Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Drone replaces sheepdog

While it’s a clever idea, this guy doesn’t seem too happy about his job being under threat.
Who needs a sheepdog when you've got a drone?
 


Drone replaces sheepdog


Technology may have gone far enough

to make a drone with floppy ears,

but would it wag a tail and  bark a  ruff

when its owner appears?


They can give a robot a name

 and call it "Shep",

but would it play and roll in a  game

or the  morning  newspaper shlep?


With all  mankind feeling so threatened and alone,

they may  now  have to invent a therapy clone.

hzl
3/31/15



 







Farmers have nearly always relied on the skills of wise old sheepdogs when it comes to rounding up their flock.
But it seems that the role of a sheepdog could now be facing the unlikeliest of threats – a drone.
That’s if this video is anything to go by, which shows what happens when a drone is flown near a flock of sheep.
Who needs a sheepdog when you've got a drone?Run for your lives! (Picture: Paul Brennan/ YouTube)
In the video, the drone essentially becomes a flying sheepdog as it manages to herd a flock of sheep through a gate and into a neighbouring field.
The drone, which has been nicknamed ‘Shep’, captured the footage on a farm in Carlow, South-East Ireland.

MORE
Dogs Youtube

THE COLORS OF PREJUDICE


THE COLORS OF PREJUDICE



An Arizona Assistant Prof

in giving a course on "whiteness"

has gotten mail with many a feeling rough

and much  less often,  politeness.


Perhaps if he wanted his students to think ,

 he could have chosen some other color--

If it had been, say, purple, green or pink,

might  he then have suffered less dolor?


Or else, in theory, done as many students do,

  have  them imagine   a large multicolored tattoo---

or even,  for  a scattered sympathetic few ,

  a Yellow Star of David, implying  "Jew"?


hzl
3/31/15

PS: Paradoxically, note that the article was written by Kaiila White !


Subject: Hate mail over 'Problem of Whiteness'
Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2015 07:35:20 -0400


 Hate mail over 'Problem of Whiteness'


Eighteen students at Arizona State University are enrolled in a new, controversial English class about "The Problem of Whiteness."
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PHOENIX — An Arizona State University course called "U.S. Race Theory & the Problem of Whiteness" has gained national attention and landed the university and the course's professor in the middle of a debate about race, political correctness and academic freedom.
In the space of two months, the course has been singled out by Fox News commentators, been targeted online by white-supremacist groups and spurred small protests and counterprotests in Tempe.
According to university records recently obtained by The Arizona Republic, assistant professor Lee Bebout has received dozens of hostile and hate-filled e-mails about the class, and Tempe police say the instructor suffered harassment when fliers were distributed on campus and in Bebout's neighborhood with "Anti-White" printed over a photo of Bebout, who is white.
Bebout's colleagues in higher education say the backlash is unfortunate but comes with the territory when anyone takes a critical approach to race and racism.
"Precisely the reason there is such a backlash is exactly the reason why (such classes) should exist," said Nolan Cabrera, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona whose research focuses on race and racism in higher education. "The time it will be unnecessary is when it ceases to be controversial."
ASU lists no specific description for the English special-topics course, which debuted this semester, and Bebout declined to be interviewed.
But in a statement released in January, ASU said the class "uses literature and rhetoric to look at how stories shape people's understandings and experiences of race. It encourages students to examine how people talk about — or avoid talking about — race in the contemporary United States."
The class, which began on Jan. 12, received national attention Jan. 23 when Fox News correspondent Elisabeth Hasselbeck called the course "quite unfair, and wrong and pointed" on Fox & Friends.
Lauren Clark, an ASU junior who is not in the class or in the English program, said on the show that the class "suggests an entire race is the problem."
The segment ignited a media frenzy, and Bebout began receiving hate mail the day it aired, according to a police report.
Over the next two months, Bebout received at least 70 hostile e-mails from opponents of the class, according to records provided by ASU.
"I look forward to your suicide," one read. Another suggested: "Maybe just kill yourself and get it over with."
One person wrote, "I'd enjoy seeing you swing from a light pole."
Those missives were outnumbered by positive responses to his class, however, Bebout told police.
The day the Fox News segment aired, ASU defended the course in its statement, saying it was "designed to empower students to confront the difficult and often thorny issues that surround us today and reach thoughtful conclusions rather than display gut reactions."
ASU added: "A university is an academic environment where we discuss and debate a wide array of viewpoints."
As controversy surrounding the course continued, ASU declined further comment, letting the Jan. 23 statement stand.
On Jan. 29, someone distributed fliers on the driveways of Bebout's and others' homes in his neighborhood with "Anti-White" printed over his face and reading "Arizona State University is Anti-White," according to Tempe police. The act of putting the flier on Bebout's driveway constituted misdemeanor harassment, the report said.
The fliers were labeled "National Youth Front." NYF is a "youth organization dedicated to the preservation of all White people," according to the website for the group, which has a Phoenix chapter of unknown size.
The group is characterized as a "newly formed youth wing of the White nationalist American Freedom Party" by the Southern Poverty Law Center, an Alabama-based civil-rights organization.
When Bebout told ASU administrators about the e-mails and fliers, they advised him to contact Tempe police, the report said. Tempe police met with Bebout multiple times and assigned a detective with its Homeland Defense Bureau to research the case.
In February, commenters on white-supremacist websites posted a photo of Bebout with his family, along with disparaging comments, his contact information and other personal details.
In early March, a few NYF supporters protested the class on ASU's Tempe campus. Among them was Harry Hughes, a local member of the white-supremacist National Socialist Movement.
A handful of ASU students and Tempe residents responded by protesting and hosting meetings about the nationalists' presence.
This month, forensic analysis identified a fingerprint on one of the fliers from Bebout's neighborhood, though no match was found. Bebout told police he would aid in prosecution if the subjects were identified, but the case was closed for lack of leads, the report said.
NYF Chairman Angelo John Gage, who lives in New Jersey, said in a Facebook message that no one in his organization threatened Bebout. NYF member John Hess said he and other members distributed the fliers on campus but not in Bebout's neighborhood.
Earlier this month, ASU administrators accepted an offer from the Arizona branch of the Anti-Defamation League to train ASU police on extremist groups with an emphasis on white supremacists, according to the league, and to organize a meeting of community leaders to discuss race-related tension on campus.

"We were very alarmed and troubled, specifically about targeting someone in a higher-learning environment, challenging the courses that the professor was teaching and then trying to recruit, organize and disseminate propaganda on a college campus," said Michele Lefkowith, an investigative researcher with the ADL.
The ADL had been working with ASU to plan the officer training and the community meeting, but the head of the ADL's Arizona office said last week that he's losing patience with the university.
"We have continually asked the administration at ASU to make a public statement denouncing the hate speech and the intimidation," said Jake Bennett, director of the ADL's Arizona regional office. "If you don't speak out against it, then you make the people who are committing these acts ... feel emboldened to do it more."
The fields of ethnic studies and "critical race theory" emerged in the 1970s after the civil-rights movement of the '60s. Academics and researchers have taught classes and published works on "Whiteness" and the field of "critical Whiteness studies" since the '90s.
"Whiteness" is an academic term that refers not to race but to a multilayered concept: how whites are viewed by society, how they view themselves, and the implications of those perceptions, such as social norms and discrimination. The ASU course title refers to a "problem" regarding this framework.
"Any time there's critical approaches to race or even bringing up the subject of racism, it's guaranteed there's going to be very strong pushback," said Cabrera, whose research at UA has focused on Whiteness.
He said he and his colleagues also receive hateful e-mails and anonymous comments, though to a lesser degree than Bebout.
"Their distribution of fliers is one of intimidation: 'We are watching you, we know where you live.' ... It's actually a way of saying, 'Watch your back,' " he said. "That's beyond academic intimidation, and that's a situation of just basic safety.
"Higher education was meant to promote critical thinking," Cabrera said.
The sort of hateful deluge Bebout experienced is common and has a chilling effect on academic freedom, said Anita Levy, with the American Association of University Professors, a group that advocates for academia.

"This professor, whether or not he gets tenure, is going to think twice and thrice about what he teaches next time," she said.
It is students who ultimately suffer, Levy said: "They're not going to get the benefit of different and varying viewpoints, which is, after all, presumably what you come to college for, to be exposed to new and different knowledge."
Bebout published an article in an academic journal last year titled "Skin in the Game: Toward a Theorization of Whiteness in the Classroom," which explains his field of study, his life and his approach to teaching.
"Like many scholars of ethnic studies, my courses daily explore instances and legacies of racism, sexism, homophobia, class oppression, and other manifestations of inequality," he wrote in the article.
He cited Nancy Peterson, an English professor at Purdue University, who in a 1996 article "argued that white professors who are willing to examine and question their own standpoint of privileged whiteness ... can help engage white students in similar kinds of critical analysis as well as demonstrate to black students that allies can be found to fight the war against racism."
The "Whiteness" class is not in ASU's course catalog for next semester. Bebout, an assistant professor of literature and the Department of English's literature-program director, is slated to teach "Transborder Chicano Literature," which he has taught three times before, and a special-topics class titled "Chicano Literature, Chicano Politics."
Classes are scheduled up to a year in advance. It is unclear if a class on Whiteness studies or critical race theory will be offered in spring 2016.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Ex-CFO on food stamps after expressing views on Chick-Fil-A


Ex-CFO on food stamps

after expressing  views on Chick-Fil-A

At first, I thought this (now  poor) guy had worked for  Chick-Fil-A

when he opened his yap to have his say,

but he was working for a medical tech firm called Vante in Tucson

before he decided to publicly air, and then film, his views on

that   company. Which led to so many  bomb threats

he was fired and now his family lives in a trailer with debts,

because  few companies, it seems,  won't  take the  risk  to hire him

only having then under duress to fire him. 



The moral of this sad story 

is now clear to see:

The Truth in our Land of the Free

does not always  conquer bigotry ,

especially when  it comes to  the economy.

So, if having your say  was your Plan-A

 you may be safer with a quieter Plan-B.


hzl
3/27/15



Dan Cathy interview with the Biblical Recorder


Fred Phelps Chick-Fil-A
Chick-fil-A found something even better than cows to advertise their holy products.

On July 2, 2012; Dan "Jesus is my homeboy" Cathy, the son of S. Truett Cathy and the president and chief operating officer of Chick-fil-A, was interviewed by the Biblical Recorder, a Conservapedia-like weekly newspaper. When asked about his opposition to gay marriage, Cathy replied:
Cquote1Of course I'm against gay marriage. The gays are even worse than the Jews! Sure, they don't steal your money, but they transform your children into perverts! And while we're talking about marriage, we should probably get rid of interracial marriage too. That stuff's just messed up.Cquote2
Even conservatives thought this was a bit much, and the Biblical Recorder replaced the quote with the three words, "Guilty as charged."






CFO who slammed Chick-fil-A 

now on food stamps

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(NEWSER) – Things haven't gone too well for the former CFO who criticized Chick-fil-A in a video heposted on YouTube.
Unable to find lasting work, 37-year-old Adam Smith is living on food stamps with his wife and four kids in the RV they call home, he tells ABC News. "I think people are scared," Smith says of potential employers. "I think people are scared that it could happen again."
Back in the summer of 2012, as thousands of people were opposing Chick-fil-A's stance on gays, Smith rolled into a Chick-fil-A drive-thru for a free glass of water and slammed the female attendant: "Chick-fil-A is a hateful corporation," Smith told her as he filmed the exchange. "I don't know how you live with yourself and work here. I don't understand it."
Smith posted the video before returning to work at Vante, a Tucson-based medical manufacturer — and the proverbial you-know-what had hit the fan by the time he got there.
The receptionist told him "the voicemail is completely full, and it's full of bomb threats," he says. Fired that day, Smith lost his $200,000 salary and more than $1 million in stock options. He and his family moved to Portland, where he got a CFO job, but lost it two weeks later when they realized who he was.
He says he has since been honest in interviews, but companies have been too wary of fallout to hire him. "I don't regret the stand I took, but I regret… the way I talked to her," an emotional Smith says of the worker.
The interview coincides with his recent digital release of a memoir, A Million Dollar Cup of Water (a paperback version is out April 21), which chronicles his professional collapse and years of soul-searching. It's not faring so well on Amazon, which Smith addressed on the site on Friday. "Regarding the many 1-star ratings my book has received today and yesterday, I would like to note that I have only sold 17 digital copies thus far, yet there are 23 1-star ratings on my book. This fascinates me! LOL!"
This article originally appeared on Newser: Ex-CFO Who Slammed Chick-fil-A Lives



  1. Category:Chick-fil-A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chick-fil-A

    Wikipedia
    Pages in category "Chick-fil-A". The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).
  2. Chick-fil-A - Uncyclopedia - Wikia

    uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Chick-fil-A

    Chick-fil-A is an American fat food restaurant chain specializing in 100% ... tastes, the so-called experts at Wikipedia think they have an article about Chick-fil-A.

  3. California's Ventura High School Scraps Chick-Fil-A From Fundraiser, Citing Chain's Gay Marriage Stance

    Posted: Updated: 


    A California high school has nixed a student-run booster club's plans to sell Chick-fil-A sandwiches during a back-to-school night because of the restaurant chain'scontroversial stance on same-sex marriage.
    Ventura High School Football Principal Val Wyatt said that she wanted to keep outside organizations from selling or advertising during the Sept. 10 event, according to the Ventura County Star, but also referenced the 2012 media firestorm which erupted after Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy confirmed his company's support of the "biblical definition of the family unit" in 2012.
    Still, she said, "With their political stance on gay rights and because the students of Ventura High School and their parents would be at the event, I didn't want them on campus."
    Still, the decision has divided parents and students, particularly since the booster club expected to raise $1,600 for the school's football team. The Ventura location has already donated $21,000 to area schools, according to CBS Los Angeles.
    "Everybody is embraced,” one parent told the news station. “And Chick-fil-A should have been allowed to be here.”
    Fox News' Todd Starnes was also among those to decry the decision, noting, "What, pray tell, could people find offensive about a plump juicy chicken breast tucked between two buttered buns?"
    He added, "This is a classic example of those preaching inclusivity and diversity being the least inclusive and diverse of all."
    It isn't the first that Chick-fil-A has prompted outcry in an educational setting. In 2012, the student government at North Carolina's Elon University voted 35-11 to ask the school's food vendor, Aramark, to find another restaurant to take the fast food chicken chain's place, the Times-News reports.
    Similarly, St. Mary's College in Maryland and North Carolina's Davidson College have both opted against serving Chick-fil-A products at school events.