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Monthly Archives: February 2015
Censorship Moments in Rooster Teeth – Video
Posted: February 17, 2015 at 6:42 am
Censorship Moments in Rooster Teeth
The annoying but often hilarious bleeps and black bars which have occurred over the years. This video is for entertainment purposes only. All footage is owned by Rooster Teeth.
By: friskynixon
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MALT LIQUOR Label Out! Ron Paul is right again. – Video
Posted: at 6:42 am
MALT LIQUOR Label Out! Ron Paul is right again.
02/13/2015 Washington DC International Students For Liberty Conference. I enjoyed that 40oz of delicious Colt 45 MALT LIQUOR while Ron Paul spoke.
By: Mr Met 40oz
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Drink MALT LIQUOR. Talk About Liberty. – Video
Posted: at 6:42 am
Drink MALT LIQUOR. Talk About Liberty.
Shoutouts to Tiffany Madison, Nick Gillespie, Julie Borowski, Judge Napolitano, Ron Paul, Libertarian Girl, and everyone that attended the International Students For Liberty Conference 2015.
By: Mr Met 40oz
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Ukraine Is A Pawn of NATO and The U.S. – Video
Posted: at 6:42 am
Ukraine Is A Pawn of NATO and The U.S.
The best thing for Ukraine is to force NATO, the US, and regional players out of the country, former US congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul said. Without foreign meddling in the...
By: THElNFOWARRlOR
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Understanding IP: An Interview with Stephan Kinsella
Posted: at 6:41 am
Jeffrey Tucker:
Stephan Kinsella, it's a pleasure to have you here today. Welcome.
Thank you. It's good to be here.
We're going to talk about your class for the Mises Academy, on intellectual property.
Yes, I'm looking forward to it. We've been planning it for quite a while, as you know. I think the first course will be on November 1st for six weeks and then we'll take a week off. We'll have time to go in depth into many of the issues about intellectual property and its relationship to libertarianism, economic theory, and various other areas.
Why is this an important issue?
Well, it's becoming a more and more important issue as we've seen in our circles and as seen on the internet. Daily, we see horror stories and crazy examples of abuses of IP. People are starting to wonder if these are really abuses of IP or if there's something wrong with IP itself.
In the past, free-market economists and libertarians have sort of given this issue a pass. They took it for granted. It's been in a corner all by itself. Now people are wondering, and as we start looking more closely at it, we can see that a lot of the assumptions about IP have been wrong.
It's striking you mention the history of thought here and why this issue is sort of crystallizing in our time, especially with your pioneering monograph on that subject, Against Intellectual Property.
It's generally true, isn't it, that that theoretical element of economics or law or whatever catches up when the practical need for that new theory comes along. For example, the theory of money and credit was made necessary by the advent of central banking.
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Understanding IP: An Interview with Stephan Kinsella
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DARPA's 'Cortical Modem' will plug straight into your BRAIN
Posted: at 6:41 am
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is developing a brain interface it hopes could inject images directly into the visual cortex.
news of the "Cortical Modem" project has emerged in transhumanist magazine Humanity Plus, which reports the agencu is working on a direct neural interface (DNI) chip that could be used for human enhancement and motor-function repair.
Project head Dr Phillip Alvelda, Biological Technologies chief with the agency, told the Biology Is Technology conference in Silicon Valley last week the project had a short term goal of building a US$10 device the size of two stacked nickels that could deliver images without the need for glasses or similar technology.
The project was built on research by Dr Karl Deisseroth whose work in the field of neuroscience describes how brain circuits create behaviour patterns.
Specifically the work dealt in Deisseroth's field of Optogenetics, where proteins from algae could be inserted into neurons to be subsequently controlled with pulses of light.
"The short term goal of the project is the development of a device about the size of two stacked nickels with a cost of goods on the order of $10 which would enable a simple visual display via a direct interface to the visual cortex with the visual fidelity of something like an early LED digital clock," the publication reported.
"The implications of this project are astounding."
The seemingly dreamy research was limited to animal studies, specifically the real time imaging of a zebra fish brain with some 85,000 neurons, due to the need to mess with neuron DNA and the 'crude device' would be a long way off high fidelity augmented reality, the site reported.
DARPA's Biological Technologies Office was formed last April to cook up crazy ideas born at the intersection of biology and physical science. Its mind-bending research fields are geared to improve soldiers' performance, craft biological systems to bolster national security, and future the stability and well-being of humanity.
The project follows DARPA's upgrading of the heavy-set Atlas robot which was granted a battery allowing it to move about free of its electrical umbilical cord.
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Creative AI: The robots that would be painters
Posted: at 6:41 am
Painting might be the last thing you'd expect computers to excel at. It's abstract, expressive, and tied to cultures, psychology, and subjectivity, whereas computers are objective, precise, and governed by the rules of mathematics. Painting, with its emotional reasoning and unclear meanings, appears to be the antithesis of a feeling, logical computer. But they aren't so far apart as they seem. Painting and other forms of visual art owe much to areas of mathematics such as geometry and perspective, and the algorithms that computers adhere to can in fact be made to generate images as varied and subtle as a human painter.
Much like its musical counterpart, algorithmic art dates back to the time before computers were commonplace and in its purest sense requires no artificial intelligence whatsoever. You've probably seen examples of fractal art, which replicates patterns in a recursive, algorithmic way to often-stunning results that vary in appearance from geometric to organic to alien.
Traditionally, algorithmic art involves a human coming up with a concept that an algorithm then generates or visualizes either from scratch or based on existing material. An extreme example of this is Nagoya University researchers Yasuhiro Suzuki and Tomohiro Suzuki's evolutionary painting algorithm, which takes example paintings of a given style and progressively mutates them cutting and splicing and flipping elements, throwing out at each evolution any images that don't match the user's initial stylistic choices. But algorithmic art is more commonly used in the sense of images that are generated by computer code written by people like Dextro, who is one of the leading practitioners of algorithmic/generative art.
As with music, game development, and writing, much of the attention from artists and scientists has been placed upon algorithms and intelligent tools that augment the artist's creativity. The Processing programming language was designed as an electronic sketchbook for artists and designers, while some of the better-known apps for algorithmic artists include Ultra Fractal, Scribble, and Fragmentarium.
There are now over a dozen separate kinds of algorithmically-based art, including fractal art, genetic art, cellular automata, proceduralism, and transhumanist art. And there are multitudes of websites such as The Algorists, Algorithmic Worlds, and The compArt database Digital Art that celebrate the work of artists who use algorithms.
Harold Cohen watches AARON paint in 1995
But there are some who would teach computers to paint like humans, to push them beyond the point of being an extension of the artist and into the territory of artist themselves. The pioneer in this regard is a former artist and University of California San Diego professor called Harold Cohen. He started working on an art-creating program called AARON in 1973, while a visiting scholar at Stanford University's Artificial Intelligence Lab.
AARON's capacity to paint improved year after year as its maker taught it more difficult or complex techniques. It learned to situate objects or people in 3D space in the 1980s, and could paint in color from 1990 onwards. In time its paintings found their way into many of the world's major art museums and onward into the hands of private collectors who paid hundreds or even thousands of dollars for AARON's art.
AARON paints not with pixels, we should note, but with real paint on an actual canvas. Cohen built a painting machine for his painting AI. He taught it to mix paint (fabric dyes, not oil), and even gave it an imagination of sorts. Enough of one, at least, that it can paint still life and portraits of human figures without photos or other human input as reference.
AARON learned to use color in a decorative motif in 1992 (Photo: Becky Cohen)
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Law School Clinics Release Report Documenting the Devastating Consequences of U.S. Deportations to Haiti
Posted: at 6:41 am
A report documenting the failure of the United States to safeguard the human rights of those it deports to post-earthquake Haiti has been released by the Human Rights and Immigration Clinics at the University of Miami School of Law and the International Human Rights Clinic at the University of Chicago School of Law. The report asks the U.S. government to stop deporting Haitians with criminal records until conditions improve and makes additional recommendations to the U.S., Haiti, and the international community, including the extension of Temporary Protected Status to all Haitian nationals.
Speaking at the news conference will be Haitian-American author Edwidge Danticat, author of the award-winning novel Brother, Im Dying, and the foreword to the report.
The law school clinics collaborated with Alternative Chance/Chans Alternativ, Americans for Immigrant Justice, Haitian Women of Miami (FANM), and the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti to conduct extensive fact-finding about the treatment of men and women who were deported on account of past criminal convictions, including interviews with more than 100 deportees.
We hope this report moves the U.S. government to stop deportations to Haiti, said Marleine Bastien, Executive Director of FANM. Post-earthquake Haiti is unable to safely receive deportees. These deportees face violence, discrimination, lack of access to medical and mental health care, and an inability to find adequate employment and housing.
In post-earthquake Haiti, deportees from the U.S. face tent cities, deadly cholera, broken homes, and broken hearts, said Michelle Karshan, founder of Alternative Chance. Barriers such as lack of language and family support, and insufficient medical or mental health care and medicine, leaves deportees lost and at risk of death.
Deportations to Haiti affect deportees as well as the family left behind in the U.S., imposing severe financial and psychological strain on the spouses and children of deportees. The government has taken away my father, my best friend, said a teenage girl profiled in the report whose father was deported after the earthquake.
Due to the tragic consequences of the 2010 earthquake, the U.S. granted TPS to eligible Haitians, allowing them to stay in the U.S. temporarily. Excluded from protection under TPS are individuals convicted of two misdemeanors or one felony. As a result, over the past five years, the U.S. has forcibly returned approximately 1,500 men and women, including parents of U.S. citizen children, people with severe medical and mental health conditions, and those with only minor criminal records.
This report would not have been possible without deportees willing to share their stories of the almost insurmountable obstacles they face in post-earthquake Haiti, said Geoffrey Louden, a third-year law student at UM School of Law, who traveled to Haiti in October and worked on the report. We urge policymakers to listen.
The report is available for download at: http://www.law.miami.edu/clinics/pdf/2015/haiti-report.pdf
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Law School Clinics Release Report Documenting the Devastating Consequences of U.S. Deportations to Haiti
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Nixon the drunk, Jefferson the glutton and 4 more party-hardy presidents
Posted: at 6:41 am
Presidents are human beings, author Brian Abrams tells The Post. They behave in ways we can relate to.
True. Who among us isnt in the habit of starting every morning with a mug of hard cider, like John Adams? Or casually showing off our genitalia to colleagues, like Lyndon Johnson?
As is plain in Abrams book Party Like a President: True Tales of Inebriation, Lechery, and Mischief from the Oval Office, released this month, being elected commander in chief doesnt make someone above boorish behavior. Not that it necessarily affected job performance.
You cant make this empirical judgment call about whether those who partied performed better than those who didnt, says Abrams, who lives in Brooklyn. You can think of instances where people were total teetotalers and didnt have much of a reach. Someone like LBJ, whose scotch-drinking was almost robotic, is considered a master legislator.
He are six randy anecdotes to celebrate Presidents Day:
Thomas Jefferson, 1801-1809
An 1800 portrait of Thomas Jefferson.Photo: AP Photo
Our third prez was a foodie before being a foodie was cool. One servant recalled that Jefferson would never eat fewer than eight courses, even when dining alone. He spent the equivalent in todays dollars of nearly $1,000 a day on food, and amassed a monumental wine collection, dropping more than $300,000 on vino during his two terms.
Richard Nixon, 1969-1974
Photo: The White House
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Nixon the drunk, Jefferson the glutton and 4 more party-hardy presidents
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A setback for D.C. arts and culture, years in the making
Posted: at 6:40 am
They had already decided on a Saturday night in mid-September, and they had a tentative program: an evening of George Gershwin, Kurt Weill and Daniel Schnyder, a Swiss composer and saxophonist whose music crosses just about every definable stylistic boundary, from jazz to world music to opera. It was going to be a hard-hat concert, performed in the raw, crumbling space of the 1869 Franklin School. It would showcase the possibilities of the historic structure and generate support for the renovation of the historic building.
It is the kind of edgy, unorthodox artistic event that new generations of Washingtonians, who no longer accept the premise that the nations capital is a cultural backwater, crave. But it wont happen unless the city reverses course on a decision made this week to end an agreement with the Institute for Contemporary Expression, which had partnered with one of the countrys most innovative music groups the Post-Classical Ensemble to present concerts at the long-vacant school at the corner of 13th and K streets NW.
Attracted by the large open spaces of the Franklin School, which would have also hosted art exhibitions, lectures and educational activities, the Post-Classical Ensemble signed on early as a resident ensemble at the proposed arts center. It was excited about finally having a proper home and increased presence in the District, where it hoped to build a new and more diverse audience than it might find at the Kennedy Center or other venues.
D.C. doesnt have a space that has the vibrancy, modernism, futurism, of a place like this, said Chris Denby, board chair of the ensemble.
The decision to scuttle the citys arrangement with ICE remains opaque. The deputy mayors office for planning and economic development first said that it doubted the ability of ICEs visionary founder, Dani Levinas, to raise sufficient funds to cover the costs but then backtracked. It suggested that Levinas planned to charge exorbitant admission fees, even though none of those details had been set in stone. Although it claimed to have conducted a top-to- bottom review of the agreement between ICE and the city, the economic development office never met with Levinas and never asked questions about his fundraising. When asked how long that review took and how many staffers participated in it, a spokesman offered this by e-mail: We took this process seriously and took the time necessary to make a decision that we believe is in the long-term best interest of all District residents.
Strangely, that decision was made almost simultaneously with the announcement of a new venture by the citys Commission on the Arts and Humanities, a Start Fresh innovation grant for up $100,000. This is designed to aid organizations that are creative, innovative and groundbreaking, with multi-disciplinary and multi-platform initiatives. In other words, organizations that plan to do what ICE was already gearing up to do. The coincidence of these two decisions, one forward, the other several steps back, suggests that not only does the new administration lack a coherent cultural program, there isnt even basic communication between its various offices.
This kind of fiasco is all too familiar to longtime observers of the citys cultural scene, and to people who live near the Franklin School and who have watched the city try for years to develop a coherent plan for it. Local advisory neighborhood commissioner Kevin Deeley, whose district includes the Franklin School, wasnt in office when Mayor Vincent C. Grays administration chose the proposal by ICE over three others (including a boutique hotel with rooftop restaurant, a technology center and a live/work space for tech entrepreneurs). But he likes the idea because the institute would be open to the public, increase foot traffic at night and weekends and offer cultural amenities in downtown Washington.
But it is the possibility of yet more years of delay, with the historic structure moldering yet further, that really frustrates him and his neighbors. There is no continuity between administrations, he says, and the result is a wasted resource.
Another administration comes along and the whole process starts again, and now were looking at maybe two more years before they can break ground, says Deeley. He is sending a letter on behalf of his constituents to Mayor Muriel E. Bowser, asking her to reconsider her decision. Other letters have come from the American Alliance of Museums (It is hard to imagine any better or higher use of this historic building than the one that Mr. Levinas has proposed, said Ford Bell, the groups president) and from civic groups. Dorothy Kosinski, who as head of the Phillips Collection knows a thing or too about the fundraising climate in Washington, said, I was disappointed to hear of the projects cancellation this week and lamented the loss of an organization that would demonstrate how contemporary art is a vital part of our economy and cultural ecosystem.
The school has been empty for seven years. In 2010, when Adrian Fenty was mayor, the city held a hearing to determine whether the school should be declared surplus and thus open for private development. A transcript of that meeting is telling. While there wasnt an agreement about exactly what the school should become, there was overwhelming sentiment that as a historic building with a long history of public service to the citizens of Washington, it most certainly should not be given up for commercial development.
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A setback for D.C. arts and culture, years in the making
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