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Monday, August 14, 2017

Why potato chip bags are always empty at the top

The 4 most common signs your relationship is failing — and how to fix them

The Alaskan Town FULL of Bald Eagles

Hate Map

From the Huffington Post - (Me:  For a better view, please click the first link below)

Here’s A Reminder That The Hatred We Saw In Charlottesville Is Everywhere
There are 917 hate groups currently operating across the U.S., according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
By Hayley Miller


https://www.splcenter.org/hate-map

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/charlottesville-hate-groups_us_5991b97ee4b0909642989772?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Charlottesville - Last Week Tonight with John Oliver ( HBO) | August 13,...

Michael Jackson Tribute - Heal The World - Child Prodigy Cover | Maati B...

Here's why west-bound flights always take significantly longer

More Reaction to Charlottesville

From Buzzfeed -

https://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanschocket2/here-are-what-celebrities-are-tweeting-about-charlottesville?utm_term=.udVEPJYq7#.gdPX6A2qJ

From the 13th Film

Hmmmmmm.

Down (Marian Hill KOver) - Kevin "K.O." Olusola

Liberal Redneck - Virginia is for Lovers, not Nazis

You First

An excerpt from CNN -

Pilotless planes could save airlines billions. But would anyone fly?
Taking pilots out of the cockpit could save airlines billions. But would anyone buy a ticket?
by Ivana Kottasová


The aviation industry could save $35 billion a year by moving to pilotless planes, according to a new report from UBS. Just one problem: The same report warns that only 17% of travelers are willing to fly without a pilot.

UBS said that the technology required to operate remote-controlled planes could appear by 2025. Further advances beyond 2030 might result in automated business jets and helicopters, and finally commercial aircraft without pilots.

"The technologies in development today will enable the aircraft to assist and back up the pilot in all the flight phases, removing the pilot from manual control and systems operations in all types of situations," the report said.

Commercial flights already land with the assistance of on-board computers, and pilots manually fly the aircraft for only a few minutes on average.

http://money.cnn.com/2017/08/07/technology/business/pilotless-planes-passengers/index.html

Saturday, August 12, 2017

A Reignited Civil War

Excerpts from the Boston Globe -

In Charlottesville, a reignited Civil War
OPINION | RENÉE GRAHAM

Remember this day, August 12, 2017. This is Fort Sumter in our modern, reignited Civil War.

While President Trump cravenly condemned violence “on many sides,” it appears there was only one side plowing a car at a high rate of speed into peaceful anti-racism protesters at a “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Va. There was only one side standing up for the values that America loves to espouse. Then there was that other side, boiling in hate, locked and loaded with fire and fury, who want to reclaim as theirs alone rights they have never been denied.

~~~~~~~~~~

Trump has never denounced this homegrown terrorism with the crazed fervor he reserves for Islamic terrorism. For a man who has so much so say about so many things, he’s downright tongue-tied when it comes to calling out this supremacist hatred. Of course, no politician condemns his most loyal base, and these are people sustaining this sinkhole of a presidency. Hatred has always been part of this nation, but Trump flipped over the rock and out slithered racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, bigotry, and misogyny in doses that might have made Jefferson Davis cringe.

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un is not America’s most clear and present danger. Nor is ISIS our biggest terrorist threat. It’s a savage mob of white supremacists so validated by this president that they see no need to hide their faces or conceal their identities. They marched with Confederate flags and swastikas, guns slung from their shoulders and strapped to their waists, believing their champion occupies this nation’s highest office. Trump not only understands their discontent — his exploitation of it propelled him into the White House — he won’t even condemn by name a barbarism that has taken a life and threatens to consume this nation.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/columns/2017/08/12/charlottesville-reignited-civil-war/gsqTeWwpxOeMSQgraA9acJ/story.html?event=event12


History Lesson

An excerpt from the Atlantic -

The Lost History of an American Coup D’État
Republicans and Democrats in North Carolina are locked in a battle over which party inherits the shame of Jim Crow.
By ADRIENNE LAFRANCE AND VANN R. NEWKIRK II

By the time the fire started, Alexander Manly had vanished. That didn’t stop the mob of 400 people who’d reached his newsroom from making good on their promise. The crowd, led by a former congressman, had given the editor-in-chief an ultimatum: Destroy your newspaper and leave town forever, or we will wreck it for you.

They burned The Daily Record to the ground.

It was the morning of November 10, 1898, in Wilmington, North Carolina, and the fire was the beginning of an assault that took place seven blocks east of the Cape Fear River, about 10 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean. By sundown, Manly’s newspaper had been torched, as many as 60 people had been murdered, and the local government that was elected two days prior had been overthrown and replaced by white supremacists.

For all the violent moments in United States history, the mob’s gruesome attack was unique: It was the only coup d’état ever to take place on American soil.

What happened that day was nearly lost to history. For decades, the perpetrators were cast as heroes in American history textbooks. The black victims were wrongly described as instigators. It took nearly a century for the truth of what had really happened to begin to creep back into public awareness. Today, the old site of The Daily Record is a nondescript church parking lot—an ordinary-looking square of matted grass on a tree-lined street in historic Wilmington. The Wilmington Journal, a successor of sorts to the old Daily Record, stands in a white clapboard house across the street. But there’s no evidence of what happened there in 1898.

Conservatives in North Carolina don’t often bring up the Wilmington Massacre. Even many of those North Carolinians who are now aware of it are still reluctant to talk about it. Those who do sometimes stumble over words like “insurrection” and “riot”—loaded terms, and imprecise ones.

Not only was it a coup, though, the massacre was arguably the nadir of post-slavery racial politics.

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/08/wilmington-massacre/536457/


This is Making America Great Again?