Monthly Archives: February 2022

See the whites of Democrats’ eyes – Washington Examiner

Posted: February 5, 2022 at 5:09 am

Poll numbers look bleak for Democrats. A wide range of surveys show twice as many people saying America is on the wrong track as saying its heading in the right direction. In the most recent polls aggregated by RealClearPolitics, right track/wrong track deficits were 31, 30, 37, 48, 39, 26, and 50 points. President Joe Biden is underwater by 16, 4, 11, 5, 17, 19, and 14 points on the approve-disapprove question.

Such figures point to an unambiguous electoral repudiation of the Democratic Party and its policies, wholly owned by left-wing extremists. The president, having thrown off the mantle of moderation, and the militants for whom he works are heading for what former President Barack Obama called a shellacking. Voters never gave them a mandate for radicalism and dont like being played for saps in a bait and switch.

Bidens White House website boasts that hes building a better America. To which the looming electoral riposte is, No, thanks, we like the America we already had. And, anyway, its not yours to change.

The public knows that the Left and Democrats a distinction without a difference have spun out of control. To borrow the lyrics of Neil Young, the aging rocker who now pines for orthodoxy and cancel culture, the Lefts Cadillac has got a wheel in the ditch and a wheel on the track. The only problem with the analogy is that the Left no longer has even one wheel on the track. It has lurched out of control, leapt the verge, and is a steaming wreck in the undergrowth beyond the guardrail.

A week is a long time in politics, but even 10 months out from the midterm elections, the numbers are a nightmare for the Left. They could spell Democratic disaster and national salvation as far ahead as the 2024 presidential election. For the transformation of the Democratic Party is a long-term phenomenon. It is no quickly passing, easily forgotten squall. The partys absorption into the sub-Marxist Left has taken decades.

Its emergence into plain sight has produced many related phenomena. One is, as Gerard Baker noted in the Wall Street Journal recently, that the ratchet that until recently made Americas leftward drift seem irreversible might be about to lose its grip. Like a spring that cannot be compressed any further, the nations politics and culture appear poised to snap back, retrieving common sense from its current marginalization and restoring it to its rightful place at the center of public life.

Another is the emergence of a more combative cadre of conservative Republican political leaders. People are almost always of their time, perhaps especially politicians. As James Antle writes in our cover story, the likes of Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and other contenders for the 2024 GOP nomination are members of a rising generation no longer willing to go along and get along with the liberal dispensation. They have arrived, ready to fight, determined to win, at a moment when the nation seems to want that decisive victory.

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See the whites of Democrats' eyes - Washington Examiner

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Letter to the editor: Voting Democrat an addiction – TribLIVE

Posted: at 5:09 am

I believe that voting Democrat can be an addiction. Democrats continue to vote Democrat for decades while their cities disintegrate into cesspools of drugs, slums, crime, disease and suffocating taxes. For some of them, when they finally cant stand it any longer, they move and vote Democrat in their new location. They are Demoholics!

Todays Democratic Party has been hijacked by the Marxist, socialist, progressive, woke movement. It has proclaimed and is implementing its evil and diabolical agenda to fundamentally transform our country.

I believe that todays Democratic Party has shown its agenda be: the banishing of God, Judeo-Christian values, natural law and patriotism; the atrocity of abortion; the destruction of the nuclear family; BLM and antifa and the burning, looting and destroying of historic statues; the shattering of MLKs dream of a colorblind society by fomenting racial tension; teachers unions indoctrinating and poisoning the minds of our children; the hate-mongering and dividing of us into factions by race, party, and financial and vaccination status, and a house divided cannot stand.

Those who hate this country are living a dream. Those of us who love it are living a nightmare. Traditional Democrats are facing a dilemma: vote to save the country as founded or vote Democrat. Many will try to appease their conscience by defending and justifying what their party has become. But, alas, in the end, like an alcoholic who cant pass by a liquor store without stopping in, far too many Democrats will continue to vote Democrat no matter what. They are hopelessly addicted Demoholics!

Bob McBride

West Deer

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Las Vegas’ Linda Richardson Linda Richardson is Make-A-Wish America’s 2021 National Philanthropist of the Year – Vegas Magazine

Posted: at 5:09 am

The largest single donor to Make-A-Wish Southern Nevada (wish.org/snv), Linda Richardson is Make-A-Wish Americas 2021 National Philanthropist of the Year, an honor bestowed on one member from its 59 chapters. Here, the 26-year volunteer shares how giving back has transformed her life.

What does being Philanthropist of the Year mean to you? I am truly honored to be recognized by Make-A-Wish and to play even a small role in its mission to create life-changing wishes for children with critical illnesses. Its not about me, its all about the children they serve, and I feel blessed to get to positively impact these childrens lives by helping to make wishes come true.

Why is Make-A-Wishs mission close to your heart? Ive been involved with many different organizations over the years, and they are all amazing, but my work with Make-A-Wish is extraordinarily special. Watching children who are struggling with critical illnesses get to experience their heartfelt wish is incredibly moving and rewarding. If youve never experienced wish granting personally, I would encourage everyone to find a way to do so. A wish doesnt just leave a lasting impact on the child receiving it; it leaves a lasting impact on those who have the honor of granting it.

Which philanthropic accomplishment has meant the most to you? It probably wont come as a surprise that my all-time favorite Make-A-Wish moment was the very first wish I granted with my daughter, Melissa. That single experience lit a fire in us that literally transformed our lives. It led to 20 years of working together to not only grant wishes for children when they need it most, but to create the Fashion Luncheon event, allowing us to increase our impact for Wish kids in Southern Nevada. Melissa and I have always been close, and volunteering for Make-A-Wish brought us even closer.

What is your motto in life? My motto in life is just to have a positive mindset. I have long been guided by the mantra Where much is given, much is expected, and I have tried to teach that to my children through example.

Dream job? I was lucky enough to have my dream job: being a mother and a grandmother. Thats all I ever wanted to do.

Photography by: PHOTO BY MONA SHIELD PAYNE

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Democrats, teachers unions fight to keep parents from learning what their kids are taught – Fox News

Posted: at 5:09 am

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Democrats and teachers unions are working to block bills proposed in at least a dozen states that would require curriculum transparency in schools across the country, arguing that parents access to their childrens learning materials online could lead to undue censorship and backlash against educators.

Parents are entitled under federal law to request their children's curriculum for review if they attend a federally funded school, but schools are not required to post the materials online. Lawmakers in at least 12 states have introduced legislation to require schools to post lists of all their teaching materials online, including books, articles and videos.

A Missouri billsponsored by Republican state Rep. Doug Richey would do just that, but Democrats say curriculum transparency billswould only further embolden parents to censor certain materials and trainings, like those pertaining to critical race theory (CRT) a framework that involves deconstructing aspects of society to discover systemic racism beneath the surface.

STEPHEN MILLERS AMERICA FIRST LEGAL LAUNCHES GUIDE FOR PARENTS TO OBTAIN SCHOOL CURRICULA UNDER FEDERAL LAW

Amy Carney speaks on behalf of parents during a protest against critical race theory being taught at Scottsdale Unified School District before a digital school board meeting at Coronado High School in Scottsdale on May 24, 2021. (Reuters)

Richeys bill, dubbed the Parents Bill of Rights, would also require schools to allow parents receive notifications whenever a teacher intends to teach a "divisive or controversial topic" that may conflict with a "parent's belief that all persons, regardless of race, ethnicity, color, national origin, or ancestry, should be treated equally."

"Parents have a fundamental right, responsibility and authority when it comes to their children," Richey said to committee members Tuesday, FOX 2 reported.

Democratic state Rep. Paula Brown, a former teacher, said Richey's legislation is "setting people up to just be in court."

"Make no mistake: these bills are an attack on Missouri students," she said in a statement after the committee hearing. "They have the right to learn in classrooms free from censorship."

BIDEN ADMIN KEEPS GIVING TEACHERS' UNIONS POLITICAL VICTORIES

Democratic Rep. Maggie Nurrenbern, another former teacher, said the legislation would be a "Trojan horse to destroy quality education."

"These laws would create a chilling effect on teachers who would be afraid to teach anything remotely related to banned curriculum," Nurrenbern said, Fox 2 reported.

TheAmerican Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sparked criticism last month after tweeting that curriculum transparency bills are just "thinly veiled attempts at chilling teachers and students from learning and talking about race and gender in schools."

Emerson Sykes, staff attorney in the ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, reiterated the ACLU's position to Fox News Digital last week, saying the organization is "actively pursuing litigation to block" curriculum transparency bills.

"Government bodies should always strive for transparency, and the ACLU supports any good-faith effort to make public education as transparent as possible to parents and communities," Sykes said. "But some of these so-called curriculum transparency bills are thinly veiled attempts at chilling teachers and students from learning and talking about race and gender in schools. Their sponsors have said as much.

"For example, in Florida, one lawmaker recently introduced legislation that would allow teachers and children to be constantly recorded and surveilled in the classroom for signs of teaching and learning about divisive concepts around race and gender," Sykes added.

PARENTS RIGHTS ACTIVISTS SLAM ACLU FOR OPPOSING CURRICULUM TRANSPARENCY LAWS AMID CRT BATTLES

Asra Nomani, vice president for strategy and investigation at Parents Defending Education, blasted the ACLU's opposition in a statement to Fox News Digital.

"Transparency is key to good governance," she said. "This applies to our schools especially where our youngest minds are being informed andinfluenced. Teachers unions, activists and the ACLU are on the wrong side of history as they try to block transparency inschools."

Floridas Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis unveiled a parents bills of rights last June. Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott introduced a similar proposal last month.

"Florida law should provide parents with the right to review the curriculum used in their childrens schools," DeSantis said in his State of the State address last week.

Amy Jahr sings "The Star Spangled Banner" after a Loudoun County School Board meeting was halted by the school board because the crowd refused to quiet down, in Ashburn, Virginia, June 22, 2021. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo)

Last year, GOP-controlled legislatures in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania became the first to pass curriculum transparency bills, but both bills were vetoed by Democratic governors, NBC News reported.

Wisconsins Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vetoed the classroom transparency act in December, sayingit failed to provide the necessary funding needed to implement it. Pennsylvanias Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf said in his veto message that the legislation was a "thinly veiled attempt" to censor content "reflecting various cultures, identities, and experiences."

Like Democrats, teachers unions are opposing parents-bill-of-rights legislation because they say it'll create more problems and censorship, similar to the push to ban CRT in schools.

"Good schools and good school districts have always had curriculum transparency including extensive two-way communication between parents and educators on what we are teaching and how to support our kids," Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a statement to NBC News. "Pretending otherwise is just the latest attempt by Chris Rufo and others to exploit the frustration of Covid to create a toxic environment where the biggest losers are children and their recovery."

Weingarten was referring toChristopher Rufo, a fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute who has been a leading voice in shining a light on left-wing ideologies like CRT being taught in classrooms across the country.

Michigan Department of Education Board Vice President Pamela Pugh, a Democrat, said a curriculum transparency bill introduced by Republican members of the Michigan House on Wednesday aims to disrupt the education system.

"Theres more than meets the eye at the root of these divisive, manufactured, chaotic bills that are being proposed" across the country as part of a national playbook, Pugh told Bridge Michigan. "Its scare tactics and intimidation meant to cause mass chaos, mass confusion, and disruption to our education system."

"Were not the enemy," Ingrid Fournier, a fifth-grade teacher in Ludington Public Schools, told Bridge. "Where is the trust? Just trust us."

Unions heavily opposed the Pennsylvania bill that was recently vetoed by Wolf, saying curriculum transparency bills are part of a larger push to ban teaching racism in schools.

Shelley Slebrch and other angry parents and community members protest after a Loudoun County School Board meeting was halted by the school board because the crowd refused to quiet down, in Ashburn, Virginia, June 22, 2021. (Reuters)

"The shameful truth of racism, both historically and today, must be taught. And as a society we must not just teach it, but do all we can to collectively dismantle the systems that have long failed Black and brown people," Philadelphia Federation of Teachers President Jerry Jordan told Keystone Crossroads in October as the bill advanced through the state legislature. "This bill is far from a benign attempt at increasing curriculum transparency."

"The last thing students need at this time is further politicization of their education," Rich Askey, president of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the states largest teachers union, said at the time, Keystone reported.

Ian Prior, executive director of the Virginia parents group Fight For Schools, slammed the left-wing opposition to curriculum transparency in a statement to Fox News Digital on Thursday.

"The far left went from saying that there is no critical race theory or gender identity grooming in schools, to now trying to hide what is going on in schools," Prior said. "That tells you all one needs to know about what is happening in America's classrooms.

"Government is supposed to be transparent except in very limited circumstances," he said. "Parents shouldn't need a security clearance to see what their children are learning in the schools that the parents pay for with their tax dollars."

Loudoun County School Board meeting protest (Reuters)

Craig Strazerri, chief marketing officer for PragerU, said in a statement to Fox News Digital: "It's insane that there is any opposition at all tocurriculum transparency in schools - of course parents should be able to review in detail what their children are learning in our schools. What are they hiding?"

A nonprofit group led by former Trump policy adviser Stephen Miller launched a toolkit Wednesday aimed at helping parents understand their rights already granted under federal law in reviewing their childs school curriculum.

The new guide provided by America First Legal (AFL) highlights provisions in the Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment of 1978 (PPRA) thatgives parents the right to inspect all learning materials at schools that receive federal funding.

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"Part of the problem is that people don't know about this law," Miller told Fox News Digital in an interview Tuesday. "They don't know about their rights enshrined in federal statute, and that's because teachers unions, the schools, the administrators and teachers themselves don't want parents to know their rights. And so that's where we come in."

"The purpose of this endeavor from America First Legal is to let parents know what their current rights are under federal law the kind of thing that groups like the ACLU should be doing but arent doing because they have fallen prey to a political agenda. Theyre no longer in the business of defending civil rights and civil liberties," he said.

Fox News Tyler ONeil, Peter Hasson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Democrats Were Never As Afraid Of Covid As They Want You To Be – The Federalist

Posted: at 5:09 am

California Gov. Gavin Newsom was the latest Democrat officeholder to flout the science! on mask mandates when he was photographed sans mask at the Rams-49ers playoff game, accompanied by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and San Francisco Mayor London Breed.

It wasnt the first time Newsom demonstrated that Covid rules are only for pleb workers, small business owners, and children, and not for their lordships in public office and high society. In November 2020, when the rest of the state was being told to lock down and shut up, it was revealed that Newsom and a dozen other unmasked guests had attended a birthday bash at a high-end Napa Valley restaurant.

Newsom is one of the many Democratic governors, members of Congress, and mayors who have spent the past two years disingenuously threatening, belittling, and terrorizing their constituents and the country at large with unscientific Covid cult practices and superstitions that were unprecedented in public health history prior to February 2020. These fraudsters have readily and cheerfully opted out of their own fear porn whenever it suited them.

While its tempting to attribute the failure to heed their own Covid wisdom as plain old hypocrisy, the real takeaway is that Democratic leaders have always been much less afraid of Covid than they want you to be. Their Covid behavior has been about demonstrating a social hierarchy in which they are unquestionably at the top.

At his Texas rally last weekend, former President Donald Trump earned cheers from the tens of thousands-strong crowd when he announced that were moving on from Covid, whether they like it or not. Ironically, the Covid-fear peddlers and purveyors of tyranny Trump was referencing include Democratic officials who have let it slip time and time again that they moved on from Covid restrictions long ago.

The pioneer in all of this was probably Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who, as early as April 2020, trotted off to get her hair done in violation of her own stay-at-home order. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is another Democrat for whom the prospect of contracting or transmitting Covid was not so terrifying that it stopped her from getting a blowout. Her trip to an otherwise shuttered hair salon in her home state of California was famously captured on CCTV and shared by the salons owner.

Throughout the country, people caught a glimpse of Pelosi, who only months before had chided President Trump for not setting an example by wearing a mask, swanning around maskless. That should have been enough. If an 80-year-old woman, before the availability of vaccines, was brave enough to stare Covid down, despite belonging to one of the most vulnerable age demographics for Covid hospitalizations and deaths, clearly the rest of the population didnt need to be so terrified either.

Pelosi was at it again last summer at a fundraising event, where scores of maskless white leftist elites wined and dined, while minimum-wage minority servers waited on them with their faces obediently covered.

Then there are the hoaxers who ordered their constituents to lock down while they jetted off on vacation interstate and abroad. In 2020, ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, Denver Mayor Michael Hancock tweeted, stay home, avoid travel, and host virtual gatherings before boarding a flight to visit his own out-of-state family.

A month later, Austin Mayor Steve Adler took time out from kicking back in the sun in Los Cabos, Mexico, to shoot a video for the serfs back home, warning them, this is not the time to relax and threatening them with further restrictions and lockdowns.

For politicians seeking temporary respite from self-inflicted blue state misery, Florida has consistently been the destination of choice, despite routine left-wing attacks on Gov. Ron DeSantis for his allegedly reckless, virus spreading, murderous Covid management strategy. Early in the lockdowns, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker sent his family off to live it up on their multi-million-dollar estate in Florida while he locked down his constituents and warned against non-essential travel.

While warning Michiganders about non-essential travel and the perils of spring breaking in variant-ridden Florida and then flying the virus back home, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer chartered a private jet to the Sunshine State, lied about the trip, then tried to weasel her way out of the scandal.

Most recently, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was photographed vacationing and partying in Miami Beach, while back in New York, Covid is apparently so deadly that at restaurants the police are ejecting unvaccinated children and management is denying service to black families.

But its no secret that masks are just expedient political theater for AOC. When she was gracious enough to join celebrity guests at the $30,000 a ticket Met gala last fall, she evidently saw no need to spoil the occasion with something as pointless as a face covering. Meanwhile, scurrying behind in the background were her masked attendants, dutifully fawning over the congresswoman and carrying the train of her ghastly concoction of a dress.

Former President Barack Obama and San Francisco Mayor Breed have both been caught on camera partying and clubbing without masks, totally cool with the covert virus particles theyve been exploiting to spook, propagandize, and scaremonger the rest of us.

Now the latest data again confirms what the Democratic aristocracy was confident of all along: lockdowns, social distancing, masks, and vax mandates may be useful at keeping the drones and neurotics in check, but largely ineffective in preventing virus transmission. Jurisdictions around the world that locked down hard dont appear to have fared any better at curbing the virus than those that took a more relaxed approach.

The Centers for Disease Control begrudgingly acknowledged what Dr. Anthony Fauci was advising back in February 2020, before he switched his position: cloth masks are ineffective. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky recently admitted that vaccines cant prevent virus transmission, and even Pfizer Chief Executive Officer Albert Bourla conceded that two vaccine doses provide limited protection, if any against the Omicron variant.

Meanwhile, an updated review of global research from Stanford Universitys Meta-Research Innovation Centersuggests Covid fatality rates have fallen across most age groups. The analysis, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, reveals an infection survival rate of more than 96 percent for all age groups, and more than 99 percent for all age groups under the age of 70. Data showing this was available early in the pandemic, almost from the time of the U.S. lockdowns.

Even the CDCs best estimates show a relatively low infection fatality ratio across all age groups. For children 17 and younger, that figure is a breathtakingly low 0.002 percent.

Think about this the next time you fasten a useless, oxygen-depriving, speech-impeding bacterial trap to your helpless two-year-old. When you don the Covid talisman to go to church, attend class, enter a grocery store, watch a show, or board an airplane, reflect on how a disdainful coterie of officials have trolled Americans for two years.

Theyve been bleating about flattening the curve while theyve been nonchalantly recreating, dining, primping, and preening, vacationing, partying, and clubbing in contradiction of their own fabricated and capricious public health edicts. Yes, they were being dishonest, hypocritical, and hierarchical. But most importantly, they were clearly never afraid of the virus, and you shouldnt be either.

Carina Benton is a dual citizen of Australia and Italy and a permanent resident of the United States. A recent West Coast migr, she is now helping to repopulate the countrys interior. She holds a masters degree in education and has taught languages, literature, and writing for many years in Catholic and Christian, as well as secular institutions. She is a practicing Catholic and a mother of two young children.

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NHL skills competition 2022: Live updates, highlights, how to watch All-Star Weekend in Las Vegas – The Athletic

Posted: at 5:09 am

The reigning champion in the fastest skater competition, Islanders forward Mathew Barzal, isn't here to defend his title, and Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid has a chance to walk away with a crowning achievement if he can cross that finish line before the others.

McDavid can become the competition's first four-time champion. He joined Mike Gartner as the only three-time winners during his dominating streak from 2017-2019. Gartner won in 1990, 1993, and 1996.

So who is likely to stand in his way? He's got a pretty good idea.

"There's lots of good skaters in the group. (Dylan) Larkin's won it before so I'd definitely say Larkin."

Not only did the Red Wings forward win before, his winning time in 2016 (13.172) was faster than each of McDavid's (13.310 in 2016, 13.454 in 2018, and 13.378 in 2019).

Golden Knights forward Mark Stone, a self-proclaimed fan of the hardest shot and fastest skater competitions as a spectator, echoed McDavid's thoughts.

"I haven't quite looked it at yet, but I think I'm a Larkin guy," Stone said. "If was a putting money on it, I'd bet Larkin."

But fellow fastest skater competitor Cale Makar predicted it's going to come down to a narrow margin.

"Hopefully I'm good competition for the other guys," Makar said. "There's some pretty fast guys, so it'll be interesting to see how it all unfolds but I'm just looking to go out there and have fun and see where it takes me.

"(McDavid's) a pretty fast guy. We obviously haven't played him much in the past few years but every single one of those guys, you put them in a straight line race or a race around the nets, it's going to be pretty close. Honestly, I'll think it'll come down to very minimal seconds."

Chris Kreider, Adrian Kempe, Kyle Connor, Evgeny Kuznetsov, and Jordan Kyrou round out the field.

(Photo by Del Mecum / Cal Sport Media via AP Images)

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Opinion: Democrats Lose 90% of Rural Counties in America. Here is why. – Josh Kurtz

Posted: at 5:09 am

Getty Images.

By Dave Harden

The writer is a Democratic candidate for Congress in Marylands First District. He grew up on a small farm in Carroll County, Maryland. He can be reached at Dave@hardenforcongress.com

Democrats lose 90% of all rural counties in America. Why? Because they run weak candidates who simply do not align with the culture, values, hopes, aspirations, concerns and worries of rural folks. The messaging and policies for urban and suburban communities are not tailored to rural communities. The Democrats simply dismiss those people as politically expedient at best, or a lost cause at worst.

Even today, there is little evidence that the Democratic establishment understands these failures. Politicians endorsing politicians, party elites tipping the scales, political hacks who are ahead of their time, none of this works for rural folks. The result: the Democrats rural strategy has failed election after election.

The Democrats failure to appeal to rural voters has consequences. Extreme polarization exacerbated by partisan gerrymandering and the growing urban-rural divide increases the risk that America slips into authoritarianism. We see three challenges right here in Maryland.

First, working class, rural communities on the Eastern Shore are marginalized by the unrelenting consolidation of political and economic power between Washington and Baltimore along the I-95 and 270 corridor.

Second, this consolidation of power is happening while poverty rates in some communities on the Shore are worse than lower middle income countries in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.

Third, the census revealed that four Eastern Shore and two western counties lost population in the last decade. Declining populations mean fewer jobs, fewer services, fewer opportunities, less of a tax base and more grievances.

Most worryingly, these political-economic trends are happening amid the accelerating threats to our democracy. The January 6 attacks on our Capitol may just be practice if Donald Trump runs for president in 2024 and his enablers, like Andy Harris from Marylands First District, remain in power.

America needs the Democrats to be competitive in rural communities just like we need Republicans to be competitive in big cities.

Here is what rural folks want: we want to close the wealth gap. We want our kids to have opportunities at home. We want know-it-all politicians to stop speaking to us like we are a bunch of rednecks who are too stupid to vote our economic interests. We want to be valued and heard on our terms.

Democrats can, of course, deliver economic opportunities and the related respect. Broadband, infrastructure, localized renewable energy, decentralized energy grids, rural accelerators and incubators, less regulations on small businesses, tighter connections to high-end markets, next-generation vocational schools can all lead to revitalized growth and economic opportunity in our rural communities. But this requires that the Democrats compete in local elections by charting an independent path forward which aligns with the sensibilities of communities that too often feel left behind and forgotten.

I was appointed by President Obama and confirmed by the Senate to lead our democracy efforts and conflict stabilization activities around the world. I have worked in fragile countries for decades. Given these experiences, I believe democracy in America is at risk. If the Democrats get it wrong in 2022 by losing to authoritarian incumbents like Andy Harris yet again, America could very well slip into a full blown authoritarian state by 2024.

Despite its imperfections, our generation was given an extraordinary gift of democracy. It is our responsibility to protect and defend our nations legacy. We must begin by electing pro-democracy candidates to safeguard our sacred democratic institutions and norms. All other issues are secondary.

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Liftoff lifts off: Area15s newest ride has view of Strip and beyond – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Posted: at 5:09 am

Anticipation hangs in the air no, wait, thats our breath that were seeing suspended before us. Its cold, but things are heating up.

Its like waiting for fireworks, a bundled-up blonde woman observes in front of Area15 on Wednesday evening, noting the Fourth of July-like sense of expectancy.

Those fireworks come soon enough, sparks-spewing pyrotechnics countering the wind-driven night chill. And with that, its go time.

Goggles-sporting guides lead the way. The illuminated obelisk beckons, cradled in a steel tower criss-crossed with illuminated spires. Liftoff is ready for lift off.

Its Wednesday night, and Area15s new open-air balloon ride is getting its official launch.

Think of it as a steampunk Around the World in 80 Days, with craft cocktails and 360-degree panoramic views of the Strip in place of transcontinental flight.

At the base of the attraction is a themed bar made to look like a lost desert hang for wayward aviators.

Theres antiquities here: A typewriter rests on one table; encyclopedias are strewn about, a nod to those long-lost days of manual research, when learning the genus of an ostrich wasnt as simple as hitting the Google button on the internet machine.

The point?

To make the past feel indivisible from the present.

It is meant to evoke the last place some aeronauts and astronauts drank and dreamed of building a tower, explains Michael Beneville, Area15s chief creative officer, addressing the crowd as Liftoff welcomes its first riders. And they did.

Beverage in hand, its time to board.

Building a mystery

He remembers standing in this space when thats all it was: open space.

Michael Beneville recalls surveying the then-barren parcel of land that would eventually become Area15 with Winston Fisher, CEO for Area15, years back.

Winston and I stood in this parking lot with our two respective teams, it was an empty lot that stretches from the highway to Palace Station, and we thought, What would we put here? says Beneville, cald in a disco-ball shiny silver suit. This was born out of its proximity to the Strip, which is close, but thats the other side of the moon in terms of the natural traffic flow of a visitor.

What would make them go across the highway? he continues. And we thought the only thing that would actually do that would be a geunine curiosity about, What the hell is that?

Area15 was built on these kind of open-ended questions.

Since opening in September 2020, the complex has featured a number of attractions, like Meow Wolfs immersive art experience Omega Mart and the winding maze of booze that is Lost Spirits, that pointedly leave something to the imagination, that keep visitors guessing about what it is theyre taking in, exactly and in doing so, ideally keeps them coming back.

Its worked so far.

Not only does curiosity kill cats, it also lines coffers: In its first full year of operation, Area15 drew nearly two million visitors, with the smash success of Omega Mart leading the way, drawing over 800,000 guests alone.

Liftoff is the latest addition to Area15s arsenal of the far-out.

While certainly packing more straight-forward kicks than puzzle-piecing together the 60-plus experiences that comprise Omega Mart into a coherent whole what isnt? the core idea is the same, that when youre up there in the sky looking this way and that way, youre forming your own narrative of what it is youre choosing to see.

I think its ironic, Beneville notes, that a lot of places that are about imagination dont leave much to the imagination, you know?

Seven minutes in the heavens

3-2-1 liftoff! everyone says in unison, voices elevated like the rest of us will be soon enough.

Seat belts clicked into place, cell phones confined to see-through cases worn around the neck so that they wont be dropped, the steady ascension begins.

Its a gradual climb, allowing any clammy-palmed acrophobes to keep a leash on their nerves.

People chatter; teeth chatter.

Dance music plays as pink and blue lights pulsate.

At the top of the attraction, the 16-seat gondola spins slowly; you can take everything in without turning your head.

Its an observation deck of sorts, Beneville explains.

You can see for miles in all directions mountains to the west; man-made grandeur to the east your feet dangling above the parking lot 13-stories below.

Its a mix of sophistication and simplicity, a space-age structure housing hot air balloon technology that dates back nearly 250 years; a futuristic ride posited on the primal thrill of being really, really high up in the air.

Seven minutes later, were back on the ground.

The rides over; the rides have just begun.

Its not a billion dollar thing, Beneville says of Liftoff, which is now open to the public. Its actually some cinder blocks, some cool art, some couches that are painted and a helluva cool ride.

Contact Jason Bracelin at jbracelin@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0476. Follow @jbracelin76 on Instagram

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AI, the brain, and cognitive plausibility – TechTalks

Posted: at 5:09 am

By Rich Heimann

This article is part of the philosophy of artificial intelligence, a series of posts that explore the ethical, moral, and social implications of AI today and in the future.

Is AI about the brain?

The answer is often, but not always. Many insiders and most outsiders believe that if a solution looks like a brain, it might act as the brain. If a solution acts like a brain, then the solution will solve other problems like humans solve other problems. What insiders have learned is that solutions that are not cognitively plausible teach them nothing about intelligence or at least nothing more than before they started. This is the driving force behind connectionism and artificial neural networks.

That is also why problem-specific solutions designed to actually play to their strengthsstrengths that are not psychologically or cognitively plausiblefall short of artificial intelligence. For example, Deep Blue is not real AI because it is not cognitively plausible and will not solve other problems. The accomplishment, while profound, is an achievement in problem-solving, not intelligence. Nevertheless, chess-playing programs like Deep Blue have shown that the human mind can no longer claim superiority over a computer on this task.

Lets consider approaches to AI that are not based on the brain but still seek cognitive plausibility. Shane Legg and Marcus Hutter are both a part of Google DeepMind. They explain the goal of artificial intelligence as an autonomous, goal-seeking system; [for which] intelligence measures an agents ability to achieve goals in a wide range of environments.

This definition is an example of behaviorism. Behaviorism was a reaction to 19th-century philosophy of the mind which focused on the unconscious, and psychoanalysis, which was ultimately challenging to test experimentally. John Watson, professor of psychology at John Hopkins University, spearheaded the scientific movement in the first half of the twentieth century. Watsons 1913 Behaviorist Manifesto sought to reframe psychology as a natural science by focusing only on observable behaviorhence the name.

Behaviorism aims to predict human behavior by appreciating the environment as a determinant of that behavior. By concentrating only on observable behavior and not the origin of the behavior in the brain, behaviorism became less and less a source of knowledge about the brain. In fact, to the behaviorist, intelligence does not have mental causes. All the real action is in the environment, not the mind. Ironically, DeepMind embraces the philosophy of operant conditioning, not the mind.

In operant conditioning, also known as reinforcement learning, an agent learns that getting a reward depends on action within its environment. The behavior is said to have been reinforced when the action becomes more frequent and purposeful. This is why DeepMind does not define intelligence: it believes there is nothing special about it. Instead, intelligence is stimulus and response. While an essential component of human intelligence is the input it receives from the outside world, and learning from the environment is critical, behaviorism purges the mind and other internal cognitive processes from intellectual discourse.

This point was made clear in a recent paper by David Silver, Satinder Singh, Doina Precup, and Richard Sutton from DeepMind titled Reward is Enough. The authors argue that maximizing reward is enough to drive behavior that exhibits most if not all attributes of intelligence. However, reward is not enough. The statement itself is simplistic, vague, circular, and explains little because the assertion is meaningless outside highly structured and controlled environments. Besides, humans do many things for no reward at all, like writing fatuous papers about rewards.

The point is that suppose you or your team talk about how intelligent or cognitively plausible your solution is? I see this kind of solution arguing quite a bit. If so, you are not thinking enough about a specific problem or the people impacted by that problem. Practitioners and business-minded leaders need to know about cognitive plausibility because it reflects the wrong culture. Real-world problem solving solves the problems the world presents to intelligence whose solutions are not ever cognitively plausible. While insiders want their goals to be understood and shared by their solutions, your solution does not need to understand that it is solving a problem, but you do.

If you have a problem to solve that aligns with a business goal and seek an optimal solution to accomplish that goal, then how cognitively plausible some solution is, is unimportant. How a problem is solved is always secondary to if a problem is solved, and if you dont care how, you can solve just about anything. The goal itself and how optimal a solution is for a problem are more important than how the goal is accomplished, if the solution was self-referencing, or what a solution looked like after you didnt solve the problem.

About the author

Rich Heimann is Chief AI Officer atCybraics Inc,a fully managed cybersecurity company. Founded in 2014, Cybraics operationalized many years of cybersecurity and machine learning research conducted at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Rich is also the author of Doing AI, a book that exploreswhat AI is, is not, what others want AI to become, what you need solutions to be, and how to approach problem-solving. Find out more about his bookhere.

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The US can compete with China in AI education here’s how | TheHill – The Hill

Posted: at 5:09 am

The artificial intelligence (AI) strategic competition with China is more intense than ever. To many, the stakes have never been higher who leads in AI will lead globally.

At first glance, China appears to be well-positioned to take the lead when it comes to AI talent. China is actively integrating AI into every level of its education system, while the United States has yet to embrace AI education as a strategic priority. This will not do.To maintain its competitive edge, the United States must adopt AI education and workforce policies that are targeted and coordinated. Such policies must also increase AI-specific federal investment and encourage industry partnerships.

Upon first glance, the state of U.S. AI education appears to be on a positive trajectory. Recent years have seen a proliferation of AI education materials outside the classroom: a rise in online AI education programs at all levels, including K-12 summer camps, boot camps, and a range of certificates and industry-academia partnerships.Nearly 300different organizations now offer AI or computer science summer camps to K-12 students. Other K-12 learning opportunities include after-school programs, competitions and scholarships, including explicit outreach to underrepresented groups in computer science education to address race and gender disparities.

However, the reach and effectiveness of these piecemeal efforts tell a different story. There are no standardization or quality benchmarks for the maze of online offerings or data on reach. Moreover, outside of a handful of schools, very little AI education is happening in the classroom. Integrating any new education into classrooms is notoriously slow and difficult, and AI education will be no exception. If anything, it faces an even steeper uphill battle as schools across the country are in a constant struggle over competing priorities.

Meanwhile, Chinas rollout and scale of AI education dramatically eclipse U.S. initiatives. While it is too early to assess the effectiveness and quality of Chinas AI education programs, our research at Georgetown Universitys Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET)revealsthat Chinas Ministry of Education is rapidly implementing AI curricula across all education levels and has evenmandated high schools to teach AI courseworksince 2018. In Beijing, as well as Zhejiang and Shandong provinces, education authorities haveintegratedPython into the notoriously difficultGaokaocollege entrance exam.

At the postsecondary level, Chinas progress appears even more impressive. In 2019, the Ministry of Educationstandardizedan undergraduate AI major, which today is offered at 345 universities and has been the most popular new major in China. Additionally, our tally indicates at least 34 universities have AI institutes that often train both undergraduate and graduate students, and research areas such as natural language processing, robotics, medical imaging, smart green technology and unmanned systems. The U.S. has a world-class university system, but AI majors in large part remain a specialization of computer science.

The U.S. education system is not designed to operate like Chinas. Nor should it be. There are inherent advantages in a system that allows for a greater degree of educational autonomy. This gives breathing room for experimentation, creativity and innovation among U.S. educational institutions and opens doors for collaboration with the local community, private sector, philanthropic organizations and other relevant stakeholders.

But for experimental AI education initiatives to be successful, they must be evaluated and scaled inclusively throughout the education system. In this context, the decentralized nature of the U.S. education systems can pose a challenge curricula, teacher training and qualifications and learning standards are all fragmented by different state approaches.

For instance, computer science coursework is currently available at51 percentof U.S. high schools but unlike in China, is not required in most cases. Initiatives are cropping up in various schools around the country, but a lack of coordination delivering comprehensive awareness, cross-state collaboration and shared assessment metrics hinder these nascent programs from having a nationwide, widespread impact on AI education.

Implementing competitive AI education across the United States is no easy task there are no shortcuts and no single solution. There are, however, two elements that education leaders and policymakers should prioritize: coordination and investment.

For coordination at the federal level, one path forward is through the White HousesNational Artificial Intelligence Initiative Office for Education and Training, which can help coordinate AI education, training and workforce development policy across the country. At the same time, community and state-level engagement to implement, evaluate and scale AI education initiatives are likely to be just as important as federal efforts.

For example, the Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education is leveraging partnerships with private universities and nonprofits to strengthen its K-12 computer science initiative. Results are starting to show promise: There has been a17-fold increasein advanced placement computer science exams taken since 2016; however, this still represents a small fraction of the overall student body.

Adequate and diversified investment in AI education is also essential. Federal funding can helpclose accessibility gapsbetween states. To that end, Congress can appropriate funding for states to provide public K-12 students with AI experiential learning opportunities and K-12 educators with the required training and support. State and local governments can also fund teacher training initiatives to encourage more educators to become certified in computer science or offer ongoing professional development. Concurrently, funding from nonprofit and private sectors can complement federal, state-level and local investments.

Ultimately, successful AI education implementation and adoption will be a national endeavor requiring participation from federal, state and local governments, as well as nonprofits, academia and industry. Coordination within the education ecosystem will help to spur ideas and initiatives.

For those touting U.S. innovation as a competitive strength vis--vis China, it should be nothing less.

KaylaGoodeis a research analyst at Georgetown Universitys Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), where she works on the CyberAI Project.

Dahlia Peterson is a research analyst at Georgetown Universitys Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET). Follow her on Twitter@dahlialpeterson.

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