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Wednesday, March 15, 2017

File This Under "Do We Really Need This?"

Luxurious Tiny House With A Split Level Floor Plan

The GOP health care plan: The more you need, the less you get

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks: Official Trailer (HBO)

Funny Father

From the Huffington Post -

Ryan Reynolds Might Be One Of The Funniest Dads On Twitter
The actor shares his musings on raising two kids under 3.
By Caroline Bologna

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/ryan-reynolds-twitter-dad_us_589a4854e4b04061313a25e0?


Bill Withers - Hello Like Before

Child Prodigy

From the Daily Mail -

Child virtuoso AGED 11 will make history as the world's youngest conductor as he commands the 75-strong Nottingham Symphony Orchestra
By RACHAEL BURFORD

A British child prodigy is set to make history as the world's youngest orchestra conductor at just 11 years old.

Talented Matthew Smith is a Grade 5 standard violinist and also plays the guitar, drums, piano and viola.

Incredibly he will take the lead when Nottingham Symphony Orchestra (NSO) play Die Fledermaus at the Royal Concert Hall in the city on April 2.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4312256/Child-virtuoso-make-history-youngest-conductor.html#ixzz4bP3yuqh3
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4312256/Child-virtuoso-make-history-youngest-conductor.html#ixzz4bP3gn8il

Monday, March 13, 2017

Hilarious Indeed!

From the Huffington Post -

Twitter Hilariously Burns Kellyanne Conway For Microwave Comment
Because it’s **BEEPING** insane.
By Elyse Wanshel

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/twitter-responds-kellyanne-conway-microwave-camera-comment_us_58c6ce27e4b0d1078ca86b60?

HBCU @ SXSW

From USA Today -

Push to get more African-Americans into tech leads to SXSW
By Jarrad Henderson

Mariah Cowling promised her father she would apply to Spelman College, with dreams of becoming an aerospace engineer. There was just one problem: the historically black women's liberal-arts college didn't have an engineering program.

So she became a computer science major instead. That's how Cowling, who is headed to Microsoft as a coder in its virtual reality division after she graduates from Atlanta's Spelman in May, finds herself surrounded by tens of thousands of tech professionals at the SXSW Interactive Festival here.

She's one of 100 students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) participating in the HBCU@SXSW initiative, a partnership between South By Southwest Convention and Festivals and organizations such as Opportunity Hub, Huddle Ventures and Stemmed. These have teamed up to help students of color attend the popular music, interactive and film festival in Austin.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/news/2017/03/13/push-get-more-african-americans-into-tech-leads-sxsw/99103260/

Four Tops - I Believe In You And Me

Hilarious Jack Russell Goes Crazy with Excitement at Crufts 2017!

Forensic artist helps catch over 1000 criminals - Meet the Record Breakers

Now, Everyone Can Afford 3D Printing (Monoprice Mini Select Review)

American Health Care Act: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Making Connections

From the Hollywood Reporter - (Bold is mine)

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Why 'Get Out' Is 'Invasion of the Black Body Snatchers' for the Trump Era
by Kareem Abdul-Jabba

It's horrifying watching poor Chris Washington (Daniel Kaluuya) paralyzed in that chair while his will and body are being stolen, because growing up, I felt as paralyzed as him. Watching James Baldwin struggle with the frustrations of black bodies being destroyed both physically and mentally in the documentary reminded me of my own struggles as a young black man in the '60s. I was the poster child for the Good Boy, which to many Americans meant Good Negro. Everyone was telling black children that if you studied hard and did what you were told, you could be successful and welcomed into white society. I studied hard and earned good grades. I practiced hard and earned a good living. But I knew as a child that my name and religion were not my own. Alcindor was the Christian slave monger who owned my ancestors. I was paralyzed by that past, by white America's expectations for how a black man should behave, by how much gratitude I should constantly express for allowing me to succeed. I overcame that paralysis when I adopted a religion and name that I felt connected me more to my cultural roots. Reading The Autobiography of Malcolm X and James Baldwin's The Fire Next Time inspired me to find my own voice. When I used that voice to speak about political and social injustice, some Americans responded with hatred and death threats. Ironically, I was just doing what people came to America to do since it was founded: reinvent myself according to my beliefs rather than someone else's.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kareem-abdul-jabbar-why-get-is-invasion-black-body-snatchers-trump-985449

Cautionary Tale

From the LA Times -

His NFL-to-prison cautionary tale leaves students transfixed. Here is Ryan Leaf's story, in his own words
By Sam Farmer

There was a joke going around campus when I was at Washington State. It went, “What’s the difference between God and Ryan Leaf?” The punchline was, “God doesn’t think he’s Ryan Leaf.”

When I came into the NFL, there were three things that were very important to me: money, power and prestige. I was powerful now because I was a famous athlete. I had prestige because I was doing what everybody wanted to do. And I had a lot of money.

When I’m talking to parents, I tell them an analogy. My emotional level was kind of stunted when I was about 13, so I tell them to try this experiment at home: Give your 13-year-old child $31 million and see how that works out.

So I’m 21, have $31 million, and I wasn’t responsible to anyone anymore for money or really anything. If anybody said “no” to me, I would discard them from my life. That included my parents at one point. I just had zero perspective on what was important.

http://www.latimes.com/sports/nfl/la-sp-ryan-leaf-20170311-story.html

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Confiscated From Migrants

From the New Yorker -

A JANITOR’S COLLECTION OF THINGS CONFISCATED FROM MIGRANTS IN THE DESERT
By Peter C. Baker

When migrants are apprehended, Customs and Border Protection agents
dispose of personal-hygiene items such as toilet paper during intake.
Thomas Kiefer INSTITUTE


Tom Kiefer was a Customs and Border Protection janitor for almost four years before he took a good look inside the trash. Every day at work—at the C.B.P. processing center in Ajo, Arizona, less than fifty miles from the border with Mexico—he would throw away bags full of items confiscated from undocumented migrants apprehended in the desert. One day in 2007, he was rummaging through these bags looking for packaged food, which he’d received permission to donate to a local pantry. In the process, he also noticed toothbrushes, rosaries, pocket Bibles, water bottles, keys, shoelaces, razors, mix CDs, condoms, contraceptive pills, sunglasses, keys: a vibrant, startling testament to the lives of those who had been detained or deported. Without telling anyone, Kiefer began collecting the items, stashing them in sorted piles in the garages of friends. “I didn’t know what I was going to do,” he told me recently. “But I knew there was something to be done.”

http://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/a-janitors-collection-of-things-confiscated-from-migrants-in-the-desert?intcid=mod-latest

A Master Thief

From the New Yorker -

A PICKPOCKET’S TALE
The spectacular thefts of Apollo Robbins.
By Adam Green

Robbins, who is thirty-eight and lives in Las Vegas, is a peculiar variety-arts hybrid, known in the trade as a theatrical pickpocket. Among his peers, he is widely considered the best in the world at what he does, which is taking things from people’s jackets, pants, purses, wrists, fingers, and necks, then returning them in amusing and mind-boggling ways. Robbins works smoothly and invisibly, with a diffident charm that belies his talent for larceny. One senses that he would prosper on the other side of the law. “You have to ask yourself one question,” he often says as he holds up a wallet or a watch that he has just swiped. “Am I being paid enough to give it back?”

In more than a decade as a full-time entertainer, Robbins has taken (and returned) a lot of stuff, including items from well-known figures in the worlds of entertainment (Jennifer Garner, actress: engagement ring); sports (Charles Barkley, former N.B.A. star: wad of cash); and business (Ace Greenberg, former chairman of Bear Stearns: Patek Philippe watch). He is probably best known for an encounter with Jimmy Carter’s Secret Service detail in 2001. While Carter was at dinner, Robbins struck up a conversation with several of his Secret Service men. Within a few minutes, he had emptied the agents’ pockets of pretty much everything but their guns. Robbins brandished a copy of Carter’s itinerary, and when an agent snatched it back he said, “You don’t have the authorization to see that!” When the agent felt for his badge, Robbins produced it and handed it back. Then he turned to the head of the detail and handed him his watch, his badge, and the keys to the Carter motorcade.

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/01/07/a-pickpockets-tale

He Was Sold by the Jesuits to Save Georgetown

From the New York Times RACE / RELATED -

A photograph of Frank Campbell was found in a scrapbook at Nicholls State University in Louisiana.
The children with Mr. Campbell are unidentified.


He was an enslaved teenager on a Jesuit plantation in Maryland on the night that the stars fell. It was November of 1833, and meteor showers set the sky ablaze.

His name was Frank Campbell. He would hold tight to that memory for decades, even when he was an old man, living hundreds of miles away from his birthplace. In 1838, he was shipped to a sugar plantation in Louisiana along with dozens of other slaves from Maryland. They were sold by the nation’s most prominent Jesuit priests to raise money to help save the Jesuit college now known as Georgetown University.

Mr. Campbell would survive slavery and the Civil War. He would live to see freedom and the dawning of the 20th century. Like many of his contemporaries from Maryland, he would marry and have children and grandchildren. But in one respect, he was singular: His image has survived, offering us the first look at one of the 272 slaves sold to help keep Georgetown afloat.

http://www.nytimes.com/newsletters/2017/03/12/race-related?nlid=38867499

Hiring the Right Person

From the New York Times -

How to Hire the Right Person
By Adam Bryant

Over the course of speaking with almost 500 leaders for my weekly “Corner Office” series, I’ve asked every one of them, “How do you hire?” Their answers are always insightful because after years of interviewing countless job candidates, they’ve learned the best approaches to help them get right to the core of who a candidate is and how he or she will work with a team. Learn the strategies these chief executives have developed through trial and error to help you go beyond the polished résumés, pre-screened references and scripted answers, to hire more creative and effective members for your team. And if you’re on the other side of the job hunt, you can gain insight on what your interviewer is really looking for in a candidate.

https://www.nytimes.com/guides/business/how-to-hire-the-right-person

Hot Pockets History

From Saveur -

THE FORGOTTEN IMMIGRANT ORIGINS OF AMERICA’S MOST ICONIC MICROWAVABLE SNACK
How two Iranian brothers invented the beloved Hot Pocket
BY MATTHEW SEDACCA

The short version of the story goes like this: In the late ‘60s, the Merages were attending universities in California. After earning an MBA in business, Paul Merage worked entry-level marketing positions at Maxwell House coffee. But both wanted to start their own company, a dream ingrained by their father, and according to a 2015 profile in Family Business, David believed success would happen in California. (The Merage family did not respond to requests for an interview.)

After a business trip to Europe in the mid-70s, the brothers saw potential demand in the American market for frozen Belgian waffles, according to a 2016 Tedium article, working for months to perfect a reipce. For months, the two worked on a recipe for easy-to-prepare Belgian waffles. In 1977, despite minimal experience in the industry, they founded the food manufacturing company Chef America Inc. in Chatsworth, California. Then, after earning millions marketing their waffles to restaurants and coffee shops, the brothers decided to compete with lunch and dinner-time offerings. The Hot Pocket came soon after.

http://www.saveur.com/hot-pockets-merage-brothers-history#page-2


Sister Sledge - We Are Family

From CNN -

Joni Sledge of vocal group Sister Sledge dies at 60
By Ralph Ellis and Tony Marco, CNN





http://www.cnn.com/2017/03/11/us/joni-sledge-of-sister-sledge-dies/index.html

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Should You Hover Or Cover The Toilet Seat?

Paper Towel vs Hand Dryers

You Should Get A Second Cat

Bruno Mars - Count on me [Official Video]

You've Got a Friend In Me - LIVE Performance by 4-year-old Claire Ryann ...

[OFFICIAL VIDEO] Imagine - Pentatonix

A student's 'Adidas' commercial is everything advertising should be.

General Jeff

From OZY -

THE 'MAYOR' OF SKID ROW WANTS TO BRING DOWN THE WHOLE SYSTEM
By Jemayel Khawaja

General Jeff, legally known as Jeff Page, was a three-sport athlete at Compton High School and a pioneering contributor to the West Coast hip-hop scene in the early 1990s, performing as a DJ and in pop-and-lock dance troupes, and mingling with the likes of Snoop Dogg and DJ Quik. After trying and failing to mediate peace between the Crips and Bloods in his hometown of South LA, Page fell upon hard times in 2006. “I was homeless in South Central Los Angeles, sleeping in abandoned houses, warehouses, outdoors,” he tells me. “Burnt out, down and out, I showed up on Skid Row rolling a suitcase with some clothes, an Akai drum machine and a thousand dollars in my sock.” He felt like Skid Row could use his help. “I know it was an extreme thing to do,” he says. “I have no idea where the impetus came from.”

Page moved to a single room occupancy building on Skid Row within months. In the meantime, he familiarized himself with “the lingo, the movements, the thought process” of his new neighbors, looking for a way to improve the lives of the people around him. He noticed streetlights were broken, which created a dark and dangerous atmosphere at night and paved the way for unsavory activities. After manually gathering data on the lights, Page ambushed the head of the Bureau of Street Lighting with his findings. Two days later, government trucks rolled up to repair the broken lights. “I felt really good that day,” Page recollects. “That night — lights! We could see! The drug dealers were pissed!”

http://www.ozy.com/rising-stars/the-mayor-of-skid-row-wants-to-bring-down-the-whole-system/70838

Biracial Twins

From the Daily Kos -

Biracial twins are the universe's beautiful answer to white supremacists
By Walter Einenkel

Lucy and Maria Aylmer are twins, born at the same time from the same parents
http://m.dailykos.com/story/2017/3/10/1642217/-Biracial-twins-are-the-universe-s-beautiful-answer-to-white-supremacists?detail=email&link_id=1&can_id=8bda5eb174a253edad76f618fda958b7&source=email-biracial-twins-are-the-universes-beautiful-answer-to-white-supremacists-2&email_referrer=biracial-twins-are-the-universes-beautiful-answer-to-white-supremacists-2&email_subject=biracial-twins-are-the-universes-beautiful-answer-to-white-supremacists

HBCU Rugby Team

Frankie, this one's for you.

From the Odyssey -

At Morehouse College
The Black Sabers: The First All-Male HBCU Rugby Team

The Black Sabers have become the first all-male HBCU rugby team. Beyond breaking barriers as an HBCU rugby team, the Black Sabers have established themselves as a serious threat on the field. Just within the past season the team has defeated Georgia Tech and Emory University. With these victories the team has laid claim as rugby’s “best in Atlanta”. The Black Sabers went on to finish 5-2 in division play. The team placed second in their division after only their second year in the National Small College Rugby Organization (NSCRO).



https://www.theodysseyonline.com/the-black-sabers-the-first-all-male-hbcu-rugby-team

Small Stars

From the Daily Mail -

The long and short of our biggest stars: Which British actors are big on talent but small of stature? 
By Richard Price



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-4302736/Which-actors-big-talent-small-stature.html#ixzz4b24o0E9e

Spring Forward

From Vox -

Daylight saving time begins Sunday: 6 things to know about “springing forward”
Why do we need to “save” daylight hours during the summer? — and 5 other burning questions about DST, answered.
By Brian Resnick

At 2 am on Sunday, March 12, we will push our clocks forward one hour to mark the start of daylight saving time. The change will push sunsets later into the evening hours, at the cost of temporarily disrupting the sleep of millions of Americans.

There’s a lot of confusion about daylight saving time.

http://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2017/3/10/14883576/daylight-saving-time-2017-start-spring-forward

Friday, March 10, 2017

The O'Jays - I Love Music (1975)

Anita Baker - "Giving You The Best That I Got" (Official Music Video)

Two Bands Rolling

Prized Degree

From the Guardian -

PPE: the Oxford degree that runs Britain
Oxford University graduates in philosophy, politics, and economics make up an astonishing proportion of Britain’s elite. But has it produced an out-of-touch ruling class?
by Andy Beckett

Monday, 13 April 2015 was a typical day in modern British politics. An Oxford University graduate in philosophy, politics, and economics (PPE), Ed Miliband, launched the Labour party’s general election manifesto. It was examined by the BBC’s political editor, Oxford PPE graduate Nick Robinson, by the BBC’s economics editor, Oxford PPE graduate Robert Peston, and by the director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, Oxford PPE graduate Paul Johnson. It was criticized by the prime minister, Oxford PPE graduate David Cameron. It was defended by the Labour shadow chancellor, Oxford PPE graduate Ed Balls.

~~~~~~~~~~

More than any other course at any other university, more than any revered or resented private school, and in a manner probably unmatched in any other democracy, Oxford PPE pervades British political life. From the right to the left, from the centre ground to the fringes, from analysts to protagonists, consensus-seekers to revolutionary activists, environmentalists to ultra-capitalists, statists to libertarians, elitists to populists, bureaucrats to spin doctors, bullies to charmers, successive networks of PPEists have been at work at all levels of British politics – sometimes prominently, sometimes more quietly – since the degree was established 97 years ago.

https://www.theguardian.com/education/2017/feb/23/ppe-oxford-university-degree-that-rules-britain

How to impeach a president

Coconut Love

http://www.bbc.com/travel/gallery/20170203-where-a-coconut-can-save-your-life

Thursday, March 9, 2017

jessy j - tequila moon♥ by jazzy club♪

OFFICIAL - Somewhere Over the Rainbow 2011 - Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwo'ole

Heather Headley - I Wish

Earl Klugh - Alfie (Burt Bacharach)

Working to Get Justice for All

Tiny Homes for Vets

From Good -

Volunteers Constructed An Entire Community To House Homeless Veterans
by Penn Collins

Many veterans sacrifice comfortable, lucrative lives to protect the liberties of their home country—only to find nothing left of those former lives when they return. In the face of rising veteran homelessness rates, due in part to inadequate medical and psychological resources, Missouri volunteers pooled their creativity, time, and money to create a community that welcomes veterans, completely free of charge.



The Veterans Community Project created Veterans Village, which sits on four acres of land outside of Kansas City and consists of 50 tiny homes, complete with bathrooms, kitchens, sleeping, and living areas.

The community is strategically situated near an outreach center which provides social and medical services to the residents and other veterans. A community center intended for more socializing and recreation is also in the works.

https://www.good.is/articles/veteran-home-community

LSAT Not Required

From the Washington Post -

Harvard Law School will no longer require the LSAT for admission
By Susan Svrluga

For 70 years, the LSAT has been a rite of passage to legal education, a test designed to gauge students’ ability to learn the law.

But its dominance could change. Beginning this fall, Harvard Law School will allow applicants to submit their scores from either the Graduate Record Examination or the Law School Admission Test.

The dramatic change in admissions, a pilot program at Harvard, is part of a broader strategy at the school to expand access. Because many students consider graduate school as well as law school, and because the GRE is offered often and in many places around the world, the decision could make it easier and less expensive for people to apply, school officials said.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2017/03/08/harvard-law-school-will-no-longer-require-the-lsat-for-admission/?hpid=hp_hp-cards_hp-card-national%3Ahomepage%2Fcard&utm_term=.f2300c2774d6

Jihad Against Regulations

From Wired -

Want to Gut Emission Rules? Prepare for War With California
By Alex Davies

IN ITS ONGOING jihad against federal regulations, the Trump administration has indicated some interest in targeting the ones that attempt to fight climate change. First in its sights: a funky law that gives the state of California the right to make its own rules on automotive emissions. But because of the way laws and business work, the California exemption is one of the most powerful environmental tools in the world.

So California’s not going down without a fight.

A quick history lesson: When legislators wrote the 1963 Clean Air Act, they acknowledged that California already had pollution-fighting rules, and that its environmental situation was especially dire. So they gave the state the right to write its own, stricter standards.

“It’s hard to overstate how important the ability for California to set its standards has been to public health and clean air over the past 40 years,” says Don Anair, deputy director for the clean vehicles program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “Time and again, California’s been willing and able to move forward.”

https://www.wired.com/2017/03/want-gut-emission-rules-prepare-war-california/


Quote

Samantha Bee Explains Donald Trump’s Obama Wiretap Tweet: “White Guy Shoots Self In D*ck, Tries To Pin On Black Guy”

Weighing the Pro & Cons

From Politico  -

A Letter From Black America
Yes, we fear the police. Here’s why.
By NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES

My friends and I locked eyes in stunned silence. Between the four adults, we hold six degrees. Three of us are journalists. And not one of us had thought to call the police. We had not even considered it.
We also are all black. And without realizing it, in that moment, each of us had made a set of calculations, an instantaneous weighing of the pros and cons.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/03/letter-from-black-america-police-115545.html#ixzz4aqOVdXSb

Whiplash

From the LA Times -

To black Americans, Trump behaves like a classic Southerner — and we feel erased
By Erin Aubry Kaplan

Talk about whiplash. During the brief era of Donald Trump, black people have been living in trepidation and silent outrage, grappling with the meaning of a man who took office largely on the promise to nullify or reverse whatever America’s first black president, Barack Obama, had accomplished — good, bad or indifferent.

Seeing our historical gains dissolve at the whim of white rage is all too familiar for black folks, which is not to say that the last two months haven’t been a shock. That Trump is not just another white politician but one who is spectacularly unqualified to be president makes the setback that much more racially charged, and ominous.

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-kaplan-trump-as-a-southern-man-20170309-story.html

Comedian Dave Chappelle addresses Village of Yellow Springs council meeting



http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2017/03/08/dave_chappelle_speaks_at_his_town_council_meeting.html

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Rock Arch Washed Away

From the BBC -

Malta's Azure Window collapses into the sea


Malta's famous Azure Window rock arch has collapsed into the sea after heavy storms.

Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said the news was "heartbreaking".

A study in 2013 said that while erosion was inevitable, the structure was not in imminent danger of collapsing, the Times of Malta reports.


The popular limestone arch on Gozo island was featured on the first episode of the HBO series Game of Thrones and in several films.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-39207196

Trump Talks To Obama About His Wiretap Claim - CONAN on TBS

Why are we so attached to our things? - Christian Jarrett

Twista ft Faith Evans - Hope (HQ)

Stevie Wonder - Love's In Need Of Love Today

No, Ben Carson, Slaves Weren't "Immigrants": The Daily Show

The Republican health care bill makes no sense

Stay With Me (Sam Smith looping KOver) - Kevin "K.O." Olusola

Republicans Release New Health Plan, And We're All Going To Die

Go Google!

https://www.google.com/doodles/international-womens-day-2017

Teddy Pendergrass with Harold Melvin The Blue Notes Wake Up Everybody

#HerVoiceIsMyVoice: Celebrate the Women Who Inspire Us Every Day

Honoring Teachers

From OZY -

WE SHOULD BUILD STATUES FOR TEACHERS
By Fiona Zublin

Building statues is one way communities decide on, and indicate to the world, what they value. There are statues of generals, presidents, reformers, ministers, Oscar Wilde and, in the Loire Valley, a jarringly naked statue of Leonardo da Vinci. What we don’t have are statues honoring the thousands of extraordinary teachers who, day in and day out, motivate American youth, keep them from dropping out, spend their summers crafting lesson plans and make a visible, lasting difference.

http://www.ozy.com/immodest-proposal/we-should-build-statues-for-teachers/74783

Quote

The best sermons are lived, not preached. - Anonymous

Grab Your Pen and Paper . . .

It's time for school.

WARNING:  Don't read if you have not seen the movie, "Get Out."

How Get Out deconstructs racism for white people
“Stay woke.”
By Aja Romano

Get Out ingeniously uses common horror tropes to reveal truths about how pernicious racism is in the world. It doesn’t walk back any of its condemnations by inserting a “white savior” or making overtures to pacifism and tolerance. No: In this film, white society is a conscious purveyor of evil, and Chris must remain alert to its benevolent racism. He has to in order to survive.

http://www.vox.com/culture/2017/3/7/14759756/get-out-benevolent-racism-white-feminism


Nike is releasing a hijab for female athletes

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Love You I Do from Dreamgirls (sung by Jennifer Hudson) Lyric Video

When I First Saw You - Curtis Taylor Jr / Jamie Foxx [DreamGirls]

L.T.D. - Back In Love Again (HD)

SHE'S A BAD MAMA JAMA / Carl Carlton

Curtis Mayfield - Diamond in the Back

Bobby Caldwell - What You Won't Do For Love (Slayd5000)

12 Angry Men Trailer 1997



This is another one of favorite movies.  It is a remake of the 1957 version.

How Braille was invented | Moments of Vision 9 - Jessica Oreck

Trump's Unfounded Accusations of Wiretapping: The Daily Show

Not Good

From Slate -

Early Reports Indicate That Everyone, Literally Everyone, Hates the Republican Health Care Plan
By Ben Mathis-Lilley

Congressional Republicans led by right-wing think tank test-tube baby Paul Ryan have been claiming for a solid eight years to be putting the finishing touches on a workable alternative to Obamacare. On Monday, Paul Ryan finally, really unveiled an Obamacare replacement bill. Everyone hates it.

No, seriously. Obviously liberals/leftists/Democrats were almost certainly not going to like it no matter what, and indeed, there has been nary a whisper of a rumor that even the most moderate Dems are interested in voting for the bill. But what's been really remarkable is how much heat it's gotten immediately from both the moderate and hard-line and insider and grassroots segments of Ryan's own party.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2017/03/07/the_reviews_are_in_paul_ryan_s_obamacare_plan_makes_everyone_want_to_barf.html

Neuroscientist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED



The Connectome is a comprehensive diagram of all the neural connections existing in the brain. WIRED has challenged neuroscientist Bobby Kasthuri to explain this scientific concept to 5 different people; a 5 year-old, a 13 year-old, a college student, a neuroscience grad student and a connectome entrepreneur.

https://thescene.com/watch/wired/neuroscientist-explains-one-concept-in-5-levels-of-difficulty

Teaching Entreprenuership

From INC -

Inside the Schools That Want to Create the Next Mark Zuckerberg--Starting at Age 5
Inside the growing education movement that's training kids to be entrepreneurs.
By Tom Foster

On a cloudless October morning in Austin, hundreds of people stroll the grassy aisles between a half-dozen rows of white tents, where entrepreneurs sell everything from iced coffee to pottery to handmade dog treats, pickles, and gluten-free baked goods. One booth sells security software, and one sells wooden virtual reality headsets. At another, Baker Bros Designs, which sells stationery and change jars printed with psychedelic paint swirls, a handsome young man introduces himself and gestures to his younger brother--"the artist." He hands me a business card that lists their Etsy page in case we want to buy more.

This is no hipster flea market. The sellers are kids as young as 5 years old. We're on the oak-shaded grounds of the Pease Mansion--also known as Woodlawn--a legendary white-columned edifice atop a hill in the city's toniest historic district. The house belongs to Jeff Sandefer, a billionaire Texas oilman, and his wife. Three decades ago, he began educating entrepreneurs at the University of Texas; later, he and others launched the independent Acton School of Business, which runs an MBA program. Then he and his wife co-founded Acton Academy, a private Austin K-12 school that has spun off affiliate locations in 25 other cities as far-flung as Kuala Lumpur; 26 more are slated to open this year. He also started, as an offshoot of that school, the Acton Children's Business Fair, a small but fast-growing series of events like the one here at his house, where kids aged 5 to 15 spend half a day selling goods and services they create.

http://www.inc.com/magazine/201703/tom-foster/kids-inc-entrepreneurship-training.html

Jobs Instead

From the Portland Press Herald -

To Portland panhandlers, program may offer welcome change: Jobs
Using Albuquerque as a model, Portland would pay $10.68 per hour to those willing and able to work.
BY RANDY BILLINGS

City officials are working on a 36-week pilot program to offer day jobs to panhandlers. A city social worker would drive a van around to busy intersections and offer panhandlers a chance to earn $10.68 an hour cleaning up parks and other light labor jobs. They would be paid at the end of each day.

http://www.pressherald.com/2017/03/05/to-panhandlers-program-may-offer-welcome-change-jobs/

A Super Shoe?

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Monday, March 6, 2017

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How This Ban Hurts Trump Voters

From the Huffington Post -

Here’s Why Trump’s New Travel Ban Could Make Us Sicker, Not Safer
Doctors from the six affected countries provide vital health care in underserved regions of the U.S.
By Anna Almendrala

While Monday’s new executive order doesn’t apply to people who already have some kind of authorization to move in and out of the U.S. (whether it be through legal permanent residency, dual citizenship, visa, waiver, or some other kind of permit), a group of 10 researchers points out that if the new policy slows the immigration of doctors from these regions, Americans in underserved counties — particularly those who voted for President Donald Trump — will suffer.

“The people who are most hurt by the executive order in terms of health are the Trump base from the Midwest,” said Peter Ganong, an assistant professor of public policy at the University of Chicago. “It’s a particularly sad irony that people who voted for Trump will potentially end up getting worse medical care because of this.”

~~~~~~~~~~

To bring attention to the positive contributions these immigrants make to people in the U.S., Ganong and his colleagues launched the Immigrant Doctors Project — an interactive map showing just how vital doctors from these six countries are at helping Americans access health care.

There are more than 7,000 doctors from the six affected countries practicing in the U.S. right now, and they provide 14 million doctor’s appointments each year — 2.3 million of which occur in areas facing doctor shortages. The five cities that have the highest share of doctors from these countries, and would thus be most affected if physician immigration from these countries stopped, are Detroit, Toledo, Los Angeles, Cleveland and Dayton.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trumps-new-travel-ban-will-make-us-sicker-not-safer_us_58bdc55de4b033be146771e0?ftfiy2lxgwe1att9&

Check out the interactive map in the link below.

https://immigrantdoctors.org


Progressive Love


Quote

From the Huffington Post -

Samuel L. Jackson On Ben Carson’s Slavery Comment: ‘Mothaf***a Please’
Carson referred to those on “slave ships” as “immigrants.”
By Jenna Amatulli

Samuel L. Jackson  ✔@SamuelLJackson (Twitter)
OK!! Ben Carson....I can't! Immigrants ? In the bottom of SLAVE SHIPS??!! MUTHAFUKKA PLEASE!!!#dickheadedtom

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/samuel-l-jackson-on-ben-carsons-slavery-comment-mothafa-please_us_58bdd2f5e4b09ab537d5e4b0?x4oyldi&

Where to Find Local Black Farmers

From Blavity -

Black Farmers to buy from instead of Whole Foods
By Victoria Massie

Philadelphia

  1. The Philadelphia Urban Creators
  2. Mill Creek Farm
                          Photo via Philly Urban Creators Website.

NYC



  1. Black Urban Growers
  2. La Familia Verde
  3. The BLK ProjeK
  4. East New York Farms
                          Photo via Black Urban Grower's Website.

Oakland

  1. Afrika Town Community Garden
  2. Farms to Grow, Inc.
  3. People’s Grocery
  4. Phat Beets Produce

    https://blavity.com/black-farmers-to-buy-from


Black Farmers

From OZY -

A COMEBACK FOR THE BLACK AMERICAN FARMER?
By Nick Fouriezos

Minority-led farms have sprouted from New York City to Philadelphia, from Stone Mountain in Georgia to the hills and molehills of Mississippi, a national phenomenon writer Victoria Massie recognized last year by suggesting 35 Black-owned farms that Americans could buy from instead of Whole Foods. Maryland has been especially attractive, both in the fertile fields of the Eastern Shore, home to the Black Dirt Farm Collective, and in Baltimore, site of Tha Flower Factory, among others. Lavette Blue, who with her husband has farmed the Greener Garden in Northeast Baltimore for three decades, says 75 percent of the students in the local small-scale farming classes are African-American. “It’s picking up steam,” adds Staycie Francisco with the Farm Alliance of Baltimore. Recently elected U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, who is the first Marylander in decades to sit on the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, tells OZY that the next federal farm bill will consider “legislation to provide incentives for more young people to go into farming.” Van Hollen also points to work done by the historically Black University of Maryland Eastern Shore; its Small Farm Program provides funds and literature to help limited-resource and socially disadvantaged farmers.

http://www.ozy.com/politics-and-power/a-comeback-for-the-black-american-farmer/75920

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Flying High

From BlackWebAmerica -

Little Known Black History Fact: Stephanie Johnson
Female pilots make history at Delta Airlines.
By D.L. Chandler



Captain Stephanie Johnson is the first Black female captain for Delta Airlines, the second of her historic achievements as a pilot. Twenty years ago, Captain Johnson became the first Black female pilot for Northwest Airlines and last year, Delta promoted her to her current post.

The Kent State University graduate caught the flying bug in high school after a physics teacher took Johnson and a few friends on a flight. Johnson even got to fly the airplane for a spell and from there, she was hooked. After leaving Kent State with a degree in Aerospace Technology, she became the instructor for the school’s aviation program.

https://blackamericaweb.com/2017/03/06/little-known-black-history-fact-stephanie-johnson/

Tooth-brushing turned entertainment.

Mandatory High Heels?

From the Washington Post -

Are high heel dress codes sexist? UK lawmakers hold debate
By Jill Lawless | AP

LONDON — British lawmakers focused on footwear Monday, asking whether employers should be able to make women wear high heels as part of a corporate dress code.

Members of Parliament were to debate a ban on mandatory workplace high heels, in response to a petition started by a receptionist who was sent home without pay for wearing flat shoes.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/are-high-heel-dress-codes-sexist-uk-lawmakers-debate-topic/2017/03/06/47752f40-0266-11e7-9d14-9724d48f5666_story.html?utm_term=.19ae4d0058c5