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Friday, February 16, 2018

Couple Reunites And Finds The Daughter They Gave Up For Adoption After 5...

A Stepwell Fit For a King, Built By a Queen

Vanessa James & Morgan Cipres - 2018 Winter Olympics Pairs Figure Skatin...

What’s the Longest Train in the World?

Cowardly Response

An excerpt form the NY Times -

The Bad Parent Caucus
By Timothy Egan

Here’s a thought: The next politician to express sorrow over the slaughter of students at a school without offering any specific remedy should be run out of office, for cowardice and failure to protect American children.

Here’s a prayer: Let us remember to hold that thought for at least seven months, to the next election.

President Trump delivered 702 words to the nation Thursday on the murder of 17 kids in Parkland, Fla. — one of more than 150 school shootings over the last decade. Not once did he mention guns, or more specifically the semiautomatic rifle used by the mentally unstable white-supremacist teenager who entered a school with an AR-15.

The president did order the flag lowered to half-staff. He should have run up a white flag of surrender. Along with a gutless majority in Congress, Trump is hiding behind the shield of “thoughts and prayers” while showing himself derelict of duty in failing to defend the lives of school children.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/15/opinion/florida-school-shooting-guns.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share

My Inspiration

NRA Stooges


Black Panther

An excerpt form the Hollywood Reporter -

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on 'Black Panther': All This Fuss Over a Superhero Movie?
by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

At its Hollywood premiere, Black Panther received a rousing standing ovation. What's impressive is that this ovation occurred before the movie was shown. Equally significant is that presales for tickets have broken Fandango's record for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Also, in the weeks before the film was set to open Feb. 16, more than 200 grassroots campaigns in black communities from Denver to Toronto to Ghana were arranging screenings in order to commemorate the movie event. This is an unprecedented global rallying for something that doesn't include Beyonce. All this fuss over a superhero movie?

Black Panther is not just another comic-book film but a cultural spearhead disguised as a thrilling action adventure. You may go for the hard-core action and hard-muscled bodies, but, if you're white, you'll leave with an anti-"shithole" appreciation for Africa and African-American cultural origins. If you're black, you'll leave with a straighter walk, a gratitude for your African heritage and a superhero whom black children can relate to.

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/features/kareem-abdul-jabbar-black-panther-all-fuss-a-superhero-movie-1084545

Gun Violence Mapped

From the Washington Post -

Eighteen years of gun violence in U.S. schools, mapped
By Philip Bump

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/politics/wp/2018/02/14/eighteen-years-of-gun-violence-in-u-s-schools-mapped/?utm_term=.215940a36d93

Jimmy Kimmel on School Shooting in Parkland, Florida

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Oprah on Making Things Happen in Your Life | SuperSoul Sunday | Oprah Wi...

ENOUGH!

From the Huffington Post -

Kimmel Writer Calls Out GOP In Blistering Replies To ‘Prayers’ After Florida Shooting
Bess Kalb has names and dollar amounts for NRA-linked lawmakers.
By Ed Mazza

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/bess-kalb-nra-tweets_us_5a84ee69e4b0058d5565cbac

When the Doctor Becomes the Patient

An excerpt from The Atlantic -

A Breast-Cancer Surgeon Returns to Work After Breast Cancer
Liz O’Riordan went from doctor to patient, and back again. Here’s what she learned on the way.
By ED YONG

Doctors face particular challenges when they become patients—challenges that they are rarely prepared for. It is hard to relinquish control and allow others to dictate the treatments that you yourself are used to doling out. It is crushing to know your own prognosis in the starkest terms—a 65 percent chance of surviving for 10 years, in O’Riordan’s case. It is awkward to see your own former patients while you’re being treated: To strike up a chat would break confidentiality.

And it is difficult to be cut off from the same supportive forums and networks that other patients use to share experiences and support; if you let slip that you’re a doctor, you become a source of information, rather than a comrade in illness. After getting her diagnosis, O’Riordan tweeted about it, and began blogging about her experiences. She was contacted privately by several people who said: I’m a doctor, and no one knows I have cancer. She ended up with a secret network of 15 such people. Two of them have since died.

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2018/02/a-breast-cancer-surgeon-returns-to-work-after-breast-cancer/553199/

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Breaking News: Black Excellence Is At An All Time High

Golden Retriever waits for mail truck

Dog apologizes for doing a bad thing

Superintendent Jorge Aguilar responds to controversial science project a...

How did Dubai get so rich? | CNBC Explains

How Overnight Shipping Works

Can dogs tell the time? - Inside the Animal Mind: Episode 1 Preview - BB...

Keeping the Ancient Craft of Tin Embroidery Alive

The Untold Truth Of Five Guys

Figure skating scoring, explained

Ridiculous Indeed

Monday, February 12, 2018

Official Portraits

Wow!

Kehinde Wiley’s official portrait of Barack Obama.
Photo: Kehinde Wiley/Mark Gulezian/NPG

Amy Sherald’s official portrait of Michelle Obama.
Photo: Amy Sherald/Mark Gulezian/NPG


http://www.vulture.com/2018/02/barack-and-michelle-obamas-official-portraits-are-revealed.html

Why Does February Have 28 Days??

You Can Build Your Own Mini-Motorboat With This $950 Kit

How to Dress for Winter in the South

Sheku Kanneh-Mason - No Woman, No Cry (Arr. Cello) [Studio Session]

Ursula Burns On Distinguishing Herself To Become First Black Woman To Ru...

Cramming An Entire Orchestra in a New York City Apartment

This Wheelchair Can Go From A Seated To Standing Position In Seconds

sinbad on marriage

Sunday, February 11, 2018

She's the Badass Tesla Robot Builder

An excerpt from Business Insider -

A Tesla employee who builds robots told us why production hell is actually a good thing
By Matthew DeBord

Sheena Patterson with one of Tesla's giant robots.
Matthew DeBord/Business Insider


Tesla turned out to be the perfect fit — and Patterson's decision to join the company was perfect timing.

She started just as Tesla was launching the Model X, a complicated vehicle to build. With her expertise in systems design and robotics, which dates to her undergraduate days, she could make an immediate contribution.

She designed a robot that now sits on the combined Model S-Model X assembly line where glass panels are glued and attached to the Model X.

Smaller than the massive orange robots at Fremont that can sling around entire vehicle bodies, Patterson's robot — named Gambit, for the superhero from the "X-Men" comics — is yellow, about as large as an adult, and encased in Plexiglas.

Its job is to apply adhesive — something formerly done by multiple workers, who had to use glue guns and work on tables set up next to the assembly line. Gambit draws adhesive from large barrels and can save Tesla time and money on this delicate phase of production.

It's a glimpse into Musk's plans for factories of the future: almost fully automated, with robots that can build cars so fast that air resistance becomes a problem.

Patterson is smack in the middle of that revolution. She's currently working on the new highly automated Model 3 assembly line.

http://www.businessinsider.com/tesla-employee-explains-why-production-hell-is-good-2018-2?pt=385758&ct=Sailthru_BI_Newsletters&mt=8&utm_source=Triggermail&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=email_article

Indian Home Remedies

An excerpt from OZY -

THE HOME REMEDIES INDIANS SWEAR BY
By Joanna Lobo

The turmeric latte and golden milk trend abroad had many of us Indians thanking our mothers for foreseeing their popularity. I was given warm milk with haldi (what we called haldi doodh) to treat an impending cold or sore throat pain. Sometimes garlic was added as a disinfectant. As a child, I hated it. As an adult, I swear by it. There are many similar home remedies, passed down by our grandmothers and mothers, whose value I am discovering only as an adult. Some involved alcohol too — brandy rubbed on the chest brought relief from congestion, and a shot of feni with sugar cleared up blocked sinuses in a trice.

These simple remedies are a mix of herbs and spices, easily available in kitchens and gardens. The best part: no side effects.

TREATING COLIC IN KIDS

A light brew of fennel, a pinch of ajwain (carom seeds) and vavding (false black pepper), diluted with lukewarm water, is an old-fashioned remedy for colic. “I fed my daughter this brew every day for two years” and never had a cranky baby, says Nandita Godbole, a cookbook and fiction author from Mumbai now settled in Atlanta. When they traveled, they even carried a little kettle and a bottle of seeds.

Why it works: Useful for treating digestive problems, ajwain “reduces gas in the stomach,” says Raj Merchant, a naturopath in Mumbai.

http://www.ozy.com/good-sht/the-home-remedies-indians-swear-by/83096

Black History Month Playlist

From YouTube -

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKB8zkQFlMyKNmK6qGqdOX2_l5ArBH_mD

Kumbaya

An excerpt from the NY Times -

About That Song You’ve Heard, Kumbaya
By John Eligon

We chant it with locked arms and closed eyes, at campfires, in protests lines and from the pews at church, but the truth is, many of us have no clue what the lyrics mean or exactly where they come from.

Kumbaya my Lord, kumbaya. Kumbaya my Lord, kumbaya.

Thanks to research and lobbying by residents of a coastal community descended from slaves, the origins and meaning of “Kumbaya” have been recognized in Congress, raising hopes that a fading culture might get a boost. The song may be sung more often than usual this month, especially in the part of Georgia where its soulful lyrics are said to have originated almost a century ago.

Speaking on the House floor two months ago, Representative Buddy Carter of Georgia recognized the Gullah Geechee, whose ancestors were brought to America’s southeastern coast from West Africa, as the probable creators of the famous folk song.

https://www.nytimes.com/newsletters/2018/02/10/race-related?nlid=38867499

What (Teachers) really say while calling roll pt.2

What teachers say in parent conferences when the only translator is the ...

What (teachers) really say about bad behavior and parent support!

Toddler Helps Twin Sister Escape Her Crib | So Funny!

Ride the World’s Longest Zipline in the UAE | National Geographic

Do No Harm

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

When Volunteering Abroad Does More Harm Than Good
By Noelle Sullivan, Guest Writer

“Voluntourism” is a booming multibillion-dollar industry. Many volunteer placement companies market themselves as sustainable, helpful, even crucial.

However, there’s a growing body of scholarship demonstrating that the potential inadvertent harms of short-term international volunteering often outweigh the positives. Voluntourism can reinforce paternalism, expecting hosting communities to be passive and grateful “recipients.” Volunteers’ efforts often shirk pressing issues like infrastructure and resource shortages, or unknowingly duplicate existing resources. Sociologist Judith Lasker finds most global health volunteering benefits the sending organizations and the volunteers more than the host communities. Anthropologist Nicole Berry’s work reveals that volunteer medical missioners often prioritize their own interests rather than local needs.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/opinion-sullivan-volunteering-abroad_us_5a7de894e4b044b3821d1627

Hiring autistic workers

See How Dancing Helps This Young Refugee Feel Welcome in a New Country |...

Saturday, February 10, 2018

The Trump-Fox & Friends feedback loop, explained

Why It's Almost Impossible to Do a Quintuple Jump | WIRED

Making Hockey History

From CNN -

For the first time in Olympic history, an African-American is playing for a US hockey team
By Meridith Edwards, CNN
Video by Madeleine Stix, CNN

Jordan Greenway hasn't yet finished college, but he's already made history: He's the first African-American competing on a Olympic US hockey team.

http://www.cnn.com/2018/02/10/sport/olympics-hockey-first-african-american-greenway-trnd/index.html

Go Grandma!

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

All Night Long at The Airport

Falcon Heavy: The story of Elon Musk rocket launch - BBC News

Treason? God Help Us.

An excerpt from the NY Times -

Gulp. I’m Guilty of Treason.
By Frank Bruni

After more than five decades of reasonably virtuous living, I’m now told that I have betrayed my country and committed the ultimate crime.

I did not clap during President Trump’s State of the Union address.

Granted, my hands were otherwise engaged. They pounded my laptop’s keyboard as I frantically took notes: “clean coal,” “disastrous Obamacare.” And I’m limited in my appendages and much too clumsy to approximate applause with my feet.

But even if I could, I wouldn’t have. That’s not because I’m rooting against America. It’s because I’m rooting for it — and believe that we deserve better than a leader who uses language as sloppily and poisonously as Trump does, who reacts to every unwelcome message by smearing the messenger, and whose litmus test for patriotism is this and this alone: Do you worship me?

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/06/opinion/trump-treason-guilty.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fopinion&action=click&contentCollection=opinion&region=rank&module=package&version=highlights&contentPlacement=7&pgtype=sectionfront



"The Talk" is a Necessary Rite of Passage

From the NY Times -

Wendell Pierce: The First Time My Dad Gave Me ‘The Talk’
By WENDELL PIERCE

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/06/theater/wendell-pierce-the-first-time-my-dad-gave-me-the-talk.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share


Cold or Flu



From the Center of Disease Control

https://www.vox.com/2018/2/6/16978544/cold-versus-flu-chart

Why It Matters

An excerpt from Essence -

This Elementary School Teacher Styled Her Hair Like One Of Her Students To Teach Her a Beautiful Lesson
By SIRAAD DIRSHE



Ms. Bishop understood the immense influence teachers can have on their students and wanted to truly make her young student feel beautiful. When she complimented one little girl on her beautiful braided hairstyle, the student, unfortunately, did not believe her. In order to help the student truly comprehend just how amazing and beautiful she really was, Ms. Bishop came to school the very next day with an identical hairstyle.

https://www.essence.com/hair/texas-elementary-school-teacher-natural-hairstyle-student

This Is the Oldest Restaurant in the World

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Knocked Off Their High Horse!

From USA Today -

Eagles dethrone Tom Brady, Patriots for first Super Bowl title in stunner
By Lindsay H. Jones

MINNEAPOLIS – The Philadelphia Eagles won Super Bowl LII over the New England Patriots 41-33 Sunday night at U.S. Bank Stadium. Here’s how it happened:

Key drive: After the Patriots took their first lead of the game, at 33-32 with 9:22 remaining, the Eagles could have wilted. But quarterback Nick Foles led the Eagles on a 14-play, 75 yard touchdown drive to retake the lead with 2:21 remaining on an 11-yard pass from Foles to tight end Zach Ertz. The drive included a fourth-down conversion near midfield, also on a pass from Foles to Ertz.


Key play: The Eagles defense, who struggled to pressure on Tom Brady throughout the game, finally got to Brady as the Patriots’ quarterback was trying to lead yet another game-winning drive. But defensive end Brandon Graham pushed his way into the pocket and knocked the ball from Brady’s hand, and teammate Derek Barnett recovered the fumble with 2:16 remaining. It was the first turnover of the game for the Patriots. The Eagles again held firm against Brady and the Patriots on the final drive.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/super/2018/02/04/super-bowl-2018-score-philadelphia-eagles-new-england-patriots/305840002/?csp=

Redemption: Lost, Found & Lost Again

Too good to cherry pick.

From The Times-Picayune

The search for Jackie Wallace
Story and Pictures by Ted Jackson

http://www.nola.com/living/index.ssf/2018/02/jackie_wallace_ted_jackson.html#incart_most-read_#incart_m-rpt-2

Meet the Man Bringing Hip-Hop to the Deaf

Touchdown Celebrations to Come | NFL | Super Bowl LII Commercial

Weekend Update on the Nunes Memo - SNL

Amazing Art -Toothpick Sculpture - COOLEST THING I'VE EVER MADE: EP4

Remembering Tulsa's "Black Wall Street" Massacre

An excerpt from OZY -

HISTORY HANGS HEAVILY OVER TULSA’S LONE BLACK COUNCILWOMAN
By Nick Fouriezos

To engage with Vanessa Hall-Harper is to grapple with the tragic history of race relations in Tulsa. Reckoning is the only option when sitting down with the 46-year-old, who, within minutes, is digging into what was — and what could have been.

They called the city councilor’s North Tulsa district “Black Wall Street” in the early 20th century, when African-American aristocrats paraded their automobiles down roads lined with more than 200 Black-owned businesses. But on May 31, 1921, everything changed. Resentment over Black wealth erupted, with white vigilantes taking to the streets, killing at least 300 of their neighbors of color and firebombing their businesses in what would be dubbed a “race riot” by the history books — and then promptly forgotten.

Too often, the past becomes destiny. It’s a thought internalized by Hall-Harper, a history lover since she studied political science and organized sit-ins at the historically Black Jackson State University in Mississippi. “It’s a slap in the face to call it a riot,” she says. But now, the native daughter of a Tulsa structural mechanic can start righting the wrongs of the past. Elected to the city council last year after defeating 12-year incumbent Jack Henderson, she has crafted a constituency around grassroots activism, expanding access to food in her district and reviving traditions that speak to the area’s once thriving African-American community. She has elevated the concerns of those who had forgotten their power, says Chief Amusen, a Black organizer and guidance counselor in Tulsa. “Instead of her being the voice, she became the messenger for the community’s needs. Whether it’s police matters, social justice, mental health, you name it, she’s been a part of it.”

http://www.ozy.com/politics-and-power/history-hangs-heavily-over-tulsas-lone-black-councilwoman/82011


Where the Millionaires Live

Scroll down tot he map.

From VisualCapitalist -

http://www.visualcapitalist.com/global-millionaire-population/

Why do taxpayers pay billions for football stadiums?

John Mellencamp Performs 'Easy Target'

Panda wants a hug from nanny, but nanny is working

Why Italians are saying 'No' to takeaway coffee - BBC News

Budweiser 2018 Super Bowl Commercial | “Stand By You”

Friday, February 2, 2018

Paid in Full - Kaep's Million Dollar Pledge

An excerpt from CNN -

While you were arguing about the anthem, Colin Kaepernick just finished donating $1 million
By AJ Willingham, CNN

CNN)People like to talk about Colin Kaepernick. But while everyone was busy arguing over the on-field protests he spearheaded two years ago, the free agent NFL quarterback was putting his money where his mouth is.

On Wednesday, Kaepernick completed a pledge he made in September 2016: To donate $1 million to organizations working in, what he called, oppressed communities.
The donations spanned the country and touched on a wealth of social issues: Homelessness, at-risk families, education, community-police relations, prison reform, inmates' right, reproductive rights, hunger and more.

http://www.cnn.com/2018/01/31/sport/colin-kaepernick-million-dollar-donation-pledge-anthem-nfl-trnd/index.html

The Blackest Season

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

The Blackest Season In NFL History
By Jamil Smith, Columnist

In 1933, the National Football League suddenly became monochromatic. The “gentleman’s agreement” to ban black players was reportedly set in motion, poetically enough, by the owner of the Washington franchise that still uses a racial slur as its team name. Baseball, then the national pastime, was conspicuously a white-only affair. Professional football was still a niche sport at the time, and thus could practice its discrimination more discreetly. Even the breaking of its color line in 1946 ― with two signings each by the Los Angeles Rams and Cleveland Browns ― seems all but forgotten in the context of Jackie Robinson’s debut the following year.

Things are different now, and they are not. The NFL’s 32 franchises are still owned almost universally by white people, but the percentage of black players hovers just above 70 percent. Those athletes play mostly for the pleasure of a majority-white fan base. Still, it was tough to describe the NFL before this season as unmistakably black, despite the epidermal clarity. The league’s own mechanisms for generating fan interest have aided in the distillation of the players’ humanity to injury reports and fantasy points. The race of its players only seemed to come up in maudlin pre-game feature segments about the rough neighborhoods from which their NFL fortunes delivered them. African American life, through the lens of pro sports, has largely been something to escape, and the playing field or the court is both the means of deliverance and the promised land.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/opinion-smith-superbowl-kaepernick_us_5a711e2de4b0a6aa4874562c