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OK, I admit, a major change of discussion here, but related to the collection of personal data...

OpEd: The race to build a better internet " before it's too late
www.nbcnews.com

... It sure looks like the people at these major data-hoarding companies have optimized their algorithms to do just that.

As a new book argues, Big Tech appears to have perfected a model that has created rhetorical paralysis.

Using our own data against us to create dopamine triggers, tech platforms have created "a state of perpetual disagreement across the divide and a concurrent state of perpetual agreement within each side," authors Frank McCourt and Michael Casey write, adding: "Once this uneasy state of divisive 'equilibrium' is established, it creates profit-making opportunities for the platforms to generate revenue from advertisers who prize the sticky highly engaged audiences it generates." ...

[emphasis mine]

Wow, aside from the run-on sentence, imo, a good opinion.


@#163 ... Quite frankly, I've little concern about how these various trials affect fmr Pres Trump from a voter perspective. ...

Yet, the articles your current alias seems post to substantiate its opinion have that "public opinion" slant to them.

... The lines between legal and public opinion are being blurred. It's an election year. ...

I do not disagree.

But Law and Order has to be the rule in this case.

Otherwise, what is the result?

An occupant of the Oval Office who says that he can direct the head of the DoJ to prosecute anyone he wants to prosecute?

Trump pledges to direct completely overhauled DOJ' to probe DAs and AGs (October 2023)
thehill.com

... Former President Trump pledged Sunday to direct the Department of Justice (DOJ), should he be elected president in 2024, to probe "radical" attorneys general (AG) and district attorneys (DA) and stressed his plan to "completely overhaul" the department.

In a speech to supporters in Iowa, Trump said he would specifically target officials who are practicing "reverse" racism.

"To stop the Marxist prosecutors who release rapists and murderers while persecuting Republicans, conservatives and people of faith like you," he said, "I will direct a completely overhauled DOJ to investigate every radical DA and AG in America for their illegal, racist-in-reverse, enforcement of the law."

Trump also pledged to create a "Truth and Reconciliation Commission," which he said will "shed some light on every dark and rotten corner of Washington, D.C., starting with crooked Joe Biden," adding, "and now we could really do that because they've led the path, what they're doing is so bad to this country."

Trump has frequently threatened to investigate officials whom he claims are corrupt or whom he claims are targeting him for political purposes. He has also outlined plans to limit the bureaucratic guardrails and increase the president's authority and power to direct independent agencies as he sees fit. ...



More from the article...

... The US Department of Agriculture this week posted an unpublished version of its genetic analysis into the spillover and spread of bird flu into US dairy cattle, offering the most complete look yet at the data state and federal investigators have amassed in the unexpected and worrisome outbreak -- and what it might mean.

The preprint analysis provides several significant insights into the outbreak -- from when it may have actually started, just how much transmission we're missing, stunning unknowns about the only human infection linked to the outbreak, and how much the virus continues to evolve in cows. The information is critical as flu experts fear the outbreak is heightening the ever-present risk that this wily flu virus will evolve to spread among humans and spark a pandemic. ...

But another big finding from the preprint is how many gaps still exist in our current understanding of the outbreak. To date, the USDA has identified 36 herds in nine states that have been infected with H5N1. The good news from the genetic analysis is that the USDA can draw lines connecting most of them. USDA researchers reported that "direct movement of cattle based upon production practices" seems to explain how H5N1 hopped from the Texas panhandle region"where the initial spillover is thought to have occurred -- to nine other states, some as far-flung as North Carolina, Michigan, and Idaho. ...

Putative transmission pathways of HPAI H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b genotype B3.13 supported by epidemiological links, animal movements, and genomic analysis.

The bad news is that those lines connecting the herds aren't solid. There are gaps in which the genetic data suggests unidentified transmission occurred, maybe in unsampled cows, maybe in other animals entirely. The genetic data is clear that once this strain of bird flu"H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4 genotype B3.13 -- hopped into cattle, it could readily spread to other mammals. The genetic data links viruses from cattle moving many times into other animals: There were five cattle-to-poultry jumps, one cattle-to-raccoon transmission, two events where the virus moved from cattle to domestic cats, and three times when the virus from cattle spilled back into wild birds.

"We cannot exclude the possibility that this genotype is circulating in unsampled locations and hosts as the existing analysis suggests that data are missing and undersurveillance may obscure transmission inferred using phylogenetic methods," the USDA researchers wrote in their preprint. ...



"1. Claiming the "other crimes" had to be listed on the indictment"

I provided a government link that says pretty much that. And the guideline/clarification is tied to 6A.

"2. Claiming Braggs didn't have the authority to charge "other crimes""

He doesn't have the authority to charge FEDERAL crimes.

"3. Implying since it was a federal election Bragg didn't have a case"

IF the furtherance of the "other crime" was a federal election violation than Bragg absolutely doesn't have a case.

"4. Claiming that the "other crimes" is a due process issue"

It absolutely is. Whether the "other crime" was committed or intended to be committed, it has to be proven beyond reasonable doubt in a court of law.

"5. Implying the length of time since the crimes is somehow political despite a. Shitler being president and thus not able to be indicted for 4 years, b. Shitler delaying tactics and the charge having been filed last year"

What I believe, based upon what I've watched unfold, is that the timing of when these cases are being brought is political and coordinated. I ALSO said, that while the timing sure as hell looks political, that doesn't mean the cases themselves, this particular one notwithstanding, are bogus based on legal merits.

"6. Implying the legality of NDAs has anything to do with this case."

I pointed out that NDA's are legal. That's it.

Your reading comprehension is terrible. I guess your abject hatred of me clouds your ability to accurately read what is actually written and what is being conveyed.

Another view...

Trump Campaign Talks Up Prospects of Flipping Two States to GOP
www.bnnbloomberg.ca

In both of these instances, there is that pesky "margin of error" aspect.

In other words, individual polls are meaningless at this point.

But the trend they may show is more significant.

Unfortunately, the trend also seems to be wallowed in the murkiness of Margin of Error.

Oh well...



Immigration and DACA: The impact on first responder hiring (2017)
www.firerescue1.com

... In early September, the Trump administration announced plans to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. The policy was originally introduced in 2012 by the Obama administration.

In short, the policy has made it possible for nearly 800,000 immigrant children, known as dreamers, to live in the U.S. without fear of deportation. After plans were announced to end the program, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stopped processing DACA applications.

But not all dreamers are children " some are now adults after arriving in the United States at a young age. In Houston, paramedic Jesus Contreras, who came to the U.S. when he was six years old, credits DACA for allowing him to earn his paramedic certification at a community college.

Contreras said he's now worried he won't be able to work if he loses his DACA recipient status. Which, in turn, begs the question: how does the halt of DACA impact first responder hiring? Additionally, what does it mean for those who are already first responders, such as Contreras?
First responder hiring and DACA

Fully staffing police, fire and EMS departments can be a challenge. Adding in the DACA reversal, it may present issues from the top down.

While most police departments require U.S. citizenship, the ability to hire DACA recipients as law enforcement officers varies state by state, according to the Immigrant and Refugee Center.

"The law forbids many employers from discriminating based on different factors, including national origin. There are exceptions to this general rule, particularly when the work deals with issues of national security," the Immigrant and Refugee Center said. "Different states may also have enacted legislations that require U.S. Citizenship for law enforcement officers." ...



Wow, unexpectedly, the lyrics of the song caught my attention.

Alfred Ely Beach
en.wikipedia.org

... Alfred Ely Beach (September 1, 1826 -- January 1, 1896) was an American inventor, entrepreneur, publisher, and patent lawyer, born in Springfield, Massachusetts.

He is known for his design of the earliest predecessor to the New York City Subway, the Beach Pneumatic Transit, which became the first subway in America.[1]

He was an early owner and cofounder of Scientific American and Munn & Co., the country's leading patent agency, and helped secure patents for Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and other innovators.[2] A member of the Union League of New York, he also invented a typewriter for the blind and a system for heating water with solar power.[3] ...


Wow.


Who knew?

And, would write a song about him...


Speaking of NYC...

Klaatu - Sub-Rosa Subway (1976)
www.youtube.com

Lyrics excerpt...

genius.com

...
Back in 1870
Just beneath the Great White Way
Alfred Beach worked secretly
Risking all to ride a dream
His wind machine
His wind machine

New York City and the morning sun
Were awoken by the strangest sound
Reportedly as far as Washington
The tremors shook the earth as Alfie
Blew underground
Blew underground
He blew underground

Ahh, all aboard sub-rosa subway
Had you wondered who's been digging under Broadway?
It's Alfred
It's Alfred
It's Alfred
Poor Al, oh no, Al

As for America's first subway
The public scoffed, "it's far too rude"
One station filled with Victoria's age
From frescoed walls and goldfish fountains
...


@#57 ... Time to tax the living F out of them!
Eff them all! ...

I disagree.

www.archives.gov

... This case presented a major issue that challenged the Constitution: Does the Federal Government hold sovereign power over states? The proceedings posed two questions: Does the Constitution give Congress power to create a bank? And could individual states ban or tax the bank? The court decided that the Federal Government had the right and power to set up a Federal bank and that states did not have the power to tax the Federal Government.

Marshall ruled in favor of the Federal Government and concluded, "the power to tax involves the power to destroy." ...

[emphasis mine]


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