Clarifying FDA and FTC Roles Could Strengthen Oversight and Enhance Consumer Awareness – Government Accountability Office

What GAO Found

GAO's market review during a 2-month period found most examples of memory supplement marketing on the Internet. About 96 percent of marketing identified appeared on the Internet, and a total of 490 memory supplement products were identified by the market review. GAO found 28 examples of advertisements that linked supplement use to treatment or prevention of memory-related diseases, which is generally prohibited by federal law. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials subsequently determined that 27 of these examples appeared to violate federal requirements. Officials reported that they had issued two advisory letters to two firms and would continue monitoring all of the examples that were identified.

Oversight of memory supplements falls under FDA's general authority to regulate dietary supplements and their labeling, and the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) general authority to enforce the prohibitions against deceptive advertising. Between 2006 and 2015, FDA and FTC have taken similar types of enforcement actions for memory supplements as for other dietary supplementswith most FDA actions being warning letters and FTC actions being a mix of administrative and federal court actions. Nineteen of 551enforcement actions involved memory supplements. The agencies coordinate enforcement actions in the same way for all dietary supplements. FDA and FTC have done some outreach to industry and consumers on dietary supplement use by older adults as well as some specific outreach related to memory supplement enforcement actions. In prioritizing enforcement and outreach efforts, the agencies focus on safety, egregiousness of deception, and impact of marketing.

FDA faces challenges related to limited information about the dietary supplement market, including memory supplements, to inform its oversight efforts. FDA officials said the agency is exploring ways to obtain additional market information to improve its oversight. FTC officials believe their existing tools and information are sufficient to inform its oversight efforts. While Internet marketing of dietary supplements was a concern for agencies, consumers, and industry groups, GAO found that consumer groups were unclear about FDA's and FTC's roles for overseeing supplement marketing found on the Internet. FDA and FTC share oversight of marketing on the Internet, with FTC exercising primary jurisdiction over advertising on the Internet and FDA exercising primary jurisdiction over aspects considered to fall under labeling, including information provided at the point of sale. However, few documents explicitly delineate their differing roles and coordination in oversight, or communicate the roles to industry and consumers. Federal internal control standards state that agencies should communicate quality information with external parties to achieve objectives, and GAO has also previously reported that delineating roles and responsibilities are issues agencies should consider when collaborating. Absent clarification of FDA and FTC roles, consumers may not understand which agency to report concerns to involving Internet marketing, and there is a risk that agencies may not receive consumer complaints directly, which may delay agencies taking action to address a problem. Consumer complaints are an important tool for both agencies to learn about potential dietary supplement issues, according to agency officials.

Memory supplementsdietary supplements claiming to improve memoryare a growing market, with sales estimated at $643 million in 2015, almost double 2006 sales. FDA and FTC share oversight of memory supplement marketinglabeling and advertising claimsbut generally do not approve claims before products are marketed.

GAO was asked to review memory supplement marketing and oversight. This report examines (1) how memory supplements are marketed and the extent marketing targets older adults and may violate federal requirements; (2) related enforcement and outreach actions taken by FDA and FTC; and (3) challenges to agency oversight.

GAO reviewed five types of media (Internet, television, among others) to identify examples of memory supplement marketing practices and potential violations of federal requirements. GAO selected these channels using demographic and survey data relevant to older adults. GAO analyzed FDA and FTC data on enforcement actions for fiscal years 2006 through 2015the most recent data available. GAO also reviewed relevant agency oversight policies, interviewed agency officials, and interviewed selected consumer and industry groups.

GAO recommends that FDA and FTC provide additional guidance to consumers clarifying the agencies' differing roles in their shared oversight of memory supplement and other dietary supplement marketing on the Internet. The two agencies concurred with GAO's recommendation.

For more information, contact Seto Bagdoyan at (202) 512-6722 or bagdoyans@gao.gov.

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Clarifying FDA and FTC Roles Could Strengthen Oversight and Enhance Consumer Awareness - Government Accountability Office

CNO Richardson: Perry Frigates Only Inactive Hulls Navy Considering Returning to Active Fleet; DDG Life Extension … – USNI News

Sailors assigned to the Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate USS Elrod (FFG-55) pose for a photo in front of the ship before her decommissioning ceremony at Naval Station Norfolk in 2015. US Navy Photo

WASHINGTON, D.C. While all options are on the table in the Navys push to field a 355-ship fleet, when it comes toreactivating ships in the inactive fleet, the service is realistically only looking at seven decommissioned Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates (FFG-7), Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson told USNI News on Thursday.

Since the December reveal of the Navys new fleet size goal, calls have come from some analysts to reactivate three older Ticonderoga-class cruisers (CG-47) that have been sidelined for more than a dozen years or the conventionally powered Kitty Hawk (CV-63) aircraft carrier.

In the 1980s, the service reactivated ships from the inactive fleet as part of the Reagan Administrations drive to a 600-ship Navy most notably the four Iowa-class battleships (BB-61) from World War II.

The Navy has about 50 warships in the inactive fleet, but so far only the Perrys are seriously being studied for reactivation, Richardson said following a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He first mentioned the possibility of reactivating Perrys earlier this week during a presentation at the Naval War College.

Bringing those back were examining it and we dont want to overlook any options, but really on the face of it its going to be very complicated, he said. As a ship class comes to the end of its life, its not like were pouring a lot of money into keeping that class modernized. Although the last of the frigates were decommissioned a couple of years ago, weve really stopped modernizing far before that because we just wanted to bring it to a graceful end and there were better places to spend our money at the time.

Rather, the Navy is looking at what it could do now to extend the life of the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers (DDG-51) past an expected service life of 35 years, in a more realistic bid to keep up the fleet size.

The DDG life extension plan would prompt a reexamination of key decisions the Navy has made over the last few years on the mid-life modernization of the Burke class.

The Navy elected not to modernize the Aegis Combat Systems of some of the earlier Burkes as a cost-savings measure and instead just executed hull, mechanical and engineering upgrades.

The Baseline 9 combat system upgrade replaces the 1980s-era computer infrastructure of the combat system with faster and more easily upgraded commercial servers, an additional signal processor that allows the ship to fight both traditional air and ballistic missile threats, and a networking capability that allows data to flow from the upgraded destroyer to other ships and aircraft.

How extensively the Navy will take a second look at the DDG upgrade schedule or combat system modernization plan is also being evaluated, Richardson said.

Its the same cost-benefit tradeoff [as the frigates]. You take a look at how much more life might we get, and if its a significant period of time then it might be worth investing in the combat system to modernize and well take it from there, he said. Everything has to be on the table, and I want to understand the entire decision space and that entire landscape.

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CNO Richardson: Perry Frigates Only Inactive Hulls Navy Considering Returning to Active Fleet; DDG Life Extension ... - USNI News

Hacking the human lifespan / Boing Boing – Boing Boing

Biomedical gerontologist Aubrey de Grey has said that the first person likely to live to 1,000 years-old has probably been born already. de Grey's nonprofit lab, and others, some of which are funded by Silicon Valley billionaires, are boldly focused on how science may find a cure for aging. In the new issue of Smithsonian, Elmo Keep writes about these efforts to "hack" mortality and quotes my Institute for the Future colleagues Rachel Maguire and Jake Dunagan, both of whom cast a concerned eye on the obsession with longevity. From Smithsonian:

One thing we do know is that there are more elderly people alive now than there have ever been in the history of the planet. Even if todays life-extension researchers made meaningful breakthroughs, the therapies wouldnt be available for many years to come. That means were about to face a lot of death, says Rachel Maguire, a research director focusing on health care at the Institute for the Future, in Palo Alto. By 2025 or 2030, there will be more of a culture of dying and lots of different ways of experiencing it. There are early signs of new types of funerals and spiritual formations around this. Maguire foresees new end-of-life plans, including assisted dying. When it comes to aging, she points out that biological research is only one piece of a puzzle that must also include economics, politics and cultural change. I dont think we have answers yet for how wed do the other pieces. And the financial piece alone is huge.

Theres already a huge disparity between the life spans of rich and poor Americans, and critics of the new longevity research worry the gap may only grow wider. A 2016 report from the Brookings Institution found that, for men born in 1920, there was a six-year difference in life expectancy between men at the top 10 percent and bottom 10 percent of the earnings ladder. For men born in 1950, the difference was 14 years. For women, the gap grew from 4.7 to 13 years. In other words, advances in medicine havent helped low-income Americans nearly as much as their wealthier counterparts....

Dunagan has little patience for Silicon Valleys longevity research; he says proponents are not sufficiently interested in the details. The rich people are defining the terms of the longevity conversation and have enhanced access to these technologies, he says. Everyone wants to live longer, to some degree, but its also the sense of privilege, of selfishness to it thats I want mine. I always want mine. Well, what if everyone had this? What would be the long-term implications of that?

Derek Muller of the YouTube channel Veritasium uses a nifty trick to make visible the invisible air currents, temperature gradients, and differences in air pressure around us. The process is called Schlieren photography and with the right equipment and some precision alignment, you can try it at home. As Muller explains: I first saw a []

On June 16, 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space. She orbited the Earth 48 times over a period of three days. Inspired by Yuri Gagarin who in 1961 became the first person in space, Tereshkova applied to the Russian space program and was accepted based on her extensive background as []

In this nifty YouTube video, Dave Hax talks through the properties of gallium, the metal that liquefies at just 86F and is safe to play with. (Just dont eat it!) Hax has a whole collection of videos about gallium on his YouTube channel. If you want to give it a try yourself, you buy 20 []

While the portability of smartphones and tablets is undeniably convenient, the occasional need to support your device while typing or video chatting can get exhausting after awhile. To give you an extra hand with your mobile devices, this trio of foldable stands is availablein the Boing Boing Store.These device props have an adjustable metal back, []

With over 80% of the global smartphone market, Android is by far the most widely-used operating system. Thanks to its open-source underpinnings, adoption of Googles mobile OS has skyrocketed. It can be found everywhere from laptops to car navigation systems. As such, enterprising mobile developers would be remiss to not consider targeting the platform. And []

Having grown out of its awkward adolescence, JavaScript is no longer a novelty language for animating elements on webpages. It has become the lingua franca of the web, imbued with a variety of other libraries and tools to form complex, interactive sites. To make a real career as a programmer its not enough to just []

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Trans-Europe Express: 5 Star fails on immigration – EURACTIV

It was a wipeout. Failing to win a single contest in 1,004 local elections in Italy on Sunday (11 June), Beppe Grillos 5 Star Movement was quickly assigned to the list of declining populist parties that began with Geert Wilders defeat in Marchs Dutch poll.

Said to be inspired by the Trump Effect, Italian voters gave their votes to the centre-right and centre-left, going so far as to post a Lega Nord/Forza Italia coalition victory in Grillos hometown, Genoa, a traditionally left-wing city.

The one-time comedian was quick to write off the defeat as a symptom of growing pains.

The M5S was the most present political force in this electoral round. The other parties camouflaged themselves, above all the PD which presented itself in around half the constituencies the M5S did, he told Ansa. The results are a sign of slow but inexorable growth.

Grillo might be right. 5 Star is no ordinary populist party. Indeed, calling it populist is itself something of a stretch, though the M5S leader has done little to dampen the comparison, given his embrace of Marine Le Pen, Nigel Farage, and, umm, Donald Trump.

More importantly, 5 Star has managed to fill a void in Italian politics that was opened up by the collapse of the countrys left, particularly that created by the fragmentation of the Communist Party in the early 1990s, of which Grillo was once a member.

Adding a healthy dose of environmentalism and anarchism, and a typically American embrace of the democratic possibilities opened up by the Internet, made the 5 Star Movement an especially distinct beast, with little ideologically in common with other populist parties such as Germanys far-right Alternative fr Deutschland.

The tone of the partys politics has always been counter-cultural, albeit hippie-like, sans the labour emphasis of the older Italian left. Given that Grillo and party co-founder Gianroberto Casaleggio were both baby boomers, it made sense.

They were, in fact, ageing hippies, who, in classic 1960s fashion, had held onto most of the contrarian ideologies of their generation.

That cultural mix is what made 5 Star such a potent and appealing, Zeitgeist-like force, particularly in the context of the economic crisis created by the decadence of Silvio Berlusconis disastrous four terms in office, during which the party was born.

5 Star didnt have to offer much in the way of a concrete political programme. It just had to emphasise the anti-establishment values associated with Italys declining left, and the culture of its post-war heyday.

The problem with this, and the one which makes it less than competitive with Italys right, is its anti-immigration stance, one that Rome Mayor Virginia Raggi resurrected this week, calling for a moratorium on migration to the capital.

A former advocate of Romes profound diversity, the scandal-ridden Raggi could not help but sound a bit insincere, smarting, as 5 Star was, from its electoral performance on Sunday.

Hence the significance of the electoral resurgence of the Lega Nord and Berlusconis Forza Italia. Both took an estimated 13% in Sundays vote, in no small part due to the consistency of their historic antipathy towards immigration.

Decidedly nationalist parties, and also avowedly pro-business, the Lega Nord and Forza Italia are also less ideologically contradictory than 5 Star.

Their return to prominence, at 5 Stars expense, helps highlight the ideological inconsistencies of Grillos party, and why immigration is a core weakness.

Hating Roma, for example, is not normally associated with environmentalism. Even in Italy, where fascism always indulged a mix of left and right.

If 5 Star continues to haemorrhage voters to its competitors, it will be impossible to ignore why.

Appoint a queer premier. The Serbian government has come under fire once again after the Nelt Group announced that its facilities in downtown Belgrade had been illegally razed.EURACTV.rs reports.

Democratic deficit. France is mulling the introduction of proportional representation for its next legislative election. It could take inspiration from its European neighbours, all of which bar the United Kingdom use a version of PR.

Hungary is such a drag. Budapests new NGO law is discriminatory and restricts the free movement of capital. This could affect other kinds of economic activity, former Commission official Heather Grabbe toldEURACTIV Germany.

Refugee crisis 1.0. Almost a decade before Lampedusa became a symbol of todays refugee crisis, the Canary Islands another southern European border faced a similar challenge, reports EURACTIV media partner EFE.

Cold War still hot. Ion Iliescu and 13 other officials have been ordered to stand trial on charges of crimes against humanity in connection with the crackdown on a Bucharest protest in 1990, the Romanian prosecutors office said on Tuesday.

No taxes, no peace. The growing trend of distributing vouchers to employees to avoid taxes has raised eyebrows in the Greek government, which has moved to crack down on unprecedented levels of tax evasion in the cash-strapped country.

Refugees matter. The EU launched legal action on Tuesday against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic for refusing to take in their share of refugees under a controversial solidarity plan.

Go West. Macedonias new leaders showed fresh resolve to revive the countrys stalled bid for membership of the EU and NATO on Monday by vowing to mend relations with estranged EU neighbours Greece and Bulgaria and implement long-delayed reforms.

Hippies are better at farming. Italys anti-system 5-Star Movement looked set to suffer a severe setback in local elections on Sunday, failing to make the run-off vote in almost all the main cities up for grabs.

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Whatever Happened to American Idealism? | PopMatters – PopMatters

(Random House) US: Jun 2017

For much of the 21st centurylike the decades preceding itidealism has seemed in short supply in America. As the country lurches from dubious democracy to outright oligarchy, and the fledgling achievements of the Civil Rights era are back-pedaled into barely veiled disenfranchisement and targeted violence against black Americans and other minorities, idealism has seemed the scarcest resource in a country where hope itself has inexorably dwindled. Even the countrys dissenters those pundits and politicians who challenge whatever status quo holds sway in the halls of Washington and board rooms of Wall Streetseem more intent on proving the legitimacy of their own voices than proving the legitimacy of any high ideals.

However, suggests Jeremy McCarter, the spirit of radicalism and idealism may be returning to America. As his book went to print in early 2017 he witnessed the march of a nation against the president it found itself saddled with; a president who seemed to embody all of the countrys most terrible qualities.

Perhaps hes right, and something is awakening in the American soul. Perhaps it requires great struggle against the most formidable and despicable of foes to break through the collective cynicism of a country disillusioned with its ideals; to quicken a peoples heart and enable them to believe in the potential for progress once again.

Driven in part by the hope this might be the case, McCarter looks back to a former century for inspiration. Young Radicals might appear on the surface to be a group biography, but its subject is actually the spirit of an age. McCarter explores the progressive-minded radical idealism of the 1910s, an era which produced some of the centurys greatest hopes and greatest horrors. In America: socialism and suffrage. Internationally: world war and the Russian Revolution.

Behind the fury of events and ideas were vibrant, living people, and McCarter weaves his narrative primarily around the stories and struggles of five of them. Walter Lippmann starts off the tale as an employee of the newly elected Socialist mayor of Schenectady, New York; he quickly grows disgusted with the municipal administrations failure to implement serious socialism and embarks on his own career as a writer and journalist, helping to found The New Republic magazine and eventually serving as advisor to presidents.

Alice Paul: the Quaker who learned militant resistance from the suffragettes in Britain and brought it back to America where she fought for womens right to vote, and broader equality, until her death in 1977. John Reed, swashbuckling journalist, poet, and playwright who produced the most famous chronicle of the Russian Revolution, tried to kickstart communism in America, and died as a member of the fledgling Soviet government in 1920, the only American to be honoured with burial at the Kremlin. Max Eastman, editor of the radical journal The Masses. And Randolph Bourne, radical writer and essayist whose refusal to commit himself to any ideological stricture was no doubt aided in part by his tragically early death.

The five core characters, and the many others who came into their orbits, were united by more than just their radical organizations, journals, and Greenwich Village roots. There was a spirit in the air. America was idealistic. People believed they could identify the countrys problems, and by thinking about them, solve them. There was a deep-seated faith that the answers were out there; a faith that coincided with the birth or maturing of doctrines that would go on to play an important role in 20th century history: feminism, socialism, communism, internationalism, transnationalism. There was a concomitant belief in the power of art to change the worldnon-commercial; radical; political artart for and by artists, not for or by corporate profit or state-sponsored regimes.

There was a purity to the struggle and idealism of the era, or at least McCarter helps it to appear that way in hindsight.

Of course, he handles his characters with passion, but also integrity. He knows they werent perfect. Alice Pauls suffrage militancy collaborates with white supremacists. John Reed and Max Eastman both wind up disillusioned after their first-hand experiences as part of the Russian revolutionary regime. Walter Lippmann becomes an apologist for Americas involvement in World War I, lured in by the prospect of influence at the highest levels of power in Washington.

But the gradual evolution of these characters is at least as instructive, and important, as the genesis of their radical idealism.

Biography of an Era

McCarters subjects at first appear to be a disparate, random grouping of intellectuals and activists, waging their own struggles and lives, linked here and there by common causes and employers. But what gradually emergesand McCarter does a consummate job in breathing it slowly into lifeis a common spirit of idealism and radicalism that animates not only this core of characters but also the movements and people around them. From the arts to politics to journalism and more, every field of endeavor seems infused by this sense of grappling with big ideas. No matter where the characters turn their energy, their projects take on a sense of fundamental radical importance.

During a summer break, John Reed, Louise Bryant and several others form what would become the famous Provincetown Players, at first just for a lark but they take it so seriously it develops a life of its own (in the process they accidentally discover and recruit Eugene ONeill, who would go on to become what many consider Americas greatest playwright). The theatre troupes constitution, drafted during an intense 24-hour writing session by Eastman, Reed, and a couple of others, deeply resembles the manifesto for their radical journal The Masses, grappling with issues of democratic and artistic control by the artists themselves, and dedicated to presenting the sorts of things capitalism would not be interested in. The two projectsand countless others during these few yearsare really one and the same.

The same radicals, pursuing the same dreams, facing the same problems: The Masses and the Provincetown Players are, at heart, twin children of the zeitgeist. Both explicitly reject the limiting, falsifying effects of commercial production. Both see a true and honest reckoning with the facts of American life as a step toward liberation. Both proceed not with doggedness, but with a light heart. There is, in both, a lively spirit of play.

The First World War is a constant backdrop to the throbbing beat of this zeitgeist, both tempering and quickening it. America watches in horror as Europeheretofore considered by many the apex of the civilized worlddescends into barbarous, self-destructive bloodshed. President Woodrow Wilson is initially determined to keep America out of the war, and public sentiment (along with the radicals) are on his side. Yet as the war drags on, so do the cries for America to do something, especially when growing numbers of American vessels and passengers wind up as unintended casualties of German U-Boats in the Atlantic.

Yet for the time being America rests atop its moral high ground, preaching peace to both sides, ready and waiting to help the world rebuild whenever the war ends. Wilsons administration sends a moralizing message to both sides: no matter who wins, the war will have been a setback for human civilization, and whatever settlement ends the war must not be grounded in vengeance but in ensuring that new systems are put in place to prevent war from ever erupting again. The government itself seems tinged with the idealism of the era. Peace without victory is the call coming from the White House; it is, perhaps, the last stand of institutionalized American idealism and morality.

When more American casualties pile up, and when the Germans not only refuse to rein in their U-Boats but are caught trying to provoke Mexico into a war with the United States, Wilsons administration finally opts for war (they werent entirely hapless victims: militarists and would-be war profiteers at high levels had been advocating for participation in the war for years). But even then, they attempt to varnish it with a moralistic sheen. Granted, war-making American administrations have always claimed they were fighting for some high ideal, but Wilson gives his vision a bit more substance: not only a war for democracy, but he suddenly injects the new vision of a League of Nations, a super-governing global body with the power to prevent future wars, into the mix. Its a fitting capstone to this radical moment that even the most institutionalized Establishment figure, the president, clings on to a radical idea as well.

In many ways, Young Radicals is an innovative history of the First World War. While it engages a broader range of subject matter than just the war, it also offers an important history of the war from the perspective of how it impacted progressive and radical socio-political movements in America. When America finally enters the war it signals a crack in American utopianism and idealism. From the dubious idealism of President Wilsons administration and its efforts to stay out of the war, to the split in the left caused by Americas eventual entry, the war impacted American progressivism just as powerfully as these young radicals impacted the war. And impact it they did, by challenging its repressive anti-sedition and anti-espionage legislation, which wound up shutting down radical papers like The Masses and eventually deporting hundreds of radicals to Russia after the war. Yet amidst these defeats, the radicals had victories, too, defending themselves from prison and worse in passionately argued court cases. Much of our popular ideals of free speech were shaped in pivotal ways during this period.

One major impact the war had on the radicals was in splitting their ranks, between those (like Lippmann) who bought the governments claim that it was fighting for democracy, peace and other high ideals; and those who saw Americas entry into the war as treachery and imperialism. These latter included not only radical socialists like Eastman and Reed but also Paul and her suffrage movement, which rightly pointed to the hypocrisy of a government that claimed it was going to war for democracy while it denied democracy to tens of millions of women voters at home.

Lippmann himself became an ideologue for the Presidents war-making, narcissistically convinced he would help craft the post-war new world order. When finally faced with the fact of both his exclusion from decision making and the failure of America to achieve the idealistic post-war treaty it sought, he seeks redemption by working to scuttle the fatally flawed treaty. Interestingly, President Wilson himself becomes almost a sixth core character, ostensibly the farthest thing from a radical (as President) yet almost helplessly sharing in the radical and idealistic spirit of the age despite himself.

Young Radicals is a beautiful book; a desperately-needed book for the present era. The prose is passionate and poetic; the narrative is fast-moving, riveting and resonates with the very idealism that its author seeks to explore. McCarter writes with passion and integrity. Its a book that renders hope real again, and reminds us that idealism and progressive radicalism are not terms of insult; they are core American values that America needs desperately to rediscover. Its only ever idealism that has driven America forward, notes McCarter in closing. In a dark era like the present, its more vital than ever to (re)discover and cling to the most audacious ideals, for they are the only bulwark against the destructive power of cynicism.

Whatever happens, we ought to be braced by the example of the young radicals: how they discovered their ideals, made a decision to fight for them, and went on fighting even when the battle turned against them. Their defeats were painful, but not final. Battles for ideals never are. Ruins stop being ruins when you build with them.

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All Eyez on Me movie review: This 2pac biopic is a compilation of videos with very little story – Firstpost

If you grew up listening to Tupac Shakur, youre going to be disappointed with the biopic All Eyez On Me. If you merely knew about Tupac but are generally unaware of his songs and what they stand for, youre going to be disappointed with this movie. If youre looking for a hip hop biography in the vein of Straight Outta Compton, youre still going to be disappointed. With no clear target audience that will be entertained, this is a difficult film to recommend.

Tupac is a giant name, and he deserved a film better than this one. Directed by Benny Boom, who is known for music videos for 50 Cent, David Guetta and other such big artists, the film never manages to engage on a level that Tupac did with his songs. In fact the film plays out like a string of music videos, with bits of story sprinkled, to no lasting effect.

A still from All Eyez on Me. Image from Facebook

A biography tends to chronicle familiar beats such as humble beginnings, an opportunity, a rise, the descent into sex, drugs and disillusionment and the eventual fall but a good biography transcends these cinematic clichs with either new ways to explore them, or pure cinematic heft. All Eyez On Me unfortunately tracks those familiar elements like a checklist, not revealing anything that wasnt already known about the legendary hip hop artist.

The biggest focus here is the frenemy relationships between Tupac, Suge Knight and Biggie Smalls but theres a lot of smoke and no fire the conflicts dont exude any power and the drama feels like something out of a bad TV movie than a motion picture. Even worse is the supposedly platonic friendship between Tupac and Jada Pinkett (who would later become a movie star and Will Smiths wife). The film tries to shoehorn a social issue with Tupacs mother being a blacktivist, and the internal conflict that Tupac has with whether to stand up for his community, but that too is weakly executed. The censorship by Mr Nihalani doesnt help matters with swear words muted listening to Tupacs songs feels like eating a burger without the patty.

A still from All Eyez on Me. Image from Facebook

Demetruis Shipp, who plays Tupac looks a lot like the guy hes playing, but falls completely flat during the dramatic moments and fares even worse in the sentimental ones. The few bits of entertainment come from the music montages where you see him belting out his legendary songs, but the film never manages to capture the infectious energy of better films of its genre.

The 90s captured a whole zeitgeist of music and the rivalry between the East and West coast rappers, theres a whole history behind the movement and the film wastes a huge opportunity to tap into a time so crucial to both America and music. Perhaps a Netflix mini series would be a better avenue to explore the chunk of time in greater detail. In fact the hologram of Tupac performing at Coachella a few years ago was farmore interesting than this film you could head over to YouTube to watch an icon digitally come back to life.

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All Eyez on Me movie review: This 2pac biopic is a compilation of videos with very little story - Firstpost

Summit County leaders pass resolution supporting public lands and national monuments – The Park Record

Wednesday, Summit County Council members agreed to join Salt Lake City and Castle Valley in passing a resolution urging Utah Gov. Gary Herbert and state legislators to stop using taxpayers' money to fund the transfer of control of public lands to the state.

The council unanimously approved the resolution, which recognizes the "value of federal public lands to Summit County's economy, recreation, heritage and quality of life." Nine people cheered and applauded the decision, including Becky Yih, a Kimball Junction-area resident and volunteer with the campaign "Keep Public Lands in Public Hands."

"It's a statement in favor of preserving the land as it is and listening to the native voices," Yih said. "I think it will bolster efforts in other areas and might trigger other cities and counties to take the same stance."

The resolution states that any loss of access to public lands would have "damaging consequences" for the county's economy, residents and visitors. Additionally, the resolution stresses how the transfer of the county's federal lands would undermine the county's ongoing investment in its open space programs.

"I want to remind you that of all the communication you have received is in support of this resolution and opposed to the transfer of public lands to the state," said Janna Young, director of intergovernmental affairs.

As part of the resolution, the county offered its support for the continued designation of the state's national monuments, including Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.

"Summit County has a rich history of multiple use of public lands in support of an agricultural-and natural resource-based economy and more recently, a significant recreation-focused economy," the resolution stated. "Since 1998, the travel and tourism sector has steadily held approximately half of the countys total private employment and a significant portion of Summit Countys economic livelihood rests on having an active and desirable natural resources, recreation and tourism industry."

Yih said she became involved in the public lands discussion in 2016 after several state legislators wrote a column for the Salt Lake Tribune explaining their reasons for wanting to return control of federal lands to the state.

"They didn't say anything about recreation or the value of public lands. They said it is to develop commerce and that totally incensed me," Yih said. "Senators Orrin Hatch and Mike Lee don't represent me. But, I think, by the Summit County Council being willing to stand up for this, they are representing me and the rest of us who value these lands."

Yih further commended the County Council's consideration of pulling out of U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah) public lands initiative, which has been heavily criticized by the groups who oppose the transfer of public lands. County Council members have not decided whether they want to maintain the county's involvement with the bill or pursue a separate piece of legislation, which will include Wednesday's resolution.

"The county had already tried to work with Rob Bishop and just say, 'OK we can give a little here if you'll give a little,' which he didn't," Yih said. "But by getting a group of entities to make a resolution similar to this, it at least lets the state know they will receive some pushback on the $14 million lawsuit and Public Lands Initiative."

County Council member Kim Carson said councilors had received approximately 75 emails supporting the resolution prior to the meeting.

"I just want to thank you for your input and thank everyone who sent in comments," Carson said.

To view the resolution, go to http://summitcounty.org/DocumentCenter/View/5697.

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Summit County leaders pass resolution supporting public lands and national monuments - The Park Record

Patents: Home Automation Leader Crestron Invents a Smarter Smart Bulb – CEPro

Crestron patent application describes a smart bulb with an integrated on/off mechanism, so users can turn the lamp "off" locally but still control via app or home automation. Is it practical?

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It figures that if home-automation leader Crestron were to build a smart bulb, it would be smarter than other smart bulbs. Indeed, the company filed a patent application that describes how a bulb in a lamp fixture could be controlled locally at the bulb itself, but also via an app or smart-home system even if the bulb is turned off at the lamp location.

Smart bulbs might be all the rage, but they are troublesome because they must always remain in the on position in order to control them remotely.

Crestrons patent application for a wireless replacement LED bulb with one or more accompanying control switches (#20170171948) describes a solution to this problem. It was filed on Dec. 15, 2015 and published on June 15, 2017. Doug Jacobson is listed as the inventor.

The problem is that users want to be able to control lights locally, as well. In the case of a lamp, you might want to flip the switch to turn off the light right then and there, without having to pull out your phone.

Once its powered off, however, you cant use an app to turn it on, much less dim it or perform other lighting feats. It needs power, so the switch must stay on.

Doh! Just after we posted this piece, several folks told us Sengled already has a product similar to the Crestron invention: the ZigBee-enabled Element Touch.

The invention is for a smart bulb with a local on/off switch built in. The quote marks are because flipping this switch doesnt actually turn the bulb off. It just dims it all the way down so it appears to be off. You can still control it remotely.

Power to the lamp is maintained through the always-on original switch.

The integrated switch on the smart bulb can take a number of forms. The patent outlines ideas such as a rotatable collar at the base of the bulb; an electrically conductive surface somewhere on the bulb or harness; or a fancy-pants replacement of the old rotary lamp switch.

Yank the black plastic cap off the rotary shaft on the lamp, and replace it with a digital version that communicates with the bulb. Crestron offers a number of clever ideas for the replacement rotary, such as units that can be pushed in, pulled out and rotated.

Also noted in the patent application is a mechanism to alert users if the lamp is powered off. A battery on the lamp itself could power an LED indicator and/or send a message via the network.

Alternatively, a replacement rotary knob might generate enough kinetic energy to send an alert after power is removed. I dont recall reading it in the patent application but certainly energy harvested from the ambient light could power an LED indicator or a message over the network.

Because its tempting for someone, especially a guest, to turn the real switch off, you have to find some way to keep it in the on position.

Crestron has a few solutions for this, too like a cap that snaps over the switch.

In the early days of smart bulbs, the power-off problem was a big one. Today, however, new solutions address the issue with wireless switches that can be mounted near a lamp or over an in-wall toggle (like the GoControl Z-Wave switch cover).

One could imagine, for example, a Logitech Pop button stuck underneath the lampshade or on a nearby wall.

Easier still, forget about a smart bulb and use a smart light socket like Emberlights or iDevices. Put a local controller on the socket instead of the bulb.

A few twists on Crestrons invention could improve usability, I think. Why not put the local control mechanism on a cover that snaps over the existing switch or rotary? You get a two-fer: lock the power in the on position while providing a local control point.

Or provide a discreet control pad that adheres to the lamp shade or base. It could be powered by ambient light.

Its clear that smart bulbs arent going away. Its also clear they need to be smarter. We can imagine that Crestron might embed its infiNET ZigBee-based wireless technology in a smarter bulb.

More likely, however, they would build their smarter technology into a lamp socket or else build a smaller version of their wirelessinfiNET button that would stick to the lamps shade, cord, base or stand.

Julie Jacobson, recipient of the 2014 CEA TechHome Leadership Award, is co-founder of EH Publishing, producer of CE Pro, Electronic House, Commercial Integrator, Security Sales and other leading technology publications. She currently spends most of her time writing for CE Pro in the areas of home automation, security, networked A/V and the business of home systems integration. Julie majored in Economics at the University of Michigan, spent a year abroad at Cambridge University, earned an MBA from the University of Texas at Austin, and has never taken a journalism class in her life. She's a washed-up Ultimate Frisbee player currently residing in Carlsbad, Calif. Email Julie at [emailprotected]

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Patents: Home Automation Leader Crestron Invents a Smarter Smart Bulb - CEPro

GE CEO Says Automation Within the Next 5 Years is Not Realistic – Futurism

In Brief The outgoing CEO of General Electric spoke at a tech conference in Paris where he called the idea of widespread automation in the next five years "bulls***." He believes that a lack of tech executives experience in a factory leaves them unqualified. Stunted Revolution

Most executives in tech believe that the next five years will bring about a significant number of jobs lost to automation. As advances in robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) are being rapidly developed, the capability of machines to do work previously requiring humans is ramping up. However, not all executivessubscribe to this idea of the ultra-fast progression of automation.

Outgoing Chief Executive of General Electric, Jeff Immelt did not mince words regarding his feelings about the impending automation take over. Speaking at the Viva Teach conference in Paris, Immelt said, I think this notion that we are all going to be in a room full of robots in five years and that everything is going to be automated, its just BS. Its not the way the world is going to work.

Immelt believes that tech executives who have no experience running or working in a factory have no idea of how they actually operate and therefore cannot realistically gauge how automation will progress.

Other experts like tech giant Elon Musk and Greg Creed, the CEO of Yum Brands (the people behind Pizza Hut, KFC, and Taco Bell) believe in the near threat of automation to many human jobs. Elon Musk goes even further in saying that humans need to integrate with machines in order to remain relevant in the future.

The problem with looking at automation as something in the far off future is that it limits the necessary conversations of what we can do to prepare workers for job losses. One of the more popular solutions to this automation issue is a Universal Basic Income (UBI) that is supported by the likes of Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and other experts.

Both sides of this issue are interpreting evidence into predictions. These predictions can only be discounted or vindicated by time. Even so, the questions of what we can do to prepare are still vital whether automation is 5 or 50 years away.

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GE CEO Says Automation Within the Next 5 Years is Not Realistic - Futurism

Automation Is Vital for IT Transformation – CIO Insight

A significant percent of CIOs and other IT decision-makers consider digital transformation "Topic A" on their technology agenda, according to a recent survey from BMC. Successful transformations are currently creating new sources of revenue, improving operations and establishing unique competitive advantages. The automation of manual processes, however, is essential. In fact, nearly all the survey respondents believe that technology and automation will spread from IT to all areas of the business by 2020 to "transform everything." Many strongly agree that businesses that fail to embrace IT automation as a driver of digital businesses won't even exist 10 years from now. Fortunately, the vast majority of survey respondents said their organization has all the resources required to continue innovating technology to reach their goals, with strong alignment between lines of business (LoBs) and the IT department. And most have embraced DevOps as a means to help teams complete projects and achieve strategic objectives. More than 650 global IT decision-makers took part in the research.

Dennis McCafferty is a freelance writer for Baseline Magazine.

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Automation Is Vital for IT Transformation - CIO Insight

21st Century Automation: Policy Responses – Niskanen Center (press release) (blog)

June 14, 2017 by Ryan Hagemann and Nicholas Ciuffo

Previously, we discussed the historical tensions inherent in the First Industrial Revolution, and how the rapid pace of technological change contributed to emerging social tensions. In the short-term, the growing pains were significant, as more and more people began moving to cities and experienced firsthand the costs associated with the advent of a more industrialized economy. However, there were also long-term costs that resulted from the inaction of early 19th century policymakersspecifically, the rise of ideologies that eroded peoples trust and confidence in liberal institutions. The Niskanen Centers Will Wilkinson expressed this sentiment well in a post-election blog on the need to revitalize liberalism:

Liberal norms and institutions are under constant corrosive pressure from natural, deep-seated illiberal tendencies that weve only recently managed to suppress and/or harness at all. These latent atavistic instincts cannot be effectively neutralized in general or in advance because they constantly find expression in novel, unpredictably powerful guises as our culture, economy, and technology evolves.

As our technology evolves, it is inevitable we will continue to encounter corrosive pressure from illiberal tendencies that speak to peoples fears, rather than their aspirations. While we cannot possibly prepare for all future scenarios that might degrade our institutions, there are a number of issues that we can begin addressing that may yet help ensure we avoid the same pitfalls experienced during the First Industrial Revolution.

The Issues the Robots Cant Solve

There are a number of tangential policy areas that will have an impact on how quickly and easily people adapt to the changing technological landscape. Some, like ensuring a robust social safety net and education reform, have been focal points of attention. Others, like the cost of housing, have largely flown under the radar. All of them, however, are important to the broader conversation of automation and the future of work.

Reforming Housing Policies

Impediments to economic growth arent solely tethered to dwindling returns from productivity gains. For example, some believe that restrictions on the supply of housing in dense urban centers where total factor productivity is high (in particular, Silicon Valley) has led to significantly lowered aggregate economic growth. Urban enclaves on the coasts are a significant source of economic activity. By some estimates, U.S. cities with populations exceeding 150,000 contribute to almost 85 percent of GDP. These are the areas with the most potential for high-income earnings, but high costs of living can have a significant deterrence effect for citizens seeking to capitalize on those opportunities. As Greg Ferenstein recently noted:

In one of the most productive cities in America, San Francisco, average rent has rocketed past $3,500 a month, mostly because anti-skyscraper residents have made it illegal to build apartments in half of the city. Getting a permit to build a tall apartment complex can take upwards of 10 years because neighborhood groups have broad regulatory authority to delay construction.

As a result, talented engineers are fleeing the city, and their dreams for creating the next Facebook or Google are going with them. Not everyone needs to live in San Francisco, but its much easier to build high-growth companies in places with a dense concentration of talent. The fewer people who can afford to live in big cities, the less innovative America will be.

If fewer people can afford to take advantage of the network effects in major metropolitan areas, their ability to take advantage of better paying jobs is at risk. Every lost opportunity for an individual is also a potential loss for society, with fewer people participating in, and contributing to, the innovation economy. Diminished potential for innovation could stymie economic growth, while exacerbating social tensions. Much of the modern housing issue in American cities echoes those of early 19th century Britain. As Robert C. Allen wrote in a 2007 Oxford University working paper:

As British cities expanded, growing labour demanded bid up the price of housing and land, and much of the income gain was transferred to urban landowners. Faced with a rising cost of housing, workers responded by reducing their consumption: the result was overcrowding. The were limits as to how far this process could be pushed, and those limitations meant that rising rents translated into a rising share of income spent on housing.

According to a report published by the Californias Legislative Analysts Office (LAO), a major roadblock to meeting housing demands in Californias most sought-after coastal neighborhoods (Los Angeles, Oakland, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, and Santa AnaAnaheim) has to do with resistance from existing residents. Fear of negative impacts on their home values combined with perceived negative complications related to increased development contribute to hostile attitudes towards developing land for residential purposesthe Not In My Backyard, or NIMBY, effect.

So-called growth control policies also play a role in limiting the development of housing in Californias coastal communities. According to the same LAO report, two-thirds of California cities have growth control policies. Policies such as limiting the number of homes built in a given year or limiting the height of buildings, place a physical limitation on the ability of developers to meet the demand for housing in these highly sought after regions.

Policy reform in this space will be complicated due to the hyperlocal nature of housing policy. The power to reform restrictive zoning laws is often in the hands of those who directly benefit from manipulating the housing supply through such mechanisms. Implementing housing policy reforms at the state level may decouple zoning regulations from local politics aimed at restricting housing supply.

New Approaches to Education

Regardless of how the future of work unfolds, investing in Americas talent today will be essential to reaping the economic benefits of the world of tomorrow. Pursuing policies that incentivize STEM education programs in primary, secondary, and postsecondary institutions will be essential in maintaining an innovative workforce that will be equipped to deal with rapid technological change. Perhaps more importantly, however, a reassessment of the role of certified education in society is needed. That means focusing on different means of accrediting the workforce, outside of the traditional four year university.

Baileys article cites an excellent report by Michael Mandel and Bret Swanson. It correctly identifies the potential of the information technology and digital sectors to radically transform physical industries in the coming years. They argue that it is necessary to upgrade our education and workforce development systems to dramatically expand the number of Americans who can help create, and thrive in, the digitally-enabled economy. Reducing the cost of higher education while boosting collaboration between higher education and industry leaders and improving the relevance of curricula are also cited as important public policy goals. Promoting more skills-based certification and training programs, especially through apprenticeships and trade schools, are necessary to ensuring workers are better prepared (and at a cheaper cost) for the emerging jobs in the digital economy.

Consider Germany, where according to The Wall Street Journal, roughly half of high-school graduates opt for high-octane apprenticeships rather than college degrees. Through a system of collaboration between employers, educators, and the federal government, students in Germany are afforded the option of developing in-demand skills via an apprenticeship arrangement with an employer. Apprentices participate in a dual-training program where they split their time between on-site training and in-classroom instruction. Funding for this scheme is low-cost to the state. Federal agencies provide public funds for the development and promotion of apprenticeship schemes, whereas the majority of the costs involved with training and educating an apprentice is the responsibility of the employer.

Heeding these calls can help fundamentally alter the future of work for future generations. Of more immediate concern, however, is the largest growing sector of the active labor market: older workers. According to a report produced by the New America Foundation in partnership with Bloomberg, one quarter of the workforce will be 55 or older by 2024.

Investments in opportunities for lifelong-learning programs will be necessary to enable those most at risk of being displaced by automation, thus allowing the older generation to participate in a new economy shaped by technological advancement. Incentivizing lifelong education for this at-risk population through income tax credits or grants will be necessary to inspire and motivate those who might otherwise be reluctant, unwilling, or unable to adapt to the changing nature of work.

Traditional education policy has focused on delivering resources for young students to obtain an equitable education regardless of where they live or their economic background. This same line of thinking will need to be adapted to provide an equitable education regardless of age. Providing resources for local community colleges and universities to offer new and innovative curricula, such as online MOOCs or apprenticeship learning, will provide diverse and affordable pathways for older workers to pursue new opportunities.

Social Safety Net Provisions

Although, the United States has fairly robust social welfare programs, they can certainly be improved. A report published by the Executive Office of the White House points out that domestic spending on active labor market programs amounts to just 0.1 percent of GDP. The Organization of Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) average, by contrast, is 0.6 percent. Some tout the need for retraining programs or incentivizing employers to invest in their workforce through a Worker Training Tax Credit.

While training or retraining our workforce to be productive in an economy powered by automation is a possible solution, there is potential to leave out segments of the population that are educationally disadvantaged. It is important to consider policies that will enable this segment of the population to transition into new work or to better plan for leaving the workforce.

In an interview with the MIT Technology Review, economic historian Joel Mokyr notes that in the modern capitalist system your occupation is your identity. Policies should help enable Americans to maintain their ability to function as productive members of society during their transition from low-skill labor to new jobs powered by automation. This can be achieved by improving the social insurance system.

One such proposal, recently floated by Rep. Ro Khanna, is to expand the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). The Niskanen Centers Samuel Hammond has written in support of Rep. Khannas proposal, arguing that:

major disruptions to work on the horizon, with more and more routine jobs being automated by robots and artificial intelligence. The result will not be a lack of jobs, but rather a challenging period of transition to new jobs that leverage uniquely human capabilities like caring and emotional intelligence.

As Hammond has previously noted, expanding the EITC, in contrast to worker retraining programs like Trade Adjustment Assistance, can be a powerful incentive mechanism for both workers and firms to aggressively seek each other out. Mitigating the potential negative effects of automation on Americas labor force will require a thoughtful combination of expanding or augmenting current social nets while being open to policies that will benefit older workers participating in the workforce.

Conclusion

Robots probably arent going to eat all the jobs; at least not anytime soon.

Nonetheless, it is incumbent upon policymakers and technology analysts to start grappling with the potential outcomes of a more automated society. Arguing for doing nothing simply because the gains from automation could outweigh the potential costs ignores the inherent uncertainty of future events. If the labor displacement effects from automation are far greater than we anticipate, the unraveling of institutional trust could lead to unintended consequences that actually forestall future progress, while producing greater market uncertainty.

A dynamic economy that embraces innovation is, on net, a good thing. We shouldnt forestall a future of limitless possibilities for the contentment of the present. But that isnt an excuse for ignoring the many practical hurdles that exist between the present and that future. When Bailey and others argue that their opponents lack of imagination blinds them to how people will use technology to conjure millions of occupations now undreamt of, it fails to acknowledge those roadblocks that currently exist, and which may be erected in the future.

None of this is to suggest we should back off innovation and digitization of the economy. Quite the opposite: if anything, we should aim for more innovation and digitization of the economy. What we cannot do, however, is simply hope for the best. We need to focus on how best to mitigate the risks associated with automation of the economy, and soon.

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21st Century Automation: Policy Responses - Niskanen Center (press release) (blog)

Rockwell Automation CEO shares workforce development strategies at White House – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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Rockwell Automation President and Chief Executive Officer Blake Moret shared his companys successful workforce development strategies at a roundtable discussion at the White House Wednesday.

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Blake Moret (left) succeeded Keith Nosbusch (right) as the CEO of Rockwell Automation last year.(Photo: Business Wire)

Rockwell Automation President and Chief Executive Officer Blake Moret shared his companys successful workforce development strategies at a roundtable discussion at the White House Wednesday.

The conference was presented in conjunction with the Business Roundtable and was led by Ivanka Trump, daughter and adviser of President Donald Trump, and Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta.

Moret was one of about 20 CEOs who shared their workforce development success stories with the White House staff.

Reached by telephone after the conference, Moret said he shared three successful staff development strategies that Milwaukee-based Rockwell deploys: acommitment to lifelong learning;outcome-based instruction;and partnerships between manufacturers and learning centers, such as technical colleges.

I expressed the three principles for having a skilled workforce, Moret said. These are the things that work.

Moret said he was impressed by Ivanka Trumps interest in the subject.

She was an active participant and is clearly knowledgeable about the subject, Moret said.

Ivanka Trump and her father traveled Tuesday to Wisconsin, where they toured an apprenticeship program at Waukesha County Technical College.

The Business Roundtable is an association of chief executive officers of leading U.S. companies.

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Rockwell Automation CEO shares workforce development strategies at White House - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Beyond Prisons Episode 8: Prison Labor feat. Jared Ware – Shadowproof (blog)

In episode 8 of Beyond Prisons, we have a wide-ranging conversation on the subjects of prison labor and slavery. First, we hear more from Bennu Hannibal Ra-Sun, an incarcerated member of the Free Alabama Movement, and a member of Jailhouse Lawyers Speak,a group of incarcerated human rights advocates and prison abolitionists,on the connection between slavery and the 13th amendment, and how society justifies the exploitation of prisoners through academia.

We are then joined by Jared Ware, our producer and a fellow abolitionist. Jay worked withthe Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC) during the nationwide prison strikes against slavery. He helped manage their Twitter account, which was acrucial source of informationas the strike unfolded.

The three of us talk aboutprison jobs programs, organizing against prison slavery, abolishing the 13th Amendment, and the upcoming Millions for Prisoners Human Rights March in Washington, D.C. We also attempt to complicate the discussion of prison labor by considering the economic relationship between the minimum wage labor movement and the use of prison labor, the ethics of working in prisons, and the relevance of prison jobs to the broader labor market.

Free Alabama Movement:http://www.freealabamamovement.com/

Jailhouse Lawyers Speak:https://www.facebook.com/BlkJailhouselawyer/

Read Lawsuit May Serve As Template For Challenging Forced Immigrant Labor In Private Prisons, by Jared Ware.

Please listen, subscribe, and rate/reviewour podcast on iTunesand on Google Play

Sign up for the Beyond Prisons newsletter to receive updates on new episodes, important news and events, and more.

Send tips, comments, and questions tobeyondprisonspodcast@gmail.com

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Music & Production: Jared Ware

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Beyond Prisons Episode 8: Prison Labor feat. Jared Ware - Shadowproof (blog)

Poroshenko instructs Cabinet to verify work of simplified registration … – Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

President Petro Poroshenko has instructed the Cabinet of Ministers to verify the efficiency of abolition of additional registration for the foreign drugs registered in the countries of the EU and G7.

This has been reported by the press service of the Head of State.

"I instruct the Government to thoroughly verify the efficiency of abolition of additional registration for the best foreign drugs and their prices," Petro Poroshenko said. He added that the government officials must explain the difference in prices in case there is one.

The Head of State noted that the medical system requires urgent reform. However, several important steps in this issue have already been made: registration of drugs registered in the EU and G7 countries has been abolished. "This is a resolute step to overcome corruption and bureaucracy," the President emphasized.

ish

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Poroshenko instructs Cabinet to verify work of simplified registration ... - Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

Juneteenth holiday celebrated as an opportunity for city – TribDem.com

Johnstown native Artie Lightfoot was one of the many people spending time on Friday in downtown Johnstowns Central Park for this years Juneteenth Celebration.

Juneteenth, which was presented by the NAACP Johns-town branch, is a holiday that commemorates the announcement of the abolition of slavery in Texas in 1865.

Lightfoot said Fridays gathering was a celebration of freedom, but that it also was a great foundation that can be used to build up the diverse community of Johnstown.

Today is the beginning of what could be great for the city of Johnstown, Lightfoot said.

Everyone is coming together today for one common thing thats happiness, and we can get that back in this city, he said.

All we have to do is be able to get together more often like this. And lets talk about our differences. Im sure we have more in common than we thought.

This is what it truly takes to Make America Great Again, Lightfoot said.

Derek Rose, owner of House of Smoke, was one of the food vendors working on Friday.

Rose, like many of the people in attendance, is hoping Johnstown is ready to take a turn for better.

I think this is good for the city, Rose said. I decided to participate just to give back to the city. Its time for all of us to work together.

During Fridays festivities there was an open mic segment that gave the public an opportunity to give words of encouragement, read poetry and more.

Johnstown police Capts. Chad Miller and Jeff Janciga took some time during the open mic period to address Central Parks crowd. The captains spoke about the community coming together and working together to battle such things as the heroin epidemic and the gun violence.

Im proud to be here, Miller said.

I think its important for the community to understand that its just not about one group here and one group there making a difference, its about everybody coming together thats ultimately what it has to be.

Fran Cashaw, the events organizer, agrees with Miller and said Fridays turnout was great.

Were excited about people coming down and fellowshipping together, socializing together and getting to know each other, she said. All while having a great time here in the park.

The Juneteenth festivities began on Wednesday with a youth day at FWA gym on Lincoln Street. Cashaw said that more than 40 kids came down to participate.

The celebration will conclude on Sunday at Lorain Borough Park. Events for Sunday are scheduled from noon to 5 p.m.

All in all, things are going very well, Cashaw said.

Ronald Fisher is a reporter for The Tribune-Democrat. Follow him on Twitter @FisherSince_82.

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Juneteenth holiday celebrated as an opportunity for city - TribDem.com

Meet Elysia Crampton, the Producer at the Forefront of Political Electronic Music – TeenVogue.com

Fresh Finds is Teen Vogue's new franchise dedicated to highlighting the badass female-identifying artists, musicians, and filmmakers you need to know.

Everything Elysia Crampton does makes you do a double take. One of the rare musicians who is just as adept at blending samples as she is at disseminating scholarly rhetoric, Elysia's experimental compositions which use of everything from ominous drones to slowed-down Shakira samples are always nuanced, layered, and prone to inducing conversation. That said, this all makes sense, seeing as how she's all about discourse as "one of the leaders of a revolution happening in electronic music" right now.

Born in Riverside, California, Elysia still maintains a strong connection to her indigenous Aymara roots. As such, identity politics is a big talking point for her, as is modern colonialism and the subjugation of Native Americans. However, that's not the only issue that's near and dear to her. As a transwoman of color, Elysia is also a vocal proponent for education as a means of minimizing violence against gender-nonconforming or trans bodies. So, on the heels of her new Vinyl Factory project, Teen Vogue sat down with her to talk about everything from the politicization of electronic music to how privilege still exists within so-called progressive spaces.

TV: So you're based in Sacramento now right? That sounds quiet.

Elysia Crampton: Yeah, but [I'm actually nearer to Reno, Nevada]. I just love it up there. It's only been my home for short of two years now. But that's why I'm trying to call it my home, because right now I am fortunate to have a relationship with my family that I didn't before... It's just such a privilege, especially with my father, I didn't think I would have a relationship in my adult life again with him, and so certain things changed and that opened up and it's been incredibly healing.

TV: That's awesome. So I'm just kind of curious. It's been a big time for political activation and embracing identity politics within music, especially electronic music. What are your thoughts on that?

EC: A lot has changed even in just the past three years...I think it's from a lot of work, I think it's out of a larger political movement in the US that has been building. [It's something] that isn't just out of artists, it's from a lot of activists and underground work...I think it's definitely from the effort of those hardworking people that changes the parameters of our everyday, and what's possible on a everyday level...People who wouldn't have hired us before, are hiring us now, and our audience tends to grow and change, too.

TV: In terms of "inclusion" though, there's been some criticism about how it's just a buzzword. Like, we're still not addressing things like sexual harassment in our communities and there's still a lot of transphobia and homophobia even within so-called "progressive" spaces. What do you think about that?

EC: I think for people who have had the privilege of not having to think about some of these issues, and the kind of language used, I think that is opening up. It's baby steps for some people and then sometimes they just don't know how to do it. I experience real violence all the time in the field of work that I do. Direct violence, like going through border checkpoints, being physically, sexually assaulted by these systems that don't even [account] for how to properly confront a gender-nonconforming or a trans body. But I think a lot of the violence occurs from people's lack of education, and again I don't want to make it an issue of education. Education only goes so far, it doesn't really incentivize people to treat other people a certain way. But it does allow for those interactions to happen without the reproduction of that violence.

I think a lot of the times, people don't know any better, especially, speaking as a trans person, you watch any kind of movie, the trans figure is still the joke...even now. Someone assigned male at birth, who's in a feminine role, or wearing so-called women's clothing, that's still humorous, that's still a joke. Being gay, or even just gayness, is still viewed like a joke. I think trying to speak to someone with dignity ... It's hard in a whole field, a whole system that default doesn't offer that.

TV: Right. It's still slowly changing but we're definitely not there.

EC: Yeah. It is hard because people like me who are very uneducated and really bad with language are forced to become educators, and also forced to be patient. But that helps me grow, too. I'm willing to be that person. Obviously I can't always be that patient or understanding or feel like I have to be, but I do notice it makes a lot of change when both parties are willing to step up.

TV: I guess I'm also kind of curious, because a lot of, there's also been obviously a lot of pushback with the politicization of electronic music and you also have a lot of people being like "Why are we talking about this? It's just a beat or a bassline?"

EC: Oh my god, yes, and that's changed so much, even just within the last five years. I think it's because it used to be so cool to act apolitical. Because [you had] these bands with all this white privilege, with all the privilege to be able to act apolitical and act like [nothing matters]. Again that changes and that's great to see, because when that changes, a whole new field of coordinates opens up and whole new set of possibilities can emerge out of that. I can't even predict what that is. To think that people on any sort of mainstream platform could address something like abolition of the prison system and the police is incredible to me. It makes me optimistic.

That's why I think specifically Native American experience comes in handy, because again in the US even with these talks about police brutality, about the police state, about politics in general it gets very, it comes out as a very binary logic. There's a black and white, and those are the real, the two main characters in opposition of each other... and all these other groups of people are just pushed onto that side or that side, and then those who are able to whitewash themselves, they go to the other side somehow.

Speaking from a Native American perspective, it really helps us in this moment, because so much of the conversation still don't include that recognition that we are on stolen land, that this is a colonial state. It wasn't a colonial area that we merged out of and away from. Those are the coordinates that formed all the possibility of what we experience now, and I hope to see that emerging more in so-called political conversations. I think just recognizing that allows new things to emerge.

I think that's a difficult thing to confront, I think some people, if they feel anything, maybe they feel guilty, "What am I supposed to do? This is something that happened a long time ago, yet I'm benefiting from this violence that is still ongoing".

TV: Right. But there's still a lot of stuff that those said people can do, like be active and being an ally .

EC: Being an ally. Listening.

TV: Okay, so, a couple of final questions. If you were 15 again, what would you tell yourself? Or is there any advice you'd impart on a young person who's questioning their gender or sexuality?

EC: I don't know, that's so hard because I was always trans, and I always navigated my life that way. The world saw me as gender-nonconforming, even when I didn't see myself that way or I thought I was passing. There's so much internalized policing that I had to confront that just had to be sussed out and confronted in a time span. It couldn't just happen in this rapid transformative moment, there had to be a lot of healing, and it was something that was done in a society where we're taught to view everything on such an individualistic level. Especially justice, in the field of rights, justice is something we're taught to see as enunciated on a personal level. This is how I see my truth, my reality, when it's really something more in relation than that. We do it with our families, with our friends, with our what our communities allow us to communicate, and with the support of them or with the lack of support from them. It's always in relation to that, though.

I would say be forgiving with yourself, and know that sometimes things just are a process of taking time, and know that it's something that is coordinated, that coming into oneself is something that isn't coordinated in isolation; it's coordinated with the people around you. As difficult as that is in a society that can be very unwelcoming and very brutal, it's about finding those people that you can connect with, and that allow you to explore those things about yourself.

Related: How to Be a Better Ally

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Meet Elysia Crampton, the Producer at the Forefront of Political Electronic Music - TeenVogue.com

The Power of Personal Connections in the Dark Age of Trump – Common Dreams


Common Dreams
The Power of Personal Connections in the Dark Age of Trump
Common Dreams
... of life to communicate in empowering ways. In my experience, I have to thank Facebook live and all of the activists who facilitate this communication platform, for helping me to find that outlet for personal empowerment through communicative ...

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The Power of Personal Connections in the Dark Age of Trump - Common Dreams

Use Vocational Skills To Generate Personal Income And Employ Others Aisha Buhari Tells Women – NTA News

Wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Muhammadu Buhari has called on women to use vocational skills to generate income for themselves and employ other women. She was speaking at the graduation ceremony of the Women Empowerment Programme of Future Assured in Lagos state on Thursday 16th June, 2017.

Mrs. Buhari said the beneficiaries of the training should look beyond generating income to creating employment.

The empowerment training for Lagos women, which graduated 2200 women in various skills is the second in the series organized to hold around the country. Kano has concluded its own training recently.

Speaking through Wife of the Governor of Lagos state, Mrs. Bolanle Ambode, Mrs. Buhari said the empowerment of women helps them to be more self-confident and puts them in a position to assist their spouses in family upkeep, thereby making them more relevant in their respective homes.

The skills acquired by the women include hair braiding, manicure, pedicure and weaving, tie and dye, soap and pomade making, as well as catering and sewing. Others include hat making, bead stringing and cap making.

Also speaking at the event, Senior Special Assistant to the President on MDGs, Princess Adejoke Adefulire, commended Mrs. Buhari for using her personal resources for the public good. She said an empowered woman has enough muscle to do more for her home by assisting with family upkeep. She also believes that women empowerment reduces cases of domestic violence.

Mrs. Adefulire called on the women to imbibe the culture of putting their hands to work, rather than expect handouts.

Some of the beneficiaries who spoke at the event thanked Mrs. Buhari for her kind gesture. Kenny St. Brown, a popular artist said she joined the catering class and learnt local and international cuisine, such that today she can organize group feeding even at short notice. She called on women to have a skill-based pastime even when they are well-to-do. Mrs. Florence Otu, another beneficiary who learnt fashion design, called on other influential Nigerians to toe the line of the Wife of the President by empowering women both with skills training and start up packs or fund.

Highlight of the occasion included the presentation of certificates to beneficiaries and inspection of their finished products.

Suleiman Haruna

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Use Vocational Skills To Generate Personal Income And Employ Others Aisha Buhari Tells Women - NTA News

ss-technology | ISO certified

S&S Technology division of S&S X-Ray Products, Inc. serves as the marketing, manufacturing, research and development headquarters for S&S X-Ray, S&S RADX, and S&S MedCart product lines. This family of companies incorporates excellence in design, electronic circuitry, engineering and fabrication, resulting in multiple patents for many of its products.

S&S Technology is located in a modern 155,000 square foot facility in Houston, Texas, where most S&S Technology products distributed in the United States are now manufactured.

S&S Technology supports turn-key projects via an in-house R&D group comprising individuals from Engineering, Sheet Metal Fabrication, Marketing and Production. This capability allows S&S Technology to respond rapidly to requests for custom or original equipment manufacturer products. To support both in-house and external customers, S&S Technology operates a state-of-the-art sheet metal fabrication center and powder-coat paint shop that cover 80,000 square feet of the Houston facility. These groups can satisfy a broad range of design specifications with quality mechanical and electrical assemblies.

All S&S Technology products are designed and built with the highest quality standards. Moreover, the manufacturing facility in Houston is certified to the FDAs GMP quality standards. S&S Technology is ISO certified to ISO 13485:2003 and ISO 9001:2008

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ss-technology | ISO certified

Tough & Technology | Casio – G-Shock

Case design offering protection against free-fall shocks A prominent bezel configuration was adopted to prevent the buttons and glass from contacting flat surfaces, thus protecting them from shocks when falling at any angle. This design concept stressing protection from shocks is basic to every G-Shock case design, and the same protective structure is employed not only for our urethane cases, but also for our mm teal cases and analog watch cases.

Urethane band that acts as a shock absorber The band actually acts as a shock absorber itself, protecting against shocks from behind. We have established strict standards for the combination ratio of urethane resin employed. Neither too soft nor too hard, the superb specified combination realizes an ideal balance between shock resistance and comfortable wear-ability.

Shock-resistant metal band that prevents drop shocks This band is constructed of scratch-resistant pieces. Damage from shock is prevented, even if the watch is dropped, by a structure that defends against shocks by employing wide intervals at the connection points between the band pieces, and adopting a flexible, 150-degree range of band movement.

Born from the breakthrough idea of a hollow structure The case employs a hollow structure in which the module is "floated" to protect it from shocks. A full urethane bezel provides all-directional enclosure to prevent direct shocks from striking the glass and buttons. And cushioning material provides extra protection for the key parts such as the crystal oscillator inside the module. These and other shock-resistant technologies, exclusive to G-Shock, are spread generously throughout the body and the module interior to raise toughness to the highest levels.

Hollow-structure case If we tried to absorb shocks simply by encasing the module with urethane resin or other such materials, the case would grow to immense proportions. G-Shock realizes high shock resistance by supporting the module inside the case at just a few points, thus creating a situation as if the module were floating in air.

All-directional covering Direct shocks to the buttons and the glass surface are prevented by a protective urethane-resin bezel design. Shock resistance has been ensured by inserting cushioning material between the bezel and case in metal models with lower shock-absorption capabilities.

Protection of important parts with cushioning material The crystal oscillator and other important parts inside the module are individually protected with cushioning material. This prevents contact failures and improper operation due to distortions that could otherwise occur inside the module if the watch experience a sudden strong impact.

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Tough & Technology | Casio - G-Shock