NEW: “We got a QUEER running for President... the white man has very few rights.” Watch @SevierCounty Commissioner Warren Hurst’s homophobic, bigoted outburst Monday, telling folks to “wake up”. Mayor’s office: 865-453-6136 Hurst: 865-453-8513 WVLT: https://t.co/GFwJLqehUfpic.twitter.com/bfXrAACfPh
sicsempertyrannis | Any fair reporter with half a brain would see these events as
pointing to a conspiracy. But not the liars at the New York Times. But
the Times does tip us off to the upcoming mad scramble for life boats.
It will it the FBI and DOJ against the DNI, the CIA and NSA. According
to the Times:
It is not clear how many people Mr.
Durham’s team has interviewed outside of the F.B.I. His investigators
have questioned officials in the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence but apparently have yet to interview C.I.A. personnel,
people familiar with the review said. Mr. Durham would probably want to
speak with Gina Haspel, the agency’s director, who ran its London
station when the Australians passed along the explosive information
about Russia’s offer of political dirt.
There is no abiding affection between the FBI and the CIA. They mix
like oil and water. In theory the FBI only traffics in "evidence." The
CIA deals primarily with well-sourced rumors. But the CIA will argue
they were offering their best judgement, not a factual conclusion.
Brennan and Clapper will insist they were not in a position to determine
the "truth" of what they were reporting. It is "intel" not evidence.
The Horowitz report will not deal with the CIA and NSA directly.
Horowitz can only point out that the FBI folks insisted that they were
relying on the intel community and had no reason not to trust them. This
is likely to get ugly and do not be surprised to see the intel folks
try to throw the FBI under the bus and vice versa. Grab the popcorn.
sicsempertyrannis | U.S. officials had been
concerned that Russian sources could be at risk of exposure as early as
the fall of 2016, when the Obama administration first confirmed that
Russia had stolen and publicly disclosed emails from the Democratic
National Committee and the account of Hillary Clinton’s campaign
chairman, John Podesta.
In October 2016, the
Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence said in a joint statement that intelligence
agencies were “confident that the Russian Government directed” the
hacking campaign. . . .
In January 2017, the Obama administration
published a detailed assessment that unambiguously laid the blame on
the Kremlin, concluding that “Putin ordered an influence campaign” and
that Russia’s goal was to undermine faith in the U.S. democratic process
and harm Clinton’s chances of winning.
“That’s a pretty remarkable intelligence
community product — much more specific than what you normally see,” one
U.S. official said. “It’s very expected that potential U.S. intelligence
assets in Russia would be under a higher level of scrutiny by their own
intelligence services.”
Sounds official. But there is no actual forensic or documentary
evidence (by that I mean actual corroborating intelligence reports) to
back up these claims by our oxymoronically christened intelligence
community.
Vladimir Putin ordered the hack? Where is the report? It is either in
a piece of intercepted electronics communication and/or in a report
derived from information provided by Mr. Smolenkov. Where is it? Why has
that not been shared in public? Don't have to worry about exposing the
source now. He is already in the open. What did he report? Answer--no
direct evidence.
Then there is the lie that the Russians hacked the DNC. They did not.
Bill Binney, a former Technical Director of the NSA, and I have written
on this subject previously (see here)
and there is no truth to this claim. Let me put it simply--if the DNC
had been hacked by the Russians using spearphising (this is claimed in
the Robert Mueller report) then the NSA would have collected those
messages and would be able to show they were transferred to the
Russians. That did not happen.
This kind of chaotic leaking about an old intel op is symptomatic of
panic. CIA is already officially denying key parts of the story. My
money is on John Brennan and Jim Clapper as the likely impetus for these
reports. They are hoping to paint Trump as a national security threat
and distract from the upcoming revelations from the DOJ Inspector
General report on the FISA warrants and, more threatening, the decisions
that Prosecutor John Durham will take in deciding to indict those who
attempted to launch a coup against Donald Trump, a legitimately elected
President of the United States.
asiatimes | Trump’s real liability isn’t impeachment. It’s China and the economy.
What the Trump administration has been doing so far, vis-à-vis China,
is an own goal — ein Eigentor [“an owner”].
Why is it an eigentor?
Because the effect of the tariffs on the US economy is at least as
bad as the effect of the tariffs on the Chinese economy. American export
orders are collapsing. We have the weakest industrial reading since
June of 2009. We are in a manufacturing recession, according to the
Federal Reserve. Factory output is contracting. Trump won in 2016 by
carrying key manufacturing states like Pennsylvania,
Ohio, Michigan, and
Wisconsin. This blunder could lose him the election. This is much more
dangerous than the impeachment masquerade. China’s also suffering, but
appears to be suffering less.
And the big difference is Xi Jinping
[China’s president] doesn’t have a presidential election in 2020 and
Trump does.
In fact, President Xi will never face an election. He is elected for life.
That is true. But all that can change if he fails to succeed.
You have compared the situation that the US is facing toward China to the siege and conquest of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258.
The Mongols, by themselves, did not have the capability to penetrate
the twelve-foot-thick walls of the city of Baghdad. But they hired a
thousand Chinese siege engineers. Within three weeks, the Chinese
mercenaries breached the walls, at which point the Mongol horsemen went
in and killed the entire population of Baghdad.
Who are today’s Chinese siege engineers who are breaching the American fortress?
Huawei very much is the spearhead, because in the Chinese model of
economic expansion and the development of world economic power,
broadband is the opener to everything else.
It’s a company with a lot of very talented people. Ten years ago – if
you asked people, “What Chinese products do you buy?” – you wouldn’t
mention a single brand name. But everyone now knows Huawei. They produce
the world’s best smartphones. They certainly dominate 5G internet. But
Huawei is not a Chinese company. It is an imperial company.
The Chinese empire is doing better than us because it’s absorbed the talent of a very large number of others.
oftwominds | If you're truly interested in finding solutions to humanity's pressing problems, then start helping us pry open the Overton Window.
The Overton Window describes the spectrum of concepts, policies and approaches that can be publicly discussed without being ridiculed or marginalized as "too radical," "unworkable," "crazy," etc. The narrower the Overton Window, the greater the impoverishment of public dialog and the fewer the solutions available.
Those holding power in a socio-economic-political system that's unraveling devote their remaining energy to closing the Overton Window so that only "approved" narratives and policies that support the status quo are "allowed" into the public sphere.
Everything outside this narrow band of status-quo-supportive narratives is immediately disparaged as "fake news," "Kremlin talking points," or other highly charged accusations designed to close the Overton Window--a process Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman called manufacturing consent: if no "outside" ideas are allowed, people accept the status quo as "all there is and all there can possibly be."
This narrow Overton Window benefits those in power who are "legally looting" the system.
There is another source of a narrow Overton Window: the cultural, social and political elites have no new ideas and so they cling to doing more of what's failed, relying on the past successes of now-failing strategies to cement their power.
Michael Grant described how this failure of imagination and devotion to the past leads inevitably to decline and collapse in his excellent account The Fall of the Roman Empire, a short book I have been recommending since 2009:
NYTimes | Speaker Nancy Pelosi has traveled to
Jordan to meet with the Jordanian king for “vital” discussions about the
Turkish incursion into Syria and other regional challenges, amid uncertainty about whether an American-brokered cease-fire with Turkey in northern Syria was holding.
The
visit by senior United States officials came as sporadic clashes
continued on Sunday morning along the Turkish-Syrian border, where,
according to the Turkish Defense Ministry, a Turkish soldier was killed
by Kurdish fighters in the Syrian border town of Tel Abyad.
Confusion and continued shelling have marred the cease-fire deal
announced by Vice President Mike Pence last week, with both Turkey and
Kurdish leaders accusing each other of violating the truce.
Ms.
Pelosi, a California Democrat, led a nine-member bipartisan
congressional delegation to Jordan that included Representatives Adam
Schiff, Democrat of California; Eliot L. Engel, Democrat of New York;
and Mac Thornberry, Republican of Texas. The group met with King
Abdullah II of Jordan on Saturday evening.
tomluongo | Tulsi Gabbard has stones. She has the kind of stones born of a life dedicated to the cause of serving others.
She is the direct opposite of Hillary Clinton, for whom all causes serve herself and her enormous narcissism and pathology.
So seeing Gabbard go directly after Hillary Clinton after her debate
performance the other evening where she explicitly called out both the New York Times and CNN (the hosts of the debate) for the hit jobs on her puts to rest any idea she’s someone else’s stalking horse.
Great! Thank you @HillaryClinton. You, the queen of warmongers, embodiment of corruption, and personification of the rot that has sickened the Democratic Party for so long, have finally come out from behind the curtain. From the day I announced my candidacy, there has been a ...
Tulsi Gabbard calls The New York Times and CNN — the hosts of the debate — "completely despicable" for alleging she is a Russian asset and Assad apologist. pic.twitter.com/0pzpA4nvRo
But perhaps the highlight was her directly calling out the very
sponsors of the debate, CNN and the New York Times, for their
“despicable” and baseless attacks.
“Just two days ago, the New York Times put out an article saying that
I’m a Russian asset and an Assad apologist and all these different
smears. This morning, a CNN commentator said on national television that I’m an asset of Russia. Completely despicable,” she said.
The CNN charge specifically referenced comments made by Bakari Sellers on New Day on
the morning of the debate. He said Gabbard is the “antithesis” of what
the Democratic Party and the other candidates stand for, adding, “There is no question that Tulsi Gabbard, of all the 12, is a puppet for the Russian government.”
ineteconomics | Under the shadow of a future darkened by climate crises, political
instability, inequality, and super-human machines, how to best proceed?
For some, the answer is more technology and scientific advancement; for
others, better policies and political arrangements. Or some combination
of these.
To get at that something, Lent traces a “cognitive history” of the
human species in a book delivering big, sweeping ideas and a
discipline-hopping approach drawing from neuroscience, archaeology,
linguistics, and systems theory, the study of complex living systems.
Lent argues that how we view the world arises out of language,
specifically core metaphors that shape our values and culture, which in
turn mold history in a reciprocal feedback loop. Cultural templates are
often long lasting, but can also shift dramatically, sometimes in a
generation or two. The process of cultural evolution, Lent observes,
determines how well humans fare as much as the genes we inherit (there’s
a feedback loop between culture and genes, too).
As Lent sees it, you and I are in the midst one of history’s great
transitions — a process which could lead to conditions far less
hospitable for most, or even a total collapse of global civilization. To
avoid these dire fates, we can train our brains to adopt alternative
metaphors that allow us to live less destructively.
So which metaphors are causing the trouble? For one, Lent faults a
tendency to conceive a dualistic universe of binary categories, like
mind and matter, reason and emotion, self and other. This framework, as
the postmoderns observed, drives us to favor one category over the other
and to build societies based on hierarchy and separation.
The pattern is not universal: Lent presents evidence that early
hunter-gatherers emphasized connectivity rather than separation, a
mindset that engendered a more egalitarian social structure.
(Unfortunately, they also lived by a metaphor of nature as an endlessly
giving parent, resulting in problems like overhunting, which illustrates
that even seemingly harmless metaphors can eventually lead to
catastrophe).
bbc | Depending on what language you speak, your eye perceives colours – and the world – differently than someone else. The human eye can physically perceive millions of colours. But we don’t all recognise these colours in the same way.
Some people can’t see differences in colours – so called colour blindness – due to a defect or absence of the cells in the retina that are sensitive to high levels of light: the cones. But the distribution and density of these cells also varies across people with ‘normal vision’, causing us all to experience the same colour in slightly different ways.
Besides our individual biological make up, colour perception is less about seeing what is actually out there and more about how our brain interprets colours to create something meaningful. The perception of colour mainly occurs inside our heads and so is subjective – and prone to personal experience.
Take for instance people with synaesthesia,
who are able to experience the perception of colour with letters and
numbers. Synaesthesia is often described as a joining of the senses –
where a person can see sounds or hear colours. But the colours they hear
also differ from case to case.
Another example is the classic Adelson’s checker-shadow illusion. Here, although two marked squares are exactly the same colour, our brains don’t perceive them this way.
Since
the day we were born we have learnt to categorise objects, colours,
emotions, and pretty much everything meaningful using language. And
although our eyes can perceive thousands of colours, the way we
communicate about colour – and the way we use colour in our everyday
lives – means we have to carve this huge variety up into identifiable,
meaningful categories.
Painters and fashion experts, for example, use colour terminology to
refer to and discriminate hues and shades that to all intents and
purposes may all be described with one term by a non-expert.
wikipedia |Preference falsification is the act of communicating a preference
that differs from one's true preference. Individuals frequently convey,
especially to researchers or pollsters, preferences that differ from
what they genuinely want, often because they believe the conveyed
preference is more socially acceptable than their actual preference. The
idea of preference falsification was put forth by the social scientist Timur Kuran in his book Private Truth, Public Lies
as part of his theory of how people's stated preferences are responsive
to social influences. It laid the foundation for his theory of why
unanticipated revolutions can occur. It is related to ideas of social proof as well as choice blindness.
wikipedia |Dean Karnazes (English: /kɑːrˈnɛˈzɪs/car-NEH-zis; born Constantine Karnazes; August 23, 1962), is an Americanultramarathon runner, and author of Ultramarathon Man: Confessions of an All-Night Runner, which details ultra endurance running for the general public.[3][4]
wired | On Saturday morning in Vienna, Austria, Eliud Kipchoge, the world's finest marathoner, became the first person in history to run 26.2 miles in under two hours.
His time of 1:59:40 required him to maintain an average pace of just
under 4:35 per mile. That is, to put it mildly, soul-searing speed. Even
a supremely fit person would struggle to run at so aggressive a clip
for more than five or six minutes in a row. On Saturday, Kipchoge held
it for just shy of 120.
But
Kipchoge's performance will not be recognized as an official world
record. The event was not an open competition; it was held for Kipchoge
and Kipchoge alone. What's more, a rotating cast of pacers shielded him
from wind throughout the run, and a bicycle-riding support team was on
hand at all times to deliver him water and fuel. It was not so much a
race, in other words, as an exhibition event designed for speed. A
one-man, all-or-nothing time trial.
healthline | A no-carb diet is a way of eating that eliminates digestible carbs as much as possible.
Carbs
are your body’s primary source of energy. They’re found in grains,
beans, legumes, fruits, vegetables, milk, yogurt, pasta, bread, and
baked goods.
Therefore, someone on a no-carb diet must avoid most
of these foods and instead eat foods that contain primarily protein or
fat, such as meats, fish, eggs, cheese, oils, and butter.
There is no strict rubric for a no-carb diet. Some people who follow it eat nuts and seeds, non-starchy vegetables, and high-fat fruits like avocado and coconut.
Even
though these foods have some carbs, they’re high in fiber. Therefore,
they have only a minuscule number of digestible or net carbs, which is
calculated by subtracting the amount of fiber from the total number of
carbs (1).
A no-carb diet resembles a ketogenic diet,
which limits your carb intake to fewer than 30 grams per day and
encourages you to get 70% or more of your daily calories from fat (2Trusted Source).
Depending on what you choose to eat, a no-carb diet can be more restrictive than keto.
technologyreview |My bitterness peaked midway through day four
of the “Fast-Mimicking Diet,” when a parent arrived at my daughter’s
softball game with doughnuts. As little girls and fellow coaches crowded
around the box, I stood apart, glumly sipping out of my special water
bottle with its “proprietary” blend of nutrients.
For breakfast, I’d consumed a nut bar the size of a small cracker and a couple of vitamins. Lunch was five olives from Seville.
Frankly, I’d begun to resent Valter Longo, the inventor of Prolon,
the five-day, $250 fad diet causing my misery. True, the Italian-born
biochemist had seemed perfectly nice when I’d reached him at his office
at the University of Southern California’s Longevity
Institute a few days before to speak with him about the science behind
the diet and what it might do for my general health and longevity. He
had patiently explained how the diet would temporarily shift my body
into a starvation state that would prompt my cells to consume years of
accumulated cellular garbage before unleashing a surge of restorative
regeneration. Getting rid of garbage had sounded like just what I
needed. But now I blamed him for my predicament. I wanted a doughnut.
My
Prolon “meal kit” had arrived in a white cardboard container a little
bigger than a shoebox. Inside I’d found a meal program card spelling out
the menu, a large empty water bottle emblazoned with the word “Prolon,”
and five smaller cardboard boxes, each labeled with a corresponding
day. I opened the box for day one, billed as a higher-calorie
“transition day,” and was pleasantly surprised. It didn’t look so bad.
I’d be sampling many of the diet’s highlights: a small packet of kale
crackers, powdered tomato soup blend, algae oil supplements, a bag of
olives, herbal tea, and not one but two nut-based bars (albeit
distressingly small).
When
I opened up day two, however, I began to get a better sense of what I
was in for. One of the puny nut bars had been replaced by a
glycerin-based “energy” drink, which I was instructed to add water to
and sip on throughout the day. There was more herbal tea—hibiscus, mint,
and lemon (I don’t even like herbal tea)—plus a couple more
powdered-soup packs and two tiny packets of olives. Where was the rest of it?
technologyreview |Izpisúa Belmonte believes epigenetic
reprogramming may prove to be an “elixir of life” that will extend human
life span significantly. Life expectancy has increased more than
twofold in the developed world over the past two centuries. Thanks to
childhood vaccines, seat belts, and so on, more people than ever reach
natural old age. But there is a limit to how long anyone lives, which
Izpisúa Belmonte says is because our bodies wear down through inevitable
decay and deterioration. “Aging,” he writes, “is nothing other than
molecular aberrations that occur at the cellular level.” It is, he says,
a war with entropy that no individual has ever won.
But each generation
brings new possibilities, as the epigenome gets reset during
reproduction when a new embryo is formed. Cloning takes advantage of
reprogramming, too: a calf cloned from an adult bull contains the same
DNA as the parent, just refreshed. In both cases, the offspring is born
without the accumulated “aberrations” that Izpisúa Belmonte refers to.
What
Izpisúa Belmonte is proposing is to go one step better still, and
reverse aging-related aberrations without having to create a new
individual. Among these are changes to our epigenetic marks—chemical
groups called histones and methylation marks, which wrap around a cell’s
DNA and function as on/off switches for genes. The accumulation of
these changes causes the cells to function less efficiently as we get
older, and some scientists, Izpisúa Belmonte included, think they could
be part of why we age in the first place. If so, then reversing these
epigenetic changes through reprogramming may enable us to turn back
aging itself.
Izpisúa Belmonte cautions
that epigenetic tweaks won’t “make you live forever,” but they might
delay your expiration date. As he sees it, there is no reason to think
we cannot extend human life span by another 30 to 50 years, at least. “I
think the kid that will be living to 130 is already with us,” Izpisúa
Belmonte says. “He has already been born. I’m convinced.”
Forbes | NASA is preparing to explore a world made of metal. Confirming that the
exciting Arizona State University School of Earth and Space
Exploration-led Psyche mission
is now entering the build phase, NASA’s probe is now set to visit a
mysterious asteroid between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It could be
nothing less than the exposed core of a dead planet, with some
suggesting that it could be worth a staggering $10,000 quadrillion.
What is asteroid Psyche?
While most asteroids are rocky or icy bodies, Psyche is thought to be
a stripped planetary core, a very rare object in the solar system.
While NASA missions like InSight drill into Mars
to discover the origins of planets, Psyche offers an opportunity to
inspect and study a planetary core up close. It appears to be the
exposed iron-nickel core (just like Earth’s) of a proto-planet, a small
world that formed early in the solar system's history, but never reached
planetary size—much like Vesta and Ceres, which NASA's Dawn spacecraft explored.
Could asteroid Psyche be the heart of an early planet as big as Mars
that lost its rocky outer layers? Was it involved in violent collisions?
NASA will help planetary scientists find out, and so tease-out lessons
for how the solar system’s planets likely formed.
energy.gov | NNSA and the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) joined forces to address a unique challenge:
developing a power source able to support deep space travel and outlast
existing fuel sources. NNSA came through with the technical expertise required to achieve this goal.
“The
relationship between NNSA and NASA is a ‘win-win’ partnership,” said
Patrick Cahalane, NNSA’s Principal Deputy Associate Administrator for
Safety, Infrastructure and Operations. “NASA gets a prototype
demonstration for a kilowatt-range fission power source, and NNSA gets a
benchmark-quality experiment that provides new nuclear data in support
of our Nuclear Criticality Safety Program.”
The experiment, nicknamed KRUSTY (Kilowatt Reactor Using Stirling TechnologY), was part of NASA’s larger Kilopower project. KRUSTY was designed to test a prototype fission reactor coupled to a Stirling engine. Stirling technology is efficient, doesn’t require significant maintenance, and does not degrade in performance over time.
Researchers
designed and performed initial testing of the KRUSTY reactor design
using a surrogate, or non-fissile, reactor core and resistive heating
elements. Experts from NNSA’s Y-12 National Security Complex manufactured the uranium reactor core, which was delivered to the NCERC in the fall of 2017.
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
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