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Daily Archives: March 4, 2017
We are sick of being told what to do, says Freddie Forsyth – Express.co.uk
Posted: March 4, 2017 at 3:08 pm
GETTY
During the 1960s such a revolution took place in social and sexual attitudes that the decade will always remain the Swinging Sixties.
After it, nothing was ever quite the same again. Huge swathes of bigotry were swept away. Some good traditions also went but the overall effect was to give us a fairer and more tolerant society. But seen from 50 years later, it was a decade of noisy revolt.
I suspect we are now going through an era of quiet insurrection. Lord Heseltine has announced he will in his dotage lead a campaign to destroy Brexit (if he can) and restore the age of national subordination to the One-Europe dream under nonelective government to which he and others have dedicated their lives. He and his peers (in every sense) are needless to say very elderly now.
Clearly there are some working people who support the Euro-Federal dream.
But the fanatics are the ones we see dominating the headlines and hardly one has ever done a hands turn of manual work in their lives.
Broadly, I call them all the luvvies and they are outraged at being contradicted by us proles. The attitude of the Remoaners after that devastating referendum of June last year is of uncontained outrage.
Pro-EU measure after measure was passed into law without a vote and that was all right.
Then finally the people were allowed to speak and, according to Lord H and his mates, we said the wrong thing.
Now their version of events is that we all turned xenophobic, anti-European, chauvinist, nationalist, populist, even neo-fascist. But we havent.
They have the chicken-and-egg sequence the wrong way round. Every society, across the ages and the longitudes, has had two components, one large and one small.
The large one is the broad masses of the people (the BMP) and the tiny one an amalgam of vested interests called the elite, or the establishment.
In a healthy society the establishment treats the BMP with respect. This is wise. It prevents insurrections and bloody revolutions such as the French or Russian versions.
In return the BMP treats the establishment with trust. When that breaks down, national dissatis faction ensues.
The people become surly, the elite fearful and defensive. What has happened here, which Lord Heseltine cannot understand, is that the socalled great and good are not trusted any more. They have lied to us too many times.
The luvvies may demonstrate, noisily screaming with their placards and headlines, but the BMP has quietly used its only weapon the vote after all those years.
Standing alone in all those voting booths, pencil poised, we did not turn anti-foreigner or anti-world. We just asked: What do those lying so-and-sos want us to do?
Well, we will bleeding well vote the opposite. So out went the Old Etonian, in came the vicars daughter.
Out went call me Dave and in came Prime Minister will do nicely. If Lord Heseltine and his cronies think they can order us about any more, they may be heading not for the abolition of the Lords but its root and branch reform.
EPA
It was done in 1999 when the 750 hereditary peers were culled down to 92 and it can be done again with 700 created peers reduced by internal vote to 300.
Lord H should become aware we are not in a subservient mood any longer. Perhaps our time will later be called the age of insurrection. We want our country back; from Brussels and from him.
TOO traumatised by the shambles at the Oscars I switched my attention to the stars that the ceremony always attracts.
It was quickly noticeable that for many the theme was to emulate the glamour of the celebrities of yesteryear.
Particularly successful was model Karlie Kloss (no, me neither) who was a ringer for Sophia Loren circa 1960.
My mind went back to the time when her pout and cleavage adorned the inside of my locker during National Service 60 years ago. Balmy days!
GETTY
ANALYSTS who study these things have now estimated that Vladimir Putin is worth a truly staggering 160billion (yes, billion), making him far and away the richest man in the world.
Given that he has never had a salary more than that paid to the president or prime minister of Russia there appears to be a slight mathematical problem here.
It is no secret that all dictators make themselves immensely rich by scalping their own countries economies but 160billion is abusing the privilege. Nor is it just one man.
The whole Kremlin machine is so mired in corruption that not a single business deal or government contract goes through without the machine taking its cut.
But there is a price to pay for such institutionalised corruption. When oil and gas prices were going through the roof, there was money to burn so glorious promises of jam tomorrow could be made to the Russian people. But that was then, this is now.
Despite constant military provocations in the Baltic, English Channel and Middle East the Russian economy is creaking like a barn door.
The ordinary Russian just soldiers on in poverty. Lucky old Vladimir to have such a docile and donkey-patient populace.
MUCH of the country was consumed last weekend by the annual Oscars ceremony a saturnalia of mutual and self-adoration.
Those mystified by the term La La Land had to watch only for a few minutes. When you think about it, acting is a very odd profession.
There are only two jobs in the world where the protagonist will say absolutely anything if paid to do so. One is that of lawyer but that is not a loved profession.
A barrister in court will do all he can to send a man he knows privately is innocent to jail or to set at liberty one he knows is guilty as hell.
It is his job but he does not have columns of fans clamouring for his autograph afterwards. Then again, there are only two callings in which the practitioner tries to persuade you he is someone he is not.
One is actor, the other is conman. The latter is caught and jailed.
The former is given statuettes. What is fair about that?
MORE than half of the Lords think they have the right to amend the Bill that will authorise the Prime Minister to trigger Article 50.
It is what the upper house is there for, we are told. But do they really have that right? Every Bill coming up from the Commons is the policy of the incumbent government which is a political party.
Such legislation is indeed susceptible to emendation under the constitution.
But this Bill is the first in history that is not the product of a political party, with which their lordships have the right to agree or disagree.
This Bill derives from the verdict of the entire British people.
(The 1975 referendum advocated no change, so there was no Bill to enact its finding. Hence fi rst time in all our long history.) This Bill alone is not a party political decision. It is the voice of the British people. The Lords should leave it alone.
GETTY
LIFE is rarely fair. A plump goalkeeper is fired for eating a meat pie on camera during a game.
It seems the club was offended that those who had bet he would do so won some money. Surely the pie company now owes him a supply of the product as compensation.
If he thus gets any larger, he might be restored because his enlarged frame will fi ll the entire goalmouth.
Not their right
MORE than half of the Lords think they have the right to amend the Bill that will authorise the Prime Minister to trigger Article 50.
It is what the upper house is there for, we are told. But do they really have that right? Every Bill coming up from the Commons is the policy of the incumbent government which is a political party.
Such legislation is indeed susceptible to emendation under the constitution. But this Bill is the first in history that is not the product of a political party, with which their lordships have the right to agree or disagree.
This Bill derives from the verdict of the entire British people. (The 1975 referendum advocated no change, so there was no Bill to enact its finding.
Hence first time in all our long history.) This Bill alone is not a party political decision. It is the voice of the British people. The Lords should leave it alone.
AN ELDERLY lady in my village needs help around the house and employs a cleaner from Romania.
This young girl experienced severe pain from her sinuses. She went to our NHS, which she was perfectly entitled to do as she pays income tax and national insurance.
They would be delighted to treat her but sometime next year. So she motored across Europe to her home in Bucharest and was treated by a specialist within a week.
Then she motored back. I have the impression something has gone wrong. This was not what Nye Bevan envisaged.
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We are sick of being told what to do, says Freddie Forsyth - Express.co.uk
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10 must see events in Hull 2017 season three Freedom this summer – Hull Daily Mail
Posted: at 3:08 pm
Hull's role in freedom and the abolition of slavery is part of its history we are fiercely proud of.
So it is no surprise it will feature heavily in Season 3 of the City of Culture 2017 programme.
Hull 2017 have promised an 'incredible' next six months of events after revealing their plans at the start of March.
As well as performances from Jeff Lynne's ELO, festivals and a celebration of equality and diversity, there are many performances and artworks heading to the city.
Here you can find ten of the top events which will be coming to the city this summer.
Hull 2017's third season will see the reopening of Hull New Theatre following its 1m rebuild, the most significant since being opened in 1939 as a successor to the Hull Repertory Theatre Company.
You can enjoy several performances from The Kings of Hull which sees the return of John Godber and the classic story of the trailblazing Jane Eyre.
From September 18, Hull New Theatre.
This is a ten day celebration of colour in Humber Street Gallery and Fruit Market, with installations by some of the most exciting creative figures in contemporary art, design and architecture using the specialist coloured paper Colorplan from Hull company G F Smith.
Also revealed at the launch of Paper City will be the launch of an international survey to discover the world's favourite colour.
From June 30 to July 9, various locations.
From July will be a biographical exhibition on Philip Larkin at the University of Hull, where he spent three decades as librarian. It promises to lift the lid on the life of one of Hull's most influential creatives.
Curated by Anna Farthing, and featuring unseen letters, photography and personal possessions, the exhibition will explore connections between Larkin's life and his work in Hull. Complementing the exhibition, this year's Philip Larkin Society Distinguished Guest Lecturer will be acclaimed British artist Grayson Perry on July 5
From July 5 until October at the University of Hull.
Read more: 10 must see events in Hull 2017 season two Roots & Routes
For generations in Hull, fortunes were made and a distinct way of life was created by the city's fishing community. But the freedom to make a living came at a cost for relying on the resources of the North Atlantic Ocean.
Seafaring communities on both sides of the Cod Wars reflect on confrontation, co-operation and loss in this film and photography exhibition.
From July 15 to September 24 at the Hull Maritime Museum.
From September, Hull will host one of the world's most prestigious awards, the Turner Prize. The exhibition of the four shortlisted artists' work will be held at the Ferens Art Gallery until January 2018, and is free.
From Damien Hirst's cows in formaldehyde to Anthea Hamilton's 16ft sculpture of a bare bottom, this provocative exhibition always generates debate.
From September 26 to January 18, at Ferens Art Gallery.
The Northern Ballet and CBeebies have teamed up for this fantastical ballet with a wonderful wizard, and a story that takes you from a world of greyness to one of brilliant technicolour.
The Great Blueness will premiere with live performances in Hull before being shown on CBeebies to pre-school children and their families across the UK.
From August 14 to August 19 at Airco Arena.
More news: BBC Radio 1 DJ Nick Grimshaw and Kings of Leon members attempt a Hull accent
International pioneers of site responsive performance dreamthinkspeak present ONE DAY, MAYBE, which they say will conjure a "kaleidoscopic dreamscape" where live performance, installation and cutting edge technology combine to create a vividly dystopian vision of a world spinning out of control.
Deep within a hidden office complex in the city centre, a mysterious new Korean technology company is about to change the way you view the world.
From September 1 to October 1. The location is still to be revealed.
As part of LGBT 50, a week-long festival signifying the 50th anniversary of the decriminalisation of homosexuality, Humber Street Gallery will host The House of Kings and Queens.
This will exhibit especially commissioned photography by Lee Price. Captured in Sierra Leone, where homosexuality remains illegal, Price's powerful images offer a glimpse into The House where inhabitants can live without oppression, exposing what it means to be gay in Hull's sister city Freetown.
From July 27 to September 24, at Humber Street Gallery.
Taking place in different locations with inspiration from a famous Hull street, Land of Green Ginger is designed to infiltrate everyday life.
An exciting cohort of artists, including Lone Twin, Davy and Kristin McGuire and Macnas will be spinning myth and magic across Hull neighbourhoods, transforming places which can feel unnoticed into places of possibility, where "Acts of Wanton Wonder" can occur.
Artists have described it as the antidote to boredom; and have promised astonishment, delight and curiosity to spread across Hull as each chapter leads on to the next.
Visit http://www.hull2017.co.uk for further information.
Known internationally as 'Theatre of the Struggle', the theatre challenged the apartheid regime and became a powerful voice for freedom and emancipation.
Their production of The Suitcase will have its UK premiere at Hull Truck Theatre. It is a short story by Es'kia Mphahlele, that follows a young couple from the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal who seek a better life in the city, soon to realise that urban life is cold, cruel and unwelcoming.
From August 31 to September 9, at Hull Truck Theatre.
Visit http://www.hull2017.co.uk for further information on all the events.
Read more: The Royal Ballet will open Hull New Theatre after 16m refurbishment
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Supporters gather at Freedom Hill for ‘March4Trump’ rally – Detroit Free Press
Posted: at 3:07 pm
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Supporters of President Donald Trump gathered at Macomb County's Freedom Hill Saturday, as well as scores of other places around the country in marches to show their pride in his presidency.
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Detroit Free Press staff Published 1:20 p.m. ET March 4, 2017 | Updated 57 minutes ago
March4Trump rally held at Freedom Hill in Sterling Heights.
March4Trump participants rally at Macomb County's Freedom Hill.(Photo: Jim Schaefer, DFP)Buy Photo
Supporters of President Donald Trump gathered at Macomb County's Freedom Hill Saturday, as well as scores of other places around the country in marches to show their pride in his presidency.
Saturday's "March 4 Trump" demonstrations are also intended to show unity in the face of what organizers call "a seditious fringe" aiming to sabotage his vision for the country.
During the rally at Freedom Hill in Sterling Heights, a group of anti-Trump supporters got into a yelling match with the pro-Trump group. A small physical scuffle was also reported and police were able to break things up quickly.
A 'March 4 Trump' rally also brought out several hundred supporters, waving pro-Trump signs at the state Capitol in Lansing.
Related:
Trump accuses Obama of wiretapping him, but offers no evidence
Henderson: Trump to Great Lakes: Drop dead
Trump was a campaign genius, Michigan politicians told
Trump supporters have held rallies in recent weeks to counter demonstrations against him, including women's marches the day after his inauguration and protests over his since-blocked executive order halting acceptance of refugees and temporarily barring citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from traveling to the U.S.
There were pro-Trump demonstrations in Monday in cities ranging from Denver to Atlanta. Trump himself also held a campaign rally in Florida Feb. 18.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Supporters gather at Freedom Hill for 'March4Trump' rally - Detroit Free Press
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MTA ‘Freedom Ticket’ could make some commutes cheaper – Fox5NY
Posted: at 3:07 pm
NEW YORK (FOX 5 NEWS) - It's a long haul for security guard Richard Smith to get from Rosedale, Queens, to his job in Manhattan via MTA bus and subway. He could take a Long Island Rail Road train and cut his commute in half, but that would cost almost three times more. But Patricia Goodson, who lives in nearby Locust Manor, decided to make that trade-off.
Many New York City residents face this dilemma in parts of southeast Queens and Brooklyn, where access to subway lines is limited.
Andrew Albert, chair of the NYC Transit Riders Council and a non-voting board member of the MTA, says the solution could be in something called the Freedom Ticket, which the MTA has agreed to test out.
As the name implies, the Freedom Ticket would give the commuter the freedom to ride whatever mode of transportation meets their needs in a given area. The ticket would allow unlimited free transfers across LIRR and MTA bus and subway lines for a flat rate. While it hasn't been determined what that rate would be, it would be significantly less than the cost of separate tickets.
Right now, for example, a peak ride from Locust Manor to downtown Manhattan costs nearly $13 each way in combined LIRR and MetroCard fees.
Albert says the LIRR stations expected to participate in the pilot would include Atlantic Terminal, East New York, and Nostrand Avenue in Brooklyn; and Locust Manor, Laurelton, Rosedale, and St. Albans in Queens.
The MTA says there is no official timeline for the Freedom Ticket pilot could start, but transit advocates hope it is in place by the fall.
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UCT defends stance on artistic freedom after Goldblatt pulls out – News24
Posted: at 3:07 pm
Cape Town - The University of Cape Town has defended its protection of freedom of artistic expression, after the David Goldblatt Collection chose to move its collection to Yale University in the US.
Goldblatt recently told UCT management that he wants to move his collection from the university after eight years, saying the university could no longer protect freedom of expression, artistic freedom and the rights of artists on the campus, a UCT statement said last week.
The university said it understood Goldblatt's decision.
"The Goldblatt Collection is a South African heritage treasure, it includes 18 archival boxes of photographic prints, transparencies, negatives and digital items representing his oeuvre, including portraiture and his work on various assignments.
"We regret that Mr Goldblatt could not be persuaded out of his view that freedom of expression, artistic freedom and rights of artists were no longer protected at UCT."
UCT will continue to promote, protect, attract and collect artistic collections and work with artists into the future, it said.
"The institution, the UCT libraries, and the faculties working in this field are committed to freedom of expression, artistic freedom and the rights of artists.
"UCT commits itself to intellectual honesty, rigour in debate, openness to alternative ideas and respect for other views, ways of being, beliefs and opinions as stipulated in the universitys statement of values.
"We promote and protect academic freedom and freedom of expression, including the creation of spaces for contestation of ideas."
The university said its own values, guided by the Library and Information Association of South Africa, will always stand for the free flow of information, the support of intellectual freedom and not exercising censorship.
The university wished Goldblatt and the collection well and hoped both go from strength to strength.
24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.
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Curbs on religious freedom among human rights problems in India: US – Economic Times
Posted: at 3:07 pm
Restrictions on foreign-funded NGOs and religious freedom along with corruption and police and security force abuses are among the most significant human rights problems in India, according to a US report.
The State Department 2016 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - the first under the Trump Administration - said other human rights problems in India in the year 2016 included disappearances, hazardous prison condition and delay in justice due to court backlogs.
"The most significant human rights problems involved instances of police and security force abuses, including extrajudicial killings, torture, and rape; corruption, which remained widespread and contributed to ineffective responses to crimes, including those against women, children, and members of Scheduled Castes (SCs) or Scheduled Tribes (STs); and societal violence based on gender, religious affiliation, and caste or tribe," said the report released yesterday.
"Other human rights problems included disappearances, hazardous prison conditions, arbitrary arrest and detention, and lengthy pretrial detention. Court backlogs delayed or denied justice, including through lengthy pretrial detention and denial of due process," said the report which will be submitted to the Congress.
"The government placed restrictions on foreign funding of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), including some whose views the government believed were not in the 'national or public interest,' curtailing the work of civil society," said the India section of the report.
Observing that there were instances of infringement of privacy rights, the report said that the law in six states restricted religious conversion, and there were reports of arrests but no reports of convictions under those laws.
The report alleged some limits on the freedom of movement continued. Rape, domestic violence, dowry-related deaths, honor killings, sexual harassment, and discrimination against women and girls remained serious societal problems, it said.
Child abuse, female genital mutilation and cutting, and forced and early marriage were problems. Trafficking in persons, including widespread bonded and forced labor of children and adults, and sex trafficking of children and adults for prostitution, were serious problems, it added.
Societal discrimination against persons with disabilities and indigenous persons continued, as did discrimination and violence based on gender identity, sexual orientation, and persons with HIV, the State Department said in its report.
"A lack of accountability for misconduct at all levels of government persisted, contributing to widespread impunity. Investigations and prosecutions of individual cases took place, but lax enforcement, a shortage of trained police officers, and an overburdened and under resourced court system contributed to infrequent convictions," the report said.
"Separatist insurgents and terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir, the northeastern states, and the Maoist belt committed serious abuses, including killings of armed forces personnel, police, government officials, and civilians," it added.
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Curbs on religious freedom among human rights problems in India: US - Economic Times
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Technology and art meet at New York Art Week – The Verge
Posted: at 3:06 pm
The fast pace of technology is bleeding into every aspect of contemporary life, including the artists trying to make sense of the surrounding world. The Verge visited The Armory Show and the NADA art fair during New York Art Week, where both established and emerging artists are experimenting with digital technology and its impact on the arts. We spoke with emerging artists about the way screens, science, and cyberpunk culture informs their work.
The fairs run through Sunday, and you can see a schedule here.
Technology, consumerism, and violence are the cornerstones of the work. I feel like Im facilitating the creation of the work. The scanner is recording the images and I think of my role as mediating all of those reactions, almost like Im collaborating with the machines. Theres this dystopian cyberpunk video game called Syndicate. Its like a single shooter game; its really violent, this fucked up dark future. I made a video of a work of mine, so its like a gif of my own paintings and theres imagery from the spinal reconstruction website looking at the spine and various shape and systematic text on top. I really think of these being screen-based paintings, so having a moving image alongside the painting made sense. They interact really well and work together. The underlying idea is how technology sees the world and how we see things and how the lens records the world we live in. What happens when you put a Cadillac ad in a front of a machine that doesn't care about the content? Its reading the information and recording it. I have an archive of images that goes back to the 50s. Post war until now is what Im interested in. Im into that compression of time.
Chris Dorland
All of my work starts out with me archiving thousands of my mothers drawings that she made in the 90s. I pick like 10 or 15 of the drawings trace them and Ill composite these worlds together using 3D animation. I work on graphite drawing, use a tablet to trace them and use 3d to build something that comes from an analogue process. The second phase is going around the country and filming portraits of people on the green screen. Basically I collect disparate archives and synthesize them together to make incongruent sources and to build a harmonious narrative, using what I have, fixed language, their bodies and their narratives, and my dance performance. Its like an interdisciplinary network coming together to form one harmonious sculptural 3d animated still image virtual reality experience. I want to do a 3d animated video where a safe space is being destroyed. Its a beginning of a series. Right now Im on chapter one. Its a destruction narrative. Its a hieroglyphic legend like what they do with the Hobbit or J.R.R. Tolkien, or like a punk fantasy. I flesh it out I as go. Its going to be like a VR album. I hate how crystallized it is sometimes. Its an epic meta narrative.
Jacolby Satterwhite
The Amsterdam-based artist duo Studio Drift used Microsoft HoloLens to create Concrete Storm, a mixed reality installation commissioned by Artsy Projects on view at the Armory Show. (Studio Drift will be doing a talk at 4 pm today (March 4th), which you can watch live.)
Photography by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
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Clement calls for video technology after ‘mistake’ – Football365.com
Posted: at 3:06 pm
Date published: Saturday 4th March 2017 5:08
Swansea boss Paul Clement called for the introduction of video technology over penalty decisions after Burnley were awarded a bizarre spot-kick at the Liberty Stadium.
Fernando Llorente was the Swansea hero as his stoppage-time winner secured a 3-2 home victory and lifted Clements side five points clear of the Premier League relegation zone.
But the games main talking point centred on the 20th-minute penalty referee Anthony Taylor awarded Burnley, even though television replays showed it was Clarets striker Sam Vokes who had handled the ball.
I spoke to him (Taylor) at half-time and he said he made, what was in his opinion, an honest decision, Swansea head coach Clement said,
I dont think it would be any other way. It was clearly a mistake.
I realised 30 seconds after the incident what had happened. Someone told me from the backroom staff, who were able to see it.
Asked whether video technology should be introduced for such incidents, Clement said: Id 100 per cent welcome it.
I dont understand why its taking so long, its been spoken about for years and years.
I feel for referees. I referee in training and sometimes I guess and sometimes I go off the reaction of the players.
What is bizarre is the referee, the assistants and fourth official are the only people in the stadium who do not have the help they need.
Media have got it, technical staff can get it, fans have got it real-time on their mobile devices. The only one who doesnt get the help is the one who needs it the most.
In a see-saw game, Spain striker Llorente gave Swansea a 12th-minute lead before Grays controversial leveller.
Gray then fired Burnley ahead just after the hour mark, but Martin Olsson equalised before Llorente struck for the 11th time this season.
Im not sure there is a better player in Europe at attacking crosses, and Ive worked with some good ones, Clement said.
Thats some key goals Fernando has come up with now. There was the header against Liverpool and now this one.
He has a hand in goals too, hes put in some great assists.
But he gets big help from the team too, they put some fantastic deliveries in for him today.
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In The Luxury Travel Segment, The Super Rich Are Leaving Technology In The Draw – Forbes
Posted: at 3:06 pm
Forbes | In The Luxury Travel Segment, The Super Rich Are Leaving Technology In The Draw Forbes During the summer, Deauville in the north of France draws an eclectic mix of tourists. Americans and Canadians come to see the beaches of Normandy and the cemeteries of the World War II soldiers who fought to free Europe from the grip of the Nazis and ... |
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In The Luxury Travel Segment, The Super Rich Are Leaving Technology In The Draw - Forbes
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Trump hires Peter Thiel’s top aide for technology post – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 3:06 pm
President Trump has hired Michael Kratsios, former chief of staff at billionaire Peter Thiel's company, to work as deputy chief technology officer with the White House Office of Science or Technology, according to multiple reports.
Thiel offering his top aide to the White House comes after months of supporting Trump behind the scenes. The Paypal co-founder stumped for Trump during a speech at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, last summer.
Kratsios' predecessor, Alexander Macgillivray, came to the Obama administration from Twitter, while Trump's pick has a venture capital background. Kratsios previously worked as chief financial officer of another Thiel organization, Clarium Capital Management.
The White House has not filled the position for chief technology officer, though the last person in the deputy position outlined what needs to be done in the next administration.
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"All of it is stuff we're rushing to get done. Everything from cybersecurity to making sure we're tackling inequality, that we're working on some of the interesting long-term things, like artificial intelligence," Macgillivray told TechCrunch last September.
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Trump hires Peter Thiel's top aide for technology post - Washington Examiner
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