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Daily Archives: September 13, 2014
FUNNY RomanAtwoodVlogs Unnecessary Censorship (CENSORED)! – Video
Posted: September 13, 2014 at 1:41 pm
FUNNY RomanAtwoodVlogs Unnecessary Censorship (CENSORED)!
subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/LSWLaughing?sub_confirmation=1 RomanAtwoodVLOGS Unnecessary Censorship ( PART 1 ) I Hope you like it guys!! please like and subscribe for more videos...
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Ron Paul's 'Audit the Fed' bill returns to Congress
Posted: at 1:41 pm
Ron Paul may not be in Congress anymore, but his Audit the Fed bill lives on after him.
House Republican leaders scheduled a vote on the legislation for sometime in the next week, as one of a series of pre-election bills designed to highlight lawmakers stances just before they go home to face voters.
Mr. Paul made the bill one of his causes, and after years of trying finally pushed it through the House in 2012 on an overwhelming 327-98 vote. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who had previously said he supported an audit of the Federal Reserve, reversed himself.
If Harry Reid refuses to hold the vote before the Senate leaves town, you can help us make sure the American people hear about it all the way until Election Day and build so much pressure by the time Congress returns, the Senate will be forced to act in the Lame Duck, Mr. Paul said in an email to supporters from his advocacy group, Campaign For Liberty.
Mr. Paul retired from the House after the last Congress. The current House version of the legislation is sponsored by Rep. Paul Broun, a Georgia Republican. His version cleared the House oversight committee on a voice vote in July, suggesting continued bipartisan support.
The bill would order the Government Accountability Office, which is Congresss chief investigative arm, to review the Feds decision-making particularly on monetary policy.
Congress established the Federal Reserve nearly a century ago. The system, which consists of a board of governors and 12 regional banks, act as lenders of last resort to the countrys banking system, and it is charged both with fighting inflation and with promoting economic growth and employment.
The Congressional Budget Office said the bill would cost about $5 million for the staff required to conduct the audit. The CBO also said the Federal Reserve would spend money complying with the review, which would end up costing the government about $3 million in lower revenue from the Fed over the next decade.
The previous chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, had opposed an audit, saying it could lead to politicians second-guessing the secretive boards decisions. When Mr. Pauls bill came up for a vote in 2012, Mr. Bernanke called it a nightmare scenario.
Mr. Pauls son, Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican, has a companion bill in the Senate, but that has not seen any action with Democrats controlling the chamber.
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Catholicism and libertarianism clash over property and the common good
Posted: at 1:41 pm
Editor's note: Michael Sean Winters is on vacation this week. Filling in for him are various writers from Millennial, a journal featuring the writing of millennial Catholics. Winters will be back next week.
It seems our ongoing religious consideration of the merits of libertarianism has come at precisely the right time. With The New York Times wondering if the "libertarian moment" has come -- and substantially lesser venues hoping that it has -- now is the time for a definitive Christian ethical case to be taken up with regard to libertarianism. Such a case is being mounted with increasing vigor. Yet while Vatican officials disown libertarianism and all Pope Francis' statements on politics militate firmly against it, a loud portion of American Catholics in the political realm seem doggedly committed to it. Why?
One source of libertarian sentiment among Catholics is likely, as argued by Meghan Clark, the popularity of a certain mistaken anthropology. By this, Clark means a story about what type of creature man is and what his purpose is that has been fundamentally divorced from the biblical narrative and tradition by vested political interests. Clark points out that the chief feature of this warped anthropology is its naked individualism and its inability, therefore, to grasp the necessity of solidarity in producing whole and morally upright people. For the radically individualistic libertarian, solidarity is a burden, not a boon. If it is a boon, it is only so insofar as it produces certain desired outcomes for the individual -- but this utilitarian understanding of solidarity is, as Clark demonstrates, a far cry from the real thing.
Clark is right to note the failed anthropology at the heart of libertarianism. But yet another thematic failure animates libertarian philosophy as well: a vital misapprehension of the nature and purpose of property.
One thing to note about libertarianism is that it is first and foremost liberal, in the sense of classical Enlightenment liberals like John Locke. Liberalism arose as a political philosophy at a time when hostility to the Catholic church was well received, and many assumptions that contradict truths held obvious and foundational by the Catholic church remain tied up in liberal, and therefore libertarian, reasoning. Chief among them is the philosophical preference for the primacy of private property rights over all other institutions or conditions, including the common good. Consider Murray Rothbard, arguing that all rights disputes are little more than disputes of private property:
There are other vexed problems which would be quickly cleared up in a libertarian society where all property is private and clearly owned. In the current society for example, there is continuing conflict between the "right" of taxpayers to have access to government-owned streets, as against the desire of residents of a neighborhood to be free of people whom they consider "undesirable" gathering in the streets. ... They are, in brief, complaining about the "human right" of certain people to walk at will on the government streets. But as taxpayers and citizens, these "undesirables" surely have the "right" to walk on the streets, and of course they could gather on the spot, if they so desired, without the attraction of McDonald's. In the libertarian society, however, where the streets would all be privately owned, the entire conflict could be resolved without violating anyone's property rights: for then the owners of the streets would have the right to decide who shall have access to those streets, and they could then keep out "undesirables" if they so wished.
It is a foregone conclusion in Rothbard's ethics that owners of property have the absolute right to exclude people from what they own, be it land or material objects, even in the case of individuals who have nowhere else to go -- as "undesirables" here surely refers to homeless people who congregate in or near fast food restaurants for warmth and shelter. Rothbard flatly does not see the need to argue for such a right on behalf of owners, but smoothly progresses from the problem of "undesirables" to the "cure" of private property ownership: If only land held in common were held privately, he laments, you would presumably never have to see another "undesirable" for any longer than it took you to banish them. That your ownership claim supersedes their right to shelter, warmth, perhaps even food -- is simply assumed.
Libertarian luminary Hans Hermann Hoppe makes this claim explicit, writing:
It becomes apparent that nothing could be further from the truth as soon as one explicitly formulates the norm that would be needed to arrive at the conclusion that the state has to assist in the provision of public goods. The norm required to reach the above conclusion is this: whenever one can somehow prove that the production of a particular good or service has a positive effect on someone else but would not be produced at all or would not be produced in a definite quantity or quality unless certain people participated in its financing, then the use of aggressive violence against these persons is allowed, either directly or indirectly with the help of the state, and these persons may be forced to share in the necessary financial burden.
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Catholicism and libertarianism clash over property and the common good
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CBS Executive Declares He is Immortal – Billionaire Transhumanist Sumner Redstone’s Scary Quest – Video
Posted: at 1:41 pm
CBS Executive Declares He is Immortal - Billionaire Transhumanist Sumner Redstone #39;s Scary Quest
CBS Executive Declares He is Immortal - Billionaire Transhumanist Sumner Redstone #39;s Scary Quest. *SUBSCRIBE* for more great videos! Mark Dice is a media analyst, author, and political activist...
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CBS Executive Declares He is Immortal - Billionaire Transhumanist Sumner Redstone's Scary Quest - Video
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"Building a Transhuman Social Movement" by Darshan Elena Campos – Video
Posted: at 1:40 pm
"Building a Transhuman Social Movement" by Darshan Elena Campos
Global Existential Risks Radical Futures" ~ H+X Conference H+X Conference (Transhuman Visions), June 14, 2014 more info: http://www.hplusx.com http://www...
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Crysis 3 Let’s Play: Post Human – Video
Posted: at 1:40 pm
Crysis 3 Let #39;s Play: Post Human
I die over and over fighting Cell guys. 5 likes.
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Medi-Cal official to leave healthcare post in January
Posted: at 1:40 pm
The official who led California's giant public healthcare services department through a tumultuous implementation of Obamacare reforms -- including a months-long period during which hundreds of thousands of Medicaid applications have languished, waiting to be processed -- will depart his position in January, state officials have announced.
Toby Douglas directed the state's $91-billion Department of Health Care Services for four years, a period of "unprecedented change and growth as California embraced the Affordable Care Act," said state Health and Human Services Secretary Diana S. Dooley in a letter to colleagues Friday.
During Douglas' tenure, Dooley wrote, the state's healthcare program for the poor, known as Medi-Cal, began transforming into a managed care system and added 3.5 million new beneficiaries, growing to nearly 11 million members in all -- an expansion that has been heralded by healthcare advocates.
"That's staggering," said Anthony Wright, executive director of the advocacy group Health Access. "It's more than a quarter of the state."
At the same time, advocates and officials have roundly criticized Douglas and his agency for problems that emerged during the healthcare expansion, including a months-long backlog in processing Medi-Cal applications because of troubles getting state and county computer systems to communicate.
In May, bottlenecked applications reached 900,000; by July, after the federal government and advocacy groups wrote letters to Douglas demanding plans to solve the problem, the number had been whittled down to 600,000.
This week, according to the health services department, 350,000 applications remained in limbo. Some waiting applicants, worried about costs, have delayed seeking medical care, advocates say.
Critics, including state Assemblyman Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), have also targeted the agency for a lack of accountability and transparency, and have challenged the low reimbursement rates Medi-Cal offers participating doctors. On Friday, however, Pan praised Douglas's work, saying that the enormity of implementing healthcare reforms and persistent budget challenges had contributed to "difficult times" for the department.
"He worked hard in a challenging environment," Pan said.
In an interview with The Times on Friday, Douglas said that he had left his job voluntarily and that he was proud of his track record expanding and improving Medi-Cal.
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Insanely big-ass iPhone future is already here
Posted: at 1:40 pm
Video will begin in 5 seconds.
The bigger iPhone screen unveiled by Apple could have happened much sooner, according to deputy technology editor Ben Grubb. Illustrated by Rocco Fazzari.
I can only imagine that my personal invite to Apple's Festival of Shiny Things went missing in the post. I stood by the letter box every day waiting for Tim Cook to write. When the day arrived and I found myself abed, asleep, when I should have been in the front row knocking mugachinos with Jony and the boys, I was, to quote the internet, disappointed but only with the post office for losing my invite. Never with Tim.
Unlike every tech journalist ever, I wasn't disappointed with the new phones or the Apple Watch. They were cool, if a little bemusing.
The iPhone has always been a compact device, but these latest versions are what Americans call big-ass and insanely big-ass. The Plus-sized model will fit nicely into a man bag. (Don't you judge me it's not like I'm wearing pocket squares). But it will look bizarre, like a silicon boogie board, strapped to your arm when you're out running or at the gym, which is how millions of people currently use their phones every day.
Illustration: Glen Le Lievre.
The Apple Watch, meanwhile, is beautiful and amazing, but in the way that visions of retro-futurism from 1975 are beautiful and amazing. It would look totally right, for instance, if worn by Barbara Bain, to match her spankyest bell-bottomed jumpsuit while Moonbase Alpha is blown out of Earth's gravity in the pilot episode ofSpace 1999.
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While I'd have happily accepted Tim's invite to hang out at the Flint Centre, it was a lucky thing that having been spurned, I didn't get up at quarter to three in the morning like some other addicts. (One hopeless iJunkie of my acquaintance is a gentleman farmer, who probably curdled the milk of his moo cows cursing at the stuttering video and unexpected Chinese voice-over Apple pushed out to his iPhone at omigod-thirty in the morning). Apparently a couple of lines of wonky code on the website trashed the live stream of the event for millions of viewers around the world. Yes, a phone launch rates like Wimbledon now but then so do web casts of video game tournaments you've never heard of, or YouTube updates from some guy walking across the jaggy, 8-bit world of Minecraft. It's like William Gibson quipped, the future is already here, it's just unevenly distributed.
The future seems to have finally caught up with ageing Sith Lord Rupert Murdoch, despite his best efforts at creeping just out of reach. Rupe took to the Twitterz this week, genuinely baffled about whether his life long crusade for the truth was helped or hindered by running a bit of scruff on page three of his tabloids.
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Insanely big-ass iPhone future is already here
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Daniel Burrus – Technology and Innovation Futurist – Video
Posted: at 1:40 pm
Daniel Burrus - Technology and Innovation Futurist
Daniel Burrus is considered one of the World #39;s Leading Futurists on Global Trends Global Trends and Innovation. The New York Times has referred to him as one...
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Daniel Burrus - Technology and Innovation Futurist - Video
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