It’s Not McCarthyism, Stupid – New Matilda

Donald Trumps likening of false claims his office was bugged by the White House to McCarthyism is not just ridiculous, its laced with deep irony, writes Claire Connelly.

In Aaron Sorkins West Wing, fictional President Bartlet is in an argument with his speech writer and communications director Toby Ziegler over his writing a speech. Zeigler is condemning Hollywood for its gratuitous use of sex & violence in entertainment. Bartlett says, Do I look like Joe McCarthy to you?, to which Ziegler replies Nobody ever looks like Joe McCarthy, Mr President. Thats how they get in the door in the first place.

[Thank you to awesome word nerd @HowPeculeah for making me this gif special for the story]. Well, on Saturday morning at around 3am, the world got a reminder of just how that may occur when the very real President Donald Trump sank to a new low, claiming that President Obama had tapped the phones at Trump Towers during last years election campaign. In the explosive tweet, he captioned the event without the slightest hint of irony McCarthyism alluding to the Cold War anti-Communist sentiment.

And he should know. Trump was trained by McCarthys right hand man, Roy Cohn, who is perhaps the strongest link between these two eras. He may have died in 1986, but Cohns legacy lives on in the bloated orange buffoon that occupies the oval office (Ill get to this momentarily).

Lets put to one side momentarily that Trump confused McCarthyism with Watergate: only a Federal Judge can authorise a tap on the grounds the subject was an agent of a foreign power (there are a few exceptions to this, I wont get into here. You can read about it here, here and here).

For those not born before the mid-70s and who were not alive to remember a time when people were actually against and afraid of government blacklists, surveillance, censorship and, you know, Communism (shoutout to Pauline Hanson)

allow me to refresh your memory:

McCarthyism is what spurred the (second) reds beneath the bed scare of the 1940s and 50s, during which time employees of the White House, the public service, private sector and even the military were subject to mass firings and investigations for communist sympathies under a host of government panels set up by Senator Joseph McCarthy. And all under the approving eye of President Harry Truman.

The press was subject to intense scrutiny, and in more than one case news outlets were forced to fire journalists, reporters, radio hosts even comedians on the demand of the government.

President Truman required all public servants be screened for loyalty or sympathy for communism, fascism or other isms deemed a threat to the continued dominance of the American dream.

Hundreds if not thousands of people lost their jobs, economics textbooks were suppressed, economics teachers intimidated, and the direction of the whole discipline changed (one could argue the same thing is happening across university campuses right now, though I dont think its fair to put that development at Trumps feet. Thats a topic for another essay).

While we sit in the eye of the storm, on the brink of a rapidly changing economic system, its hard not to recognise the similarities.

Much like the ongoing war in the Middle East, the gaping power struggle that beset the globe following the devastation of WWII created the perfect power-struggle between the Soviet Union, America, China, North and South Korea, Greece, Turkey and of course all of their relevant allies, (Gday).

In 1949, the White House was drawn into a national security and PR disaster when Attorney General, Alger Hiss was convicted of espionage and perjury by the House of Un-American Activities Committee (shout out to Jeff Sessions).

In 1950, the Korean War pitted America, backed by the United Nations and South Korea, against North Korea and China. Russia upped its espionage activities.

Emil Julius Klaus Fuchs, a German theoretical physicist and Soviet spy involved in the creation of the worlds first nuclear weapon, was convicted of leaking information about the US, UK and Canadian Manhattan Project to Russia. And the infamous Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for stealing atomic bomb secrets and selling them to the Soviets, after a widely publicised trial which made the nuclear threat ever more real for the general public.

This backdrop, and the economic devastation caused by the war, created the perfect set of social and international and intercultural tensions for the Red Scare.

Reform became a term to be feared as civil rights, industrial relations, child labor laws, and womens suffrage were quickly rhetorically associated with the secret Communist plot to overthrow America. Anyone considered to be remotely progressive or vaguely Eastern European or Jewish looking was quickly dubbed an un-American traitor, to be feared, scorned and to always be the subject of scrutiny and suspicion.

Enter Joseph McCarthy, the United States Senator from Wisconsin. On February 9th, 1950 he gave a speech to the Republican Womens Club of Wheeling in West Virginia in which he claimed to be in possession of a list of known Communists working for the State Department. The speech pretty much made him the informal leader of the movement which would soon come to bear his name.

The result was the rapid establishment of government sanctioned committees, panels, departments, loyalty review boards and portfolios across all levels of government, not to mention the proliferation of private agencies to do the dirty work government wasnt legally allowed to do itself to protect America from those pesky Reds out to convert America to their way of life.

Companies were required to conduct investigations for Communists employed amongst their workforce.

Of course, in progressive Hollywood, many executives, writers, directors, actors and producers accused of having Communist sympathies were blacklisted from working in the industry. Careers were ruined. Many never worked again.

Interestingly, the provision of public health services was one of the tenets of McCarthyism, where things like vaccination, mental health care services and fluoride were considered to be part of some Communist plot to poison or brainwash Americans. Under the instruction of J Edgar Hoover, the FBI distributed propaganda flyers under the guise of various experts or research claiming as much. Much of the language had a distinctly anti-Semitic tone and was often cased in moralistic terms.

Back to Roy Cohn, described by the New York Times as McCarthys red-baiting consigliere, the attorney was instrumental in sending Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to the electric chair, helped elect Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and also mentored Trump for 13 years. His client included FBI director J Edgar Hoover and mafia boss Fat Tony Salerno.

Cohn helped deliver some of Trumps signature construction deals, was involved in his suit against the NFL for conspiring against him, and countersued the federal government for more than $100 million for defaming the Trump name.

He was central in Trumps long-running discriminatory rental feud where Trump and his father were accused of refusing to rent to black tenants.

Cohn would eventually, in 1964, after many failed attempts, be charged with bribery, conspiracy, and fraud by the US government, including coercing a dying millionaire client to amend his will from his hospital death bed making Cohn executor of his estate.

Cohn was subsequently disbarred for unethical, unprofessional and particularly reprehensible conduct. Trump claims they only got him because he was so sick (Rohn had been suffering from AIDS).

Unsurprisingly, and much like the current zeitgeist, Cohn and McCarthys policy agenda had majority public support. Both McCarthy and Trump are examples of lunatics of who overreach. One quickly became a public joke and died shortly after. Weve yet to see the outcome of the Trump era, and though there may be public consensus that he may be one sugar granule short of a fruit-loop, there also seems to be consensus across the political divide that Trump is what the system needs, whatever the cost.

Im not denying the economic system is broken. And Im not saying it doesnt need a massive overhaul. But Im not prepared for millions of people to suffer for that to happen. Weve seen what occurs when we allow that kind of thinking to permeate public policy.

The country I was raised in, the education system I was taught in, it told me, it told all of us, why it wasnt worth it. Today, as rising white supremacy, and socially and domestically acceptable casual racism rears its ugly head, Im not sure so many people would agree.

Just yesterday Pauline Hanson endorsed Vladimir Putin. For McCarthy it would take a comedian and a stand-off between the President and the US military to bring him down. What is it going to take to get rid of Trump? And what fresh hell follows forth?

McCarthyism was brought to an abrupt halt during the spring of 1954 after he unsuccessfully picked a fight with the US Army, subjecting it to a three-month long nationally televised spectacle in which members of the military were interrogated for alleged communist sympathies.

The buck stopped with Joseph Nye Welch, chief counsel for the US Army, who, during the hearings, infamously coined the six words which would end McCarthys career: Have you no sense of decency.

On national television Welch berated the Senator: Until this moment, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness, he said. When McCarthy tried to intervene Welch interrupted, Let us not assassinate this lad further, senator. You have done enough. Have you no sense of decency?

The trial was seen as a significant turning point in the publics attitude towards McCarthyism.

The US government suddenly turned on McCarthy. And the same party which gave rise to Trump tossed him under the bus at its earliest convenience.

On December 2nd, 1964, McCarthy was censured by the Senate, ostracised by both parties and eviscerated in the press. He would die three years later at the age of 48.

Meanwhile, in 1957 NBC radio talkback host and comedian John Henry Faulk sued AWARE, the agency which investigated him for his alleged Communist sympathies and won. Ultimately it was a financial, not moral imperative that did it, though arguably the press coverage the trial brought at the time might support an argument to the contrary. Knowing they could now be held legally and financially liable for the professional and financial losses caused by their firings, companies began to knock it off.

McCarthyism would soon after faded into history, burned into the public consciousness as the time where, for a brief moment, America lost its damn mind. Were at that point again. And its not clear what it will take for this terrifying new chapter to come to a close.

Historian and Senior Lecturer at Adelaide University, Dr Tom Buchanan says that though they may have been mentored and guided by the same man, it would be a long bow to draw between Trump and McCarthy, but certainly they both were instrumental in leading moral panics to serve a greater agenda.

Trump has the country whipped into a panic about womens modern roles, gay rights, minority criminals, immigrants, job stealers, and Islam, he said. The 1950s had discrimination against all these too but they were folded into the larger Communist Panic, (here mostly with homosexuals, though single people unmoored from family life were at risk too as being susceptible to spy seduction).

There was of course concern about women and minorities who strayed from their proper roles, but nothing like today where women and minorities are being depicted by many in government and the peanut gallery as having taken control via weird liberal programmes like affirmative action. There were panics in both times, but there were differences too.

Dr Buchanan told New Matilda that McCarthyism was a way to target various groups under the accusation that they were not fully American.

Its a moral panic, he said. In the same way the Islamaphobia we are seeing today is very similar.

Most distinctly, he said, it is the distinct consensus of opinion between Democrats and Republicans against Islam in todays zeitgeist that resembles the very same moral panic of the 1940s, simply replacing the label Communist with Muslim.

Let it be clear, McCarthy was not the reason for Trump, anymore than Trump is the reason for the state of moral panic and the escalating social tensions occurring the world over hes the symptom of the holy war being waged between left and right, black and white, men and women and the LGBTQI communities, workers against employers, voters against the government.

He is the symptom of a system which appoints deranged lunatics to whip the public into a moral panic to distract them from the financialisation, deregulation and privatisation of an economic model designed to deliberately and systematically manipulate the market in favour of the few, and to the detriment of the majority.

Dr Buchanan says the irony is that Trumps whole movement is predicated on a return to the 1950s, which he now uses as an example of his persecution. Even though the 1950s was actually a time of great fear and persecution of many to the social and economic advantage of the few.

He imagines a return to the racial/gender/middle class privileges of that time for his supporters, Dr Buchanan says. The idea of victimhood (however twisted the logic) resonates very strongly with them because of the changes of the last 40 years.

Trumps McCarthy style persecution only highlights the imagined promise land a return to power in which the hierarchies of old can be resurrected.

And they can be the hunters again.

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It's Not McCarthyism, Stupid - New Matilda

Donald and the Dominatrix: How the White House Inspired a BDSM Movement – Salon

Soon after Donald Trump joined the presidential race, a professional dominatrix named Tara Indiana announced her plans to follow suit. If a carnival barker like Donald Trump can run for president, why not a dominatrix? she said during an interview with GQ. Her slogan? Whipping America back into shape, one middle aged white man at a time.

Her platform included decriminalizing all consensual sex acts between adults, funding scientific research to show that S&M is a sexual orientation and adding kink into laws dealing with discrimination. She also favored the idea of the prohibitioning of middle-aged white men from holding office without permission from their Mistress, and requiring men to carry purses so they can look after their own belongings.

The women in my field, we dont live as victims. When we want to make change, we make changes, says professional dominatrix and sex educator Sandra LaMorgese. When we want to influence the world around us, we take action.

Women are feeling a little powerless right now, she notes. And shes right. In the weeks following election, sex therapist Kimberly Resnick Anderson noticed a steady decline in sex drive among her female clients. They appeared irritable and easily annoyed. Often, it was the men in their lives that bore the brunt of these developments. Anderson dubbed the phenomenon The Donald Trump Bedroom Backlash. The misogyny displayed by Trump throughout his entire presidential bid. . . has undermined the hard-fought progress to de-objectify women, she wrote in a think piece on the subject. This general malaise can easily zap libido and ruin your sex drive.

But there are those in the sex-o-sphere who havent abandoned their prowess. Instead, theyre using it to get even.

In an interview with Vice, Indiana explained, Ive noticed being in the scene for over 25 years, that fetishes and kinks come in trends, just like fashion, music, et cetera. And these trends tend to be reactions to the social and political zeitgeist.

When I got into the business in 1989 your garden variety slave was into foot worship, and cross dressing. I see this as a reaction to changing gender roles and a need to work through those issues. Then when AIDS started to affect the straight community, things like heavy medical, blood sports, and scat became popular. People were tired of safe sex they wanted to do things that were dangerous and risky.

In the world of sex, theres only one equal and opposite reaction to an apparent uptick in female devaluation: complete female domination.

Any time that we express empowerment during sex, that will trickle into other areas of our life, says LaMorgese. Its the transmutation of energy. Everything you do influences everything else. If you can be more aggressive, and dominant and powerful, sexually, it gives you a sort of moxie. It gives you some swagger.

And its not just women pushing the trend. After the election results came in, submissive guys started posting ads on Craigslist in search of women looking to relieve some stress. One guy from New York wrote, This is not a solution, but maybe a small, fun, cathartic escape. Take out your anger by putting me over your knee and giving me a hard spanking!

In the week that Trump was elected, I saw such a shift in people reaching out to me for sessions, LaMorgese revealed. Her clients, overwhelmingly male and financially successful, fall on either end of the political spectrum. Still, the requests were more or less the same. These clients were not looking for passive sessions, they were looking corporal punishment. They were looking for very intense sessions.

Its like they were in shock, she says. When youre doing BDSM, you have to be present. You really have to be aware of whats happening. Maybe thats why the clients are asking for more intensity. Its almost like it can get them out of shock.

Donald Trump is not sexy. But sex tends to follow the trends, and for the moment, Trump is it. His unlikely climb to power has given us great porn parodies like Donald Tramp and Make America Gape Again. Its also inspired some terrific pieces of erotic literature, like Humpin Trump and of course, President Trumps Gay Hairpiece and the Revenge of the Were-Water Buffalo. These days, those who chose to take their creativity into the bedroom might just find themselves somewhere between a whip and a hard place.

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Donald and the Dominatrix: How the White House Inspired a BDSM Movement - Salon

McDonald’s Automation Push Is Great News for Investors – Motley Fool

As one of the world's largest employers, McDonald's(NYSE:MCD) often finds itself at the center of debates about wages and the potential effects of automation. Rising labor costs pose a threat to the company and its franchisees, and the scale is starting to tip in favor of developing technology being cost-effective enough to replace human jobs.

The restaurant chain's new automation push is still in its early stages and can be counted on as a source of controversy in the years to come, but the effects of the trend stand to create long-term tailwinds for McDonald's and its investors.

Image source: McDonald's.

McDonald's is in the process of bringing self-order kiosks to all of its locations, and this initiative, along with the rollout of mobile-based ordering and payment, presents a way to improve functions and efficiency throughout the chain. Perceivedquality of service has been an issue for the company, and reducing employee-customer interaction has the potential to relieve friction and free up employees to perform other tasks. Studies and customer feedback have also indicated that a substantial portion of the millennial generation prefers to bypass human interaction when placing orders, so the new initiatives could help to ingratiate Mickey D's with one of its most crucial age demographics.

The surge in kiosk and mobile adoption is occurring industrywide and points to technology that's becoming increasingly attractive. Wendy's (NASDAQ:WEN)recently announced that it will add self-ordering stations at 1,000 of its restaurants by the end of 2017, and Panera Bread plans to have kiosks at all of its locations within the next several years. Other competitors, including Burger King, CKE Restaurants, and Tim Hortons are also transitioning to automated ordering.

McDonald's hasn't given much color on the expenses of adding self-order stations, but comments from Wendy's management could provide some insight. Wendy's Chief Information Officer David Trimm has indicated that franchisees will pay roughly $15,000 for three ordering kiosks, and he anticipates that it will take less than two years for the benefits created by self-ordering kiosks to offset the investment. The timeline to break even is probably similar for McDonald's franchisees, and the benefits of kiosks will likely become more pronounced with time.

Shifting to this new technology requires that stores continue to employ cashiers to assist with the new process and cater to customers who prefer traditional service. But the need for these roles should fall as kiosks become the norm, leaving employees free to take on other roles. Kiosks have already freed up some McDonald's staff to provide table service, and the company is testing curbside delivery in conjunction with mobile ordering and payment.

Automated ordering also means that more workers should be available for the kitchen, helping to address franchisee concerns about increasingly complicated menus and challenges related to customization.CEO Steve Easterbrook believes that the perception of time constraints can make ordering at McDonald's stressful and that this issue can be alleviated through the company's new investments. He has also indicated that the additional time to peruse the menu encourages customization and premium sales, generating higher average spending per consumer.

Payscale lists the median wage for an American fast food worker at $8.24 per hour, a far cry from the $15 per hour benchmark that many groups are calling for. With labor often making up 20% or more of costs for this industry, sizable increases to payroll can reasonably be expected to be passed onto consumers. That presents a major problem for value-focused restaurants like McDonald's.

In the U.S., the fast food chain is struggling with declining traffic but has managed to offset this trend by increasing the average spending per check. The extent to which the company can continue to raise prices is limited, however.McDonald's thrives by offering low-cost food options -- a model that makes it very sensitive to increasing expenses. While food and materials may fall mostly outside the company's control, it will enjoy increasing flexibility with labor thanks to the automation trend.

Easterbrook has been careful when commenting on the likelihood of new technologies that will eliminate jobs, but competitors including Wendy's and CKE Restaurants have directly linked their respective automation efforts to rising labor costs, touting the benefits of smaller in-store headcounts. Talking about replacing workers with technology might not be politically expedient for McDonald's at the moment, but a pared-down workforce is almost certainly a desirable outcome for the company -- and one it is certain to explore going forward.

Keith Noonan has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Panera Bread. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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McDonald's Automation Push Is Great News for Investors - Motley Fool

Inventing The Telephone, The Mechanical Automation Of Work, And Searching By Associative Links – Forbes


Forbes
Inventing The Telephone, The Mechanical Automation Of Work, And Searching By Associative Links
Forbes
This week's milestones in the history of technology include the invention of the telephone, automating telephone exchanges and textile weaving and the idea of searching for information through associative links. March 6, 1997. The first-ever nationally ...

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Inventing The Telephone, The Mechanical Automation Of Work, And Searching By Associative Links - Forbes

Will Industrial Automation Truly Take Our Jobs? – Tech News Inc

Recently there was a programmer from San Francisco who had managed to automate his work. For six years he didnt lift a finger to his workplace. Thankfully, he didnt have any friends who would check up on him just some developers who would occasionally ask him about the software he was testing. Automation helped him play League of Legends by skipping work.

Even though it sounds fun, there is an underlying horror at this instance. This means that this guy was able to create software that would put him out of work. Eventually, the man did lose his job when his officials found out what he had done. Whats worse is he forgot how to code in these six years and has now become completely skill-less to find another job.

The implications of industrial automation are threatening to the workplace. To this day politicians and campaigners have been focusing on how the immigrants are eating up jobs. But we are neglecting the one issue that we face immediate implications from automation.

A 2013 study by Oxford University academics Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne suggests that automation will replace a lot of white collar and blue collar jobs. This has drawn the attention of several governments around the world. Further, a recent report from the United Nations stated that there is a high chance that industrial automation would disrupt the labor market. But this report was more detailed indicating that most of the disruption will occur in the routine tasks. This is why it will affect the developing, rather than the developed, countries.

Despite this announcement, it is pretty clear that such announcements and predictions had been made in the past. When automation solutions were coming in the country, many people were afraid they would lose their jobs. Even many did lose their jobs, but eventually, a different sector developed that needed a different skill set.

The US Labor Department predicted that some fields will exist in future appointing 65% of the school children. These kids will have to gain skills in specific areas that give them the opportunity to get those jobs. But in the meantime, those adults who do not have the necessary skills to adapt to the changing nature of employment will lose their jobs.

In short, automation system will create jobs only after it makes some people lose jobs at first. A report from the Chief Scientific Advisor to Britain suggested that there are possible benefits of appointing AIs in areas such as tax collection. There are also questions of morality that will judge the future of the jobs.

Alison Sander, the director of the Centre for Sensing and Mining the Future at the Boston Consulting Group, says, Theres a significant shift happening in the skill sets people to need. But thats not a focus of our education system.

The worst fear is that many of the skills taught today are no longer or will no longer be relevant down the years. The future of youths can only be determined if they are being given proper technical education. A thorough revision of the current education system is the only way to ride this tide.

Also Read:Cloudflare Leaked Passwords And User Info For Months!

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Will Industrial Automation Truly Take Our Jobs? - Tech News Inc

Tax machines as workers? Proposals weigh taxing automation equipment to replace lost worker income tax revenue – MiBiz

Tax machines as workers? Proposals weigh taxing automation equipment to replace lost worker income tax revenue
MiBiz
As automation technology continues to advance, lawmakers and industry insiders are working to determine what role a new wave of robotic workers could play in the future social tax structure. In mid February, billionaire technology entrepreneur and ...

and more »

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Tax machines as workers? Proposals weigh taxing automation equipment to replace lost worker income tax revenue - MiBiz

Rockwell Automation helps industries put data to use – Trade Arabia

By 2020, the industrial sector will be producing nearly 15 trillion gigabytes of data. With increasing amounts of data, manufacturers must find more effective and efficient ways to put this data to use, says Rockwell Automation, a leading company dedicated to industrial automation and information.

Rockwell Automation is releasing expanded and scalable analytics offerings to help customers more quickly and easily gain insight from their investments in automation technology.

Our Connected Enterprise vision has always had analytics and collaboration at its core, said John Genovesi, vice president of information software and process business, Rockwell Automation. As we expand our information solutions offerings, a primary goal is to make analytics more approachable and right-sized for the customer. New analytics solutions help our customers move ahead on their connected enterprise journey, no matter where they are today. The new Rockwell Automation offerings expand capabilities for analytics across the plant floor for devices, machines and systems, as well as throughout the enterprise. In this approach, analytics are computed and gain context closest to the source of decision at the appropriate level in the architecture to return the highest value from edge devices to the cloud on a variety of new appliances, devices, and on- or off-premise cloud platforms.

New solutions cover remote monitoring, machine performance, device heath and diagnostics, and predictive maintenance to enable companies to derive value from their data more quickly, easily and incrementally. At the enterprise level, these solutions offer more powerful ways to integrate plant-floor data into business intelligence strategies.

For any manufacturer or industrial company, control systems are the birthplace of data, Genovesi added. As the provider of those systems, Rockwell Automation can help customers better understand, analyze and act on this data with several new products and services.

We have watched Rockwell Automation move forward significantly in the analytics space, coming to play a role equal to that they serve in the MES/MOM and EMI arenas, noted Matthew Littlefield, president and principal analyst, LNS Research. Our research on IIoT and analytics adoption clearly shows a need for more flexibility and scalability in this space. Its encouraging to see companies like Rockwell Automation walk the talk of industrial analytics.

Device Analytics The new FactoryTalk Analytics for Devices appliance provides health and diagnostic analytics from industrial devices. It crawls your industrial network, discovers your assets and provides analytics by transforming the data generated into preconfigured health and diagnostic dashboards. The system also delivers action cards to your smartphone or tablet if a device requires attention.

As the application uncovers information about how the devices are related to each other, such as their network topology or fault causality, it starts to understand the system on which it is deployed to make prescriptive recommendations. For example, with the appliance in place, it can send users an action card if an Allen-Bradley PowerFlex drive needs to be reconfigured to maintain optimal performance, helping prevent potential downtime and prescribing solutions to maintenance teams.

Analytics for Equipment Builders At the machine level, FactoryTalk Analytics for Machines cloud application provides equipment builders access to performance analytics from deployed systems to help support their customers via the FactoryTalk cloud. For manufacturers, this capability capitalizes on connected technologies to help drive higher availability and output while reducing maintenance costs.

System Analytics Expanding on the Rockwell Automation analytics capabilities, which already include historization and visualization capabilities, Rockwell Automation now provides a predictive maintenance solution that can help reduce downtime and maintenance costs. Using the latest in machine learning algorithms, this solution can predict failures before they happen and generate a maintenance work order to avoid costly downtime.

Enterprise Analytics To further enterprise analytics services, the SaaS-based FactoryTalk cloud offering will use Microsoft Azure IoT technology to allow for remote monitoring of assets, historization and dashboarding capabilities. Microsoft and Rockwell Automation are also collaborating to include Power BI business services for data discovery, mashups and visual analytics at the device level. TradeArabia News Service

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Rockwell Automation helps industries put data to use - Trade Arabia

Role of servers’ tips fires up Minneapolis debate over $15-an-hour … – Minneapolis Star Tribune

A coalition of Minneapolis eateries this past week proposed gradually hiking the minimum wage to $15 an hour for all workers with an important exception: tipped employees. Tips should count toward their minimum wage, they said, leaving the base wage for servers and bartenders at $9.50 an hour.

The idea has no public backers at City Hall, and a prominent opponent, Mayor Betsy Hodges. In an essay published last week, Hodges said tipping is a legacy of slavery, and counting tips toward the minimum wage for servers would be a penalty that will leave tipped workers falling behind and subject to sexual harassment.

The essay raced across social media, striking fear into restaurant owners and many servers and bartenders as City Hall leaders explore raising the minimum wage citywide. And the controversy isnt expected to die down any time soon in a municipal election year when many mayoral and City Council candidates are vying for endorsements from organized labor.

It scares the living daylights out of me, said Kathryn Hayes, one of the owners of the Anchor Fish & Chips in northeast Minneapolis, who says a $15 minimum wage without a carve out for tips would cost her business about $170,000 per year. I hope that they think it through very seriously, because it will have massive consequences.

While City Council members have expressed interest in raising the minimum wage, they have not yet settled on a number and have directed staff to study the issue. This spring, the city is hosting dozens of listening sessions to gather public opinion.

Servers and bartenders are split on the topic, though many already making more than $15 an hour including tips say their business model wont survive a $15 minimum wage that does not recognize tips.

Callie Daniels, a bartender and manager at the Howe Daily Kitchen & Bar on Minnehaha Avenue, said she feels empowered behind the bar, not vulnerable to harassment. She makes closer to $30 an hour when she tends bar twice a week, and said she worries if her wage rises to $15 an hour before tips, her restaurant will take drastic measures.

Whats going to happen is everything is going to turn into you come in and you order at a counter, and then you sit down, Daniels said.

A solid independent restaurant doing $1 million in sales per year turns a $50,000 profit for the owners a 5 percent margin, according to restaurateurs who gathered for a minimum wage listening session Monday in Northeast.

Many establishments arent flexible in how they could respond to a higher minimum wage. Pooling tips is prohibited by Minnesota law. Introducing a service fee would allow restaurants to keep prices down but would cause pay to drop for many servers. Some establishments are trying to do away with tipping, but full-service restaurants havent had much luck.

Pathway to $15

The Minnesota Restaurant Industry on Tuesday launched a campaign called Pathway to $15 in which the minimum wage would rise to $15 for employers with fewer than 250 workers, including cooks and dishwashers, by 2024. Tips would be counted toward wages for servers, and if someone doesnt earn $15 per hour over a pay period, the business must make up the difference.

We do want $15 an hour to pass. But we want our wages to stay at $9.50, said Bryan Campbell, a bartender at Northbound Smokehouse and Brewpub who is organizing a listening session at the bar on Monday. If we dont make that $5.50 in tips, we want the employer to be on the hook for that, but realistically, you can work at a Perkins in Albertville and make $5.50 an hour in tips.

According to the Department of Labors statistics, waiters in the Twin Cities earn a median wage, including tips, of $9.07 per hour. The estimated wage for bartenders is $9.36 per hour. Hodges cited similar figures in her essay, and the data are a strong argument for those opposed to recognizing tips as wages.

But Campbell calls the number alternative facts, adding, I was making $20 an hour serving at a bar in Inver Grove Heights when I was 18 years old in 1998.

To the extent the figures are wrong, however, restaurants have themselves to blame. Managers are instructed to include tips as wages on the 13-page survey sent to them by the Department of Labor, but a certain number probably dont, according to officials at both the state of Minnesota and the U.S. Department of Labor.

Still, some waiters are not earning $15 an hour.

If you are an overnighter, Sunday through Wednesday, theyre slow shifts, said Jessica Bean, who waits tables and manages the Dennys on East Lake Street.

I see both sides of it, Bean said. Ive been that server who struggles. Im a single mom.

One of her co-workers, Arianna Barnes, had been cut from the floor at 2 p.m. on a slow Friday, and had to roll silverware and stock condiments for the next hour. Barnes said she probably earns $15 an hour when shes waiting tables, but shes not always waiting tables, and she would welcome a $15 minimum wage.

Youre going to want me to come to work and treat your restaurant like my restaurant, but yet you want your customers to pay me? she said.

Different approaches

Council Member Jacob Frey, who is among those challenging Hodges in the mayors race, floated the idea of counting tips toward a $15 pay floor among his colleagues, but he never made a public proposal.

Frey said he weighed all options to find passable proposals that would uplift all workers at a time when the mayor opposed a city minimum wage increase. Hodges, who had previously advocated a regional approach, said in December that she would push for a citywide increase.

Organized labor insists that Minneapolis mayor and council candidates who want a union endorsement must oppose a minimum wage carve out for tipped workers.

That is our top issue, said Chelsie Glaubitz Gabiou, president of the Minneapolis Regional Labor Federation, an umbrella group for all unions in the city. We really believe in building power for all workers, and creating a structural way for workers to be left out creates a long-term unequal balance.

Council Member Kevin Reich sat in on Monday nights listening session that was full of restaurant owners. He said hes going to wait for a staff recommendation in May before taking a stance.

Politics has definitely taken hold of this topic, and politics has one effect if nothing else, it sucks the life out of nuance, Reich said. What Im trying to do is stay in that place of contemplation, listening, analysis.

Council President Barb Johnson said the council is giving restaurants a fair hearing, but she also is waiting to take a position.

I support raising the minimum wage, she said. But I want to respect our process that weve got going.

Twitter: @adambelz

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Role of servers' tips fires up Minneapolis debate over $15-an-hour ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Fountain pen prices ‘write’ out there – Sault Star

THESSALON-

I have a stash of writing books; not books about writing, although I have those, too, but books to write in. Blank books call to me, stick to my fingers, sneak into my shopping bags when I'm not looking. David and I have agreed that I'm not allowed any more writing books until I use up what I have. So I was surprised to get one this year for Christmas from David.

It's a beautiful book. It might have been made just for me bound in brown leather, with a gryphon tooled on the front and two metal clasps to hold the book closed. Oh, yes, and the pages are handmade paper. It's gorgeous, and I'm looking forward to using it.

Of course, you don't write in a book like that with a ballpoint pen or a Sharpie, or even one of those really fine rollerball pens. You need a fountain pen to write in a book like that.

I'm no stranger to fountain pens. When I was in public school, back when the school buses were pulled by woolly mammoths, every desk had a hole in the top right corner to accommodate a bottle of ink. Of course we learned to write with pencils. Even when we switched to pens, the standard was not a fountain pen, but a ballpoint. Those ballpoints were something different, too not disposable Bics, but elegant things with three-part barrels. Often the top and bottom were different colours, but there was always a little white-metal band in the centre. When the ink ran out, you unscrewed the two parts of the barrel to replace the slender plastic tube of ink. Inevitably, the metal band fell on the floor and rolled under something, and the little spring around the tube of ink sprang out and boinged off across the room. I believe that changing the refill in my ballpoint pen as a ten-year-old gave me my current conviction that any little motor I take apart will throw pieces irretrievably around the room.

But I digress. I remember owning a fountain pen with a reservoir and a little lever. When you ran out of ink, you stuck the nib in the bottle of ink and flipped the lever out and back. The lever squeezed the rubber reservoir in the barrel of the pen flat, and then released it to suck up ink. A bit Rube Goldberg, maybe, but it worked.

The pen was an old one my mother gave me. Nowadays it would be retro and valuable, but then it was just that old pen that she didn't need because she had another, and good enough for a child to use at school. It was made of pearly white plastic, and the nib, lever and pocket clip were gold-coloured. Heck, it was the early 1960s and this was an old pen they might have been gold-plated. Probably worth a lot on eBay these days. I also remember buying bottles of blue-black ink at Woolworth's.

I don't currently own a fountain pen; the inevitable conclusion is that I need to acquire one. We started by looking at the selection available locally. The prices ranged from about $40 to $100, and made me miss my long-gone pearly-white hand-me-down. The cheapest fountain pen available was about 40,000 times costlier than the ubiquitous ten-for-a-buck stick pens I usually use.

So David, as is his wont, began looking on line at fountain pens. What he found was paeans of praise for the delights of writing with a fountain pen. No more pressing down on the page to make the ball lay down a pasty line, but a light and delightful exercise of floating the nib over the paper on a layer of liquid ink. Writing, apparently, becomes so enjoyable with a fountain pen that you do more of it. It also, the sell went on, makes you a better writer. Then he got to the prices.

I could shell out $100 for a Cross fountain pen in my local stationery emporium, or I could go the luxury route and buy a pen for $500, $1,200 or if I'm really committed to good writing - $15,000. Yes, a one, a five and three zeros. That is almost what I take home from a year of wage-slavery. When I heard that, what I said was well, not fit for publication in a family newspaper. If I spent that kind of money on a fountain pen, it damn well better make me a better writer. In fact, it had better make me Shakespeare.

Suddenly the $100-pen doesn't look quite as expensive. Besides, if I mortgaged the dog and bought the pen for fifteen grand and became a better writer, I'd probably have to buy a better journal. And I'm not allowed any more writing books, at least until I use up what I have.

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Fountain pen prices 'write' out there - Sault Star

Religious bodies misguided – Trinidad & Tobago Express

Religious bodies have misguided views on the issue of child marriage says Government Minister Maxie Cuffie as he pointed out that there were also religious arguments against the abolition of slavery. Cuffie spoke on the Miscellaneous Provisions (Marriage) Bill, 2016 at last Fridays Parliament sitting at the International Waterfront Centre, Port of Spain. Debate was adjourned on the Bill which now no longer requires Opposition support for passage. The Bill seeks to make 18 the legal age for marriage. Cuffie, the Minister of Public Administration and Communications, said while he respects the work that has been done by religious bodies, theirs is a misguided view and on this issue they are wrong, and theyre as wrong as the people who stood up to defend slavery; theyre as wrong as the people who were against giving women the right to vote; theyre as wrong as the people who were against universal adult suffrage and those who said the world is flat. He reminded the Parliament that some of the most far-reaching and landmark pieces of legislation were objected to by religious bodies. During the time of slavery, there were people who were arguing against the abolition of slavery on the grounds that God wanted things that way to protect African people. In the 1920s there were religious people arguing women should not have the right to vote because things will fall apart. In fact, some people in Saudi Arabia still believe that things will fall apart if women are given the right to drive. And throughout history youve seen some of the greatest advances, in terms of society, being objected to by religious persons, said Cuffie. Protection for children

Cuffie said at present this country has legislation that allows women to be objectified and this must be changed. For me this bill is not about young boys and young girls, its about creating a culture that respects our young people and respects young women. When we have legislation that allows women to be objectified, it leads to a culture where rape is prevalent, where violence against women is prevalent... he said. Cuffie said it was untenable for the Opposition to pretend they are supporting the marriage age of 18, yet add caveats to their support. I support this legislation... to assist the young people of this country, to protect children and to do all that is possible so that we do not have a dichotomy in the legislation where you can be treated as a minor on one hand if you dont take marriage vows and youre treated as an adult if you have, he said. He said the legislation is intended to treat with how the country sees itself, explaining that when a young girl is asked or is forced to get married at an early age, its not just the girl who suffers but her siblings and extended family. Cuffie added that having listened to the arguments, no one from the Opposition bench has advanced reasons why there is need for a three-fifths majority to get the bill passed. He said no one outlined how having the three-fifths majority will enhance the bill or what has been taken out of the bill that will affect a young man or woman because it does not have the three-fifths majority clause.

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Religious bodies misguided - Trinidad & Tobago Express

*M*A*S*H star speaks out against death penalty – Seacoastonline.com

Howard Altschiller haltschiller@seacoastonline.com @HowardSMG

Mike Farrell is best known for playing Captain B.J. Hunnicutt on the smash hit television series M*A*S*H, opposite Alan Alda from 1975 to 1983.

On Friday, March 3, Farrell spoke in Concord about his lesser known work as a death penalty abolitionist.

In a keynote address to the New Hampshire Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, Farrell called capital punishment the prime example of societys failure, the ultimate insult to human value.

Farrell was introduced by Barbara Keshen, a former public defender, assistant attorney general and lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union of NH.

Keshen noted that New Hampshire has not executed anyone since 1939. Michael Addison, convicted of the capital murder of Manchester Police Officer Michael Briggs in 2006, is the states lone death row inmate. He remains alive pending his appeals in federal court.

New Hampshire has come close to abolishing the death penalty three times, Keshen said. In 2000, repeal was passed by the Legislature and vetoed by Gov. Jeanne Shaheen. In 2014 and 2016 repeal bills died in the state Senate on 12-12 votes.

If we repeal the death penalty it moves us closer toward being the kind of society that I think we want to be, Keshen said. A more kind, a more compassionate society. And repealing the death penalty is a real statement of desire to aim toward those goals and thats why for me its important and why I continue to do this work.

The coalition also awarded three of the states newspapers, the Portsmouth Herald, Concord Monitor and Keene Sentinel, with its Gov. William Badger Award, for outstanding and persistent editorial advocacy of death penalty repeal.

William Badger served as New Hampshires governor from 1834 to 1836 and called for the abolition of the death penalty.

The humanity of mankind revolts at the idea of taking the life of a fellow human being, Badger said in a message to the Legislature in 1834.

Farrell got involved in the fight against the death penalty in 1976, after the Supreme Court found it constitutional and reinstated it after a four-year hiatus.

I was working on the show (M*A*S*H) and getting involved in things like fighting a ballot proposition attempting to keep gay people from teaching in our schools. Then a minister from Nashville contacted me. He was fighting the death penalty and had read that I opposed it. He needed someone with visibility to help him stop the bloodbath he saw coming.

Farrell said he used his celebrity to raise awareness about the plight of death row inmates and to get their advocates access to governors and others in power to review their cases or commute their sentences.

Anyone who looks seriously at the death system in this country knows its racist in application, is primarily used against the poor and the poorly defended, is more expensive 18 times more in California than life in prison, and it entraps, savages and sometimes kills the innocent, some of whom I can name, Farrell said.

While 18 states have repealed the death penalty, many others, including Farrells home state of California, have repeatedly voted to keep and even expand it. The New Hampshire House will vote on a bill this week that seeks to expand the states death penalty to include those who kill children. A House committee that heard testimony regarding the bill recommended against it, deeming it inexpedient to legislate.

Farrell, like Keshen and many other coalition members, noted that state sanctioned killing not only destroys the life of the person on death row, it damages the people who conduct the execution and society as a whole.

There is an inevitable, inescapable consequence associated with the taking of a human life, Farrell said. The person losing her or his life pays a price, of course. But what is the price paid by those who do the killing? What is the cost to the society that tells people to kill for them not the economic cost, which is tremendous, but the moral cost, to all of us.

Several times during his address Farrell paused and stated simply: I hate this system.

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*M*A*S*H star speaks out against death penalty - Seacoastonline.com

BEP hosts women empowerment conference – The Brown Daily Herald

Brown Entrepreneurship Program hosted the first intercollegiate womens empowerment conference called Women Empowered at Brown Saturday. The conference introduced students to female leaders through small workshops and lectures.

The conference was organized by Antonia Alvarez 19, Abby Neuschatz 18 and Daniela Paternina 18. The organizers received approximately 230 applications to attend the conference and accepted 160.

Alvarez began planning for the event over a year ago, motivated by a desire to bring female leaders together, she said.

Melanie Whelan 99, CEO of fitness company SoulCycle, delivered the keynote lecture. She explained how each step in her career path from working at Starwood Hotels, to Virgin Airlines to Equinox taught her to prioritize relationship building in business.

Dont think about what you should be doing, but what you could be doing, she said.

In terms of womens empowerment, the world has come a long way since Ive been at Brown, (but) there are still systematic challenges that affect women in business, Whelan told The Herald.

Melissa Tischler 98, an associate partner and the head of the Strategy Team at strategy and design firm Fahrenheit 212, delivered the closing remarks. Previously, Tischler launched EOS personal care products and helped found the nonprofit Women in Innovation.

If this conference gives people that level of confidence to go out and create what they wouldnt otherwise, its a success, Tischler said.

Danielle Peterson 17 attended the conference to have access to role models and be inspired by the women today, she said.

I wish something like this existed when I was at Brown. I think its pretty incredible, Whelan told The Herald.

Alvarez said they are planning another womens empowerment conference for 2018.

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BEP hosts women empowerment conference - The Brown Daily Herald

COMMENTARY: Empowering the homeless to take the next step … – Delaware State News

The term homeless describes a current and temporary condition for many and is not a characteristic of a person. It is a condition. Many people experience this condition for periods of time when drastic changes such as job loss and family breakups occur. Everyone wonders what it takes to change a persons condition from homeless to housed.

More importantly, how do we avoid doing the wrong things or what is not needed but, instead, empower those experiencing homelessness to change their own situations?

The Dover Interfaith Mission for Housing (DIMH) has changed and grown over its nine years of operations, moving away from the notion of providing shelter and services to one of enabling the homeless to secure their own self-reliant lives. Resources focus on making the tools of success available rather than insisting on compliance with a particular path.

Along the way, we have discovered many of the obstacles that people face who are trying to regain stable lives.

Why dont homeless people just get jobs?

Jeanine Kleimo

Some lack basic information that they need to secure employment, such as a birth certificate. If someone calls his or her state of births department of vital statistics in the hopes of procuring a birth certificate, the office will request both the details of birth and a credit card for payment of the fee of $20 to $50. The homeless person does not have a credit card or address and experiences one of the many Catch-22 type problems faced in obtaining a legal identify.

Our Resource Center has solved both the address problem (by providing one) and will send an affidavit of the requester with credit card details belonging to one of our staff who hope to be repaid through donations to DIMH, as grants rarely cover such a step. Help with Social Security cards and drivers licenses is also provided.

One man was heard to say after waiting weeks to receive his birth certificate, Now I exist!

He went on to get a job and to move on to housing in the community, along with many others.

Some even obtain and maintain jobs while living in tents, with Code Purple sanctuaries their refuge on freezing nights.

Why do homeless people congregate at places like the library? It makes me feel unsafe.

To begin a response with a question: where would you go if you had no place to stay or work and no money to spend?

Its true that the library is a public building. As such, people are allowed to go there when no other place is available. Many also congregate in the DIMH Resource Center, though users are expected to take advantage of services and to move on to make room for other patrons. Both places enable a mobile and sociable population to seek contact, friendship, assistance and support from one another. This interaction is as necessary for those who are homeless as it is for those of us who live and work with others.

With regard to safety: as a woman challenged by her lack of height, I have nevertheless never felt unsafe in dealing with more than 2,000 homeless men these past nine years. They are all human beings who respond to kindness.

What do homeless people need for their lives to change?

For decades since Maslow published his paper on the Hierarchy of Needs, we have recognized that people require food, clothing and shelter to survive. Most social programs focus on the provision of a minimal supply of these essentials, understanding that their absence makes the improvement of life impossible. While these basics are necessary, we must ask what is sufficient for people to change their conditions of life.

Empowering people to take the next step means giving them hope, encouragement and guidance, and showing them what is possible. Empowerment also takes the form of removing obstacles to success: the example of securing ones birth certificate so that a Social Security number and license makes one employable illustrates this.

Many homesless people do not know how to go about finding work and are unprepared for the application and interview process. This is where places like our Resource Center or the Job Center at the Dover Public Library are key resources. At the Resource Center, people can learn how to use computers to complete online job applications. Resumes are prepared for them to communicate their skills and experience in an optimal fashion. Participants are coached in interview skills and assisted to obtain clothing suitable for presenting oneself to a potential employer.

They can also shower, access mail and do their laundry: things that one cannot do in a tent.

Perhaps most important, they interact with those who were homeless in the past and who can offer encouragement about how to succeed. They encounter people who are ready to believe that their success is possible and that they do not have to do everything alone.

In other words, the Resource Center empowers the homeless by removing some of the obstacles to their success and by providing a positive and encouraging setting for them to initiate change in their own lives. It also encourages people to obtain regular work that includes payment of Social Security so that ones long-term future is a bit more secure.

Many homeless individuals lacking experience and basic identification are vulnerable to exploitation. One man was permitted to live on an employers boat while earning $20 per day for hard labor. Others eager for work are paid small amounts of cash under the table for manual labor and no opportunity for improvement.

Does this approach work for everyone?

Sadly, the answer is NO. Many who are homeless also suffer from mental illness and from substance abuse. Some mental illness is mild and may be treated with counseling or medication. Accessing sufficient care is still a challenge for many who lack stable residence, telephones, and transportation. Local services are often insufficient to provide the frequency and regularity of care that is needed.

Accessing services through the Resource Center is possible, including registering homeless individuals for Medicaid; however, the current outpatient treatment model assumes that the client has the personal ability to comply with the treatment plan.

Residential care is limited though greatly needed. In the meantime, the mentally ill and addicted are sent to shelters instead of those who might regain self-reliant lives as the result of a stay in a shelter with employment and housing guidance.

Many homeless individuals are disabled and alone. With monthly federal disability income of $733, they are also unable to afford most housing on their own. In the experience of those working at Dover Interfaith, many disabled adults fear living alone and dying alone and do not wish to be isolated from their community of people in similar circumstances.

Still others do not know how to apply for disability benefits or find their applications rejected, leaving them with no resources and no hope. Assistance and encouragement are provided in the Resource Center; however, many truly disabled low-income adults wait months and even years for financial assistance.

What about housing?

Study after study shows that people achieve greater personal stability and self-reliance when they are able to secure stable and affordable housing. Shelters are only a good starting point; but demand far exceeds supply. 761 different individuals resided in one of three Dover shelters during 2016. Few can afford the average $1,200 monthly cost for private rental housing, and waiting lists for assisted housing are long. A minimum-wage job is nowhere near sufficient to cover local housing costs.

Enabling people to achieve basic employment goals in a supportive group setting sometime leads to building friendships among those willing to share housing; but other obstacles remain: landlords seek those with demonstrated stability and adequate credit histories. This does not characterize most of those who have been living on the street.

Empowering people to achieve real stability means developing housing that is affordable, safe and which includes compliance with continued efforts to address credit, personal budgeting and other issues. Putting people into housing without supportive services may lead to a renewed cycle of personal failure. New models of housing affordable to those of very low incomes are needed desperately. Such housing must include expectations of participation in those activities, which will lead to improved personal earning capacity and self-reliance.

What works?

Cost-effective strategies to address the needs of the majority of the homeless are being explored by the Mayors Panel on Homelessness. Dover Interfaith knows that empowering the homeless is a critical step in their success and endeavors to keep its Resource Center functioning. At present, there is no funding for the Resource Center despite its critical contributions to the needs of our local homeless population. We are blessed with volunteers and occasional donations and do our best to sustain it.

EDITORS NOTE: Jeanine Kleimo is chairwoman of the Dover Interfaith Mission for Housing.

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COMMENTARY: Empowering the homeless to take the next step ... - Delaware State News

Film spotlights human trafficking as Trump promises action – The Republic

BOSTON A new documentary is spotlighting human trafficking across the globe, with a focus on the grassroots activists trying to end the scourge.

Stopping Traffic premieres at the Global Cinema Film Festival in the Boston suburb of Belmont on March 11.

The film is the first by Sadhvi Siddhali Shree, a 33-year-old Jain monk, Iraq War veteran and child abuse survivor who intends to distribute it free of charge to universities, nonprofits and government agencies.

The film, which was financed through online donations, comes as President Donald Trump is promising to bring the full force and weight of the U.S. government to combat human trafficking. He says he will order the departments of Justice and Homeland Security to closely examine the resources theyre devoting to the issue.

Shree gives credit to the Republican billionaire for placing an emphasis on human trafficking early in his tenure, but stressed it still remains to be seen what is actually done.

We need action to back that up, she said. We will need a lot of resources, legislation and law enforcement.

If Trump is serious about addressing the issue, he should take cues from Canada, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, France, Ireland and other nations that have enacted laws harshly punishing pimps, traffickers and clients, rather than the prostitutes, said Rosi Orozco, an anti-trafficking activist in Mexico City who is featured in the documentary.

These are very good words from your president, she said. This could be most the important issue to unite U.S. and Mexico.

Shree, who is spiritual director at the Siddhayatan Spiritual Retreat Center and Ashram in Windom, Texas, acknowledges she wasnt aware of the extent of human trafficking and was shocked at what she learned from Orozco and other activists.

Estimates vary, but the International Labour Organization believed some 21 million people were being trafficked worldwide in a 2014 report.

The illicit activities earned captors roughly $150 billion, with nearly $100 billion coming from commercial sexual exploitation, the report by the Geneva-based special agency of the United Nations found. The remaining $50 billion came from other forms of forced labor.

While trafficking is a global issue, its also important to remember that America isnt immune and that its not just foreigners being trafficked, said Stephanie Clark, executive director of Amirah, a Massachusetts nonprofit that helps sexually exploited women but isnt featured in the film.

This is an extremely prevalent issue that is right here, hidden in plain sight, she said.

Its not just women being trafficked either. Young men and boys are often abused at far higher rates than whats recorded because many cultures still dont accept the notion that boys can also be rape victims, said John King, a child abuse survivor and activist in Grapevine, Texas, who is featured prominently in the film.

The filmmaker, who became a monk in 2008 after serving as an army medic during the Iraq War, said she deliberately avoided delving deeply into the personal experiences of those recently escaped from trafficking in the final product.

The documentary features interviews with activists in Mexico, Philippines and the U.S. cities of New Orleans and Houston, as well as actor Dolph Lundgren and other celebrities who raise awareness about human trafficking. Shree also shares her experience of being sexually abused as a child in the film.

We wanted to show the empowerment, not the sad and suffering side, she said. Its more about the motivation and the inspiration. That where theres dark, theres also light.

Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/journalist/philip-marcelo

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Film spotlights human trafficking as Trump promises action - The Republic

Technological Unemployment and the Paradox of Permanent Understaffing – Inside Higher Ed (blog)

Technological Unemployment and the Paradox of Permanent Understaffing
Inside Higher Ed (blog)
The paradox is that at the same time we are worried that technology will create a world with too few jobs, we actually live in a world where there are too few jobs getting done. How we make sense of the reasons behind our understaffing epidemic depend, ...

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Technological Unemployment and the Paradox of Permanent Understaffing - Inside Higher Ed (blog)

IBM, Maersk aim to speed up shipping with blockchain technology – ZDNet

Credit: Mrsk Line

IBM and Maersk will partner to use blockchain technology to conduct, manage and track transactions in the shipping supply chain.

The companies said they collaborated on creating blockchain tools for cross-border transactions among shippers, freight forwarders, ocean carriers, ports and customs authorities.

According to Maersk and IBM, the blockchain effort, built on the Linux Foundation's open source Hyperledger platform, will aim to replace paper-heavy manual processes with blockchain to improve transparency and secure data sharing.

Related: IBM, Northern Trust partner on financial security blockchain tech | How to use blockchain to build a database solution | Disney, yes Disney, becomes blockchain's biggest proponent | How it works: Blockchain explained in 500 words | Stop overhyping blockchain

Maersk and IBM will work with the shipping supply chain to build a blockchain digital platform that will go into production later in 2017.

Blockchain has potential for supply chain applications because the private and secure transactions can digitize processes, cut fraud, bolster inventory management and save time and money.

Just improving visibility and workflow with trade documentation processing can save billions of dollars. Here's how the blockchain process will work in the context of shipping:

Maersk, which has a supply chain services unit, and IBM have run a few proof-of-concept pilot with Maersk Line container vessels, the Port of Rotterdam, Port of Newark and Customs Administration of the Netherlands. That pilot, conducted as part of a EU research project, also included U.S. agencies.

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IBM, Maersk aim to speed up shipping with blockchain technology - ZDNet

Technology and art meet at New York Art Week – The Verge

The fast pace of technology is bleeding into every aspect of contemporary life, including the artists trying to make sense of the surrounding world. The Verge visited The Armory Show and the NADA art fair during New York Art Week, where both established and emerging artists are experimenting with digital technology and its impact on the arts. We spoke with emerging artists about the way screens, science, and cyberpunk culture informs their work.

The fairs run through Sunday, and you can see a schedule here.

Technology, consumerism, and violence are the cornerstones of the work. I feel like Im facilitating the creation of the work. The scanner is recording the images and I think of my role as mediating all of those reactions, almost like Im collaborating with the machines. Theres this dystopian cyberpunk video game called Syndicate. Its like a single shooter game; its really violent, this fucked up dark future. I made a video of a work of mine, so its like a gif of my own paintings and theres imagery from the spinal reconstruction website looking at the spine and various shape and systematic text on top. I really think of these being screen-based paintings, so having a moving image alongside the painting made sense. They interact really well and work together. The underlying idea is how technology sees the world and how we see things and how the lens records the world we live in. What happens when you put a Cadillac ad in a front of a machine that doesn't care about the content? Its reading the information and recording it. I have an archive of images that goes back to the 50s. Post war until now is what Im interested in. Im into that compression of time.

Chris Dorland

All of my work starts out with me archiving thousands of my mothers drawings that she made in the 90s. I pick like 10 or 15 of the drawings trace them and Ill composite these worlds together using 3D animation. I work on graphite drawing, use a tablet to trace them and use 3d to build something that comes from an analogue process. The second phase is going around the country and filming portraits of people on the green screen. Basically I collect disparate archives and synthesize them together to make incongruent sources and to build a harmonious narrative, using what I have, fixed language, their bodies and their narratives, and my dance performance. Its like an interdisciplinary network coming together to form one harmonious sculptural 3d animated still image virtual reality experience. I want to do a 3d animated video where a safe space is being destroyed. Its a beginning of a series. Right now Im on chapter one. Its a destruction narrative. Its a hieroglyphic legend like what they do with the Hobbit or J.R.R. Tolkien, or like a punk fantasy. I flesh it out I as go. Its going to be like a VR album. I hate how crystallized it is sometimes. Its an epic meta narrative.

Jacolby Satterwhite

The Amsterdam-based artist duo Studio Drift used Microsoft HoloLens to create Concrete Storm, a mixed reality installation commissioned by Artsy Projects on view at the Armory Show. (Studio Drift will be doing a talk at 4 pm today (March 4th), which you can watch live.)

Photography by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

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Technology and art meet at New York Art Week - The Verge

‘People-first’ technology on the rise – Inquirer.net

Technology for the people, by the people.

No, its not a reworked line from Abraham Lincolns Gettysburg Address, but the theme of Accentures 2017 Technology Vision (Tech Vision) report, the companys annual prediction of technology trends that will shape the future of companies in the next three years.

In 2017, were seeing that technology is really being shaped by people, for people, says JP Palpallatoc, Accenture digital group lead of the Philippines delivery center.

Basically, the theme is a call to action for business and technology leaders to actively design and direct technology to augment and amplify human capabilities.

To help companies respond to this call, Tech Vision lists down five emerging technology trends that companies should take note of to succeed in todays digital economy:

AI (artificial intelligence) is the new UI (user interface);

ecosystems as macrocosms;

workforce marketplace

design for humans;

the uncharted.

AI is getting simpler, making the interaction with customers and employees more intuitive, Palpallatoc says of the first trend, citing the Amazon Alexa, the virtual assistant created by the company.

For companies, AI could become their spokesperson, says Palpallatoc, citing how chat bots have already started taking on this role when it comes to customer service.

As more people interact with AI, were going to see how they could eventually represent brands and be the digital spokesperson, he says.

The second trend, Palpallatoc continues, is all about companies building an ecosystem of partners that will allow them to diversify their operationslike how General Motors invested $500 million in ride-hailing startup Lyft Inc. with plans of creating a network self-driving cars.

When we surveyed executives, 75 percent said that their competitive advantage does not solely rely on their strengths, but on the strengths of their partners and their ecosystem, says Palpallatoc. They can even have multiple ecosystems, so they need to create a strategy to know which partners, which ecosystem they can work with.

The next Tech Vision trend, according to Palpallatoc, is something that is very relevant to the country: workforce marketplace. With the rise of on-demand labor platforms such as freelancer.com and raket.ph, companies are given the opportunity to have a healthy talent mix by tapping into these external sources, aside from their direct hires. A very good example of this would be Procter & Gamble, which is experimenting by mixing borrowed resources from external talent marketplaces with their own internal recruits, he says. And the results have been very positive: projects have been developed with higher quality and faster pace. So companies need to redesign their contracts with people, to provide jobs that will allow [employees] to pursue their passions.

Closely related to the first trend is the fourth, which is designing technology for humans.

This entails understanding human behavior, says Palpallatoc, with the help of data analytics, which could be gathered using AI.

Every application, customer interaction generates data, [which allows one] to see peoples preferences, wants, needs. These can be used to tailor technology according to ones behavior, he adds.

Lastly, Palpallatoc emphasizes that companies should also keep in mind the unchartedinventing new industries and new technology standards. Sixty-eight percent of the executives which we surveyed said regulations, especially in the area of technology, had not kept pace with the changes, he says. Here in the Philippines, the most relevant experience weve had was the entry of Uber and Grab. So were seeing that technology leaders have also become pioneers, redefining standards in different industries.

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'People-first' technology on the rise - Inquirer.net

New technology helping APD track, prevent crimes in the city – Amarillo.com

Technology continues to develop at rapid pace, and law enforcement agencies across the country including the Amarillo Police Department are using these advancements to assist in catching criminals and tracking relevant data in their communities.

APD Chief Ed Drain recently teamed up with the Texas Department of Transportation, who will provide the department with more data on crash types, location, and cause. Analyzing that information from TxDOT assists in public safety, as APD is able to send more traffic patrol to certain areas in hopes of cutting down accidents and fatalities.

Early reports on the data indicate most accidents in the city occur along Amarillo Boulevard, and in the southwest part of the city along Soncy Road and Coulter and Bell streets.

We were retaining some of this data in our records, but our system does not have the ability to provide and compile it into the highly useful, comparative information the way TxDOTs does, APDs Sgt. Brent Barbee said. Being able to look at collision data allows us to develop and implement strategies to prevent the accidents, save lives and property.

The department is using similar data from crime-mapping software to help with criminal incidents, which is used internally and passed on to federal and state agencies. Data mined from the new mapping technology also includes details about the crimes such as type, time, date, motivation, offender and victim information, as well as property involved.

The new technology is a far cry from using pin maps, where an officer placed a pin on a physical map to locate where a crime had occurred.

Crime mapping is a major part of analysis in an effort to prevent crime, Barbee said. A long time before computers existed at police departments, pin maps showing locations of crimes were visible somewhere in every police department. Mapping is one tool to help make decisions about how to deploy officers or other resources including education in prevention measures. Modern mapping software allows law enforcement to view more than just locations of crimes over a short period of time, so it is considerably more effective than a pin map.

The new data also allows APD to be aware of changing trends in the city both in terms of what types of crimes happen most often, as well as where they happen in the city.

The data that we watch shows things like clusters of auto burglaries or home or business burglaries by area, Barbee said. We can watch it move or shift, often week to week, but can also see consistency in some things such as auto burglaries along I-40 or on I-27 near major intersections, for example. Mapping is not needed necessarily to see what is most common, but where and when it most common.

The trend of adding advanced technology is expected to continue for APD.

A new radio system will be in place in March 2018. The new radios which have been approved for APD, Amarillo Fire Department and other civil departments that need them will switch from analog signals to digital, eliminating dead spots in the city that could not be reached with current radios.

There is one major piece of technology APD covets but has yet to secure body cameras, which were recently added to the digital repertoire of the Potter and Randall county sheriffs offices.

The biggest obstacles keeping APD from getting the cameras are costs and technology limits, according to the City of Amarillos director of information technology, Rich Gagnon.

A measure on the November ballots would have given APD the money needed to update in-car computers through which body cameras would run, as well as the money to upgrade the citys data storage system, but the ballot failed to pass.

There is no set time frame for when APD may receive body cameras.

The primary technology interest we have right now body worn cameras, Barbee said. They provide valuable documentation of what an officer and others see and do, including the discovery of evidence. The cameras are an expense, but the most significant expense is the storage for the massive amount of video they will generate.

New law enforcement trend in Chicago

The Chicago Police Department has expanded a technology called ShotSpotter, which uses sensors placed in neighborhoods that can help police detect any time a gun is fired, according to Associated Press reports. The data from those sensors is then sent to smartphones officers carry, as well as their in-car laptops, so officers know within seconds when and where shots were fired from.

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New technology helping APD track, prevent crimes in the city - Amarillo.com

Taming Technology – The Market Mogul

Technology is humanitys greatest feat, yet its greatest fear. Economic development in nations across the world is a product of technological innovation, or to use economist-speak, technological progress.

By the same token, technology gets a bad rap unfairly in many cases. Some say it reduces human roles due to productivity gains from automation. Take retail banks, for instance: many of the branches on the high street nowadays are filled with self-service counters, much like supermarkets.

The productivity puzzle, that efficiency has not increased as technology has gained in its sophistication, is indeed baffling and is a counter argument for more and more robots, but there are possible reasons for this, namely measurement error. Simply blaming tech is nota valid reason.

As mentioned above, tech gets a bad wrap. It was to blame for the flash crash in 1982, it was partially to blame for Long Term Capital Managements blow up from a Russian debt default, and it was to blame for the most recent derivative instruments that imploded the core of the financial system.

So given that, why is the adoption of tech a good idea?

For investment processes, rules based/systemic programs, or the scarier-sounding algorithm is enough to make the less statistically minded switch off, but even relatively simple strategies are better than one might think.

Investment strategists give views on whether they think the market is going up or down. Those with money give those with knowledge the money because they think something will happen, yet they would hesitantly give their savings to bet on an algorithm that would buy the S&P 500 futures market when it is above its 200-day moving average and sell it when it is below because surely that sounds too simple; or is it?

If the futures strategy were implemented along with the following: buy every single stock in the US, choose the top 500 by market capitalisation (and weight it by that market cap) and rebalance that position accordingly every quarter, what would be the result?

The answer would be an outperformance of the S&P 500 over the past five or so years, by a significant margin. Both strategies in some regard are investing in the market, except one is weighting and rebalancing the components, while the other is based on fundamental factors by a human.

The first rule, which is buying when the market goes above its 200-day moving average, is in many respects a momentum strategy. A fundamental strategy based on buying higher than the sector price-earnings (P/E) ratios is also a momentum strategy. The point here is that although both are looking for similar outcomes, someone choosing to invest would likely prefer the human P/E method to the 200-day computer strategy, but why is that?

If a plane was descending into an airport and the tannoy system explained that the air traffic controlling system was relying on technology and not a human, what would the reaction be? It is unlikely to be filled with a sense of insecurity, but that is irrational. Human error is far greater than technological error, yet people seem to think technological processes are bad and do not trust them.

From an investment perspective, fundamental analysis is the foundation for many investment houses, but the two methods are not mutually exclusive. Rules-based methods are very good as a complement because they remove the human element, bias. Those who are not in favour of rules-based methods would say: well, the market changes all the time, so one does not want to be stuck in a rigidsystem that does the same thing in all market conditions.

One could sort of agree, but the adage, this time is different, is clich because it simply is not true. Markets always overshoot, that is what markets do. People always get emotional and believe the hype, that is what people do. Having a system was and never is a bad thing. What is bad is not accompanying it with peoples views. Relying on a system alone has shown in most cases to create problems.

The human versus AI debate is not the right conversation to be having. The focus should be on including technology alongside human decision-making because AI does not have emotion, bias and external pressure to compete with peers. Those who include both in the process or at least do not look at technology as a potential disaster are those who will benefit.

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Taming Technology - The Market Mogul