Thursday, January 31, 2019

Little Larry


Larry's kindergarten class was on a field trip to their local police station where they saw pictures tacked to a bulletin board of the 10 most wanted criminals. One of the youngsters pointed to a picture and asked if it really was the photo of a wanted person. 'Yes,' said the policeman. 'The detectives want very badly to capture him.' Larry asked, "Why didn't you keep him when you took his picture ? "

Little Larry attended a horse auction with his father. He watched as his father moved from horse to horse, running his hands up and down the horse's legs and rump, and chest. After a few minutes, Larry asked, 'Dad, why are you doing that?' His father replied, 'Because when I'm buying horses, I have to make sure that they are healthy and in good shape before I buy. Larry, looking worried, said, 'Dad, I think the UPS guy wants to buy Mom .....



Monday, January 28, 2019

Huawei's Set To Battle US in 5G

It's got major smartphone ambitions


Huawei's consumer division chief made a bold prediction last week: Rams win by 10 The company will become the world's largest smartphone maker.
  • "Even without the U.S. market we will be number one in the world," he said. "I believe at the earliest this year, and next year at the latest."
  • "Our customers have trust and confidence in us...it's only politics guys which are trying to put pressure on us."
Zoom out: Huawei's consumer business raked in more than $52 billion in revenue last year, the first time it's accounted for more of the company's total sales than Huawei's telecom network business.

Speaking of telecom networks...

The NYT published a remarkable story over the weekend explaining how the Trump administration is pressuring other countries to block Huawei equipment.
What's at stake? The building out of 5G networks...or as the reporters describe it, "the most dramatic remaking of the plumbing that controls the internet since it sputtered into being, in pieces, 35 years ago" (now that's writing). The U.S. believes it's locked in a Cold War-style arms race with China—and by proxy Huawei—to be the world's plumber.

Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine

The Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine

 (SpanishCatedral basílica de San Agustín) is a historic cathedral in St. AugustineFlorida, and the seat of the Catholic Bishop of St. Augustine. It is located at Cathedral Street between Charlotte and St. George Streets. Constructed over five years (1793–1797),[3][4] it was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark on April 15, 1970. Its congregation, established in 1565, is the oldest Christian congregation in the contiguous United States.


History[edit]


A historic image of the Basilica
During the mid-1560s, the Spanish Empire expanded from its Caribbean strongholds northward, to what is Florida today. The first colony which was founded and remained continuously occupied was St. Augustine. Spanish settlers began immediately to establish a Catholic church. The Roman Catholic Church was integral to the Spanish monarchy and to Spain's history. In fact, from the mid-1500s to the mid-1600s, the kingdom was in the midst of a Catholic Revival, in opposition to the Protestant Reformation.
The settlement's cathedral was completed rapidly. However, given that the early colonists were mostly sailors or soldiers and had little experience in architecture, the first Cathedral of St. Augustine was very simple, with a variety of materials and overall hurried confusion about the building. As the English would have it, the original parishwould be short-lived. In 1586, an attack on St. Augustine led by Sir Francis Drake resulted in the cathedral burning down.[6] As determinedly as they had done two decades previously, the colonists began rebuilding the cathedral and completed the second construction in a matter of months. Once again though, the cathedral was constructed hastily using straw and palmetto, which deteriorated quickly in the humid climate. In 1599, a fire destroyed the second cathedral.
Shortly after news of the second cathedral's demise reached Spain, a tithe was placed for several years; and in 1605, the third attempt was made to construct the church. By this time, more experienced architects and builders from Europe had begun to make their way to the New World, and the third cathedral was built with permanence in mind. It was constructed from timber, and it would stay intact for the next 95 years.
Some years after the timber cathedral had been completed, the church began to deteriorate due to lack of maintenance, climatic conditions, and severe fluctuation in the congregation's size. Consequently, in 1702 when the church was again burned down, during a failed English effort to take over the city led by South Carolina colonist James Moore, the cathedral would vanish from the town for over ninety years. Undoubtedly, there were attempts throughout to rebuild, the most notable in 1707.
The King had sent a large sum of money for the cathedral to be rebuilt. The funds never made it to the cathedral because the colony was in poor shape; the money was spent on goods, back pay for soldiers, and public officials taking a cut. (A similar misappropriation of funds had occurred in almost the same manner about a century earlier.) During the first half of the 18th century, priests held mass in what was a portion of St. Augustine's hospital. This became detrimental to the size and morale of the congregation, as well as to the relations with Native Americans, many of whom had converted to Catholicism.

From 1763 to 1784, Florida fell under British rule, and concern for reconstruction dwindled into nonexistence. However, only two years after Spain regained control of the colony, a new sense of pride was instilled in the citizenry and a plan for a grand Cathedral was put into motion. As planned, in 1793 construction of the Cathedral of St. Augustine was begun, this rendition of the project being the longest-running in the parish's history, and finally completed in August 1797.

Architecture[edit]

Cathedral interior
The cathedral's eclectic facade is a combination of Spanish mission and Neoclassical styles. Spanish mission features include curving bell gables, limited fenestration, clay roof tiles, a semicircular tympanum, prominent statuary niche, and comparatively unadorned walls. Neoclassical details surround the entry door; an entablature embellished with triglyphs is topped with a broken pediment above and supported by pairs of Doric columns below.[7]
Main facade with Neoclassicalelements surrounding the doorway and Spanish mission styling at the gables
In 1887, just as fire had plagued the cathedral in the past, the structure burned once again. The damage was not total, however, and the exterior shell of the building was still salvageable because the coquina and cement used to build the masonry walls were fireproof. Reconstruction was started through donations from Henry Flagler and funds from the congregation. At this time the congregation hired New York architect James Renwick, Jr. to restore the burned cathedral.[8] Upon restoration, many improvements were made; to start the church was enlarged, particularly the addition of a transept to give the church a more European style. Also, as the truss system before was somewhat plain, Renwick devised a roof system that still relied on timber, but decided to decorate the timbers and leave an exposed ceiling, which today makes for a beautiful view upon entering the church seeing the decorated and varnished chords in the upper portion of the structure.
One possible misconception of the history of the Cathedral of St. Augustine is the well-known bell tower that graces the top of the building. This was not the first time in the U.S. that an exposed bell tower had been placed on a church, or Spanish type of religious structure. In fact, by this point, Spanish missions had already moved far west, and had built cathedrals in Arizona, New Mexico, California, Texas, and Mexico. The bell tower was placed on the Cathedral of St. Augustine because the exposed bell at the front of the cathedral had become a well known symbol of the Spanish mission. Despite the technique being used elsewhere, a certain grandeur was still associated with this specific cathedral. As such, four bells were placed at the Cathedral of St. Augustine; one of which is still thought to be the oldest bell in the United States to this day because it is thought to have been salvaged from a previous church.[9] As for the other bells, one of the more ironic features of the cathedral, one of the bells was taken from a British cathedral, the very empire that had burned this church more than once in the past.
The last rebuilding of the cathedral (not the remodelling) included an idea for building materials that was remarkably innovative. Since fire had demonstrated to be a problem in the past, the notion arose to use a nonflammable material, and with a reasonably modest budget coupled with constraints of transport, a solution was not so clear. In the end, however, apparently due to Amerindian construction knowledge, coquina stone was used for the exterior walls.[10] The great aspect of this material was it is a sedimentary rock, created primarily from the decomposition of seashells. As St. Augustine is a city near the coast, the stone could be quarried and transported with minimal distance to travel, and it was easy to quarry because the stone was saturated with seawater when quarried. After pulled out of an extremely wet environment, the stone hardens to a regular stone consistency when dry. This served the exact purpose that was required and was done with minimal effort and cost.


Saturday, January 26, 2019

Nathan Phillips is a liar

Nathan Phillips is a liar, not a victim






Days after Nathan Phillips’ story of his confrontation with a group of students in Washington was thoroughly discredited, many on the left are still rallying behind him, pretending he was somehow a victim.
This, even after both the New York Times and the Washington Post had to publish not just “clarifications” about the incident itself, but even corrections of his claim to be a Vietnam, or “Vietnam times,” veteran. (Turns out he was a stateside refrigerator technician, and frequently AWOL.)
It also turns out Phillips made nearly identical allegations against a few college students four years ago.
Yet the instant a single video of this incident hit Twitter, journalists jumped to uncritically accept Phillips’ account of how a mob of MAGA-hat-wearing white teens surrounded and taunted him. After all, the image exploited reporters’ preconceptions: Here was an aged Native American surrounded by a pack of smirking pro-Trump teens.
But full videos of the incident soon showed he was lying: He was the one who confronted the students, unprovoked, beating a drum just inches from their faces.
In fact, video shows the Covington school students were themselves being taunted with racist and homophobic slurs by a group of Black Hebrew Israelites.
Yet Phillips claims the kids “were in the process of attacking these four black individuals” and “looked like they were going to lynch them,” hence his move to “do something.” Why not beat his drum at the “Israelite” aggressors?
The video also shows, contra Phillips, no sign the kids were defiantly chanting “Build that wall.” Nor does it feature Phillips saying anything that sounds remotely like an effort to pacify the situation.
Yet he still has supporters because he keeps crafting new narratives that appeal to left-liberal prejudice. He certainly has the right bottom line, though: “Time for lies to be not accepted anymore,” he told CNN.
Yes: Starting with his.

Saturday, January 19, 2019

Like the Justice League, but for Climate Economics



CLIMATE

Like the Justice League, but for Climate Economics

27 Nobel Prize in Economics winners +
4 former Fed chairs +
2 former Treasury secretaries +
12 former chairs of the Council of Economic Advisers=

The Climate Leadership Council

It's an all-star cast of economists (we're talkin' Janet Yellen, Amartya Sen, Larry Summers...) who came out in support of a carbon tax on businesses in a WSJ op-ed.
Their plan advocates replacing current "cumbersome" environmental regulations with a tax on companies that release environmentally harmful carbon into the atmosphere.
  • In theory, that should incentivize the private sector to use cleaner energy and implement climate-friendly tech at a faster clip.
What's in it for you? A little "political sweetener" to win bipartisan support. The plan suggests sharing the tax proceeds with the American people to offset higher energy costs firms will have to pass on to consumers.
  • Supporters say the tax would generate about $200 billion per year to start—which would translate to $2,000 for a family of four.
Zoom out: These economists know they have some selling to do. Even in left-leaning Washington State voters rejected a statewide carbon tax last November.
+ And wouldn't ya know: The World Economic Forum just identified environmental concerns as the biggest risk businesses (and the world) currently face.
Via Bloomberg
        


Mueller's Team Blasts BuzzFeed's Trump 'Bombshell' As 'Not Accurate'

BREAKING: Mueller's Team Blasts BuzzFeed's Trump 'Bombshell' As 'Not Accurate' 




Special counsel Robert Mueller's office pushed back on a "bombshell" report published by BuzzFeed News on Thursday, describing elements of the report as "not accurate. 
In a statement to BuzzFeed News, a spokesperson for special counsel Robert Mueller's office wrote:
BuzzFeed's description of specific statements to the Special Counsel's Office, and characterization of documents and testimony obtained by this office, regarding Michael Cohen's Congressional testimony are not accurate.
BuzzFeed had cited two anonymous law enforcement sources in its report alleging that President Donald Trump had instructed his former lawyer Michael Cohen to lie to Congress and that Cohen briefed the Trump family on a regular basis about a real estate project in Russia.
"Now the two sources have told BuzzFeed News that Cohen also told the special counsel that after the election, the president personally instructed him to lie — by claiming that negotiations ended months earlier than they actually did — in order to obscure Trump’s involvement," BuzzFeed reported on Thursday.
The Daily Wire noted on Thursday that in 2017 the "embattled Cohen famously pleaded guilty to falsely testifying to Senate and House intelligence committees about when his negotiations over a potential Trump Tower Moscow project ended; rather than January 2016, as he originally claimed, the negotiations went on months longer. He lied, Cohen claimed, to 'minimize links between the Moscow Project and Individual 1 [generally believed to be Trump,' with the express hope of 'limiting the ongoing Russia investigations.'"
The news from the special counsel's office sparked intense reaction on social media:
RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel tweeted: "The entire premise of this story, which received wall-to-wall coverage, was based on 'evidence' the reporters admitted they never even saw. Who could've predicted that the publishers of the phony dossier would get this wrong, too?"
The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald tweeted: "24 straight hours of completely uncritical, mindless, hysterical cable news coverage on a story - complete with calls for impeachment - that Muller's office now says was fundamentally false. This has happened over and over in the Trump/Russia story. Why don't people trust media??"
Fox News investigative reporter Sara Carter tweeted: "I did not believe this story from the beginning- they never saw the documents, had no corroboration from SC office and now they’ve been either played by sources or wrote outright lies. It fails all journalistic standards ..."
The Hill's Buck Sexton tweeted: "Buzzfeed: 'we’ve got Trump nailed. It’s all over.' Wise people: 'wait, do you have evidence? Have you seen it?' Buzzfeed: 'No, but we totes aren’t getting ahead of our skis. We stake our credibility on it.' Special Counsel: 'Turns out Buzzfeed has no credibility.'"
This is a breaking news story, refresh the page for updates.