Daily Archives: August 13, 2017

Google Doesn’t Want What’s Best for Us – New York Times

Posted: August 13, 2017 at 2:35 am

Last week, Google fired a software engineer for writing a memo that questioned the companys gender diversity policies and made statements about womens biological suitability for technical jobs.

Portions of the memo violate our code of conduct and cross the line by advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace, Googles chief executive, Sundar Pichai, wrote in a companywide email.

Its impossible to believe that Google or other large tech companies a few years ago would have reacted like this to such a memo. In 2011 when CNN filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the workplace diversity data on big tech companies, Google, among others, asked the Department of Labor for its data to be excluded. The company said that releasing that information would cause competitive harm. It was not until 2014 that Google began to disclose statistics showing that only 17 percent of its technical work force was female.

The rise of Google and the other giant businesses of Silicon Valley have been driven by a libertarian culture that paid only lip service to notions of diversity. Peter Thiel, one of the ideological leaders in the Valley, wrote in 2009 on a blog affiliated with the Cato Institute that since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians have rendered the notion of capitalist democracy into an oxymoron.

If women should not even have the vote, why should we worry about gender diversity in the engineering ranks?

Today Google is under growing scrutiny, and the cognitive dissonance between the outward-facing Dont be evil stance and the internal misogynistic brogrammer rhetoric was too extreme.

Google had to fire the offending engineer, James Damore, but anyone who spends time on the message boards frequented by Valley engineers will know that the bro culture that gave us Gamergate an online movement that targeted women in the video game industry is much more prevalent than Mr. Pichai wants to acknowledge.

Google employees who opposed Mr. Damore found their internal company profile pictures posted on Breitbart, the Verge reported. What really gets me is that when Googlers leaked these screenshots, they knew this was the element of the internet they were leaking it to, a former Google employee said. They knew they were subjecting their colleagues to this type of abuse.

The company canceled a planned all-hands meeting on Thursday, citing concern about harassment.

For much of the short life of Silicon Valley, America has held a largely romantic view of the tech industry. Men like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates were held in high esteem. But increasingly, companies like Google, Amazon and Facebook are coming under the same cultural microscope that questioned the greed is good culture of the 1980s. Viewers of the comedy series Silicon Valley note that uber-libertarianism and uber-geek machismo go hand in hand. And certainly Mark Zuckerberg was not happy with his portrayal in David Finchers The Social Network, nor could anyone in the Valley be happy with Dave Eggerss novel The Circle or Don DeLillos Zero K.

The effects of the darker side of tech culture reach well beyond the Valley. It starts with an unwillingness to control fake news and pervasive sexism that no doubt contributes to the gender pay gap. But it will soon involve the heart of Googles business: surveillance capitalism. The trope that if you are not paying for it, you arent the customer youre the product has been around for a while. But now the European Union has passed the General Data Protection Regulation, which will go into effect next May. This regulation aims to give people more control over their data, so search engines cant follow them everywhere they roam online. It will be an arrow to the heart of Googles business.

We have an obligation to care about the values of the people who run Google, because weve given Google enormous control over our lives and the lives of our children. As the former Google design ethicist Tristan Harris points out, Without realizing the implications, a handful of tech leaders at Google and Facebook have built the most pervasive, centralized systems for steering human attention that has ever existed, while enabling skilled actors (addictive apps, bots, foreign governments) to hijack our attention for manipulative ends.

The future implications of a couple of companies having such deep influence on our attention and our behavior are only beginning to be felt. The rise of artificial intelligence combined with Googles omnipresence in our lives is an issue that is not well understood by politicians or regulators.

America is slowly waking up both culturally and politically to the takeover of our economy by a few tech monopolies. We know we are being driven by men like Peter Thiel and Jeff Bezos toward a future that will be better for them. We are not sure that it will be better for us.

As George Packer, writing in The New Yorker in 2011, put it, In Thiels techno-utopia, a few thousand Americans might own robot-driven cars and live to 150, while millions of others lose their jobs to computers that are far smarter than they are, then perish at 60.

Somehow the citizens of the world have been left out of this discussion of our future. Because tools like Google and Facebook have become so essential and because we have almost no choice in whether to use them, we need to consider the role they play in our lives.

By giving networks like Google and Facebook control of the present, we cede our freedom to choose our future.

Jonathan Taplin is the director emeritus of the University of Southern Californias Annenberg Innovation Lab and the author of Move Fast and Break Things: How Google, Facebook and Amazon Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy.

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A version of this op-ed appears in print on August 13, 2017, on Page SR3 of the New York edition with the headline: Google Doesnt Care Whats Best for Us.

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Life in fossil-fuel-free utopia – Townhall

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Posted: Aug 12, 2017 12:01 AM

Al Gores new movie, a New York Times article on the final Obama Era manmade climate disaster report, and a piece saying wrathful people twelve years from now will hang hundreds of climate deniers are a tiny sample of Climate Hysteria and Anti-Trump Resistance rising to a crescendo. If we dont end our evil fossil-fuel-burning lifestyles and go 100% renewable Right Now, we are doomed, they rail.

Maybe its our educational system, our cargo cults easy access to food and technology far from farms, mines and factories, or the end-of-days propaganda constantly pounded into our heads. Whatever the reason, far too many people have a pitiful grasp of reality: natural climate fluctuations throughout Earth history; the intricate, often fragile sources of things we take for granted; and what life would really be like in the utopian fossil-fuel-free future they dream of. Lets take a short journey into that idyllic realm.

Suppose we generate just the25 billion megawatt-hours of todays total global electricity consumption using wind turbines. (Thats not total energyconsumption, and it doesnt include what wed need to charge a billion electric vehicles.) Wed need more than 830 million gigantic 3-megawatt turbines!

Spacing them at just 15 acres per turbine would require12.5 billion acres! Thats twice the land area of North America! All those whirling blades would virtually exterminate raptors, other birds and bats. Rodent and insect populations would soar. Add in transmission lines, solar panels and biofuel plantations to meet the rest of the worlds energy demands and the mostly illegal tree cutting for firewood to heat poor families homes and huge swaths of our remaining forest and grassland habitats would disappear.

The renewable future assumes these eco-friendly alternatives would provide reliable, affordable energy 24/7/365, even during windless, sunless weeks and cold, dry growing seasons. They never will, of course. That means we will have electricity and fuels when nature cooperates, instead of when we need it.

With backup power plants gone, constantly on-and-off electricity will make it impossible to operate assembly lines, use the internet, do an MRI or surgery, enjoy favorite TV shows or even cook dinner.Refrigerators and freezerswouldconk out for hours or days at a time. Medicines and foodswouldspoil.

Petrochemical feed stocks would be gone so we wouldnt have paints, plastics, synthetic fibers or pharmaceuticals, except what can be obtained at great expense from weather-dependent biodiesel. Kiss yourcotton-polyester-lycra leggings and yoga pants good-bye.

But of course all that is really not likely to happen. It would actually be far worse.

First of all, there wouldnt even be any wind turbines or solar panels. Without fossil fuels or far more nuclear and hydroelectric plants, which rabid environmentalists also despise we couldnt mine the needed ores, process and smelt them, build and operate foundries, factories, refineries or cement kilns, manufacture and assemble turbines and panels. We couldnt even make machinery to put in factories.

Wind turbines, solar panels and solar thermal installations cannot produce consistently high enough heat to smelt ores and forge metals. They cannot generate power on a reliable enough basis to operate facilities that make modern technologies possible. They cannot provide the power required tomanufacture turbines, panels, batteries or transmission lines much less power civilization.

My grandmother used to tell me, The only good thing about the good old days is that theyre gone. Well, theyd be back, as the USA is de-carbonized, de-industrialized and de-developed.

Ponder America and Europe before coal fueled the modern industrial age. Recall what we were able to do back then, what lives were like, how long people lived. Visit Colonial Williamsburg and Claude Moore Colonial Farm in Virginia, or similar places in your state. Explore rural Africa and India.

Imagine living that way, every day: pulling water from wells, working the fields with your hoe and ox-pulled plow, spinning cotton thread and weaving on looms, relying on whatever metal tools your local blacksmith shop can produce. When the sun goes down, your lives will largely shut down.

Think back to amazing construction projects of ancient Egypt, Greece or Rome or even 18th century London, Paris, New York. Ponder how they were built, how many people it took, how they obtained and moved the raw materials. Imagine being part of those wondrous enterprises, from sunup to sundown.

The good news is that there will be millions of new jobs. The bad news is that theyd involve mostly backbreaking labor with picks and shovels, for a buck an hour. Low-skill, low-productivity jobs just dont pay all that well. Maybe to create even more jobs, the government will issue spoons, instead of shovels.

That will be your life, not reading, watching TV and YouTube or playing video games. Heck, there wont even be any televisions or cell phones. Drugs and alcohol will be much harder to come by, too. (No more opioid crisis.) Water wheels and wind mills will be back in fashion. All-natural power, not all the time.

More good news: Polluting, gas-guzzling, climate-changing cars and light trucks will be a thing of the past. Instead, youll have horses, oxen, donkeys, buggies and wagons again grow millions of acres of hay to feed them and have to dispose of millions or billions of tons of manure and urine every year.

Therell be no paved streets unless armies of low-skill workers pound rocks into gravel, mine and grind limestone, shale, bauxite and sand for cement, and make charcoal for lime kilns. Homes will revert to what can be built with pre-industrial technologies, with no central heat and definitely no AC.

Ah, but you folks promoting the idyllic renewable energy future will still be the ruling elites. Youll get to live better than the rest of us, enjoy lives of reading and leisure, telling us commoners how we must live. Dont bet on it. Dont even bet on having the stamina to read after a long day with your shovel or spoon.

As society and especially big urban areas collapse into chaos, it will be survival of the fittest. And that group likely wont include too many Handgun Control and Gun Free Zone devotees.

But at least your climate will be stable and serene or so you suppose. You wont have any more extreme weather events. Sea levels will stay right where they are today: 400 feet higher than when a warming planet melted the last mile-thick glaciers that covered half the Northern Hemisphere 12,000 years ago.

At least it will be stable and serene until those solar, cosmic ray, ocean currents and other pesky, powerful natural forces decide to mess around with Planet Earth again.

Of course, many countries wont be as stupid as the self-righteous utopian nations. They will still use fossil fuels, plus nuclear and hydroelectric, and watch while you roll backward toward the good old days. Those that dont swoop in to conquer and plunder may even send us food, clothing and monetary aid (most of which will end up with ruling elites and their families, friends, cronies and private armies).

So how about this as a better option?

Stop obsessing over dangerous manmade climate change. Focus on what really threatens our planet and its people: North Korea, Iran, Islamist terrorism and rampant poverty, disease, malnutrition and early death among the billions who still do not have access to electricity and the living standards it brings.

Worry less about manmade climate cataclysms and more about cataclysms caused by policies promoted in the name of controlling Earths climate, when they really end up controlling our lives.

Dont force-feed us with todays substandard, subsidized, pseudo-sustainable, pseudo-renewable energy systems. When better, more efficient, more practical energy technologies are developed, they will replace fossil fuels. Until then, we would be crazy to go down the primrose path to renewable energy utopia.

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Oceania introduces La Cuisine Bourgeoise by Jacques Ppin – Seatrade Cruise News

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Oceania Cruises unveiled an elegant seven-course affair, La Cuisine Bourgeoise, by Jacques Ppin. This new epicurean experience features many classic dishes that the master chef has enjoyed over the years.

'Cuisine bourgeoise is rooted in tradition and is one that shaped my childhood. It is a cuisine to savor rather than admire or evaluate. It is simply happiness on a plate, and I am thrilled to share this with our guests,' said Ppin, executive culinary director for Oceania Cruises.

The meal is expertly paired from start to finish with wines that complement and echo the history of the dishes, while providing diners with a hint of the flavors, complexity and nuances that one might have experienced during the mid-20th century.

'Pairing the wines took particular care and required extensive research to ensure that the wines featured with each course reflected the bright, approachable and celebratory nature of this dining experience,' said Bob Binder, president and ceo, Oceania Cruises.

Each course is served with dramatic flair from gleaming silver trays in the best traditions of the century.

'Imagine being transported back to the halcyon days of the Htel Plaza Athenee in Paris, enjoying a celebratory meal with great friends. This is an experience you cant have anywhere else and one that will create memories for a lifetime. It is the epitome of special,' Binder said.

The experience starts with Kir Royal. The first course, a poultry cream soup, is paired with Chteau Carbonnieux Grand Cru Class, Pessac-Leognan, Bordeaux.

Next comes lobster and cheese souffle paired with Louis Latour Meursault Chardonnay, Cte de Beaune, Burgundy; Dover sole with crustacean mousse and French black truffles paired with Louis Latour Morey-Saint-Denis Pinot Noir, Ctes de Nuits, Burgundy; and roasted beef tenderloin with stuffed mushrooms, accompanied by Chteau Lynch-Moussas 5me Cru Class Pauillac, Bordeaux.

Nut-crusted brie, baked Alaska, petits fours and Parisian-style pink praline cream puffs crown the meal.

La Cuisine Bourgeoise is now available aboard Marina and Riviera. This exclusive experience is limited to 24 diners and reservations are required and can be made on board.

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Development Overview: Icon Oceania’s ‘Calibre’ Surry Hills – The Urban Developer

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Designed by Koichi Takada Architects and developed by Sydney-based property developer Icon Oceania, the eight-storey 18 apartment Calibre aims to be an oasis in the citys heartland fringe.

Icon Oceania andKoichi Takada intend to achieve this through a design that draws inspiration from local landscapes, utilising an aspect that faces the Sydney City skyline, locatedwithin a well-connected suburb that is occupied by a younger demographic of buyers.

Located at 10-14 Cooper Street Surry Hills, the recently approved development features a mix of residential with around 1200m2sq m of ground level retail.

The Surry Hills located development was approved in April 2017 and is currently awaiting to commence construction in November, scheduled for completion in early 2019.

Calibre comes on the back of an expanding portfolio by Iconic Oceania who earlier this year acquired two mixed-use buildings in Sydneys Chinatown precinct for $21.35 million.

The development is currently 60% sold with the 91m2sub penthouse selling for $2.65 million. Teaming up with Icon Oceania andKoichi Takada on Calibre are JBA (planning), CBRE (marketing), NAB (financing) with a builder yet to be confirmed.

Calibre Apartments Surry Hills from Digital Identity on Vimeo.

Architect Koichi Takada propose that Calibre aims to be a sanctuary from the vibrant streetscape, with views over Sydneys CBD skyline, imbued with naturally luxurious apartments with a rare sense of place in order to create a sense of home in Sydneys bustling suburbs.

Takada has utilised the buildings roof top by creating a communal garden with barbeque and shared facilities. The development also features a whole-floor penthouse with its own private rooftop and pool.

Leading lines, luxurious details and tactile appeal, Calibres message is one of effortless simplicity. Intelligent planning and floor-to-ceiling glazing really work to bring the outside in. Slatted screening and barely-there glass create both openness and privacy.

Natural textures and hues make these tranquil apartments supremely restful with generous and elegantly crafted details. the architect said.

Calibre is located in close proximity tothe areas new light rail and an array of bus networks connecting to the City, East and beyond. It is walking distance to UTS and the University of Sydney, and close proximity to Prince Alfred and Centennial Park.

Surry Hills is located 2.2km from the Sydney CBD. The suburbcovers a largesocio-economic range and is known for a strong sense of community.Surry Hills has a mixture of residential, commercial and light industrial areas. It remains Sydneys main centre for fashion wholesale activities, particularly on the western side.

According to data collected on realestate.com the demographic of residents in Surry Hills is predominantly younger with a near-even mix of independent youth and young professionals.

Realestate.com also report that the median apartment price is currently around $825,000 with renters expected to pay a median of $625 per week.

Data indicates that median property prices in Surry Hills continues to grow with an $818,7502016 median unit price.

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PM for increased exchanges between legislatures of India, Seychelles – Moneycontrol.com

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi today welcomed increased exchanges between the legislatures of India and Seychelles.

He made the remarks while receiving a 12-member delegation of the Seychelles Parliament led by its Speaker Patrick Pillay.

Modi appreciated the role of the legislatures of the two countries in upholding strong and vibrant ties between India and Seychelles as close partners, including in the Indian Ocean, the PMO said.

He recalled his own productive visit to Seychelles in March 2015 that helped both countries further deepen cooperation, the PMO said in a statement.

The delegation shared their perspectives with prime minister on further strengthening cooperation and people-to- people exchanges between the two countries.

The Seychelles delegation also called on Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan in Parliament House.

Mahajan said India considers Seychelles not only as a maritime neighbour but also as a trusted friend and a strong strategic partner.

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The District becomes Caribbean island paradise – Quad-Cities Online

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ROCK ISLAND The smell of exotic seasonings and the sound of groovy reggae beats floated through the downtown Saturday night as Ya Maka My Weekend morphed The District into a Caribbean island paradise.

It marked the Caribbean cultural festival's 26th year.There were palm trees and sandboxes; shopping and mingling; a plethora of food and drink options from both from festival vendors and downtown establishments; laughing, dancing and singing.

Many were lured by the music including Alexis Wierenga, of LeClaire, who came for the first time Saturday. She was swaying and singing to Rude Punch, one of the many bands to take the stage.

"I really enjoy them," she said, nodding toward the stage, "and the food!"

She hadn't gotten to the food yet, she said, but the night was young.

"I like the music," she said. "I'm pretty pumped for the late-night show" with 40oz To Freedom.

She brought Ethan Fry from Marion, Iowa, with her, who said the fest was "pretty good."

"It smells great," Ms. Wierenga added. There was "great beer, relaxed environment, a lot of room to dance."

A number of acts were scheduled to take the stage throughout the evening, including Morten Wa Byaombe, Rude Punch and DiMachine.

Early in the evening a couple of hundred people gathered around the stage and near the food vendors, relaxing in lawn chairs, sitting on the raised stone areas around the stage and at the tables on the deck of the Daiquiri Factory, as more slowly trickled through the gates.

Nearby was an open-air marketplace packed with unique items such as tie-dyed clothing, sarongs, jewelry, incense and more. Folks waited in trailing lines near the food vendors as delicious scents wafted into the air in plumes of smoke.

Many come to the event each year for the Caribbean food, which downtownrockisland.org describes as a fusion of African, French, Indian, Spanish and other cuisines.

And it seemed to be worth the wait.

Samantha Stinson, of Galesburg, came Saturday for the music, the food, and "just how different it is." It's not like a typical fair, she said, as sheenjoyed a Jamaican beef patty and a daiquiri.

With her was her fiance, Mickey Gibbons, who was having a daiquiri before grabbing food.

"I'm amazed it's not bigger," he said, gesturing to the surrounding streets early in the evening. "It's a shame. The community wants to have a good time."

The couple was enjoying the atmosphere and the "peaceful" reggae music, Mr. Gibbons said, with friends Amber and Bryan Wilson, of Monmouth.

"My friend had been here before," Mrs. Wilson said, gesturing to Ms. Stinson, "and talked about the food so I wanted the food!"

She was noshing on curry goat. "It sounds odd, but it's really good," she said.

They had chosen a stand-up table about midway between the music and the market, a prime spot to enjoy the festival.

"It's awesome," she said. "It's just nice being out with a ton of people."

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Caribbean Filmmakers Stepping Up* – Trinidad & Tobago Express

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A scene from the movie, A Caribbean Dream, one of the Caribbean films to be screened at the 2017 trinidad+tobago film festival in September.

A strong line-up of critically acclaimed, award-winning Caribbean films will screen at this years trinidad+tobago film festival (ttff), to be held from September 19-26, at MovieTowne Port of Spain, San Fernando and Tobago, as well as at The University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus. The films from some of the Caribbeans finest filmmakers include, from the Dominican Republic, Jose Maria Cabrals Carpinteros (Woodpeckers), a high-octane, no-holds-barred movie about a forbidden relationship conducted through prison bars and across the 200 yards of empty space dividing the male and female prisons in Santo Domingo. Described by critics as a raw, intriguing and energetic blend of the tough and the tender, Carpinteros played at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, USA, to great acclaim. Bahamian filmmaker Kareem Mortimers moving and topical film, Cargo, tells the tragic story of human trafficking from the point of view of reluctant trafficker, Kevin. An American exile with a gambling addiction, living in the Bahamas, he begins smuggling Haitians to Florida in an act of desperation, to keep his secrets buried and get out of a financial bind.

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AP PHOTOS: Editor selections from Latin America, Caribbean – New Jersey Herald

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Posted: Aug. 11, 2017 8:00 am

This photo gallery highlights some of the top news images made by Associated Press photographers in Latin America and the Caribbean that were published in the last week.

Bolivia held its Independence Day parade in the Kjasina desert, where an Aymara indigenous female photographer wore her traditional dress as she covered the army's 192 anniversary. Ecuador's President Lenin Moreno, who led his nation's Independence Day parade, was criticized by his predecessor Rafael Correa after he announced the sale a presidential jet and luxury cars to help the nation's budget.

An encampment of protesting farmers continued in Asuncion, Paraguay. The growers are facing economic hardship after failed harvests due to harsh environmental conditions, and are asking the government to forgive their debts. In Buenos Aires, Argentina, Catholics flocked to the patron saint of the unemployed, Saint Cajan, to pray for prosperity.

A town in Ecuador held a running of the bulls event where it set loose about 40 bulls during the town's annual fair. Mexico City hosted a Pumas vs. America's soccer match, and Brazil put on a Copa Libertadores match between Botafogo and Uruguay's Nacional. Ecuador's Emelec players kneeled to watch their team's penalty shoot-out, which they ultimately lost, at a Copa Libertadores match in Buenos Aires.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro vowed that a band of anti-government fighters who attacked an army base will get the "maximum penalty" as his administration roots out his enemies. He also saw the swearing-in of its new all-powerful Constitutional Assembly.

Colorful packages of seized cocaine were displayed to the media at the pacific port of Buenaventura in Colombia. In Bogota, Australian Cassandra Sainsbury attended her court hearing after the 22-year-old was detained at the international airport caught trying to smuggle about 6 kilos of cocaine inside packages of headphones.

After Mexican journalist Javier Valdez was shot dead in front of his Riodoce newspaper office, his colleagues continued reporting as bodies piled up across Mexico, and more and more of the dead are journalists. Residents on Mexico's Gulf coast tied down and taped up their storefronts as Hurricane Storm Franklin approached.

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This photo gallery was curated by photo editor Leslie Mazoch in Mexico City. On Twitter: @Leslie Mazoch

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AP photographers and photo editors on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP/lists/ap-photographers

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Aruba Hosts Caribbean’s Largest Vow Renewal – Caribbean360.com (subscription)

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160 Couples renewed their I Dos at sunset on Eagle Beach, Aruba. (Photo Credit: PRNewsfoto/Aruba Tourism Authority)

ORANJESTAD, Aruba, Saturday August 12, 2017 As the sun set on Aruba on Tuesday evening, more than 160 couples gathered on the world-famous Eagle Beach to simultaneously renew their I Dos, in the Caribbeans largest vow renewal ceremony.

The two-hour events romantic dcor and chic ambiance were inspired by real on-island weddings, and featured elegant white linen with pops of vibrant Caribbean colours.

Couples relished in the opportunity to celebrate their love on the worlds number three beach, while enjoying champagne, hors doeuvres, local music and Carnival-like festivities.

Aruba is a culturally-rich destination, beloved as one of the worlds top beach destinations for weddings and honeymoons, said Ronella Tjin Asjoe-Croes, CEO of the Aruba Tourism Authority. It felt truly special to showcase our islands defining qualities during this unprecedented ceremony while sharing Arubas love and happiness with loyal and first-time visitors alike.

Among the more than 320 participants were travel influencers and celebrity couples, including Tamra and Eddie Judge, known from Bravo TVs The Real Housewives of Orange County.

Aruba is simply beautiful. It meant everything for Eddie and I to be able to renew our I Dos in such a picturesque setting, in the company of our family, said Tamra.

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Report shows amount Caribbean states paid firms to lobby the US – WIC News

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The amount governments across the Caribbean have been paying law firms in Washington DC to lobby the the US government on their behalf has been revealed as part of an investigation.

St Kitts and Nevis, the Dominican Republic, and Antigua and Barbuda are all included, reports News Americas Now.

The conclusions are based on the US Attorney Generals latest Foreign Agents Registration Act report, which is sent to Congress.

Theres nothing wrong with this to a point, a source told WIC News.

All the persons in the Caribbean have their interests. You just got to wonder how what goes on. I want the people to see the full picture.

The Bahamas and the Dominica Republic were the biggest spenders in the six-month period ending 29 February 2016, spending US$1,490,126.30 and US$1,393,239.58, respectively.

At the other end of the scale, Barbados is reported to have paid US$3,548, while the government of Antigua and Barbuda shelled out US$15,147.37 with an application made to the National Committee on Foreign Medical Education and Accreditation to have the US Secretary of Education determine that the foreign principals medical programme accreditation standards are comparable to those used in the United States.

The law firms hired by Caribbean administrations are some of the worlds highest earners.

Hogan Lovells, hired by Antigua-Barbuda and The Bahamas, has more than 40 offices around the world and in 2013 was the 11th biggest law firm in the world with earnings of almost US$2 billion.

Washington DC-based Patton Boggs, which earns almost $1 billion each year, was used by The Dominica Republic to give advice to the foreign principal with respect to the development and implementation of public diplomacy programmes.

However, some of the islands used boutique firms.

St Kitts and Nevis paid Lanny J Davis and Associates US$52,752.30 to address the concerns of the US Treasury Department and the Canadian government regarding enhanced due diligence and background vetting related to the Citizenship by Investment Programme.

Despite the company being one of the smaller featured in the investigation, Lanny J Davis was the former special counsel to US President Bill Clinton.

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