50 of the Most Anticipated Books of 2020: Critical Linking, December 22, 2019 – Book Riot

Critical Linking, a daily roundup of the most interesting bookish links from around the web, is sponsored by the Read Harder Journal, a reading log for tracking your books and reading outside your comfort zone!

It wasnt easy narrowing down next years list of buzzy titles to just 50, so trust that this is going to be a great reading year. Here are the books were most excited for, from major novels to fascinating memoirs to a Jim Carrey book were struggling to explain. And click the release dates on each slide to make all the pre-orders your heart desires.

New year, new books!

It is all therelife, not just in the American South but this American life, periodwaiting for you to take the ride, the heartbreaking and brave journey that is Marguerite Johnsons young life. Ahead of its publication, James Baldwin said Caged Bird liberates the reader into life simply because Maya Angelou confronts her own life with such a moving wonder, such a luminous dignity. I have no words for this achievement, but I know that not since the days of my childhood, when the people in books were more real than the people one saw every day, have I found myself so moved.Her portrait is a biblical study in life in the midst of death.'

How I Know Why the Caged Bird Singssparked a literary revolution.

A lot has changed over the course of the last 10 years, yall. The 2010s kicked off with the WikiLeaks scandal, and ended with the arrest of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange earlier this year. Netflix and Hulu had only just begun to stream in 2010, and now we live in a world in which premium cable networks have their own, separate streaming services. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down DOMA in 2013, paving the way for the Court to legalize marriages for similar-gender couples midway through the decade. All thats just a brief sampling of all the ways our lives have changed this decade.

The best books of the decade according to debut authors, and I still cant believe its almost 2020.

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50 of the Most Anticipated Books of 2020: Critical Linking, December 22, 2019 - Book Riot

2019 Kept It Weird – wgbh.org

2019 was a weird year.

You know who had a weird year? Volodomyr Zelensky. When this Ukrainian standup comic got elected president of his country, I bet he probably thought, "Okay, this is pretty weird." I also bet he had absolutely zero idea how weird 2019 was going to get as he and his entire former Soviet nation got sucked into the vortex of impeachment proceedings in Washington, D.C., where he would play a role in the fate of another entertainer in high public office.

The thing is, the weird isn't just radiating out from circles of power across the globe. It's everywhere. I mean, even the animals are getting involved. Example: our No. 1 story of the year was about a group of snakes at the New England Aquarium that managed to produce baby snakes... without the involvement of any male snakes.

Supernatural? No. There's a scientific explanation for it. Weird? Absolutely.

It also led to the following A+ tweet, which I truly wish I'd written myself:

The snakes weren't the only critters doing it for themselves. Consider, for example, Miguel Wattson, the electric eel who decided to switch careers and get into the booming field of home electronics. Here he is lighting up a Christmas tree all by himself. Does this count as green power?

Yaks in Western Mass. decided they'd had it and rushed a couple of hikers. Really, that velcro noise IS annoying, who can blame them.

That said, it was also a year of inter-species peace and harmony, at least when it comes to yoga classes. You can get cat yoga, baby goat yoga, and just in time for the holidays, reindeer yoga.

None of this cross-species namaste did anything for Julian Assange's cat, though. Despite his natty attire, Assange's feline ended up getting evicted from his home in the Ecuadorian embassy after complaints that Assange was a lousy roommate that didn't clean up after himself.

Crime was also weird in 2019. Consider, for example, the daring hijack theft of... gold? Bitcoin? Pharmaceuticals? Pricey electronics? Nope, thieves in Miami boosted $2 million worth of Spanx-like silhouette smoothing undergarments and got away with it. A bank robber from East Boston could have benefited from a consult with his Miami colleagues: they might have told him that an MBTA bus was probably a bad choice of getaway vehicle. Actually, anybody in Boston could tell you that the MBTA is a bad getaway vehicle, except perhaps for Gov. Charlie Baker, who has only ridden the T once.

The weirdness of everything in 2019 can just get exhausting. The mental effort involved in the ongoing "Onion article? Actual news?" calculus just seems to get harder all the time. Like, why did Irish vandals steal only a mummy's head? It's enough to make you just want to stop for a snack, which is what a fugitive wanted for murder did at the Ben and Jerry's in Harvard Square. He got arrested. No word on his favorite flavor.

As 2019 wore on, we did see some encouraging signs that we might be pulling back from the gravitational pull of Planet Weird. For instance, some cities floated the idea of changing the date of Halloween trick-or-treating, but many, like Worcester, Mass., came to their senses and left it where it belongs: on October 31. Residents of Fall River, Mass., re-elected Mayor Jasiel Correia even though he was under indictment for fraud charges, but then refrained from doubling down when new charges were added to the pile. They now have a new mayor-elect, who isn't actually under indictment for anything at all.

The pendulum of balance appeared to be swinging back on other fronts, as well. The Supreme Court decided not to hear a case on whether it's okay to have laws against sleeping in public, or a car, pulling the country back from the weird idea that we can solve the problem of homelessness by simply moving homeless people around. Notre Dame burned, but efforts began to restore its glory. Boston struggled through the spectacle of Straight Pride, but the city ended the year announcing that a former middle school would become the city's first elder housing specifically for LGBTQ people. When the development's new residents emerge from the building into the streets of Hyde Park, they can complain about the death of the double cup at Dunks, just normal residents doing their normal thing on a normal day in their neighborhood in America.

Farewell, 2019. It's been weird.

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2019 Kept It Weird - wgbh.org

2019: The Year in Pictures – Daily Maverick

President Donald Trump exits a press conference on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly on September 25, 2019 in New York City. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announced yesterday that the House will launch a formal impeachment inquiry into President Trump. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

January: Polar vortex brings extreme cold temperatures

February: Creative visionary Karl Lagerfeld dies at age 85

Lady Gaga wins Best Original Song for Shallow at 91st Academy Awards

April: Scientists capture the first image of the black hole

Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris catches ablaze

Wikileaks Julian Assange is arrested by Scotland Yard

Kim Jon Un shakes hands with Vladimir Putin

May: Cyril Ramaphosa is elected President of South Africa

Taiwan becomes the first nation in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage

Theresa May announces her resignation

Formula 1 race car driver, Niki Laude, dies at 70

Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, son of Prince Harry, Duke ofSussex, and Meghan, Duchess ofSussex is born

June: Anti-government protesters march in Hong Kong

July: Boris Johnson becomes UK Prime Minister after being elected Tory leader

USA wins FIFA Womens World Cup Trophy

The climate crisis continues as the Sahara heat wave sends temperatures to record levels

August: 50 years ago, the iconic Abbey Road photograph was made

September: President Donald Trumps wall is used as a platform for protest art

October: At 22, Simone Biles is the most decorated artistic gymnast of all time, men and women combined

November: The South African Springboks win the Rugby World Cup in Japan

December: Zozibini Tunzi is crowned Miss Universe 2019

December: TIME and Daily Mavericks Our Burning Planet name climate activist Greta Thunberg as Person of the Year

December: South African-directed documentary, Influence, is selected to compete at Sundance Film Festival in 2020

December: Disney Plus releases Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Baby Yoda forces his way through the internet

President Donald J Trump becomes the third president of the United States to be impeached

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2019: The Year in Pictures - Daily Maverick

CMSWire’s Top 10 AI and Machine Learning Articles of 2019 – CMSWire

PHOTO: tiffany terry

Would you believe me if I told you artificial intelligence (AI) wrote this article?

With 2020 on the horizon, and with all the progress made in AI and machine learning (ML) already, it probably wouldnt surprise you if that were indeed the case which is bad news for writers like me (or not).

As we transition into a new year, its worth noting that 73% of global consumers say they are open to businesses using AI if it makes life easier, and 83% of businesses say that AI is a strategic priority for their businesses already. If thats not a recipe for even more progress in 2020 and beyond, then my name isnt CMSWire-Bot-927.

Today, were looking back at the AI and ML articles which resonated with CMSWire's audience in 2019. Strap yourself in, because this list is about to blast you into the future.

ML and, more broadly, AI have become the tech industry's most important trends over the past 18 months. And despite the hype and, to some extent, fear surrounding the technology, many businesses are now embracing AI at an impressive speed.

Despite this progress, many of the pilot schemes are still highly experimental, and some organizations are struggling to understand how they can really embrace the technology.

As the business world grapples with the potential of AI and machine learning, new ethical challenges arise on a regular basis related to its use.

One area where tensions are being played out is in talent management: a struggle between relying on human expertise or in deferring decisions to machines so as to better understand employee needs, skills and career potential.

Marketing technology has evolved rapidly over the past decade, with one of the most exciting developments being the creation of publicly-available, cost-effective cognitive APIs by companies like Microsoft, IBM, Alphabet, Amazon and others. These APIs make it possible for businesses and organizations to tap into AI and ML technology for both customer-facing solutions as well as internal operations.

The workplace chatbots are coming! The workplace chatbots are coming!

OK, well, theyre already here. And in a few years, there will be even more. According to Gartner, by 2021 the daily use ofvirtual assistants in the workplacewill climb to 25%. That will be up from less than 2% this year.Gartneralso identified a workplace chatbot landscape of more than 1,000 vendors, so choosing a workplace chatbot wont be easy. IT leaders need to determine the capabilities they need from such a platform in the short term and select a vendor on that basis, according to Gartner.

High-quality metadata plays an outsized role in improving enterprise search results. But convincing people to consistently apply quality metadata has been an uphill battle for most companies. One solution that has been around for a long time now is to automate metadata's creation, using rules-based content auto-classification products.

Although enterprise interest in bots seems to be at an all-time high,Gartner reports that 68%of customer service leaders believe bots and virtual assistants will become even more important in the next two years. As bots are called upon to perform a greater range of tasks, chatbots will increasingly rely on back-office bots to find information and complete transactions on behalf of customers.

If digital workplaces are being disrupted by the ongoing development of AI driven apps, by 2021 those disruptors could end up in their turn being disrupted. The emergence of a new form of AI, or a second wave of AI, known as augmented AI is so significant Gartner predicts that by 2021 it will be creating up to $2.9 trillion of business value and 6.2 billion hours of worker productivity globally.

AI and ML took center stage at IBM Think this year, the shows major AI announcements served as a reminder that the company has some of the most differentiated and competitive services for implementing AI in enterprise operational processes in the market. But if Big Blue is to win the AI race against AWS, Microsoft and Google Cloud in 2019 and beyond, it must improve its developer strategy and strengthen its communications, especially in areas such as trusted AI and governance

Sentiment analysis is the kind of tool a marketer dreams about. By gauging the publics opinion of an event or product through analysis of data on a scale no human could achieve, it gives your team the ability to figure out what people really think. Backed by a growing body of innovative research, sentiment-analysis tools have the ability to dramatically improve your ROI yet many companies are overlooking it.

Pop quiz: Can you define the differences between AI and automation?

I wont judge you if the answer is no. There's a blurry line between AI and automation, with the terms often used interchangeably, even in tech-forward professions. But there's a very real difference between the two and its one thats becoming evermore critical for organizations to understand.

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CMSWire's Top 10 AI and Machine Learning Articles of 2019 - CMSWire

The Value of Machine-Driven Initiatives for K12 Schools – EdTech Magazine: Focus on Higher Education

K12 schools and districts are using artificial intelligence, specifically machine learning, to address a range of needs, from infrastructure efficiencies to targeted academic interventions.

Self-learning machines and intelligent algorithms can detect the signs of students vaping on campus or spikes of noise that might indicate a violent incident. AI-driven innovations can collect and analyze data on HVAC usage to help administrators identify inefficiencies. And those are just a few examples. Such evolving technologies promise plenty of benefits for K12 education.

So, what is machine learning? Machine learning algorithms use statistics to find patterns in massive amounts of data, according to the MIT Technology Review.

A key benefit of intelligent algorithms: detecting patterns in vast data sets that frustrate human efforts. Advanced machine learning tools now leverage human-inspired deep neural networks to deliver both pattern recognition and behavioral prediction, while AI solutions are designed to mimic human decision-making based on available data.

In K12 education, machine learning tools enable collating and correlating student performance, and then identifying key indicators that suggest the need for specific teacher or administrative support. Administrators also have to navigate the privacy and security concerns surrounding AI-driven deployments a growing challenge as the use of Big Data in education becomes more commonplace and districts fleets of digitally connected classroom devices expand.

Theres also more to machine learning than classroom data collection.

MORE FROM EDTECH: How K12 Schools have adopted artificial intelligence.

Many institutions now use machine learning to search for patterns and sift through operational IT data, says Mohan Rajagopalan, senior director of product management for Splunk. Doing so, he says, empowers them to detect anomalies, such as deviation from past behaviors indicating machine or network failures, or unusual changes in access patterns indicating potential security issues that may arise, allowing IT staff to forecast usage trends and assist in capacity planning.

That data analysis is beneficial to K12 schools running on last-generation network technology while simultaneously managing one-to-one computing initiatives. Having the ability to predict potential downtime and understand student use trends can help administrators more effectively track technology spending and security. Machine learning leaders such as Splunk have already helped school districts prevent network outages and reduce their mean time to investigate and repair IT issues.

MORE FROM EDTECH: Teachers are turning to AI solutions for assistance.

Education has a tech talent shortage. Thats no surprise: K12 schools often cant offer competitive salaries, and many districts are located outside of large urban areas, making it harder to recruit from an already-limited talent pool. The result? Local teams are on the hook to run enterprise-scale networks with skeleton crews.

Institutions can leverage intelligent algorithms to supplement and augment human operators, Rajagopalan notes. For schools, these solutions offer a way to do more with less by enhancing the efficacy of smaller IT teams tasked with servicing technology solutions at scale, implementing data-first security features that prioritize student privacy and supporting both in-house and BYOD deployments.

Machine learning integration offers key IT infrastructure benefits, Rajagopalan says, including:

MORE FROM EDTECH: Assessment innovation in K12 levels the playing field for students.

Effective school environments extend past classrooms, teachers and learning technologies to the basic building infrastructure. For example, sudden HVAC failure could cause building temperatures to plunge or skyrocket, forcing temporary closures or class relocation. Inefficient devices can also negatively impact school budgets if districts overspend on maintenance or replacement, draining funds that could be used for new computing technologies such as virtual reality assets or cloud-based assessments.

Technology companies such as Microsoft already are leveraging machine learning to reduce climate control costs and improve employee comfort. But recent research suggests schools by virtue of their not-for-profit approach often overlook cost-effective investments in energy efficiency.

The sheer amount of data that facility control systems and sensors generate provides the necessary foundation for machine learning to automatically look for failures and resolution, Rajagopalan says. He points to the example of machine failure due to overheating: If school facility managers received alerts of air conditioning units overheating based on current ambient temperature and usage patterns, they could temporarily shut down the units for repairs, reducing the need for costly replacement.

Despite the mind-boggling potential for machine learning, Rajagopalan says, the recipe for success lies not in developing more technology but in being able to successfully align technology with specific use cases and user needs.

For K12 schools, that means the application of machine learning and AI isnt about speed or scale, but specificity. From identifying IT patterns to bridging the tech talent shortage or avoiding costly failures, machine learning applied to solve specific challenges can help school districts maximize their digital strategy investments.

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The Value of Machine-Driven Initiatives for K12 Schools - EdTech Magazine: Focus on Higher Education

Ten Predictions for AI and Machine Learning in 2020 – Database Trends and Applications

In 2019 artificial intelligence and machine learning continued its upward trajectory in the market, promising to change the future as we know it. To help support data management processes and decision making, artificial and augmented intelligence is being infused into products and services.

Machine learning sits in the center of all AI conversations, as combining machine learning with AI and cognitive technologies can make it even more effective in processing large volumes of information. Both technologies can lead to automation of tasks inside and outside the enterprise-another subject that promises to make waves in the future. Here, executives of leading companies offer 10 predictions for what's ahead in 2020.

The Rise of the AI-enabled Business Analyst; AI is No Longer for the Precious Few ML Experts and Data Scientists: Businesses have been working to break through the logjam of AI projects that have been back-burned in the face of machine learning skills shortages. However, were seeing the real world reach of AI expand with more companies looking at ways to foster collaboration, gain economies of scale and accelerate their AI paths from concept to production with maturing tools. AI is no longer for the small minority of machine learning experts and data scientists. With data at their core, business analysts are also eager for a slice of the pie. With AI and ML tools at their disposal, the skills of business analysts are expanding towards data science to explore insights from more diverse and richer data sets through the use of machine learning. Technology and automated machine learning techniques will begin shifting the use of data and AI to a greater proportion of a companys business analysts. The demand for these skills are also starting to shape higher-ed curriculums to contend with this new wave of expectations. - Per Nyberg, chief commercial officer, Stradigi AI

ML gets operationalized: Companies adopt best practices to operationalize machine learning and go-live in production for mission-critical processes. Silos will be broken and multi-disciplinary will teams emerge with data engineers, application developers, data scientists, and subject-matter experts. Companies will kill the data lake process and start focusing on applications. New tools to track data science workflow will become the standard (e.g., MLFLow) and new comprehensive data platforms kill the Lambda Architecture.- Monte Zweben, CEO, Splice Machine

AI with Focus: There will be a shift to narrow AI that focuses on a single problem within an industry. Broad AI providers that promise to do everything AI will diminish as more narrowed and expert-level solutions will be offered. The new offerings will produce tangible value for companies as others scramble to keep up. - Vance, director of AI, data science and emerging technology, TD Ameritrade.

Object Storage will be Key to Processing AI and ML Workloads: As data volumes continue to explode, one of the key challenges is how to get the full strategic value of this data. In 2020, we will see a growing number of organizations capitalizing on object storage to create structured/tagged data from unstructured data, allowing metadata to be used to make sense of the tsunami of data generated by AI and ML workloads.While traditional file storage defines data with limited metadata tags (file name, date created, date last modified, etc.) and organizes it into different folders, object storage defines data with unconstrained types of metadata and locates it all from a single API, searchable and easy to analyze. - Jon Toor, CMO, Cloudian

AI is becomes a standard technique: Between random forests, linear regression, and other search patterns, AI has become a standard technique. AI, like standard numeric techniques, is best done with compute close to data. This means the techniques of big data (separating compute and data) are a poor choice just like they were for a majority of analytics. Running AI as code on a compute grid, or within your database, does not allow the kinds of optimizations that an AI framework, or an AI-centric query system can provide. In 5 years, well wonder why custom code lasted so long in the AI space. - Brian Bulkowski, CTO, Yellowbrick Data

AI/ML will overcome challenges related to stream processing: To achieve low latency stream processing and high throughput at scale and in real-time, AI models and applications must be iterative and responsive to change. 44% of IT decision-makers find it extremely difficult to manage advances in technology speed, a recent Hazelcast survey found. The marriage of stream processing and AI will enable companies dealing with a massive volume of real-time events to generate immediate value from their data, opening up more opportunities for innovation. It will also allow developers to more quickly identify anomalies, respond to events or publish events in a data repository for storage and historical analyses, ultimately impacting business outcomes. - John DesJardins, VP of solution architecture & CTO, Hazelcast

The next wave of digital transformation will be led by AI modeling and natural language processing: As of 2019, AI modelling and language processing technologies are robust but not packaged accessibly enough to everyone that could make use of it. When everyone from business analysts to data scientists begin to have full accessibility, then real improvements will rapidly accelerate. Its not about coding the future is now about how abilities are packaged to transfer skills and enable people to get moving faster - Alan Jacobson, chief data and analytics officer, Alteryx

AI will go from identifying trends to making intelligent decisions: AI will begin to drive real-world productivity across all aspects of business in 2020. As companies start using AI to gain deeper insights and understand trends, the technology will lead to more prescriptive actions and further automation of tasks. As AI continues to improve, we will see AI taking automatic actions that are intelligent. As humans become more familiar with this newfound intelligence, they will remove themselves from the equation, and businesses will benefit from greater productivity gains. For example, right now AI can predict when a printer needs a new toner cartridge, but taking a step further, AI can order the toner before it runs out, creating a seamless experience. - Dave Wright, chief innovation officer, ServiceNow

AI can tackle climate change: Climate change may be the biggest challenge of our time. And it will continue to be a significant topic of discussion in the year ahead. A challenge this big and literally Earth-changing calls on humanity to use every tool at our disposal to address it. Artificial intelligence can play a critical role on this front. AI can contribute to everything from CO2 removal to creating more energy-efficient buildings and optimizing energy production. It can also enable better climate predictions, better illustrate the effects of extreme weather and track the sources of pollution. - Asheesh Mehra, CEO, AntWorks

AI Knowledge Graphs will Debunk Fake News:Knowledge Graphs in combination with deep learning will be used to identify photos and video that have been altered by superimposing existing images and videos onto source images. Machine learning knowledge graphs will also unveil the origin of digital information that has been published by a foreign source. Media outlets and social networks will use AI Knowledge Graphs as a tool to determine whether to publish information or remove it. - Dr. Jans Aasman, CEO ofFranz, Inc.

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Ten Predictions for AI and Machine Learning in 2020 - Database Trends and Applications

Letters to the Editor: Dec. 24, 2019 – TCPalm

Inviting Russia back to G8 seems likegood idea

Harvey Glatt, in his Dec. 14 letter, writes, "But (Vladimir) Putin, since Russia's membership (in the G8)was suspended, has stepped up both his aggression in Ukraine and his efforts to undermine democratic nations, including the United States."

He follows up with the complaint that President Donald Trump and U.S. Rep. Brian Mast voted to allow Russia back into the G7 summit. Since exclusion, by Glatts own admission, is not working, allowing Russia back seems like a good idea. The adage of "keep your friends close and your enemies closer" would seem to apply.

President Barack Obama was cowardly and incapable of facing anyone down. He only bowed and pandered to the world, while demeaning the United States. He did nothing when Russia invaded Crimea, and sent "blankets" to help Ukraine protect themselves from a Russian invasion.

I hardly think trying to isolate Russia is going to accomplish anything except to encourage them to partner up with China It's hard to negotiate anything when you aren't willing to talk.

So kudos to Trump and Mast for their courage and reason in leaving the door open.

Maureen Cotter, Vero Beach

Chelsea Manning during A Conversation with Chelsea Manning at Bard College, Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts in Annandale-on-Hudson on Wednesday, February 21, 2018. Manning was convicted of leaking more than 700,000 classified documents, including battlefield reports on Iraq and Afghanistan and State Department cables, while working as an Army intelligence analyst in Iraq. She has said the leaks were intended to expose wrongdoing.(Photo: John Meore/Poughkeepsie Journal)

Presidential clemency in history

David Horsmans snarky Dec. 15 letter decrying interference by "President Bone Spurs in the military justice system displays a woeful ignorance of presidential clemency involving U.S. military personnel.

President AbrahamLincoln, who did not serve, issued more than 60 pardons for military-related crimes before being assassinated. His successor, Andrew Johnson, granted clemency to many thousands of Confederate troops Christmas Day1868.

More recently, President Bill Clinton, who did not serve, granted posthumous clemency to Henry Flipper, the first black graduate of West Point, found guilty of embezzlement but dishonorably dismissed from the Army. President Jimmy Carter granted amnesty to many thousands of draft-dodgers from the Vietnam era.

President Barack Obama, who did not serve, commuted the 35-year sentence of Chelsea Manning, who had pled guilty to espionage, freeing the former Army intelligence specialist decades before her scheduled release date of 2045. I must have missed Horsmans letter on that one.

Jim Trout, Sebastian

I wonder why people who stop for a red light stop four car lengths behind the car in front of them.

When the light changes to green, it takes much more time to move through the intersection before the light changes to red again. I am confused as to why so many people think that is a good idea.

Barbara Beach, Stuart

A Dec. 11 Opinion piece about the Listen First Project recommends we listen to one another, particularly in matters of political discussion.

Thats difficult.

When, in a discussion, topics such asMedicare for all, free college tuition, forgiveness of college loans, welfare and driver licenses for non-citizens, etc., come up, and are challenged, you'll get, Well both sides do that; both sides make promises.

Asked for an example from the other side, the person calls you a name, refuses to argue whenin fact you were hoping for a discussion. We see examples of this every day.

This has gradually become the modus operandi of today's Democratic Party. It is not your father's or even grandfather's party. It is not the party of JFK, who famously said, Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.

Today, that party has as one of its more prominent spokespersons Bernie Sanders, who says he's calling for socialism, but claims not to be looking at Cuba or Venezuela, but Denmark and Sweden.

The first two are socialist, the second two are not. (Actually, some Scandinavian countries that did try socialism years ago have since privatized industries and repealed regulations.) Denmark's prime minister recently refuted Sanders statement with, Denmark is far from a socialist planned economy. In fact, in economic freedom Scandinavia is near the top. Their emphasis is on self-reliance and hard work.

Socialism crushes freedom as seen in Venezuela and Cuba. It is a system of ownership of the means of production and distribution by government, not individuals. Obviously, as our Constitution is based upon individual rights, it would have to be repealed or revoked by pen or sword to become our system here in the United States.

Audrey Taggart, Hobe Sound

The Dec. 16 letter from teacher Lynn Nissen was well articulated with regard to defining the elements involved in the dissemination of learning to students. In simple terms, teaching involves a behavioral technology designed to stimulate the brain to be receptive to the transmission of important lifelong information.

Indeed, it is not the responsibility of a teacher to function as a social worker, keeping antisocial behaviors from distracting from the learning process. That is the responsibility of educationally trained social workers, who ideally would function as guidance counselors or behavioral therapists.

Unfortunately the current composition of many families does not meet the standards of "the nuclear family. The concepts of single-parent households, dual-wage earners, divorce, and other situations often place an overwhelming and stress-laden burden on supervisory parenting.

When this deficiency manifests, mayhem, physical injury and gunshots may permeate the classroom.

Ultimately, it is the responsibility of local school boards along with the FloridaBoard of Education to meet and address this situation. Parents and teachers must understand their designated roles and join together to create the positive classroom atmosphere. Hopefully when each participant fulfills their obligatory duties the educational process shall be enhanced.

Gary S. Weiner, Port St. Lucie

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Letters to the Editor: Dec. 24, 2019 - TCPalm

The 20 Top Stories On NPR In 2019 – KRWG

Surprise, anger, parenting and Lizzo: That's one way to sum up NPR's list of our most engaging stories in 2019, as those themes drew a huge amount of interest from our readers this year. Other big topics included consumerism and climate change and officials behaving badly.

People often linger for several minutes on these popular pages. Collectively, NPR's readers spent the equivalent of more than 35 years' worth of time reading our top five stories. The top draw was a story about how to help kids handle anger; altogether, readers spent nearly 16 years' worth of time reading that report.

1. How Inuit Parents Teach Kids To Control Their Anger

At the top of the world, the Inuit culture has developed a sophisticated way to sculpt kids' behavior without yelling or scolding. Could discipline actually be playful?

2. American With No Medical Training Ran Center For Malnourished Ugandan Kids. 105 DiedWhen she was 19, Renee Bach founded a charity that went on to care for more than 900 severely malnourished babies and children. Now she is being sued by two of the mothers whose children died.

3. 'The Best Thing You Can Do Is Not Buy More Stuff,' Says 'Secondhand' Expert"Your average thrift store in the United States only sells about one-third of the stuff that ends up on its shelves," Adam Minter says. His book explores what happens to the things that don't sell.

4. U.S. Charges Dozens Of Parents, Coaches In Massive College Admissions ScandalActresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin are among 33 parents who paid large sums of money to cheat admissions standards at prestigious schools, federal prosecutors say.

5. Trump Tweets Sensitive Surveillance Image Of IranThe tweet had experts picking up their jaws from the floor when they saw a photo of an Iranian space facility an image that was almost certainly taken by a classified satellite or drone.

6. The Mysterious Death Of The Hacker Who Turned In Chelsea Manning

Adrian Lamo was a hero in the hacker community for years. Everything changed when he began exchanging messages with U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning.

7. FACT CHECK: Trump's State Of The Union AddressNPR reporters provided context and analysis in real time as President Trump delivered the annual speech to Congress: "Remarkably, President Trump did not acknowledge the new power dynamic in Washington."

8. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Releases Green New Deal Outline"Even the solutions that we have considered big and bold are nowhere near the scale of the actual problem that climate change presents to us," Ocasio-Cortez said.

9. 'Game Of Thrones' Season 8, Episode 5: 'Let It Be Fear'In the series' penultimate episode, the quality of mercy gets seriously strained. And stabbed. And set aflame. And razed. And several characters meet their final fates.

10. NPR's Book ConciergeThe end-of-year Book Concierge recommends more than 350 great reads across 30 genres hand-picked by NPR staff and trusted critics.

In terms of page views, a slightly different list emerges. While some of the top stories are the same, here are the top 10 most-viewed stories that didn't also appear in the above list. All of the pages drew more than 1 million views on NPR's website, not including traffic on other platforms, such as Apple News or Facebook.

1. Lizzo: Tiny Desk Concert

Backed by a band assembled just for this occasion, the breakthrough pop icon performs three joyfully showy songs from Cuz I Love You.

2. Patient With 'Tree Man' Syndrome Says He 'Can Finally Live A Normal Life'The man, who lives in Gaza, has undergone a pioneering treatment by Israeli surgeons for a severe case of this rare condition.

3. Speaker Pelosi Revokes Vice President Pence's House Office SpaceRepublicans had given Pence, a former House member, a first-floor bonus office in the House side of the U.S. Capitol shortly after President Trump was inaugurated.

4. Court Says Using Chalk On Tires For Parking Enforcement Violates ConstitutionA federal appeals court in Michigan cited the Fourth Amendment, which protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures.

5. 'Not One Drop Of Blood': Cattle Mysteriously Mutilated In Oregon

Five young, purebred bulls mysteriously showed up dead on the ranch this past summer, drained of blood and with body parts precisely removed.

6. 3 Indiana Judges Suspended After White Castle Brawl That Left 2 Of Them WoundedA fight apparently started when one of the judges raised a middle finger at two men yelling from a passing SUV. The Indiana Supreme Court found that the three had "gravely undermined public trust."

7. Workers Are Falling Ill, Even Dying, After Making Kitchen CountertopsIrreversible lung disease has started to show up among young workers who cut, grind and polish countertops made of increasingly popular "engineered" stone. The material is more than 90% silica.

8. Taylor Swift: Tiny Desk ConcertAs she settled in for the set at NPR's offices, Taylor Swift looked out over the crowd. "I just decided to take this as an opportunity to show you guys how the songs sounded when I first wrote them."

9. Notre Dame Cathedral Fire Extinguished; Spire Collapsed, Towers Still StandingAs night fell on Paris and the fire continued to burn, people knelt and sang "Ave Maria" as they watched the blaze.

10. Florida Governor Declares State Of Emergency As Hurricane Dorian Gains ForceAs the storm neared, the National Hurricane Center said Dorian's winds could top 115 mph making it a Category 3 storm.

NPR senior manager for digital analytics Christina Macholan contributed to this report.

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The 20 Top Stories On NPR In 2019 - KRWG

These are the top Google searches of the past decade: From Disney Plus to Whitney Houston and the World Cup – Business Insider

captionWhitney Houston.sourceKevork Djansezian/Getty Images

As 2019 and another decade comes to a close, Google has shared the top trending searches of the past 10 years.

These are the people, places, things, and news events that saw the biggest spikes in traffic for a continuous period of time compared to the previous year, providing a glimpse into the topics that dominated the public interest over the past decade.

The 2010s brought the tragic deaths of celebrities like Whitney Houston, Robin Williams, and Paul Walker, major news events included Hurricane Irma and the trial of Casey Anthony, and two FIFA World Cups. Nearly every year, a hurricane dominated the search terms.

Heres a look back at the top 10 trending Google searches from each year of the past decade.

In 2010, Spain won its first FIFA World Cup title by defeating the Netherlands in extra time, becoming the eighth nation to win the tournament. Hundreds of millions of fans watched the 64 matches, which were played across nine cities in South Africa and marked the first time an African country hosted the tournament.

Also that year: A massive trove of classified communications between US diplomats was given to Julian Assanges organization Wikileaks by Chelsea Manning, then a soldier in the US Army. A devastating earthquake left hundreds of thousands dead in Haiti. Chatroulette, a website that randomly connects users in webcam chats, launched and quickly became popular. Former child actor Corey Haim died of pneumonia after struggling with prescription drug abuse.

Top 10 trending searches in 2010:

Following the tragic death of 2-year-old Caylee Anthony in 2008, her mother, Casey, stood trial in what became one of the most widely televised cases of the decade. The nation tuned in for drama-fueled testimony and people literally fought to get into the courtroom to watch live. A jury ultimately found Anthony not guilty of first degree murder in 2011.

Also that year: Image-sharing website Pinterest took off. Google entertained users by letting them search do a barrel roll to make the website do a 360-degree spin and let it snow to blanket the page in snowflakes. Hurricane Irene hit the Caribbean and parts of the eastern United States, leaving dozens dead and causing billions of dollars in damage.

Top 10 trending searches in 2011:

Legendary singer Whitney Houston, the Queen of Pop, died in 2012 at the age of 48. Houston won six Grammy awards and was nominated for 25 for her vocal performances, and remains one of the best-selling artists of all time.

Also that year: Mexican-American Banda singer Jenni Rivera died in a plane crash. 27 people, most of them children, were killed in a mass shooting at Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut.

Top 10 trending searches in 2012:

Actor Paul Walker, best known for his role as Brian OConner in the popular Fast and the Furious movie series, passed away in 2013 in a car crash at age 40. Walkers death prompted an outpouring of support, especially from fellow cast and crew members, who had grown incredibly close over the years.

Also that year: Glee start Cory Monteith died of a drug overdose. The U.S. government temporarily halted most of its operations after Congress failed to approve its budget. Jodi Arias was found guilty of murdering her ex-boyfriend in a trial that became a cable television spectacle.

Top 10 trending searches in 2013:

Academy Award-winning actor and comedian Robin Williams committed suicide in August 2014 at age 63 after struggling with severe depression as well as dementia. Williams starred in a number of well-known films such as Mrs. Doubtfire, Dead Poets Society, Good Will Hunting, and Disneys Aladdin.

Also that year: mobile game Flappy Bird went viral, earning its creator, Dong Nguyen, $50,000 per day before Nguyen abruptly pulled the plug. Protests erupted in Ferguson, Missouri, over law enforcements treatment of African-American residents after police officer Darren Wilson, who is white, fatally shot Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager. Russia controversially invaded and annexed the Crimean peninsula, a region of Ukraine, prompting criticism from the international community.

Top 10 trending searches in 2014:

Two-time NBA Championship winner Lamar Odom was hospitalized after being discovered unconscious in a Nevada brothel in 2015, an incident that left him fighting for his life at the time and dominated the news cycle that year. Odom, who was also previously married to the reality TV star Khloe Kardashian, made headlines more recently for his newly announced engagement to personal trainer Sabrina Parr.

Also that year: Terrorist attacks shocked Paris: attacks in November that killed 130 and injured more than 400, and a shooting in January at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. A mobile game called Agar.io skyrocketed in popularity after Frank Underwood, the main character from Netflixs House of Cards played by Kevin Spacey, was seen playing it in the shows fourth season.

Top 10 trending searches in 2015:

The Powerball jackpot hit a record $1.6 billion in 2016 and went to three lucky winners in Tennessee, California, and Florida. The odds that they would land on all of the winning numbers 4, 8, 19, 27, and 34 as well as Powerball 10 were 1 in 292.2 million.

Also that year: A new take on the classic mobile game Snake called Slither.io topped App Store charts. Most of the years other search trends were dominated by the 2016 US presidential election.

Top 10 trending searches in 2016:

Hurricane Irma was the most powerful storm outside the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean when it hit Florida and the Caribbean in 2017. It reached maximum sustained wind speeds of 185 miles per hour, and maintained that intensity for a record 37 hours.

Also that year: Fidget spinners became the years hottest toy, a rare solar eclipse was visible in parts of the United States, and a gunman opened fire and killed 58 people at a country music festival in Las Vegas.

Top 10 trending searches in 2017:

France emerged as the victor among the 32 countries that competed in the 2018 FIFA World Cup in what has been perceived as being the best tournament yet. France took the coveted title after a landmark match against Croatia, winning by two points.

Also that year: Iconic fashion designer Kate Spade was found dead in her New York City apartment at age 55, renowned chef and TV host Anthony Bourdain died by suicide, the Marvel film Black Panther topped the box office.

Top 10 trending searches in 2018:

Disneys highly-anticipated streaming service debuted in November 2019, offers movies and TV shows from Walt Disney Studios and Walt Disney Television properties for $7 per month. That means you can get classic Disney movies, Pixar films, Marvel content, and more in one app.

Also this year: Cameron Boyce, the Disney channel star known for his role in the TV show Jessie, died at age 20 after suffering an epileptic seizure, and the HBO phenomenon Game of Thrones finally came to an end.

Top 10 trending searches in 2019:

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These are the top Google searches of the past decade: From Disney Plus to Whitney Houston and the World Cup - Business Insider

Jazz Jennings, Chaz Bono and Caitlyn Jenner: How the last decade changed the way we see gender – Yahoo Lifestyle

This past decade has brought about a seismic shift in how Americans view gender and gender expression particularly when it comes to the ever-expanding awareness of what it means to betransgender.

For this you can give at least partial credit to the many powerful pop-culture moments over the years from the coming out of Caitlyn Jenner and Chelsea Manning to the premiere of television shows like Transparent and Pose.

And while its impossible to pick just one as having had the most cultural impact, it is worth noting that theres been one young woman whose very public, very proud gender transition has been a consistent influencer now for more than a decade: Jazz Jennings.

Jazz is the Florida teen, reality-show star and transgender activist who first leapt into public view at age 6, during a candid and groundbreaking20/20 interviewwith Barbara Walters in 2007. And she remains squarely in the public eye today, allowing a massive and devoted audience to trail her and her loving family first through a 2011 Oprah Winfrey Network documentary and, as of 2015, on the TLC reality series, I Am Jazz as she goes through pretty much every milestone of adolescence, from dating and dances to college acceptance, not to mention her most personal experience of all: her gender-reassignment surgery.

The show averages over one million viewers per episode, which equals one immense social impact and thats not even counting the other ways Jazz has gotten her story out there over the years.

It's pretty surreal, to be honest, Jazz, now 19, tells Yahoo Lifestyle about her unique and lengthy experience in public view.

When we first decided to share our story, we had no idea how huge of an impact our family would have on so many other lives, she adds, so I think just seeing the way culture has shifted around gender, and people being more open and accepting to transgender people it's just really cool to know that we played a part in all of that.

The Jennings family first went public, through a local newspaper, in response to Jazzs kindergarten not allowing her to use female pronouns or wear dresses; the story was picked up nationally, and then snowballed from there to ABC and beyond. Her story was, for many Americans, their first time hearing about anyone being transgender especially someone so young. I think the main reason why we wanted to do it was just help others who were like me, transgender kids out there, to help them realize that they're not alone in their journey and that there's others like them, Jazz recalls.

When our family first shared our story, there really weren't any transgender kids in the public, or there weren't many who heard of transgender kids. And now I feel like you'll hear about trans kids more frequently, she adds. I think that shift is really amazing to see, because people are finally able to step out of the shadows and be their true authentic selves.

Her story has taken many other forms, as well, certainly widening its impact. In the years since Jazz spoke with Walters as a kindergartener, she returned as a braces-wearing tween for a follow-up in 2012 (and has sat for many other interviews as well), and she has co-written a childrens picture book, calledI Am Jazz, as well as a memoir,Being Jazz: My Life as a (Transgender) Teen.

She has also become aYouTube sensationwith 675,000 followers and blossomed as a reality star, first on the OWN Networks I Am Jazz: A Family in Transition, and then again on TLCs I Am Jazz, which enters its 6th season on Jan. 28. She has starred ina short film, Denim,about a trans teen who gets outed at school, and has conquered social media, amassing 961,000 followers onInstagram, where shes shared everything from her post-surgery debut in a swimsuit to news that she deferred her acceptance to Harvard. She has also starred ina commercial, was named one of Time magazines most influential teens of 2014 (and again in 2015), and became the youngest honoree ever to make both Outs Out 100 and the Advocates 40 under 40.

It is a lot of pressure, she admits.

Jazz Jennings, at 13, flanked by Elle Fanning and Alex Newell onstage during the 24th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Los Angeles in 2013. (Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for GLAAD)

But the still-rippling impact of her ongoing journey has been unprecedented and groundbreaking, explains Nick Adams, director of transgender representation atGLAAD, which advocates for fair and accurate LGBTQ media representation.

"I think that Jazz and her family's decision to share so many details of her life as a young transgender girl going through both a social and medical transition have had impact in two ways, Adams says. It has allowed Americans who think theyve never met someone who's transgender to get to know Jazzs family and to know what it means to love and support your transgender child. And for families who do have transgender children, it's given them hope and critical information about what their journey may be like as they support their child."

Now, as we slide out of the 2010s and into 2020, hope on the transgender equality front is needed perhaps more than ever. While media visibility has reached an encouraging high point, the Trump administration has triggered a transgender rights rollback in a slew of areas, from serving in the military to receiving medical treatment. And as of Dec. 7 2019 got the dismal distinction of becoming the deadliest year on record for transgender Americans. That date is whenNikki Kuhnhausen, 18, was found dead in in Vancouver, Wash., becoming the 27th transgender homicide victim of the year.

Jazz posted about Nikkis murderon Facebook, saying, simply, She was only 18....the murders must stop.

So does visibility really have the power to bring about change? Adams believes it does.

Backlash has grown against many different marginalized groups of people, he says, but it is often fueled by stoking peoples fears and ignorance about people different from them. So, I believe that the more we can have visibility, the more we can combat that ignorance and that fear and for people who have the safety and privilege to do that, I think it can make a difference. They can change hearts and minds.

Lets take a look back at some moments during the past decade that aimed to do just that.

"The last decade has seen a tremendous increase in visibility for people who are transgender, and media representations are starting to portray trans people in more real and authentic ways, Adams says. Growing cultural awareness about people who are trans has also sparked more conversations among non-trans people about the rigid and outdated gender-based expectations that affect all of us.

Billy Porter attends the 91st Annual Academy Awards. (Photo: Dan MacMedan/Getty Images)

Some of those conversations have come out of basic yet groundbreaking moments whenTide featured a stay-at-home dadin a 2011 commercial, for example, and whenTarget announcedin 2015 that it would eliminate separate boys and girls sections for toys and bedding. Those seemingly tame moments caused both celebration and outrage over the collective message: The time for gender stereotypes had come to an end.

Those gave way to bigger, bolder milestones in gender fluidity such asBilly Porter wearing a gownon the 2019 Oscars red carpet, and Jonathan Van Ness (who would soon announce he was nonbinary) making a similar moveat the 2019 Emmy Awards.

Actor Asia Kate Dillon. (Photo: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

Back in 2015, Miley Cyrus noted that she does not relate to being boy or girl, whileAmandla Stenberg opted for they/themsingular pronouns in 2016, and nonbinary actorAsia Kate Dillonmade history on Billions. Later that same year,Jill Soloway, creator of the groundbreaking Transparent series, came out as nonbinary and embraced the singular they, followed bySam Smithin 2019. Its no wonder Merriam-Websterdeclared theyits word of the year.

The transgender milestone moments, meanwhile, deserve their own timeline.

In 2010, there were two major moments at the federal government level: President Barack Obama made a high-profile transgender appointment in Washington, D.C., withAmanda Simpson, to the Department of Commerces Bureau of Industry and Security while the State Department made it possible for trans people, no matter what state they lived in and regardless of whether or not theyd had gender reassignment surgery, to change the gender marker on their U.S passports.

Lea Tbecame known as the first transgender supermodel in 2010, while the first of what would soon become a handful of pregnant transgender men to gain notoriety, Thomas Trace Beattie, made it into Guinness World Records in 2010.

Chaz Bono helped to bring transgender men into the public eye. (Photo: Getty Images)

Chaz Bono also brought transgender men into the spotlight in 2011, by releasing the documentary of his transition, Becoming Chaz, and by being cast on Dancing With the Stars. In 2012, TV show Glee introduced its first transgender character, Unique. And the American Psychiatric Association announced that its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) would remove the term, Gender Identity Disorder, replacing it with Gender Dysphoria, assuring that transgender people may no longer be subject to a lifelong default diagnosis of their mental health,noted GLAADat the time.

In 2013, on the eve of her 2013 sentencing for sharing classified military documents with WikiLeaks,Chelsea Manningcame out as a transgender woman. That same year would seeLaverne Coxstarring in Netflixs hit Orange is the New Black and gracingthe cover of Time magazine.

Transparent debuted on Amazon in 2014 and also that same year,Katie Couric had a public learning momentthat helped observers, too: During an interview with Cox and transgender model Carmen Carrera on her daytime talk show, Couric asked a question about the state of Carreras genitalia, and was promptly schooled by Cox about that being too invasive. Couric later apologized and admitted shed learned a valuable lesson.

That was one of the most important moments in the last decade, Adams says. All of journalism woke up and went, Oh my god, were not supposed to be asking trans people about their genitals?

But 2014 ended with the widely covered, heartbreaking suicide of Ohio transgender teenLeelah Alcorn, which educated people worldwide on the importance of empathetic parents. Her suicide note on Tumblr read, [My mom] told me that I am wrong. ... If you are reading this, parents, please dont tell this to your kids. Even if you are Christian or are against transgender people dont ever say that to someone, especially your kid. That wont do anything but make them hate them self. Thats exactly what it did to me.

Former military intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning speaks to the press before a Grand Jury appearance. (Photo: Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images)

In 2015, Caitlyn Jenner brought a new level of celebrity to being trans first by coming out as a transgender woman on a 20/20 interview with Diane Sawyer that pulled in a whopping17.1 million viewers, and then by appearing in a white corset on the cover ofVanity Fair and kicking off her reality show, I Am Cait, on the E! network.

A backlash in the form of some politicians using scare tactics to prevent trans people from using the bathroom matching their gender identity went full steam ahead in places around the country, with North Carolina signingHB2, or the bathroom bill,into law in 2016. It required everyone to use the bathroom corresponding with the sex they were originally assigned, but the nationwide protest was so intense that the bill was repealed in 2017.

Also in 2017, transgender activistAshlee Marie Prestoncalled Caitlyn Jenner a "fraud" in a video that went viral, bringing awareness to the vast diversity of opinions within the trans community. That year also saw greater visibility in terms of trans actors:A Fantastic Woman, starring transgender Chilean actress Daniela Vega, won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The groundbreakingTV series Pose featuring the largest cast ever of transgender actors in scripted roles and written by trans activist Janet Mock debuted on FX in 2018, fictionalizing the queer ballroom culture of the 80s and 90s that was first brought to light by the documentary Paris Is Burning, whileSupergirl season 4starred actress Nicole Maines as TVs first trans superhero, Nia Nal.

While Pose was bringing acceptance, visibility and fame to so many, however, the rate of murders of trans women, particularly black trans women, was climbing, sparking protests and vigils in cities across the country. Thecollective grief was oddly juxtaposedwith the excitement of Pride Month and the 50th anniversary of Stonewall in June.

As Adams says today, We still have a long way to go before people can be true to themselves without fear of discrimination and violence.

Still, in spite of the continuing threat against trans people, Jazz says she remains ever faithful to the power of representation. I definitely think visibility has a lot of value, she says. I think the more people hear about transgender individuals, the more they can be open to accepting us for who we are. And I just think it needs to continue.

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Jazz Jennings, Chaz Bono and Caitlyn Jenner: How the last decade changed the way we see gender - Yahoo Lifestyle