Daily Archives: February 9, 2017

We must take a wrecking ball to political correctness to achieve our true economic potential – City A.M.

Posted: February 9, 2017 at 6:17 am

Just how big is the size of the state in the UK?

A simple question you might think. Surely all you need is a numerator (a tax or public spending measure) and a denominator (a GDP measure)? Divide one by the other and hey presto theres your size measure as a proportion of GDP. Based on that approach, public spending is projected by the OBR to fall to 38 per cent of GDP by 2020.

Unfortunately its not that simple. If you use a factor cost measure of GDP, as opposed to a market prices measure, the share rises by around 5 percentage points of GDP to 43 per cent. This reveals how technical details can mask powerful truths.

And it doesnt end there either. The total intervention of the state isnt measured by tax and spend alone. There is also regulation to consider. If the government pays income related benefits on day one, but then mandates a national minimum wage on day two, public spending could fall but the total intervention of the state would be unchanged.

Read more: Leviathans tentacles: How the state hides its true size

Of course, the impact of regulation extends far beyond the replacement of benefits. The costs of regulation encompass a whole swathe of labour and product market activity.

Assessing the costs and benefits of such activity is fiendishly complicated with regard to individual regulations. Aggregating such impacts across the whole economy is downright impossible. But that doesnt mean we should ignore it. Some of the best aggregate work has been undertaken in the US, with an estimated cost around 10 per cent of GDP rather dated now. The working assumption since has been that EU membership means the UK figure will be significantly higher. But how much higher, nobody knows.

So we have a total intervention measure, so far, of at least 53 per cent of GDP (38 per cent plus 5 per cent plus 10 per cent). Unfortunately this is not the end of the story. Theres more.

Read more: Regulation, regulation, regulation: What to expect in 2017

Political correctness is a tumour at the heart of our culture. Recent decades have seen an explosion in political correctness, as regulation of our behaviour (product and labour market regulation) was added to by the regulation of our minds (what we think and say). And while it is utterly impossible to quantify the impact of such encroachment by the state, it doesnt make the tentacles of control any less real.

Political correctness also interacts with other areas of state intervention, making it difficult to curtail spending, cut taxes or undertake a bonfire of regulations. But if the UK is to achieve its economic potential in the twenty-first century, it will need to take a scythe to tax and spend and regulation, and apply a wrecking ball to political correctness.

Political correctness is embedded in our culture, and culture shapes institutions (the rules of the game, such as law, taxation and regulation), which then shape economic performance (such as productivity and competitiveness). An analogy might be a River of Prosperity, with culture upstream, institutions mid-stream and economic performance downstream. Political correctness risks blocking the river, far upstream.

Research on the impact of freedom such as by the Heritage Foundation and the Fraser Institute on economic success is powerful and compelling, and the conclusion is clear. If we just look at tax and spend measures alone, we will delude ourselves as to the true scale of economic and political freedom in the UK.

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We must take a wrecking ball to political correctness to achieve our true economic potential - City A.M.

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Call Kurtis Investigates: Triple Tag Team Scam Started With Cloned Facebook Profile – CBS Local

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CBS Local
Call Kurtis Investigates: Triple Tag Team Scam Started With Cloned Facebook Profile
CBS Local
The Better Business Bureau's Danielle Spang says most of us know by now scammers are cloning Facebook pages, stealing people's photos to target that person's Facebook family and friends list. And they're just getting desperate, said Spang. It's ...

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Orangutan squeaks reveal language evolution, says study – BBC … – BBC News

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Publicist Report - Market Research News by Market.Biz (press release)
Orangutan squeaks reveal language evolution, says study - BBC ...
BBC News
Scientists who spent years listening to the communication calls of one of our closest ape relatives say their eavesdropping has shed light on the origin of human ...
Study Says Orangutan Squeaks Reveal Language EvolutionPublicist Report - Market Research News by Market.Biz (press release)

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‘Evolution To Revolution’ As New York Fashion Week Gets Political – NPR

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'Evolution To Revolution' As New York Fashion Week Gets Political
NPR
For New York Fashion Week, NPR's David Greene speaks with designer Jeremy Scott about how his clothing line has been influenced by the presidential election. Facebook; Twitter. Google+. Email ...

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Chimpanzee feet allow scientists a new grasp on human foot … – Science Daily

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Science Daily
Chimpanzee feet allow scientists a new grasp on human foot ...
Science Daily
An investigation into the evolution of human walking by looking at how chimpanzees walk on two legs is the subject of a new research paper.

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London exhibition charts 500 years of evolution of robots – Chicago Sun-Times

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LONDON (AP) Inspired by his belief that human beings are essentially terrified of robots, Ben Russell set about charting the evolution of automatons for an exhibition he hopes will force people to think about how androids and other robotic forms can enhance their lives.

Robots, says Russell, have been with us for centuries as Robots, his exhibit opening Wednesday at Londons Science Museum, shows. The exhibit runs through Sept. 3.

From a 15th century Spanish clockwork monk who kisses his rosary and beats his breast in contrition, to a Japanese childoid newsreader, created in 2014 with lifelike facial expressions, the exhibition tracks the development of robotics and mankinds obsession with replicating itself.

Arnold Schwarzeneggers unstoppable Terminator: cyborg is there, as is Robby the Robot, star of the 1956 film Forbidden Planet, representing the horror and the fantasy of robots with minds of their own.

There are also examples of factory production-line machines blamed for taking peoples jobs in recent decades; a telenoid communications android for hugging during long-distance phone calls to ease loneliness; and Kaspar, a minimally expressive social robot built like a small boy and designed to help ease social interactions for children with autism.

A technician adjusts Robs Open Source Android (ROSAL) which was built in France from 2010-2016, at the Science Museum in London, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017. The exhibition shows 500 years of mechanical and robotic advances.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

When you take a long view, as we have done with 500 years of robots, robots havent been these terrifying things, theyve been magical, fascinating, useful, and they generally tend to do what we want them to do, said Russell, who works at the science museum and was the lead curator of the exhibition.

And while its human nature to be worried in the face of change, Russell said, the exhibit should help people think about what we are as humans and realize that if robots are going to come along, youve got a stake in how they develop.

A total of 100 robots are set in five different historic periods in a show that explores how religion, industrialization, pop culture and visions of the future have shaped society.

For Rich Walker, managing director of Shadow Robot Company in London, robotics is about what these increasingly sophisticated machines can do for humans to make life easier, particularly for the elderly or the impaired.

Im naturally lazy and got involved so that I could get robots to do things for me, Walker said. His company has developed a robotic hand that can replicate 24 of the 27 natural movements of the human hand.

Charllotte Abbot reacts to the movement of Pepper, an interactive French-Japanese robot, during a press preview for the Robots exhibition held at the Science Museum in London, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

As humans have a 1 percent failure rate at repetitive tasks, committing errors about once every two hours, the hand could replace humans on production lines, he said.

Walker concedes further erosion of certain types of jobs if inventions such as his are successful, but says having repetitive tasks performed by automatons would free up people to adopt value-added roles.

The issue is to rebuild the economy so that it has a holistic approach to employment, he said.

This in turn leads to questions, raised at the exhibition as well as by the European Union, of whether or not robots should pay taxes on the value of their output as part of the new industrial revolution.

LYNNE ODONNELL, Associated Press

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‘Goldilocks’ genes that tell the tale of human evolution hold clues to variety of diseases – Science Daily

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'Goldilocks' genes that tell the tale of human evolution hold clues to variety of diseases
Science Daily
The implication here is that wider variations in the number of gene copies may evolve and persist in benign CNVs, but not in disease-linked CNVs -- the effects would be too physiologically serious to be passed on by an individual to his/her children ...

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From Whoa to ‘Wick:’ The Evolution of Keanu Reeves – Film School Rejects

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Has anyone in entertainment had a better last few years than Keanu Reeves? Dont answer, its a rhetorical question, because of course no one in entertainment has had a better last few years than Keanu Reeves. This time early 2014 he was sitting on a string of disappointments that stretched back pretty much to the end of the Matrix trilogy, and that seemed to suggest an A-lister who had lost his focus. Constantine did okay, and I guess The Day the Earth Stood Still wasnt total trash, but outside of these flicks you either saw Keanu turning in brief and odd supporting roles like those in Somethings Got to Give, Ellie Parker, or The Private Lives of Pippa Lee, or you saw him trying to establish himself as a leading man outside of the action and sci-fi genres in flicks like the romantic drama(?) The Lake House, which attempted to capitalize on past successes by reteaming Reeves with his Speed co-star Sandra Bullock, as well as more straightforward crime dramas like Street Kings and Henrys Crime before settling back into what he thought audiences wanted to see from him, martial-arts-driven flicks like 47 Ronin and Man of Tai Chi, the latter of which Reeves directed.

But then something amazing happened in 2014, something called John Wick. Overnight Reeves was back and bigger than ever. Wick became for Reeves what Taken had been for Liam Neeson: a slight tweak to a familiar context that suddenly revealed the true movie star each was meant to be; by making Reeves character an anti-hero instead of a hero, it unlocked a reservoir of angst and bitterness and general badassery in the actor the likes of which we hadnt seen from him before. Add to this turn other darker roles in films like Knock Knock and The Neon Demon, and boom, its 1996 again and well watch Keanu in anything. Like Chain Reaction.

But the path of Keanu to here has not been easy. Like a little Buddha he has sat patiently as Hollywood tried to fit him neatly into a preset role, Keanu the stoner, Keanu the protector, Keanu the automaton, even Keanu the victim. But Keanu conforms for no man. He has no master, no teacher, and no guru. He has no parallels either historically or contemporarily, he is an actor unto and of himself and the Keanu you see on screen today (or rather this Friday when John Wick Chapter 2 opens nationwide) is a creation of the man himself, solely, and not some publicity machine or industry laboratory. Keanu is a singular as his name, and this upcoming chapter of his career holds more promise, for my money, than any before it.

To fully appreciate the Keanu of now you have to respect the Keanu until now, and to help with that weve got this video from Burger Fiction that traces the evolution of Keanu from the Whoa days to Wick, and all the peaks and valleys in-between. What it reveals is an artist constantly evolving, and occasionally devolving, but always sticking fiercely to his uniqueness, even when attempting to conform to Hollywood standards.

This is the Golden Age of Keanu were living in. Bask in his radiance below.

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With Darwin Day Approaching, It’s Time for a Look Back at Evolution … – Discovery Institute

Posted: at 6:15 am

Darwin Day is coming up -- February 12, this Sunday, marking the birthday of Charles Darwin and celebrated by us as Academic Freedom Day. Yes, that means we'll be introducing you to a new Censor of the Year. Feel free to submit nominations, but frankly we've already got a leading contender. Visit us again on Sunday when we'll reveal the winner.

With the historical context in mind, in any event, the following is interesting and relevant. English professor and historian Randall Fuller has a new book out called The Book that Changed America (Viking, 2017), referring to Darwin's Origin. The following comments are based on a review in Science by Myrna Perez Sheldon, "Darwin's American Ascendancy," and an interview with Fuller in National Geographic by Simon Worrall, "Darwin's Theory of Evolution Roiled U.S. on Eve of Civil War."

To understand the author's perspective, consider Fuller's response to Worrall's final question in the NG interview:

Great question! Though I tend to think that those figures you've mentioned are, hopefully, a last gasp of denial. It's certainly true that there's an increasing resistance to Darwin's theory. But that exists simultaneously with, almost every month, new data showing the validity and overall soundness of Darwin's theory. The question is, how long can one deny a growing empirical body of facts? [Emphasis added.]

I grew up in public school in the late 1970s in Missouri, and natural selection was taught as an accepted, and completely settled, scientific question. There have been periods between the 1920s and 2014 where the opposite has obtained. But that pendulum will always swing back again. Just recently Pope Francis reaffirmed the Catholic Church's conviction that evolutionary theory is valid.

The citation of Pope Francis is not accurate, but let it pass. Knowing the author's bias will justify our attempt to follow Darwin's dictum, "A fair result can be obtained only by fully stating and balancing the facts and arguments on both sides of each question." Fortunately, we have two excellent sources with which to obey Darwin's advice. The first is Darwin Day in America by Center for Science & Culture associate director John West. The second is Tom Bethell's new book, Darwin's House of Cards.

We learn from the interview that Origin arrived on American shores quickly after its publication in November 1859, when the U.S. was on the verge of civil war. Hardly a month had passed after John Brown's futile raid on Harper's Ferry that escalated tensions between North and South. Fuller tells an interesting story about how the first copy landed at a house in Concord, Massachusetts, having been carried from Boston by a "red-hot abolitionist," Charles Loring Brace. Gathered on this "extremely cold, New England winter evening" were notable intellectuals gathered to discuss two topics: slavery, and Darwin's book. Attendees included abolitionist Franklin Sanborn (one of the funders of the raid on Harper's Ferry), along with two leading lights of transcendentalist philosophy: Bronson Alcott (father of novelist Louisa May Alcott and friend of Ralph Waldo Emerson), and Henry David Thoreau. Now some 14 years past his first experiences at Walden Pond, Thoreau was "beginning a kind of second career as a scientist," Fuller says. What was his reaction?

Sheldon's review provides an important contrasting response:

Fuller makes a big point that American abolitionists initially embraced Darwin's views. How could this be, since Darwin did not discuss human evolution until The Descent of Man over ten years later?

A number of prominent American scientists at the time argued that God had created black people, brown skinned and white people separately, and each of them were different, had different capacities, and there was a hierarchy. Some went so far as to suggest that black people were a different species, and that they were not only different, but inferior. These scientists were praised in the South and provided the perfect rationalization for slavery. Darwin's argument that all living things shared a common ancestor provided the abolitionists with a great rebuttal of the dominant, American science of the time.

A couple of observations here. First, Fuller says that it was "scientists" who argued for polygenism (separate creations of races); he specifically points to Louis Agassiz as a leading polygenist. Second, the "dominant American science" belief "that God had created" separate races deviated sharply from Genesis, which speaks of a single creation of the first human pair. In that regard, Jewish and Christian believers of the period had exactly the same grounds for opposing slavery, believing that all humans had descended from "one blood" (cf. Paul's message to the Athenians, Acts 17:26). Fuller indicates that it was the American scientific community, not the religious community, that justified slavery on the grounds of "modern racial science." In all fairness, it must be acknowledged that pro-slavery churches found other pretexts for supporting slavery in their scriptures, just as anti-slavery churches found Biblical support for their views. Whether in labs or pulpits, there was plenty of racism to go around -- and plenty of abolitionism, too. The point is that Darwin did not bring any unique, new argument for abolitionism that was not already in the Bibles of the churches and in the Declaration of Independence, with its statement that "all men are created equal."

If the abolitionists found support for their cause in Darwin, however, it was short-lived. Within months, America plunged into its Civil War, shredding the optimistic idealism of Emerson and Thoreau in the clash of swords. The implications of Darwin's views also began dawning more clearly on intellectuals. In Darwin Day in America, John West explains how Darwin's cautious naturalism in Origin developed into full-fledged materialism with his publication of The Descent of Man in 1872. West quotes leading American scientists in the early 20th century who used Darwin to promote eugenics and race purity. "Bluntly put," he says, "the evolutionary process had led to the development of superior and inferior races." Consider that Darwinians to this day believe that different populations of humans must have remained genetically isolated for many tens or hundreds of thousands of years, providing ample opportunity for groups to advance in "fitness" over others. By contrast, any church holding to the "one blood" doctrine, even if prone to racist tendencies, would have to acknowledge human exceptionalism as a consequence of their doctrine of imago Dei (humans created in the image of God). No such leash could restrain natural selection's racist implications. Fuller acknowledges this, when asked why racism remains a problem to this day:

Today, you only hear the term social Darwinism with a very negative inflection. However, like all ideas, over time they become absorbed or, to quote you, become part of the cultural wallpaper. So I would hazard the guess that the idea of the inherent superiority of some races is still, unfortunately, with us today.

Tom Bethell pulls the rug out from under the notion that Darwin helped the anti-slavery movement. In Chapter 4 of Darwin's House of Cards, he documents growing evidence against universal common descent -- a single tree of life -- the very idea that Thoreau, Alcott, and the others felt gave scientific credibility to their abolitionist views. Had those people ruminated a little more, they might have realized how silly the argument was anyway. What? All men are equal because they had the same bacteria ancestors? In Darwin's tree of life, branches at the tips could deviate significantly from one another even if they shared a common root hundreds of millions of years earlier. That realization aimed the trajectory that Social Darwinism quickly took after The Descent of Man, bringing horrendous consequences documented in West's book.

This leaves Fuller -- evolutionist that he is -- in a precarious position. He knows that Darwinism led to some nasty consequences. Among the milder examples, he tells how P.T. Barnum, having "his finger on the pulse of his native country," dressed up a disabled man with microcephaly and exhibited him as "a missing link between gorillas and human beings." Fuller knows that Social Darwinism left "a very negative inflection" on the "cultural wallpaper" of America to this day. He knows about the unending controversies Darwinism created.

But evolution is a fact, isn't it? Certainly it's a called that by many, but the "growing empirical body of facts" Fuller thinks lends validity to Darwinian evolution is, as Bethell shows forcefully, a "house of cards."

Photo credit: http://www.cgpgrey.com [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons.

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Home-schooled students studying robotics – Valencia County News Bulletin

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LOS LUNAS Math and engineering concepts come alive students say, when they use them to build robots.

The Valencia County Home School Robotics Teams used simple engineering plans and equipment to build robots they will compete in the Kirtland Air Force Research Laboratory La Luz Academy Robotics Challenge on March 2.

The three home-school teams are the Transformers, Big Hero 3 and The Ohm Schoolers.

Ive had an amazing experience in robotics, said Amanda Sparks with the Transformers team. Ive made new friends and broadened my mind in many different subjects.

In final preparation for the robotics competition, each team gave a presentation and demonstrated their robots abilities last week at the Community Bible Church in Los Lunas.

The Transformers robot, Opie, a small, boxy BOE-Bot with whiskers, was programmed to change course when its antenna touches an obstacle.

When the whiskers are pushed, it sends a message to the servos (individual motor) that it needs to move back and turn a different way, explained Elizabeth Schatzinger.

It looks a lot easier than it is, but once youve figured out the basics, you can perform the other tasks, added teammate Amanda Sparks.

Sometimes what we program does not turn out how we want it to but using our math skills, we can figure out the problem and fix the program, she said.

Sparks learned a surprising number of new math skills she said, and teammate Max Kiehne said its about learning computer programming language.

In the beginning, I learned about binary, which before this class I thought was really hard to learn, but then I learned the basics and I found its a lot simpler than most people probably would think, Kiehne said.

Only the top scoring 30 teams out of 80 statewide will go on to the Robotics Challenge. Along with the home-schooled teams, there are seven teams from Valencia Middle School and 12 teams are being hosted at Peralta Elementary School.

The La Luz Academys science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM, educational outreach program is available free to any New Mexico public, private or home-school grades 5-12.

The home-schooled seventh-and eighth-graders have been participating in a weekly robotics class since September 2016.

What I once thought to be random letters and numbers turns out to be an amazing and intricate method of communication between us and the robot, said Rebekah Sparks from the Big Hero 3 team, which also includes Allison Storch and Timothy Schatzinger.

Their robot, Baymax, knows when to move and when to turn on the obstacle course. To enable their robot, the team measured the course with a tape measure, used a calculator they created using Excel to convert inches or centimeters to counter, which is a measure that robots use, the students said. Different numbers equal different distances in counter.

Schatzinger said he wasnt crazy about robots when he started the program but now he is a lot smarter, especially in math where he learned binary. Binary uses only ones and zeroes to calculate the numbers for counter distances and other computer programming.

I dont think (robots) are going to rule the world anymore because they cant even learn how to go through a blue course until we program them, Schatzinger said inciting laughter from the audience.

Students stretch their minds to solve the engineering problems that arise in programming robot functions.

Hands-on experience helps a bunch, said Emma Kennington, of the Ohm team. Being able to test it, you know you have understood it when you can get your robot to work the way you want it to.

The objective of the AFRL La Luz Academy educational outreach program is to raise student interest in pursuing STEM related studies and career paths. The program also seeks to involve student participants from groups traditionally under-represented in STEM fields, including females and minorities.

The program is available free of charge. The only requirement is that a teacher come forward with a willingness to teach the classroom based programs, Mars Mission, Robotics Challenge, and STEM Challenge or agrees to coordinate student scheduling for the experiences held on KAFB. All teachers are provided with training and resources to carry out class assignments. There is no grant proposal or application. For more information, visit the website at afrlnewmexico.com/afrl-la-luz-academy or call 846-8042.

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