f

Will Junior Ever Leave the Couch Now?

An excerpt from the LA Times -

E-sports isn't just a kids game anymore. There's big money for the best
By David Wharton

His father used to tell him that sitting in front of the computer, playing video games for hour after hour, was a waste of time.

So Cody Altman didn’t quite know what to think when a college from halfway across the country called to offer him a scholarship — for playing video games.

“Honestly,” he said, “I was skeptical.”

The young man from Anaheim changed his mind when he learned that Maryville University in St. Louis had an e-sports team with a coach, daily practices and league matches against other schools.


Two years later, Altman — who goes by “Walrus” in competition — found himself back in Southern California, seated with his teammates at a row of monitors on a high-tech stage, ready to do battle in the “League of Legends” college championship.

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-e-sports-20170721-htmlstory.html#nws=mcnewsletter

Asian American Lawyers

An excerpt from the LA Times Op Ed -

There are more Asian American lawyers than ever — but not in the top ranks
By Goodwin Liu

Two years ago, an unusual matter came before my court: a petition for posthumous bar admission brought by the descendants of Hong Yen Chang, a native of China. Chang came to America in 1872 at age 13. He graduated from the Phillips Academy, Yale College and Columbia Law School, and passed the bar exam. But in 1890 my court denied him a law license because the Chinese Exclusion Act prohibited him from becoming a citizen, then a prerequisite for bar membership. In 2015, my court admitted Chang to the bar, calling his exclusion “a grievous wrong” that denied our society “the important benefits of a diverse legal profession.”

For most of our nation’s history, Asians were excluded from the legal profession. But much has changed in recent decades. From 1985 to 2005, Asian Americans were the fastest growing minority group in the bar. Today. there are more than 50,000 Asian American lawyers, compared with 10,000 in 1990. More than 7,000 Asian Americans are now studying law, up from 2,300 in 1986.

And yet, Asian Americans have made limited progress in reaching the top ranks of the profession. Although Asian Americans are the largest minority group in big firms, they have the highest attrition rate and rank lowest in the ratio of partners to associates. Asian Americans comprise 6% of the U.S. population, but only 3% of federal judges and 2% of state judges. Three out of 94 U.S. attorneys in 2016 were Asian American; only four out of 2,437 elected district attorneys in 2014 were Asian American.

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-liu-asian-american-lawyers-20170723-story.html#nws=mcnewsletter

Apple in Hospitals

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Apple wants to change the way doctors and patients talk to each other — by giving everyone an iPad
By Hayley Tsukayama

LOS ANGELES — Awad Lsallum has been waiting for a heart for 40 days at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. One of the worst parts of a long hospital stay, he said, can be not having a clear picture of what your situation is, or even who is taking care of you as the days drag on.

But now, at least at Cedars-Sinai, there’s an app for all of that. Actually, there's a whole tablet. The hospital is offering some patients the option to check out iPads during their stay for free, to provide more insight into their health. The program offers a glimpse of how Apple is trying to further tap into the $3 trillion health-care market.

For hospitals, using these mobile devices can present patient health data in an accessible way, making it easier for patients and doctors to speak to each other. For Apple, it's a larger effort to focus more heavily on services rather than only products — a move that guarantees steady income and engagement, even if individual consumers aren't buying as many devices.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2017/07/19/apple-wants-to-change-the-way-doctors-and-patients-talk-to-each-other-by-giving-everyone-an-ipad/?utm_term=.edc193ac05bc&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

The World’s Best Delivery Service? Lunch in Mumbai

The difference between racial and partisan gerrymandering

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Deja Vu

From the New York Times -

BMW Denies Colluding With Carmakers on Emissions Equipment
By JACK EWING

FRANKFURT — BMW, responding on Sunday to claims it formed a cartel with Daimler and Volkswagen to hold down the prices of crucial technology, denied that the German carmakers had agreed among themselves to install emissions equipment that was inadequate to do the job.

The statement by BMW was the first attempt at damage control by the carmakers since the European Commission said on Saturday that it was investigating accusations of illegal collusion among them.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/23/business/bmw-denies-colluding-with-carmakers-on-emissions-equipment.html?emc=eta1&_r=0

In Good Company

I'm a lefty, too.

From Buzzfeed -

47 Left-Handed Celebrities That Will Make You Wish You Were A Lefty
Just some extra talented lefties.
By Allison Wild

https://www.buzzfeed.com/allisonwild/youre-not-alone-were-not-alone?utm_term=.oqnvvoN7L#.dxmnnKw9k

The Food Lab: How to Roast the Best Potatoes of Your Life

Bread Like You've Never Seen It

Google Goes to Space

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Google Street View’s latest destination: The International Space Station
By Peter Holley

You’ve used Google Street View to check out a new apartment, map traffic before you hit the road and search for haunting slices of the everyday world.

Now, the comprehensive terrestrial mapping system has gone extraterrestrial, allowing users to peer inside the International Space Station from their computer 248 miles below with 360-degree, panoramic views.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2017/07/21/google-street-views-latest-destination-the-international-space-station/?hpid=hp_hp-cards_hp-card-technology%3Ahomepage%2Fcard&utm_term=.09a7e9e2f055

The Kid From Nacogdoches

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Clint Dempsey, the ‘kid from Nacogdoches,’ lifts U.S. soccer team into Gold Cup final
By Steven Goff
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/soccer-insider/wp/2017/07/23/clint-dempsey-the-kid-from-nacogdoches-lifts-u-s-soccer-team-into-gold-cup-final/?hpid=hp_hp-more-top-stories_soccer-dempsey-930am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.43c5d32c1704

Side note - Nacogdoches, TX is about two hours from my hometown of China, TX

2017 Total Solar Eclipse's Path Across the U.S.

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Save Your Sympathy

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Don’t waste your sympathy on Sessions
By Jennifer Rubin

Sessions is the last person who deserves our sympathy. He was willing to sell his political soul to enable Trump, and he has enabled him every step of the way. Unlike Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, who plays a vital role in insulating the military from Trump and literally preventing nuclear war, Sessions is not maintaining the integrity of the Justice Department. He has normalized and rationalized conduct that flies in face of the rule of law.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2017/07/21/save-the-sympathy-for-sessions/?utm_term=.c4fb82cdd06f

HEY YA! - AVRIEL & THE SEQUOIAS

The Buck Stops Anywhere But Here

From the Washington Post -

‘The Buck Stops Here’ must be a phrase foreign to Trump
By Colbert I. King, Opinion Writer

“I’m not going to own it,” President Trump said about the Affordable Care Act that he and Republicans, following years of bombastic promises, have thus far failed to either repeal or replace. “Let Obamacare fail.”

That declaration provoked an angry editorial response from The Post, which asked: “Has there ever been a more cynical abdication of presidential responsibility?”

~~~~~~~~~~

Bottom line: Not a strand of President Harry S. Truman’s famous dictum, “The Buck Stops Here,” can be found in Trump.

Personal responsibility is strange fruit to him. And it is a character failing that should haunt members of Congress, regardless of party, and the country. A leader without honor and credibility is a leader not worth having.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-buck-stops-here-must-be-a-phrase-foreign-to-trump/2017/07/21/255e2cd4-6d9d-11e7-96ab-5f38140b38cc_story.html?utm_term=.c0a7f2a6173b

Tweets From Parents

https://www.buzzfeed.com/mikespohr/xx-photo-tweets-that-will-make-parents-pee-from-laughing?utm_term=.wjRVVXnYo#.jrDrrYpEP

Goats

Moving Mountain Goats Breaking Into An Office Growing on Trees http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/07/goats-animal-behavior-climbing-videos-spd/

Friday, July 21, 2017

Between the Scenes - Donald Trump, the First Black President? : The Dail...

Watch President Barack Obama Own Anthony Scaramucci | All In | MSNBC

Robot Cracks Safe

https://www.wired.com/story/watch-robot-crack-safe/?mbid=nl_72117_p1&CNDID=

What Did They Know & When Did They Know It?

From the LA Times -

USC bosses flunk the leadership test amid shocking allegations about former medical school dean
By Steve Lopez

By now you probably know the details.

Dr. Carmen Puliafito, a $1.1-million-a-year professor, doctor, dean and big-bucks rainmaker for the University of Southern California, left plenty of time in his busy schedule for extracurricular activities.

They included drug-fueled parties with a prostitute, convicted criminals and drug addicts. Los Angeles Times sleuths dug up photos of Puliafito’s exploits in hotel rooms, apartments and even the dean’s office at USC, including a shot of him using a butane torch to light a glass pipe while a female companion smoked heroin.

In Monday’s bombshell expose in The Times, reporters Paul Pringle, Harriet Ryan, Adam Elmahrek, Matt Hamilton and Sarah Parvini also reported the details of a 911 call from a Pasadena hotel where a woman had overdosed before being hospitalized. She later told reporters that she and Puliafito had been partying together for two days.

http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-lopez-puliafito-nikias-07202017-story.html#nws=mcnewsletter

Palomar argues the earth is polygonal.

California Says No Dice

From the NY Times -

Travel to Texas? Not on California’s Dime, You Don’t
By ALAN BLINDER

Phillip Jones, whose job it is to court visitors to this city, spent months warning anyone who would listen: Economic pain will follow if Texas lawmakers pass laws seen as hostile to gay and transgender people.

But after Texas approved a law that critics said might keep people, on the basis of sexual orientation, from adopting children or serving as foster parents, even Mr. Jones was surprised at part of the fallout: a ban by California on taxpayer-funded travel to Texas.

“Never in a million years,” Mr. Jones, the chief executive of VisitDallas, said, weeks after California broadened its travel restrictions to include eight states. “It was not even a factor in any of our discussions that California would ban travel to Texas.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/19/us/public-employee-travel.html?emc=edit_ca_20170720&nl=california-today&nlid=38867499&te=1&_r=0


Why a total solar eclipse is such a big deal

Why white supremacists love Tucker Carlson

Tiffany Haddish Took Will & Jada Pinkett Smith on a Groupon Swamp Tour

President Trump Casually Makes Another Damning Admission: The Daily Show

PROUD MARY - Official Trailer (HD)

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Welcome to the City of Violins

The high cost of free parking

Jobs Going to Canada

From Wired -

TRUMP’S POLICIES ARE SENDING PRECIOUS STARTUP JOBS TO CANADA
By Issie Lapowsky

RAYA BIDSHAHRI’S HANDS shook as she sat in her dorm room in February, reading the email that had been sent to all Boston University students.

“It was a warning letter,” she says, about a ban the Trump administration planned to institute against travelers and immigrants from seven predominantly Muslim countries, including Iran, where Bidshahri was born and where her family still lives.

Bidshahri had moved to the United States three years earlier to study neuroscience, and was just months away from graduation, after which she wanted to launch her online education startup in the Bay Area. She planned to take advantage of something called the International Entrepreneur Rule, which would give immigrant founders who raise at least $250,000 in funding temporary legal status in the United States while they build their businesses. For Bidshahri, the rule was perfectly timed. Finalized in the last days of President Obama's tenure in office, it was set to go into effect this July, just months after she received her diploma.

But that email from Boston University about the travel ban got Bidshahri thinking the United States might not be such a welcoming place for her or her company after all. And so, in June, she did what so many other foreign founders have done over the past year: set up shop in Toronto. Now she’s relieved she did.

Last week, the Department of Homeland Security delayed the International Entrepreneur Rule to next March, and it is currently accepting comments on plans to rescind it altogether.

https://www.wired.com/story/pausing-international-entrepreneur-rule-sends-jobs-to-canada?mbid=nl_71917_p1&CNDID=

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

I'll never fall in love again - Dionne Warwick

B.J.Thomas - Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head

Dionne Warwick - Walk On By

william de vaughn- be thankful for what you got (original)

What?

From the Root -

Wait, NBC Sports Announcer Mike Tirico Isn’t Black?
By Stephen A. Crockett Jr.

Mike Tirico - Getty Images Staff/Getty Images

Wait ... hol’ up. Normally when we wade into these blackness waters, it’s because some fair-skinned pop star is refusing to accept that the back of her hair—you know, the area above the neck; the area that old folks call the “kitchen”; the area that used to make my sisters cry when my mom really dug in with the hairbrush and Posner Light Touch hair grease ... that area—is a little thicker than the rest.

But this news here is mind-boggling. Longtime ESPN broadcaster-turned-NBC Sports announcer Mike Tirico doesn’t believe himself to be black. To hear him tell it, he’s just an Italian kid who grew up in Queens, N.Y., who people keep insisting is black.

~~~~~~~~~~

Let me start by saying that I am no genealogist. I couldn’t tell you what blood runs through Mike Tirico’s veins, but I can tell you what my grandfather, who also was not a genealogist, would say about Tirico’s claim of being Italian:

“That dark-ass black boy needs to go sit his ass down somewhere in a dark-ass corner until he finds himself.”

https://www.theroot.com/wait-nbc-sports-announcer-mike-tirico-isnt-black-1796985416

Why the iPhone Can't Be Made in the US

British Plugs Are Better Than All Other Plugs, And Here's Why

Guam Explained

How to Fix Traffic Forever

Arrested For Wearing a Skirt

From the Washington Post -

Saudi woman who wore skirt in viral video has been arrested, state television reports
By Adam Taylor

A young woman is at the center of a controversy about clothing in Saudi Arabia, after she posted videos of herself in one of the nation's most conservative provinces wearing a short skirt and a cropped top.

The woman has been arrested by Riyadh police for wearing “suggestive clothing,” Saudi state television station Al Ekhbariya reported Tuesday.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/07/18/a-video-of-a-woman-in-a-skirt-sparks-outrage-in-saudi-arabia/?hpid=hp_hp-more-top-stories-2_wv-saudi-skirt110am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.dd76c6395f80

Is Biking To Work Safe In Los Angeles? | 360-degree video

Mothers Who Have Died in Childbirth in the US

From ProPublica and NPR -

The Last Person You’d Expect to Die in Childbirth
The U.S. has the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world, and 60 percent are preventable. The death of Lauren Bloomstein, a neonatal nurse, in the hospital where she worked illustrates a profound disparity: The health care system focuses on babies but often ignores their mothers.
by Nina Martin, ProPublica, and Renee Montagne, NPR

https://www.propublica.org/article/die-in-childbirth-maternal-death-rate-health-care-system

https://www.propublica.org/article/lost-mothers-maternal-health-died-childbirth-pregnancy#nws=mcnewsletter

A Guide on What to Say & When to Say It

From the Washington Post -

But the latest sports apparel brand to step into the minefield of politics and consumer purchases did so by choice. On Friday afternoon, Reebok tweeted a flow chart trolling Trump's now famous comment to French Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron's wife last week that quickly went viral online. During his visit to Paris, Trump was caught on camera telling Brigitte Macron, who is 25 years older than her husband, that she was "in such good shape — beautiful," a comment some viewed as an example of sexism and ageism toward Ms. Macron, who is 64.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/on-leadership/wp/2017/07/17/reeboks-trolling-tweet-is-the-most-prominent-example-of-a-trump-news-jacking-yet/?utm_term=.486087f2d26a

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Why Norway is full of Teslas

Summer Breeze - Seals & Croft #1 Hit(1972)

Isn't She Lovely (Solo Jazz Guitar)

Kris Fuchigami - Can't Take My Eyes Off You (HiSessions.com Acoustic Live!)

Gregory Porter - "You Send Me" live on Chris Evans Breakfast Show

Gregory Porter performs It's Probably Me at the Polar Music Prize Ceremo...

Here's why humidity makes you feel hotter

A Wrinkle In Time Official US Teaser Trailer

An Exhibit of Farmworkers

From the Fresno Bee -

A first at the California State Fair, an exhibit on farmworkers
BY ROBERT RODRIGUEZ

The California State Fair has long recognized the state as an agricultural powerhouse. Now, for the first time in its 164-year history, it is devoting an exhibit to the people who keep it running: farmworkers.

The state fair, which started Friday and runs through July 30, is hosting a special exhibition in the California Building focusing on the groups and people who “helped cultivate the food that feeds our state, country and world, sustaining what is today a $47 billion agriculture industry,” according to the state fair’s website.

Read more here: http://www.fresnobee.com/news/local/article161429803.html#nws=mcnewsletter#storylink=cpy


Vincent van Gogh’s long, miserable road to fame

Friday, July 14, 2017

This $250 ring could replace your credit cards, keys, and a lot of other...

Mechanic who helped 48 men get diagnosed with prostate cancer- BBC Stories

A Really Smart Guy

A question from Quora -

If MIT "only admits people with a 4.0 unweighted gpa and 2300+ test scores", why doesn't everyone with a 4.0 get in and why do people with low GPAs get in?
Jelani Nelson, studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Jelani Nelson

Answered Jun 29 · Upvoted by Sam Sinai, studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Students live in different environments, and different environments have different measurements of success and different levels of knowledge about how to play the college admissions game. Top schools I imagine recognize that top talent exists everywhere, in all communities, so then they try to figure out how to evaluate someone within the context of their environment. If a kid writes on their application that they aced a differential equations class in an elite high school that offers such a course, I’m sure that’s impressive, but if a kid aced (with maybe even a worse score?) such a course in Podunk, Iowa where no kid had even thought to take such a course at the local community college in the last 8 years, I’m sure that’s even more impressive, since it speaks to things like initiative, passion, etc., as opposed to a kid who merely inherited and executed a pre-defined strategy. Similarly, if one school pumps out more perfect SAT students than another, doesn’t that reflect more on the quality of the school’s SAT prep than the quality of an individual kid when compared with kids at some other school?

Where I’m from (St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands), no one I knew cared about their GPA. I didn’t even know what my GPA was, or what that term really meant, until senior year when a college application required me to enter it into a box, so I asked our school’s guidance counselor. I think I had a 3.8, which put my rank at 2nd (in a class of 30). No one cared, including myself. The SAT was similar — I showed up on the day of without ever having taken a practice exam. In my St. Thomian bubble, the big things people around me emphasized were contests like Quiz Bowl, Science Bowl, and Moot Court. I was also into classical piano. I wasn’t playing the college admissions game. I didn’t even know the game existed.

I then ended up applying to MIT (and only MIT) early action, despite not having heard of it until Fall senior year (I found it in some college ranking magazine). I never saw my recommendation letters, but I suspect they helped MIT understand the environment I grew up in, and they were able to then judge me based on that environment. I was admitted. I ended up double majoring in computer science and pure math at MIT, taking a grad course my junior year and 5 more senior year, losing a perfect GPA to an independent project course I blew off in my final semester of senior year. I stayed on for an MEng and PhD in computer science. I’m now a computer science professor and think I did OK.

In short, I don’t think the numbers you posted are all that important, and I suspect MIT and other top universities are right to take holistic approaches in evaluating college applications. Even ignoring issues of balancing racial/gender/other forms of diversity, a holistic approach just makes good sense even if all you’re trying to do is to identify top talent.

https://www.quora.com/profile/Jelani-Nelson


The hidden oil patterns on bowling lanes

Lance Canales & The Flood - Plane Wreck At Los Gatos (Deportee)



https://ww2.kqed.org/news/2017/07/14/immortalized-by-woody-guthrie-deportees-who-died-in-plane-crash-are-nameless-no-longer/

A Healing Castle of Fluffy Cotton ... Or Is It?

Mouse Timer

https://appsto.re/us/Hq4Ojb.i

Florida's State Attorney Pulled Over

https://www.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeednewsvideo/floridas-state-attorney-pulled-over-by-police?utm_term=.bwZllwgx0#.wuOggkBOd

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Breaking All the Rules

An excerpt from the Atlantic -

Trump's Campaign Succeeded by Breaking All the Rules—and It’s Catching Up to Him Now
Recalling his victory over Hillary Clinton has been the president’s only solace for months, but his personnel and management decisions now threaten to topple his presidency.
By DAVID A. GRAHAM

Donald Trump’s campaign for president seemed to vacillate between, to borrow Hunter S. Thompson’s dichotomy, being too weird to live and too rare to die. All the smartest analysts were convinced that it was definitely too weird to live. Stocked with amateurs, retreads, and minor-league washouts suddenly promoted for a cup of coffee, and overseen by a candidate with a penchant for enormous gaffes. The Trump team was widely viewed as on the verge of collapse. The joke was on the wise analysts: The candidacy turned out to be too rare to die, and now Trump is president.

But with a few months’ extra perspective, and after several days of damaging revelations, it’s becoming clear that although Trump’s chaotic approach to the campaign did not prevent him from winning the White House, and may actually have provided him with a crucial edge, it is hobbling his presidency. The undisciplined, untutored atmosphere is on display in the meeting that Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, and Paul Manafort had with a woman they believed to be a Russian government lawyer offering opposition research on behalf of the Kremlin, and there may be more damaging revelations to come.

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/07/the-campaign-comes-back-to-haunt-trump/533397/?utm_source=nl-atlantic-daily-071217

Junior Maile - When I'm Gone

What's the Deepest Hole We Can Possibly Dig?

Why Donald Trump Jr.'s emails change everything

Quote

From the New York Post Editorial -

We see one truly solid takeaway from the story of the day: Donald Trump Jr. is an idiot.

http://nypost.com/2017/07/11/donald-trump-jr-is-an-idiot/?ncid=APPLENEWS00001

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Ice Cream That Looks Like Flowers

Meet The Lamborghinis Of Toilets

Shaqs



From Sports Illustrated -

https://www.si.com/nba/2017/07/05/shaquille-oneal-shaq-baby-name-popularity

From Homeless to Six-Figures in SF

An excerpt from the San Francisco Chronicle -

From homeless to six-figure salary in S.F.
By Ted Andersen

It was Christmas Day when Preston Phan, 29, stood on the streets of San Francisco’s Mission District chatting with his family over FaceTime, careful not to allow the building where he was staying to slip into view.

Phan had left Seattle jobless and was now broke and living in a homeless shelter. Interest on his student debt was growing, and his hopes of making it were shrinking.

Three months later he would be living in the South Bay, earning a six-figure salary at a major tech company. This is the story of how he turned his life around in tech’s heartland.

http://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/From-homeless-to-six-figure-salary-in-S-F-11264166.php

What a Cutie!

From the Daily Mail -

Jolene Jackinsky snapped a photo of Barack Obama cradling her baby after meeting him at the airport
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4676940/Mom-snaps-photo-Barack-Obama-holdinger-baby.html#ixzz4mFl5PRMO 

California Typewriter | Tom Hanks | John Mayer Documentary Trailer

FM Texas and AM Texas

An excerpt from the New Yorker -

America’s Future Is Texas
With right-wing zealots taking over the legislature even as the state’s demographics shift leftward, Texas has become the nation’s bellwether.
By Lawrence Wright

I’ve lived in Texas for most of my life, and I’ve come to appreciate what the state symbolizes, both to people who live here and to those who view it from afar. Texans see themselves as a distillation of the best qualities of America: friendly, confident, hardworking, patriotic, neurosis-free. Outsiders see us as the nation’s id, a place where rambunctious and disavowed impulses run wild. Texans, it is thought, mindlessly celebrate individualism, and view government as a kind of kryptonite that weakens the entrepreneurial muscles. We’re reputed to be braggarts; careless with money and our personal lives; a little gullible, but dangerous if crossed; insecure, but obsessed with power and prestige.

Texans, however, are hardly monolithic. The state is as politically divided as the rest of the nation. One can drive across it and be in two different states at the same time: FM Texas and AM Texas. FM Texas is the silky voice of city dwellers, the kingdom of NPR. It is progressive, blue, reasonable, secular, and smug—almost like California. AM Texas speaks to the suburbs and the rural areas: Trumpland. It’s endless bluster and endless ads. Paranoia and piety are the main items on the menu.

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/07/10/americas-future-is-texas

Hiking While Black

An excerpt from Outside Online -

Going It Alone
What happens when an African American woman decides to solo-hike the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine during a summer of bitter political upheaval? Everything you can imagine, from scary moments of racism to new friendships to soaring epiphanies about the timeless value of America’s most storied trekking route.
By: Rahawa Haile

It's the spring of 2016, and I’m ten miles south of Damascus, Virginia, where an annual celebration called Trail Days has just wrapped up. Last night, temperatures plummeted into the thirties. Today, long-distance Appalachian Trail hikers who’d slept in hammocks and mailed their underquilts home too soon were groaning into their morning coffee. A few small fires shot woodsmoke at the sun as thousands of tent stakes were dislodged. Over the next 24 hours, most of the hikers in attendance would pack up and hit the 554-mile stretch of the AT that runs north through Virginia.

I’ve used the Trail Days layover as an opportunity to stash most of my belongings with friends and complete a short section of the AT I’d missed, near the Tennessee-Virginia border. As I’m moving along, a day hiker heading in the opposite direction stops me for a chat. He’s affable and inquisitive. He asks what many have asked before: “Where are you from?” I tell him Miami.

He laughs and says, “No, but really. Where are you from from?” He mentions something about my features, my thin nose, and then trails off. I tell him my family is from Eritrea, a country in the Horn of Africa, next to Ethiopia. He looks relieved.

“I knew it,” he says. “You’re not black.”

I say that of course I am. “None more black,” I weakly joke.

“Not really,” he says. “You’re African, not black-black. Blacks don’t hike.”

I’m tired of this man. His from-froms and black-blacks. He wishes me good luck and leaves. He means it, too; he isn’t malicious. To him there’s nothing abnormal about our conversation. He has categorized me, and the world makes sense again. Not black-black. I hike the remaining miles back to my tent and don’t emerge for hours.

https://www.outsideonline.com/2170266/solo-hiking-appalachian-trail-queer-black-woman



Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Why there are twice as many solar jobs as coal jobs

Volvo Goes All-Electric

From the Wall Street Journal -

Volvo Plans to Go Electric, to Abandon Conventional Car Engine by 2019
CEO reiterates target of selling one million electric cars and hybrids by 2025
By William Boston




https://www.wsj.com/articles/volvo-to-phase-out-conventional-car-engine-1499227202?mod=trending_now_1

How a Deaf Musician Is Helping Others “See With Sound”

John Oliver - 4th of July

Trevor Noah - Any leader tweeting policy is ridiculous (Trevor Noah from...

He Has a Sacramento Connection

An excerpt from the Bleacher Report -

HUNTER GREENE IS NOT THE LEBRON OF BASEBALL. HE WANTS TO BE SOMETHING MORE.
Inside the unreal celebrity life of a 17-year-old prodigy who’s already expected to save America’s pastime from itself—part one of Make Baseball Cool Again, a B/R Mag special issue
By Joon Lee

Russell watches the games by himself. Occasionally, he'll cheer on Hunter and his teammates. ("Atta boy, bud!" "Good swing, kid!") Every once in a while, he'll shout out a coaching tip to his son. ("Keep your backside straight at the plate!" "Stop trying too hard!") Other parents will congratulate him on his son's success, but he keeps the conversations short. Between innings, he searches Hunter's name on Twitter. He wants to know everything. With all they've gone through, Russell needs to know everything.

When Russell became a parent at 25 years old ("He came out of this nut—the right one" he says, pointing to his groin), he promised to never miss one of his son's games. In the 17 years since, he has missed only two, and they were in Japan. "I made sure Hunter never experienced what I experienced," he says.

Russell's parents got divorced when he was two. He grew up with his father, a veteran of the Green Berets, in Sacramento, where they lived until Russell was in fifth grade. When Hunter's grandfather started dating his soon-to-be second wife, he stopped regularly attending Russell's football and baseball games. And then he stopped going to them at all. Feeling left behind, Russell decided to run away.

He called his mom, who lived in Los Angeles, and she came to pick him up. He lost contact with his dad. He smoked and transported weed. He drank. He was a good athlete, playing Division II football at Humboldt State, but he had no aspirations to play sports professionally. It's why he has no regrets about Hunter's abnormal high school experience. "What he's missed out on is stuff he doesn't need to be a part of," Russell says.

For 15 years, Russell worked for Johnnie Cochran, starting at the end of the O.J. Simpson murder trial, before opening a private practice, in which he specialized in violent crimes, often homicides and sexual assaults. His work with celebrities, Russell says, helped prepare his son for what, to him, was near-certain fame: "Everything you hear about Justin Bieber, Hunter knows about. Everything about the Kardashians, he knows about it because I use them as an example, whether they are good or bad."

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2718635-hunter-greene-is-not-the-lebron-of-baseball-marcus-stroman-mlb

Robo-Bartenders

From the LA Times -

http://www.latimes.com/travel/93989937-132.html

Cheers.

Telling Descriptors

From the Washington Post -

Bizarre. Absurd. Ridiculous. Embarrassing. Trump.
By Kathleen Parker

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/bizarre-absurd-ridiculous-embarrassing-trump/2017/07/04/f004b6dc-6033-11e7-a4f7-af34fc1d9d39_story.html?utm_term=.57da8346a099&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

Robocops

From the Washington Post -

Meet the newest recruits of Dubai’s police force: Robo-cars with facial-recognition tech 
By Hamza Shaban

The model O-R3 autonomous security robot manufactured
by Singapore-based Otsaw Digital. (Otsaw Digital)

Mini autonomous police cars paired with companion drones and facial-recognition technology will begin patrolling the streets of Dubai by the end of the year to help identify and track suspects.

The announcement by city officials this week comes as Dubai races to reshape the future of its law enforcement.

But don’t expect a high-speed chase out of the little cars. In demonstrations, the robot never appears to move beyond a stroll’s pace. But the four-wheeled security vehicle comes with a built-in aerial drone that can be deployed to surveil areas and people that the robot can’t reach.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2017/06/30/meet-the-newest-recruits-of-dubais-police-force-robo-cars-with-facial-recognition-tech/?utm_term=.741f575a100a&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

Searching for the Truth

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Do They Know This?

An excerpt from the Undefeated -

Locker Room Talk: First day of NBA free agency should be called Big O Day
Oscar Robertson is the reason today’s players can choose where to play and make megamillions
BY WILLIAM C. RHODEN

Henceforth and forever, the NBA should designate July 1 as Big O Day, in honor of Oscar Robertson, namesake of the rule that put NBA players on the road to free agency.

That road has been paved with gold ever since.

Robertson, 78, said he is open to the idea. “I like it,” he told me last week. “I don’t think a lot of players know anything about the Oscar Robertson Rule and what it really means.”

The rule has a number of ins and out, but what the players need to grasp is simple. “They should understand why they are making 15 and 20 million dollars a year playing basketball,” Robertson said.

Robertson v. National Basketball Association was a class-action lawsuit filed in 1970. Robertson at the time was president of the National Basketball Players Association. The NBA was represented by the firm Proskauer, Rose, Goetz & Mendelsohn, whose lead attorney was future NBA commissioner David Stern.

https://theundefeated.com/features/locker-room-talk-first-day-of-nba-free-agency-should-be-called-big-o-day/



The Fourth of July

“What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?”
By Frederick Douglass
July 5, 1852

What, to the American slave, is your 4th of July? I answer: a day that reveals to him, more than all other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciations of tyrants, brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade, and solemnity, are, to him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy — a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices, more shocking and bloody, than are the people of these United States, at this very hour.

~~~~~~~~~~

Fellow-citizens! I will not enlarge further on your national inconsistencies. The existence of slavery in this country brands your republicanism as a sham, your humanity as a base pretence, and your Christianity as a lie.

http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/document/what-to-the-slave-is-the-fourth-of-july/

Not a Fan, But . . .


Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. delivered the ninth-grade commencement address a Cardigan Mountain School, a boarding school for boys in New Hampshire. (Cardigan Mountain School)

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/the-best-thing-chief-justice-roberts-wrote-this-term-wasnt-a-supreme-court-opinion/2017/07/02/b80a5afa-5e6e-11e7-9fc6-c7ef4bc58d13_story.html?utm_term=.a559922295b3&wpisrc=nl_most-draw7&wpmm=1

A Hometown Hero

An excerpt from the LA Times -

Hiroshi Miyamura and his hometown had a lot in common. They believed in America.
By JOE MOZINGO

Two American soldiers trudged across the war-torn Korean peninsula as winter bore down.

To keep their minds off the cold and hunger, Hiroshi “Hershey” Miyamura told his new friend, an Italian kid from Boston, about his hometown of Gallup, N.M.

Joe Annello pictured the kind of strange buttes and red-rock desert he had seen in John Wayne movies. But Miyamura told him a different story, about how Gallup had risen to defend the American ideal when so many others stood by.

Sixty-seven years later, their enduring friendship is a testament to how a small town grappled with issues the nation is again debating today — where people of certain ethnic or religious backgrounds fit into its changing identity. It is the story of how a small act of courage helped turn an "enemy alien" into an American hero.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-japanese-american-hero-hiroshi-20170703-htmlstory.html

James Davis "Hood Adjacent"

Dad Insurance For Fearless Dreams | @AmFam®

Be careful out there, America

Monday, July 3, 2017

Dog at Vienna Chamber Orchestra Performance in Ephesus Turkey

Pushing STEM Careers

From the Undefeated -

Isiah Warner’s inspirational teaching at LSU never stops pushing STEM careers
The 2016 SEC Professor of the Year holds the highest professorial rank in the LSU system
BY MAYA A. JONES

Louisiana State University (LSU) professor Isiah Warner laughed as he recounted the many hats he’s worn throughout his 25 years at the school. Warner serves as vice president for strategic initiatives, Boyd Professor (the highest professorial rank in the LSU system) and Philip W. West Professor of analytical and environmental chemistry and as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor who works to develop, apply and solve fundamental problems through research.

https://theundefeated.com/features/isiah-warner-lsu-stem-careers/

Quote

From the Huffington Post -

Justice Official Quits Over White House Conduct ‘I Would Not Tolerate Seeing In A Company’
“Trying to hold companies to standards that our current administration is not living up to was creating a cognitive dissonance that I could not overcome.”
By Mary Papenfuss

“Even as I engaged in... questioning and evaluations, on my mind were the numerous lawsuits pending against the President of the United States for everything from violations of the Constitution to conflict of interest, the ongoing investigations of potentially treasonous conducts, and the investigators and prosecutors fired for their pursuits of principles and facts,” she wrote. “Those are conducts I would not tolerate seeing in a company, yet I worked under an administration that engaged in exactly those [conducts]. I wanted no more part in it.” - Hui Chen

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/hui-chen-quits-justice_us_5959be5ce4b0da2c732455c9?77p&ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

App Improves Memory

An excerpt from the Independent -

New brain training app improves memories of people with early-stage Dementia
'We hope to extend these findings in future studies of healthy ageing and mild Alzheimer's disease,' said George Savulich, who led the study at Cambridge University
By KATE KELLAND

A brain training computer game developed by British neuroscientists has been shown to improve the memory of patients in the very earliest stages of dementia and could help such patients avert some symptoms of cognitive decline.

Researchers who developed the “game show”-like app and tested its effects on cognition and motivation in a small trial found that patients who played the game over a period of a month had around a 40 per cent improvement in their memory scores.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/brain-training-app-dementia-early-stage-patients-people-help-memories-improve-games-show-cambridge-a7820301.html

Warrior Games

http://www.dodwarriorgames.com

The World is Watching

From Axios AM Newsletter -

How they see us ... The wrestling tweet was at the top of the front pages of the Financial Times and The Times of London (which said that in the video, Trump "attacked a person with a superimposed CNN logo on their head"). The BBC's Katty Kay said on "Morning Joe' that it '"looks like America has gone off the reservation."

https://www.axios.com/axios-am/

What causes kidney stones? - Arash Shadman

Sinclair Broadcast Group: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Wildlife crossings stop roadkill. Why aren't there more?

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Just Let It Go

Despacito - Luis Fonsi ft. Daddy Yankee (Boyce Avenue acoustic cover) on...

New Rule: Make Summer Great Again | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)

Healing With Fish Skins

An excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -

Fish Skin for Human Wounds: Iceland’s Pioneering Treatment
The FDA-approved skin substitute reduces inflammation and transforms chronic wounds into acute injuries.
By Lois Parshley

The materials in fish skin, particularly omega-3 fatty acids, yield natural anti-inflammatory effects that speed healing. When placed on wounds, the product, made from dried and processed fish skin, works as an extracellular matrix, a group of proteins and starches that plays a crucial role in recovery. In a healthy person, a matrix surrounds cells and binds them to tissue, generating the growth of new epidermis. But in chronic wounds, this natural structure fails to form. So like a garden trellis, the fish skin provides the body’s own cells a structure to grow around so they can form healthy tissue, gradually becoming incorporated into the closing wound.

Some six and a half million Americans suffer from chronic wounds, whether related to vascular disease, diabetes, or complications from normal procedures. The five-year survival rate is 54 percent, compared with 88 percent for breast cancer, and treatments cost more than $25 billion a year. That total is steadily rising, in part because of a graying population. But precisely because many patients suffering from such wounds tend to be old, and many are also poor, they don’t get much attention.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-06-27/fish-skin-may-be-the-answer-to-chronic-wounds

Quote

"You're never too rich to be white trash." - Bill Maher on Trump's "Morning Joe Feud"