Daily Archives: April 7, 2017

Can a robot do your job? – Financial Times

Posted: April 7, 2017 at 8:54 pm


Financial Times
Can a robot do your job?
Financial Times
This interactive calculator, based on data from the McKinsey Global Institute, gives an indication of how the future of work will change: instead of destroying entire jobs and creating completely new occupations, for the most part AI and automation ...

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Can a robot do your job? - Financial Times

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Small World: Ranking the rank – The Bridgton News

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Henry Precht

By Henry Precht

BN Columnist

A historian friend of mine has listed the men he deems the ten worse American presidents. He didnt leave a vacant slot for the incumbent, but I wonder whether Mr. Trump might not soon fit in based on this countrys experience of the past two and a half months of his 48-month term of office.

Categorizing roughly, I would say that five of the historians ten baddies were listed because of their wrong-headed positions on slavery; two because of their toleration of corruption; two because of lying or criminal policy; and one because of ineptitude in dealing with a national crisis. Lets see how Mr. Trump makes it through this sieve. Chattel slavery is no longer on the agenda but we might easily substitute how the incumbent treats the middle and lower classes sometimes called wage slaves.

On that score, I would say Mr. Trump shows every sign of becoming a modern day Buchanan. After his campaign appeal for better treatment of educationally poorly prepared and economically threatened whites, he turned on them in proposing health care legislation which would leave them worse off than with Obamacare. Programs that benefit them Meals on Wheels, regional development funds, etc. are slated to be cut back. Its early to say, but I doubt that Trump tax proposals will treat them as generously as they will the traditional big money folks in the Republican ranks the kind that have been named to fill Cabinet slots. So much for favoring the little guy against the elites.

There is one bit of business where Mr. Trump gives equal treatment to wage slaves and elites: both will suffer from his destruction of Obamas measures to limit the pace of global warming. They and their descendants will suffer equally.

The next failing among past leaders for which two are held culpable is corruption: Grant and Harding are listed as the major malefactors. Neither, however, dipped his own hands into the till; they simply turned a blind eye when cronies ripped off the public purse. Something like that may be starting under the present regime: the assets of our billionaire president have been turned over to his kin to manage. We may see court cases challenging these and other arrangements on conflict of interest grounds. Another source of foul aroma may be found when a billionaire investor profits from his closeness to the bunch in Washington and successfully advises the elimination of regulations that harm his business interests.

Two scorned ex-presidents (Nixon and the second Bush) have been reasonably accused of lying and putting or keeping us in disastrous wars. The latter was also been accused of wrecking the economy. Its too soon to accuse our president of pushing us into deeper conflicts, but there are signs in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen that a drift in that direction is building momentum. The economy is doing well during his brief tenure thanks in good part to inherited momentum and high hopes among investors, which may prove to be ill-founded. When it comes to lack of respect for truth, however, Mr. Trump may establish a new national record. Roll over, Mr. Nixon.

Finally, how might Mr. Trump rank compared to Herbert Hoover and his bungled efforts to deal with the Great Depression? Happily, he hasnt had to face that kind of severe test. But can anyone vouch for his interest in the mechanisms of government, his knowledge of foreign relations, his skill in persuading recalcitrant members of Congress, or talents for generating sound ideas and reassuring the panicky public? Mr. Trump has faced severe difficulties in the past. Unfortunately there is no bankruptcy court to rescue him if the national economy tanks.

Roosevelt came to the nations rescue in the Depression in large part because he picked a staff rich in creative talents. Trumps staff is just plain rich.

To wrap up this evaluation, I would say that Mr. Trump is headed down the trail to low or lowest ranking. In all fairness we should allow him some more months to manifest his true fitness and qualities for the job if, in fact, he can scrape up a few.

Henry Precht is a retired Foreign Service Officer.

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Is Passover Broken Beyond Repair? – Forward

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Its time to face facts: Passover is broken. Busted. Split in two. Half of us are celebrating one part of the holiday while the other half celebrates the other part. Most of us dont even realize were celebrating only half the holiday.

This shouldnt surprise us. The Jewish community worldwide is broken into pieces. Theres no reason to expect our favorite Jewish holiday will be exempt. The festival mirrors the community that observes it. Right now were a community thats marching in two opposite directions at once.

One side of the community observes Passover to recount the suffering and persistence of Jews in a hostile world, from ancient Egypt up to modern times and, we assume, into the future. For the other side, Passover is about expressing solidarity with victims of modern-day oppression by linking our peoples historic suffering with injustices done to others today.

The first type of Passover, the Jews-in-a-hostile-world version, looks pretty much like the Passover that Jews have celebrated throughout our two millennia of wandering. Theyre not identical, of course. Through most of our history Jews saw the Egyptian bondage as a foreshadowing of their own suffering. Passover expressed our yearning to be liberated as our forebears were. Most of us today havent experienced anything similar. The holiday now serves to remind us of our humble roots. It also reaffirms our sense that were still historys victims, even if we dont look like it lately.

Then again, the Passover of the European exile wasnt the original model either. The original Passover, the one commanded in the Bible, centered on sacrificing livestock at the Holy Temple in Jerusalem. It was only after the Babylonians and then the Romans demolished the Temple that the family dinner took center stage.

One unifying element in all traditional Passovers, ancient and modern, is the recitation of the traditional lessons of Passover: In each generation, each of us is obliged to see ourselves as if we personally had come out of Egypt. Liberation happens by divine miracle. In each generation they rise up against us to destroy us. And, as we tell the skeptical son: This happened to me, not to you.

The other Passover, the solidarity-with-the-downtrodden version, is a more recent phenomenon. Its key feature is a revising of the Haggadah text to spotlight modern-day struggles for liberation from bondage. These can range from the agony of the Holocaust and redemptive birth of Israel to civil rights, gender equity and, more recently, Palestinian rights. Sometimes these new narratives are woven into the text of the traditional Haggadah. Sometimes they replace it altogether.

Alternative Haggadahs began appearing about 100 years ago, initially in the labor movement. Diasporist socialists sang of liberating workers from the wage-slavery of Boss Pharaoh. Labor Zionists sang of liberating the Jews from the bondage of diaspora by returning to the redeeming soil of the Land of Israel.

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Among Jews, the upheavals of late 1960s were a watershed, the beginning of our division into two factions. One of the earliest signs of the split was the appearance of two Haggadahs that embodied the two opposing worldviews. One was the Freedom Seder, published in 1970 by left-wing guru Arthur Waskow. It updated the Passover message by putting black Americas freedom struggle at the center of the holiday narrative, drawing parallels between the Exodus from Egypt and the civil rights movement. For the first time, Passovers main message was not the suffering of Jews but of others. It was the message of the Seders skeptical son turned on its head: These things happened to him, not to me.

Two years later, as if in reply to Waskow, came the Soviet Jewry-themed Haggadah Let My People Go. A traditional text with some new commentaries, its most memorable feature was the illustrations by physician Mark Podwal. Like Waskows Freedom Seder, it put modern events front and center. Unlike the Freedom Seder, it kept the holidays focus on Jews.

In the decades since, countless new Haggadahs have appeared, with and without the traditional text, focusing variously on gender equality, hunger, the environment and more. Each one tries explicitly to frame its contemporary cause as a modern version of the Exodus story.

The latest innovation, though, risks turning the Passover tradition on its head by connecting the Jews suffering in Egypt with the suffering of the Palestinians under Israeli occupation.

Some might see the analogy as a tad overdone. Certainly the Palestinians suffer under Israeli military rule. But its not the agony of Syria or Congo, and its not the suffering of the Hebrew slaves in Egypt.

In a way, though, the strength of the historical comparison is beside the point. Every analogy is imperfect. If juxtaposing our ancestors with modern-day victims helps draw our attention to injustices around us, thats for good.

Whats off-kilter about Palestinian-themed Passover texts is that they put the Jews back in the center of the story but as the oppressor, not the victim. If the Palestinians are todays Hebrew slaves, then the Jewish state is the modern Pharaoh. Where the Freedom Seder and its heirs asked us to see our neighbors as comrades in suffering, Palestinian-themed Passover texts ask us to go a step further and see ourselves and our family as the wicked enemy.

Its important to learn to see through Palestinian eyes. Learning to identify with the Palestinians helps us understand why they view Israel the way they do, and how Israel got into its current plight. It can help us to love Israel more, not less. Jews who love Israel should be trying to help Israel disentangle from its neighbors, not just for their sake but for Israels and ours.

If, however, we carry our solidarity to the point of viewing Israel as Pharaoh, as the enemy, then we undo whatever good we hope to achieve. When we make Israel our enemy, we make ourselves Israels enemy. When that happens, we lose any ability to contribute to peace. And we lose our family. Were left broken holidays, traditions and all.

J.J. Goldberg is the Forwards editor-at-large.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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European Parliament vote doesn’t mean abolition of visas yet – Poroshenko – Interfax

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2017-04-06T17:21+02:00 17:21 06.04.2017

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has said that a positive vote in the European Parliament on granting the visa-free regime for Ukrainians by the European Union still does not mean the abolition of visas, but the Ukrainian authorities are working to ensure that the final introduction of the visa-free travel is not postponed to a later date.

"I want to emphasize that this doesn't yet mean the opening of the border. We are still waiting for a decision of the EU Council, we are working hard so that no one postpones it or drags out this process," Poroshenko told journalists on the sidelines of the 10th Kyiv Security Forum, which takes place in Kyiv on Thursday.

According to him, "pro-Putin representatives" in the European Union are trying to prevent Ukraine from receiving the visa-free regime and the latest debate in the European Parliament confirmed this.

"Only the joint work of all political forces within the state and beyond gives us a firm belief that everything will be fine," the Ukrainian president said.

Poroshenko also believes that the presidential elections in France cannot affect the process of granting the visa-free regime to Ukrainians.

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A Life Story – Peace campaigner Dame Laurie Salas dies, aged 94 – Stuff.co.nz

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BESS MANSON

Last updated05:00, April 8 2017

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Dame Laurie Salas spent her life promoting peace and justice.

Dame Margaret Laurence Salas,peace campaigner:bFebruary 8, 1922, Wellington; m(1) Ian Webster 1941 (d 1943); (2)John Salas 1946,4d, 2s;dJanuary 26, 2017, Wellington, aged 94.

Dame Laurie Salas was a peace campaigner who believed you had to try tochange the world for the better. You had to make a difference. And so she did.

She dedicated her life, beyond her family, toa legion of organisations for women whose objectives embraced the concepts of peace, justice and humanitarian assistance.

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Salas embraced the concepts of peace, justice and humanitarian assistance.

She always pushed for the total abolition of war. "There must be an alternative to resolving conflict other than by killing each other," she told the Evening Post on receiving her damehood in 1988.

READ MORE: * A life story - Arty Bees founder Bob Burch * A life story - Allen Walley * A life story - Michele Amas

The National Council of Women and the United Nations were her main platforms for change.

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Dame Laurie Salas ''was a devoted mother but she was also always connected outward'', her daughter Rosie says.

She represented these and other non-governmental organisations at manyinternational conferencesover her career, travelling toParis, Oslo, Tashkent, New York, and Beijing.

Women and children were the main beneficiaries in her fight for change.

As a staunch anti-nuclear campaigner she once pointed out that the cost of one nuclear submarine was equivalent to the education costs of 160 million children in 23 Third World countries.

Addressing 400 women gathered for the Save the Children Woman of the Year Awards in 1988, she told themthey must bring pressure on politicians to stop the "unacceptable and outmoded concept of wa''. The world must replace fear with understanding, tanks with tractors, she said.

Laurie Salas was born in Wellington in 1922.

One of four children, the family moved to Christchurch, where she attended Fendalton School and later Rangi Ruru.

When she was13 her family werein a serious car accident which left her unconscious for a week. She spent four months in hospital and had a year off school.

The accident left her with gaps in her memory of her life up till that point.

At the age of 19, while doing her BA in philosophy and history at Canterbury University, she met and married Ian Webster. But after just 21 months of marriage Webster died of blood poisoning. His death inspired her to study medicine but half way through medical school she married John Salas, another medical student, and started a family.

She never finished her degree.

In the early 1950s, after the birth of three of her six children, the family moved to Edinburgh,where her husband was studying. Theyreturned a few years later, to Timaru, where the couple had another daughter and, following a move to Wellington, two sons.

Daughter Rosie remembers her mother always being involved in some community organisation or other, in particular the Playcentre Association and later the Mothers Helpers Committee.

"She was a devoted mother but she was also always connected outward. She believed that even if you were really busy, as she was raising six children, you should still go out and do things for other people."

In the late 1960s, with the children all at school, she became more deeply involved in her cause for women, international relations and peace.

It was through her work in the mid-1960s with the Mothers Helpers Committee and the Federation of University of Womenthat she came to the attention of the National Council of Women (NCW).

She would go on to work at the highest levels of that organisation, starting out as the national secretary from 1976-1980 and moving tothe position of vice-president from 1982-86.

Salaswas involved in the NCW watch committee on work with proposed legislation that would make significant changes to the lives of women, including the Matrimonial Property Act, the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act, and on matters of equal pay to women.

By the early 1980s it had become clear to her that although women may have had equal pay in theory, they did not have it in practice. Organising a two-day seminar at the Centre for Continuing Education in Wellington, Salas took practical steps to make education for women a political priority.

Jean Fuller, who worked alongside Salas on various women's organisations for almost 50 years, says her friend was a respected leader and a gracious and generous person.

"She gave immeasurable amounts of time to the organisations that she believed in. She was always nice, friendly and helpful but that doesn't mean she was a puffball! She could be steely when needed and earned great respect from the politicians."

Salas and her siblings all ended up undertaking a lot of public work. Their parents had instilled into them the importance of serving the community and of stewardship.

Several family members were formally recognised for the work they did. Her father, Sir James Hay, acouncillor and deputy mayor of Christchurch andthe founder of the department store chainHays, was knighted for services to the community. Both her younger twin brothers were knighted:Sir David Hay, founder of the National Heart Foundation, who died last year, and Sir Hamish Hay, former mayor of Christchurch who died in 2008. A sister, Helen Louisson, also served her community volunteering for the Red Cross and the Save the Children Fund.

Salas herself received the Queen's Service Order in 1982 and in 1988 she was made a Dame Commander of the British Empirein recognition of her voluntary service for women's causes as well as forher work in international relations and peace.

Her work in peace and disarmament and with the United Nations was partly as a result of her aunt who had a liberal and international outlook on life, she told Deborah Coddington in a 1991 interview with North & South.

Her own family had suffered terrible loss at war with two uncles dyingin the Gallipoli campaign.

"After World War II it seemed such a terrible waste of life and I thought there must be some other way of solving disputes rather than going to war and killing each other

"The more people think of resolving conflict in ways other than in bouts of legitimised killing, the more likely is the prospect of lasting peace," she said.

As the former national president ofthe United Nations Association of New Zealand and vice-president of the World Federation United Nations Association, Salas was a leader in improving the status, safety and security of women.

In 1982, she was the only non-government representative from New Zealand at the United Nations session on disarmament, as well as at the New York conference of Women of the World Working for Peace. She was involved in many organisations working towards social progress, such as the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and the National Society for Alcoholism and Drug Addiction.

In a 1988 article in the Evening Post Salas defended the UN from criticism that it was no more than a"costly talk-shop", saying if it had not been established there would probably have been a lot more conflict in the world.

"Now that we seem to be moving towards a more peaceful world I hope that people realise that we can perhaps do without war altogether. The more people who have faith in the UN and really support their respective governments, the more likely we will have the enduring peace the charter sets out to achieve," she said.

She was a frequent contributor to this newspaper's Letters page.She was in her 80s when she wrote about the effect of smacking and hitting children:"The end result will, I hope, be a society where children have the same protection from assault as adults and animals do, and New Zealand will be seen to comply with all the provisions of the Convention on the Rights of the Child," she wrote.

Campaigning till the end for the protection of others.

Sources: Salas family, National Council of Women, United Nations Association of New Zealand, North & South (Deborah Coddington).

-Stuff

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Takes on Trump: Are Rice claims just a distraction? – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted: at 8:53 pm

Trumps fans buying anything hes selling

Regarding Paper should focus on the Rice controversy (April 5): President Trump was desperate to divert attention from charges that Russia helped his campaign. Enter shiny object No. 1. He makes up a story that Barack Obama personally wiretapped him. But that doesnt work out very well, since there is no evidence for it.

Lets try shiny object No. 2. He leaks secret information to Devin Nunes, who parrots it back to him and the media See, he was being wiretapped, but inadvertently.

This doesnt fly either, so on to shiny object No. 3. Drag out Susan Rice to beat up. Fox runs a story without any evidence that she unmasked his team. You may well ask why they were on the other end of the phone with Russian agents.

Cue the Trump lemmings who write in to this paper complaining that they didnt sufficiently cover this latest attempt to divert attention.

Phil Heinz

Rancho Bernardo

The U-T welcomes and encourages community dialogue on important public matters. Please visit this page for more details on our letters and commentaries policy. You can email letters@sduniontribune.com or leave a comment below.

Is ISIS going mainstream? It said the U.S. is being run by an idiot.

Now that it is ideologically aligned with the mainstream media and Democrats, shouldnt the United Nations offer it a seat? It would fit right in.

Frank Felber

San Diego

In response to Will Donald Trump flub tax reform, too? (April 2): I take exception to your editorials claim that its mind-boggling and crazy that a disproportionate amount of tax relief may end up going to the richest Americans.

This assertion flies in the face of the latest IRS statistics from 2013, which show that the average taxpayer paid a 13.6 percent income tax rate. The breakdown among taxpayer percentiles: the bottom half paid a 3 percent rate, the top half paid 15 percent, and the top 1 percent paid a whopping 27 percent.

Your editorial ignores the context that taxes on the affluent already increased significantly during the Obama years, which arent yet reflected in these statistics.

You also criticize the proposed abolition of the estate tax, which isnt reflected in these numbers either since its an immoral one-time tax on a decedents wealth.

This simply propagates the demagogic narrative that the wealthy need to pay their fair share regardless of the actual numbers.

Whats really mind-boggling is the notion that if youre not in favor of tax hikes on the rich into perpetuity, youre somehow against the middle class.

Zachary M. Goldman

San Diego

Want to see more letters that appear only online? Follow @UTLetters on Twitter and UTOpinion on Facebook.

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Bernier takes on supply management in – Western Producer (subscription)

Posted: at 8:53 pm

The future of Canadas supply management system for milk, eggs and poultry has been thrust onto the national political agenda by a top candidate for the federal Conservative party leadership Maxime Bernier.

Bernier is calling for the abolition of the system after a new levy on dairy products builds enough funds to reimburse farmers for the investment they have made in quota.

Bernier isnt the first leadership candidate for a major party to advocate dismantling supply management. Martha Hall Findlay, a candidate in the last Liberal leadership contest, was a vociferous advocate for the end of supply management. She still is, as president of the Canada West Foundation. Hall Findlay finished a distant third to Justin Trudeaus landslide win.

However, Bernier is considered one of the front-runners in the Conservative party race.

Bernier, a member of Parliament from Quebec, has policies based on classical libertarian economics. Hes also calling for flat taxes and a reduction in the size of government.

Dairy farmers, however, are unimpressed with how Bernier is portraying their pricing system and themselves.

When he starts, the guy in the $1,000 suit, and tells me Im a millionaire and part of a cartel anyone can tell you how hard it is to make payments when you get started, said Mike Bechtel, who farms a dairy between Cambridge and Guelph in Ontario.

Were a long way from being millionaires.

Bechtel is like other dairy farmers who have taken out Conservative party memberships to vote for someone other than Bernier.

Bernier has called these one-issue members fake Conservatives.

Dairy farmers like Pete Van Hemert of Belmont, Ont., who has taken out a Conservative party membership, finds the term insulting.

Although he has never been a member of a political party before, Van Hemert said he has always voted Conservative and considers himself Conservative.

He (Bernier) has made it awfully public against supply management and ran us down the tube a lot of times, he said.

Bruce Sargent is concerned with Berniers description of supply management in his speeches and on social media. Sargent, the son of dairy farmers, questioned Bernier on his ideas around supply management at a Bernier open house in Guelph, Ont.

Bernier said Canadians are paying two to three times the price of milk that they can buy across the border in the United States. By dropping supply management, he said Canadians could save $500 per year.

Sargent said Bernier is not telling the whole story. Larger research projects, such as the Nielsen Fresh Milk Price Report, shows that at the end of November 2016, Canadian average milk prices fell between the commodity U.S. milk price and the milk price paid for no-added-hormones and antibiotic-free milk in the U.S.

The Canadian price is also in the middle of the pack of a list of 13 countries. Sargent points to the fact that large supermarkets in the U.S. sell milk as a loss-leader, especially in the border areas to attract Canadians.

But Bernier cast doubt on Sargents claims.

You have stats, but I have the reality, Bernier told Sargent. You cross the border, you will see that a litre of milk will be half the price. I can prove that. Its easy.

The exchanges in the videos from the event show the philosophical gulf that exists between supply management farmers and those opposing the system.

Farmers may be able to muster a strong influence in the leadership contest due to a system in which each riding gets equal weight in voting. That might help supply management farmers where they could control the riding with few members.

What could work against dairy farmers, however, is the number of candidates running for the party leadership, now at 14. That could split the vote and lessen the likelihood of a pro supply management candidate winning.

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A floating techno-libertarian city might be coming to the Pacific – Mashable

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Mashable
A floating techno-libertarian city might be coming to the Pacific
Mashable
In May, a group will gather in Tahiti to discuss building floating cities off the French Polynesian coast. That's right. The men of the Seasteading Institute (and something suggests, it will be mostly men) dream of building extra-national platforms in ...

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Real Utopia: The World’s First Floating City May Be Built in the Pacific – Sputnik International

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Life

19:15 06.04.2017(updated 21:38 06.04.2017) Get short URL

People have always dreamt ofmoving toa better place forlife. Some prefer an easy way toescape noisy dusty cities and live inthe countryside, while others dream big and work onUtopia-like projects, such asthe resurrection ofthe Russian Empire inKiribati and the creation ofseasteading communities floating cities which will allow the next generation ofpioneers topeacefully test new ideas forhow tolive together. The term "seasteading" is a combination ofthe words "sea" and "homesteading."

In the spring of2013, TSI launched The Floating City Project, which proposed tocreate a floating city withinthe territorial waters ofan existing nation, rather thanthe open ocean. According tothe institute, this proposal had several advantages: it would be easier toengineer a seastead inshallow waters, easier forresidents totravel toand fromthe "mainland" and easier toacquire goods and services fromexisting supply chains.

Later year, TSI raised $27,082 throughthe IndieGoGo crowdfunding platform and hired the Dutch marine engineering firm DeltaSync, a leading specialist inthe field offloating urbanization.

Artisanopolis - Floating City Project Animation

Things got more serious in2016, when The Seasteading Institute representatives met withFrench Polynesian officials and discussed building a prototype seastead ina sheltered lagoon. Just recently, onJanuary 13, 2017, the government officially signed an agreement withTSI tocooperate oncreating a legal framework toallow forthe development ofThe Floating Island Project. The legislation will give the Floating Island Project its own "special governing framework" creating an "innovative special economic zone."

The creation ofa "special economic seazone" would give floating islands considerable autonomy, according tothe company's official website. In return, TSI is required toproduce an environmental and economic analysis beforeit can get started.

The institute's Australian ambassador Ashley Blake, who spoke atthe Myriad startup festival held betweenMarch 29-31 inBrisbane, described the project asa startup and a place totest new technologies and ways ofliving. However, this "social enterprise" is not foreveryone. "It's not a solution fora complete full stack ofsociety," he said. "Maybe the model that ends upworking is a floating aged care home, we don't know. Or maybe it's a place where young entrepreneurs can go."

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Inspirational Forum Is Highlight of the Montclair Center Women’s Empowerment Week – Baristanet

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On Tuesday night at The Wellmont Theater, women gathered for a panel discussion with local women of distinction at the first Womens Empowerment Forum. The event was part of Montclair Centers Womens Empowerment Week, an annual eventto benefit SAVE of Essex, the countys only designated rape care center and a program of the Family Service League.

The Q&A was masterfully moderatedby local entrepreneur Donna Miller, founder & president of C3Workplace. Miller asked thoughtful questions and kept the dialogue moving with the five panelists and the audience.

Panelists were WOR radio host Joan Herrmann;nationally recognized career and life coach Laura Berman Fortgang;producer and activist Peg Cafferty; Executive director of the Montclair Fund for Education (MFEE) Masiel Rodriquez-Vars; and business owner and teacher Omni Kitts Ferrara. Fourth Ward Councilor Dr. Renee Baskerville was scheduled to appear, but wasnt on the panel Tuesday night.

Topics discussed were what empowerment means the panel agreed that itmeans something deeply personal and unique for everyone, how to deal with our inner negative thoughts to overcome fear of failure, how to raise boys to respect women, and how to build a culture of respect withour fellow women. The discussion was personal and meaningful.

Herrmann talked about her life and how she felt trapped in an unhappy marriage. She left her career to raise her children and when she was in her 40s, she realized she didnt know who she was. She made changes and started her own radio show. She shared her motto of Fake it to you make it, advising the audience to Think of what you want ot be, Act it, believe it, and then it WILL happen.

Cafferty talked about overcoming personal tragedy and moving forward with the help of support. She spoke of the problem of women demeaning and not supporting other women and said if we act with kindness, good things will happen.

And speaking of personal and meaningful, Israel Cronk, Executive Director of the Montclair Center BID and the organizer of this event, spoke about his inspiration for a Montclair Womens Empowerment Forum (he attended a similar panel at the UN) and why the SAVE of Essex benefit means so much to him personally.Getting choked up and having to stop several times, Cronk spoke about his sister being a victim of a sexual attack and the damage it does to the victimand their loved ones.

Looking over the intimate crowd at this inaugural event, Cronk asked everyone to close their eyes and envision being back in their seats a year later in a theater packed with local women. After attending the inspirational event, I dont doubt that it will happen.

Womens Empowerment Week continues with talks at various locations and a Ladies Night celebration on Friday. See the full scheudle here.

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