Monthly Archives: January 2015

Health Care – Video

Posted: January 2, 2015 at 7:43 am


Health Care
Health Care Michelle Bachmann Ron Paul Rick Perry Herman Cain Mitt Romney Jon Huntsman Newt Gingrich Rick Santorum 2011 SpeechWorks Released on: 2011-09-13 Auto-generated by ...

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Ron Paul Is Back Part Two – Video

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Ron Paul Is Back Part Two
Fun Factor- http://w11.zetaboards.com/Fun_Factor/index/ Jesse Ventura for president in 2016.. Get him on the ballot in your state, get him in the debates, write him in when you vote if you...

By: AmericaChat Zetaboards

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10 who might have an impact on 2016 campaign

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WASHINGTON (AP) - In the year that will pass before the 2016 campaign for president formally kicks off with the votes in the Iowa Caucus, any number of candidates, donors, political operatives - and people who have nothing to do with American politics - will shape the race for the White House. Here's a look at 10 people (OK, 12 people) who will be worth watching in the next year.

1. Elizabeth Warren, Potential Rival

The populist senator from Massachusetts is, at the dawn of 2015, the only person who appears able to mount a competitive challenge to Hillary Rodham Clinton in the race for the Democratic nomination. The architect of President Barack Obama's consumer financial protection agency, Warren would be able to quickly raise millions from an already enthusiastic following. She has repeatedly insisted she is "not running for president," but her consistent use of the present tense has left some liberals begging her to get into the race.

2. Steve Robertson, Backroom Ally

The bespectacled chairman of the Republican Party of Kentucky will have a busy 2015 - thanks in no small measure to the political aspirations of the state's junior senator, Rand Paul. As Robertson works to elect a Republican governor for only the second time in 44 years, he will have to figure out whether to help Paul run for president and re-election to the U.S. Senate in 2016 - something nominally barred by Kentucky law. Options include moving up the state's primary or changing the party's rules, but no matter what path Paul's team takes, Robertson will be the man selling it to the public.

3. Paul Fishman, Prosecutor

As U.S. attorney for New Jersey, Paul Fishman is leading the federal criminal investigation into a scheme to create traffic jams on a bridge that links New Jersey with Manhattan - a political scandal that still hangs over the political ambitions of Gov. Chris Christie. There is no evidence linking Christie directly to the effort to tie up traffic on the bridge, but even if he is formally cleared by Fishman, the federal prosecutor could announce a string of indictments against the governor's former staffers, aides and appointees just as he's announcing his candidacy for president.

4. John Podesta, Steady Influence

A senior adviser to President Barack Obama, Podesta is a trusted Democratic counselor and environmental policymaker who served as Bill Clinton's White House chief of staff. Podesta has said he doesn't intend to leave the White House until Obama's mid-January State of the Union address and could serve as Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman. If he joins the campaign, Podesta would provide stability to an organization that was plagued by infighting in 2007 and 2008 and could help Clinton navigate the party's liberal wing and the final term of Obama's administration.

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Libertarianism and its distortion 20120608Hr2 – Video

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Libertarianism and its distortion 20120608Hr2

By: Glenn Beck-erwoods

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Libertarianism and its distortion 20120608Hr2 - Video

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Oculus Rift's Palmer Luckey: 'I brought virtual reality back from the dead'

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Luckey has the look of a teenage gamer who hasnt ventured outside in a while. He has a mop of dark brown hair that looks as if it has never been professionally cut and a rather pale complexion. He is dressed in a work uniform only really permissible if your office is in California, you are considered a genius and are worth several billion dollars: a crumpled Hawaiian shirt, khaki board shorts and leather flip-flops.

I had read that he never wears shoes and ask him why. We invented shoes to protect our feet from the harsh environment, he says, but I live in modern-day California. Its pretty safe here. Nothings going to happen if I take them off. Also, it puts you in better touch with the world. You know what the world is like under your feet. He is sipping on coconut water, a drink he says he hates. Try it though; this one doesnt taste like crap, he says as he hands me the bottle. And its good for you.

Palmer Luckey was born on September 19 1992. He had an unexceptional childhood in Long Beach. The eldest of four siblings, he was homeschooled by his mother, Julie, and his father, Donald, who was a travelling car salesman. He spent much of his childhood inside, building PCs and crafting mutated video-game consoles from Nintendo GameCube parts. While his siblings were outside playing, Luckey made pocket money repairing and selling iPhones. He remembers the feeling of being different to his siblings. My parents knew it too, he says. But they encouraged me; they were just like, Dont shoot your eyes out, kid.

He was a voracious reader, obsessed with the science fiction of Neal Stephenson and Anne McCaffrey, and mid-1990s Japanese anime. But it was after watching the 1999 film The Matrix in which the computer programmer Neo learns the truth about his simulated reality before organising a rebellion against the machines that put him there that the seed for Oculus Rift was planted. Luckey wanted to make The Matrix a reality. Or at least a virtual reality.

An attendee at last Junes E3 gaming conference, in Los Angeles, tries out

the Oculus Rift. PHOTO: Getty Images

With his iPhone-repairs income, he bought half a dozen cut-price 3D monitors and head-mounted displays from government auctions. At the age of 15 he put these parts together to create his first headset. It wasnt very good, he says. It wasnt at all a true virtual-reality experience. He redoubled his efforts, committed to overcoming the flaw that had historically torpedoed virtual-reality developers: engineers could not smooth the head-tracking latency in the googles, which induced an unbearable, nauseating lag every time users turned their head. Luckey cracked it in months. He combined stereoscopic 3D, 360-degree visuals to widen the field of view with embedding more sensitive sensors in the monitor to ensure the image moved seamlessly with the wearers head. He had come up with a way of hacking the visual cortex, tricking it into believing the created world was a reality. The result was the first truly immersive experience.

When Luckey posted prototype pictures of the headset on the gamers message board Meant to Be Seen, he explained the thinking behind its name. I based it on the idea that the HMD [head-mounted display] creates a rift between the real world and the virtual world, he wrote on the forum, though I have to admit that it is pretty silly. 🙂

John Carmack a hero of Luckeys and the founder of id Software, which created the concept of 3D gaming began championing the Rift. In 2012 he demonstrated a prototype for a group of select journalists at E3, the gaming industrys flagship conference. Within days Luckey had dropped out of university and founded Oculus VR with another precocious dropout, his friend Brendan Iribe. The pair immediately took to the online crowdfunding site Kickstarter, aiming to raise $250,000 for prototype development costs and to produce a few hundred units for sale at $300. More than 9,500 people committed a total of $2.4 million. Andreessen Horowitz then led a round of angel funding that generated $75 million.

In March 2014 Mark Zuckerberg visited Oculus VRs offices in Irvine, California. Luckey was not keen on selling the company, but within weeks he had agreed to Zuckerbergs offer of more than $2 billion for a product in an industry that had been dormant for decades. It was already dead, Luckey says. Im not sure whether I he stops, before saying more resolutely, No, I did, I saved it from dying, brought it back from the dead. But it wasnt that I was the best at what I was doing; I was just one of the only ones that persevered. Nobody had actually managed to pull this off. Then, bam.

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Transhumanist Vlog Intro Video – Video

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Transhumanist Vlog Intro Video
http://www.facebook.com/brianlongo429 http://www.twitter.com/atomic811.

By: Brian Longo

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A transhumanist manifesto for the UK? – Video

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A transhumanist manifesto for the UK?
This online video conference meeting is a chance to review ideas for a possible "Transhumanist Manifesto" for the UK general election in May 2015. People can take part in this meeting: (1)...

By: David Wood

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Newark prostitution sting focuses on human trafficking

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NEWARK, Del. When Newark Police and federal agents carried out a sting at a South College Avenue motel last month, they arrested seven men who allegedly thought they were meeting a prostitute.

However, the officers conducting the operation at the Rodeway Inn had their sights on a bigger target: human traffickers.

Such joint local and federal operations are a common tactic of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcements Homeland Security Investigations division as it seeks to crack down on human trafficking. Though the agency is better known for its immigration enforcement, ICEs HSI division is also responsible for investigating child pornography, sex trafficking and other similar offenses.

Human sex trafficking is defined as prostitution induced by force, fraud or coercion. The victims sometimes children often make arrangements to be brought to the United States only to find themselves forced into prostitution. Other times, it involves young Americans from troubled backgrounds.

Its akin to modern-day slavery, said William Walker, assistant special agent in charge of HSI in Philadelphia.

The Dec. 18 sting in Newark was in response to recent complaints about prostitution at the Rodeway Inn, said Lt. Mark A. Farrall, a spokesman for the Newark Police Department.

After posting ads online, undercover officers used phone calls and text messages to communicate with 22 men, seven of whom showed up at the motel and were charged with patronizing a prostitute. Those charged include John Jarrell, 57; Bernard Racey, 44; Robert Fletcher, 22; Suprapto Bonari, 48; Jonathan Caine, 28; Aaron M. Johnson, 38; and James L. Poston, 45. Police withheld the defendants hometowns for unspecified reasons.

An HSI agent accompanied Newark Police during the sting and helped conduct interviews of the suspects, looking for red flag indicators of human trafficking. Similar operations have occurred in cities across the country, Walker said.

The basic idea, authorities said, is to lean on the accused to open up about any past involvement with prostitutes in an effort to get information that could lead to human trafficking rings.

We interview them and see if they can turn us on to any human trafficking victims theyve encountered in the past, Walker said.

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Candid Discussions: Gissou Nia on Irans Human Rights in 2014

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Gissou Nia is the Deputy Director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran (ICHRI), an independent human rights organization based in New York City. She is an expert on human rights in Iran and on international law. Ms. Nia previously served as Executive Director of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center (IHRDC). Under her leadership, IHRDC produced comprehensive human rights reports and documentations on political prisoners, violation of rights of women as well as those of marginalized groups such as religious and ethnic minorities.

Prior to her tenure at IHRDC, Ms. Nia worked on war crimes trials at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), where she represented former government ministers from Bosnia and Kosovo in pre-trial, trial, and appellate proceedings. Ms. Nia also assisted in proceedings at the International Criminal Court (ICC) related to allegations of crimes against humanity committed during the 2007/2008 post-election violence in the Republic of Kenya.

Ms. Nia lectures and publishes frequently on human rights developments in Iran as well as the rule of law in post-conflict and transitional societies. Her work has been profiled by NPR, CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, Forbes, FPA Blogs, and other major media outlets. Ms. Nia sat down with Reza Akhlaghi of the Foreign Policy Association to discuss Irans human rights record in 2014 and share her perspectives on the challenges the Iranian society faces in greater recognition of human rights.

__________________________________________________________________

How would you describe the state of human rights in Iran in 2014?

The state of human rights in Iran in 2014 is, rather unfortunately, not where we envisioned we would be when we started out the year. Shortly after the inauguration of President Rouhani in August 2013, the Iran human rights community had some cause to be optimistic with the release of more than a dozen prominent political prisoners in September 2013, the publication of a draft Citizenship Rights Charter in November 2013 and a general feeling that the authorities tight grip on personal freedoms might be loosening somewhat.

However, fast-forward a year later and it seems that instead of improvements in line with President Rouhanis campaign pledges to bring civil and social reforms to the country there has actually been regression along a number of human rights indicators. An on-going power struggle between the Rouhani administration and the hardliner-controlled intelligence ministry and judiciary has resulted in new detentions of journalists and activists, with a rising number of individuals arrested for online activities. Womens rights have deteriorated with a series of acid splashing attacks targeting women in Isfahan followed by widely believed to be insufficient response from the authorities to the attacks. The number of executions in the country, particularly for drug-related offenses, has increased since the year priorplacing the Islamic Republic among the worlds leaders in death sentences per capita. Additionally, the leaders of the Green Movement and other civil society actors, who were jailed for their role in events following the disputed June 2009 presidential election, remain imprisoned.

This lack of improvement has not been lost on the international community. Indeed, this lack of improvement in human rights condition was noted in November at Irans Universal Periodic Review (UPR)a process that examines the human rights performance of all 193 UN member states. At the UPR, Irans country peers expressed concern that many of the recommendations made to Iran, which were accepted by the Iranian authorities in the last UPR process four years ago, had yet to be implemented. These recommendations addressed a whole range of issues such as Irans high rate of executions; practice of public and juvenile executions; stoning; restrictions on freedom of expression and assembly; torture; mistreatment of detainees; lack of fair trial standards; due process of law; and discrimination against ethnic and religious minorities.

Rouhanis presidency has consistently come under fire for its lack of progress on the human rights front. The worsening of this situation has been widely interpreted as a demonstration of power plays by Irans hardliners who are determined to dash Iranians hopes for more moderate and liberal socio-political and cultural policies. What do you attribute to the worsening of human rights conditions in Iran over the past year?

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Candid Discussions: Gissou Nia on Irans Human Rights in 2014

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Back to the Future II Takes Place This Year. How Close Did We Get?

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Every decade produces iconic pieces of futurism that help to define a generation. For the 1960s it was The Jetsons and Star Trek. For the 1970s it was Future Shock and Soylent Green. What about the 1980s? It was almost certainly Back to the Future Part II.

Sure, Back to the Future Part II didn't get great reviews when it first came out. The 1989 film was seen as a lesser achievment than the original Back to the Future. But it became firmly wedged into the brains of a generation that wanted to believe the future was going to be filled with amazing technological advances.

I know I wanted to believe. It's half the reason I write about past visions of the future! When I was a kid I wanted nothing more than that hoverboard Marty zips around on. But BTTF2 was more than just hoverboards.

It's now the year 2015 (the year that Marty McFly travels to in the film) and we're launching a new series with American Public Media's Marketplace Tech, looking at the different futuristic aspects of the movie.

You can hear the first episode in our series below, and feel free to let us know what your favorite BTTF2 technology is in the comments. Was it the automatic dog walker? How about that thumbprint payment system? Some of the technological predictions were spot on, while others are still yet to be realized. We'll be exploring many of them in the next few months.

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Back to the Future II Takes Place This Year. How Close Did We Get?

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