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Pope Frances: I've Been Expecting An Encyclical On The Environment

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Pope Francis delivers a blessing during noon prayers. 

Alan: Whether the pope sides with anthropogenic global warming, or only says that reasonable people will behave as if anthropogenic warming is a fact, it will be a game changer, altering the face of all Christianity forever. 


The Pope Thinks Climate Change Is a Major Threat. 

So Do American Catholics.

Most Catholics say global warming is a "crisis" or a "major problem."

| Tue Dec. 30, 2014 
Pope Francis, the leader the Catholic Church, is closing out 2014 in his typically headline-grabbing fashion. He used a traditional Christmas address to issue a scathing takedown of the political squabbling that infects Vatican bureaucracy, and he was also credited as a key backroom player in the thawing of US-Cuba relations.
Next on his list? Climate change.
Over the weekend, the Guardian reported that the pope will issue the first-ever comprehensive set of Vatican teachings on climate change, in the form of an encyclical—or "papal letter"—sent to churches worldwide. He will also personally lobby for climate action action in a series of high profile meetings ahead of the all-important UN global warming negotiations in Paris next year. From the Guardian:
Following a visit in March to Tacloban, the Philippine city devastated…by typhoon Haiyan, the pope will publish a rare encyclical on climate change and human ecology. Urging all Catholics to take action on moral and scientific grounds, the document will be sent to the world's 5,000 Catholic bishops and 400,000 priests, who will distribute it to parishioners. According to Vatican insiders, Francis will meet other faith leaders and lobby politicians at the general assembly in New York in September, when countries will sign up to new anti-poverty and environmental goals.
A papal letter "is among the highest levels of teaching authority for a pope," said Dan Misleh, executive director of the Catholic Climate CovenantThese edicts "always make news, because they are rare and comprehensive," he added.
Singling out climate change is also significant. "It is the first time ever an encyclical letter has been written just on the environment," Misleh said. "The faithful, including bishops, and all of us who adhere to the Catholic faith, are supposed to read it and examine our own consciences."
Mobilizing believers to embrace climate action could be a very big deal, given the sheer number of people who identify as Catholic in the US—around 75 million—he said. "If we had just a fraction of those acting on climate change, it would be bigger than the networks of some of the biggest environmental groups in the US," he said. "That could help change the way we live our lives, and impact our views on public policy."
Hispanic Catholics are more likely than any other group to say their congregation has sponsored climate change-related activities.
The impact would be felt beyond Catholicism too, said Mary Evelyn Tucker, director of the Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale University. She called the forthcoming letter "one of the most important documents on the moral implications of what we are doing to our planet." In particular, Tucker said, the document "will contain compelling teachings on environmental justice for the poor and those who are victims of climate disruption around the world."
But would America's Catholics welcome climate advocacy from the pope? Recent polling by the Public Religion Research Institute and the American Academy of Religion suggests that many would.
The survey asks a series of questions about the environment and religion in an attempt to discern how faith impacts our thinking on science, current events, and policy. The biggest takeaway when it was released in November was that nearly half of Americans say natural disasters are a sign of "the end times," as described in the Bible. But there are other, more detailed findings about individual religions, too. The researchers break down the results by religious and racial group: White evangelical Protestants, white mainline Protestants, black Protestants, white Catholics, Hispanic Catholics, Jewish Americans, other non-Christians, and "religiously unaffiliated."
And indeed, most Catholics seem to agree with the pope that climate change poses a serious threat. Here are some of the survey's key findings:
  • Nearly three-quarters of Hispanic Catholics surveyed agree that climate change constitutes a "crisis" or a "major problem." The same is true for a majority (53 percent) of white Catholic respondents. Of the groups surveyed, Jews are the most concerned about climate change, with nearly 80 percent calling it a "crisis" or a "major problem." On the other end of the spectrum, a majority (54 percent) of white evangelicals see climate change as only a minor problem, or not a problem at all.
  • Nearly a quarter (24 percent) of Catholics surveyed said climate change is the "most pressing" environmental issue we face. That's more than white mainline Protestants and evangelicals, but less than black Protestants or those who are unaffiliated with a religion.
  • The pope's climate message is likely to resonate with what's happening already at a grassroots level in churches, as least in Hispanic communities, according to the survey. Seven-in-10 Hispanic Catholics say their clergy discus climate change often (22 percent) or sometimes (48 percent). Hispanic Catholics are also more likely than any other group surveyed to say their congregation has sponsored climate change-related activities, like group discussions or educational programs on the topic.
  • Interestingly, there's wide agreement that acting now on climate change will matter economically. Majorities of all groups surveyed—including 69 percent of Hispanic Catholics and 63 percent of white Catholics—agree that dealing with global warming now will help prevent economic calamities in the future.
Climate change, said the pope, will "affect all of humanity, especially the poorest and future generations."
The pope's climate plans follow a call by prominent Catholic bishops to end the use of fossil fuels and secure a global agreement to fight climate change. "As the church, we see and feel an obligation for us to protect creation and to challenge the misuse of nature," declared one of the statement's authors, Monsignor Salvador Piñeiro García-Calderón, the Archbishop of Ayacucho, during the recent climate conference in Lima, Peru. "We felt this joint statement had to come now because Lima is a milestone on the way to Paris, and Paris has to deliver a binding agreement."
It's also not the first time Pope Francis has advocated tough climate action. Ahead of the Lima meeting, the pontiff wrote a letter to Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, Peru's minister of the environment and the host of the meeting, to urge action. "The time to find global solutions is running out," wrote the Pope. "We can find adequate solutions only if we act together and unanimously."
Climate change, he added, will "affect all of humanity, especially the poorest and future generations. What's more, it represents a serious ethical and moral responsibility."


Florida Pastor Shoots Employee

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Terry Howell: Central Florida pastor shoots armed former employee

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) -- Authorities say the pastor of a central Florida church shot and wounded an employee during a gunfight after the employee learned he was being fired.
The Osceola County Sheriff's Office said in a news release that Living Water Fellowship Church Pastor Terry Howell had been meeting with maintenance worker Benjamin Parangan Tuesday to terminate Parangan's employment with the Kissimmee church.
Witnesses say Parangan pulled out a handgun and fired multiple shots at Howell. He wasn't hurt but returned fire with his own weapon and hit Parangan.
Officials say Parangan was listed in stable condition at a hospital.
Deputies are investigating the shooting as a case of self-defense. Authorities say charges are pending against Parangan.
Earlier this month, Pastor James "Tripp" Battle was fatally shot at his Bradenton church.

50 Police Officers Shot & Killed In 2014. Huge, Steady Decline Since 1970s

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The Good Guys

Alan: Police fatalities (by gunshot) are down 61% in the last 40 years while the overall rate of violent crime has similarly plummeted by more than half since the 1990s.

"The US Murder Rate Is On Track To Be Lowest In A Century"


America's Real Criminal Element: Lead

The Thinking Housewife's Deluded Belief That "Black Violence Has Gotten Worse"

Fifty officers were shot and killed in the line of duty this year, compared to 32 in 2013, a 56 percent increase, according to preliminary data published by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. Fifteen of those officers died in ambushes, including Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu in New York this month.

In a statement, Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department was analyzing the incidents and providing training and equipment to help keep cops safe in ambushes and other situations.

"These troubling statistics underscore the very real dangers that America's brave law enforcement officers face every time they put on their uniforms," Holder said.

In general, however, police work is much safer now than it has been in the past. From 1970 to 1979, the average number of officers shot and killed in the line of duty was 127 a year. That figure has declined steadily over the past four decades, as this chart shows. This year's total of 50 is still far, far too many, but it is slightly lower than the annual average since 2010 of 53 deaths per year. These days, more police officers die of other causes on the job than are killed, the data show.

Diane Rehm Guest Gets To The Nub Of Police Violence And How Easily It's Prevented

Harvard's Steve Pinker Notes Slight Uptick In Violence In A Much More Peaceful World


American Police Shoot An Unarmed Black Man Every 72 Hours
(Taking police and vigilante shootings together, we find that an unarmed black man gets shot every 29 hours.)

"Non-Racist" Gringos Cheer Black Man Who Would "Ventilate Black Asses With M16s"


Whites Think Discrimination Against Them Is A Bigger Problem Bias Against Blacks

"Given FL's "Stand Your Ground Law," Can This Black Woman Kill The White Cop Who Assaulted Her?"

"Video: WalMart Shopper John Crawford Didn't Aim Toy Gun At Anyone Before Police Shot Him Dead"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/09/video-john-crawford-didnt-aim-toy-gun.html
(Imagine Crawford as a young white guy. Maybe your son...)

Black Kids Get Shot For Their Mistakes. White Kids Get Psychologized
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/08/black-kids-get-shot-for-their-mistakes.html

WalMart Video Shows Man Shot Dead, Without Warning For Leaning On Toy Gun

White Man Jaywalks With Assault Rifle. Guess What Police Do

"White Teen In BMW Hits Three Cars, Flees Scene, Assaults Cops, And Doesn't Get Shot"

7.1 Million Sign Up For Obamacare In Same Period That 106 Thousand Signed Last Year

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"Obamacare: Where's The Train Wreck?"
7.1 million. That's how many people have bought health insurance polices this year in the state and federal marketplaces, including returning customers and those who were automatically reenrolled in existing plans. The data is still incomplete, but that figure shows a major improvement over last year, when technological failures prevented all but 106,000 people from signing up for health insurance in the first month of enrollment. Jason Millman in The Washington Post.

Extraordinary Electron Micrograph Of Sperm Penetrating Egg!

New York City Cops Walk Off The Job: Grow Up Guys. Criticism Is Baked In

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New York cops walk off the job. Data suggest that New York police officers have almost entirely stopped enforcing public order in the past week, apparently because they don't think the public appreciates the value of their work. Traffic citations, for example, are down 94 percent. The cops should learn to handle criticism and get back on the beat. The New York Times.


FRIEDERSDORF: Conservatives must condemn police insubordination. "What's unfolding in New York City is, at its core, a public employee union using overheated rhetoric and emotional appeals to rile public employees into insubordination." The Atlantic.

DAVIDSON: It's not clear what the police want, exactly. Gentrification has transformed New York, and the city has become much safer, but the police haven't adjusted. "Suddenly places they didn’t want to patrol are places they can hardly afford to live on an officer’s salary. Their dismay may be understandable. But it should not be enraging." The New Yorker.


The Year In Charts: Economy Up, Gas Price Down, Obamacare Working

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"Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Bitch, Whine?"

"People Who Watch Only Fox News 
Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die

The year in charts. The economy is improving and oil prices are falling, but disparities in income are widening. Meanwhile, Obamacare seems to be working, and the public is more polarized by political ideology than ever. The New York Times



A Big Safety Net And Strong Job Market Can Coexist. Just Ask Scandinavia

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SLIDE SHOW|8 Photos

Welfare and Work, Scandinavian Style

Welfare and Work, Scandinavian Style

CreditBrian Cliff Olguin for The New York Times

It is a simple idea supported by both economic theory and most people’s intuition: If welfare benefits are generous and taxes high, fewer people will work. Why bother being industrious, after all, if you can get a check from the government for sitting around — and if your choice to work means that much of your income will end up in the tax collectors’ coffers?
Here’s the rub, though: The idea may be backward.
Some of the highest employment rates in the advanced world are in places with the highest taxes and most generous welfare systems, namely Scandinavian countries. The United States and many other nations with relatively low taxes and a smaller social safety net actually have substantiallylower rates of employment.



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More People Work in Countries With High Taxes and Generous Welfare

Contrary to what theory might predict, the countries with the highest rates of participation in the labor force tend to have higher taxes and more extensive social welfare spending.
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In Denmark, someone who enters the labor force at an average salary loses 86 percent of earnings to a combination of taxes and lost eligibility for welfare benefits; that number is only 37 percent in the United States. Yet the percentage of Danes between the ages of 20 and 59 with a job is 10 percentage points higher than in the United States.



Continue reading the main story
Nonemployed
Articles in this series will examine the decline of work in the United States and its consequences, for individuals and society.

    In short, more people may work when countries offer public services that directly make working easier, such as subsidized care for children and the old; generous sick leave policies; and cheap and accessible transportation. If the goal is to get more people working, what’s important about a social welfare plan may be more about what the money is spent on than how much is spent.
    That is the argument that Henrik Jacobsen Kleven, a professor at the London School of Economics, offers to explain the exceptional rates of participation in the work force among citizens of Sweden, Norway and his native Denmark.
    If correct, it could have broad implications for how the United States might better use its social safety net to encourage Americans to work. In particular, it could mean that more direct aid to the working poor could help coax Americans into the labor force more effectively than the tax credits that have been a mainstay for compromise between Republicans and Democrats for the last generation.
    In Scandinavian countries, working parents have the option of heavily subsidized child care. Leave policies make it easy for parents to take off work to care for a sick child. Heavily subsidized public transportation may make it easier for a person in a low-wage job to get to and from work. And free or inexpensive education may make it easier to get the training to move from the unemployment rolls to a job.



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    Employment Rates Are Higher in Countries That Subsidize Child Care

    Public spending on child care, preschool and elderly care correlates with higher proportions of adults working.
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    In the United States, the major policies aimed at helping the working poor are devised around tax subsidies that put more cash in people’s pockets so long as they work, most notably through the Earned-income tax credit andChild Tax Credit.
    “The United States doesn’t do much of anything in terms of supporting labor force participation via expenditures,” Mr. Kleven said.
    There is a solid correlation, by Mr. Kleven’s calculations, between what countries spend on employment subsidies — like child care, preschool and care for older adults — and what percentage of their working-age population is in the labor force.
    Consider Marianne Hillestad of Steinberg, Norway. She teaches kindergarten; her husband, Ruben Sanchez, installs heating and ventilation systems. Day care for their three children, ages 4, 7, and 9, works out to about $1,100 a month; Ms. Hillestad estimates that if she had to pay a market rate, it would be nearly twice that, eating up most of her paycheck.
    “Using day care and working full time was a matter of costs and benefits,” Ms. Hillestad said. “The system is designed to keep us working. Maybe there are loopholes, but I could not sleep well at night if I was trying to cheat the system just to cash in social benefit checks.”
    Collectively, these policies and subsidies create flexibility such that a person on the fence between taking a job versus staying at home to care for children or parents may be more likely to take a job.
    “Being home with my children is a blessing," said Camilla Grimsland Os, a nurse in Oslo. “But I like my work, I like my colleagues, and I feel that I contribute when I go to work.”
    It is probably overly simplistic to attribute the very high employment rates in Scandinavia to a handful of policies that encourage work, as Mr. Kleven himself concedes; he is “more trying to raise a puzzle” than to provide a definitive answer. There are countless differences between Northern European countries and the rest of the world beyond child care policies and the like. The Scandinavian countries may have cultures that encourage more people to work, especially women.
    And this analysis may leave out some other factors that lead more Northern Europeans to join the work force than Americans.




    Robert Greenstein, the president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, notes that wages for entry-level work are much higher in the Nordic countries than in the United States, reflecting a higher minimum wage, stronger labor unions and cultural norms that lead to higher pay. (In October, my colleagues Liz Alderman and Steven Greenhouse wrote about$20-an-hour Burger King employees in Denmark.)
    Perhaps more Americans would enter the labor force if even basic jobs paid that well, regardless of whether the United States provided better child care and other services. The employment subsidies Mr. Kleven cites surely help coax more Scandinavians into the work force, Mr. Greenstein agrees, but shouldn’t be viewed in isolation.
    “You get into trouble when you cherry-pick things,” Mr. Greenstein said.
    But even conservatives can see some useful lessons in the Scandinavian system.
    “I’ve advocated expanding transportation options for low-income workers in order to help them get to work, and I think everybody agrees that we could do better with education,” said Michael Strain, a resident scholar at theAmerican Enterprise Institute. “I think the Scandinavian countries do those things well, and there are certainly things we can learn.”
    But that outlook changes, he argues, when looking at subsidized child care. In effect, the United States’ system of tax credits for the working poor allows people to make their own choices over how to use the money, whether for child care, food or clothing.
    “I’m more in favor of the child tax credit,” Mr. Strain said. “You can spend the child tax credit on child care if you want to, or spend it on whatever else you need. Do we effectively want government subsidizing the child care industry for middle-class parents?”
    If the United States were to subsidize child care, that benefit would join tax subsidies of employer-provided health insurance, home mortgages and retirement savings as policies that tend to favor the middle and upper-middle class.
    Every country has a mix of taxes, welfare benefits and policies to promote work that reflects its politics and culture. In the large, diverse United States, there is deep skepticism of social welfare programs and direct government spending, along with a greater commitment to keeping taxes low.
    So for reasons intertwined with politics and history, the United States has relied on a different set of policies aimed at helping workers get a leg up. But as policy makers around the world try to encourage growth by increasing the proportion of their populations with a job, there is a lesson from Scandinavia useful in its simplicity: If you make it easier for people to work, it may be the case that more will.
    Correction: December 17, 2014 
    An earlier version of a chart with this article, depicting the effect of taxes on employment rate, misstated the demographic group measured. The group is all people in the age bracket 20 to 59, not just women in that age bracket.




    As Robots Grow Smarter, American Workers Struggle To Keep Up

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    "Automation, Robotization, Software-Enhanced Productivity And Permanent Job Loss"

    Claire Cain Miller
    New York Times
    A machine that administers sedatives recently began treating patients at a Seattle hospital. At a Silicon Valley hotel, a bellhop robot delivers items to people’s rooms. Last spring, a software algorithm wrote a breaking news article about an earthquake that The Los Angeles Times published.
    Although fears that technology will displace jobs are at least as old as the Luddites, there are signs that this time may really be different. The technological breakthroughs of recent years — allowing machines to mimic the human mind — are enabling machines to do knowledge jobs and service jobs, in addition to factory and clerical work.
    And over the same 15-year period that digital technology has inserted itself into nearly every aspect of life, the job market has fallen into a long malaise. Even with the economy’s recent improvement, the share of working-age adults who are working is substantially lower than a decade ago — and lower than any point in the 1990s.


    Economists long argued that, just as buggy-makers gave way to car factories, technology would create as many jobs as it destroyed. Now many are not so sure.



    Photo

    A robot delivers an order of fresh towels to a room at the Aloft Hotel in Cupertino, Calif.CreditJason Henry for The New York Times

    Lawrence H. Summers, the former Treasury secretary, recently said that he no longer believed that automation would always create new jobs. “This isn’t some hypothetical future possibility,” he said. “This is something that’s emerging before us right now.”
    Erik Brynjolfsson, an economist at M.I.T., said, “This is the biggest challenge of our society for the next decade.”
    Mr. Brynjolfsson and other experts say they believe that society has a chance to meet the challenge in ways that will allow technology to be mostly a positive force. In addition to making some jobs obsolete, new technologies have also long complemented people’s skills and enabled them to be more productive — as the Internet and word processing have for office workers or robotic surgery has for surgeons.
    More productive workers, in turn, earn more money and produce goods and services that improve lives.
    “It is literally the story of the economic development of the world over the last 200 years,” said Marc Andreessen, a venture capitalist and an inventor of the web browser. “Just as most of us today have jobs that weren’t even invented 100 years ago, the same will be true 100 years from now.”



    Continue reading the main story
    Nonemployed
    Articles in this series will examine the decline of work in the United States and its consequences, for individuals and society.

      Yet there is deep uncertainty about how the pattern will play out now, as two trends are interacting. Artificial intelligence has become vastly more sophisticated in a short time, with machines now able to learn, not just follow programmed instructions, and to respond to human language and movement.
      At the same time, the American work force has gained skills at a slower rate than in the past — and at a slower rate than in many other countries. Americans between the ages of 55 and 64 are among the most skilled in the world, according to a recent report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Younger Americans are closer to average among the residents of rich countries, and below average by some measures.
      Clearly, many workers feel threatened by technology. In a recent New York Times/CBS News/Kaiser Family Foundation poll of Americans between the ages of 25 and 54 who were not working, 37 percent of those who said they wanted a job said technology was a reason they did not have one. Even more — 46 percent — cited “lack of education or skills necessary for the jobs available.”
      Self-driving vehicles are an example of the crosscurrents. They could put truck and taxi drivers out of work — or they could enable drivers to be more productive during the time they used to spend driving, which could earn them more money. But for the happier outcome to happen, the drivers would need the skills to do new types of jobs.
      The challenge is evident for white-collar jobs, too. Ad sales agents and pilots are two jobs that the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects will decline in number over the next decade. Flying a plane is largely automated today and will become more so. And at Google, the biggest seller of online ads, software does much of the selling and placing of search ads, meaning there is much less need for salespeople.



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      A medical team performed a colonoscopy with a robotic system (the object topped by a monitor at left) that delivered sedatives to a patient at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle.CreditMatthew Ryan Williams for The New York Times

      There are certain human skills machines will probably never replicate, like common sense, adaptability and creativity, said David Autor, an economist at M.I.T. Even jobs that become automated often require human involvement, like doctors on standby to assist the automated anesthesiologist, called Sedasys.
      Elsewhere, though, machines are replacing certain jobs. Telemarketers are among those most at risk, according to a recent study by Oxford University professors. They identified recreational therapists as the least endangered — and yet that judgment may prove premature. Already, Microsoft’s Kinectcan recognize a person’s movements and correct them while doing exercise or physical therapy.




      Other fields could follow. The inventors of facial recognition software from a University of California, San Diego lab say it can estimate pain levels from children’s expressions and screen people for depression. Machines are even learning to taste: The Thai government in September introduced a robotthat determines whether Thai food tastes sufficiently authentic or whether it needs another squirt of fish sauce.
      Watson, the computer system built by IBM that beat humans at Jeopardy in 2011, has since learned to do other human tasks. This year, it began advising military veterans on complex life decisions like where to live and which insurance to buy. Watson culls through documents for scientists and lawyers and creates new recipes for chefs. Now IBM is trying to teach Watson emotional intelligence.
      IBM, like many tech companies, says Watson is assisting people, not replacing them, and enabling them to be more productive in new types of jobs. It will be years before we know what happens to the counselors, salespeople, chefs, paralegals and researchers whose jobs Watson is learning to do.



      Continue reading the main story

      Stepping Out of the Labor Force

      The percentage of people ages 25 to 54 who do not work:
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      Whether experts lean toward the more pessimistic view of new technology or the most optimistic one, many agree that the uncertainty is vast. Not even the people who spend their days making and studying new technology say they understand the economic and societal effects of the new digital revolution
      When the University of Chicago asked a panel of leading economists about automation, 76 percent agreed that it had not historically decreased employment. But when asked about the more recent past, they were less sanguine. About 33 percent said technology was a central reason that median wages had been stagnant over the past decade, 20 percent said it was not and 29 percent were unsure.
      Perhaps the most worrisome development is how poorly the job market is already functioning for many workers. More than 16 percent of men between the ages of 25 and 54 are not working, up from 5 percent in the late 1960s; 30 percent of women in this age group are not working, up from 25 percent in the late 1990s. For those who are working, wage growth has been weak, while corporate profits have surged.
      “We’re going to enter a world in which there’s more wealth and less need to work,” Mr. Brynjolfsson said. “That should be good news. But if we just put it on autopilot, there’s no guarantee this will work out.”
      Some say the nature of work will need to change. Google’s co-founder, Larry Page, recently suggested a four-day workweek, so as technology displaces jobs, more people can find employment. Others believe the role of the public sector should expand, to help those struggling to find work. Many point to education, in new technologies and in the skills that remain uniquely human, like creativity and judgment.
      “The answer is surely not to try to stop technical change,” Mr. Summers said, “but the answer is not to just suppose that everything’s going to be O.K. because the magic of the market will assure that’s true.”



      Best "Brain Pickings": Loss Of Faith; Dealing With Hate; Living The Present & Boredom

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      The Best Brain Pickings Articles of the Year

      After the annual reading list of the year's best books overall, it's time for the annual summation of the best Brain Pickings articles of the year -- "best" meaning those most read and shared by you, as well as those I took the most pleasure in writing. Please (re)enjoy and have an inspired, stimulating, infinitely rewarding new year.

      1. An Antidote to the Age of Anxiety: Alan Watts on Happiness and How to Live with Presence

      Read the article here.
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      2. Fixed vs. Growth: The Two Basic Mindsets That Shape Our Lives

      Read the article here.
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      3. How to Criticize with Kindness: Philosopher Daniel Dennett on the Four Steps to Arguing Intelligently

      Read the article here.
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      4. Ursula K. Le Guin on Being a Man

      Read the article here.
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      5. How to Be Alone: An Antidote to One of the Central Anxieties and Greatest Paradoxes of Our Time

      Read the article here.
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      6. The Hidden Brain: How Ocean Currents Explain Our Unconscious Social Biases

      Read the article here.
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      7. 7 Life-Learnings from 7 Years of Brain Pickings, Illustrated

      Read the article here.
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      8. Kafka on Books and What Reading Does for the Human Soul

      Read the article here.
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      9. The Benjamin Franklin Effect: The Surprising Psychology of How to Handle Haters

      Read the article here.
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      10. The Shortness of Life: Seneca on Busyness and The Art of Living Wide Rather Than Living Long

      Read the article here.
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      11. E.B. White’s Beautiful Letter to a Man Who Had Lost Faith in Humanity

      Read the article here.
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      12. Debunking the Myth of the 10,000-Hours Rule: What It Actually Takes to Reach Genius-Level Excellence

      Read the article here.
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      13. Why We Hurt Each Other: Tolstoy’s Letters to Gandhi on Love, Violence, and the Truth of the Human Spirit

      Read the article here.
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      14. What It Takes to Design a Good Life

      Read the article here.
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      15. Fictitious Dishes: Elegant and Imaginative Photographs of Meals from Famous Literature

      Read the article here.
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      16. Legendary Psychoanalyst Adam Phillips on Why the Capacity for Boredom Is Essential for a Full Life

      Read the article here.
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      17. The Psychology of Writing and the Cognitive Science of the Perfect Daily Routine

      Read the article here.
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      18. Why Haters Hate: Kierkegaard Explains the Psychology of Bullying and Online Trolling in 1847

      Read the article here.
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      19. Famous Writers on the Creative Benefits of Keeping a Diary

      Read the article here.



      Transgender Teen, Leelah Alcorn, Commits Suicide

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      Leelah Alcorn was born Josh Alcorn
      (Photo: Provided/Abigail Jones)
      Leelah's Christian parents told him "God doesn't make mistakes."

      Alan: The spontaneous conviction that one's gender is essentially masculine or feminine is profound and durable. The preponderance of evidence shows that gender perception is relatively immutable. This immutability is self-evident for men living in men's bodies and women living in women's bodies.  Would you be able to change your own gender perception? That said, I think assiduous efforts to re-assign gender for people born in "the wrong bodies" should wait until one's mid-twenties and the accumulation of ample life experience. The fact that 40 to 50% of transgender teens have attempted suicide - a rate more than twice the national norm - requires careful examination.


       Sharon Coolidge, scoolidge@enquirer.com
      Why we wrote about this: "As the mother of teenagers, my heart breaks for this family," said Enquirer Editor Carolyn Washburn. "But this suicide took place in a very public place and manner; we needed to explain what happened. And it raises important issues we hope will prompt conversations in families throughout our region."
      In life, Leelah Alcorn felt alone. Born male, she feared she would never be the woman she felt like inside.
      In death, the transgender 17-year-old - born Josh Alcorn - wanted to make sure others never felt the way she did.
      "The only way I will rest in peace is if one day transgender people aren't treated the way I was, they're treated like humans, with valid feelings and human rights," Alcorn wrote in a post on the social media blog site Tumblr.
      "My death needs to mean something," she wrote in the post, which she scheduled to appear the day after her death.
      That plea marked her final public words.
      On Sunday, just before 2:30 a.m., Alcorn walked 4 miles from her middle-class Kings Mills neighborhood with its views of Kings Island to Interstate 71. There, she was struck and killed by a tractor-trailer. The highway was closed for more than a hour.
      By Tuesday evening, Leelah's story had become a worldwide story - one of how transgender teens often feel alone and afraid. The hashtag #LeelahAlcorn was topping Twitter; news sites worldwide had picked up the story; and someone had even created a Wikipedia page for Alcorn.
      The State Highway Patrol continues to investigate; no charges have been filed. Her body was sent to the Montgomery County coroner for an autopsy, which will take several weeks.
      Alcorn's family declined to comment to The Enquirer. In a statement via the Kings Local School District, the family requested privacy.
      Alcorn's mother, Carla Wood Alcorn, wrote on Facebook Sunday, "My sweet 16-year-old son, Joshua Ryan Alcorn, went home to Heaven this morning. He was out for an early morning walk and was hit by a truck. Thank you for the messages and kindness and concern you have sent our way. Please continue to keep us in your prayers." The post has since been taken down.
      According to the school statement, Alcorn attended Kings schools and was most recently enrolled as an 11th grader at the Ohio Virtual Academy, an online school.
      "Joshua Alcorn was a sweet, talented, tender-hearted 17-year-old," the statement from Kings read. Counselors will be available when students return from winter break.
      Before her death, Alcorn scheduled her note to post on her Tumblr blog at 5:30 p.m. the day of her death. A note titled "Sorry" came later. In it she told her younger brother and sisters she loved them. She thanked her friend Abby Jones for "dealing with my pathetic problems." And she told her mom and dad, "You just can't control other people like that."
      Forty-eight hours after the first note was posted on Tumblr, it had 82,272 views.
      There are no national statistics about how many transgender people commit suicide, partly because it's not always known.
      In 2010, the National Center for Transgender Equality and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force reported 41 percent of 7,000 transgender people surveyed had attempted suicide.
      An analysis of the survey responses by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and UCLA Law School's Williams Institute last January showed transgenders who experienced rejection by family and friends, discrimination, victimization or violence have a higher risk of attempting suicide.

      Cincinnati City Councilman Chris Seelbach, the city's first openly gay councilman, has taken on Alcorn's cause. In a post on Facebook - shared more than 4,700 times - Seelbach said Alcorn's death shows just how hard it is to be a transgender today in the U.S.
      "By reading her letter, Leelah makes it clear she wants her death to, in some ways, help 'trans civil rights movements,'" he wrote.
      A Kings Island caricaturist
      Jones met Alcorn last spring when Alcorn, a talented artist, applied to work as a caricaturist at Kings Island.
      Alcorn's work was the best of any new employee. They drew caricatures of each other and a friendship took root.
      "She was super bubbly and upbeat, with a really brash sense of humor; she could make anyone laugh," said Jones, 17, of Milford.
      Jones drew Alcorn as Elsa from "Frozen."


      "It was her favorite thing ever," Jones said.
      Living far from each other, they would get together before and after work. They saw "Fault in Our Stars." They got ice cream.
      They texted. A lot.
      During late-night texting in July, Alcorn wrote, "I have something to tell you."
      She came out as transgender.
      The whole story spilled. Jones recounted Alcorn's story, much the way Alcorn herself talked in her online note.
      Freshman year of high school, Alcorn came out as gay as a way to transition. Her friends were kind. She wrote her family "wanted me to be their perfect little straight Christian boy, and that's obviously not what I wanted."
      She had never really understood what she was feeling. At 14, she finally understood. But, she said, her family didn't understand.
      "She would get really down, there was just no talking her out of it," Jones said. "She always said, 'Nothing is going to get better, I am never going to transition successfully, I am never going to be the pretty girl I want to be.'"
      Shane Morgan, founder and chair of TransOhio, which provides education and advocacy, said 2014 has been a year filled with progress for transgender people.
      "If we look back at 2014 there have been really incredible changes and liberation for trans people across the world," Morgan said. "There were prominent faces on TV and on the cover of Time and that is all fantastic. But there have been a lot of murders of trans people this year; trans people are still being victimized and still being disrespected.
      "Nobody should commit suicide because of who they are," Morgan said. "With as much change as there has been, there is still much to do."
      Help for the transgendered or those considering suicide
      Trevor Project: (866) 488-7386. Text, chat or call to talk if you're thinking about suicide.
      GLSEN Greater Cincinnati Youth Group - meets weekly, for LGBTQ and allied middle and high school age youth. (866) 934-9119
      Heartland Trans* Wellness: TeenSpace and Cincinnati Trans* Community Group
       392COMMENT



      Mom Killed By 2 Year Old Child Described As "Responsible." NOT!

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      "Listen kid... Don't even think about winging him. 
      The sweet spot is right between the eyes."

      Teach Your Children Well

      Alan: It is madness to normalize guns-in-homes where children live. 

      Harboring guns near children is not only irresponsible but constitutes reckless endangerment. 

      If you are a gun supporter, ask yourself these 4 questions: 

      "Do you know anyone who saved his life by pulling a pistol in self-defense?" 

      "Do you know anyone who died from a pistol shot?" (If so, suicide or homicide?)

      "Do you know anyone who was killed in a car accident?" 

      "Do you know anyone who was killed in a car accident who was not wearing a seat belt?" 

      Duh.

      For young Americans, 15-24, suicide (60% by firearm) is the third leading cause of death


      Suicide in the Home in Relation to Gun Ownership
      Arthur L. Kellermann, MD, MPH; Frederick P. Rivara, MD, MPH; et al, The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 327, No. 7, August 13, 1992
      Key Statistic: The presence of one or more guns in the home increases the risk of suicide in the home nearly five times. 

      Guns in homes increase risk of death and firearm-related violence

      Firearm Access Is A Risk Factor For Suicide

      Guns in home increase likelihood of violent death

      Sandy Hook Kindergarten Carnage

      Firearm Injury And Death Charts For The U.S. (And The World)
      University of Pennsylvania 
      There are over 40% more "firearm suicides" than "firearm homicides" in the United States.

      The Most Violent Culture In The History Of The World


      America's Gun Violence Map
      by conservative columnist and George W. Bush advisor, David Frum

      Mom killed by own gun at Idaho Wal-Mart described as responsible


      HAYDEN, Idaho -- A 29-year-old woman fatally shot with her own gun by her 2-year-old son at a northern Idaho Wal-Mart was described as "not the least bit irresponsible."
      The little boy reached into Veronica J. Rutledge's purse and her concealed gun fired, Kootenai County sheriff's spokesman Stu Miller said. The woman was shopping Tuesday with her son and three other children, Miller said.
      CBS News correspondent Don Dahler reports law enforcement officials have reviewed surveillance tapes from inside the store but have yet to decide whether to make that video public.
      The other children, all under the age of 11, were members of her extended family, Dahler reports. Rutledge was from Blackfoot in southeastern Idaho, and her family had come to the area to visit relatives.
      Carrying a concealed weapon is legal in Idaho, and more than 7 percent of its adults have a permit to do so, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
      Rutledge was an employee of the Idaho National Laboratory, The Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington, reported. The Idaho Falls laboratory supports the U.S. Department of Energy in nuclear and energy research and national defense.
      Miller said the young boy was left in a shopping cart, reached into his mother's purse and grabbed a small-caliber handgun, which discharged one time.
      Deputies who responded to the Wal-Mart found Rutledge dead, the sheriff's office said.
      "It appears to be a pretty tragic accident," Miller said.
      The victim's father-in-law, Terry Rutledge, told The Associated Press that Veronica Rutledge "was a beautiful, young, loving mother."
      "She was not the least bit irresponsible," Terry Rutledge said. "She was taken much too soon."
      The woman's husband was not in the store when the shooting happened at about 10:20 a.m. Tuesday. Miller said the man arrived shortly after the shooting. All the children were taken to a relative's house.
      The shooting occurred in the Wal-Mart in Hayden, Idaho, a town about 40 miles northeast of Spokane. The store closed for the rest of the day.
      Brooke Buchanan, a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, said in a statement the shooting was a "very sad and tragic accident."
      "We are working closely with the local sheriff's department while they investigate what happened," Buchanan said.
      Idaho National Laboratory senior chemical engineer Vince Maio worked with Rutledge on a research paper about using glass ceramic to store nuclear waste, The Spokesman-Review said.
      Maio said he was immediately impressed with her.
      "She had a lot of maturity for her age," he told the newspaper. "Her work was impeccable. She found new ways to do things that we did before and she found ways to do them better."
      "She was a beautiful person," he added.
      There do not appear to be reliable national statistics about the number of accidental fatalities involving children handling guns.
      In neighboring Washington state, a 3-year-old boy was seriously injured in November when he accidentally shot himself in the face in a home in Lake Stevens, about 30 miles north of Seattle.
      In April, a 2-year-old boy apparently shot and killed his 11-year-old sister while they and their siblings played with a gun inside a Philadelphia home. Authorities said the gun was believed to have been brought into the home by the mother's boyfriend.
      Hayden is a politically conservative town of about 9,000 people just north of Coeur d'Alene, in Idaho's northern panhandle.
      Idaho lawmakers passed legislation earlier this year allowing concealed weapons on the state's public college and university campuses.
      Despite facing opposition from all eight of the state's university college presidents, lawmakers sided with gun rights advocates who said the law would better uphold the Second Amendment.
      Under the law, gun holders are barred from bringing their weapons into dormitories or buildings that hold more than 1,000 people, such as stadiums or concert halls.
      The Right-Wing Dream
      Absolute Safety vouchsafed by ubiquitous firearms.
      (The impossible quest to make Reality safer than God intended is the core appeal of fascism.)

      If every passenger can "pack," then every terrorist would have a firearm and only a few citizens. 

      Those who think ubiquitous firearms are a solution to any of life's problems contribute to  the problem.

      The likelihood that well-armed citizens will perform acts of sudden, salvific heroicism when a criminal already "has the drop" is vanishingly remote. 

      Such wishful thinking is the product of arrested development, the vestigial puerility of children playing at "cowboys and Indians."

      Many more innocent Americans are killed by firearms "in the home" than the piddling number of Americans saved by domestic firearm heroics.

      And when, at rare intervals, such heroics do occur, they often result in the death of property thieves who harbor no violent intent.

      Where are the Christian literalists when we need them?

      “You have heard it said, ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But now I tell you: do not take revenge on someone who wrongs you. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, let him slap your left cheek too. And if someone takes you to court to sue you for your shirt, let him have your coat as well. And if one of the occupation troops forces you to carry his pack one mile, carry it two miles. When someone asks you for something, give it to him; when someone wants to borrow something, lend it to him. “You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your friends, hate your enemies.’ But now I tell you: love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may become the children of your Father in heaven. For he makes his sun to shine on bad and good people alike, and gives rain to those who do good and to those who do evil. Why should God reward you if you love only the people who love you? Even the tax collectors do that! And if you speak only to your friends, have you done anything out of the ordinary? Even the pagans do that! You must be whole—just as your Father in heaven is whole."

      I am 67 years old and have friends "on both sides of the aisle." 

      I have never heard any of them say that their firearm saved a life.

      I have never heard any of them say they know someone whose life was saved by a firearm.

      Occassional anecdotes do not establish "general rules." 

      On the flip side of this coin, I have heard several friends say firearms were used by family members to kill themselves.

      Whether by accident... sudden eruption of anger... or by psychological disease... firearms in citizens' homes exact a terrifyingly high toll with correspondingly trivial benefit.

      ***

      The belief that individual heroes will "save the day" is essentially self-ish.

      Yes, an occasional hero will "save the day."

      But arming an entire society increases cumulative carnage.

      ***

      "One of the most disturbing facts that came out in the [Adolf] Eichmann trial was that a psychiatrist examined him and pronounced him perfectly sane. I do not doubt it at all, and that is precisely why I find it disturbing. . .  The sanity of Eichmann is disturbing. We equate sanity with a sense of justice, with humaneness, with prudence, with the capacity to love and understand other people. We rely on the sane people of the world to preserve it from barbarism, madness, destruction. And now it begins to dawn on us that it is precisely the sane ones who are the most dangerous. It is the sane ones, the well-adapted ones, who can without qualms and without nausea aim the missiles and press the buttons that will initiate the great festival of destruction that they, the sane ones, have prepared. What makes us so sure, after all, that the danger comes from a psychotic getting into a position to fire the first shot in a nuclear war? Psychotics will be suspect. The sane ones will keep them far from the button. No one suspects the sane, and the sane ones will have perfectly good reasons, logical, well-adjusted reasons, for firing the shot. They will be obeying sane orders that have come sanely down the chain of command. And because of their sanity they will have no qualms at all. When the missiles take off, then, it will be no mistake." 
      "A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann" in Raids on the Unspeakable." Thomas Merton - New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1964 

      The Singularly Slimy Way Conservatives Lie... Just To Piss, Moan, Whine, Bitch

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      "Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Bitch, Whine?"

      Canadian Letter To The Editor: "You Americans Have No Idea How Good Obama Is"

      "The Queen of Versailles" was a film documentary based on the sleazy time-share mogul, David Siegel, and his wife, Jackie.  David had major financial troubles following Bush's 2008 economic crises.  He even had to stop work on his private home, dubbed "Versailles", which was to be the largest home in the U.S.  Poor guy.
      Naturally, Obama was to blame for this.  As you may recall during the peak of the presidential campaign, Mr. Siegel penned a letter threatening to fire all his employees and close down his Orlando-based company, Westgate, if Obama was elected.  A snippet from the full letter:
      So where am I going with all this? It's quite simple. If any new taxes are levied on me, or my company, as our current President plans, I will have no choice but to reduce the size of this company. Rather than grow this company I will be forced to cut back. This means fewer jobs, less benefits and certainly less opportunity for everyone.
      So, when you make your decision to vote, ask yourself, which candidate understands the economics of business ownership and who doesn't? Whose policies will endanger your job? Answer those questions and you should know who might be the one capable of protecting and saving your job. While the media wants to tell you to believe the "1 percenters" are bad, I'm telling you they are not. They create most of the jobs. If you lose your job, it won't be at the hands of the "1%"; it will be at the hands of a political hurricane that swept through this country.
      You see, I can no longer support a system that penalizes the productive and gives to the unproductive. My motivation to work and to provide jobs will be destroyed, and with it, so will your opportunities. If that happens, you can find me in the Caribbean sitting on the beach, under a palm tree, retired, and with no employees to worry about.
      Signed, your boss
      Yeah, that happened.  
      This wasn't the first time either. In 2000, Siegel did something just as slimy.  He put negative articles about Gore in every paycheck, and also forced his managers to conduct an inappropriate survey on who was voting for Bush and Gore.  Those that said Bush were "required" to register to vote.  Ironic, considering how Bush's economy almost put him out of business.
      Fortunately for everyone, this time, his despicable letter threatening to fire everyone backfired.  Obama won Florida handily. The press mocked Siegel.  We all expected this time-share sleazeball to retire and close his company.  But then a funny thing happened...
      Instead of his company being dragged down by the evil black man in the Oval Office, his company started flourishing again.  The Obama recovery saw companies make record profits, and Siegel's was no exception.  Today, Westgate is doing better than ever.  Under Obama, we also have had the best stock market in history, so investors like Siegel made out like bandits.  (Obama=worst socialist ever).  
      Instead of firing, Siegel has had to hire more people.  Since his employees were finally able to get reasonably-priced health insurance, he was free to invest his money in all kinds of things.  He bought the Orlando Predators.  He also bought a massive hotel/casino in Las Vegas.  Saints be praised, he was even able to finally start work again on his gaudy, 90,000 square foot house complete with a bowling alley, a 30-car garage, and a roller-skating rink.
      Turns out that he never had any intention to flee to the Caribbean.  
      Turns out Obama has been great for him.  
      Turns out he was just another rich, entitled a$$hole.

      Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die

      The Psychiatric Diagnosis Of American Conservatives: Folie a Plusieurs 

      "American Conservatives And Oppositional-Defiant Disorder"

      "Are Republicans Insane?"

      "The Republican Party Is A Satanic Cult"

      Jindal Criticizes The Stupid Party: "Simply protects the rich so they get to keep their toys"

      "The Reign of Morons Is Here," Charles P. Pierce, The Atlantic

      "A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"

      "People Who Watch Only Fox News 
      Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

      Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die

      "Bank On It: The South Is Always Wrong"

      "Why The Bible Belt Is Its Own Worst Enemy"
      1. http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/10/why-bible-belt-is-christianitys-enemy.html
      2. "Republicans For Revolution," A Study In Anarchic Apocalypticism



      Palestinians Eye War Crimes Case Against Israel

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      433% More Americans Died From Fireworks 
      Than Israeli Citizens From Hamas Rockets

      "Is Israel The World's Worst Terror State? An Israeli General's Son Thinks So"

      RAMALLAH, West Bank — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas says the Palestinians will join the International Criminal Court — a move that sets the stage for filing a war crimes case against Israel.
      Abbas made the announcement in the West Bank on Wednesday, a day after the U.N. Security Council failed to pass a resolution that had aimed to set a deadline for Israel to end its occupation of territories sought by the Palestinians.
      Abbas had warned that if the resolution failed, he would resume a Palestinian campaign to join international organizations to put pressure on Israel.
      Abbas’ decision is expected to trigger a harsh response from Israel.
      Israel says all disputes should be resolved through peace talks, and such actions are aimed at bypassing negotiations.

      Compendium Of Pax Posts On Violent Criminals And Violent Police

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      "Listen kid... Don't even think about winging him. 
      The sweet spot is right between the eyes."

      "The US Murder Rate Is On Track To Be Lowest In A Century"


      America's Real Criminal Element: Lead

      The Thinking Housewife's Deluded Belief That "Black Violence Has Gotten Worse"

      Diane Rehm Guest Gets To The Nub Of Police Violence And How Easily It's Prevented

      Harvard's Steve Pinker Notes Slight Uptick In Violence In A Much More Peaceful World


      American Police Shoot An Unarmed Black Man Every 72 Hours
      (Taking police and vigilante shootings together, we find that an unarmed black man gets shot every 29 hours.)

      "Non-Racist" Gringos Cheer Black Man Who Would "Ventilate Black Asses With M16s"


      Whites Think Discrimination Against Them Is A Bigger Problem Bias Against Blacks

      "Given FL's "Stand Your Ground Law," Can This Black Woman Kill The White Cop Who Assaulted Her?"

      "Video: WalMart Shopper John Crawford Didn't Aim Toy Gun At Anyone Before Police Shot Him Dead"
      http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/09/video-john-crawford-didnt-aim-toy-gun.html
      (Imagine Crawford as a young white guy. Maybe your son...)

      Black Kids Get Shot For Their Mistakes. White Kids Get Psychologized
      http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/08/black-kids-get-shot-for-their-mistakes.html

      WalMart Video Shows Man Shot Dead, Without Warning For Leaning On Toy Gun

      White Man Jaywalks With Assault Rifle. Guess What Police Do

      "White Teen In BMW Hits Three Cars, Flees Scene, Assaults Cops, And Doesn't Get Shot"

      "Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right

      "Gun Cartoons and Gun Violence Bibliography"




      Einstein On Common Sense... And Then "The Double Whammy"

      Labor Day, 2014. Not One Union Official Interviewed On ABC, CBS, NBC Or Fox

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      Leaving Out Labor Award: ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox
      In time for Labor Day, FAIR (8/28/14 [15]) looked at the guest lists for the network chat shows to see how often union leaders were invited to the debate. The answer? Not once. Former and current corporate CEOs, though, made a dozen appearances. The closest labor came to being a part of the conversation was a mention of one former union leader: former Screen Actors Guild chief Ronald Reagan, who later became a notoriously anti-labor US president.


      Einstein On "The Most Beautiful Thing"

      What's Up With This Map Of The World?

      Our Founding Fathers On Christianity

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      Our Founding Fathers on Christianity

      Anyone who tells you that the Founding Fathers were trying to create a Christian nation is either a liar or parroting what other liars told him. This is what they really had to say about Christianity.
      The Faith of our Founding Fathers
      By Dean Worbis


      No one disputes the faith of our Founding Fathers. To speak of unalienable
      Rights being endowed by a Creator certainly shows a sensitivity to our
      spiritual selves. What is suprising is when fundamentalist Christians think
      the Founding Father's faith had anything to do with the Bible. Without
      exception, the faith of our Funding Fathers was deist, not theist. It was
      best expressed earlier in the Declaration of Independence, when they spoke
      of "the Laws of Nature" and of "Nature's God."

      In a sermon of October 1831, Episcopalian minister Bird Wilson said, "Among
      all of our Presidents, from Washington downward, not one was a professor of
      religion, at least not of more than Unitarianism."

      The Bible? Here is what our Founding Fathers wrote about Bible-based
      Christianity

      Thomas Jefferson
      "I have examined all the known superstitions of the world and I do not find
      in our particular superstition of Christianity one redeeming feature. They
      are all alike founded on fables and mythology. Millions of innocent men,
      women, and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been
      burnt, tortured, fined, and imprisoned. What has been the effect of this
      coercion? To make one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites; to
      support roguery and error all over the earth."

      SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS
      By John E. Remsburg, letter to William Short

      Jefferson again
      "Christianity...(has become) the most perverted system that ever shone on
      man...Rogueries, absurdities and untruths were perpetrated upon the
      teachings of Jesus by a large band of dupes and imposters led by Paul, the
      first great corruptor of the teachings of Jesus."

      More Jefferson
      "The clergy converted the simple teachings of Jesus into an engine for
      enslaving mankind and adulturated by artificial constructions into a
      contrivance to filch wealth and power to themselves...these clergy in fact,
      constitute the real Anti-Christ."

      Jefferson's word for the Bible? "Dunghill."

      John Adams
      "Where do we find a precept in the Bible for Creeds, Confessions, Doctrines
      and Oaths, and whole cartloads of other trumpery that we find religion
      encumbered with in these days?"

      Also Adams
      "The doctrine of the divinity of Jesus is made a convenient cover for
      absurdity."

      Adams signed the Treaty of Tripoli. Article 11 states
      "The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the
      Christian religion."

      Here's Thomas Paine
      "I would not dare to so dishonor my Creator God by attaching His name to
      that book (the Bible)."

      "Among the most detesable villains in history, you could not find one worse
      than Moses. Here is an order, attributed to 'God' to butcher the boys, to
      massacre the mothers, and to debauch and rape the daughters. I would not
      dare so dishonor my Creator's name by (attaching) it to this filthy book
      (the Bible)."

      "It is the duty of every true Diest to vindicate the moral justice of God
      against the evils of the Bible."

      "Accustom a people to believe that priests and clergy can forgive sins...and
      you will have sins in abundance."

      And; "The Christian church has set up a religion of pomp and revenue in
      pretend imitation of a person (Jesus) who lived a life of poverty."

      Finally let's hear from James Madison
      "What influence in fact have Christian ecclesiastical establishments had on
      civil society? In many instances they have been upholding the thrones of
      political tyrrany. In no instance have they been seen as the guardians of
      the liberties of the people. Rulers who wished to subvert the public liberty
      have found in the clergy convenient auxiliaries. A just government,
      instituted to secure and perpetuate liberty, does not need the clergy."

      Madison objected to state-supported chaplains in Congress and to the
      exemption of churches from taxation. He wrote "Religion and government will
      both exist in greater purity, the less they are mixed together."


      These Founding Fathers were a reflection of the American population. Having
      escaped from the state-established religions of Europe, only 7% of the
      people in the 13 colonies belonged to a church when the Declaration of
      Independence was signed.

      Among those who confuse Christianity with the founding of America, the rise
      of conservative Baptists is one of the more interesting developments. The
      Baptists believed God's authority came from the people, not the priesthood,
      and they had been persecuted for this belief. It was they - the Baptists -
      who were instrumental in securing the separation of church and state. They
      knew you can not have a "one-way-wall" that lets religion into government
      but that does not let it out. They knew no religion is capable of handling
      political power without becoming corrupted by it. And, perhaps, they knew it
      was Christ himself who first proposed the separation of church and state;
      "Give unto Caesar that which is Caesar's and unto the Lord that which is the
      Lord's."

      In the last five years the Baptists have been taken over by a fundamentalist
      faction that insists authority comes from the Bible and that the individual
      must accept the interpretation of the Bible from a higher authority. These
      usurpers of the Baptist faith are those who insist they should meddle in the
      affairs of the government and it is they who insist the government should
      meddle in the beliefs of individuals.


      References The writings of Thomas Jefferson exist in 25 volumes.
      The references for this article were found in the book, SIX HISTORIC
      AMERICANS, by John E. Remsburg (who interviewed many of Lincoln's
      associates). Much of his work on Jefferson came from THE MEMOIRS,
      CORRESPONDENCE AND MISCELLANIES FROM THE PAPERS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON, 4
      volumes ed. by Thomas Jefferson Randolph (the grandson of Thomas Jefferson).



      WWJD What Would Jefferson Do?

      April 13, 2000 marks Thomas Jefferson's 257th birthday. In honor of this
      occasion, Americans United has pulled together some of Jefferson's best
      statements on church and state. Jefferson, along with James Madison, was a
      key architect of the religious liberty guarantees we enjoy today. What better
      way to honor the memory of this visionary founder than spending a few moments
      reading and reflecting on his timeless wisdom? With issues such as voucher
      aid to religious schools and government-sponsored prayer in public schools
      pending in Congress and the state legislatures, Jefferson's comments are
      just as relevant today as they were then.

      Religious Right activists claim the framers never intended to
      separate church and state. Christian Coalition president Pat Robertson
      says separation is a "lie of the left." TV preacher Jerry Falwell calls it
      "a modern fabrication."

      Here are Jefferson's own words on the subject.

      Separation of Church and State

      "Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely
      between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith
      or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions
      only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of
      the whole American people which declared that their legislature should
      'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
      free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church
      and State."
      --Letter to the Danbury (Conn.) Baptist Association, January 1, 1802


      Taxation for Religion
      "[T]o compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the
      propagation of opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful and tyrannical;
      that even the forcing of him to support this or that teacher of his own
      religious persuasion, is depriving him of the comfortable liberty of
      giving his contributions to the particular pastor whose morals he would
      make his pattern, and whose powers he feels most persuasive to
      righteousness....Be it therefore enacted by the General Assembly, That no
      man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place
      or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or
      burthened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise suffer on account of
      his religious opinions or belief; but that all men shall be free to
      profess and by argument to maintain their opinions in matters of religion,
      and that the same shall in no wise diminish, enlarge, or affect their
      civil capacities."
      --Excerpts from Jefferson's Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, 1786

      Government-Sponsored Prayer and Other Religious Worship
      "I do not believe it is for the interest of religion to invite the
      civil magistrate to direct its exercises, its discipline, or its
      doctrines; nor of the religious societies, that the General Government
      should be invested with the power of effecting any uniformity of time or
      matter among them. Fasting and prayer are religious exercises; the
      enjoining them an act of discipline. Every religious society has a right
      to determine for itself the times for these exercises, and the objects
      proper for them, according to their own particular tenets; and the right
      can never be safer than in their hands, where the Constitution has
      deposited it."
      --Letter to Samuel Miller, January 23, 1808


      One quote the writer forgot to include: "I have sworn an oath on the altar of God of eternal hostility to tyranny" from Tom Jefferson.





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