The Power of Your Thoughts and Spoken Words (part I and 2) by Steve Robertson – Veterans News Report

Steve Robertson is the Founder and CEO of ProjectPeaceOnEarth.org (PPoE) and the PeaceSongAwards.org

Robertson is also the Founder and CEO of SupportVeteransNow.org, PenPalsForPeace.org and the LoveAllLoveWins.orgcampaigns.

The ProjectPeaceOnEarth.org Steering Committee and Advisory Board consist of 41 world-famed/Grammy-winning musicians, Academy award-winning filmmakers, Emmy winning TV producers, top scientists, doctors, higher-education scholars, human rights and world-thought leaders in the areas of consciousness and spiritual development.

Robertson has produced three international peace concerts from and for Bethlehem Palestine on Christmas Day and for the Middle East/Global Peace out to some 80 million homes worldwide which featured Grammy-winning musicians, famed celebrities, and thought-leaders.

Overview of Steve Robertsons/PPoE achievements to date:

In 2009, Robertson lead a nationwide bus tour called Peace Has Begun that served to frame the word peace as a verb for social good and promote the planned annual Project Peace on Earth global musical prayer concerts. The bus was a traveling media studio that featured two broadcast journalists who interviewed people on their commitment and actions towards inner and outer peace.

In September of 2010, Steve lead a medical mission, with famed eye surgeon Paul Dougherty MD, to Hebron Palestine which resulted in the restoration of eyesight (40 free cataract surgeries) to elderly people. Michael Garcia, former VP of Development for HBO traveled with the Medical Mission to film a documentary called Visions of Peace.

On November 25th, 2011, Robertson, Executive Produced a promotional aerial image, in conjunction with John Quigley (PPOE Advisory Board), additional PPoE Middle East Production team members and a UNRWA team, that consisted of some 1000 Palestinian refugee children forming the Picasso Peace Dove image and spelling out the words Love All both in English and Arabic.

On September 26th, 2012 the UN selected the Picasso Peace Dove and Love All still image photo (out of some 800,000 over the course of the UN) as one of the 49 most iconic images ever captured since the organizations inception.

In 2014 Robertson became an Executive Producer and the Artistic Mentor on the Shanti Samsara Environmental Consciousness benefit album. The album, produced by Ricky Kej, was produced at the request of Prime Minister Modi of India, to honor all forms of life from a Vedic and Buddhist perspective. Prime Minister Modi presented this album during his November 2014 UN Climate Change Conference Keynote Speech in Paris to every Presidential attendee at the event. The 150-page pictorial coffee table book and 2 CD album set involved over 500 musicians and 40 countries.

In November of 2014 Robertson created and Executive Produced the 2 Unite All benefit album to bring surgical teams, medical supplies, and PTSD Therapies into GAZA and the Middle East Region to support greater peace. The album features numerous world-famed Grammy-winning musicians 30 major musicians including Peter Gabriel, Roger Waters (Pink Floyd), Philip Lawrence (Burno Mars), Stewart Copeland (The Police), Thomas Bergersen (2 Billion YouTube video hits), Gary Nicholson (Grammy Winner and TX Hall of Fame) and many more. The album is endorsed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Professor Noam Chomsky, Oliver Stone, Vera Baboun (former Mayor of Bethlehem) and many more.

In 2017 Steve founded the PeaceSongAwards.org(PSA) worldwide contest which serves as a search for our worlds most enlightened musicians, songs, spoken word poetry and music videos that guide the way to inner peace and outer peace on earth. PSA Jury Panel Members consist of many world-famed Musicians, Music and TV industry people and Thought-leaders.

Steves acclaimed and recent book, The Power of Choice, Success and Your Life Purpose is endorsed by numerous national best selling authors including Gary Zukav (Seat of the Soul, 10million + books sold), Don Miguel Ruiz MD (The Four Agreements),Caroline Myss PhD (Anatomy of the Spirit), Jack Kornfield PhD (founder of the Mindful Meditation Movement, author of A Path With A Heart), Larry Dossey MD (recent author of One Mind former Director of the Nat. Inst. for Health, Alternative Medicine Division), Alexander Astin PhD (founder of UCLAs Higher Education Research Institute), Jack Healey (former Exec. Dir. of Amnesty International) and more.

National Best Selling Authors proclaim:

Steves book is A TEXTBOOK for the Soul Caroline Myss, PhD (National Best-Selling author of Anatomy of the Spirit)

Robertson is a Living Avatar on whose shining example our future may depend. Larry Dossey, MD (National Best Selling Author of One Mind and The Power of Prayer)

Steve book usesbeautiful metaphors and analogies that lead in every instance to awareness, self-responsibility, and our Divinity Gary Zukav (National Best Selling author of Seat of the Soul)

Steves book is required reading for anyone who has longed to find and fulfill their life purpose. Don Miguel Ruiz (National Best selling author of The Four Agreements)

Steves bookcan empower you and help you bring your gifts to the world. Jack Kornfield, PhD (National Best Selling Author of A Path With Heart)

Steves book offers rich and spiritually authentic insights into the meaning of life and how to find and live your life purpose. Gerald (Jerry) Jampolsky, M.D. and Diane Cirincione, Ph.D. (National Best Selling Authors, Pioneers in the Human Potential Movement)

Steves book is a treasure trove of timeless wisdom and spiritual guidance. Alexander Astin, PhD (Considered the worlds most widely quoted person on Higher Education. Co-founder of UCLA Higher Education Research Institute. Best Selling Author of Cultivating the Spirit.)

Steves booklooks at all of us in the eye and asks us to awaken to our own power and force. Jack Healey, former Executive Director of Amnesty International. Former Franciscan Monk.

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The Power of Your Thoughts and Spoken Words (part I and 2) by Steve Robertson - Veterans News Report

Delicacies and the devout in northern Tsuruoka – The Japan Times

Hidden on the coast of northwest Japan is a pocket of tradition, Narnia-esque mountain-scapes and gastronomic delights.

Tsuruoka, Yamagata Prefecture, is a castle town turned UNESCO City of Creativity, enveloped in spirituality and relatively untouched by tourists. A coastal city, it looks out onto the Sea of Japan and is backed by Dewa Sanzan, (the Three Mountains of Dewa): Mounts Haguro, Gassan and Yudono, said to respectively represent birth, death and rebirth.

These mountains have been a center for Shugendo (a mountain-centric religion combining aspects of esoteric Buddhism, Taoism and Shinto) for over 1,400 years and today remain a site for yearly week-long retreats called akinomineiri (literally, entering the autumn peaks). Usually attended by the ascetic Shugendo yamabushi (mountain priests), any dedicated individual can attend one of these retreats in late August. Be prepared for physical challenges such as cleansing oneself in the torrent of a waterfall, or nanban ibushi (sitting in a room with braziers of burning chili peppers).

Cant see the pagoda for the trees: En route to the peak of Mount Haguro, the unpainted facade of the Gojunoto (Five Story Pagoda) blends seamlessly into the surrounding woods. | JESSE CHASE-LUBITZ

For those planning a shorter and less physically demanding visit, Mount Haguro (414 meters) is the most accessible of the three mountains and can be climbed year-round. With its 2,446 stone steps winding through centuries-old cedar trees, the scenic path to the summit passes relics such as the Gojunoto (Five Story Pagoda), a 600-year-old National Treasure made entirely of wood that, unpainted, blends seamlessly with its surroundings. Nearby, the Jijisugi (Grandpa Cedar) keeps watch and has done, apparently, for over a millennium.

Summiting Haguro, hikers will be happy to note that Tsuruokas mountain culture extends to its food. At Saikan, the temple complex atop the mountain, hungry hikers can eat shjin ryri, a style of Buddhist vegetarian cuisine that has been passed down through the ages. One of the most famous dishes is gomadfu: soft squares of tofu made of sesame instead of soy, covered in gelatinous sesame sauce. Aside from being tasty, this style of cooking is supposed to have health benefits as well.

We tend to go to the hospital when something is wrong, but mountain people cannot do that, says Shinkichi Ito, the master chef at Saikan. They must cure themselves with their own means. They must connect with the mountain. A shjin ryri meal at Dewa Sanzan costs about 3,300 per person and requires a reservation.

When in Tsuruoka proper, head to Zenpoji, a Zen Buddhist temple complex on the edge of the city that also honors the god of the sea due to Tsuruokas coastal credentials. The temple houses a dozen or so monks in training and holds regular services, during which monks sit in front of individual sets of books and shuffle through the pages, while two others keep the tempo of the service with skillful drumming and chanting.

Good karma: A monk shows off sutras at Zenpoji temple, in the city of Tsuruoka. | JESSE CHASE-LUBITZ

It is meant to send wind and knowledge to people, says Ueno Ryuko, one of the monks currently in training. This religious spectacle is a well-rehearsed spiritual performance, and can be experienced bi-hourly from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. It costs 500 to enter and doubling up on socks is recommended in colder months (a visit involves removing shoes regularly and walking around unheated buildings).

Lunch can be found further inland at Naa, a family-owned restaurant with tatami floors and farm-to-table fare. Opened 17 years ago, Naa serves up organic food that bolsters Tsuruokas accolade of being labeled Japans first UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy in 2014. The restaurant mirrors the citys commitment to preserving the legacy of traditional foods and crops, one of which is dadacha-mame, a type of green soybean that the Onodera family has been planting for decades.

Growing (dadacha-mame) is important, says Norimasa Onodera, 38, owner of the restaurant since his mother passed it down to him eight years ago. But people need to eat them or they will disappear.

The restaurants dishes are affordable, ranging between 900 and 1,200, and delicious; the brown rice paired with the fresh ingredients at Naa gives a satisfying chew and nutty aftertaste. If you have room at the end, try the chiffon rice flour cake with sesame.

Farm-to-table fare at Naa, a family-owned restaurant in Tsuruoka. | JESSE CHASE-LUBITZ

For an immersive cultural experience, head to the neighboring city of Sakata. Set in a 200-year-old tea house, Somaro has daily performances by maiko (geisha in training) laced with a direct influence from their Kyoto counterparts. Admission is 1,000 for adults; to see the maiko dance, which happens daily at 2 p.m., it is an additional 800.

Before leaving Tsuruoka, stop by Nangakuji temple, where you can see the mummified remains of Tetsuryukai, one of Japans sokushinbutsu (self-mummified monks). The ultimate in dedication and endurance, this practice of self-mummification required practitioners (usually monks of the Shingon school of Buddhism) to starve themselves over a period of 1,000 days, eating pine needles and drinking poisonous lacquer so that their organs wouldnt rot after death. This extreme ascetic practice was meant to bring the monks enlightenment.

Just an hour away by train from Tsuruoka in Niigata Prefecture is Murakami a sleepy city surrounded by snowy mountains.

Among other things, Murakami is known for its sake no shiobiki (salted salmon). To see where it starts, swing by Iyoboya Salmon Museum for a glimpse into the world of the freshwater fish. As well as learning about the different types of salmon native to the area and how they are bred, the museum boasts windows through which you can peer into one of the streams. If you go between October and December, you may be able to watch the salmon breed. Iyoboya is open every day from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; admission is 600 for adults, 300 for children.

Hanging out: Sake no shiobiki (salted salmon) dry in a store room in Murakami, Niigata Prefecture. | JESSE CHASE-LUBITZ

In addition to being a Salmon City, Murakami is also a castle town. Though the ruins of its castle do not extend to anything past old, sloping stone walls, standing on the site of the castle provides a scenic vista of the town from above. Getting there involves a pleasant walk up Mount Gagyu (134 meters). If, instead of hill climbing, you want a place to sit and rest, make a beeline for Fujimien, a 150-year-old tea shop that offers a modern teahouse experience through its old Edo Period (1603-1868) hallways.

Both Tsuruoka and Murakami are rich in culture, historical food traditions and natural beauty. Whether you are traveling in the depths of winter, when the mountains are blanketed in snow, or in the heat of summer, these cities invite those who are looking to stay a little longer and immerse themselves in the mystic practices and history of an underrated region.

An upmarket option in Tsuruoka is Yumizutei Isagoya. Located in Yunohama Onsen, its Western-style beds and beautiful onsen (hot-spring baths) ensure a comfortable stay. Prices range from 15,750 to 36,750 per person per night.

For a more affordable option, try Shonai Hotel Suiden Terrasse. This modern offering boasts onsen, locally produced foods and beautifully designed open architecture. Rooms range from 7,000 to 20,000 per night.

A luxurious traditional onsen experience can be had at Taikanso Senaminoyu in Murakami. Taikanso serves up two different dining options and there is a choice of indoor and outdoor baths, as well as private ones for an extra 5,500. Rooms are upward of 19,800 per night, including breakfast and dinner.

For a less expensive, more local and eco-tourism-oriented experience, consider staying in the home of a rice farmer. Located in Tokamachi, 40 minutes from downtown Murakami, Noka Minshuku Zaigomon has breakfast and dinner included, all cooked by the farmers obchan (grandmother). Rooms look out onto rice fields and tall mountains; one night costs 7,000.

For Tsuruoka, take the Joetsu Shinkansen from Tokyo Station to Niigata Station (around two hours; 10,560) and then the Inaho Limited Express to Tsuruoka Station (one hour 50 minutes; 4,330). From Tokyo, the bus is also an option: the Shonai Kotsu Express Service takes between six and nine hours and costs 7,800. For more information visit shonaikotsu.jp.

For Murakami, take the Joetsu Shinkansen to Niigata Station and change for the Inaho Limited Express to Murakami Station (50 minutes; 2,450).

Once in Tsuruoka or Murakami, renting a car is the best option, especially if you plan to leave the city center; public transport is limited, especially during the week. The Shonai Kotsu Haguro-Gassan Line runs from Tsuruoka Station to Mount Haguro (840) and beyond.

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Delicacies and the devout in northern Tsuruoka - The Japan Times

Louis Althusser’s Class Warfare – The New York Review of Books

Alain Mingam/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)Louis Althusser in his study, Paris, France, April 26, 1978

The singular hackneyed biographical detail about Louis Althusser (19181990) is his notoriety as the French Marxist philosopher who, in 1980, killed his wife, the sociologist Hlne Rytmann, and got off with being committed to a psychiatric hospital. The horror of his crime cannot be overstated, and there were those at the time who insisted Althusser stand trial for murder, but the French Penal Code allowed for a judgment of juridical-legal non-responsibility, attested to in Althussers case by three psychiatrists. Althusser was confined to a psychiatric institution for three years, one of several such hospitalizations, including treatment that had led to his absence during the events of May 1968. The tragic event of Rytmanns death serves to obscure his real significance from the early 1960s until the present, as his version of Structuralism-tinged Marxism became part of a dominant school in the academy: French Theory.

Despite the gaps he admitted to in his reading of philosophy, Althusser, who was a member of the French Communist Party (PCF) from 1948, effected a revolution in Marxism, positing that there had been an epistemological break in Marxs thought in 18451846 that placed his Philosophical and Economic Manuscripts of 1844stained with idealist aspirations, in Althussers wordsoutside what should properly be considered Marxism. That philosophy, Althusser believed, was most clearly articulated in Capital, the founding moment of a new discipline, the founding moment of a science. Marxism, he wrote, is, in a single movement and by virtue of the unique epistemological rupture which established it, an anti-humanism and an anti-historicism.

Althussers anti-humanism was a reaction to different camps within Marxism he believed had deviated into socialist humanism, which he described not only as a critique of the contradictions of bourgeois humanism, but also and above all as the consummation of its noblest aspirations. This drive to combine socialism and humanism was of dubious theoretical value, he reasoned, for the concept socialism is a scientific concept, but the concept humanism is no more than an ideological one. The unevenness between the two made them incompatible.

Rosa Luxemburg, George Lukacs, and Antonio Gramsci, as well as dissident Marxists like Karl Korsch, were prominent figures of one camp of what he considered Marxist humanists. In his own time, such left-humanists could be found in the Frankfurt School and the Yugoslavian Praxis Group, but also in certain tendencies within the USSR. In the mid-1970s, more threatening still for Althusser was the social-democratizing trend in the Western European Communist movement known as Eurocommunism, which opposed smashing the state and favored the electoral road, while stripping communism of the embarrassing notion of the dictatorship of the proletariat.

As French Theory incorporated Althussers ideas, one important aspect was left behind: his involvement in the issues confronting the French left and specifically the PCF in the late 1970s. The positions he took in the life of the PCF were a continuation of the theoretical work that can be found in his essential early works, Reading Capital and For Marx. For Althusser, the jettisoning by the Communist Parties of Spain, Italy, and France, the core of Eurocommunism, of the concept of the dictatorship of the proletariat, was unacceptable, for, he wrote, this dictatorship was central to Marxism in the realm of theory, and in practice was at least partially necessary if the revolution is not to get bogged down and come to grief.

Althusser was not just a Marxist philosopher, he was a Communist philosopher, which isnt necessarily the same thing. As he wrote in 1976, [W]hat defines the Party is not so much simply the class character of its membership or its scientific theory alone, but the fusion of these two things in the class struggle. In the English-speaking world, Althussers specifically Communist commitments took a back seat during his heyday. The absence of a serious working-class movement in the US and the UK led to Althussers ideas becoming chiefly a subject for academic study and abstruse intra-left debate, rather than a motor for action.

In France, though, he was very much present on the left, where his refusal to accept any softening of Marxism bridged the Sino-Soviet split in the Communist movement. He even wrote (anonymously) for the journal of the Maoist Union de la Jeunesse Communiste Marxiste Lniniste, a group that included the cream of the intellectual far left in France, most of them students of Althussers at the most elite of Frances universities, the cole Normale Suprieure. (Later, when illusions about the Cultural Revolution, Mao, and revolution in general crumbled, many of these Althusserian Maoists would form the basis for the anti-Marxist school of New Philosophers.)

For Althusser, philosophy was not a matter of abstract intellectual inquiry but a guide to actionand an action in itself: the demystifying of capitalism (as the excerpt below shows). His idiosyncratic canon included Lenin and Mao every bit as much as those classical thinkers usually taught in university classrooms. For Althusser, these two revolutionary leaders, normally viewed solely as political actors, were, thanks to their intellectual rigor, true philosophers. Even more, they fulfilled a central tenet of Marxism: The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it.

Mitchell Abidor

Thus it is that the capitalist is born. He is, at the outset, an independent petty producer who, thanks to his labour and his merits and his moral virtues, has succeeded in producing enough to sell enough to buy a few more tools, just what it takes to employ a few unfortunates who dont have anything to eat, because theres no room left on earth (which is round, that is, finite, limited, as Kant magnificently puts it) and because they werent able to become independent petty producers; he renders them the magnanimous service of giving them wages in exchange for their work. What generosity! But generosity too is in human nature. The fact that all this goes sour later, that the wage-workers have the bad grace to find that the work-day is too long and that their wages are too short, is also in human nature, which has its bad sides, just as it is in human nature that certain capitalistic independent petty producers take unfair advantage (evil sorts that they are!) of their wage-workers or, still worse, play tricks in their fashion, dirty tricks, on the other independent petty producers whom they regard (just imagine!) as their competitors and treat mercilessly on the market. These things ought not to exist, but there are not only good people in this world: one has to bear the cross of human wickedness or thoughtlessness. For if they only knew!

If they knew, they would know what we have just said: that there exists one natural mode of production and just one, the mercantile mode of production, constituted by independent petty producers with families, who produce in order to sell either their surplus or everything they produce, working alone with their little family or employing wretches without house or home whom they provide, out of love for their fellow man, with the bread of a wage, thus becoming, quite naturally, capitalists, who can get bigger, if the God of Calvin, who rewards good works, bestows that grace on them.

Thus it is that the mercantile mode of production or the mode of mercantile productionbased on the existence of independent petty producers who started out as subsistence farmers but were naturally destined to become merchants, part-time and then full-time merchants, and then merchants relying on wage-based (capitalist) productionis, for bourgeois ideology, the only mode of production there is.

There is no other. The others are just deviations or aberrations, conceived on the basis of this one and only mode: aberrations due to the fact that the Enlightenment had not penetrated peoples minds with its self-evident truths in these times of darkness and obscurantism. This explains the scandalous horror of slavery: people did not know at the time that all men are free (= have a right to human nature = can be independent petty producers). This explains the horror of feudalism: people did not know at the time that the feudal independent petty producer, the serf, was capable of leaving his land, taking up residence elsewhere and trading his products for other products, like every man on earthinstead of remaining confined to the horrid closed circle of bare subsistence, merely attenuated by that other horror, the corve for the lord and tithe for the Church.

Since the mercantile mode of production is perfectly mythical, an invention of the ideological imaginary, and since the act of foundation depends on the same imaginary, we have, on the one hand, the fact of the existence of the capitalist mode of production, which is terribly real, and, on the other, its theory, its essence, furnished us by the mythical, founding construction of the mercantile mode of production. The result of this act of imaginary foundation is as follows:

1). The capitalist mode of production, which exists, is the only one that can exist, the only one that exists, the only one that has a right to existence. The fact that it has not always existed (and even that must be qualified, for when we look into the matter in detail, we always find this reality, which is natural, everywhere: independent petty producers), or that it has not always visibly existed, obscured as it was by horrid realitiesthis is merely an accident of history. It should have existed from all eternity and, thank God, it exists today, having carried the day against obscurantism, and we may be sure that nature having finally vanquished non-nature, light having finally triumphed over darkness, nature and light, that is, the capitalist mode of production, can be sure of existing for all eternity. It has finally been recognized!

2). This guarantee having been obtained at last, the essence having at last attained to existence, we can, at last, understand everything. If we want to understand what the capitalist mode of production is, it is enough to go have a look at its origin, that is, its essence, the mercantile mode of production: we will find men, the independent petty producers, their families and all the tra-la-la.

3). We have at last arrived at existence and since what has arrived at existence is the essence, we have everything we need: existence, murmuring with satisfaction, and the essence that allows us to understand it. That way everyone is happy.

That way, in other words, bourgeois ideology has reached its goal: representing the capitalist mode of production as the development of an imaginary mercantile mode of production, and the genesis of the capitalist mode of production as the result of the work of deserving independent petty producers who became capitalists only because they really deserved to. It remains only to strike up the universal anthem of humanitys gratitude to free enterprise.

*

Give yourself, for starters, a capitalist honest enough to answer your questions and admit that he is driven to increase his fortune indefinitely, without pause and without respite. Ask him why he yields to this irresistible tendency. You will receive, in this order (disorder would be another order, the same order) the following answers:

1). The psychological capitalist will tell you: Im greedy and bent on acquiring wealth. My nature is such that I thirst for gold and my thirst is such that it makes me thirsty even when its slaked. Everyone knows the story about the sea: Why doesnt it overflow? Answer: because there is a goodly number of fish in the sea, and they drink a tremendous amount of water; since the waters salty, theyre always thirsty. We can only conclude that gold too is salty, since it makes a man thirsty all the time (thirsty for gold). Enough joking. Psychology, which always keeps philosophy and religion in the corner of its eye, answers: its in the nature of things and in human nature too; man is a creature of desire and is therefore insatiable, for desire is infinite. Whatever the world contains in the way of philosophers knows this, from Aristotle talking about Chrematistics down to Pascal and countless others: it is because man is finite that he is condemned to desires bad infinity (Hegel). There you have the reason that the capitalist enriches himself without end, to the point of losing sleep and desirehuman natures to blame.

2). The philosophical capitalist (a notch more sophisticated), versed in Hobbes and Hegel, will tell you: but my dear fellow, nature only reveals itself in its sublation! This desire that you think you bring to bear on mere things, such as goods, wealth or power (power is merely a means of procuring goods, or the men who procure goods) reaches infinitely higher! For example, if so-and-so chases after gold, it is less to satisfy a need (or desire) for wealth or power (for in these matters everything has its limits, and if mans desire is infinite, man isnt) than because he is seeking an altogether different good: the esteem of his peers, that which Hobbes calls glory and Hegel calls recognition. Thus the race for wealth and the race for power (the means of attaining wealth) are merely the obligatory detour that a law takes in order to impose itself on human individuals. In fact, look! The rich man always enriches himself at another mans expense; the powerful man always becomes powerful at a third partys expense. Universal competition rules the world and men are merely its puppets. Not competition for property and power: no, whoa! Competition is a more mysterious, more sophisticated desire: the desire for glory and recognition. Man wants only to be esteemed and recognized for what he is: more deserving than the others (Hobbes) or simply free (Hegel), by way of the figures of the master and slave. Thus, competition for goods and power is simply the means of, and a pretext for, competition of another kind, in which every man expects recognition of his glory or freedom from those he dominates. The insatiable thirst for riches thereby becomes an altogether spiritual affair, in which man can stand tall and proud for being endowed with a nature so dignified that it puts him a hundred feet above the base passions that were attributed to him. One may well be a bourgeois, one still has ones sense of honor.

3). The realistic capitalist (a notch more sophisticated theoretically), better versed in Hobbes, will tell you: the quest for glory is one thing! What matters is something else: the law that forces all men to seek glory, without sparing a one. For how is it that men are brought to engage in this frantic quest, by what power? To be sure, they all start out by desiring goods and, later, glory; but the fact that they all desire them with so equal a desire that this desire surpasses and governs them, and the fact that they are all, without exception, enrolled in the racethat is what calls for explanation. The reason is that, when the time comes, they unleash, unawares, the power of a law that annuls its origin: universal war, the war of all against all. The whole mystery of the matter resides in this conversion: individuals desiring goods, each for [his own] petty ends, and suddenly all of them together are thrown into a war so universal that it becomes a State of War. That is, a State of relations such that the war can flare up at any moment and anywhere (its like bad weather, Hobbes writes: it doesnt rain every day or everywhere, but it could rain anytime, anywhere at all) should someone attack someone else. With the establishment of this State of Universal Competition, aptly called the State of War and a War of All Against All, that is to say, a war of the first person who happens along against the second, things are converted a second time. Fear of being attacked makes men make the first move and war reveals itself for what it is: the essence of war is to be preventive.

With that, the portrait of competition is complete.

However, when we take a closer look at this preventive war that the capitalists wage on each other, it turns out to be a singular war! It pits the combatants against each other, of course, like every war, even the war of all against all. But the combatants, that is, the capitalists, do not really confront each other, since they spend their time protecting themselves against attack by taking preventive measures. In Hobbess war, we might suppose that it is a question of real attacks and that the parties preventively carry out real attacks so as not to be attacked. The same holds here: but rather than preventively launching real attacks, one simply beefs up ones forces, preventively, so as not to fall. To be sure, there are victims, bankruptcies, people left by the wayside. Yet, overall, the capitalists as a group come off rather well, so much so that Marx says of competition that it is ordinarily their friendly society: it is less the rule of the war they wage on each other than that of the war that they dont. Can we therefore say that this State of War is a State of Peace? My word, as far as the capitalist class as a whole is concerned, yes.

But then where is the war? Elsewhere: between the capitalists and their workers. By means of competition, the capitalist class adjusts its accounts rather than settling thembut behind competition, which Marx calls an illusion, the capitalist class wages a veritable war on the working class. For, ultimately, taken at its word, this theory of preventive war shows that prevention, well conducted, spares the capitalists war against other capitalists; it shows that the working class bears the full brunt of prevention, that prevention of the pseudo-war between capitalists is a permanent war against the working class. In that, the war is not at all universal, a war of all against all, as Hobbes claims; it is a war of the capitalist class against the working class. Thus the war that the capitalist class wages on the working class simply allows the capitalists to live in peace. We had been mixing up our wars. We had mistaken competition for a war. We had forgotten the class struggle.

This essay is adapted from Louis Althussers Book on Imperialism, which appears in History and Imperialism: Writings, 19631986, previously unpublished work translated and edited by G.M. Goshgarian, and published by Polity Press.

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Louis Althusser's Class Warfare - The New York Review of Books

Methodist split: Conservative event organizers respond to critics – AL.com

The organizers of a meeting of conservative United Methodists planning for a denominational split have published a response to critics of the meeting held Jan. 25 at Clearbranch United Methodist Church in Trussville.

The Rev. Paul Lawler, pastor of Christ United Methodist Church in Shelby County and president of the Wesleyan Covenant Association of North Alabama, published a response to a column by Arab First United Methodist Pastor Steve West. Lawlers blog post was co-signed by 55 other United Methodist clergy.

As the expected vote on a possible split in the United Methodist Church approaches in May at the next meeting of the General Conference, clergy in Alabama have been staking out positions and explaining where they stand.

Here is the statement Lawler and others published today on the New Methodist Movement blog:

A Response to Steve Wests article, Why Im not leaving the United Methodist Church

On Jan. 25, a large gathering of United Methodist lay-people and clergy took place in the Birmingham area at Clearbranch United Methodist. The theme of the day was, Why the Best Days of Methodism are Ahead of Us! The purpose of the gathering was to inspire hope for the future of a new Methodist movement. The day featured guest speaker Chris Ritter, and delegation members from multiple annual conferences from around the southeast. You can watch the video of the gathering at this link. Here is the United Methodist News Service article on the gathering: Traditionalists Event Draws Big Crowd. While the gathering did involve many who are in leadership in the Wesleyan Covenant Association, the gathering at Clearbranch was not a WCA event. In addition, the 60 pastors Steve refers to in his article are not all a part of the WCA. The gathering at Clearbranch was made up of traditionally orthodox lay-people and clergy, which transcends the constituency of the WCA.

While the event drew many pastors together, the critical masses of attendees were lay-persons from numerous United Methodist Churches. Following the event, some pastors posted their impressions of the gathering. Apparently, when approximately 1,000 United Methodists gather to consider the next steps, in light of the possible passage of the Protocol of Reconciliation & Grace through Separation, the movement will not be without its critics. Therefore, this article is provided to correct misinformation being propagated.

Rev. Steve West wrote a recent article. Steve is the pastor of Arab First United Methodist Church in Arab, Alabama. Steves article was published by Al.com at Steves request and also by United Methodist News Service, along with it being re-posted by several blog sites around the country. You can read his article here. Steve is a colleague in ministry, and we have had good interactions with him over the years.

While we love and appreciate Steve as a colleague, there are some things shared in his article that are misleading. We simply want to give greater clarity to many of the things he stated or implied:

Here are 9 Points of Clarification we wish to Share in Response to Steve Wests Article:

1. The Statement regarding the current human sexuality debate in the United Methodist Church.

Steve states in his article, The debate is incorrectly framed as being about Biblical authority when it is really about culture wars.

For the author to declare the debate in the United Methodist Church, is really about culture wars reflects a deep misrepresentation of the truth. While all of us are aware of the tensions in our culture regarding numerous issues, our debate and division in the United Methodist Church is not rooted in culture but in theology (And a failure of governance, which will be addressed later). A good working definition of theology is simply this: What we believe as the Church and why; or, as Webster put it, the study of God and of Gods relation to the world.

United Methodist theologian after theologian after theologian have all declared a clear, biblically rooted understanding of human sexuality, which includes admonitions to not redefine the covenant of Christian marriage. Thus, our debate is, in fact, rooted in theology and biblical authority, not culture.

There is no biblical text which supports the redefining of marriage as being between two men or two women. A revisionist perspective on human sexuality is a value of western culture, and not reflected in the Scriptures, 2,000 years of Christian tradition, the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, or through the majority of Christians around the world. We would submit that we are not the ones taking our cue from the culture, but those who wish to enable or support changing the definition of Christian marriage in the church are.

2. The Statement made regarding potentially joining the new Methodist denomination:

I feel it would disregard the vows I made at ordination. I promised I would be faithful to the UMC and uphold its discipline. I have done so even if others haventI feel leaving the UMC would be hypocritical

We understand the author is speaking for himself, but we must remember the author is writing this piece in the context of a response to the Clearbranch meeting, as described by Greg Garrison of Al.com. The implied inferences need to be addressed.

The crisis in the United Methodist Church is not just theological, but constitutional. Our present crisis is rooted in the failure of Bishops and leaders who have not upheld the vows they made at their ordination. This has led to chaos in the governance of the United Methodist Church. If there had been no crises of governance, we would not be where we are today.

In the words of United Methodist theologian, Dr. David Watson, who writes regarding Steves article via Twitter, Like so many commentaries on the United Methodist Church, the article misrepresents the reason for division. It is not disagreement. It is that we have abandoned our mechanisms for resolving disagreement. Our governance has failed, and it is no longer reparable.

As clergy, we all took vows to uphold the United Methodist Book of Discipline. If the proposed Protocol of Reconciliation & Grace through Separation passes at General Conference 2020, the denominational iteration known as the United Methodist Church will vote to redefine marriage and officially ordain same-sex partnered clergy. Therefore, for Christians whose convictions will not allow us to redefine marriage, it would be hypocritical for clergy to take a vow to serve in a denomination that redefines marriage when our conscience cannot support it. Where you feel, leaving the UMC would be hypocritical, we feel that if we stayed with the present iteration of the UMC, that we would be hypocritical. We cannot take a vow to uphold an ecclesiology that endorses patterns that we believe are in direct conflict with Gods will for humanity, as expressed through Scripture. You are okay being in a denomination that does choose to do so, and that is why you can stay and not be a hypocrite. We feel this point needed to be expressed with a greater degree of clarity for persons who have read your article.

3. The Statements:I am centrist and I am traditional and orthodox.

The author stakes out the claim that he is a theological centrist, and then later in the article, stakes out the claim that theologically he is traditionally orthodox.

It is worth noting that centrist and progressives, at times, work with multiple sets of definitions of terms. We need to clarify our definitions, lest we confuse lay-persons or even clergy in the UMC. We would like to go on record with the set of definitions we are utilizing.

Theological Progressive: Progressive Christianityis a post-liberal movement within Christianity that seeks to reform the faith via the insights of post-modernism and a reclaiming of the truth beyond the verifiable historicity and factuality of the passages in the Bible by affirming the truths within the stories that may not have actually happened. Progressive Christianity represents a post-modern theological approach and is not necessarily synonymous with progressive politics. It developed out of the Liberal Christianity of the modern era, which was rooted in enlightenment thinking (Source: Wikipedia).

Theological Centrist:A person who claims the classic creeds of Christianity, but is willing to be a part of a denomination that redefines Christian marriage. They may or may not be theological universalists or inclusivists, which underpins a lack of emphasis on mobilizing the church to fulfill the Great Commission. You can read one United Methodist theologians concerns regarding Pastors who become or are, theological centrist here.

Theologically Traditionally Orthodox: a person who holds to the classic definitions of Christianity, the exclusive claims of Christ regarding salvation, as well as Christian marriage being defined as being between one man and one woman.

We would like to ask you, as well as others, to dial down the use of incendiary language.

The gathering at Clearbranch was not schismatic.The United Methodist Church, which you expressed you would be faithful to through your vows, has officially engaged in the process of placing legislation before the 2020 General Conference for the creation of multiple expressions of Methodism. The Protocol for Separation has been worked on by Bishops and leaders from a wide variety of constituencies within United Methodism. In other words, consideration of a new Methodist movement is properly before the church according to her polity, which we all vowed to uphold. We are working within that framework. When using phrases like the Schism being planned,it is misleading and just plain wrong. The gathering of Clearbranch was rooted in seeking to love and shepherd people well as we navigate the change that is potentially before us as a people called Methodists. It was rooted in caring for people in light of change on the horizon.

It was Pastor Chris Ritter who recently appealed to all of us to, Think Methodist mitosis rather than scandalous schism. Mitosis is cell division that expands life, increases health. Wise division with multiplication in mind is essential gospel practice. Angry ripping (the literal meaning of schism) drains all contestants.

There is no schism being planned. There is; however, a formal plan coming before GC 2020 that may be designed to birth new expressions of Methodism.

We are not fundamentalists. We request that centrist and progressives stop labeling everyone who disagrees with their vision of the church as fundamentalists. Please take the time to read this link.

The use of the term southern secessionism.We are a global church. Consider the voices of our sisters and brothers in Africa. Consider United Methodist leaders serving in Colorado or Ohio or New Jersey who express that they cannot live in a church held captive by constitutional chaos and are determined to redefine Christian marriage. We believe the use of the phrase southern secessionism is a poor attempt to manipulate by playing off populist stereotypes. The phrase carries negative connotations from a dark period in U.S. history. Did you mean to impugn the character of approximately one thousand of your United Methodist sisters and brothers who gathered at Clearbranch in this way? Is this how you feel toward Catholics, and the overwhelming majority of Christians around the world whose convictions concerning the definition of marriage remain rooted in the biblical tradition?

You spoke in your article on the importance of grace being expressed toward all people. Are you expressing grace and love toward all people when you call your sisters and brothers in Christ, schismatic, fundamentalist and southern secessionist? Do these words reflect what you profess when you say, Our divided culture needs a witness to love that transcends our differences, not giving in to the prevalent us vs. them and either/or mentality?

Our denominations legislation related to all of this is titled, Protocol of Reconciliation & Grace through Separation. Lets dial down the incendiary language and remember to manifest grace toward one another through this process.

5. The Statement: Wesley said that separating from a body of living Christians with whom we were before united is a grievous breach of the law of love, and hence it is only when our love grows cold that we can consider separation.

You are quoting John Wesleys sermon, On Schism. You quote Wesley accurately where he supports your intended point, but you failed to quote Wesley from the same sermon when Wesley does not support the point you were attempting to make.

John Wesley goes on to say in the same sermon,

Yet if I was not permitted to remain therein without omitting what God requires me to do, it would then become meet and right, and my bounden duty, to separate from it without delay. To be more particular: I know God has committed to me a dispensation of the gospel; yea, and my own salvation depends upon preaching it: Woe is me if I preach not the gospel. If then I could not remain in the Church without omitting this, without desisting from preaching the gospel I should be under a necessity of separating from it, or losing my own soul. In like manner, if I could not continue united to any smaller society, Church, or body of Christians, without committing sin, without lying and hypocrisy, without preaching to others doctrines which I did not myself believe, I should be under an absolute necessity of separating from that society.

Through the work of the protocol, the post-separation UMC plans to make same-sex weddings a rite within her ecclesiology. We believe that serving in a denomination that chooses to change the definition of marriage from one man and one woman to include two men or two women, is a grievous sin that violates Scripture. Because of our conviction, it becomes implausible to preach Repent and believe the gospel while at the same time taking ordination vows to uphold an ecclesiology that is in direct conflict with the call of repentance that is necessary for faithful proclamation of the gospel. According to the sermon you quoted, Wesley did warn against schism, but he went on in that same sermon and stated there are times when it is right to separate.

6. The Statement:I believe in grace. Do our churches rebuke people who are divorced and remarried, not allowing them to serve in ministry? Im not saying we should hold remarried people in judgment, not at all. Im saying that if we offer grace in one situation addressed in scripture and not in another, its clearly not about Biblical authority but about culture wars. I cant be a part of a new movement that insists LGBTQ people cant be Christians. I know too many that are.

The reasoning here is pure conjecture.

Who is considering withholding grace toward anyone? Who is considering withholding grace toward divorced people, LGBTQ people, or remarried people? We are certainly not. All people are, and will continue to be, welcomed into the doors of our churches.

We, too, believe in grace. Grace that forgives. Grace that redeems. Grace that empowers the living of a transformed life through the gospel of Jesus Christ. We offer to all people the invitation, Repent and believe the gospel because Gods grace is open to all people.

7. The Statement:Jesus didnt even mention the issues that divide us,

Again, this is misleading. Jesus did speak to the issue of marriage, and He did so more than once. Jesus could have redefined what marriage is in a Roman culture that involved all types of sexual debauchery; but instead of redefining it, He chose to reinforce its definition:

JESUS: Havent you read, he replied, that at the beginning the Creator made them male and female, and said, For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate. Matthew 19:4-6 (NIV)

Christian marriage, and the deeper reality it signifies, has been defined by God through Scripture, by the red letters of Jesus Christ, and by the apostles. As already noted, United Methodist theologians have written thought- provoking articles on the biblical rooted view of human sexuality.

Concerning our governance and the failure of Bishops and leaders in keeping their ordination vows, Jesus spoke clearly in the Sermon on the Mount about keeping ones vows (See Matthew 5:33-37).

To suggest that Jesus didnt even mention the issues that divide us is simply misleading.

8. The Statement: but theres something else that he most definitely did talk about our unity, for thats what Jesus prayed for in John 17.

We choose to be in unity with the great mass of Christians all over the world who interpret Scripture to be authoritative and agree on traditional definitions of sexual morality and Christian marriage.

Please take the time to read this link: When Unity at All Cost is too Costly.

9. The Statement: there are so many positive things to be lost by leaving. Together we have created the United Methodist Committee on Relief, the Upper Room, the Walk to Emmaus, the Academy for Spiritual Formation, Africa University, and all sorts of regional treasures like Sumatanga and the Childrens Home.

If one takes the time to watch the video of the gathering at Clearbranch, we have gone on record in the panel discussion that a new Methodist movement would continue to support United Methodist Committee on Relief(UMCOR); as well as United Methodist Childrens Homes. We are Methodists who remain passionate for involvement in Walk to Emmaus, and the Academy for Spiritual Formation and support mission to our African sisters and brothers. To infer that a new Methodist movement would forsake these things reflects false assumptions and misinformation.

Before we close, we would like to call on centrist and progressive pastors to stop misrepresenting the traditionally orthodox within their own denomination and within their own congregations. Your misrepresentations are disingenuous at best. United Methodist lay-people are educated and smart, and will ultimately discern when less than accurate and incendiary statements are being made. For the record, in a potential new Methodist movement:

We are committed to women being ordained in ministry. This is not unclear, and it is not unknown. Read this link. Read this link. And read this link. Please refrain from continuing a narrative that does not reflect this fact.

We are committed to dynamic life-transforming ministry with every ethnic group.

We are committed to the continuation of the office of Bishops, the authority of Bishops, and the continuation of being a connectional church that fosters accountability. Please refrain from continuing a narrative that does not reflect this fact.

We are committed to revising our apportionment formula to advance greater expressions of mission. Our connectional giving, and the outdated structure some of it supports, can be better utilized for greater expressions of Gods mission outside the walls of the church both locally and globally.

We are committed to lay pastors, their empowerment, and ways to bolster their voice and involvement in the life of the church on all levels.

We are committed to a new day for a people called Methodists! A new day that rekindles the best of our originating impulses by planting new churches in the United States and around the world. A new day of equipping local bodies with the seeds of church revitalization! A new day of seeing life-giving expressions of the captive being set free and the binding up of brokenness thats pervasive all around us.

We believe the best days of Methodism are ahead of us!

Sincerely,

Tim Alexander, Jeff Armbrester, Steve Baccus, Tim Barnes, Jake Barrett, Kenny Baskins, Alan Beasley, Keith Beatty, Harvey Beck, Bart Bowlin, Liz Bowlin, Charlie Brown, Glenn Conner, Raul Dominguez-Flores, Bridget Dowdy, Dee Dowdy, Eddie Gooch, Tommy Gray, Rudy Guess, Barry Hallman, Randall Ham, Todd Henderson, Gail Hiett, John Hill, Lyle Holland, Jody Hooven, Ron Howard, Sam Huffstutler, Nicky James, John Kearns, Tiwirai Kufarimai, Mark Lacey, Robert Lancaster, Paul Lawler, Bo Lloyd, Mark Mayo, Vicki Mann, Chris Martin, Michael Miller, Chris Montgomery, Deborah Moon, Todd Owen, Mark Parris, Scott Railey, John Ryberg, Ricky Smith, Vaughn Stafford, John Tanner, Rusty Tate, Blue Vardaman, John Verciglio, Ben Vernon, Ray Weaver, Michael Wilder, Trav Wilson, Lee Witherington

Read more here:

Methodist split: Conservative event organizers respond to critics - AL.com

From government shutdown to business owner: Why a Durham mom launched Bright Black – WRAL.com

By Sarah Lindenfeld Hall, Go Ask Mom editor

Durham, N.C. Tiffany M. Griffin's previous career took her around the world, meeting with world leaders and United Nations delegates. After earning a doctorate in psychology from the University of Michigan, she held positions with the U.S. Agency for International Aid, at the U.S. Senate and in academia, among others.

Today, she's making candles.

Griffin, who lives in Durham with her husband and young daughter, launched Bright Black in 2019. The company features candles made with all-natural products that honor the Black Diaspora through their scents and designs.

Bright Black was born during the government shutdown of December 2018 to January 2019. As Griffin, then a federal employee, waited to get back to work, she wrote the business plan, got the necessary permits and incorporated. On Nov. 1, the business officially launched. "It's been a WILD ride ever since," she tells me.

I checked in with Griffin to learn more about the business, the meaning behind it an what she hopes for the future. Here's a Q&A.

Go Ask Mom: What's the back story to Bright Black? How did it all come about?

Tiffany M. Griffin: I first learned candle making back in 2014 when my now husband and I first started dating. We both like candles and thought it would be a fun and romantic activity to make them together. He was really into perfecting the processes, and I was really into designing the scents. We gave our creations to friends and family and got really positive feedback. That's when we first thought we may be onto something. Initially, we thought we'd create candles that paid tributeto hip hop love songs (we both love hip hop and were falling in love!). It would take five years, amarriage, a baby, a move from DC to North Carolina and the government shutdown to create enough timeand space to refine our concept to what we know it today Bright Black!

In the end, we broadened our concept from hip hop love songs to Bright Black, but the essence of the companys mission remained. In the beginning, we wanted to highlight hip hop love songs because hip hop often has a really negative connotation. Our experience of the genre though was that much of the content is positive and uplifting and full of themes of love and the genre was truly, truly life saving for many people who enjoy it (beyond the mainstreamhits on the radio).

When firming up the concept of Bright Black, we saw parallels between the misconceptions of hip hop (and our contrasting experiences of it) and the misconceptions of black people and black culture as a whole (and our contrasting experiences of it).

When I got pregnant, I contemplated the messages my child would receive from society for countless hours. I, of course, could not control everything that she would see or hear from society about her blackness, but I COULD control what I teach her and expose her to. In many ways, Bright Black is about ensuring our daughter (and others!) have access to positive (and accurate!) representations about blackness.

GAM: Tell us about your candles. What sets them apart, and where can you find them?

TMG: There are a couple of levels to this answer.

First, theres the scent art and the mission of Bright Black. Then theres the materials that make up our candles and the packaging. And then theres the meaning behind candles themselves.

I consider myself a scent artist. Much of the power of Bright Black lies in the scents themselves. Smell is an extremely powerful (and completely underrated!) sense. You have to be present to experience it. It undergirds memory (and taste). There are hundreds of olfactory receptors. I define art as communicating messages through amedium of choice. My medium is scent. Im communicating messages of place andhistory through our Diaspora Collection, messages of creativity and resilience throughour Genres Collections, messages of coping and thriving through our Nourish NoirCollection.

When it comes to our materials and packaging, our candles are vegan and use all natural soy and coconut waxes that we blend ourselves. This combination of waxes creates a super clean, long-lasting burn. We use wood (whisper) wicks which crackle softly as the candle burns (as a nod to nature, and to provide an auditory component to the candle burning experience). There are no phthalates or synthetic dyes (actually no dyes period!). Inshort, the candles are made of extremely high quality materials. The black matte,simple, modern packaging is again a nod to the brilliance of blackness. The packaging isbeautiful and, along with the scent, sends a message before one even delves into themission and meaning behind the company. This was all by design.

And then there's the meaning behind the candles. Candles have been used as a source of light for over 5,000 years, beginning with the ancient Egyptians. They are one of the oldest sources of light on the planet. They transcend cultures, language, geography, race, and religion. They breakdown barriers and force you to focus on the aura of the flame. Candles sparkenlightenment, are a symbol of celebration, and can create a mood. Candles alsoilluminate subtly; they don't beat you over the head with messages.

The presence of a candle can spark dialogue, and they symbolize solidarity (think vigil), passion, security, warmth, hope, spirituality and connection to the spiritual world, new beginnings (think birthday candles!), health, protection, blessing, memories, calm.Candles speak to our souls. What better platform for sparking dialogue and connectionaround blackness?

4. What's the reception been like so far?

TMG: TRULY MAGICAL!!!!!!!!! Honestly, sometimes I cant believe it. Folks have been really supportive of the mission and really love the product. And the support has been pretty universal, including different racial, gender, age, and geographic groups. We feel beyond lucky and blessed.

GAM: You took a big leap leaving your full-time job to start your company. What's been the biggest challenge and the biggest reward?

TMG: YOU BET I DID!!!!!!

I had been considering leaving my job for quite some time. A number of life events and logistics, along with wanting to ensure some sort of sustainability of my work, kept me in my position. But when the government shutdown hit, and then lasted for weeks upon weeks, I knew that my itch for entrepreneurship was not going away. I started seeing a counselor to work through a lot of my personal roadblocks. I knew I wanted to leave, but didnt know what Iwanted to do. I considered launching a consultancy in the same field I was in. My intuitionand gut didnt really want to go in that direction, but my fears and anxiety and ego did. I am adoctor and have held some pretty high profile jobs. My work took me around the world. Ivepresented to world leaders, schmoozed with United Nations delegations. Was I seriously going to leave allthat to make candles?!?!?

And then there was the financial stability element to all of this. I grew up very poor. Not middle class. Poor. Despite being upwardly mobile, the fragility of poverty was omnipresent as I embarked on this huge decision. All of this to say, that the biggest challenge has been psychological (how ironic that Im a psychologist! ha!). Ive worked REALLY hard to get over the negative self-talk, to trust my capacity, and to follow my heart.

Now, dont get me wrong, behind following my heart is a TON of planning, research and analysis. I saved for three years before resigning from my government job. My 2020 strategic plan alone is 15 pages long. I know exactly how many candles we need to sell to cover our expenses! But, in the end, I wouldnttrade it for the world! Ive by and large conquered the negative self-talk. First, Im not justmaking candles (and even if I was, that would be OK!). Im doing exactly what Ive done in all ofmy other positions to date Im trying to make a positive impact on this world we live in duringmy very short time on this planet. Its been research and policymaking and blogging in the past.

This is the platform Im leveraging now and who knows that may change in the future too! The biggest rewards have included the reception from others and positive feedback, the flexibility I have to be the mom I want to be. And, to be clear, I am NOT working any less than I worked before! BUT I have more control of when and how I work, which is a huge blessing. Also, when you work for the governmentyou represent the government and its agenda. Working for myself affords me thechance to represent my own agenda. I have my voice again. Finally, Ive REALLY enjoyed all ofthe people Ive had a chance to connect with while on this journey so far customers, suppliers,retailers, other business owners. Its been really cool!

GAM: What are your hopes for the future of your business?

TMG: I have so many!

On a macro level, I hope that our business builds more connection and infuses the world with more positivity. Im also really looking forward to doing more commissions and custom scents for families, organizations, initiatives and businesses. Its really fun!

I, of course, hope to get to the point of financial resilience, profitability and stability. Despite saving to get to the point where I could resign, this beginning stage of our business is very fragile, especially because our business is 100% bootstrapped no financial capital (not even from friends or family) has been applied to the business to date. I look forward to the time when we have the scale and systems in place to easesome of that latent anxiety and to breathe a bit easier.

Im also looking forward to releasing our future collections and limited edition scents, as well as leveraging our brand for group dialogue and connection.

Go Ask Mom features local moms every Monday.

Read more from the original source:

From government shutdown to business owner: Why a Durham mom launched Bright Black - WRAL.com

Christianity gave women a dignity that no previous sexual dispensation had offered: Tom Holland – Scroll.in

Did Christianity fade with the coming of the Enlightenment in the West? Not at all, argues British historian Tom Holland in his new book Dominion: The Making of the Western Mind. In fact, Holland argues, the West is suffused with Christianity to this very day.

On the sidelines of the Jaipur Literature Festival, Holland spoke to Scroll.in about why he thinks the pagan morality of the Romans is alien and very terrifying, how the Me Too movement embodies Christian ideas about sex, what impact Christs emphasis on the little guy has on right wing populism sweeping through the West today, and more. Excerpts from the interview.

Many people believe the modern West was made in a post-Christian world, by overturning the ideals of Christianity. But youre saying that is actually not true: the West is shot through with Christianity.Yeah, when I was writing the book [the trick] was to think of the people in the west as goldfish, swimming in a goldfish bowl, and so were oblivious to the fact that were in this goldfish bowl. We just take the waters that we swim in for granted. But I think that the waters that we swim in remain deeply Christian. And it was when Id finished the book that, actually, I came across an even better metaphor, when I watched a drama series about Chernobyl, the Soviet reactor that exploded in the Ukraine.

In the TV series, you had two characters that were right up close to where the radioactivity was leaking from the ruptured power station. And you could literally see it, because the air was being ironised. But, of course, that radioactivity then spreads over Ukrainian forests and over Swedish seas. And you dont see the radioactivity, but you breathe it in, and you are affected and changed by it.

So by comparing Christianity to this, I dont mean that it kills you or makes your hair fall out, or whatever. What I mean by that is that if youre up close to the manifestations of Christianity, if youre in Rome, or Paris, you, of course, can see evidence of Christianity all around you. But, I think that it spreads, and, people who use words like secularism, people who use words like homosexuality and so this is true of India as much as it is of countries in western Europe, or the United States they also in a sense are breathing in this Christian radioactivity, being changed by it, even if they may not realise it.

What I found interesting is that you had a bit of a personal journey, which preceded the book. You started off as a great fan of the Antiquity. And you thought Christianity ushered in an age of superstition and credulity. What made you change your mind? The way I read the book is that not only are you describing this process of the West being saturated with Christianity, but you also think its a good thing. You said you were aghast with pagan morality.I do think its a good thing. But the reason I think its a good thing is precisely because Ive grown up in a Western country, so my perspectives and my assumptions about what a good thing is, in fact, is deeply Christian. But it took me time to realise that. And part of the reason is just that although I was brought up a Christian as child, and I went to church and I kind of believed it, and I was interested in the Bible, I was interested in stories.

The truth was that I was much more interested in the glamour and the swagger and the cruelty and the drama of the great empires who feature in the Bible. So, I wasnt particularly interested in the children of Israel. I was massively with the Egyptians, and the Syrians, the Babylonians and the Persians, and then the Greeks, and then of course, the Romans. And if youd ask me, you know, when I was 10, whose side are you on? Pontius Pilate or Jesus? Id tend to go for Pontius Pilate because youve got the eagles, and the purple, and the legionaries.

And so I had a sense of emotional identification with the swagger and the glamour of the Classical World. When I came to start my writing career, I wrote books on what I was most interested in, which was the Greek and the Roman world. But the experience of having to live in the minds of Greeks and Romans for years at a time, made me come to realise that actually, they were very alien and very terrifying.

Rome in particular was kind of the apex predator of the ancient world. Its like the Great White Shark or a Tyrannosaur. Objects of immense fascination. You wouldnt want to live with a fish tank with a Great White Shark, you wouldnt want to have a Tyrannosaurus a pet. And so I began to ask myself more and more: how and why did this process of transformation happened?

Im going to push back slightly on one thing. You say that Christianity upended this idea that the strong are always right. And the example youve given is the crucifixion. This terrible Roman punishment for slaves was taken by Christians and made into a symbol of love and forgiveness. Maybe the larger point youre making is wanton cruelty was almost celebrated in the ancient world as a sign of power.I think theres a kind of quality of callousness that to us seems terrifying, but to them it was an entirely innocent quality.

But the thing is, even after Europe converted to Christianity wholly lets go right to the 1500s would public torture and execution be so very unusual? I get what youre saying about what Christianity said. But what did it do?Youre absolutely right. Christianity is founded on the principle of the first will be last, the last will be first. Well, you know, there are kings and nobles and rulers and beggars. And the foundational symbol of Christianity is someone suffering death on an instrument of torture. There are tortures, there are people burned, there are people hanged. Of course, and Christianity is founded on someone who, rather than fight back, surrenders himself, puts up his sword and willingly goes to death. But there are people with crosses on their surcoats who are attacking Muslim Spain and attacking the pagans.

Or attacking other Christians...Or attacking other Christians. And theyre taking the cross across the Atlantic and wiping out great empires there. So of course, there is a massive, massive tension there. But what is I think suggestive about this is that individual Christians, and indeed even those who may be executioners or kings or military leaders, at the back of their mind there is always the voice of conscience saying are you sure that this is justified? in a way that no Roman ever had that voice in the back of his head.

And, I think that is pretty radically different. It means that when a nobleman may be riding out on his horse, and he passes a beggar, hed look down at that beggar and part of what he is, is the anxiety that that beggar may be Christ. And its part of the churn of ideas that makes European history so restless and so transformative. Because if you look at the most convulsive development in modern European history, the French Revolution, it ends up targeting Christianity, the great Cathedral of Notre Dame gets converted into a temple to Supreme Reason.

But everything about the French Revolution is drawing on deeply Christian ideas. And so, the king is brought low, the church is brought low, but the church is brought low for deeply Christian reasons. The idea is that the church has been upholding monarchy. The priests somehow lost touch with those who are poor.

Your book pushes the idea that the West is swimming in Christian waters. What I found very interesting is that you identify fascism as an anti-Christian idea. You say its the one thing that has escaped those waters. Isnt it a bit of a cop out to say that the one really evil Western idea is not Christian?But why do we say its evil? The Nazis didnt think they were evil. The Nazis thought that what they were doing was for the good of the race. And the truth is that humans are naturally given to the worship of strength and power. And were naturally given to groupthink, we find it much easier to identify with people who are exactly like us, than with people from vastly different cultures.

Id say that its there in Islam as well. I have a kind of potential brotherhood and sisterhood. I think people naturally, if you look at the course of history, people instinctively feel most comfortable with people who are like themselves. And the great foundational texts of Christianity are opposed to this. Paul says that there is no Jew or Greek, ie, there is no black or white. There is no Englishman or Indian. Theyre all kind of essentially one. Were all created equally in the image of god, there is a set core equality.

Now that is something that the Nazis are radically opposed to. They say, No, you know, absolutely there is Jew and Greek. Indeed, Hitler blames the Jews for the destruction of Greek and Roman culture. And the other thing that the Nazis, following in the footsteps of Nietzsche, are opposed to is the idea that there should be a strength and weakness. That those who are downtrodden should have a moral authority over those who are in power. And so that again is what licenses the death not just of the Jews, but of people with physical or mental disabilities.

But the Nazis do this convinced that Christianity has been a kind of grey breath that has destroyed everything thats most heroic and noble in the German. Hitler thinks that both the Greeks and the Romans are of Germanic stock, and that they were destroyed by Paul coming along with his cosmopolitan insistence that all humans are equal.

And so this actually leads to what is perhaps the most grotesque paradox in the whole of Christian history, which is that one of the reasons that the Jews get targeted for genocide is because Hitler blames them for Christianity. And so when the Nazis deny the common brotherhood of man, and when they deny that those who are at the bottom of the pile have a kind of moral strength greater than that at the top of the pile, they are trampling on the fundamentals of Christianity in a way that the French revolutionaries didnt.

And the way that even the Russian revolutionaries didnt, even though the Nazis sign a concordat with the Catholic Church, and are kind of perfectly happy to sponsor Lutherans, whereas both the French and the Russian revolutionaries targeted the church for destruction. Nevertheless, the Russian revolutionaries are vastly more Christian than the Nazis and I think that explains why in the modern West Nazi is a term of horror in a way that say communism isnt, even though Stalin and Mao probably killed vastly more people than Hitler did. Theres a feeling that these are our people who we can recognise as being part of the kind of organic growth of our assumptions, even if were not thinking of it explicitly in those terms.

The other thing that I want to also just connect to the present day: This very powerful Christian idea that the weak are the actual inheritors of the earthThe first shall be last and the last shall be first

Its a fascinating idea that upends so much of what we think of as natural. One place where I really see this going on today is in right wing populism. There is a sense that the little guy, right or wrong, is the real owner of the nation and elites are evil. Do you see parallels with Christianity here? Are they co-opting the rhetoric of Christianity?I think the idea that those from the bottom of the pile have a kind of moral stature that those at the top dont is again part of the Christian air that we in the West breathe.

Theres a British thinker who looking at Brexit has coined the phrase that there are somewheres and there are anywheres. And Brexit is a revolt of the somewheres. Those who have a particular sense of location against anywheres, and obviously thats something thats kind of happening in India as well. Thats a very similar sense of tension.

As I say, I think the idea that there is a brotherhood of man is not something that comes naturally to people. And it may be that you see whats happening in the West, in a way thats distinctive, is that up until the Second World War, the great moral figure in the West, even if you were an atheist, was Jesus. You would say, what would Jesus do? Pretty much everyone, even if you didnt believe in Christianity, accepted that Jesus was a kind of the moral fulcrum, the way that you would judge what is right.

With a Second World War that changes and the person who becomes the great moral exemplar becomes Adolf Hitler. And essentially in the wake of the Second World War people in the West have said, what is right? And the answer to that is not what Jesus did. But its the opposite of what Hitler did.

So, what we do in the West is to say, what would Hitler have done, and then we do the opposite. Now, this is still a kind of Christian way of thinking. Because, you know, Nietzsches famous parable is that god is dead, but his corpse is so huge that it will cast shadows for centuries to come. In a sense, this is a kind of shadow of the corpse of god.

Were shocked by the Nazis because the Nazis trampled on Christian assumptions. But theres a problem, I think that we are starting to face now in the West, which is that the things that Christianity demands are quite difficult. Its quite difficult to love your enemies. Its quite difficult to be as welcoming to people who are outside your family, your clan, your nation, as to within.

And what resources do people have in the West now to make this case, to say the first will be last, the last will be first? Well, people are saying if you believe this, then youre a Nazi. People are starting to get fed up with that. What Christianity offers is the sense of mystery, the sense that this is rooted in an understanding of the cosmos, that it is greater than any human being can possibly comprehend. And it provides this immense wealth of writing and religious practice and devotion and art and philosophy that the lack of belief now in the West means that we are losing touch with.

And so I think that part of what drives the rise of populism is partly actually an expression of the way in which that incredible kind of wealth, spiritual wealth that exists in Christianity which animated people to become ascetics or to go to the ends of the world preaching the gospel, thats gone.

So, youre saying, loss of faith is leading to a loss of this larger Christian ideal.I think that in the wake of the Second World War, the fact that the Nazis were such a terrifying exemplar meant that actually the loss of overt Christian faith didnt really matter. And in fact, I think the two are interlinked. Devotional Christianity in the West falls off a cliff in the 60s, which is when people are starting to wake up to the Holocaust and the full horror of what the Nazis have done.

But I think now that impact is starting to fade, and so I do slightly worry where our moral fulcrum will be if we cant rely on the Nazis to be the boogeyman and weve lost touch with the overt Christian legacy. You know, will it start to fade and dissipate?

So, you sort of echo Voltaire, you really fear what would happen if god is completely gone from our world? You really think there is a need to invent a god.Im not quite as cynical as that. But what I do think is that an idea you said with this is my sense of what is good. My sense of what is good is Christian. And so, I dont want to lose that because I think those, essentially, are my values. So I want those values to be watered and sustained. I want the soil in which from which they spring to continue to have nutrients. And I think at the moment we dont have that.

Im going to yank you back 2,000 years. You make a radical argument that Christianity was revolutionary. It completely upended Antiquity. So is there nothing of Europes old faiths or moralities left? Or was it all upended by this newcomer from the east?In India, there is a kind of continuity. You can trace the transmission of philosophical texts. Whereas in the West, we do have a sense of fracturing. And I used to think that the fracturing was a socioeconomic one. That it was the collapse of the Roman Empire, that explained it. But I think now actually that it is Christianity that is the great rupture.

There is no equivalent to the coming of Christianity in India, not even the coming of Islam, because not everyone is converted to Islam. But in Europe, unlike in India for most of its history, from the end of the Roman Empire up really until the post war period, Europe has had a mono-culture. Its been Christian. There have been the odd population of Jews, but no one else really.

We just dont have the range of approaches and understandings of god that you have in India. Were not a land of many gods. For centuries and centuries, we just have the one god. The consequence of that, I think, is that we are separated from what existed before the coming of Christianity by a great cloud of dust particles.

Of course, we have the inheritance of the classical texts, we have the classical poets, we have the classical philosophers. Aristotle is hugely influential on the way that Christianity is constructed in the Middle Ages. Plato, in the Renaissance. But I think its almost impossible for us to get back to what Aristotle or Plato meant before the coming of Christianity. They have been Christianised, our understanding of the classical past has been Christianised.

What religion did the Greeks have? Religion is a deeply Christian category for the reasons that I explained at the beginning. The idea of religion as something separate from the rest of what people are doing is a completely Christian idea. Terms like ancient Greek or ancient Indian religion, those are highly anachronistic. Its like saying that Julius Caesar invaded France. You know what I meant, but its kind of very, very wrong. And thats really why I wanted to write the book, from an increasing sense of frustration that even the words I was using as someone writing in English were stopping me from getting back to what the Romans and Greeks thought.

I know you raised the point that the words heterosexual and homosexual bear a Christian imprint, yet on the other hand, what is permitted sexually today would offend most if not all believing Catholics. Tinder would offend a believer. Whats the catch? Why is this Christian or not pagan? It looks pagan to me.So youre quite right. As I began the book, I was thinking, well, essentially the whole Christian sexual morality in the West has gone. But then while I was writing it, the Harvey Weinstein episode happened. And what was interesting about that, and the whole Me Too movement, which followed it, was that nobody said, well, whats wrong with a very powerful man sexually abusing his social inferiors. And the Me Too movement depended for its effectiveness not just on women accepting its premises but men.

And the question, why do people take for granted that powerful men do not have the right to use their social inferiors in a sexual manner, is one that actually goes back to the very heart of the theme of Dominium. Because that was what the Romans took for granted. The dynamic in the Roman world was not between, as it is now, men and women. It was between those who have power, namely Roman free male citizens, and those who were subordinate to them. And essentially the Roman sexual universe was by our lights very brutal. It was a very Harvey Weinstein sexual arena.

A Roman man had the right to sexually use anyone who was subordinate to him: Slaves, social inferiors. He could just use their mouths, their various orifices, as receptacles for his excess sperm. And so, the Romans had this one word mayo for urine and ejaculate. This is how its seen. And so it casts those who have to receive the Roman males attentions in a rather unpleasant light.

Now, Christianity radically, radically changes that. Its there in the very earliest Christian texts: Pauls letters. And Paul is a Jew. So, he has an idea that the binary is male and female; god creates man and women separate. So, he brings that assumption to the table. But he also brings another novel assumption, which is that Christ came and suffered death out of love for humanity.

And so, what Paul does is to say that love, all you need is love. Love is the greatest animating force. And if we want to have a sexual relationship with another human being, then it must be true to the love that Christ has shown for humanity. So, what Paul does is to say that there can be only one way, one proper way, of having a sexual relationship, and that is you have to have a marriage that is monogamous.

The Jews would have numerous wives. The Romans were monogamous, but they could kind of dump their spouses at regular intervals. Paul says no, it has to be monogamous. So a lifelong monogamous relationship. Something very, very odd. Theres nothing like this before. But more than that: the reason why this matters is that Paul says that the man who marries a woman is like Christ, marrying the church. So that gives an incredible sacral potency to every man and every woman in a married relationship.

These [Romans] are householders who, until they get converted by Paul, are taking for granted that they have the right to sleep with who they like. But Paul is now saying no, you are the image of Christ. Christ doesnt go around sexually forcing himself on the cullery maid or page boys. Only with your wife.

And likewise, it might seem sexist now, that the woman gets to be the church and doesnt get to be Christ. But actually, what Paul is doing is giving an incredibly potent sacral quality to the physical body of a woman. That a woman is not there to be sexually abused. Shes not there to be jumped on by a powerful male. And if thats true of an aristocratic woman, its also true of the lowest humblest woman in a Roman household.

The scale of this transformation cannot be over-emphasised. And its something that offers to women a dignity that no previous sexual dispensation had offered. And over the course of the first centuries of Christianity, this understanding of sex eats like a kind of acid through the understanding that the Romans previously had of how sex operates. And over the course of Christian history, the church imposes on believing Christians this sense that being a powerful male does not license you to have multiple wives and concubines. You have to focus on one.

And over the course of time, this further results in the idea that its the responsibility of a man and a woman to choose each other. And this gets enforced over the course of the Middle Ages by a succession of church cannons, which prescribed for instance that cousins cant marry cousins, second cousins cant marry all the way up to six degrees of separation. And the effect of this is to smash the power of clan lords patriarchs who feel that they have the right to marry one cousin off to another to keep things in the family.

So that by the time and Shakespeare comes to write Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare is writing this in London, which is by this point a Protestant city nevertheless, hes taking this Catholic idea and the bread of the medieval Christian church for granted. So the Montagues and the Capulets are clans and when Capulet wants to marry his daughter Juliet off to her cousin, he takes it for granted that he has the right to do this.

But who is it who facilitates Juliets right to choose her own husband Romeo? Its the friar. And this is so deeply embedded that when English settlers go to America they take it with them. And Puritan is now a dirty word. But actually, what Puritans are about are its there in the word its about purity. And part of that purity is sexual purity. And its not just repressive.

Within a marriage, Puritan men and women have as much sexual fulfilment as you possibly want. But outside it, you have purity by respecting the bodily integrity of, you know, your servant girl. You shouldnt go to prostitutes and things like that.

And so, for centuries, this was taken for granted in America and England. And its really only with the 1960s that that changes. But again, weirdly and paradoxically, it changes for Christian reasons because the 60s revolution is inspired by the last great overtly Christian convulsion in American politics, which is a civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King, who speaks of Jesus as being an extremist for love.

And Martin Luther King makes his appeal to White Americans in the name of love. And in the 60s, this idea that those who have been oppressed, the downtrodden, have a right to share in the universal love, its something that gets taken up by feminists, it gets taken up by gay rights campaigners. But that serves to kind of sever the link with doctrinal Christianity even if not with cultural Christianity.

Something that does cut the link not just with doctrinal, but with cultural Christianity is the idea that starts to bed down in the 60s, that love is not just spiritual, but physical. And then therefore, all you need is love means that you can basically have sex with anyone you like. And this becomes something that hippies over the course of the 70s and the 80s, in the West again, bed down.

But it turns out, as we see now in America, that this idea that free love is a great thing, have sex any way you want, actually turns out to be better for men than for women, because essentially, its licences for men to sexually harass their social inferiors. And thats what the Harvey Weinstein Me Too thing is all about. And, and, in a way, the perfect illustration of this paradox, a kind of moral Mobius Strip, is that when women go on their marches to protest against sexual harassment, many of them will wear red robes and white bonnets.

This is the uniform that theyve taken from The Handmaids Tale, a novel by Margaret Atwood, which then became a TV series: a dystopian satire set in a future America thats become basically fundamentalist Christian. And its drawing on the model of Puritan New England. But what is it that these women are demanding? Theyre demanding that men become Puritan.

Theyre demanding that they that they exercise sexual self-restraint, sexual continence, and that they respect a womans right to choose her own partner. And that is nothing if not the demonstration of the fact that Christianity is always going to come back. We in the West, we cannot escape, we cannot escape it. It always returns even if its not wearing an overtly Christian form.

Okay, final question, Tom. I follow you on Twitter. So, I know youre an ace cricketer.[Laughs] If youre relying on what I say about myself on Twitter...

How does cricket connect to Christianity?It doesnt at all. There is no link. The whole idea that cricket is somehow good for you and morally improving is a wholly bogus Victorian invention. Actually cricket emerges from gamblers and the spirit of competition. And I think thats what its basically turned to. So, I dont think that cricket has anything at all to do at all with Christianity.

Listen to the full interview.

Continued here:

Christianity gave women a dignity that no previous sexual dispensation had offered: Tom Holland - Scroll.in

Why Bodhisattvas Need to Disrupt the Status Quo – Lion’s Roar

According to Zen priest and climate scientist Kritee, part of our work in addressing climate change is to understand systems how they work, how were complicit in them, and how we can change them to work for the good. From the Spring 2020 issue ofBuddhadharma: The Practitioners Quarterly.

Following Hurricane Katrina, a New Orleans resident in a temporary shelter drops to her knees and screams, imploring journalists to help (September 1, 2005). Photo by Ted Jackson, The Times-Picayune/Landov

For the past decade, I have been researching the climate impacts of different food production practices, which is important because our global food system contributes more than a third of all human-generated climate pollution. Recently I had the opportunity to present my research to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which brought mebrieflya sense of empowerment in the face of the climate crisis. But my deeper truth is that I find myself working with intense climate grief.

Im not alone. A growing number of climate scientists and activists report sleeplessness, anxiety, and even panic attacks. Many are overwhelmed by grief or anger. If I were not engaged in regular meditation and grief practices, as well as strategic actions with an ever-widening circle of ecodharma activists, I know I would be overwhelmed too.

In the past year, I have been in touch with a growing number of fellow dharma teachers who are waking up to the climate crisis and getting involved in climate action. This is due in large part to media attention brought on by youth-led school climate strikes, Sunrise Movement sit-ins, and Extinction Rebellion actions. While this is something to celebrate, I also think Buddhists can contribute much more radically to reducing suffering than they have so far. However, in order to do so effectively, we must bring not only our Buddhist understanding but also a systems-level view.

Averting a climate catastrophe will require enormous transitions, which raises important questions, such as: who will pay for the transitions? Will these transitions be consistent with democracy? And who will suffer the most if these transitions dont happenwill it be the poor and the racially marginalized?

A just transition must be democratic, fair, and equitable. We must therefore consider the ethical, moral, and spiritual underpinnings of such a transition and ask how each of usas well as our sanghascan assist in practical and concrete ways. We must also be willing to consider changing our own behavior, and that of our sanghas, in order to create a more just and sustainable society.

As bodhisattvas committed to relieving the suffering of all beings, we start by seeing relative reality, or suffering as it is. If we dont see the depth and extent of suffering, its very difficult to take compassionate action.

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At least a quarter of the worlds population is already facing an existential crisis. According to the International Labour Organization, approximately a billion people live on less than two dollars a day. More than two billion people work in informal sectors and have no work contract with their employers. These people and their families struggle every day to make ends meet. One sickness, birth, or death, one leaking roof due to an extreme rainfall event, or one failed crop due to a drought can throw them into crisis. They are already facing what those in the privileged Eurocentric world fear awaits them in the not-too-distant future: illness and death brought on by extreme weather events and forced migration due to a lack of basic resources, including water and food, as well as physical safety. They have done the least to usher in climate crisis, but they will suffer the most as the climate crisis deepens.

We cannot put off dealing with the current existential crisis faced by a quarter of humanity until after we have tackled the climate crisis. We need an integrated approach that makes enormous changes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while also redistributing power and money and avoiding climate apartheid.

How do we do this? A just transition will require working through systems of separation, more commonly known as systems of oppression, which is another way of saying systems of domination, hierarchy, or superiority. Based on myths and lies, these systems purport that one group is more normal, superior, and/or powerful, and empower it to dominate another set of living beings. For example, patriarchy, class or caste hierarchies, and human domination over animals are all systems of oppression.

Most crucially, white people of European descent have power and supremacy over Black, brown, yellow, and Indigenous people all over the world. Globally speaking, this racial domination and associated neoliberal economic systems have helped primarily white folks to amass enormous wealth, steal land, and enslave people for hundreds of years. This concentration of power and wealth is systematically guarded through militarization, laws, trade deals, and media campaigns.

While we have made progress on some fronts, for the most part we take these systems of domination to be a given. Our hearts and minds have grown accustomed to a paradigm in which one human being has control over another. This is our default, and it has infected all parts of our psyche.

In Buddhism, through meditation and other transformative practices, we aspire to know states of heartmind that Buddha (the human being) embodied. These states of heartmind bring us close to reality as it is. When we see the absolute reality as it is, there is no individual human being, no separate entity. There is onlyinterdependent co-arising: I am you; you are me. I am a monarch butterfly that is going extinct, the Black woman whose five generations of family were lynched, and also Hitler and present-day fascists. All is me. Richest and poorest, we inter-are.

It is important to note that while Buddhism has devised many skillful practices to deal with the myth of separation in the consciousness of an individual practitioner, it has only just begun to grapple with systems of oppression. An individual cannot beat a system. To beat one system, it will require another system. Systems of oppression or separation must be replaced by systems of nonseparation or nonduality. The opposite of patriarchy is not matriarchy, where women are more powerful than men, but rather it is one of deep equality and solidarity. We are so used to systems of oppression that we have forgotten how to live in a way that is not separate. The top-down hierarchical systems that are rooted in exploitation and oppression must make way for systems and institutions that are rooted in compassion and sacred care of all beings. This requires more than words and good intentions; it must be backed by actions that redistribute power and wealth to those who are marginalized. Without this, societal healing and a just transition will not be possible.

While we need strategic and well-designed plans to redesign our economies, we also need spiritual and moral leaders who can penetrate hearts and minds. Their job is to embody genuine solidarity, interdependence, and friendship to help people wake up to the harm brought about by systems of domination and to see their complicity in it. Any legal policies involving redistribution of power and money will not be honored without changing the hearts of the oppressor and the oppressed.

Guided by the dharma, Buddhists can help our society disrupt the status quo, but in order to contribute to the transformation of the larger society, we also need to look at ourselves, as well as our sanghas. What do I mean? In an essay titled Revolutionary Suicide, African American pastor Lynice Pinkard challenges us as individuals and institutions to understand our own relationship with systemsof oppression:

To what extent does any one of us identify with the forces of domination and participate in relations that reinforce domination and the exploitation that goes with it? In what ways and to what extent are we wedded to our own upward mobility, financial security, good reputation, and ability to win friends and influence people in positions of power? Or conversely, do we identify (by putting our lives on the line) with efforts to reverse patterns of domination, empower people on the margins (even when we are not on the margins ourselves), and seek healthy, sustainable relations?

She argues that this desire for upward mobility is killing us spiritually. It is like we all know that the tree of this civilization is rotting but we still want to climb to the top!

As Buddhists, we have taken vows not to turn away from the suffering of others, whom we come to know as ourselves. When we manifest with the full integrity of what we know to be true, we naturally find ways to help heal our world. Some of my Buddhist friends are actually putting their lives on the line to defend all beings. Even if we are not ready to put our lives on the line, we can ask important questions:

Who is in our sangha? If our sangha is not diverse, do we have relationships with Black, Indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC) outside of our sanghas? Having these relationships often means working through the racial trauma lodged in the bodies of everyone involved. (I highly recommend Resmaa Menakems systematic exploration of the trauma suffered by both BIPOC and white people in his seminal book My Grandmothers Hands.)

Are we more invested in building large Buddhist temples, or are we open to directing the money to building movements and to those on the front lines of systemic change?

Are we divesting from pathways that concentrate power and investing in those that redistribute power? How can we share power? How can we break the status quo systems of domination within our sangha or other communities we inhabit?

Are we making more than the average median income in our society? Why do we want to have a standard of living above that of others in our state or country?

Could we hire the most marginalized in our society? What do we have to learn to be able to hire and retain those individuals?

These are not easy questions. I wrestle with all of them myself and face the fear of letting go of my own privilege, wealth, and assets.

It wont be easy, but as bodhisattvas in training, we must find the courage and compassion to step up both individually and as a community of practitioners to grapple with these questions. As we do, we might gain greater understanding of the mindset of those destroying our planet. And we might be able to say a much needed NO to too-big-to-fail oil and gas corporations (without othering and shaming individuals who work for them).

Given what is already happening, we do not have the luxury of assuming that we can deal with social and ecological issues after enlightenment. As we individually spend time on our cushions to face absolute reality as it is, we must also create awakened systems and beloved communities that can deal with present-day relative reality as it is without perpetuating trauma and harm.

Lions Roar is a nonprofit. Our mission is to share the wisdom of the Buddhas teachingsto inspire, comfort, support, and enlighten readers around the world. Our aspiration is to keep LionsRoar.com available to everyone, providing a supportive, inspiring Buddhist community that anyone can access, from curious beginners to committed meditators. Do you share our aspiration? We cant do this without your help.

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Why Bodhisattvas Need to Disrupt the Status Quo - Lion's Roar

Book review: The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer – Stuff.co.nz

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The ancient practice shocked Victorians, was embraced by psychologists and finally co-opted by celebrities.

Yoga, Alistair Shearer notes, in this erudite, scholarly and engrossing study, is not itself a religion. But when practised in the right spirit, it may gradually align the practitioner with "those eternal principles on which all true religion rests".

READ MORE:* Shakti: Rajorshi Chakraborti's funny, shocking and deeply thought-provoking novel* Book review: Uncanny Valley by Anna Wiener* Book review: Combat Civilian by Gilbert Greenall

In much the same way as "mindfulness" has stripped Buddhist meditation of its spiritual or religious connotations to become a secular therapy for relieving stress and maximising efficiency, so yoga has long been stripped of its sacred associations. If the classic image of the yogi was once of the solitary contemplative in his Himalayan redoubt, it is now of lithe, sunkissed bodies enacting the "downward dog" at expensive retreats in the Greek islands or on the polished wood floors of the yoga studio with its aroma of incense, its New Age music and its air of cultivated narcissism.

As Shearer writes, yoga is now aUS$18 billionindustry, its rise no better illustrated than in an exhibition, Yoga: The Art of Transformation, held in 2013 at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, where tables for the opening gala were $50,000 a pop.

It is often said that yoga practices date from "5000 years" ago, but as Shearer points out, nobody knows for sure. There is no mention of what he calls "posture yoga" in the Vedic teachings, which date from roughly 2500BC to 500BC. But there are 900 mentions in the later Mahabharata, the great Sanskrit epic of ancient India, which includes the Bhagavad Gita, the most important text in what came to be known as Hinduism.

The seers of early yoga scriptures were interested in physical postures only insofar as they aided meditation and breathing.

Yoga was a physical practice only insofar as it served a spiritual objective. None of the great authorities, Shearer writes, saw the practice of yoga as a means to perfect the human frame, "but as a way to transcend its irksome limitations altogether". .

Shearer, who has written extensively on Hindu and Buddhist philosophy, provides a fascinating chronology of the changing attitudes towards yoga in the West. To the Victorians, Indian holy men were held to be objects of reproval.

A deeper understanding came with Swami Vivekananda, whose appearance at the first World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893 galvanised popular interest in Hindu teachings. The Fabian turned theosophist Annie Besant, who saw Vivekananda speak in Chicago, would go on to publish a book on Maharishi Patanjali's yoga in 1907. In 1932, Carl Jung presented a seminar on kundalini yoga to the Psychological Society in Zurich, which, Shearer writes, was regarded as "a milestone in the Western understanding of Eastern thought".

Further enlightenment came with Aurobindo Ghose, the Indian nationalist turned mystic, whose teachings inspired the founders of the Esalen Institute in California the crucible of the so-called "Human Potential" movement in the 60s.

It is significant that some of the most popular forms of yoga today are the least contemplative. Shearer describes the "no pain, no gain" variation of Ashtanga yoga, popularised by K Pattabhi Jois and much espoused by celebrities such as Madonna, Sting and Gwyneth Paltrow, as "a sweat-based path for a nation of self-actualising achievers".

Then there is hot yoga invented by "the pony-tailed, waxed-chested" Bikram Choudhury a technique combining heat and vigorous activity. It's not unheard of for people attempting hot yoga "to vomit, break down and pass out, or lose bladder control in a room full of their fellow students". This too attracted the predictable celebrity following, and made Choudhury a multi-millionaire, before he fell to Earth after a Vanity Fair article accusing him of rape. (He has since denied any wrongdoing.)

In 2017, a survey in The Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies reported that yoga was the cause of more injuries than all other sports combined, with one in 10 practitioners developing musculoskeletal pain from their practice, and a third of those experiencing pain so severe they were out of action for three months.

Something for practitioners to meditate on, perhaps. Those adopting the determined sedentary position may find these statistics strangely vindicating.

The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer(C Hurst & Co, $50)

Originally posted here:

Book review: The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer - Stuff.co.nz

This AI Researcher Thinks We Have It All Wrong – Forbes

Dr. Luis Perez-Breva

Luis Perez-Breva is a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) professor and the faculty director of innovation teams at the MIT School or Engineering. He is also an entrepreneur and part of The Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship. Luis works to see how we can use technology to make our lives better and also on how we can work to get new technology out into the world. On an episode of the AI Today podcast, Professor Perez-Breva managed to get us to think deeply into our understanding of both artificial intelligence and machine learning.

Are we too focused on data?

Anyone who has been following artificial intelligence and machine learning knows the vital centrality of data. Without data, we cant train machine learning models. And without machine learning models, we dont have a way for systems to learn from experience. Surely, data needs to be the center of our attention to make AI systems a reality.

However, Dr. Perez-Breva thinks that we are overly focusing on data and perhaps that extensive focus is causing goals for machine learning and AI to go astray. According to Luis, so much focus is put into obtaining data that we judge how good a machine learning system is by how much data was collected, how large the neural network is, and how much training data was used. When you collect a lot of data you are using that data to build systems that are primarily driven by statistics. Luis says that we latch onto statistics when we feed AI so much data, and that we ascribe to systems intelligence, when in reality, all we have done is created large probabilistic systems that by virtue of large data sets exhibit things we ascribe to intelligence. He says that when our systems arent learning as we want, the primary gut reaction is to give these AI system more data so that we dont have to think as much about the hard parts of generalization and intelligence.

Many would argue that there are some areas where you do need data to help teach AI. Computers are better able to learn image recognition and similar tasks by having more data. The more data, the better the networks, and the more accurate the results. On the podcast, Luis asked whether deep learning is great enough that this works or if we have a big enough data set that image recognition now works. Basically: is it the algorithm or just the sheer quantity of data that is making this work?

Rather, what Luis argues is that if we can find a better way to structure the system as a whole, then the AI system should be able to reason through problems, even with very limited data. Luis compares using machine learning in every application to the retail world. He talks about how physical stores are seeing the success of online stores and trying to copy on that success. One of the ways they are doing this is by using apps to help customers navigate stores. Luis mentioned that he visited a Target where he had to use his phone to navigate the store which was harder than being able to look at signs. Having a human to ask questions and talk to is both faster and also part of the traditional experience of being in a brick and mortar retail location. Luis says he would much rather have a human to interact with at one of these locations than a computer.

Is the problem deep learning?

He compares this to machine learning by saying that machine learning has a very narrow application. If you try to apply machine learning to every aspect of AI then you will end up with issues similar to the ones he experienced at the Target. Basically, looking at neural networks as a hammer and every AI problem as a nail. No one technology or solution works for every application. Perhaps deep learning only works because of vast quantities of data? Maybe theres another algorithm that can generalize better, apply knowledge learned in one domain to another better, and use smaller amounts of data to get much better quality insights.

People have tried recently to automate many of the jobs that people do. Throughout history, Luis says that technology has killed businesses when it tries to replace humans. Technology and businesses are successful when they expand on what humans can do. Attempting to replace humans is a difficult task and one that is going to lead companies down the road to failure. As humans, he points out, we crave human interaction. Even in the age where people are constantly on their technology people desire human interaction greatly.

Luis also makes a point that many people mistakenly confuse automation and AI. Automation is using a computer to carry out specific tasks, and it is not the creation of intelligence. This is something that many are mentioning on several occasions. Indeed, its the fear of automation and the fictional superintelligence that has many people worried about AI. Dr. Perez-Breva makes the point that many ascribe human characteristics to machines. But this should not be the case with AI systems.

Rather, he sees AI systems more akin to a new species with a different mode of intelligence than humans. His opinion is that researchers are very far from creating an AI that is similar to what you will find in books and movies. He blames movies for giving people the impression of robots (AI) killing people and being dangerous technologies. While there are good robots in movies, there are a few of them and they get pushed to the side by bad robots. He points out that we need to move away from this pushing images of bad robots. Our focus needs to be on how artificial intelligence can help humans grow. It would be beneficial if the movie-making industry could help with this. As such, AI should be thought of as a new intelligent species were trying to create, not something that is meant to replace us.

A positive AI future

Despite negative images and talk, Luis is sure that artificial intelligence is here to stay, at least for a while. So many companies have made large investments into AI that it would be difficult for them to just stop using them or to stop the development.

As a final question in the interview, Luis was asked where he sees the industry of artificial intelligence going. Prefacing his answer with the fact that based on the earlier discussion people are investing in machine learning and not true artificial intelligence, Luis said that he is happy in the investment that businesses are making in what they call AI. He believes that these investments will help the development of this technology to stay around for many years.

Once we can stop comparing humans to artificial intelligence, Luis believes that we will see great advancements in what AI can do. He believes that AI has the power to work alongside humans to unlock knowledge and tasks that we werent previously able to do. The point when this happens, he believes, is not that far away. We are getting closer to it every day.

Many of Luiss ideas are contrary to popular beliefs by many people who are interested in the world of artificial intelligence. At the same time, the ideas that he shares are presented in a very logical manner and are very thought-provoking. Time will tell if these ideas are in fact correct.

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This AI Researcher Thinks We Have It All Wrong - Forbes

How AI Can Live Up To Its Hype In The Healthcare Industry – Forbes

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Whats the problem youre trying to solve?Clayton Christensen, the late Harvard business professor, was famous for posing this aphoristic question to aspiring entrepreneurs.

By asking it, he was teaching those in earshot an important lesson: Innovation, alone, isnt the end goal. To succeed, ideas and products must address fundamental human problems.

This is especially true in healthcare, where artificial intelligence is fueling the hopes of an industry desperate for better solutions.

But heres the problem: Tech companies too often set out to create AI innovations they can sell, rather than trying to understand the problems doctors and patients need solved. At many traditional med-tech conferences and trade shows, for example, talks and sales pitches focus squarely on the technology while routinely overlooking the human fears and frustrations that AI can address.

Because of this failure to prioritize human needs above business interests, medicines most-hyped AI applications have, repeatedly, failed to move the needle on public health, patient safety or healthcare costs.

Fortunately, humanistic problem-solving will take center stage at the upcoming South by Southwest (SXSW) conference and festival in Austin, Texas, from March 13-22. At this alternative cultural event, where hip musical acts overlap with indie film premiers, some 70,000+ conference attendees can find dozens of AI panels and presentations designed to put people first.

Addressing the challenges and opportunities around how technology affects our community is hugely important, said Hugh Forrest, Chief Programming Officer at SXSW. From privacy to blockchain to AI to MedTech, using this lens to filter how we look at a lot of issues facing modern society allows us to connect the dots in a deeper way. Especially in the case of an area like AI, where theres quite a bit of uncertainty and fear, we also want to showcase how these innovations can be ethical and improve lives.

Heres a small sample of the human-focused AI presentations coming to SXSW.

On Making Med-Tech More Humane

In response to our nations mental health crisis, the SXSW presentation titled Can Language Technology Rescue Mental Healthcare? will bring together a technologist and a psychologist to spotlight possible solutions. The duo will talk about tech that predicts suicide attempts 10 times more accurately than a doctors evaluation and algorithms that raise the red flag for onset of psychosis.

The panel Humanitarian AI: Disasters, Displacement & Disease will focus on the untamed global threat of nature disasters. From wars to disease outbreaks to flooding, humanity is still struggling to contain these millennia-old problems. Can technology, and AI in particular, help humanitarian agencies get ahead of the next disaster and help first responders save more lives?

On Med-Tech Making Our Lives Easier, Healthier, Better

Turning to the role of technology in our daily lives, the presentation How Tech is Transforming Healthcare, in Your Home examines the convergence of connected health and smart home products. According to the speakers, technologies like Alexa could soon help enhance independent living, improve health outcomes and reduce medical costs for families.

Similarly, in hospitals, AI and robotic technologies can unburden nurses of menial duties (likemaking repeat trips to the supply room). Doing so frees up time to address more patient-facing problems. Robots and Automation: Happier Healthcare Workplaces will focus on opportunities to improve the workflow of our nations overworked nurses.

On Making Sure Med-Tech Is Ethical, Secure

Several presentations at SXSW will address humanitys growing concern over AI doing more harm than good. In healthcare settings, for example, patients and doctors are expressing valid fears that dirty data will result in unintended medical errors and accidents. The AI Did What?! When AI Isnt Very Smart aims to help designers avoid such failures.

In healthcare, AI adoption has slowed in recent years due, in part, to apparent bias in data and algorithms, leading to inequitable care for minority populations. Looking beyond the walls of American medicine, the talk Hidden Figures: Exposing Bias in AI will focus on the impact, detection and mitigation of biased data in government, society and our daily lives.

The European Union has moved ahead of the United States in regulating technology to ensure greater privacy and equity. A high-profile panel of speakers at SXSW will discuss Shared Values for Ethical AI. This talk follows last weeks much-anticipated announcement about regulating artificial intelligence in the EU. The new proposal establishes technical and ethical standards that would influence the development and use of AI in healthcare and other industries.

In Next Gen AI: The Human Centered Design Challenge, leaders from Google, Microsoft, McKinsey and Ideo will examine how AI can earn the publics trust by learning to be smart, fair and transparent.

Finally, speakers from Carnegie Mellon and Deloitte will present The Accidental Ethicist: Making AI Human-Centered, looking at the same question of ethicsnot through the lens of public policy but through the eyes of those who create and code AI applications. Together, theyll show designers how human-centered approaches can build their ethical toolkit.

On Making Med-Tech More Creative

At its core, the art of medicine is a creative venture wherein humans aspire to help other humans. But all too often medical technologies make the overall healthcare experience feel mechanistic and impersonal. Some of the most interesting talks at SXSW will focus on AI in the arts. These sessions may offer valuable insights into resolving the dichotomy between the art and science of medicine.

Attendees can check out 3 Ways AI is Transforming the Music Industry for insights into how big data analysis, paired with human abstract reasoning, will change the future of music. Elsewhere, AI and Creativity: In Search of Genius examines how recent advances in AI have put within reach a world where art can be created and performed entirely by algorithms. Similarly, leaders from the Metropolitan Museum of Art will take on Art, AI, and Big Data, explaining how they made the institutions art collection more accessible, discoverable and useful.

On Making Med-Tech A Viable Healthcare Solution

On March 14, Ill contribute to the AI discussion at SXSW with a talk titled MedTech: Separating Reality From Hype. The goal is to help people understand why artificial intelligence has made precious few contributions to medical practice so far.

One explanation can be found in the two symbols currently associated with the medical profession.

If youre not familiar, the first symbol, called the Caduceus, features two snakes coiled around a short-winged staff. Its an ancient emblem that dates back to 1400 B.C.

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The other is the Rod of Asclepius, an wingless staff wrapped by a single snake.

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So, first logical question: Why snakes? Because they are reptiles that shed their skin annually, reminding us that its possible to regenerate and start anewa laudatory medical goal if there ever was one. And why a staff? Fair warning, the answer is a bit more stomach-churning. It involves an ancient medical treatment for patients infected by the Guinea worm (Dracunculus medinensis). The parasite enters the human body through the consumption of contaminated water, but doesnt surface until about a year later. Thats when the snake-like creature protrudes through the skin, creating a large blister that causes intense pain. Healers of the past would rupture the blister, wind the snakes head around a stick (the noble staff) and slowly pull the animal out.

Although these symbols are nearly identical, they have very different origins and meanings. The Caduceus is associated with Hermes and is recognized as the symbol of trade and commerce. By contrast, Asclepius was the Greek God of healing.

These two symbols represent a major clash in medicine today. Healthcare is, at once, a healing profession and a highly lucrative trade. Medical technologies, including AI, are caught in the middle. Those who focus creating business solutions often fail to address the most urgent problems that doctors and patients experience.

Hopefully, the creative and immersive environment of #SXSW2020 will inspire technology companies to put the needs of people at the center of future healthcare solutions.

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How AI Can Live Up To Its Hype In The Healthcare Industry - Forbes

Removing the robot factor from AI – Gigabit Magazine – Technology News, Magazine and Website

AI and machine learning have something of an image problem.

Theyve never been quite so widely discussed as topics, or, arguably, their potential so widely debated. This is, to some extent, part of the problem. Artificial Intelligence can, still, be anything, achieve anything. But until its results are put into practice for people, it remains a misunderstood concept, especially to the layperson.

While well-established industry thought leaders are rightly championing the fact that AI has the potential to be transformative and capable of a wide range of solutions, the lack of context for most people is fuelling fears that it is simply going to replace peoples roles and take over tasks, wholesale. It also ignores the fact that AI applications have been quietly assisting peoples jobs, in a light touch manner, for some time now and people are still in those roles.

Many people are imagining AI to be something it is not. Given the technology is still in a fast-development phase, some people think it is helpful to consider the tech as a type of plug and play, black box technology. Some believe this helps people to put it into the context of how it will work and what it will deliver for businesses. In our opinion, this limits a true understanding of its potential and what it could be delivering for companies day in, day out.

The hyperbole is also not helping. The statements we use AI and our products AI driven have already become well-worn by enthusiastic salespeople and marketeers. While theres a great sales case to be made by that exciting assertion, its rarely speaking the truth about the situation. What is really meant by the current use of artificial intelligence? Arguably, AI is not yet a thing in its own right; i.e the capability of machines to be able to do the things which people do instinctively, which machines instinctively do not. Instead of being excited by hearing the phrase we do AI!, people should see it as a red flag to dig deeper into the technology and the AI capability in question.

SEE ALSO:

Machine learning, similarly, doesnt benefit from sci-fi associations or big sales patter bravado. In its simplest form, while machine learning sounds like a defined and independent process, it is actually a technique to deliver AI functions. Its maths, essentially, applied alongside data, processing power and technology to deliver an AI capability. Machine learning models dont execute actions or do anything themselves, unless people put them to use. They are still human tools, to be deployed by someone to undertake a specific action.

The tools and models are only as good as the human knowledge and skills programming them. People, especially in the legal sectors autologyx works with, are smart, adaptable and vastly knowledgeable. They can quickly shift from one case to another, and have their own methods and processes of approaching problem solving in the workplace. Where AI is coming in to lift the load is on lengthy, detailed, and highly repetitive tasks such as contract renewals. Humans can get understandably bored when reviewing highly repetitive, vast volumes of contracts to change just a few clauses and update the document. A machine learning solution does notnget bored, and performs consistently with a high degree of accuracy, freeing those legal teams up to work on more interesting, varied, or complicated casework.

Together, AI, machine learning and automation are the arms and armour businesses across a range of sectors need to acquire to adapt and continue to compete in the future. The future of the legal industry, for instance, is still a human one where knowledge of people will continue to be an asset. AI in that sector is more focused on codifying and leveraging that intelligence and while the machine and AI models learn and grow from people, so those people will continue to grow and expand their knowledge within the sector too. Today, AI and ML technologies are only as good as the people power programming them.

As Oren Etzioni, CEO of the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence put it, AI is neither good nor evil. Its a tool. A technology for us to use. How we choose to apply it is entirely up to us.

By Ben Stoneham, founder and CEO, autologyx

Original post:

Removing the robot factor from AI - Gigabit Magazine - Technology News, Magazine and Website

People are scared of artificial intelligence – here’s why we should embrace it instead – World Economic Forum

Artificial intelligence (AI) has gained widespread attention in recent years. AI is viewed as a strategic technology to lead us into the future. Yet, when interacting with academics, industry leaders and policy-makers alike, I have observed some growing concerns around the uncertainty of this technology.

In my observation, these concerns can be categorized into three perspectives:

It is understandable that people might have these concerns at this moment in time and we need to face them. As long as we do, I believe we dont need to panic about AI and that society will benefit from embracing it. I propose we address these concerns as follows:

Instead of writing off AI as too complicated for the average person to understand, we should seek to make AI accessible to everyone in society. It shouldnt be just the scientists and engineers who understand it; through adequate education, communication and collaboration, people will understand the potential value that AI can create for the community.

We should democratize AI, meaning that the technology should belong to and benefit all of society; and we should be realistic about where we are in AIs development.

We have made a lot of progress in AI. But if we think of it as a vast ocean, we are still only walking on the beach. Most of the achievements we have made are, in fact, based on having a huge amount of (labelled) data, rather than on AIs ability to be intelligent on its own. Learning in a more natural way, including unsupervised or transfer learning, is still nascent and we are a long way from reaching AI supremacy.

From this point of view, society has only just started its long journey with AI and we are all pretty much starting from the same page. To achieve the next breakthroughs in AI, we need the global community to participate and engage in open collaboration and dialogue.

Machine learning projects took home the most AI funding in 2019

We can benefit from AI innovation while we are figuring out how to regulate the technology. Let me give you an example: Ford Motor produced the Model T car in 1908, but it took 60 years for the US to issue formal regulations on the use of seatbelts. This delay did not prevent people from benefitting significantly from this form of transportation. At the same time, however, we need regulations so society can reap sustainable benefits from new technologies like AI and we need to work together as a global community to establish and implement them.

The World Economic Forum was the first to draw the worlds attention to the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the current period of unprecedented change driven by rapid technological advances. Policies, norms and regulations have not been able to keep up with the pace of innovation, creating a growing need to fill this gap.

The Forum established the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Network in 2017 to ensure that new and emerging technologies will helpnot harmhumanity in the future. Headquartered in San Francisco, the network launched centres in China, India and Japan in 2018 and is rapidly establishing locally-run Affiliate Centres in many countries around the world.

The global network is working closely with partners from government, business, academia and civil society to co-design and pilot agile frameworks for governing new and emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence (AI), autonomous vehicles, blockchain, data policy, digital trade, drones, internet of things (IoT), precision medicine and environmental innovations.

Learn more about the groundbreaking work that the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Network is doing to prepare us for the future.

Want to help us shape the Fourth Industrial Revolution? Contact us to find out how you can become a member or partner.

By addressing the aforementioned concerns people may have regarding AI, I believe that Trustworthy AI will provide great benefits to society. There is already a consensus in the international community about the six dimensions of Trustworthy AI: fairness, accountability, value alignment, robustness, reproducibility and explainability. While fairness, accountability and value alignment embody our social responsibility; robustness, Reproducibility and explainability pose massive technical challenges to us.

Trustworthy AI innovation is a marathon, not a sprint. If we are willing to stay the course and if we embrace AI innovation and regulation with an open, inclusive, principle-based and collaborative attitude, the value AI can create could far exceed our expectations. I believe that the next generation of the intelligence economy will be forged in trust and differentiated by perspective.

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with our Terms of Use.

Written by

Bowen Zhou, President, JD Cloud & AI; Chair, JD Technology Committee; Vice-President, JD.COM

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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People are scared of artificial intelligence - here's why we should embrace it instead - World Economic Forum

The real test of an AI machine is when it can admit to not knowing something – The Guardian

On Wednesday the European Commission launched a blizzard of proposals and policy papers under the general umbrella of shaping Europes digital future. The documents released included: a report on the safety and liability implications of artificial intelligence, the internet of things and robotics; a paper outlining the EUs strategy for data; and a white paper on excellence and trust in artificial intelligence. In their general tenor, the documents evoke the blend of technocracy, democratic piety and ambitiousness that is the hallmark of EU communications. That said, it is also the case that in terms of doing anything to get tech companies under some kind of control, the European Commission is the only game in town.

In a nice coincidence, the policy blitz came exactly 24 hours after Mark Zuckerberg, supreme leader of Facebook, accompanied by his bag-carrier a guy called Nicholas Clegg who looked vaguely familiar had called on the commission graciously to explain to its officials the correct way to regulate tech companies. The officials, in turn, thanked him and courteously explained that they had their own ideas, and escorted him back to his hot-air balloon.

For this columnist, the most interesting document is the white paper on AI. It declares that the commission supports a regulatory and investment oriented approach that has two objectives: to promote the uptake of AI and to address the risks associated with certain uses of the technology. The document then sets out policy options on how these objectives might be achieved.

Once you get beyond the mandatory euro-boosting rhetoric about how the EUs technological and industrial strengths, high-quality digital infrastructure and regulatory framework based on its fundamental values will enable Europe to become a global leader in innovation in the data economy and its applications, the white paper seems quite sensible. But as for all documents dealing with how actually to deal with AI, it falls back on the conventional bromides about human agency and oversight, privacy and governance, diversity, non-discrimination and fairness, societal wellbeing, accountability and that old favourite transparency. The only discernible omissions are motherhood and apple pie.

But this is par for the course with AI at the moment: the discourse is invariably three parts generalities, two parts virtue-signalling leavened with a smattering of pious hopes. Its got to the point where one longs for some plain speaking and common sense.

And, as luck would have it, along it comes in the shape of Sir David Spiegelhalter, an eminent Cambridge statistician and former president of the Royal Statistical Society. He has spent his life trying to teach people how to understand statistical reasoning, and last month published a really helpful article in the Harvard Data Science Review on the question Should we trust algorithms?

Its trustworthiness rather than trust we should be focusing on

Underpinning Spiegelhalters approach is an insight from the philosopher Onora ONeill that its trustworthiness rather than trust we should be focusing on, because trust is such a nebulous, elusive and unsatisfactory concept. (In that respect, its not unlike privacy.) Seeking more trust, ONeill observed in a famous Ted Talk, is not an intelligent aim in this life intelligently placed and intelligently refused trust is the proper aim.

Applying this idea, Spiegelhalter argues that, when confronted with an algorithm, we should expect trustworthy claims made both about the system (what the developers say it can do, and how it has been evaluated) and by the system (what it concludes about a specific case).

From this, he suggests a set of seven questions one should ask about any algorithm. 1. Is it any good when tried in new parts of the real world? 2. Would something simpler, and more transparent and robust, be just as good? 3. Could I explain how it works (in general) to anyone who is interested? 4. Could I explain to an individual how it reached its conclusion in their particular case? 5. Does it know when it is on shaky ground, and can it acknowledge uncertainty? 6. Do people use it appropriately, with the right level of scepticism? 7. Does it actually help in practice?

This is a great list, in my humble opinion. Most of the most egregiously deficient machine-learning systems we have encountered so far would fail on some or all of those grounds. Spiegelhalters questions are specific rather than couched in generalities such as transparency or explainability. And best of all they are intelligible to normal human beings rather than the geeks who design algorithms.

And the most important question in that list? Spiegelhalter says it is number five. A machine should know when it doesnt know and admit it. Sadly, thats a test that many humans also fail.

BBC v Netflix: a prequelHow the BBCs Netflix-killing plan was snuffed by myopic regulation. Sobering piece in Wired about how the BBC and other UK broadcasters came up with the idea of a Netflix-like service when the streaming giant was still shipping DVDs, but were thwarted by UK regulators. Regulation is hard unless you know the future.

An open and shut caseThe messy, secretive reality behind OpenAIs bid to save the world. Great investigative reporting by MITs Technology Review.

How the peace was lostThe Last Days at Yalta A gripping reconstruction on Literary Hub by the historian Diana Preston of the conference that launched the cold war.

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The real test of an AI machine is when it can admit to not knowing something - The Guardian

The Potential of AI in the Healthcare Supply Chain – SupplyChainBrain

Theres no shortage of enthusiasm or predictions about the potential use of artificial intelligence (AI).

Grand View Research estimates the global AI market will grow at a compound annual rate of 57% between 2017 and2025, reaching $36 billion. Forrester predicts that 2020 is the year executives will focus on how to drive and measure the value of their investments in AI.

Healthcare is no exception. A recent survey of healthcare executives conducted by Optum found that not only is use of AI on the rise, but also that most executives expect a faster return on their investments than first anticipated.

Whats missing from these lofty projections are more substantive discussions about whats required to ensure that AI can deliver on its promise, such as the importance of data governance and management. There are also fewer conversations about the role AI and machine learning can play in the healthcare supply chain, compared with other areas, such as improved disease diagnosis and drug development. But when you stop and think about how AI is being applied elsewhere in healthcare, you begin to see implications and opportunities for the supply chain.

Predictive analytics. One of the more exciting applications of AI is the use of genomics, combined with other patient clinical, social and behavioral factors, to predict future disease states and healthcare treatments, such as whether a patient is likely to experience a cardiovascular event or need a knee replacement. At the individual patient level, there is relatively little downstream relevancy for supply chain. But consider what could happen if we had data on entire patient populations say those served by a healthcare system or accountable care organization. Could that help predict the types and volume of products that will be needed, including when and where, while providing valuable demand signals to manufacturers and distributors?

Demand matching. With more data on how products perform in routine clinical practice and the drive to redesign care pathways based on the needs of specific patient populations, there is an increasing need to match the right product to the right patient. AI can play an important role in understanding what works best on what kinds of patients, and leverage this data for value analysis and sourcing, as well as making sure the right products are in the right place.

Logistics optimization. AI-enabled companies focused on patient flow are utilizing tools commonly deployed by third-party logistics companies, such as UPS, to chart the fastest ambulance routes to transport patients to the hospital or other care delivery sites. Why not deploy these same technologies to assist healthcare supply-chain professionals as they grapple with the migration of care outside the acute care settings? AI can help determine the best transportation methods, frequency and routes to move both products and caregivers to the rapidly expanding number of locations where they will be needed, from home and retail clinics to urgent care and ambulatory surgery centers.

Supply continuity. Recent events from natural disasters and infectious disease outbreaks to product recalls and sterilization facility closures have increased attention to the challenges incurred by disruptions in supply continuity. Unlike the retail industry, where a backorder is often only an inconvenience, supply disruptions in healthcare can have grave consequences. Take Hurricane Maria as an example. When the storm hit Puerto Rico, it negatively affected operations at more than 50 different manufacturers on the island, including those that supply IV bags. The shortage in saline bags left providers across the U.S. scrambling for alternatives. The group purchasing organization, Premier, recently called on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to require medical device manufacturers to communicate potential shortages. AI could be deployed not only to help providers anticipate backorders and stockouts, but also to help manufacturers gather data across their highly complex supply chains to better predict disruptions, take corrective action, and help their customers identify alternatives.

Task automation. Robotic process automation (RPA) is a form of AI that is being increasingly used in healthcare, especially around claims processing. RPA uses software robots to automate and standardize repetitive tasks, freeing up personnel for more value-added work. For supply chain, RPA is being used to automate contract-management tasks, such as checking pricing and populating procurement systems with contract terms.

AI dependencies. As with many new technologies, there is considerable excitement over what AI can do to improve clinical, operational and financial performance, along with patient and clinician experience. At the same time, there is relatively little discussion about what needs to be in place to ensure that AI delivers on its promise.

One of the most underestimated areas is data governance. The beauty of AI is that it can analyze large amounts of data to identify patterns and hidden correlations that would otherwise take humans considerably longer to decipher, if at all. It also allows users to feed the AI engine with a wide range of variables, even those you only suspect might have some bearing on the problem youre trying to solve. But despite the sophistication of the tool, the old adage garbage in, garbage out still applies. Before starting an AI initiative, make sure you have enough data (likely drawn from different sources), and that the data adheres to well-defined data policies, standards, definitions and processes.

Finally, consider to what extent you want to utilize AI to augment decision making, i.e., whether to allow the system to provide insights and recommendations while a human still makes the final choice, or to fully automate decision making. The magic and mystery of AI is the lack of transparency in how the system makes decisions, because its continually learning and changing how it selects, weighs and relates different variables to reach conclusions. Only once you have trust in the system especially when dealing with patient care decisions should you move to applications of AI in which the system makes decisions and takes action without human intervention.

The potential for AI and machine learning in healthcare is awe-inspiring, especially as we consider how to harness the rapidly expanding wealth of knowledge that is generated every day. On the other hand, there is still much to learn about how best to apply AI across the various aspects of healthcare. As we aspire to new heights, guided by AI, its important to remember the foundation upon which AI is built. Are your AI initiatives based on accurate, complete, standardized and normalized data? If so, then the sky, seemingly, is the limit.

Karen Conway is vice president of healthcare value with GHX.

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The Potential of AI in the Healthcare Supply Chain - SupplyChainBrain

The Curious Case of Data Annotation and AI – RTInsights

Data annotation takes time. And for in-house teams, labeling data can be the proverbial bottleneck, limiting a companys ability to quickly train and validate machine learning models.

By its very definition, artificialintelligence refers to computer systems that can learn, reason, and act forthemselves, but where does this intelligence come from? For decades, thecollaborative intelligence of humans and machines has produced some of theworlds leading technologies. And while theres nothing glamorous about thedata being used to train todays AI applications, the role of data annotationin AI is nonetheless fascinating.

See also: New Tool Offers Help with Data Annotation

Poorly Labeled Data Leads to Compromised AI

Imagine reviewing hours of video footage sortingthrough thousands of driving scenes, to label all of the vehicles that comeinto frame, and youve got data annotation. Data annotation is the process oflabeling images, video, audio, and other data sources, so the data isrecognizable to computer systems programmed for supervised-learning. This isthe intelligence behind AI algorithms.

For companies using AI to solve worldproblems, improve operations, increase efficiencies, or otherwise gain acompetitive edge, training an algorithm is more than just collecting annotateddata, its sourcing superior quality training data and ensuring that data iscontributing to model validation, so applications can be brought to marketquickly, safely, and ethically.

Data is the most crucial element of machine learning.Without data annotation, computers couldnt be trained to see, speak, orperform intelligent functions, yet obtaining datasets, and labeling trainingdata are among the top limitations to adopt AI, according to the McKinsey Global Institute. Another knownlimitation is data bias, which can creep in at any stage of the training datalifecycle, but more often than not occurs from poor quality or inconsistentdata labeling.

The IDC shared that 50 percent of IT and dataprofessionals surveyed report data quality as a challenge in deploying AIworkloads, but where does quality data come from?

Open-source datasets are one way to collectdata for an ML model, but since many are curated for a specific use case, itmay not be useful for highly specialized needs. Also, the amount of data neededto train your algorithm may vary based on the complexity of the problem youretrying to solve, and the complexity of your model.

The Waymo Open Dataset is the largest, mostdiverse autonomous driving dataset to date, consisting of thousands of imageslabeled with millions of bounding boxes and object classes12 million 3Dbounding box labels and 1.2 million 2D bounding box labels, to be exact. Still,Waymo has plans to continuously grow the size of this dataset even further.

Why? Because current, accurate, and refresheddata is necessary to continuously train, validate, and maintain agile machinelearning models. There are always edge cases, and for some use cases, even moredata is needed. If the data is lacking in any way, those gaps compromise theintelligence of the algorithm in the form of bias, false positives, poorperformance, and other issues.

Lets say youre searching for a new laptop.When you type your specifications into the search bar, the results that come upare the work of millions of labeled and indexed data points, from product SKUsto product photos.

If your search returns results for a lunchbox,a briefcase, or anything else mistaken for the signature clamshell of a laptop,youve got a problem. You cant find it, so you cant buy it, and that companyjust lost a sale.

This is why quality annotated data is soimportant. Poor quality data has a direct correlation to biased and inaccuratemodels, and in some cases, improving data quality is as simple as making sureyou have the right data in the first place.

Vulcan Inc., experienced the challenge of diversity in their datasetfirst-hand while working to develop AI-enabled products that could record andmonitor African wildlife. While trying to detect cows in imagery, they realizedtheir model could not recognize cows in Africa, based on their dataset of cowsfrom Washington, alone. To get their ML model operating at peak performance,they needed to create a training dataset of their own.

Labeling Data, Demanding for AI Teams

As you might expect, data annotation takestime. And for in-house teams, labeling data can be the proverbial bottleneck,limiting your ability to quickly train and validate machine learning models.

Labeling datasets is arguably one of the hardest parts of building AI. Cognilytica reports that 80 percent of AIproject time is spent aggregating, cleaning, labeling, and augmenting data tobe used in machine learning models. Thats before any model development or AItraining even begins.

And while labeling data is not an engineeringchallenge, nor is it a data science problem, data annotation can provedemanding for several reasons.

The first is the sheer amount of time it takesto prepare large volumes of raw data for labeling. Its no secret, human effortis required to create datasets, and sorting irrelevant data from the desireddata is a task in and of itself.

Then, theres the challenge of getting theclean data labeled efficiently and accurately. A short video could take severalhours to annotate, depending on the object classes represented and theirdensity for the model to learn effectively.

An in-house team may not have enough dedicatedpersonnel to process the data in a timely manner, leaving model development ata standstill until this task is complete. In some cases, the added pressure ofkeeping the AI pipeline moving can lead to incomplete or partially labeleddata, or worse, blatant errors in the annotations.

Even in instances where existing personnel canserve as the in-house data annotation team, and they have the training andexpertise to do it well, few companies have the technology infrastructure tosupport an AI pipeline from ingestion to algorithm, securely and smoothly.

This is why organizations lacking the time fordata annotation, annotation expertise, clear strategies for AI adoption, ortechnology infrastructure to support the training data lifecycle partner withtrusted providers to build smarter AI.

To improve its retail item coverage from 91 to 98percent, Walmart worked with a specializeddata annotation partner to evaluate their data and ensure its accuracyto train Walmart systems. With more than 2.5 million items cataloged during thepartnership, the Walmart team has been able to focus on model development,rather than aggregating data.

How Data Annotation Providers Combine Humans and Tech

Data annotation providers have access to toolsand techniques that can help expedite the annotation process and improve theaccuracy of data labeling.

For starters, working day in and day out withtraining data means these companies see a range of scenarios where dataannotation is seamless and where things could be improved. They can then passthese learnings on to their clients, helping to create effective training datastrategies for AI development.

For organizations unsure of how tooperationalize AI in their business, an annotation provider can serve as atrusted advisor to your machine learning teamasking the right questions, atthe right time, under the right circumstances.

A recent report shared that organizations spend 5x moreon internal data labeling, for every dollar spent on third-party services. Thismay be due, in part, to the expense of assigning data scientists and ML engineerslabeling tasks. Still, theres also something to be said about the establishedplatforms, workflows, and trained workforce that allow annotation serviceproviders to work more efficiently.

Working with a trusted partner often meansthat the annotators assigned to your project receive training to understand thecontext of the data being labeled. It also means you have a dedicatedtechnology platform for data labeling. Over time, your dedicated team oflabelers can begin to specialize in your specific use-case, and this expertiseresults in lower costs and better scalability of your AI programs.

Technology platforms that incorporateautomation and reporting, such as automated QA, can also help improve labelingefficiency by helping to prevent logical fallacies, expedite training for datalabelers, and ensure a consistent measure of annotation quality. This alsohelps reduce the amount of manual QA time required by clients, as well as theannotation provider.

Few-click annotation is another example, whichuses machine learning to increase accuracy and reduce labeling time. Withfew-click annotation, the time it would take a human to annotate several pointscan be reduced down from two minutes to a few seconds. This combination ofmachine learning and the support of a human, who does a few clicks, produces alevel of labeling precision previously not possible with human effort alone.

The human in the loop is not going away in theAI supply chain. However,more data annotation providers are also using pre and post-processingtechnologies to support humans training AI. In pre-processing, machine learningis used to convert raw data into clean datasets, using a script. This does notreplace or reduce data labeling, but it can help improve the quality of theannotations and the labeling process.

There are no shortcuts to train AI, but a dataannotation provider can help expedite the labeling process, by leveragingin-house technology platforms, and acting as an extension of your team, toclose the loop between data scientists and data labelers.

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The Curious Case of Data Annotation and AI - RTInsights

Which are the Key Industries that Depend on the Artificial Intelligence – CIOReview

There are many industries that heavily rely on artificial intelligence so that they can work more efficiently.

FREMONT, CA:There is no end to research about how artificial intelligence can be improved and implemented in everyday lives. Several multi-million companies are continuously trying to apply new technologies to ensure that they will be the foundation of human evolution. However, there are still some positive and negative points to it, and people are divided about the idea of making a robotized world.

Despite such differences among human beings, some forms of AI are highly used in industries. Here are some of the industries that heavily depend on the technology of artificial intelligence.

Online Gambling Sites

The online casino industry is heavily dependent on artificial intelligence. Furthermore, online gambling sites would not have existed if they did not have the technology of AI. The online casinos will utilize artificial intelligence so that they can impose fair-play, and every result of the games is random. The technology also helps to secure the sites and ensure that the information of the players remains hidden.

Healthcare

In the last few years, AI and healthcare have formed a strong bond among them. The doctors get assistance from artificial intelligence as it offers better diagnostics and detects medical issues in every human being that, too, within no time. Healthcare wants to utilize technology because it reduces the time taken to examine a patient and also provides reliable and effective results.

Manufacturing

The manufacturing sector needs robots, and artificial intelligence can help the industry to build the process, which can be more reliable than humans. AI has been playing a significant role in the industry as it takes care of every minute detail in the making process to make it more efficient.

Advertising

In the case of an advertisement, the marketing industry can transform itself into the online world due to which applying AI has become significant in this sector. AI is used for identifying the preference of the consumers by analyzing the cookie history while advertising on social media and other online platforms. Online advertisement has become much more accessible and effective with AI than it was ever before with the traditional marketing devices.

See also:Top Artificial Intelligence Companies

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Which are the Key Industries that Depend on the Artificial Intelligence - CIOReview

Rules urgently needed to oversee police use of data and AI report – The Guardian

National guidance is urgently needed to oversee the polices use of data-driven technology amid concerns that it could lead to discrimination, a report has said.

The study, published by the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi) on Sunday, said guidelines were required to ensure that the use of data analytics, artificial intelligence (AI) and computer algorithms developed legally and ethically.

Forces expanding use of digital technology to tackle crime was in part driven by funding cuts, the report said.

Officers are battling against information overload as the volume of data around their work grows, while there is also a perceived need to take a preventative rather than reactive stance to policing.

Such pressures have led forces to develop tools to forecast demand in control centres, triage investigations according to their solvability and to assess the risks posed by known offenders.

Examples of the latter include Hampshire polices domestic violence risk-forecasting model, Durham polices Harm Assessment Risk Tool (Hart) and West Midlands polices draft integrated offender management model.

The report, commissioned by the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation (CDEI), said that while technology could help improve police effectiveness and efficiency, it was held back by the lack of a robust empirical evidence base, poor data quality and insufficient skills and expertise.

While not directly focused on biometric, live facial recognition or digital forensic technologies, the report explored general issues of data protection and human rights underlying all types of police technology.

It could be argued that the use of such tools would not be necessary if the police force had the resources needed to deploy a non-technological solution to the problem at hand, which may be less intrusive in terms of its use of personal data, the report said.

It advised that an integrated impact assessment was needed to help justify the need for each new police analytics project. Initiatives were often not underpinned by enough evidence as to their claimed benefits, scientific validity or cost-effectiveness, the report said.

The reports authors noted criticism of predictive policing tools being racially biased, but said there was a lack of sufficient evidence to assess whether this occured in England and Wales and if it resulted in unlawful discrimination.

They said studies claiming to demonstrate racial bias were mostly based on analysis conducted in the US, and that it was unclear whether such concerns would transfer to a UK context.

However, there is a legitimate concern that the use of algorithms may replicate or amplify the disparities inherent in police-recorded data, potentially leading to discriminatory outcomes, the report said.

For this reason, ongoing tracking of discrimination risk is needed at all stages of a police data analytics project, from problem formulation and tool design to testing and operational deployment.

Roger Taylor, chairman of the CDEI, said: There are significant opportunities to create better, safer and fairer services for society through AI, and we see this potential in policing. But new national guidelines, as suggested by Rusi, are crucial to ensure police forces have the confidence to innovate legally and ethically.

The report called on the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) to work with the Home Office and College of Policing to develop the technology guidelines.

The NPCC lead for information management, Ian Dyson, said it would work with the government and regulators to consider the reports recommendations. He added: Data-driven technology can help us to to keep the public safe. Police chiefs recognise the need for guidelines to ensure legal and ethical development of new technologies and to build confidence in their ongoing use.

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Rules urgently needed to oversee police use of data and AI report - The Guardian

These leaders are coming to Robotics + AI on March 3. Why arent you? – TechCrunch

TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics + AI brings together a wide group of the ecosystems leading minds on March 3 at UC Berkeley. Over 1,000+ attendees are expected from all facets of the robotics and artificial intelligence space investors, students, engineers, C-levels, technologists and researchers. Weve compiled a small list of highlights of attendees companies and job titles attending this years event:

ATTENDEE HIGHLIGHTS

STUDENTS & RESEARCHERS FROM:

Did you know that TechCrunch provides a white-glove networking app at all our events called CrunchMatch? You can connect and match with people who meet your specific requirements, message them and connect right at the conference. How cool is that!?

Want to get in on networking with this caliber of people? Book your $345 General Admission ticket today and save $50 before prices go up at the door. But no one likes going to events alone. Why not bring the whole team? Groups of four or more save 15% on tickets when you book here.

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These leaders are coming to Robotics + AI on March 3. Why arent you? - TechCrunch

Zero-sum thinking is an AI talent killer – Times Higher Education (THE)

Technology arising out of artificial intelligence has untold potential to benefit humanity and to generate wealth and employment. It also offers exciting new ways to explore most academic disciplines.

Moreover, if a technology company cannot learn from the innovative work done in higher education, it will probably fail to find a platform for sustainable growth. Similarly, without both public and private funding, new inventions may languish in a laboratory.

Hence, the case is obvious for industry and academia to collaborate on AI. However, not everyone is convinced. Some people regard cooperation between enterprises and universities as benefitting only the companies, and that research should be conducted in a commercial vacuum. Politicians are less concerned about commercial benefit since they welcome the economic growth and jobs that commercial success brings. But they do sometimes object when the company concerned is based in a foreign country.

Such zero-sum thinking has parallels with fears voiced by some US politicians in the 1980s and 1990s about Japans economic rise. In the 2018 book Prediction Machines, Ajay Agrawal recounts how the MIT economist Scott Stern was asked at a congressional hearing in 1999 how the US should respond to comparably higher R&D spending by Japan and other economies, suggesting that these countries posed a threat to American prosperity. The first thing we should do is send them a thank you letter, Stern said. Innovative investment is not a win-lose situation. American consumers are going to benefit from more investment by other countriesIt is a race we can all win."

Huawei is not holding out for a thank you letter any time soon. But our message will always be clear: countries have more to gain than to fear from healthy international competition. By placing Chinese companies on a blacklist, politicians are restricting the talent growth required for a successful AI-informed future that will benefit everyone.

Talent growth is a hugely important issue. The European Commission believes that there could be as many as 750,000 unfilled jobs in the European information and communication technology sector this year. And a 2018 Ernst & Young poll found that 56 per cent of senior AI professionals believe this lack of qualified talent is the single biggest barrier to AI implementation across business operations. This means talent, not technology, is key to economic growth.

The trick, then, will be to upskill people up to work in IT, rather than allowing them to be put out of work by it: what Andy Haldane, chief economist at the Bank of England, calls technological unemployment. But the existing talent is spread all around the world; 71 per cent of tech employees in Silicon Valley are foreign born, for instance. So cross-border collaboration on AI makes overwhelming sense. We need a global Silicon Valley: an international community of academics, entrepreneurs, companies and investors working together to nurture talent and push ideas forward.

To this end, Huawei has launched a developer enablement programme, providing an investment of $1 billion (777 million) to address the widening skills gap. We work with universities to publish textbooks and educational material related to AI, help to build AI labs and train AI teachers, and encourage universities from all over the world to participate in the Huawei cloud open community.

But we also need to keep making the case for investment in basic research, which has hit a bottleneck worldwide, primarily because government funding in this area has fallen significantly. Product innovation during the past 20 years has relied on ideasthat were conceivedin academiaand developed by industry into products and solutions that address customer needs. The next phase will be a search for new theoretical concepts that will shape consumer needs in 50 years time: a future ShannonHartley theorem or Moores Law, for example.

Despite the geopolitical pressures that international tech companies such as Huawei face, we will continue to increase investment in collaborating with universities. A collective effort is the only way to answer the worlds greatest challenges and respond to an uncertain future. It is not a zero-sum game.

Jack Lyu Ke is president of Huaweis Human Resource Management Department, and chairman of the Huawei Corporate Advisory Committee.

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Zero-sum thinking is an AI talent killer - Times Higher Education (THE)

Aisera, an AI tool to help with customer service and internal operations, exits stealth with $50M – TechCrunch

Robotic process automation the ability to automate certain repetitive software-based tasks to free up people to focus on work that computers cannot do has become a major growth area in the world of IT. Today, a startup called Aisera that is coming out of stealth has taken this idea and supercharged it by using artificial intelligence to help not just workers with internal tasks, but in customer-facing environments, too.

Quietly operating under the radar since 2017, Aisera has picked up a significant list of customers, including Autodesk, Ciena, Unisys and McAfee covering a range of use cases from computer geeks with very complicated questions through to people who didnt grow up in the computer generation, says CEO Muddu Sudhakar, the serial entrepreneur (three previous startups, Kazeon, Cetas and Caspida, were respectively acquired by EMC, VMware and Splunk) who is Aiseras co-founder.

With growth of 350% year-on-year, the company is also announcing today that it has raised $50 million to date, including most recently a $20 million Series B led by NorwestVenture Partners with Menlo Ventures, True Ventures, Khosla Ventures, First Round Capital, Ram Shriram and Maynard Webb Investments also participating.

(No valuation is being disclosed, said Sudhakar.)

The crux of the problem that Aisera has set out to solve is that, while RPA has identified that there is a degree of repetition in certain back-office tasks which, if that work can be automated, can reduce operational costs and be more efficient for an organization the same can be said for a wide array of IT processes that cover sales, HR, customer care and more.

There have been some efforts made to apply AI to solving different aspects of these particular use cases, but one of the issues has been that there are few solutions that sit above an organizations software stack to work across everything that the organization uses, and does so in an unsupervised way that is, uses AI to learn processes without having an army of engineers alongside the program training it.

Aisera aims to be that platform, integrating with the most popular software packages (for example in service desk apps, it integrates with Salesforce, ServiceNow, Atlassian and BMC), providing tools to automatically resolve queries and complete tasks. Aisera is looking to add more categories as it grows: Sudhakar mentioned legal, finance and facilities management as three other areas its planning to target.

Matt Howard, the partner at Norwest that led its investment in Aisera, said one of the other things that stands out for him about the company is that its tools work across multiple channels, including email, voice-based calls and messaging, and can operate at scale, something that cant be said in actual fact for a lot of AI implementations.

I think a lot of companies have overstated when they implement machine learning. A lot of times its actually big data and predictive analytics. We have mislabeled a lot of this, he said in an interview. AI as a rule is hard to maintain if its unsupervised. It can work every well in a narrow use case, but it becomes a management nightmare when handling the stressthat comes with 15 million or 20 million queries. Currently Aisera said that it handles about 10 million people on its platform. With this round, Howard andJon Callaghan of True Ventures are both joining the board.

There is always a paradox of sorts in the world of AI, and in particular as it sits around and behind processes that have previously been done by humans. It is that AI-based assistants, as they get better, run the risk of ultimately making obsolete the workers theyre meant to help.

While that might be a long-term question that we will have to address as a society, for now, the reward/risk balance seems to tip more in the favour of reward for Aiseras customers. At Ciena, we want our employees to be productive, said Craig Williams, CIO at Ciena, in a statement. This means they shouldnt be trying to figure out how a ticketing tool works, nor should they be waiting around for a tech to fix their issues. We believe that 75 percent of all incidents can be resolved through Aiseras technology, and we believe we can apply Aisera across multiple platforms. Aisera doesnt just make great AI technology, they understand our problems and partner with us closely to achieve our mission.

And Sudhakar similar to the founders of startups that are would-be competitors like UiPath when asked the same kind of question doesnt feel that obsolescence is the end game, either.

There are billions of people in call centres today, he said in an interview. If I can automate [repetitive] functions they can focus on higher-level work, and thats what we wanted to do. Those trying to solve simple requests shouldnt. Its one example where AI can be put to good use. Help desk employees want to work and become programmers, they dont want to do mundane tasks. They want to move up in their careers, and this can help give them the roadmap to do it.

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Aisera, an AI tool to help with customer service and internal operations, exits stealth with $50M - TechCrunch