Daily Archives: September 16, 2014

Ron Paul Calls for a Race War – Video

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 7:41 am


Ron Paul Calls for a Race War
Jimmy speaks with Ron Paul. Follow Jimmy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jimmy_dore Follow TYTComedy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TYTComedy Visit: http://www.jimmydorecomedy.com/ Filmed ...

By: The Jimmy Dore Show

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The Fix: Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

Posted: at 7:41 am

Dave Fahrenthold wrote a big piece in today's Post on Rand Paul'sevolution (to be nice) or flip-floppery (to be not so nice) on a variety of issues -- from how to deal with the Islamic State to what to do with Medicare -- in advance of his near certain 2016 presidential bid. It's a great piece and contains two absolutely critical sentences when it comes to understanding what makes Rand different from his father, Ron, who ran for president in 2008 and 2012. Here they are:

As the prospect of a 2016 presidential bid looms larger, Paul is making it clear that he did not come to Washington to be a purist like his father, former congressman Ron Paul.He came to be a politician, like everybody else.

Then, later in the piece, Dave quotes a "longtime [Paul] friend and adviser" saying:Rands a pragmatist. He realizes weve got a really large federal government....I think that Rand has a picture of what a utopia would look like. And hes very realistic about how long it would take to get there.

For those paying close attention to Rand Paul since he arrived in the Senate in 2011 -- and I count myself among that group -- it's been clear for a very long time that he is not a facsimile of his father. Not only is Rand more naturally able as a campaigner than his father -- that's not saying all that much -- but he is also far more willing to tweak and adjust his policy positions to appeal to an electorate that is broader than simply the libertarian wing of the GOP base.

That flexibility has always been cast -- including by me -- as something that works in Paul's favor in a likely presidential bid. After all, we learned in 2008 and 2012 that running as a pure libertarian doesn't win you much other than a loyal, loud and too-small following. (Ron Paul didn't win a single caucus or primary in either 2008 or 2012.)But, Fahrenthold's piece raises the specter that Rand's willingness to massage where he stands could have far more politically painful consequences.

The first, and perhaps most important, is that much of Paul's early support in places like Iowa and New Hampshire comes from the hardcore libertarian base who not only voted for his father but also volunteered and donated money. These are the cause people, not the campaign people. And they are not likely to be all that keen on someone who sees them as one point of a triangulation strategy.

Fahrenthold also quotes social conservative leaders raising questions about just how committed Rand is to working to make abortion illegal and/or roll back gay marriage. While Paul was never going to be the "social conservative guy" in the 2016 field -- that's likely to be Texas Sen. Ted Cruz -- he also can't afford to have that segment of the party actively opposed to him. Social conservatives have become a dominant voice in the Iowa caucuses and remain a major factor in the South Carolina primary as well.

Remember that the most important anything a politician can be -- or at least be perceived to be -- is authentic. Voters like to vote for people that they think a) have convictions and b) are willing to stick by those convictions even in the face of public disagreement. Of course, the best politicians are the ones who give off the impression of being utterly steadfast in their principles while also adjusting those principles to fit the times and the mood of the electorate. Think Bill Clinton.

That's who Matt Lewis, a columnist at the conservative Daily Caller website, sees when analyzing Rand's dexterity on position taking. Writes Lewis:

No, Rand Paul is not in danger of entering John Kerry territory. Kerry wouldn't dare attempt to pull something like this off. He knew he didn't have what it takes to get us to suspend reality and embrace his delusions of grandeur.

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The Fix: Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

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Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

Posted: at 7:41 am

Dave Fahrenthold wrote a big piece in today's Post on Rand Paul'sevolution (to be nice) or flip-floppery (to be not so nice) on a variety of issues -- from how to deal with the Islamic State to what to do with Medicare -- in advance of his near certain 2016 presidential bid. It's a great piece and contains two absolutely critical sentences when it comes to understanding what makes Rand different from his father, Ron, who ran for president in 2008 and 2012. Here they are:

As the prospect of a 2016 presidential bid looms larger, Paul is making it clear that he did not come to Washington to be a purist like his father, former congressman Ron Paul.He came to be a politician, like everybody else.

Then, later in the piece, Dave quotes a "longtime [Paul] friend and adviser" saying:Rands a pragmatist. He realizes weve got a really large federal government....I think that Rand has a picture of what a utopia would look like. And hes very realistic about how long it would take to get there.

For those paying close attention to Rand Paul since he arrived in the Senate in 2011 -- and I count myself among that group -- it's been clear for a very long time that he is not a facsimile of his father. Not only is Rand more naturally able as a campaigner than his father -- that's not saying all that much -- but he is also far more willing to tweak and adjust his policy positions to appeal to an electorate that is broader than simply the libertarian wing of the GOP base.

That flexibility has always been cast -- including by me -- as something that works in Paul's favor in a likely presidential bid. After all, we learned in 2008 and 2012 that running as a pure libertarian doesn't win you much other than a loyal, loud and too-small following. (Ron Paul didn't win a single caucus or primary in either 2008 or 2012.)But, Fahrenthold's piece raises the specter that Rand's willingness to massage where he stands could have far more politically painful consequences.

The first, and perhaps most important, is that much of Paul's early support in places like Iowa and New Hampshire comes from the hardcore libertarian base who not only voted for his father but also volunteered and donated money. These are the cause people, not the campaign people. And they are not likely to be all that keen on someone who sees them as one point of a triangulation strategy.

Fahrenthold also quotes social conservative leaders raising questions about just how committed Rand is to working to make abortion illegal and/or roll back gay marriage. While Paul was never going to be the "social conservative guy" in the 2016 field -- that's likely to be Texas Sen. Ted Cruz -- he also can't afford to have that segment of the party actively opposed to him. Social conservatives have become a dominant voice in the Iowa caucuses and remain a major factor in the South Carolina primary as well.

Remember that the most important anything a politician can be -- or at least be perceived to be -- is authentic. Voters like to vote for people that they think a) have convictions and b) are willing to stick by those convictions even in the face of public disagreement. Of course, the best politicians are the ones who give off the impression of being utterly steadfast in their principles while also adjusting those principles to fit the times and the mood of the electorate. Think Bill Clinton.

That's who Matt Lewis, a columnist at the conservative Daily Caller website, sees when analyzing Rand's dexterity on position taking. Writes Lewis:

No, Rand Paul is not in danger of entering John Kerry territory. Kerry wouldn't dare attempt to pull something like this off. He knew he didn't have what it takes to get us to suspend reality and embrace his delusions of grandeur.

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Rand Paul Ron Paul. Is that good thing or a bad thing?

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Libertarianism: Why I’m a libertarian. – Video

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Libertarianism: Why I #39;m a libertarian.
Government have been encroaching and infringing on our personal rights for hundreds of years. Why aren #39;t most people concerned about this issue?

By: Sami Al-Suwaidi

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Libertarianism: Why I'm a libertarian. - Video

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Hedge fund offers $1M to cure aging

Posted: at 7:41 am

The $1 million "Palo Alto Longevity Prize" will be split in two, but teams can try for both. One $500,000 award will go to the first team to show, using a mammal for testing, that it can restore a youthful heart rate to an aging adult. The second $500,000 pot will be awarded to the first group that can extend lifespan by 50 percent.

Eleven teams have already signed up to compete and more can apply. They include researchers from Stanford, George Washington University and Washington University in St. Louis who will experiment with gene modification and the hormone oxytocin.

"Now is the time to launch this prize because we have reached the point in science where we really do have the opportunity to solve aging," Dr. Doris Taylor, director of the regenerative medicine research at Texas Heart Institute, said in a statement. Taylor is a leader of an initial team competing for the prize using a stem cell approach.

Prize organizers are also working with private investors and foundations to provide access to additional money to the teams. The effort's advisory board includes Eric Weinstein of Thiel Capital, Graham Spencer of Google Ventures and Steve Jurvetson of Draper Fisher Jurvetson.

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The $1 Million Race For The Cure To End Aging

Posted: at 7:41 am

The hypothesis is so absurd it seems as though it popped right off the pages of a science-fiction novel. Some scientists in Palo Alto are offering a $1 million prize to anyone who can end aging. Based on the rapid rate of biomedical breakthroughs, we believe the question is not if we can crack the aging code, but when will it happen, says director of the Palo Alto Longevity Prize Keith Powers.

Its a fantastical idea: curing the one thing we will all surely die of if nothing else gets us before that. I sat down with Aubrey de Grey, the chief science officer of theSENS Research Foundationand co-author of Ending Aging, to discuss this very topic a few days back. According to him, ending aging comes with the promise to not just stop the hands of time, but to actually reverse the clock. We could, according to him, actually choose the age wed like to exist at for the rest of our (unnatural?) lives. But we are far off from possibly seeing this happen in our lifetime, says de Grey. With sufficient funding we have a 50/50 chance to getting this all working within the next 25 years, but it could also happen in the next 100, he says.

If you ask Ray Kurzweil, life extension expert, futurist and part-time adviser to Googles somewhat stealth Calico project, were actually tip-toeing upon the cusp of living forever. Well get to a point about 15 years from now where were adding more than a year every year to your life expectancy, he told the New York Times in early 2013. He also wrote in the book he co-authored with Terry Grossman, M.D., that Immortality is within our grasp. Thats a bit optimistic to de Grey (the two are good friends), but hes not surprised this prize is coming out of Silicon Valley. Things are changing here first. We have a high density of visionaries who like to think high.

And he believes much of what Kurzweil says is true with the right funding. Give me large amounts of money to get the research to happen faster, says de Grey. He then points out that Googles Calico funds are virtually unlimited. Kurzweil asked Larry [Page] and Sergey [Brin] how much he had to work with and they said to let him know when he runs out of money and theyll send more, de Grey tells me.

Whether its 15, 25 or even 100 years off, we need to spur a revolution in aging research, according to Joon Yun, one of the sponsors of the prize. The aim of the prize is to catalyze that revolution, says Yun. His (very well-connected) nanny actually came up with the initial idea. She just happens to be an acquaintance of Wendy Schmidt, wife of Googles Eric Schmidt. But it was the passing of Yuns 68-year-old father-in-law and some conversations with his friends that got him thinking about how to take on aging as a whole.

The Palo Alto Prize is also working with a number of angel investors, venture capital firms, corporate venture arms, institutions and private foundations within Silicon Valley to create health-related incentive prize competitions in the future. This first $1 million prize comes from Yuns own pockets.

The initial prize will be divided into two $500,000 awards. Half a million dollars will go to the first team to demonstrate that it can restore heart rate variability (HRV) to that of a young adult. The other half of the $1million will be awarded to the first team that can extend lifespan by 50 percent. So far 11 teams from all over the world have signed up for the challenge.

All 11 teams are listed below for those interested in following along:

Doris Taylor, Ph.D. Texas Heart Institute, Houston, TX http://paloaltoprize.com/team/team-taylor-lab/ TEAM NAME: T.H.I. REGENERATIVE MEDICINE (approach: stem cells)

Dongsheng Cai, M.D., Ph.D. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, NY http://paloaltoprize.com/team/cai-lab/ TEAM NAME: CAI LAB (approach: hypothalamic regulation)

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The $1 Million Race For The Cure To End Aging

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Spiritual Warfare, Nanotech, Nephilim Nazis Their Negative Ancestors: The Transhumanist – Video

Posted: at 7:41 am


Spiritual Warfare, Nanotech, Nephilim Nazis Their Negative Ancestors: The Transhumanist
Laurence Galian`s Podcast`The Place Inside`Episode # 8`Spiritual Warfare, Nanotech, Nephilim Nazis Their Negative Ancestors: The Transhumanists`Tonight we ha...

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Cibolo councilman reinstated to seat

Posted: at 7:40 am

A Cibolo councilman has been reinstated to his seat after losing it when he applied for a post on a local water board, a violation of the city's charter.

Councilman James Doty had to forfeit his seat in August when he filed for a post on the Green Valley Special Utility District board of directors in the November election. GVSUD provides water services for parts of Cibolo.

The councilman said when he applied for the water board seat on Aug. 18, the filing deadline, he did not realize the GVSUD post was an elected position.

According to the city charter, if an elected city official places his or her name on the ballot for another elected post their council seat automatically becomes vacant.

Doty said he thought the GVSUD post was an appointed, unelected position.

It was a mistake, he said. It was a human error.

He said he withdrew his name from the GVSUD post once city officials notified him that he could not retain his council seat under the city charter if he ran for the water board.

To rectify the situation, the Cibolo City Council voted to appoint Doty back to his seat at a Saturday special meeting following procedures set forth in the city charter.

According to the city charter, the council has up to 30 days to fill a seat once it becomes vacant.

The city posted the council vacancy on its website, with a copy of the application for those who wanted to be appointed to the position.

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President commends post-2015 agenda progress as General Assembly concludes 68th session

Posted: at 7:40 am

15 September 2014 Closing the current session in the newly-renovated General Assembly Hall, President John Ashe today expressed gratitude to Member States for their cooperation in focusing on perhaps the biggest generational challenge of the United Nations: crafting an inclusive, participatory, people centred post-2015 development agenda.

These are indeed troubling times and they require resourceful, dedicated and focused responses. I am therefore grateful for your cooperationin helping me to set the stage for this collective endeavour, Mr. Ashe said in his closing address to the 193-member body.

The UN post-2015 development agenda, which will succeed the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) expire in 2015, has the eradication of extreme poverty as its overarching objective, Mr. Ashe said.

Member States had wholeheartedly joined in a wide spectrum of high-level events and thematic debates he had convened to pave the way towards the new agenda, which yielded good results.

Some 300 resolutions and 80 decisions were adopted on a range of issues including nuclear disarmament, rule of law, financing for development, the peaceful use of outer space, the right to privacy, the safety of journalists and peacekeeping missions budgets.

Mr. Ashe looked forward to the upcoming 69th session of the Assembly as an opportunity to build on those accomplishments as well as to break new ground in addressing pivotal developmental issues, and emerging challenges.

As we usher in the 69th session, the sustainable development goals (SDGs) you have developed will form the main basis for whatever set of concise goals you agree to for the post-2015 development agenda, Mr. Ashe said.

That agenda has the potential for transformative change and to eradicate poverty and bring dignity to the lives of all human beings by building on the foundation and successes of the MDGs.

To that end, his General Assembly had achieved important milestones including the completion of the Third International Conference on Small Island Developing States (SIDS), which gives SIDS a mandate to marshal support for their agenda within the context of the post-2015 agenda.

In addition, the Assembly completed a review on global counter terrorism strategy and the launch of the first ever UN Web Portal for victims of terrorism. On social and humanitarian issues, the Assembly produced the High Level Declaration on migration and development and adoption of the Outcome Document of the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples.

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Julian Assange Says "Apolitical Futurism of Star Trek" Fits Google

Posted: at 7:40 am

Julian Assange is currently answering questions in a live chat over at Gawker, promoting his new book, When Google Met Wikileaks. One of the most interesting exchanges for readers of Paleofuture actually comes from a question by Matthew Phelan who writes the Gawker subdomain Black Bag.

Phelan asks about the culture of Google and whether its vision of the future aligns with more retro notions of technology, information and politics seen in cultural artifacts like Star Trek.

Question from Matthew Phelan of the Gawker subdomain Black Bag:

There was a piece in Slate last year about Google, that I kept thinking about with respect to this book, about how Google's internal culture and goals are bound up in Star Trek. For example: Amit Singhal, the head of Google's search rankings team, told the South by Southwest Interactive Festival that "The destiny of [Google's search engine] is to become that Star Trek computer, and that's what we are building."

It makes sense to me in that there's a real Camelot-era liberal pro-statist ideal underlying Star Trek's vision of the future, and I'm curious what your sense was as to whether or not Eric Schmidt really buys into that. AND/OR I am curious to know how your idealized vision of the future differs from that Google Star Trek model.

From Julian Assange:

I hadn't seen that piece. At a glance, it reminds me of the discovery that the NSA had had the bridge of the Enterprise recreated. In my experience it is more reliable and fairer to look at peoples interests and expenditure rather than try to diagnose their inner mental state, as the latter often lets people project their own biases. As I say in the book, I found Eric Schmidt to be, as you would expect, a very sharp operator. If you read "The New Digital Age", the apolitical futurism of Star Trek seems to fit what Schmidt writes quite well. I also quite liked this summary of Google's vision for the future: "Google's vision of the future is pure atom-age 1960s Jetsons fantasy, bubble-dwelling spiritless sexists above a ruined earth."

It's interesting to see Assange describe Star Trek futurism as apolitical, especially because from Phelan's question (and any critical reading of Star Trek's quasi-utopian, post-scarcity values) Star Trek is presented as far from apolitical. Even "atom-age 1960s Jetsons fantasy" doesn't seem to quite nail it.

If anything, this exchange shows that we're grasping at imperfect utopian analogies for the future dredged up from the past when what we really should be looking at are the dystopias.

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Julian Assange Says "Apolitical Futurism of Star Trek" Fits Google

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