Tuesday, June 07, 2022

Why Are We So Attracted To Walking Disaster Stories?

You, me...we own this country. Politicians are employees of ours....And when somebody does not do the job, we got to let them go.

—Clint Eastwood, born in 1930


People don’t quit jobs, they quit bosses


“Where all fellows think alike, no one thinks very much.” 

— Walter Lippmann


A bad system that sips your energy will beat a good person every time.


Who’s The Greatest Performance Artist Of Our Lifetimes? HM Queen Elizabeth II

"Her controlled, carefully evolving, global visibility has been one of the great demonstrations of durational performance art. It is a feat ... made possible by the Queen's powers of concentration, stamina and presence of mind. She has become a Marina Abramović for the ages." - The Art Newspaper

The Free Learning List

Published by The School of Thought International, a 501c3 nonprofit and registered Australian Charity organization. The Internet’s Best Education Resources. “We’re attempting something quite ambitious: to save the world from itself by popularizing critical thinking, reason, and understanding.  So far our non-profit’s creative commons resources have reached over 30 million people – so while this goal may be ambitious, it isn’t entirely unrealistic.

Researchers identify rise in Guillain-Barré syndrome following AstraZeneca vaccine.


The analysis revealed 198 GBS cases (20% of 966) occurred within six weeks of the first-dose COVID-19 vaccination in England, equating to 0.618 cases per 100,000 vaccinations. Of these, 176 people had had an AstraZeneca vaccination, 21 Pfizer, and 1 (one) Moderna. Only 23 GBS cases were reported within six weeks of any second vaccine dose.

 

Why Are We So Attracted To Disaster Stories?

Maybe we rubberneck over disasters because we are bored by our relatively cushy safety. Or maybe we can’t avoid the threats as they creep up on us, which only encourages more distraction.  - The Daily Beast

The Race to Hide Your Voice Voice recognition

Wired: “Your voice reveals more about you than you realize. To the human ear, your voice can instantly give away your mood, for example—it’s easy to tell if you’re excited or upset. But machines can learn a lot more: inferring your age, gender, ethnicity, socio-economic status, health conditions, and beyond. Researchers have even been able to generate images of faces based on the information contained in individuals’ voice data. 
As machines become better at understanding you through your voice, companies are cashing in. Voice recognition systems—from Siri and Alexa to those using your voice as your password—have proliferated in recent years as artificial intelligence and machine learning have unlocked the ability to understand not just what you are saying but who you are. Big Voice may be a $20 billion industry within a few years. And as the market grows, privacy-focused researchers are increasingly searching for ways to protect people from having their voice data used against them…”


Writing In “The ‘New Yorker’ Sort Of Voice” (And Knowing When To Leave It Behind)

"It is a voice of intelligent curiosity; it implies that the writer has synthesized a great deal of information; it confidently takes readers by the hand. ... It is an effective voice for a lot of long-form journalism, but it was not for the book I was trying to write." - Public Books



AFP say Calabrian mafia have been in Australia for decades, laundering money and ‘pulling the strings’ of other gangs