Women need to look out for each other in automated workplaces – The Guardian

Women need to be more aware of the effect automation will have on women further down the ladder, said EYs Uschi Schreiber. Photograph: Colin Anderson/Getty Images

A few months ago I was in LA on my way to a meeting. Having realised that everyone there has a side project, I got chatting to my Uber driver about what he does when he isnt working for the car-sharing app. He told me he was just about to make the final payment on his own Tesla driverless car. This was going to be the first in a fleet because he believed his days as an Uber driver were numbered.

Hed realised something important: the automation of jobs is coming faster than any of us are ready for and it presents both opportunities and losses. No longer restricted to actually having to be in the car in order to make money, this particular Uber driver had found a way to exponentially increase his income, while others might find themselves out of a job.

Depending on which study you look at, automation will affect between 47% and 80% (pdf) of all jobs in the US. Yet most of us believe our own jobs wont be affected. The bad news is they almost certainly will be in some way, and the worse news is that if youre a woman the impact is going to be greater.

As automation increases and men come to dominate the workplace even more, women are going to keep losing out

A recent report from the World Economic Forum (WEF), argues the automation of jobs is going to cause a particular problem for women in the technology industry. As certain industries begin to decline such as administration, healthcare and financial services others will increase. More roles will be created in the technology sector in particular.

This should be good news for women more jobs should mean more employment opportunities. But the problem comes when you look at the disparity between men and women entering the sector. Because men outnumber women in tech, the increase of jobs wont automatically mean more women get hired. In fact, the report argues that for every five female job losses there will be one job created. For men, there will be one job created for every three lost. So the gender gap in the workplace will actually increase rather than decrease.

We already know that unconscious bias leads to greater numbers of men (pdf) in senior roles. One way of changing this is to even out the numbers. But as automation increases and men come to dominate the workplace even more, women are going to keep losing out.

There is some good news, however. The WEF report suggested that the number of women in senior roles will increase in the coming years by 12%. Its not a huge number but its something.

At the EY Women in Leadership summit in 2016, Uschi Schreiber, EY global vice chair of markets and chair of the global accounts committee, spoke of the need for senior women to be more aware of the effect automation would have on women further down the ladder. We might say this is something wed never ask of men, but the reality is that redundancy programmes often hit women harder.

Earlier in 2017 the UK government announced that there needed to be a proper investigation into why pregnant women and mothers were at higher risk of redundancy. The reality is its because thats the way its always been, and unless senior women challenge this attitude thats the way it will always be. Automation might provide opportunities for some but the risks for women are huge, so we need to look out for each other.

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Women need to look out for each other in automated workplaces - The Guardian

Automation vs. the H-1B visa program: Which matters to employees? – TechTarget

If you're wondering how talk in Washington, D.C., about the H-1B visa program is going to affect the software industry, you're not alone. Although nothing is settled or clear, Patrick Heffernan, a practice manager at Technology Business Research and a former diplomat, predicted automation is going to be a bigger disruptor than any changes in the law.

The H-1B visa program allows workers from other countries to be employed in the United States for a set period of time. And although it has always been surrounded by at least some controversy, it's widely used by many high-tech companies in hard-to-fill jobs. As part of a re-examination of immigration, officials in the White House have said they plan to look at the H-1B visa program. According to published reports, executives in several large Silicon Valley companies are very unhappy about the possibility.

But that doesn't mean employers aren't already in the process of making changes that might make this less painful than it might have been, Heffernan said. Most of the larger companies with employees on an H-1B visa have already been working on streamlining their processes -- through automation and the cloud -- with the net result that they should need fewer people.

Heffernan pointed to Accenture as a company employing a lot of folks with H-1B visas, but that is also aggressively working on automation. The result, Heffernan predicted, is any changes aren't going to hurt as much, or for as long. "Automation is going to partly kill off the need to have as many jobs back in India," he said. Companies are realizing "they need people here to get the training and experience, and [to] stay here and work."

But if you're in the industry and have H-1B employees, how is it feeling? TechTarget asked a number of companies for comment. Many declined, but three shared their experiences.

Software lifecycle integration company Tasktop operates around the world and has used the H-1B visa program in the past, according to Neelan Choksi, COO and president at the company, based in Vancouver, B.C.

"Our U.S. operation has relied on the H-1B visa program in the past to fill specific roles where we've struggled to find suitable U.S. candidates. In addition, we had plans to further use the program in the current year," Choksi said. "Any changes to the program that impacts already issued H-1B visas or makes it harder to obtain new visas will result in our U.S.-based operations being impacted negatively.

These visas are invaluable for finding unique skill sets. Justin BarneyCEO, ScaleArc

"Based on previous challenges we've faced in recruiting for certain positions, we may end up having to hire in Canada, rather than filling those positions again in the U.S.," he continued. "The demand for talent in the technology sector is so great at present and the competition for qualified individuals so intense that some of our open positions have been left unfilled for long periods of time."

As far as a backup plan goes, "the H-1B program is not something we rely on, other than where all options have been exhausted. However, without this option, should we find ourselves unable to fill a position in a timely manner, we may end up defaulting to trying to hire those positions outside of the U.S."

ScaleArc, which makes database load balancing software and is based in Santa Clara, Calif., has also used H-1B employees, according to CEO Justin Barney.

"We appreciate the value of H-1B visas and have leveraged them to grow our talent base," Barney said. "We have both transferred employees who originally came over on another company's H-1B and sought and been granted new H-1B visas for overseas employees. These visas are invaluable for finding unique skill sets."

What's ScaleArc's backup plan? "We also use L-1B visas. The advantage for the employees is that their spouse can work in the U.S. The disadvantage, of course, is that it's not transferable to another company."

Flash storage array vendor Tegile employs engineers with H-1B visas in its headquarters in Newark, Calif., according to CEO Rohit Kshetrapal.

"It will start affecting us in slightly different ways along the path here. A big part of this is H1 visas and green cards," Kshetrapal said. "So, while this doesn't affect us, the next one will, and the one beyond that will. Go to any tech company and you will see a lot of H1 visas. We have engineers in India that have a desire to move here. To us, it's about meritocracy, and that's what the United States is about."

This story includes reporting from executive editor Jan Stafford, news director James Montgomery and editorial director Dave Raffo.

Struggling to hire? Try a robot

If you can't hire, you're not having enough fun

How the role of software developer is fundamentally changing

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Automation vs. the H-1B visa program: Which matters to employees? - TechTarget

AlixPartners examines automation in manufacturing and logistics management – Logistics Management

By Patrick Burnson, Executive Editor February 7, 2017

In a new manufacturing outlook report focusing on the automotive and industrial sectors, AlixPartners observes that many of the labor-cost advantages associated with near-shoring may be lost if companies fail to spend more on automation in the future.

The consultancy notes that automation capabilities have improved dramatically, and implementation expenses have come down. As a consequence this kind of technology can help manufacturers augmentor entirely replace functions previously performed entirely by humans.

To exploit those technologies, manufacturers will likely have to make capital-intensive investments, says Foster Finley, a managing director at AlixPartners in New York. But they should understand, too, that automation cannot replace a human workforce.

Instead, adds Finley, automation shifts the focus to a new set of critical skills.

As automation technology becomes more available and more affordable, companies will have to adopt longer-term views on developing and retaining talent aligned with the tactical use of robotics, he says.

The survey, which polled manufacturing and distribution companies in the U.S. and Western Europe, finds that 69% of respondents believe near shoring is a possible opportunity to meet demand from consumers, up from 40% in last years survey.

This increase in near shoring has led to labor challenges, however says Finley. Many respondents are having a hard time filling roles like product engineers and frontline supervisors.

Along with these labor issues, two-thirds of respondents said they plan to invest significantly in automation technologies.

So what we may expect is more spend in human resources with higher salaries and other incentives, at the same time companies will place greater reliance on technology.

Researchers note that automotive and electronics manufacturers have been the biggest adopters of automation technology thus far. But companies in other sectorssuch as pharmaceuticals, instrumentation and measurement devices, medical equipment, and pulp and paper will likely begin to shift more of their manufacturing capacity to robots in the coming years.

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AlixPartners examines automation in manufacturing and logistics management - Logistics Management

Cruise Automation Is Testing an App For Hailing Self-Driving Cars – Fortune

Electric-powered Chevrolet Bolts in Cruise Automations San Francisco garage. PHOTOGRAPH BY ART STREIBER

Cruise Automation, a division of General Motors that makes autonomous car technology, has developed a mobile app to request rides in self-driving Chevrolet Bolt EVs.

The app is being used by Cruise employees on a test basis to request a ride in an autonomous Bolt EV from their home to the company's office in San Francisco. The test program was started a few months ago, according to a GM spokesman.

Information about the app was shared by Cruise Automation CEO Kyle Vogt in emailed statement that was released Wednesday along with a new video showing one of its autonomous vehicles successfully navigating the Potrero and Mission neighborhoods in San Francisco. This is the second video that the normally secretive unit, acquired by GM last year for $1 billion, has shared in the past month of its self-driving car exploits.

The video was captured from one of Cruise Automation's autonomous vehicles (this particular one is named Albatross) during a series of back-to-back test rides, according to Vogt. There was no additional planning involved in rides beyond what is typical, and the video was captured in a single take, he said.

More from Vogt:

The operator selected a random destination using the Cruise mobile app, pushed a button, and the vehicle started moving. Rides like this occur hundreds of times per day across our test fleets.

The video, posted below, is compressed to show a 23-minute tour that includes pedestrians, cyclists, and at least one car cutting in front of the self-driving vehicle as well as a combination of traffic lights, stop signs, and a construction zone . In other words, a complex environment.

The company's overall fleet for self-driving cars is growing, according to GM. In October, there were 30 self-driving cars in the company's fleet. Now there are more than 40 vehicles, which are being testing in San Francisco, Scottsdale, Ariz., and Detroit. In San Francisco, there are 25 autonomous vehicles being tested on public roads, according to GM spokesman Kevin Kelly.

General Motors has been more public and aggressive with its autonomous car ambitions in the past 18 months. The automaker announced a number of new initiatives last year that highlight its interest in self-driving cars and unconventional transportation options popularized by a new wave of startups, including a partnership and $500 million investment in ride-hailing startup Lyft, the creation of an engineering team dedicated to autonomous driving , and its acquisition of Cruise Automation .

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Cruise Automation Is Testing an App For Hailing Self-Driving Cars - Fortune

Wolf budget proposal calls for $12 minimum wage – Scranton Times-Tribune

Gov. Tom Wolf has been urging lawmakers to raise the minimum wage since his campaign days. On Tuesday, he took matters into his own hands.

His 2017-18 executive budget proposal calls for raising the minimum wage from $7.25 to $12 an hour.

Advocates say the two-thirds increase would make it easier for families to earn life-sustaining pay.

Critics say it will force business owners to slash staff rosters or raise prices.

I love when my employees are making more money. Theyre more well-off. Theyre happier, said Joe Fasula, owner of Scranton-based Gerritys Supermarkets. But the issue is that any increase in wages has to be offset by prices.

Grocers industry-wide operate on a 1 percent to 2 percent margin, he said, and even a 10 percent payroll increase could wipe that out.

Pennsylvania last raised its minimum wage in 2009, in step with the federal standard.

Tried before

In March, Gov. Wolf urged the legislature to raise it to $10.15, but repeated pleas from his office have failed to gain traction.

In his Tuesday budget proposal, Gov. Wolf estimated raising wages would bolster state revenue by about $95 million.

State Rep. Eddie Day Pashinski, D-121, Wilkes-Barre, said higher wages could give relief to those working full-time plus second and third jobs.

In many cases, companies have been raising wages to attract higher-caliber workers.

Recent employment numbers from the state Department of Labor and Industry show Northeast Pennsylvanias labor force is shrinking, which could push wages higher as companies compete for talent.

Full-time employees at Gerritys start at $9 per hour. Only part-time employees who start with no experience in supermarkets make minimum wage, Mr. Fasula said.

Wage slavery

Families might be able to climb just beyond the federal poverty limit if wages reach $12 an hour, said Alex Lotorto, a union delegate with the Industrial Workers of the World, Northeast Pennsylvania chapter, quoting numbers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Urban Studies and Planning.

Every neighboring state has increased their minimum wage, but Pennsylvania lingers in wage slavery at $7.25 per hour, he said.

Its too early to tell whether the governors proposal is too high or too fast, said Jennifer Kocher, a spokeswoman for Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-34, Centre County.

We are taking all the parts and pieces of the budget and digesting them and (studying) how they fit together what the impact of raising the minimum wage would be on employers, while at the same time, what are the other areas that might be benefiting them, she said.

JEFF HORVATH, staff writer, contributed to this report.

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joconnell@timesshamrock.com

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Wolf budget proposal calls for $12 minimum wage - Scranton Times-Tribune

The Rule of Law and The Working Class – Anarkismo.net

An anarchist communist approach of the recent protests in Romania

The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread. Anatole France

In the following text we are going to try and express an anarchist communist assessment, in as much a coherent manner as it is possible at the present time, of the recent protests against some of the decisions made by the governing party and the manner in which these were perceived as an atack on the rule of law, the post-state capitalist trajectory of Romania, and on the progress made in the last 27 years.

In a few words, we are of the opinion the we are witnessing to a war for power inside the state between representatives of the political class and the hard-power institutions of the state, and that this event does not provide for an interesting subject for the working class and its self-emancipation. The way we see things the main actors of these protests are on the one side the numerous members of the so-called middle class, president Iohannis, and some of the repressive institutions of the state, such as the secret service, DNA (National Anti-corruption Department), and so on, and on the other side PSD (Social Democratic Party) and the political class as a whole. The reason we say this is a war involving the entire political class, and not just PSD, is that despite the oposition parties stating different for reasons regarding electoral interests, we consider that the struggle is carried in these terms. We consider this to be a struggle between rival factions because the legislative changes made by the ruling party are trying to eliminate some legal instruments that have been used by the aforementioned repressive institutions in order to exert control over the politicians in the last decade, in many cases commiting abuse while acting in this manner.

At the same time we are not denying the fact that among the people protesting in the streets, one can find many working class members, many dispossessed people, and generaly people that cant be counted among the winners of the transition to market capitalism. The reason for this might be the mass-media intoxication and the general pro-capital speech that has dominated the romanian society for the last 27 years. Another factor that can be taken into consideration, and which cannot be ignored, is the total lack of a credible alternative able to support the cause of the working class. Many statements, many actions are definitely inconsistent at this moment, and for this reason we can not express a final approach, capable of taking all factors into consideration.

The middle class; the beautiful young people (this term is used regularly to describe the young middle class people which are presented as taking care of the future of the country and moving the country in a positive, european, western direction; the opposite of this segment is usually made up of poor pensioners, and people on welfare, which are associated en masse with the communist times and make the electoral base of the Social Democratic Party)

The romanian middle class is composed of those parts of the population that have an above average standard of living, that have hope for achieving a standard of living similar to that of their counterparts in the Western world, and that generally subscribe to the whole perception of civilised progress that the western colonial capitalist culture stands for. Although many of them remain wage slaves, some of them have the possibility to acumulate important capital, others not, their class betrayal shows itself in their aspirations to join the ranks of the bourgeoisie, with which they identify themselves.

Their class consciousness resumes to that of soon to be bourgeoisie, or of temporary embarassed bourgeoisie. Another important feature of the romanian middle class is its total contempt for the working class masses and the poor, which they associate with communism (state capitalism), material scarcity, and the reasons for why their path to joining the ranks of the bourgeoisie is so wavy. Inside the ranks of this class, the most active elements are the urban, westernised ones (they desire a country like in the West), which can often be described by their affiliation with both the multinational corporations operating in Romania, and the NGO industrial complex, where they are payed above average.

The Social Democratic Party party of the corrupt

PSD is a political party that is no different in any important fashion from other european parties that lay claims to a social-democratic tradition (a reformist and capitalist tradition, but this is an entirely different discussion). One can hardly say that PSD is a more corrupt party, or that is different in a profund manner from other parties both in the past, or in the present. Because we do not wish to talk of PSD as a neoliberal party (although it definitely is), in the sense that a political party takes more care of the interests of capital, than of those of the workers the opposite of this was bassicaly never true, the pre-neoliberal exceptions in the so called welfare western states having more to do with the historical conditions in which capitalism found itself at the end of WWII) we shall refer to it as a political party whose traditional electoral base was made up of both large parts of the working class, and the most dispossessed sections of the romanian society.

Heir of the National Salvation Front (the descendant of the former single rulling party), like other parties PSD also enabled the primitive accumulation process that started after the former regime was overthrown when the country moved in the direction of a capitalist market economy. During PSD rule many privatisations took place, new markets were created for investments, many lay offs and social spending cuts were made. Looking at things from this angle it is difficult to point to clear differences between PSD and other ruling parties since the 90s, considering this was the main line adopted by all governments, one that was concerned in furthering the interests of capital (and mostly those of the foreign capital) and that totally ignored the growing precariousness of the working class.

There are many reasons for why PSD is so popular amongst the working class people. One of them is, of course, the fact that there is no other practical alternative that could at least offer the ilusion of focussing its speech on the interest of the lower classes, another one might be the good organizational infrastructure that PSD has in the poorest urban and rural areas. That being said, we think that its possible to identify some differences between the parties, even if not very profound ones. This can be revealed best when we take into consideration the public speech of the former technocratic government as opposed to that expressed by PSD (at least the one they had in the electoral campaign).

The technocratic government, which was run by a highly paid european birocrat, opposed the increase in the minimum wage (which was to be increased to around 920 lei, aprox 200 euro net, one of the smallest in Europe) which was decided by the Ponta government (PSD), and also told the romanian working class that it is too expensive and that wages should be around 2 lei per day (50 euro cents) like it is in other underdeveloped or developing countries. However, PSD promised in the previous electoral campaign an increase in wages and pensions, and also the creation of other social programs a very important one would consist in providing one hot meal per day for every pre-college student (Romania having one of the largest child poverty and extreme poverty rates in Europe). Despite these promises, PSD did not adress the many issues important to its electoral base, and sought to gain votes from traditional voters of the right by promising cuts in taxes and contributions, or the altogether elimination of many.

This strategy proved a winning one, in the last elections PSD reaching outside the borders of its traditional base and managing to get votes from the urban, more educated, previously out of reach portions of the population (an important factor contributing to this event might be the threat of scarcity that its starting to make itself felt in parts of the population that previously considered themselves safe from the moods of capitalism). Far from representing a local type of opposition to the neocolonial regime that dominates the population, PSD might be perceived by the foreign institutions that are ruling de facto the country as being less agreable in some moments than say an outspoken right wing (or technocratic) government willing to center its speech on the interests of capital and the class that mostly represents those interests.

Another direction for PSD comprised of making a nationalist, conservative, traditionalist call aimed both at the explicitly reactionary parts of the population, and at a working class that at this moment is far from understanding the different internal divisions and hierarchies that are imposed and reproduced for the benefit of the rulling class. That being said we should not be so surprised at the position taken by PSD on the side of the crypto-fascist Coalition for the Family, and of its president that expressed his support for a conservative notion of the family, one that excludes same sex marriage, and even the possibility of forming legal partnerships between non-hetero adults. In a few words, PSD is a very capital friendly party, has a very strong nationalist and conservative flavour, doesnt question and doesnt try to oppose the foreign institutions and power structures that have turned the country into a neocolonial subject (such as NATO, IMF, EU, the american Embassy regarding the Embassy it is interesting to witness the local political rulers being called for explanations every time a threat to the american interests in the area is perceived; on another note we are eager for the day when the romanian embassy in Washington will ask for explanations from high officials of the american state, in regards to the direction in which the american state is heading; and so on), but at the same time PSD has a discourse that sometimes might be translated into social policies which is not to be found on the side of the outspoken right-wing parties and which sometimes can bring some minimum temporary benefits for the working class (for example, raising the minimum wage).

Anti-corruption, Iohannis, and the rule of law

A main part of the ideology of anti-corruption is Romanias path towards a western type market capitalist economy and the drawbacks that must be fought. What were trying to say by this is that the main accepted discourse starts from the assumption that the best way to achieve the development of the country is by obliterating its industrial infrastructure, cheapening its qualified and educated work force, maintaining the country attractive for foreign investments (keeping some of the lowest wages in Europe), lowering or eliminating taxes on the profits made here and then exported to western countries. What were describing here is the type of colonial capitalism that rules the country. Whereas corruption is seen as a major obstacle for reaching that type of western capitalism, and that country like in the west. Most of the supporters of the ideology of anti-corruption belong to the middle-class, that privileged portion of the population, which considers anti-corruption in a political form as it was constructed under the Bsescu ten year rule of the country as the main source of its well-being.

That same time period, starting with 2004, marks the more recognisable formation of a middle class segment at the same when the foreign investments of multinational corporations were starting to grow. This, however, for the large part of the population meant more poverty and a bigger exodus of the local work force (again in the benefit of western capital, which had a lot to gain from the wave of cheap labour force that became available after the colapse of the former regimes in Eastern Europe). At an ideological level the middle class considers the brutality of the transition period towards a market capitalist type of economy (a period of capitalist primitive accumulation of plain and simple robbery of public wealth which was handed to private owners) of the 90s to be connected with the corruption of the political regimes that ruled the country in that period. Although between 1996 and 2000 PSD was not part of the government, it is still considered as the main responsible for that dark period, and at the same time it is linked with the pre 90s regime and considered an obstacle for capitalist development. The discourse of the middle class tends to delimit itself from PSD and its electoral base which is considered to be ignorant, precarious, exposed to all the wrongdoings of capitalism, hence an enemy of european values (of capitalist values), of the rule of law and of western culture which are all considered the main source responsible for their well being.

By engaging in electoral giveaways, PSD is actually trying to hide its own corruption and contempt for these european values, making itself guilty of attacking the well being of the privileged parts of the population (by preventing the process of capital accumulation through its corruption and incompetence, and by directing funds to social spending instead of investing in the infrastructure needed for the capitalist exploitation).

President Iohannis, on the other hand, is considered the stuff that the highest values of western culture and civilization are made off. German, former mayor of Sibiu, former highschool teacher and tutor par excellence (when he was asked how he managed to raise enough money to buy all his property since he has always worked in the public sector he responded that he offered a lot of tutoring; he also said that other teachers who didnt manage to do so had bad luck), owner of 6 houses, he is seen as the perfect opposite of the PSD president and its electoral base. By contrast, Dragnea, president of PSD, is looked upon as a provincial, balcanic, corrupt, despotic, uncivilised character. Iohannis is the defender of Romanias european path, the guarantor of the rule of law, of anti-corruption, and of the strategical partnership with the american fascist empire. Basically Iohannis is the enemy of all those things that could stand against the process of capitalist accumulation and against imperialist interests. Not even by far are we saying that Dragnea is somewhat of a defender of the workers struggle for emancipation. Dragnea, as well as the entire political class, represents the interests of the bourgeoisie. But in this kind of terms, or in similar ones, do the representatives of the middle class which is protesting these days express themselves.

The working class

Unlike many people which constitute the tiny and mainly irrelevant world of the romanian left, we state that for the working class the anti-corruption fight is not important, at least not in the sense of gaining freedom from capitalist exploitation and the state domination. When under the guise of fighting corruption we are spectators to a struggle for power between different sides of the state, when no matter who wins this battle the interests of capital and the bourgeoisie are the ones important, when we know that in the capitalist mode of production governments are nothing else but committees for managing the affairs of the rulling class, we state that the emancipation of the working class can only come from the working class. The working class needs to develop consciousness of its own condition and then needs to organise both in the workplace, and in its own communities to put an end to the class domination of the bourgeoisie which is long due to leave the stage of history.

The so-called rule of law is nothing but the political expression of the current social order, a order which is built on the suffering, on the tragedies, poverty, exploitation, on the spirit crushing pressure felt daily by millions of people inside the country and by billions of people on a global scale. For the working class capitalism is the most corrupt system for its daily extortion, for the exploitation of labour power, for its wage slavery that makes victims of all the workers. The historical role of the state is that of ensuring the continuation of class society and the reproduction of capitalism, of making sure that one class is able to live off the work of another class, of doing everthing possible to please the rulling elites. In this sense, the political oppression of the state has to leave the stage at the same time as the capitalist exploitation. However, we cannot help but see how in this struggle for power between parts of the political class and the repressive institutions of the state, the privileged portions of the middle class take the side of the latter. The protesters have no restrains in showing their support and choice for a set of completely undemocratic institutions, totally lacking in transparency, which lack any serious accountability, such as DNA (anti-corruption department). Somehow this thing makes us wonder if their contempt for the popular vote that brought the PSD government and for political parties which might be prone to implementing certain populist measures (social spending, wage increase) could not be viewed as an aversion for some deficiencies of bourgeois democracy, things such as the popular vote. Plenty of voices could be heard during the last days calling to take away the right to vote for the poor population that constitutes the majority of the PSD voters. From an ideological perspective we might ask ourselves if behind this statement of the middle class one could not see a historical tendency towards fascism and authoritarianism from this class, a tendency that expresses itself by a profound contempt for people representing a class they see as inferior (the working class and poor people) and to which they always turn their heads whenever they consider their privileges are in danger and they feel the need to strike.

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Attending College Doesn’t Close Racial Wage Gap, Says New Report – Post News Group (blog)

Since the first iteration of slavery transformed into its more contemporary formsJim Crow, mass incarceration, redlining, employment and education discriminationthe toxic myth that Black people can bootstrap their way to success and safety in a country that thrives on their subjugation has continued to thrive.

In a new report, Asset Value of Whiteness, Demos andthe Institute on Assets and Social Policy take a deep dive into the intrinsic link between racism and capitalism; specifically, how whiteness infests the so-called American dream and renders it inaccessible to anyone who doesnt meet the pre-selected criteria.

This is a truth that Black and brown people in this country have always known, but one that white people invested in the maintenance of white supremacy have willfully chosen to ignore.

For centuries, white households enjoyed wealth-building opportunities that were systematically denied to people of color. Today our policies continue to impede efforts by African-American and Latino households to obtain equal access to economic security, explains Amy Traub, associate director of policy and research at Demos and co-author of the report.

When research shows that racial privilege now outweighs a fundamental key to economic mobility, like higher education, we must demand our policymakers acknowledge this problem and create policies that address structural inequity, Traub continues.

A few key points from the Asset Value of Whiteness:

Attending college does not close the racial wealth gap. The median white adult who attended college has 7.2 times more wealth than the median Black adult who attended college and 3.9 times more wealth than the median Latino adult who attended college.

Equal achievements in key economic indicators, such as employment and education, do not lead to equal levels of wealth and financial security for households of color, notes Thomas Shapiro, director of the Institute on Assets and Social Policy.

White households have a leg up, while households of color face systematic barriers to growing wealth, reproducing our long-standing racial wealth gap over generations, Shapiro continues.

Without policies that combat ingrained wealth inequalities, the racial wealth gap that we see today will continue to persist.

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Attending College Doesn't Close Racial Wage Gap, Says New Report - Post News Group (blog)

Commissioner hits back at Mayoral candidate’s call for abolition of … – The Northern Echo (registration)

A POLICE and Crime Commissioner has hit back at a mayoral candidate who is calling for the abolition of his scandal-hit force.

Ben Houchen, who is fighting to be the Tees Valley Mayor as a Conservative candidate, says Cleveland Police has lost all credibility and he will set up an independent commission to bring about the end of the force.

However, Police and Crime Commissioner for Cleveland, Barry Coppinger, maintains that the retention of Cleveland Police is in the best interests of the residents it serves and reminded the candidate that the force is outside the control of the mayoral role.

Last month, the Labour Party-backed Mr Coppinger announced a review of the forces professional standards department after it was heavily criticised following a series of failed employment tribunals and court hearings.

He said: We have invested heavily in a series of ongoing measures to tackle issues that have raised concern. This includes the commissioning of independent analysis of past mistakes and, where necessary, looking outside of police circles for future answers.

I recognise the seriousness of the mistakes that were made in the past but to scrap an entire police force because of the actions of a tiny number of officers makes no sense.

I am in regular contact with Her Majestys Inspectorate of Constabulary who is supportive of the steps we have taken and whose recent reports recognise Cleveland as an improving force. To scrap the work already underway and start again would be foolish, a shameful waste of public money and betrayal of the rank and file officers who serve the badge of Cleveland Police with integrity and pride.

UKIPs Tees Valley mayoral candidate, John Tennant, said: While the sentiment of abolishing Cleveland Police is one I can support, particularly in light of a series of professional failings of the Force and the public lack of confidence, it does not fall under the powers of the Mayor of Tees Valley.

While John Tait, who is standing as the North Easy Party candidate, added: There needs to be a regional police force but I think it is damaging when a candidate for one office criticises another office when they clearly would have no control over the force if elected.

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Commissioner hits back at Mayoral candidate's call for abolition of ... - The Northern Echo (registration)

Mrs. Clinton Is Not the Future – National Review

Hillary Rodham Clinton has had an odd career for a feminist icon.

Her main occupation has consisted of being the long-suffering wife of a powerful man, infamous for treating subordinate women as disposable conveniences, who abused her ruthlessly and humiliated her publicly. In exchange for standing by her man, she was given an orphaned Senate seat in New York, where she did not live, and two shots at the presidency, which she lost to an unknown back-bencher from Chicago in 2008 and to a reality-television host in 2016.

Margaret Thatcher she isnt.

She is back to her habitual form of paid work: making speeches that are so vague as to be nearly content-free, her famous face and bland, almost affectless mode of speech serving as a kind of blank screen onto which those gathered can project their fantasies about having been present for Something Very Important.

Whatever that might be.

This weeks speech was for the MAKERS conference, a project of AOL, which still exists. MAKERS is a collection of Web videos about famous women, featuring exactly the sort of women youd imagine appealing to midlevel executives of AOL, which still exists: Lena Dunham, Oprah Winfrey, Shonda Rhimes, Lilly Singh. The women of the world were, one assumes, simply crying out for well-lighted videos of humorless American (Miss Singh is Canadian, i.e., American Lite) multimillionaires repeating the most tedious banalities imaginable. And so they now have them, courtesy of AOL, which still exists.

Mrs. Clintons remarks were remarkable for one line:

The future is female.

That line caught the attention of Le Figaro, which breathlessly headlined a report: Hillary Clinton: Oui, lavenir est fminin! It is likely that the editors at Le Figaro are better-read than Mrs. Clinton is and recognized the sentiment from the contemporary French novelist Michel Houellebecq, who used the line in his dystopian novel The Elementary Particles. Houellebecq, an aging hedonistic intellectual who writes very sad novels about aging hedonistic intellectuals, imagined a future in which sexual rivalry and unhappiness between the sexes both have been abolished with a single master-stroke: the abolition of the human race and its replacement by an engineered successor species that reproduces asexually and is entirely female.

Perhaps that is not what Mrs. Clinton has in mind.

Houellebecq was probably having some fun with the declaration of the poet Louis Aragon that la femme est lavenir de lhomme, woman is the future of man. Aragons expression has made several other appearances: Jean Ferrat sang it, and Hong Sang-soo used it as a film title. Houellebecqs version was rendered The Future Is Feminine in the English translation rather than the splashier and much more commercial-sounding The Future Is Female (an error in judgment, I think; it is intended to be a commercial-sounding slogan), but the idea is the same. In a more recent novel, Submission, Houellebecq solves the same problem in a different way: a near-future France knuckles under to Islam, and aging hedonistic intellectuals, exploiting the fact that professors in France enjoy a much, much higher social status than they do in the United States, go in enthusiastically for polygamy and arranged marriage.

RELATED: No, the Future Is Not Female

In the English-speaking world, The Future Is Female has had a different sort of career, having been taken up as the motto of lesbian separatists in the 1970s and then reborn as a popular T-shirt in recent years which, Americans being Americans, has given rise to litigation about who owns that daft phrase.

My bet is that Mrs. Clinton took the line from the T-shirt, or rather that one of her minions did. (Speechwriter for Mrs. Clinton must currently be the saddest job in all politics.) A T-shirt is about as deep as she goes. Like Barack Obama, Mrs. Clinton likes to talk about the importance of art (or the arts, as such people habitually put it) and culture and the like but does not seem to have read very many serious books in the past 40 years or so, or to have thought very seriously about anything she has read. Progressives enjoy the life of the mind a great deal...in theory. Michael Tracey of The Young Turks, one of those predictable lefty types who like to go on about how much they love science and how deeply they care about the environment, took to Twitter earlier this week to ask for help in identifying an exotic bird he encountered in Texas City. It was a pelican.

Darwin, yes; Audubon, not so much.

I suppose it is just barely possible that Mrs. Clinton used The Future Is Female in tribute to radical feminists in the Age of Nixon, when she was first getting her real start in politics, and goodness knows that all those years of enduring marriage to Bill Clinton must fill one with a certain aspirational longing vis--vis the whole touchy subject of lesbian separatism. That she has been thinking about the works of Michel Houellebecq and the funny professional problem of how one would go about marketing human extinction is even more unlikely. (Though if ever there was a really convincing ad campaign for human extinction, it was Mrs. Clintons 2016 presidential effort.)

There are great works of literature that have some bearing upon the public career of Hillary Rodham Clinton (you would not believe how many performances of Macbeth I have seen in recent years), but she isnt reading contemporary French novels in her spare time, even in translation. (Like President Trump and President Obama, but unlike the current Mrs. Trump and either of the Presidents Bush, Mrs. Clinton, purportedly the most intellectually accomplished woman of her generation, does not know a foreign language. Melania Trump speaks five languages.) Mrs. Clinton is in fact a familiar political type, whose intense and lifelong focus on the pursuit and maintenance of that pettiest and most ephemeral of things political power has left her intellectually stunted, which is obvious to anyone who ever has heard her speak. No doubt she already is planning her 2020 campaign, without anyone around who cares enough to explain to her why this is absurd. She is, in truth, a tragic figure.

Bereft of anything like an original thought, she tends to repeat dopey slogans like The Future Is Female, without giving much thought to what they mean.

Which, in this case, is nothing.

Kevin D. Williamson is National Reviews roving correspondent.

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Mrs. Clinton Is Not the Future - National Review

WE Are Women’s Philanthropy – Jewish Exponent

Last years Womens Philanthropy Pomegranate event. Photo via Flickr @jewishphilly

The Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphias Womens Philanthropy group is an inclusive community of passionate, caring women of all ages, incomes and lifestyles. We share a commitment to support the Jewish community locally, in Israel and around the world. We lead and convene, educate and advocate, travel and fundraise in support of the Jewish Federations mission. We do all this by focusing on Giving, Inclusion and Tradition.

Women have contributed more than $29 million to our Jewish Federation over the past five years.

Womens Philanthropy raises money to help vulnerable Jewish populations, and to feed, clothe and shelter Jews. We are their safety net.

Together, we care for older adults and make sure they can get to doctors appointments, have socialization opportunities and receive assistance with taking care of their homes so they can continue to live with dignity in their own homes for as long as possible.

We make sure that Holocaust survivors are living out their lives in dignity.

We feed Jews who are food-insecure through a variety of programs. Regardless of whether they need a little extra help every month or three hot meals a day, whether they are an individual or a large family, we are here for them.

We help those in times of crisis no matter the situation. If theyve lost a job, are in a dangerous situation or are dealing with any other pressing matter, we fund programs that will see them through the tough times and get them back on their feet.

Womens Philanthropy also ensures our community members have access to a vibrant Jewish life. We make sure families can access Jewish education, Jewish camping, Hillel on campus and family programs like jkidphilly and Interfaith Family.

We also work hard to send people of all ages to Israel to see, touch and feel the magic of the Jewish homeland.

We are inclusive. We want all of our community members to have a seat at the table for open dialogue to form a strong and vibrant network that enables us to ensure the safety of Jews everywhere.

We are a group of women who are proud of the work we accomplish each and every year. We know that our investment of time, talent and treasure will address our critical priorities and make sure that we Carry the Light for all of us, our families and generations to come.

Join us this spring at one of our upcoming events to get a taste of all that is Womens Philanthropy.

Pomegranate Event: An Evening of Happiness with Keynote Speaker Carin Rockind on Wed., March 1 at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Elyse Berger in Penn Valley, Pa.

Carin is a leading happiness and life-purpose expert, a media personality and the creator of PurposeGirl, a movement to empower purpose-driven living. All women who make a minimum gift of $1,000 are invited to this event.

International Womens Day Speaker Series on Wed., March 8 at Southern Cross Kitchen in Conshohocken from 7 to 9 p.m.

Join us for an evening of empowerment and self-defense featuring speaker Yudit Sidikman, the co- founder and CEO of El Halev, a women-run NPO working to end violence by providing personal safety and empowerment programs for women, children, seniors and people with special needs. She is a renowned motivational speaker who has taught thousands how to find their inner strength and is committed to promoting self-worth and self-esteem among women, children, the elderly and those with special needs through violence prevention. The cost to attend is $36; no donation is required.

WE (Womens Event): Tues., April 4, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the Hilton Philadelphia City Avenue.

Join us for our largest event of the year to celebrate community and tzedakah at our Womens Event (WE). Keynote Speaker Archie Gotesman, co-founder of JewBelong, is on a crusade to help Jews embrace the joy, warmth and meaning in our rituals and traditions. Once youve heard Archies take on Jewbarrassment, your holiday gatherings will never be the same. All women who make a minimum donation of $180 to our Jewish Federation are welcome.

For additional information on Womens Philanthropy, email womensphilanthropy@jewishphilly.org or visit jewishphilly.org/womensphilanthropy.

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WE Are Women's Philanthropy - Jewish Exponent

Town Crier: Help Yourself – Casper Star-Tribune Online

Introduction to 3D modeling

The Natrona County Library will offer an Introduction to 3D Modeling class from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Feb. 11. Participants will come away from this workshop being able to design three-dimensional objects using a free, web-based Computer Aided Design program called Tinkercad. Tinkercad is an easy, browser-based 3D design and modeling tool. Its also your perfect 3d printing companion, allowing you to imagine anything, and then design it in minutes. Call 577-READ ext. 2 or email reference@natronacountylibrary.org for more information.

St. Marks Episcopal Church, 7th and Wolcott, will have classes on money management, using the Financial Peace plan, starting in February. The classes will run from Feb. 18 to April 25, 2017 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., on Tuesdays at the church. To register, please contact Dorothy Brown at 377-3509 or via e-mail Wyo_nana@yahoo.com.

Family Life Ministry (FLM) at Highland Park Community Church is offering premarital, marriage enrichment, and parenting workshops, seminars, retreats and conferences, empowering families to thrive through Gods love. Please visit the website for more information or to register, http://hpcc.church/FLM.

The Wyoming Symphony Orchestra and The Hill Music Company are joining forces to help young Wyoming musicians further their musical ability with the opportunity to win a new string or wind instrument.

Wyoming music students in grades 9 through 12, who may have outgrown or outplayed a wind or string instrument, are invited to apply for a new instrument.

To apply, download an application form and instruction packet from the WSO website, http://www.wyomingsymphony.org/outreach. Applicants will need to write a short essay about the importance of music and their particular instrument to their lives, and include references from music teachers, family, and friends.

The deadline to apply is Feb. 24, 2017. A certificate will be awarded to the winner at the Wyoming Symphony Orchestra concert on March 18, 2017. The Hill Music Company will provide the winning instrument, and assist the winner in selecting the instrument of his or her choice.

Looking for a one-day workshop that will teach a new, old-time skill? Check out the Pinhole Cameras Workshop on Saturday, Feb. 11 from 2 to 4:30 p.m. at the Casper Rec Center. A pinhole camera is the earliest form of capturing images that is called a photograph today. It is a dark chamber with a pinhole and no lens. During the clinic, participants will build their own pinhole camera.

For registration fees and more information, stop by the Casper Recreation Center at 1801 E. 4th St., visit the website http://www.activecasper.com or call 235-8383.

Life After Loss is a support group for people who have lost a loved one to suicide. This is a nine-week program designed to help navigate the troubled waters of this time. The class starts at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2017, at the Highland Park Community Church, 5725 Highland Dr., room 1327. There is a $12 fee for the book and materials, scholarships are available. Please contact Ardith at 267-3532 or The Healing Place at 265-3977.

ART321/Casper Artists Guild holds Saturday Morning Watercolor Sessions under the direction of Ellen Black. Sessions are Saturday mornings, 10 a.m. to noon. $10 per session.

Feb. 11: Tree Studies; Feb. 18: Practice Session; Feb. 25: Mountain Landscapes. Instructed by Jennifer Morss. Please contact Ellen Black at 265-6783 for any questions. Hope to see you all again this season.

Art 321 offers February workshop

Art321/Casper Artists Guild is offering a Beginning Colored Pencil Workshop will be instructed by Lynn Jones from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., on Saturday, Feb. 18. Open to all levels. Fee is $30 for members. Take colored pencils and learn all the basic techniques of shading, blending colors and burnishing. The great thing about colored pencil is that it is easily portable, allowing artists to work from anywhere.

Register in person at the gallery or call the desk at 265-2655.

Consider becoming a member of Art321 and get discounted fees on all workshops. Annual dues are $65.

GRO-Biz conference Feb. 22-23

Registration is underway for Wyomings premiere business conference, GRO-Biz Conference & Idea Expo, Feb. 22 and 23 at the Ramkota Hotel.

Register before Feb. 8, 2017 for the discounted cost of $165 per registrant; beginning February 8, 2017 registration fee is $185. To see agenda and to register, visit http://www.regonline.com/2017grobizidea.

The GRO-Biz Conference & Idea Expo is two events rolled into one. The event provides opportunities to learn from experts presenting innovative workshops that inspire attendees to think about their business in new and exciting ways. In addition, the conference provides Wyomings small businesses the opportunity to better understand state and federal government procurement processes and meet with professionals who can provide valuable information on the bidding process.

Conscious Co-Creation, Part Two: Field Play, Feb. 18, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., offered in person at the Agricultural Learning Resources building on Fairgrounds Rd. and also via live webinar. In the follow-up to Conscious Co-Creation Part One, explore in depth some of the ideas and skills gained in Conscious Co-Creation. Prerequisite: Conscious Co-Creation/Self-Transformation & Healing. For a full class description and registration information, visit: http://www.cathyhazeladams.com/pp/classes-webinars-event/.

Living from the Heart: The Key to Peace, Freedom & Creative Empowerment, Feb. 26, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., offered in person at the Agricultural Learning Resources building on Fairgrounds Rd. and also via live webinar.In the new four-hour class/playshop, learn what the field of the heart really is, practice easy, practical ways to go into heart field, and learn how to live every day from this place of peace, love, well-being and personal empowerment. No prerequisite. For a full class description and registration information, visit: http://www.cathyhazeladams.com/pp/classes-webinars-event/.

The Natrona County VITA Program, a United Way of Natrona County initiative, is open through April 12, for free tax return assistance. This is a first come, first serve program, no appointments will be scheduled. Individuals must bring their Social Security card, photo identification and the appropriate paperwork with them. For a complete listing of required paperwork, please visit the website http://www.wyomingfreetaxservice.org

Hours are Tuesday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Aspen Creek Building, 800 Werner Ct., Ste. 206. Closed Sunday and Monday.

For more information, call (307) 333-5588 during hours of operation or look on Facebook. The initiative is supported by funding from the Wyoming Free Tax Service and local United Way.

Join the five-week program and learn how to reduce processed and packaged foods from your diet. Learn how to plan meals, shop, and cook using whole, natural ingredients. Also learn how to read labels and decipher ingredient lists. Real Food will meet from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., starting Feb. 9 and finishing March 9. Classes will be held at the UW Extension office at 2011 Fairgrounds Road. Half of the class time will include hands-on healthy cooking in the foods lab. The cost is $35, which covers all materials, including food. For more information and to register, contact Karla Case, RD at 235-9400 or kcase@natronacounty-wy.gov.

Parenting class available

Mercer Family Resource Center offers a class in March designed to help parents become more effective.

Make Parenting a Pleasure is for parents and caregivers with children ages 0 to 8. Class meets March 1, 8, 15, and 22 and April 5, 12, and 19 from 6 to 8 p.m. Onsite childcare available, meets once a week for seven weeks. Cost is $35 individuals and $50 a couple.

For more information or to enroll, call Lisa Brown at 233-4276.

ARTCORE music deadline March 15

The deadline for the ARTCORE New Music Competition is March 15. Entrants must be Wyoming residents.

The purpose of the competition is to find serious composers in the state; to provide an ongoing program for encouraging new music by these same composers; to give exposure to musical works of merit and to stimulate an interest in contemporary music in Wyoming audiences.

Performance time shall be limited to 20 minutes. Compositions shall not have been performed previously. Compositions shall be limited to no more than eight performers. Compositions may be for any combination of voice and/or instrument. Three copies of the manuscript must be submitted. Manuscripts will not be returned unless accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Submit manuscripts to ARTCORE, P.O. Box 874, Casper, WY 82602. Entry fee is $15. Manuscripts must be postmarked no later than March 15, 2017.

Teen Challenge offers classes

Teen Challenge Wyoming offers classes at local churches, True Care and the Link (Youth for Christ). For more information on these groups or on other Teen Challenge programs, please call 258-5397.

Peacemaking: Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. In this world of division and conflict, it is important for Christians to stay grounded in what the Bible teaches about resolving our differences with orders in a God-honoring way. For more information, call Pat at 258-5397.

Save One: A group for post-abortion healing. For more information, call Judy at 251-5644.

Single & Parenting: Sundays at 6:30 p.m. Covers major challenges single parents face in raising their children, and offers tools to help them meet these challenges. Enter anytime, each lesson stands alone. Call Cathie at 258-6119.

Professionals in Recovery: An ongoing Christian recovery group. For more information, call Gary at 267-7777.

Insight: Discovering the path to Christian character, especially in the midst of stress. Time to be announced. For more information, call Teen Challenge Wyoming at 258-5397.

Possible offering: Committed Couples and/or the Smart Stepfamily (groups designed to strengthen marriages for both married couples and those anticipating marriage) may be offered later this year. For more information on these possibilities, please call Teen Challenge Wyoming at 258-5397.

Seedling trees, shrubs and perennials on sale

Premium quality seedling trees, shrubs and perennials are available for windbreaks and wildlife habitat enhancement from the UW/Natrona County Extension. Order forms are available at the Ag Resource and Learning Center, 2011 Fairgrounds Rd. There are 41 species available. Order now for best selection with May 2017 delivery. For more information, call Rose Jones at 235-9400.

Dementia caregiver support

Wyoming Dementia Care offers five Alzheimers Caregiver Support groups each month. Caregivers of those with dementia-related illnesses and the loved ones they care for are welcome at any of the group sessions. Professional staff from Intermountain Home Companions will be on hand to offer separate activities and snacks for those who need care. There is no charge for Wyoming Dementia Cares support groups or for the respite care provided during the approximately one hour long sessions.

The morning support group sessions meet on the first and third Thursday of each month at 10 a.m. at Central Wyoming Senior Services, 1831 E. 4th St. The afternoon support groups meet at 1 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at Life Care Center of Casper, 4041 S. Poplar. The evening groups meet on the second and fourth Wednesday of the month at 6:30 p.m. at Meadow Wind Assisted Living, 3955 E. 12th St.

Family continues suicide support

Good Grief, Support will continue at 5:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month at the 12-24 Club, 500 S. Wolcott, by request of attendees. Anyone who is grieving a suicide, death, or considering suicide is encouraged to attend. Attendance at the meeting, as well as the content, will be strictly confidential. The Fresh Start Cafe will be open, and you can eat during the meetings. This meeting place was offered by Dan Cantine of the 12-24 Club. You need not be a member to attend. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

New depression group begins

J.R.s Hunt for Life is offering See it Clearly, a free peer support group for persons suffering from depression and other mental conditions that lead to suicidal thoughts and actions. The group is led by like-minded peers wishing to offer support in these struggles. Anonymity and confidentiality is offered to all attending. Meetings are at 6:45 p.m. on the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month at 500 South Wolcott in the conference room on the second floor, (12-24 Club). Those who have considered or attempted taking their life or are struggling are welcome. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

Family offers faith-based groups

The family of J.R. Hunter, who committed suicide, now has two additional support groups, these faith-based, in addition to the groups they run on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month at the 12-24 Club. Those continue. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

J.R.s Hunt; for life presents two faith-based grief and depression peer to peer support groups at 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. at Restoration Church, 411 S. Walsh. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

Grief Support Group, Good Grief: A faith-based grief support group that the family hosts on the first and third Tuesdays of the month at 5:30 p.m. at Restoration Church. The familys loss has moved them to offer this to anyone grieving. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

Depression Support Group, See It Clearly: A faith-based free peer to peer support group for persons suffering from depression and other mental conditions that may lead to suicidal thoughts and actions. The group is led by like-minded peers wishing to offer support in these struggles. Anonymity and confidentiality is offered to all attending. Meetings are at 6:30 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of the month at Restoration Church. Those who have considered or attempted taking their life or are struggling are welcome. For more information, email jlh35@hotmailcom.

Rocky Mountain Therapy is offering a Parkinsons exercise program. Join us from noon to 1 p.m. Thursdays at Rocky Mountain Therapy, 2546 E. Second St., Building 500. These classes are open to anyone with Parkinsons or caring for someone with Parkinsons.

Thursdays class is tailored for the individual with more advanced Parkinsons and focuses on improving endurance, safety and managing symptoms. We are open to all ages and can tailor the class to meet varying exercise needs. The cost of the class is $5. To RSVP, call 577-5204 and ask for Jerri or Shannon.

Celebrate Recovery every Friday

Celebrate Recovery meets at 5:30 p.m. every Friday at Highland Park Community Church, just south of Elkhorn Valley Rehabilitation Hospital on East Second Street. We start with a family meal, followed by praise and worship. At 7 p.m., theres either a lesson from Celebrate Recoverys planned curriculum or a testimony by a person who has found recovery through Christ. Then, people go to gender-specific small groups until 8:30 p.m., when dessert and fellowship conclude the evening. Child care is available at no cost. For more information, contact Chris at 265-4073.

Here and Now: Dementia-focused monthly art class

Classes are every third Tuesday of the month from 1 to 3 p.m. There is no charge. Here and Now is a program made possible through a collaboration between Wyoming Dementia Care and the Nicolaysen Art Museum. It is designed to provide a supportive environment for people with dementia and Alzheimers and their loved ones.

Latin Study Club language enthusiasts welcome anyone who wishes they had taken Latin in school or paid better attention when they did. The group meets at 7 p.m., on Tuesday nights at Mount Hope Lutheran School, 2300 Hickory. There is no charge. The textbook used is Wheelocks Latin, 7th edition. Noli timere!

Continued here:

Town Crier: Help Yourself - Casper Star-Tribune Online

Tech is empowering women, and it’s great for business – GreenBiz

For working women everywhere whether on an assembly line or in front of a computer the question "how does she do it all?" easily can trigger eye rolls. Working women continue to carry a disproportionate burden in comparison to men because, more often, they are responsible for both their jobs and being the primary family caregivers. However, the technology sector can play a significant role in empowering women both in the workplace and at home and businesses stand to benefit if these efforts are pursued strategically.

Last year, we at BSR published a report, "Building Effective Womens Economic Empowerment Strategies," encouraging companies to apply a holistic and integrated approach in empowering women. While the report highlights eight building blocks for such an approach, ICT companies can focus on two areas to support both women climbing the corporate ladder in Silicon Valley and in an electronics factory in Bangalore, as well as female consumers of ICT products and services.

As in other sectors, women in the technology field are paid less than men and have lower representation in senior roles. Men in U.S. tech companies typically make 10 percent more than their female counterparts a smaller gap compared to other industries but still far from equal (PDF). Because of employment discrimination in terms of both compensation and employment opportunities, women are some of the lowest-paid workers in the electronics manufacturing supply chain and often work in difficult conditions, including long hours, potential exposure to health hazards, limited professional development opportunities and vulnerability to human rights abuses.

In regard to senior leadership, women make up 10 percent of executives within the Silicon Valley 150 (the Bay Area's top tech companies), compared to 20 percent of leaders for companies in the S&P 150. With talent pipeline shortages in the tech industry expected to reach an estimated 1.4 million by 2020, women are essential to ensuring the industry continues to meet rising demands for its services.

Men in U.S. tech companies typically make 10 percent more than their female counterparts a smaller gap compared to other industries but still far from equal.

Strengthening transparency in reporting on pay equity and gender diversity in leadership roles is an important step toward improving equitable employment opportunities at ICT companies. For example, Salesforce conducted a salary review of its 17,000 employees, making subsequent pay adjustments where deemed appropriate, and has invested nearly $3 million to eliminate statistically significant differences in pay.

Intel publicly has disclosed diversity numbers for more than a decade. Google, Microsoft, Apple, Symantec and several other leading ICT companies have begun doing so as well, helping companies set and publicly work toward leadership diversity goals.

Jabil has seen improved productivity in its supply chain after implementing HERproject, BSRs onsite training program that empowers female factory workers through health and financial training. Benefits to the business (PDF) include increased operational efficiency, higher retention and improved worker-management relations. ICT companies have made public commitments to gender equality by signing the Presidents Equal Pay Pledge, and nearly 90 of the 1,368 CEO signatories to the Womens Empowerment Principles belong to those in the technology sector.

ICT companies can offer products and services that all industries and consumers can use to support womens empowerment efforts and the work-life challenges that women disproportionately face.

ICT platforms can support employee engagement through interactive training programs and services related to gender equality or discrimination. When these platforms are publicized, as Google did with its unconscious-bias materials, non-tech companies can use the material for their own purposes.

LinkedIn is drawing on user data to provide insight into gender equality across every industry and is researching gender differences in how users promote themselves in personal profiles.

ICT products can increase access to health and finance. Electronic or mobile healthcare can empower women worldwide to take charge of their health and wellness, learn important health knowledge and access health services notably, for reproductive health. In China, BSRs HERhealth mobile app provides workers with convenient access to educational materials so that they can learn about general and sexual health and share this knowledge with their friends and family members.

ICT platforms can support employee engagement through interactive training programs and services related to gender equality or discrimination.

Online outsourcing, the business practice of contracting third-party providers (often overseas) to supply products or services that are delivered over the internet, allows women around the world access to digital jobs and more opportunities to earn a living. Through this model, Samasource has employed more than 8,000 people in Haiti, India, Kenya and Uganda.

Improved conference-call software and internet access can enable flexible work schedules.The Women and the Web Alliance (which grew out of Intels She Will Connect program) seeks to address the internet gender gap by bringing more than 600,000 young women online in Nigeria and Kenya in the next three years.

There is more work to be done within the ICT industry to advance gender equality, but also many avenues that ICT companies can explore to help other sectors and their consumers use digital resources to advance women as skilled professionals and empowered individuals. Companies can start by making public disclosures and commitments, then assess how their practices and business strategy can improve womens empowerment efforts for both their female workforce and consumer base.

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Tech is empowering women, and it's great for business - GreenBiz

How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses – Forbes


Forbes
How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses
Forbes
Want more jobs, not just here but around the world? Easy! Give dreamers the tools to become doers. Photo by The Videographers courtesy of Makerarm. Back in 2013, Zaib Husain, a Muslim, Pakistani-born, Austin-based, female founder started work on a ...

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How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses - Forbes

Coming technology will likely destroy millions of jobs. Is Trump ready? – Washington Post

By Ed Hess By Ed Hess February 8 at 10:53 AM

American manufacturing job losses to China and Mexico were a major theme of the presidential campaign, and President Trump has followed up on his promise to pressure manufacturers to keep jobs here rather than send them abroad. Already, he has jawboned automakers Ford, General Motors, Toyota and Fiat Chrysler and heating and cooling manufacturer Carrier into keeping and creating jobs in the United States.

What he hasn't yet addressed but should is the looming technology tsunami that will hit the U.S. job market over the next five to 15 years and likely destroy tens of millions of jobs due to automation by artificial intelligence, 3-D manufacturing, advanced robotics and driverless vehicles among other emerging technologies. The best research to date indicates that 47 percent of all U.S. jobs are likely to be replaced by technology over the next 10 to 15 years, more than 80 million in all, according to the Bank of England.

Think back to the human misery in this country during the financial recession when unemployment hit 10 percent. Triple that. Or even quintuple it. We as a society and as individuals are not ready for anything like that. This upheaval has the potential of being as disruptive for us now as the Industrial Revolution was for our ancestors.

Techno-optimists tell us to relax dont worry, technology will produce lots of new jobs just like it did during the Industrial Revolution. History will repeat itself, they say. Well, not so fast.

First, human disruption caused by the Industrial Revolution in Britain lasted 60 to 90 years, depending on the historical research. That is a long time for society to right itself, and lot of personal pain. Second, this time will be different because there will be new questions: Will technology produce lots of new jobs that advancing technology itself cant do? And will displaced workers be able to keep up with the pace of advancing technologies?

These issues should be front and center on the presidents agenda. Planning for how our country will adapt to the coming technology tsunami must start now. We are talking about a major societal challenge preservation of the American Dream as well as the future of work in the United States and the world.

Jobs at risk include a diverse range of service and professional positions. Retail and fast-food jobs will be almost entirely automated. Manual laborers and construction workers will be replaced by robots; long-haul truck drivers by self-driving trucks; accountants, clerks, paralegals, telemarketers and customer-service reps by artificial intelligence; and security guards by robots and drones. Even professionals in the fields of accounting, law, finance, consulting, journalism and medicine are at risk of losing their jobs to smart machines.

What jobs will be secure? Well, that will change as technology advances. For now, the consensus is that humans will be needed to perform those tasks that require higher-order critical thinking, innovation, creativity, high emotional engagement with other humans and trade skills requiring real-time problem-solving and manual dexterity. Humans will need to excel at doing those things that are, for now, uniquely human. Good will no longer be good enough.

We need to begin planning for what is coming. Our political leaders need to embrace this challenge. We need an American Dream 2.0 Plan for how we, as a society, will remain the land of opportunity as technological advances cause massive job losses. The stresses upon our system and way of life will be huge. This is not science fiction.

I ask the president to appoint a diverse blue-ribbon committee to study and make recommendations about how we, as a nation, will prepare for the coming technology tsunami and answer the tough economic questions of our time: How will we keep the American Dream alive in the Smart Machine Age? How will people find meaning and purpose in a world where full-time work will be limited? How must our public education system be transformed to better prepare our children for this new world? How do we, as a society, deal with the fact that the future of work for many will be no work at all?

We need to begin preparing ourselves, our families and our nation by mastering those skills that technology cannot replace. We need to rethink human excellence for the Smart Machine Age.

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Coming technology will likely destroy millions of jobs. Is Trump ready? - Washington Post

Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images – Variety


Variety
Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images
Variety
As always, technology and technique intertwined with personal artistic sensibilities and stories to drive changes in filmmaking. New markers were laid down on the road to the future with high-tech endeavors like The Jungle Book, lensed by Bill Pope ...

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Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images - Variety

Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers – Forbes


Forbes
Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers
Forbes
Chemical producers were among the first industrial companies to deploy digital technologies extensively, using digital sensors and controllers to optimize production and control plant operations. More recently, however, the chemicals sector has slowed ...

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Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers - Forbes

Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator – Forbes

Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator
Forbes
The technology company I started introduced real-time TV measurement to an industry accustomed to waiting 30 days for the same data no one had thought about it yet. Along the way, I've touched nearly every aspect of the business, including product, ...

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Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator - Forbes

Solutions replace technology as the focus at ISE 2017 – Installation International

For a show as huge and diverse as ISE has become, it might seem like a fruitless exercise to try to discern the emergence of any single major theme, writes Ian McMurray. However, both Brad Grimes, director of communications for InfoComm, and Dave Pedigo, VP of emerging technologies at CEDIA, believe that two have emerged.

Ive had a number of conversations with our exhibitors, and an important shift in our industry is becoming increasingly clear, saysGrimes. Were starting to go beyond the technology, and pivot towards the solution. What does this achieve? What outcome will the customer get from this?

He cites as an example some remarkable technology that Avocor is demonstrating which sees IR embedded in the glass of the screen. But, says Grimes, the people at Avocor are emphatic: theyre looking to provide a solution. Theyre entirely focused on the customer experience.

For Pedigo, the overriding impression from the show is the move towards voice as the user interface to the smart home a phenomenon currently driven largely by the Amazon Echo and Google Home. He acknowledges that that will take more time in Europe, given the limited availability of the Echo and as-yet-unavailability of Home but is certain it will happen.

Its all about use cases, he says. There are just so many occasions when its easier to use your voice than a control panel, remote or app. Those wont go away, of course people like things they can touch but now, the industry is able to give our users even more choice. Voice is complementary to what they already have.

Delivering a better experienceThat fundamental idea of exciting technology being seen, not as something in its own right, but as something that provides a valued solution and delivers a better experience to users, is one that both Grimes and Pedigo see as a significant change in the industry.

Our customer is no longer just the AV guy at the end user, continues Grimes. What were delivering as an industry is now widely seen by our customers as part of their enterprise technology strategy. What were doing is of enormous interest to CIOs and IT managers. What theyre focused on is ROI, productivity and solutions, and theyre the people who are going to be writing the cheques that will keep our industry going.

Both men see an important and shared challenge. Technologies such asAlexa can be seen as symptomatic of a shift towards standards. In a world that has historically prided itself on its ability to deliver custom solutions, that can perhaps be seen as threatening.

In reality, its an opportunity, believes Grimes. As an industry, we need to understand where our skills really lie. We deal in environments and experiences, and the interaction between audio, video, acoustics, lighting and so on. Thats our area of expertise and it has no less value in a standards-based world than it did before.

Pedigo agrees.What custom installers must realise that they bring isnt so much those technical skills, but a real understanding of how to deliver to a home owner exactly the right solution that precisely meets that home-owners needs, he says. That can be in the simplest of things adopting good practice for voice control, for example that can make a big difference to the end result.

The last word goes to Grimes.

When it comes to ISE, it may be the technology wow factor that brings people through the door, he laughs, But what our customers buy is something that solves a problem for them.

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Solutions replace technology as the focus at ISE 2017 - Installation International

Factory Boss Says Fishing Technology Could Improve Controversial US Border Wall – Voice of America

NORTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

A manufacturing company says skills and technology it developed making lobster traps could help save money on U.S. President Donald Trump's controversial plan to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Riverdale Mills' super-tough steel fence already guards 43 kilometers of the border, and the company says its technology has proven to be a cost-effective way to secure airports, prisons and nuclear facilities.

The small firm is based in Northbridge, Massachusetts, and CEO Jim Knott says his company came up with a much better way to make lobster traps. The metal mesh is assembled on huge automated machines that weld many joints at once. The mesh can be made of different sizes of steel, with different size openings for different applications.

The mesh is run through a huge vat of molten zinc to protect the product from rust. For lobster traps and other marine applications, the product gets an additional coating of special plant-based plastics that protect the zinc. The plastic formula is a trade secret. Lobster traps have to be sturdy, effective and affordable, and Knott says lessons from making them improved the design and production of mesh for other applications.

For security fences, the mesh openings can be made too small to allow people to get a grip with their fingers or to allow a cutter to work effectively. Knott says, "It's difficult to climb, it's difficult to cut I think it just makes more sense than a concrete wall, or a bollard wall, or an expanded metal wall."

Riverdale Mills says mesh openings in fencing can be made too small to allow people to get a grip with their fingers or to allow a cutter to work effectively.

Knott says this industry is very "capital intensive" and a big new order for a border fence could require a bigger investment in expensive equipment. It would also increase the need to recruit and train more skilled workers. According to Knott, "Adding people might be a challenge, but our plant pays a good wage and people, I think, are fairly happy here."

Riverdale already supplies some fencing on the Arizona border with Mexico.

Trump's plan to build a wall along the southern U.S. border is controversial, so a large order to supply material for the project might bring criticism to the company. Knott, however, expects job gains will generate goodwill and may temper critiques of his company.

"For every one person who works here directly, we're probably influencing 10 other people somewhere else in the community," he said.

In the meantime, this small manufacturing company has already grown from 60 employees to 185 over the past several years and still needs 35 more workers. These employment gains come after a period when the United States has lost millions of factory jobs that generally pay fairly well.

Knott says manufacturing is an important source of good jobs and a crucial source of innovation for the nation's economic health.

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Factory Boss Says Fishing Technology Could Improve Controversial US Border Wall - Voice of America

Republicans Aim to Kill Election Technology Standards Agency – Gizmodo

In a party line vote, the House Administration Committee voted today to kill the Election Assistance Committee, which sets federal standards for voting technology. If the bill becomes law, it could affect efforts to protect US elections from cyber attacks, further indicating that Republicans arent all that bothered by the threat of election hacking.

The Election Assistance Commission is charged with testing and certifying voting technology, and creating best practices and guidance for states on their voting systems. It was created by the Help America Vote Act, after the chaos of the 2000 election showed the need for better and more standardized electronic voting systems. The agency doesnt make rules or enforce requirements, but does certify technology. It also sets standards that states can use if they choose, and it provides grants for research into improving voting technologies. Its budget was $10 million in 2013, making it practically a rounding error in federal budget terms.

Bills that would eliminate the EAC have been introduced in previous years, but its more of a threat now with a united Republican congress and a Republican president. Its hard to imagine why Republicans would want to eliminate a small agency with such a limited budget and remit, particularly given the growing concern over foreign hacking of US elections systems. The EAC itself was hacked in 2016, and voter registration systems in multiple states were targeted by hackers. None of these incidents caused the elections to be compromised, but future attempts at hacking could be more successful without the EAC setting national standards for election security and performing tests on voting machines. And hacking isnt the only problem: according to the Brennan Center, a democracy and voting rights advocacy group, 43 states use at least some machines that are more than 10 years old.

In a statement, Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, who is on the House Administration Committee, took on Donald Trump for his partys attempts to kill the agency:

It strikes me as odd that at the same time their President Donald Trump is claiming massive voter fraud, House Republicans on the House Administration Committee are advancing legislation to eliminate the very commission which helps ensure that voting systems are secure, accurate, and accessible.

We received reports that dozens of state voter registration databases were subject to Russian hacking attacks last year. Eliminating the Elections Assistance Commission means these state and local jurisdictions will be less prepared to prevent efforts to delegitimize or disrupt our elections.

The EACs chair, Tom Hicks, also cited the threat of hacking if the agency is eliminated:

Efforts to dismantle the Election Assistance Commission are seriously out of step with the current U.S. election landscape. At a time when the Department of Homeland Security has designated election systems as part of the countrys critical infrastructure, election officials face cybersecurity threats, our nations voting machinery is aging and there are accusations of election irregularities, the EAC is the only federal agency bridging the gap between federal guidance and the needs of state and local election officials.

The bill would still have to pass the House and Senate before it reaches the presidents desk, so Senate Democrats may filibuster the effort.

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Republicans Aim to Kill Election Technology Standards Agency - Gizmodo