Monthly Archives: May 2013

Best Comedic and Inspirational Male – Censorship Makes No Sense! – Video

Posted: May 8, 2013 at 2:43 pm


Best Comedic and Inspirational Male - Censorship Makes No Sense!
http://tinyurl.com/VLOGgging - Vlog, comedy, short comedy skits scripts, stand up comedy series, a short comedy play script, short comedy play scripts, stand...

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Cuban blogger Sanchez battles censorship

Posted: at 2:43 pm

Yoani Sanchez won the prize for Best Blog at The Bobs awards in 2008, but she wasn't allowed to collect her trophy. Now, she is on a world tour talking about how to overcome censorship, and stopped by at re:publica.

She has been beaten. She has been taken away by police multiple times. For those who refuse to be silenced, it's just part of life in Cuba. Despite the dangers, Yoani Sanchez speaks her mind. She says she has no choice. She wants to "exorcize demons," and her motivation is the future of her country. She doesn't want to explain to her grandchildren someday that she did nothing to fight oppression. This motivation has landed Sanchez under the government's watchful eye as a dissident, a "liar and foreign mercenary."

In her blog, Generacion Y, Sanchez writes about everyday life in Cuba. She also dissects the Castro clan in her texts, which makes her a thorn in the government's side. Early this year she was finally allowed to leave Cuba after several unsuccessful applications. Now she's set out to a worldwide tour where she talks about her work, about the backlash, how she overcomes censorship in Cuba, and what tricks she uses to distribute her content throughout the world.

Incognito at a hotel for tourists

She has more than 500,000 followers on Twitter - the majority of her followers are not from Cuba, where the internet is not affordable for the average citizen. Private internet connections do not exist, with the exception of hotels and internet cafes that offer networks at a rate of six to $12 per hour (an average monthly salary is $20). Even then the internet speed is comparable to that of a modem from the 1990s.

You have to get creative if you want to get information via the internet. Sanchez has posed as a European tourist, so she could sneak into a hotel with internet access. This plan worked because she is able to speak some German. Prior to her blogging career, she lived in Switzerland for two years.

A crucial tool is mobile technology. Via text message, tweets are sent to a foreign telephone number - there's also a contact in Germany. From there, the tweet finds its way to the internet. The only disadvantage is that two-way interaction is not possible. Sanchez calls this "tweeting in the dark." Those who retweet her work support her efforts.

The power of a USB stick

To work as efficiently as possible, she writes the text for her blog offline, saves it onto a USB stick, passes it along to a trusted person who then posts the contents online.

"If you ever travel to Cuba, bring your old laptop or cell phone with you, and give it to any Cuban on the street. It would change that person's life and help an ordinary citizen breach the red line of censorship," she appealed to the audience.

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Battling censorship behind bars

Posted: at 2:43 pm

In November 2008, a mail-order book addressed to Lou Johnson arrived at the Hilltop Unit, a state prison for women located in Gatesville, central Texas. Written by investigative journalist Silja Talvi, the book was titledWomen Behind Bars:The Crisis of Women in the U.S. Prison System, and chronicled the past decades sweeping upsurge in female incarceration as told through the stories of prisoners across the country. Talvis interviews cast light on the common threads of trauma and abuse these women shared, the increase in nonviolent drug charges that put them behind bars, and the troubling conditions they found inside.

Johnson, one of the women interviewed for the project, described the harsh and humiliating circumstances she endured at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) facility. Denied adequate medical care, refused meals for minor infractions such as talking in line, and forced to clean pipe chases covered with fecal material without gloves, Johnson summed up her experience as cruel and unusual punishment.

But Johnson was barred from reading her own account in print, as well as from accessing the testimonies of the one hundred other female prisoners interviewed forWomen Behind Bars. By the time her copy arrived at the Hilltop Unit mailroom, the book had already been censored at another TDCJ facility. Johnson received a form explaining that an offending passage on page 38 depicted sex with a minor, therefore the publication as a whole was detrimental to offenders rehabilitation because it would encourage deviant criminal behavior. She attempted to appeal the decision to no avail; having never received the book to review the contents of page 38, she was in no position to present a compelling rebuttal.

Prison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution, the U.S. Supreme Court found in its 1987Turner v. Safleydecision. While inmates are not entitled to full First Amendment rights, any encroachment on their freedom of speech must be reasonably related to legitimate penological objectives.

While both publishers and prisoners have standing to challenge prison censorship policies that restrict opportunities to send and receive literature, in practice publishers are far better equippedthey are free from the legal restrictions that bind the incarcerated, and can actually access the material in question. But commercial magazines and booksellers rarely act upon notice that the material theyve mailed has been seized or withheld; prison inmates dont represent a sufficiently marketable demographic.

Women Behind Bars, however, was distributed by Prison Legal News (PLN), which, as the only national publication whose majority of contributors and subscribers are state and federal prisoners, is deeply invested in combating prison censorship. Thats our core constituency, says editor Paul Wright. Wright founded the magazine in 1990 while serving out a sentence for first-degree murder in Washington State. As a twenty-one-year-old military policeman, Wright was broke and a week away from completing his service when he tried to rob a cocaine dealer who turned out to have a gun. Wright panicked and shot first, and was sentenced to twenty-five years.

In prison, he worked as a book fetcher at the facilitys law library, and grew interested in prison conditions litigation. With fellow inmate Ed Mead, he began PLN as a ten-page hand-typed newsletter with a readership of just seventy-five aimed at raising political consciousness and informing prisoners of their rights. The censorship was immediate. In 1991, Wright reported on pervasive racism at Washingtons Clallam Bay Corrections Center, and a specific incident in which a group of white guards brutalized a black inmate. Prison authorities redacted the incriminating sections for circulation inside Clallam Bay, and when they found out that PLN had been distributed to subscribers outside of the facility, subjected Wright to three weeks of solitary confinement.

Wright, who was released in 2003 after serving seventeen years of his twenty-five year sentence, says that over the past few decades, censorship practices in prisons and jails have grown startlingly worse. PLNwhich now has 7,000 print subscribers in all fifty states, with reader surveys indicating that each issue is passed around to ten different inmateshas faced blanket censorship in over ten state prisons systems, and countless bans in local jails across the country. The magazine was impelled to establish the Human Rights Defense Center, a legal nonprofit dedicated to protecting subscribers right to read. It also launched a book publishing operation to distribute titles that, despite limited commercial appeal, are vital to incarcerated populations, such asPrisoners Self Help Litigation Manual,Hepatitis and Liver Disease: What You Need to Know, andBeyond Bars: Rejoining Society After Prison. Which brings us back to Texas.

Page 38 ofWomen Behind Bars, it turned out, described the childhood ordeals faced by Tina Thomas, a neurologist and professor in a teaching college who battled drug addiction late in her career:

What is even more remarkable about Thomas is that she had overcome the kind of childhood trauma that might have completely derailed her adult life. It might have been precisely that background that first propelled her to become an overachiever and attain a high level of professional success, but then came back to haunt her just as she had gotten to where she wanted to go. The dark secret of her life was that she had been forced to perform fellatio on her uncle when she was just four years old. Thomas explains that this unresolved trauma became the template for a lifetime of distrust, fear, uncertainty, and a spirit of self-negation.

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Asylum Comrades Ron Paul

Posted: at 2:42 pm


Asylum Comrades Ron Paul Jim Rogers - Unsound Minds For Sound Money
Where were their handlers...? Special thanks to kkbose for sending us this link.

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WeeGamers Unboxing Post Human Republic Starter Army for Dropzone Commander – Video

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WeeGamers Unboxing Post Human Republic Starter Army for Dropzone Commander
a quick close dive into the contents of the PHR starter army for Hawk Wargames Dropzone Commander 10mm futuristic wargame.

By: WeeGamersNI

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WeeGamers Unboxing Post Human Republic Starter Army for Dropzone Commander - Video

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To the space station and beyond with Linux

Posted: May 7, 2013 at 7:46 am

Summary: The International Space Station's laptops are moving from Windows to Linux, and R2, the first Linux-powered humanoid robot in space, is now under-going in-flight testing.

Unlike my recent spoof story about a Linux-powered Iron Man suitthat you could build at home, this story isn't science fiction. NASA really has decided to drop Windows from the laptops on the International Space Station (ISS) in favor of Linux, and the first humanoid robot in space, R2, really is powered by Linux.

Keith Chuala, a United Space Alliancecontractor, manager of the Space Operations Computing (SpOC) for NASA, and leader of the ISS's Laptops and Network Integration Teams, recently explained that NASA had decided to move to Linuxfor the ISS's PCs."We migrated key functions from Windows to Linux because we needed an operating system that was stable and reliable one that would give us in-house control. So if we needed to patch, adjust, or adapt, we could."

Specifically, the ISS astronauts will be using computers running Debian 6. Earlier, some of the on-board computers had been using Scientific Linux, a Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) clone. While not the newest version of Debian, Debian 7 has just been released, Debian is nothing if not well-tested and reliable.

While Linux has been used on the ISS ever since its launch (PDF link) and for NASA ground operations almost since the day Linus Torvalds created it, it hasn't seen that much use on PCs in space. "Things really clicked," said Chuala in an interview, "after we came to understand how Linux views the world, the interconnectedness of how one thing affects another. You need that worldview. I have quite a bit of Linux experience, but to see others who were really getting it, that was exciting."

In addition to appearing on in-flight laptops, Linux is also running Robonaut (R2), the first humanoid robot in space. Currently on the station and experimental mode, R2 is meant to carry out tasks too dangerous or tedious for astronauts.

To help astronauts and IT specialists get up to speed, NASA is relying on The Linux Foundation for training. As Chuala explained, "NASA is as heterogeneous as it gets".

"They had a heavy Debian Linux deployment, but also various versions of RHEL/Centos. Because our training is flexible to a variety of distributions, we're able to address all those different environments in a single training session. No other training organization can provide that."

And, I might add, no other operating system is as flexible as Linux. From supercomputersto robots to desktops, NASA is finding that Linux is the answer.

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Gravity in the Elysium Space Station

Posted: at 7:46 am

I dont know too much about the upcoming moving Elysium, but it looks pretty cool. Here is the trailer. The first interesting thing I saw was the rotating space station.

Why are you weightless in space? I have already answered this question in great detail. The short answer is that you dont really feel gravity anyway since it acts on all parts of your body equally and on the space station. Both the space station and all parts of your body have the same acceleration which means there is no interaction forces between them. What you actually feel is not the gravitational force, but rather the force that other objects push on you. On the surface of the Earth, you are mostly at rest. This means that the ground has to push up on you to balance the gravitational force and you feel weight.

Ok, Im not going to spend more time talking about weightlessness. If you arent happy with my short answer, read my other post. For now, lets say that you have a person in a space station. The space station could be in orbit around the Earth or in deep space where there are no strong gravitational forces. Either way, the person will be weightless.

How do you make a person feel weight? One way is to accelerate the person so that there is a force from the ground of the space station that is similar to Earth. Here is a force diagram of a person on the surface of the Earth and a person in the space station with fake gravity.

The person on the ground has the two forces that are equal in magnitude (thus no acceleration). I am calling FN the normal force. This is the force the person feels and calls weight. Now, we want the astronaut person to have this same FN force. Since there is no gravitational force, this one force would make the person accelerate in that same direction.

That is our fake gravity force make the person accelerate. There are two ways this person could accelerate in that direction. The person could increase in speed in that direction, this would be an acceleration. However, this would also change the velocity. For a station in orbit, this wouldnt work but it would be fine for a spaceship traveling to another star and accelerating. No, for the space station we need to do something else. The answer is to make the acceleration perpendicular to the velocity of the person so that the person moves in a circle.

When an object moves in a circle, the velocity vector is always changing and the direction of this change in velocity is towards the center of the circle. Acceleration is the rate of change of the velocity vector. Its really that simple. Here is how this would work.

And this is your basic spinning space station. You have seen this in countless space movies because it is an idea that would actually work. How do you change the acceleration of the object moving in a circle? There are two things to change, the radius of the circle and the speed that you move in a circle. The magnitude of this acceleration is:

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Tiny Alien-Like Skeleton Contains Human DNA – Video

Posted: at 7:45 am


Tiny Alien-Like Skeleton Contains Human DNA
Tests of the mysterious skeleton, believed by some to be alien, have so far revealed only human DNA.

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Bombas De Boston Teriam Vestígios De DNA Feminino – Video

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Bombas De Boston Teriam Vestgios De DNA Feminino
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Brooke Lakin – DNA (Little Mix Acoustic Cover) Live at the Plough Inn Hickling – Video

Posted: at 7:45 am


Brooke Lakin - DNA (Little Mix Acoustic Cover) Live at the Plough Inn Hickling
Brooke Lakin - DNA (Little Mix Cover) Live at the Plough Inn Hickling Leics April 2013 Guitar - Chris White, Recorded and mixed by Steve Wainer.

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