Pay attention. The teacher talks fast and covers a lot of ground.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zeh2q9gke0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zeh2q9gke0
via International Skeptics Forum http://ift.tt/2z5pa7L
We're experiencing some technical difficulties... Were sorry, but Yahoo Mail can't load due to a temporary error. You can try back again shortly, or visit our help pages for ways to troubleshoot the issue. Temporary error: 2 |
Originally Posted by New York Times
Call it a classic case of supply meeting demand.
Universities, colleges, even community colleges insist that faculty publish scholarly research, and the more papers the better. Academics and the schools they teach at rely on these publications to bolster their reputations, and with an oversupply of Ph.D.'s vying for jobs, careers hang in the balance. Competition is fierce to get published in leading journals. But what about the overworked professors at less prestigious schools and community colleges, without big grants and state-of-the-art labs? How do they get ahead? As it turns out, many of their articles are appearing in "journals" that will publish almost anything, for fees that can range into the hundreds of dollars per paper. These publications often are called predatory journals, on the assumption that well-meaning academics are duped into working with them tricked by flattering emails from the journals inviting them to submit a paper or fooled by a name that sounded like a journal they knew. But it's increasingly clear that many academics know exactly what they're getting into, which explains why these journals have proliferated despite wide criticism. The relationship is less predator and prey, some experts say, than a new and ugly symbiosis. Many faculty members especially at schools where the teaching load is heavy and resources few have become eager participants in what experts call academic fraud that wastes taxpayer money, chips away at scientific credibility, and muddies important research... |
"If y'all, this is how I feel, if y'all think I did it, I know that I didn't do it so why don't you just give me a lawyer dog cause this is not what's up." That was Warren Demesme talking to the police after he voluntarily agreed to be interviewed over accusations he sexually assaulted a minor. In an opinion concurring with the Louisiana Supreme Court's decision to deny the man a writ of certiorari, Justice Scott Chricton insists that Demesme only "ambiguously referenced a lawyer." Chricton notes that under current legal precedent in Louisiana, if a suspect makes an "ambiguous or equivocal" reference to a lawyerone where a "reasonable" cop could conclude that that the suspect only "might" be invoking his right to an attorneypolice can continue their interrogation. "Maybe I need a lawyer," for example, is considered too ambiguous. |
Manus Island asylum seekers secure fences, barricade themselves inside processing centre as closure looms Hundreds of refugees and asylum seekers are barricading themselves inside the Manus Island processing centre and refusing to leave amid fears they'll be attacked if they venture outside the compound's wire fences. Refugees are repairing and securing damaged barbed wire on the compound's perimeter fences to protect them from possible attacks as confrontation between the men, locals and Papua New Guinea authorities looms. Tensions have been rising on the island before it is shutdown, and refugee advocates have expressed fears the "powderkeg" may erupt into violence involving locals, detainees and police. Some 600 men have been refusing to leave the centre at the Lombrum Navy Base, despite its planned closure on Tuesday, saying they won't be safe at three other facilities in and around the island's main town of Lorengau earmarked for the asylum seekers' relocation. They have vowed to resist any attempts to move them amid reports locals are threatening to arm themselves to stop detainees moving into their community. Alternative accommodation has been offered but one facility, West Lorengau Haus, is not ready and another, Hillside Haus, consists mostly of "transferable accommodation containers". Refugee Action Coalition spokesman Ian Rintoul said fear in the centre was rising. "On the one hand is the fear that, as so often has been the case, Border Force and the PNG police will use force against them," Mr Rintoul said. "On the other, there is the fear that they wil be vulnerable to the violence and threats that has seen so many of them robbed, bashed, and attacked with knives and machetes. They have been warned, if you move to Hillside, you will be killed." Dining facilities at Lombrum have closed, with the asylum seekers relying on basic food parcels containing muesli bars, muffins, cornflakes and pre-cooked meals that they have been told will last two days. "Outside they will also be deprived of medical and other support with no hope of a secure future," Mr Rintoul said. "No one has explained where over 600 people are going to find enough food in Lorengau." He said one refugee told the Refugee Action Coalition: "It doesn't matter if the Australians walk away from the detention centre, we are not going to leave." Meanwhile, lawyer Ben Lomai, who in a previous Supreme Court challenge has represented the men detained on Manus, said he would seek an urgent order from the court that food, water, and electricity should be provided to those in the centre beyond Tuesday. "Those necessities of food, water and electricity must be maintained because that is their constitutional right," he said. Mr Lomai, who plans to file the court application early Tuesday morning, said he would also seek orders guaranteeing the men's safety if and when they were moved from the centre. It followed fresh human rights concerns raised by the United Nations in recent days with the PNG government warning Canberra that it would not force refugees to resettle in the country if they did not want to remain, and said Australia was responsible for dealing with them. "It is PNG's position that as long as there is one individual from this arrangement that remains in PNG, Australia will continue to provide financial and other support to PNG to manage the persons transferred under the arrangement until the last last person leaves or is independently resettled in PNG," Immigration Minister Petrus Thomas said in a statement. Mr Thomas said his government had discharged its responsibilities under the two countries' asylum seeker processing arrangement and Australia now had to find a solution for the men who had not been granted refugee status and refugees who refused to stay in PNG. He urged the Australian government to maintain all necessary medical and mental health services on Manus. Amnesty International, which has had a team on the island over recent days, said it was concerned about the restrictions to food, power, water, and medical and sanitation services imposed on the men at the centre, and urged the Australian and PNG governments to prevent violence from erupting as the centre was forcibly closed. In April, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton flagged that the centre would be closed by October 31, but last week warned that ongoing resistance would "make it hard for us to achieve" the deadline. Fairfax Media has contacted Mr Dutton's office for a response. |
Wind generation is forecast to climb to a record on Sunday, creating more output than needed and driving electricity prices below zero, broker data compiled by Bloomberg show. It would be the first time this year that the average price for a whole day is negative, not just for specific hours. Germanys grid operators can struggle to keep the balance between how much energy people are using and how much is being produced when there are high amounts of wind generation. Negative prices mean that producers must either shut down power stations to reduce supply or pay consumers to take the electricity off the grid. |
Picture this image in your minds eye: a thumb and forefinger brought so near to each other that they almost, but dont quite, touch. As the thumb and forefinger nearly touch, a voice says, We came that close to nuclear war in the Cuban missile crisis. |
Trumps opponents are bitterly split. You cant understand US politics today unless you understand the rift between liberals and leftwingers. By Pete Davis Roughly speaking, these two sides could be characterised as the populist wing and the establishment wing of the Democratic party, but even this terminology is a point of controversy between the feuding sides Discussing a resolution to this conflict is difficult, because even calls for resolution can be interpreted as ideological statements. Wanting the Democratic party to survive and unify can be taken as an endorsement of the establishment, because the quickest path to intra-party peace is for the conflicts leftwing instigators to get in line. Meanwhile, treating the intraparty divide as substantive arguing that there is, in fact, a significant difference between, say, Medicare for All and Obamacare can annoy liberals who believe that the so-called divide has been manufactured by a few disgruntled purists To resolve our intra-party conflict, we must first understand it. I believe the two sides concerns can be grouped into three divides: the first over party loyalty, the second over how to win elections, and the third over the gap between Democrats and Republicans The liberals best insight is that todays Republican party is an exceptionally dangerous political organisation. It denies catastrophic climate change, is an almost-pure vessel for the corporate takeover of public power, has based its electoral coalition on aligning with white ethnic nationalism and authoritarian theocracy, and has instigated disastrous decision after disastrous decision over the past decades . The leftwingers best insight is that the end-goal of electoral politics is not winning; it is the advancement of certain programmes and policies. As anyone who has watched the conservative ascendancy within the Republican party knows, internal criticism of party leaders is what makes leaders listen. As Frederick Douglass said: Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. |
(FOX 13) - U.S. Navy sailors were greeted by barking dogs and blown kisses Wednesday as they pulled alongside two Americans who had been drifting aboard a foundering sailboat for several months. According to the Navy, Jennifer Appel and Tasha Fuiaba set sail this spring from Honolulu, headed to Tahiti a 2,700-mile trip south across the Pacific Ocean. Even when their engine failed in late May, they vowed to press on under sail power alone, believing they could still reach Tahiti. |
Amid an ongoing battle within the Democratic National Committee between its progressive wing and the more "centrist" establishment, a Harvard-Harris poll (pdf - http://ift.tt/2iBZR93) published Tuesday found that a majority of Democrats think their party should be embracing grassroots movements, ditching its current leadership, and moving to the left. (...) Desire for a leftward move was strongest among young Democrats, who overwhelmingly backed Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the 2016 Democratic primary. The Harvard-Harris poll found that 69 percent of Democratic voters between the ages of 18 and 34 believe the party should embrace the leftward shift pushed by grassroots movements urging Democrats to back Medicare for All, free public college tuition, a $15 minimum wage, and a bevy of other progressive goals. (...) Some prominent Democrats have in recent weeks indicated that they agree with this critique, and with the majority of their voters. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) angered centrist Democrats back in August when she told the audience of a Netroots Nation conference in Atlanta, Georgia that "the Democratic Party isn't going back to the*days of welfare reform and the crime bill." "We're not going back to the days when a Democrat who wanted to run for a seat in*Washington first had to grovel on Wall Street," Warren added. Record support among congressional Democrats for Medicare for All and a $15 federal minimum wage also indicates that Democrats are beginning to shift left under pressure from the grassroots. Consistent with previous surveys, the new Harvard-Harris poll also found that Sanders is far and away the most popular politician in the country, while President Donald Trump and the congressional leadership of both parties remain broadly unpopular. |
"Now, the adultery of the woman is a very serious attack on the honor and dignity of the man," the ruling, signed by Judge Joaquim Neto de Moura, said. "It was the disloyalty and the sexual immorality of the plaintiff that made (the defendant) fall into a profound depression, and it was in this depressive state and clouded by the revolt that carried out the act of aggression, as was well considered in the judgment under appeal." The judges also cited the Bible and its passages "that the adulterous woman must be punished by death." |
Originally Posted by The Flakester
We must never regard as 'normal' the regular and casual undermining of our democratic norms and ideals. We must never meekly accept the daily sundering of our country -- the personal attacks, the threats against principles, freedoms, and institutions, the flagrant disregard for truth or decency, the reckless provocations, most often for the pettiest and most personal reasons, reasons having nothing whatsoever to do with the fortunes of the people that we have all been elected to serve.
|
Originally Posted by Gettin' Flakey With It
It is often said that children are watching. Well, they are. And what are we going to do about that? When the next generation asks us, Why didn't you do something? Why didn't you speak up? -- what are we going to say?
|
Originally Posted by Metro UK
Lim Ba, a 65-year-old Taoist guru, climbed inside the large steel capsule heated on boiling water on Monday at 10pm, outside the Kuala Sanglang Qinglong temple in Ayer Tawar, Malaysia.
He apparently pulled the stunt to show off his phsyical endurance to his followers, and had managed to pull it off a number of times before. However, after 30 minutes the devotees heard frantic banging coming from inside the pan. By the time they managed to get him out, he was unconscious. Lim was rushed to the hospital, but was pronounced dead of a heart attack soon afterwards. He had also suffered second-degree burns. The sounds coming from inside the wok were not regular and not normal so we knew there was something wrong, his son said... |
Lind wrote on Instagram Tuesday that Bush touched her from behind from his wheelchair with his wife Barbara Bush by his side, told her a dirty joke, and then touched her again. Lind claimed that Barbara Bush rolled her eyes at Bush, as if to say not again. . . . A representative for Bush, now 93, admitted that the former president might have erred in his attempt at humor, the Daily Mail reported. President Bush would never under any circumstance intentionally cause anyone distress, and he most sincerely apologizes if his attempt at humor offended Ms. Lind," Bush's statement said, the Daily Mail reported. |
We are disappointed that Boy Scouts of America has chosen to open its program to girls in contravention of its charter, rather than focusing on the 90% of American boys not being served by Boy Scouts. We believe strongly in the importance of the safe, all-girl, girl-led and girl-friendly environment that Girl Scouts provides. |
Leading House Republicans announced on Tuesday two new probes, one into how the Obama administration’s Justice Department handled a deal that gave Russia control over 20 percent of the United States’ uranium supply, and the other into the how it investigated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server. The parallel investigations — both of which involve the House Oversight Committee working in cooperation with another panel — formally revive issues that the Trump campaign used to try to discredit his Democratic rival Clinton during the 2016 presidential race and later, the conduct of now-fired FBI Director James B. Comey. The House Oversight and Judiciary Committees’ probe into the Clinton email investigation focuses on well-established lines of questioning, including why Comey decided to publicly announce it was investigating Clinton, but wait months before making a similar announcement about its inquiries into Trump. |
Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) said Tuesday that the panel has “been looking into this for a while now” but elected to formally start the inquiry in light of new evidence, reported in the Hill, that the FBI had been investigating Russian efforts to influence the American nuclear industry through various corrupt schemes. |
To hear Sean Hannity tell it, the media is ignoring “what is becoming the biggest scandal — or, at least, one of them — in American history.” Hannity is jumping waaay ahead of the facts. So is Breitbart News, which has been running misleading headlines such as this: “FBI uncovers confirmation of Hillary Clinton's corrupt uranium deal with Russia.” Brent Bozell, founder of the conservative Media Research Center, claims that there is “another coverup in the making.” President Trump agrees. |
Under the citys administrative code, a car can be forfeited if the owner has previously violated the citys for-hire vehicle code at least twice in the past 36 months. |
In September 2015, Judge Valerie Caproni ruled in favor of the owners, who included not just unlicensed cab drivers, but also ordinary New Yorkers who faced baseless charges. One of the plaintiffs, Pedro Camacho, had his car seized after TLC inspectors believed he had dropped off an Asian woman at JFK airport who had paid for a ride. In reality, Camacho had dropped off his (Hispanic) niece, who wasnt even questioned by inspectors. Fortunately for him, the commission ultimately dropped charges and returned his seized car. |
Between July 1, 2013 and June 13, 2014, TLC's ....The inspectors seized 8,798 vehicles during that time. Drivers cant retrieve their impounded cars unless they plead guilty and pay a fine or wait until their assigned hearing date to make their case before a city administrative judge.....Kalyoncu said the inspectors seized his car at the airport and he was given a May 13 hearing date. But the postal worker needed his minivan for work and couldnt wait two weeks to defend himself before a judge. Instead he decided to plead guilty the same day his van was seized. He paid a $600 fine, plus another $381 to the impound lot. |
"You know, am I mad at God? Yeah, I'm mad at him," O'Reilly said. "I wish I had more protection. I wish this stuff didn't happen. I can't explain it to you. Yeah, I'm mad at him." |
Customer: "Will the copper help with my arthritis?" Me: "There is no science to support that!" Customer: "Can you put magnets on the copper cuffs?" Me: "Sure." Customer: "My aunt/grandmother/cousin wore copper cuffs all the time and she said it helped her." Me: "Well, we live in Missouri, the State of Walt Disney. Wishing can make it so. Cash or Credit?" I lost count of how many times I had that conversation over the last two weeks. They usually bought a cuff! I guess we were poor, my grandmother just kept pennies in her shoes. |
I love that you're raking in snake oil dollars with a firm, "There is no science to support that!" |
|
CIA Director Mike Pompeo declared Thursday that U.S. intelligence agencies determined that Russia’s interference in the 2016 American presidential election did not alter the outcome, a statement that distorted spy agency findings.... His comment suggested — falsely — that a report released by U.S. intelligence agencies in January had ruled out any impact that could be attributed to a covert Russian interference campaign that involved leaks of tens of thousands of stolen emails, the flooding of social media sites with false claims and the purchase of ads on Facebook.... But the report reached no conclusions about whether that interference had altered the outcome — an issue that U.S. intelligence officials made clear was considered beyond the scope of their inquiry. |
“This is another example of Pompeo politicizing intelligence,” a former senior U.S. intelligence official said. Pompeo “is the most political CIA director since Bill Casey” during the Reagan administration, the former official said. “This significantly undermines the intelligence community’s credibility.” |
Paul Fiola: IMO, at least they believe what they believe enough to fight for it. Robert Menard: But not enough to allow others to fight against it in an equal manner. |
Robert Menard: . . .these masks are religious garb that provide no tactical benefits or increased safety. Their sole purpose is to hide the identity of the 'priests'. . . .I am personally far more concerned about [the law’s] armed and dangerous enforcers than I am a humus loving niqāb wearer. |
Pawel Fryga: **** everybody's religion. Braindead. |
Chris Carter: first of all **** islam. it's a piece of **** doctrine, intentions, claims and practices wise. wearing niqab isn't an indication of a free society. unintended consequences=wanna bet that many many hundreds of non-muslim females and perhaps even males r gunna flood into Quebec, wear niqab and force the police and courts to put up or shut up. |
Parts of your car may one day be printed in Darwin, with a world-first 3D printer pumping out bespoke metal parts in a matter of minutes. The machine's creators say they have unlocked the ability to print pieces of copper and aluminium up to 1,000 times faster than existing 3D printers. Co-inventor Steven Camilleri said it was "a bit strange" to finally have the printer up and running after spending more than two years devising the technology. "The technology doesn't sound like it should be real, but it's actually demonstrable," he said. The printer arrived at a research hub at Charles Darwin University this month and is already manufacturing metal parts. It is rocket science After engineers choose from a digital menu of 3D designs, the printer's machinery noisily heats up to 400 degrees Celsius. "Instead of using a laser and heat to melt the metal powder and form the metal part a very expensive and slow process we use a rocket engine and deposit metal powders at extremely high velocity," Mr Camilleri said. |
This is a continuation from here. As is usual, posters are free to copy & paste from previous iterations of the thread. |
Posted By:Agatha
|
Originally Posted by ceptimus (Post 12042987)
Poor analogy choice as it implies that some could go down the slide while some remain behind.
This was a group choice. Of those that chose to vote, the majority of the group were in favour and the group leaders subsequently announced that they agreed with the decision and were determined to carry it out. The attitude of most of the group remains, "Just get on with it!" A vocal minority are still trying to reverse the decision by any and all means possible. |
A Texas city has required residents who are seeking government disaster relief funds in the wake of Hurricane Harvey to pledge not to boycott Israel. The city of Dickinson, about 30 miles (48km) south of Houston, posted grant applications for anyone seeking money for repairs after the category 4 storm. Local officials say the pro-Israel clause is required under a Texas state law enacted earlier this year. |
Tyler Tenbrink, William Fears and Colton Fearstwo of whom police say have known ties to extremist organizationsare being held in the Alachua County Jail on charges of attempted homicide after allegedly firing on another group of people during a violent encounter shortly after Spencers speech. According to police, the trio argued with and threatened a group of protestors demonstrating against Spencer, who was addressing a small crowd at the University of Florida Phillips Center for Performing Arts. The men reportedly began threatening to f*cking kill and shoot the protestors, before eventually offering the Nazi salute and shouting Hail Hitler. Police say Tenbrink, a convicted felon, fired the shot. One of the protestors managed to write down the license plate of the silver Jeep the three men were riding in. |
Eleven-year-old Ames Mayfield, a fifth-grader at Prospect Ridge Academy and a Scout for five years, on Oct. 9 asked Sen. Vicki Marble, R-Fort Collins, questions about gun control, and about comments Marble made at a 2013 legislative hearing on poverty about mortality rates among African-Americans. The boys mother, Lori Mayfield, on Wednesday said Ames was kicked out of his den, or Scout group, as a result. |
In September 2017, a high-ranking official in the Russian Ministry of Culture said the Russian authorities were considering a ban on the film, which, he alleged, could be part of a "western plot to destabilise Russia by causing rifts in society |
Trump's Health Subsidy Shutdown Could Lead To Free Insurance by Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Associated Press If President Donald Trump prevails in shutting down a major "Obamacare" health insurance subsidy, it would have the unintended consequence of making free basic coverage available to more people, and making upper-tier plans more affordable. The unexpected assessment comes from consultants, policy experts, and state officials, who are trying to discern the potential fallout from a Washington health care debate that's becoming even more complicated and volatile. What's driving the predictions? It's because another subsidy that's part of the health law would go up for people with low-to-moderate incomes, offsetting Trump's move. |
A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the U.S. government to allow an undocumented immigrant teenager in its custody to have an abortion and said she was astounded that the Trump administration was trying to block the procedure. . . . Late Wednesday, however, the Justice Department appealed the case, asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to stay District Judge Tanya Chutkans ruling. The government asked the appeals court to rule by 9 p.m. on Thursday, to prevent the 17-year-old, identified in court papers as Jane Doe, from having an irreversible elective abortion while the appeal is pending. . . . Court filings make clear that the government is trying to prevent minors in its custody from having abortions, a departure from U.S. practice under Obama. Scott Lloyd, director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, the HHS agency that cares for unaccompanied minors caught crossing the border, said in an email in March that federally funded shelters should not be supporting abortion services pre or post-release; only pregnancy services and life-affirming options counseling. . . . In court filings, the Justice Department said the government has strong and constitutionally legitimate interests in promoting childbirth, in refusing to facilitate abortion, and in not providing incentives for pregnant minors to illegally cross the border to obtain elective abortions while in federal custody. . . . The judge pointed out that the federal workers took the teenager, against her wishes, to a Christian pregnancy facility for counseling aimed at persuading her not to abort, and also informed her mother about the pregnancy. Both steps potentially violated the girls constitutional protections, Chutkan said. |
In the midst of the worst drug epidemic in American history, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's ability to keep addictive opioids off U.S. streets was derailed -- that according to Joe Rannazzisi, one of the most important whistleblowers ever interviewed by 60 Minutes. Rannazzisi ran the DEA's Office of Diversion Control, the division that regulates and investigates the pharmaceutical industry. Now in a joint investigation by 60 Minutes and The Washington Post, Rannazzisi tells the inside story of how, he says, the opioid crisis was allowed to spread -- aided by Congress, lobbyists, and a drug distribution industry that shipped, almost unchecked, hundreds of millions of pills to rogue pharmacies and pain clinics providing the rocket fuel for a crisis that, over the last two decades, has claimed 200,000 lives. |