From: Gregory Brown <
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bee: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.. 1/10/2016
Date: Sun, 10 Jan 2016 11:53:15 +0000
Attachments: Lisa_Fischern playlist_01.03.16.docx
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DEAR FRIEND
Capitalist.
Socialist.
Communist.
DO YOU KNOW
THE DIFFERENCE?
I recently read a New York Times' article by Philip Bump - Capitalist, Socialist, Communist,
do you know the difference - which I understood but I am not sure that many Americas do, as the
proponents of Capitalism has won that argument in the West castigating the others as both negative
and evil. But for those of you who only read the cliffs notes here is difference, as described by Alasdair
Russell who is socialist member of the Labour Party in the U.K.
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Capitalism: One group of people own what's called the means of production (factories, etc.).
These are the capitalists. Another group of people work in the factories etc., and the first group
pay them some money for their work, but take much more for themselves. These are the
workers.
Communism: Society has organized itself into a system whereby everybody works as much as
they can, and receives whatever they need. (From each according to their ability, to each
according to their need).
Socialism: Traditionally, this is the transitional stage between capitalism and communism.
The state organizes the economy and society so that there are no more capitalists, and the
workers run the place. Eventually, this organization will become less and less as Communism
begins.
Phillip Bump starts his article — The day after the first Democratic presidential debate, Donald Trump
called Bernie Sanders a maniac. "This socialist-slash-communist," Trump said to raucous cheers. "I
call him a socialist-slash-communist, because that's what he is." Well, no. The terms "socialist" and
"communist" are often confused, thanks in large part to the Cold War. Layer on top of that the nuance
of the term "democratic socialist," which is how Sanders describes himself, and it's easy to see why
people might generally be confused. Having been told their entire lives that both Socialism and
Communism is evil, whether they can tell the distinction between them is not important as they being
used to disqualify someone who is far more trustworthy than his accuser.
To offer America a bit of a primer, Mr. Bump reached out to Dr. Lawrence Quill, chairman and
professor of political science at San Jose State University, over e-mail. He explained the difference
between communism, socialism, capitalism and democratic socialism -- in very professorial terms.
Capitalism - or really the concept of "liberalism" — arose in the '7th century, and centers on the
right to private property. In Adam Smith's foundational "Wealth of Nations," Quill notes, "is
recognition that capitalism is going to make the lives of a good majority of the population miserable,
and that there will be a need for government intervention in society and the economy to offset the
worse effects."
Socialism was in part a response to capitalism, largely through the writings of Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels. Socialism focuses on the inequalities that arise within capitalism through a number
of possible responses. Quill outlined some possibilities: "[T]he state might 'wither away' or collapse
altogether, in others it would regulate the production of goods and services, in yet others it would
become thoroughly democratic" -- all with the aim of reducing that inequality.
You can see that's where democratic socialism arises. That philosophy, Quill writes, seeks "democratic
control of sectors of society and economy in order to avoid the pitfalls of an unregulated market and --
this is most important -- the kind of terrible authoritarian government that emerged in the Soviet
Union."
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Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has been making waves as the only democratic socialist running for
president. Here's what you need to know about being a democratic socialist and how it's different
from socialism.
Communism "was the endpoint of Marx's ideas," Quill writes, though Marx didn't delineate what it
would look like, exactly. "Wefind hints in works like The German Ideology (1846) where there is
a description of working life that is unalienated, i.e. creative and various -- we hunt in the morning,
fish in the afternoon, and become opera critics in the evening." During the Cold War, though, the idea
came to be inextricably and pejoratively associated with the Soviet Union and with the elimination of
private property. The term, in Quill's words, "served as a shorthandfor all things un-American" --
which was the way that Trump used it.
Quill's most important point is that "all of these terms are 'umbrella concepts'; in other words, they are
host to a family of related ideas, not all of them compatible with one another." We tend to use the
terms concretely, which necessarily introduces inaccuracies. Or, as Quill put it, "they [can] serve as
excuses not to think, as belief systems that discourage explorations of the mismatch between theory
and practice and the inconsistencies of any grand theory."
So that's the college-level curriculum, so to simplify it a bit Mr. Bump asked Tori Waite, who teaches
high school history at Del Mar High School in San Jose, as it was in High School where most of us were
first introduced to these ideas in high school. "When we teach about the different types of economies,"
Waite said, "the first thing we do is we talk about economic questions. How is it made? Who makes it?
Who gets to buy it? Based on the economy, different people answer those questions."
Simplifying Quill's explanation: "In a communist country, the government answers those
questions. There's no private business. There's no private property. The government decides."
"In a capitalist society, the people make those decisions. The businesses, the market decides how
much products will cost, how many there are, where it will be made."
"In the socialist system, there's a mix of both. The government operates the system to help all, but
there is opportunity for private property and private wealth. That's generally how we talk about it."
Back to Quill's point: A socialist government could control all of the means of production -- or it could,
for example, use taxes to redistribute resources among the population.
Both Quill and Waite note that the United States is not a purely capitalist society. There are and have
long been socialist aspects to how the government makes decisions and applies its power, while still
striving to keep the marketplace as free as possible. And, of course, while allowing democratic
decisions to guide what it does. Mr. Bump points out that the example of the United States, with its
many social programs that enjoy near universal support in the country, serves as a reminder that these
ideas exist on a three-dimensional scale, in which differentiation is often tricky.
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Please Tell Me That This Isn't True
Republicans in Congress, caught on tape, may have committed treason under the Espionage Act.
If this is true which I am inclined to believe, because it was revealed by the Wall Street Journal and
confirmed by U.S. Intelligence officials, that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reached out
to republican congressmen, who had been considering voting in favor of the Iran peace deal, asking
what they wanted in return for voting against the deal the partisan-ism has reached a new level of
ugliness and danger in our country. Because in the end, not a single republican voted for the deal,
meaning that Netanyahu's bribes succeeded in swaying the ones who had been on the fence. That
means that not only is Netanyahu actively working to undermine the sanctity of the United States
government, the republican congressmen involved may have committed treason under the Espionage
Act.
While it's not uncommon for members of congress to offer each other political favors in exchange for
votes on various bills, it's an entirely different legal matter when those offers come from a foreign head
of state. Not only were they caught accepting favors from Netanyahu in exchange for votes on the Iran
deal, they also received confidential details of the Iran negotiations directly from Netanyahu himself.
Republicans have long criticized the Obama administration for its wiretapping of Netanyahu, but now
we know why: they didn't want the details of their own wrongdoing to be discovered in the process.
The Wall Street Journal has more on the story.
United States President Obama has long had a strained relationship with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, despite the two nations being historically dose allies. Obama's reasoning has
been straightforward: Netanyahu is a corrupt warmonger has intentionally made his region unstable
for his own political gain. Republicans have fired back by accusing Obama of simply being anti-Israel.
But the WSJ has said that the wiretaps now show that at least some republicans in congress had an
entirely different reason for siding with Netanyahu: he was bribing them to change their votes on key
issues. And where I come from this is considered treason. Now let's see if the same people who
instigated 17 different congressional investigations into Benghazi will follow up on U.S. politicians
accepting bribes taking bribes from a foreign leader to undermine the interest of the American
government and its people.
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Given the fact that Republican politicians are notorious for the amount of money they accept from
special interests within the United States, what makes anyone think they wouldn't accept them from a
foreign government? The fact that forty-seven Republican Senators sent a letter to the Iranian
government without consulting the administration in a direct attempt to undermine the President's
policies is only further evidence of their treachery, putting their ill-gotten rewards above the
effectiveness of our foreign policy and consequently the good of our nation and the security of the
voters they claim to represent. Their incredibly hypocrisy only confirms just how deeply the
Republican Party is beholden to Israeli lobbying groups like AIPAC and to the government of Israel
itself.
"A U.S. intelligence officialfamiliar with the intercepts said Israel's pitch to undecided lawmakers
often included such questions as: "How can we get your vote? What's it going to take? Mr.
Netanyahu and some of his allies voiced confidence they could win enough votes." The answers to
Israeli proposals have yet to be fully revealed, but it is clear that favors were offered — bribes were
proposed — and from the subsequent behavior of Republican lawmakers, we can only infer that our
legislators accepted those bribes, from a foreign government in exchange for opposing the diplomatic
efforts of the Obama Administration. At the very least, the very discussion itself indicates that they
conspired with a foreign government to undermine the foreign policy agenda of their elected
Commander-in-Chief, which certainly amounts to treason.
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iniiirRom
Treason: Leaked Wiretaps
Reveals Netanyahu Bribed
Republicans To Sabotage
Obama's Iran Peace Deal
How much money does it take for a foreign nation to buy a United States Senator? Just ask Republican
Tom Cotton. For a lousy $i million paycheck, Israel hired Cotton to lead an effort to sabotage the Iran
nuclear deal that the Obama Administration toiled for months to achieve.
Consider the behavior being endorsed by the Republican Party. An elected U.S. senator travels to
another country as part of his purchased partnership with a foreign official. Together, their goal is to
undermine American foreign policy. The Republican senator is working for Israel, and against the
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United States of America. And there is a reason for that. The Kristol's Emergency Committee for
Israel gave Torn Cotton nearly $i million in his race for the Senate just five months ago.
Clearly, Israel successfully bought their new puppets considering Republicans crusaded against the
deal for months. And the fact that America's broken campaign finance laws gave Israel the secret
opportunity to donate to campaigns like Cotton's only makes Republican and Israeli treachery all the
more credible. Again.... Cotton got a million dollars for his campaign from an Israel Super PAC and
then went to work for his Israeli overlords to sabotage American foreign policy. Again.... Where I come
from, no matter how well intention, this is treason.
******
So True
******
Why is America so Hostile to Gun Control?
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This week the president of the United States and the mayor of the District of Columbia both used this
week to address violence within the sphere of their responsibilities. And they are catching flak for it.
And as Trevor Noah pointed out on 'The Daily Show' prominent Republicans were trashing the
President proposals prior to his announcement.... But why?
The Daily Show: https://www.facebook.com/susan.ajohnson.002/postshol53543252513m
President Obama's focus was on the weapons that now kill as many people as car accidents and on the
need for gun-control measures. He said at the White House on Tuesday: "Every single year, more than
30,000 Americans have their lives cut short by guns — 30,000. Suicides. Domestic violence. Gang
shootouts. Accidents." And he added this grabber: "In 2013 alone, more than 500 people lost their
lives to gun accidents — and that includes 3o children younger than 5 years old."
The next day, D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) went to the city's Eastern Market Metro station to
announce the formation of a task force to combat gun robberies, which last year increased to 1,249, 10
percent more than the 1,112 recorded in 2014. This year isn't off to a good start — 25 gun robberies in
the first six days of 2016. Robberies without guns numbered 28.
Yet robberies aren't the only crime on the rise in our nation's capital. Last year ended with 162
murders. There were 105 in 2014. Something, however, may get lost in these numbers. How can the
toll taken by death be measured with any degree of accuracy? It's impossible to quantify the sense of
loss and grief that follows; the sadness, emptiness and loneliness that death leaves behind. The
families and friends of those 30,000 people whose lives were cut short by guns may have some idea.
What is the impact of more than 3,000 total street robberies in a city? Gauge the distress of having
possessions taken by force — imagine the fear, anger, insecurity and unwanted memories that robbery
leaves behind. The violence assailed by Obama and Bowser is disturbing. So is the opposition
mounted against them for trying to do something about it.
Criticism of Obama's proposed regulations to ensure that laws on the books are enforced as written
and intended is sickening. Unlike the "he's gonna take away your guns" rhetoric coming out the
mouths of some gun enthusiasts and their sycophantic Republican presidential hopefuls, Obama's plan
to reduce gun violence is light stuff. It would:
• Require all those in the business of selling firearms to be licensed and to conduct background
checks.
• Overhaul the FBI's background check system to make it more efficient and effective and
provide the bureau with more staff.
• Beef up staffing of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to crack down on
firearms trafficking.
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• Increase funding for mental-health treatment and mental-health reporting to the background
check system and direct the departments of Defense, Justice and Homeland Security to pursue
research into gun-safety technology.
Several law professors who looked at the constitutionality of Obama's executive actions said that they
"ensure robust enforcement of the law" and are "entirely compatible with the will of Congress and the
President's constitutional authority."
But listen to the resisters.
"Obama wants your guns," says Ted Cruz's campaign website.
Obama is "making an end-run around the Constitution" to "restrict one of the basic,
fundamental principles of our country," Donald Trump's campaign manager told CNN.
"Just one more way to make it harder for law-abiding people to buy weapons to be able to
protect their families," said Marco Rubio on Fox News.
"Obama's executive orders trample on the 2nd Amendment," said a Jeb Bush tweet.
Obama "is advancing his political agenda," a Ben Carson tweet said.
"I will get rid of gun-free zones on schools' my first day in the White House," said Donald
Trump to an audience in Burlington, Vermont
These politicians are not interested in saving lives. Better to save political hides from National Rifle
Association attacks. The president's modest proposals should triumph over demagoguery and plain
stupidity. The idea that nothing should be done when more than 30,000 people are dying as a result
of gun violence is beyond ridiculous. And for those who believe that laws prohibiting felons, crazy
people and terrorist access to guns should not be enacted... are insane. Obviously, the President's
proposals won't stop gun violence but even if it stops 5, 10, 15 percent shouldn't everyone support
them? Bravo Mr. President.
******
White Privilege
Please Don't Call Them Patriots When They Are Actually Terrorist
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Shortly after n a.m. last Sunday at least 150 heavily armed white men seized control of a federal
building/compound outside of Burns, Oregon. They are led by a cadre which includes Ammon and
Ryan Bundy who are the sons of tax-dodging cowboy Cliven Bundy, the rancher who led a successful
armed rebellion against federal law enforcement officers in Nevada last year. Since that event, Ammon
and Ryan Bundy have been traveling the United States, meeting with other white "militia" groups, and
inciting violence against the federal government. Yet almost no major media, nor are any of the
contenders running for President call them terrorist.
The Washington Post: "Those who want to go take hard stand, get in your trucks andfollow me!"
Ammon Bundy declared to rally-goers at the conclusion of Saturday's event, according to several
people who were in attendance. Not long afterward, the group then took over the federal wildlife
preserve in Burn.
Harney County Sheriff David M. Ward said authorities from several law enforcement organizations
were monitoring the ongoing incident. "These men came to Harney County claiming to be part of
militia groups supporting local ranchers," Ward said in a statement Sunday. "When in reality these
men had alternative motives, to attempt to overthrow the county andfederal government in hopes to
spark a movement across the United States." Several of the men occupying a federal wildlife preserve
in Oregon have even recorded "goodbye" videos to their relatives in anticipation of being killed in
battle with the United States government. Others have threatened to use deadly force if local police or
other government forces attempt to remove the protesters from the land and building they have
occupied.
The actions taken by Ammon Bundy, Ryan Bundy, and their supporters in Oregon are the very
definition of terrorism and armed insurrection. It would seem that the year 2016 has begun with a
strident example of unapologetic white privilege in action. Actually Oregon is a perfect place for such
a gesture, as it was admitted to the Union in 1859 with a constitution that explicitly banned blacks
from the state. Black Americans were barred from moving to Oregon until 1926. The Ku Klux Klan
and other white terrorist organizations used violence and other forms of intimidation in their (failed)
efforts to prevent black Americans from settling in the area. At present, white nationalist
organizations continue to claim the area as a foothold and primary base of operations.
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Last Time Black Protesters Had An Anned Standoff.
The Police Bombed A City Block
White privilege has many components. One of its most powerful aspects is the ability to twist reality,
and by doing so, free white folks from personal responsibility (as well as group accountability) for
their actions. There are many examples of this phenomenon in the United States. White men who
commit mass shootings are "mentally ill" and not "terrorists." Heavily armed white cops who kill
unarmed and defenseless black people were acting "in reasonablefear of their lives." White
conservatives who gather by the dozens and hundreds and then point loaded guns at federal
authorities are described by the right-wing news entertainment media as "patriots."
And of course to be "white" is to be unmarked by "race." Therefore, there is little mention of the fact
that these right-wing traitors are white men. Moreover, the connections between the Christian White
Identity Movement will also go uncommented upon by the mainstream corporate news media.
Example — as the latter's coverage of the events in Oregon has followed this script very closely.
The New York Times described the events in Oregon as "Armed Group Vows to Occupy Office in
Oregon for `Years': ABC News reported on a "Peaceful protestfollowed by Oregon wildlife refuge
action." Surprisingly, Fox News, while still quite literally whitewashing their headline, came the
closest to the truth with their, "Armed militia occupying Oregon government building." It does not
take an amazing act of creativity to envision how the same actions — and much less — if taken by
blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, or First Nations peoples would likely be described by the American
corporate news media. If Muslims took up arms, occupied a federal building, recorded martyrdom
videos, and threatened to kill police and other authorities, they would be called "terrorists."
Let's be honest: If the Oregon terrorist "militiamen" were Black, Muslim, or
Hispanic, THEY'D BE DEAD BY NOW!
Instead — this week in Oregon journalist mingled freely with the activist supporting these "so called
militia" with no police cars zooming to the seized buildings with sirens blaring and SWAT teams
arriving in armored vehicles sitting up an armed perimeter to control the situation.
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When unarmed Black Lives Matter protesters showed up to peacefully protest at Mall Of America, this
is a fraction of the police that showed up, dressed in militarized gear. They secured the fuck out of that
escalator. Remember this image as you watch this Oregon protest go down. Those are armed white
men who stated clearly that they would use violence. Not unarmed peaceful protesters. So where are
the police? Where are the talking heads on the news calling them terrorists? It seems that when
armed white men make a stand, police remember their training and focus on de-escalation out of
respect for life. This land they trying to claim was stolen from Native Americans. This isn't even a real
cause. It's not about guns or states' rights or cattle. It's about white men realizing their era of privilege
is ending. And the government is giving them a pass just like they daddy got a pass after pointing guns
at police two years ago. Do they have a right to protest? Sure. But let's call them what they are....
TERRORIST!!!
See the hypocrisy?
The contemporary 'citizens militia' movement has appropriated and perverted the concept of militias
in use at the time of the American Revolution. Lacking a regular army, the colonists initially relied on
local bodies of armed citizens to resist tyranny. Despite their celebrated stands at Lexington and
Concord, however, militiamen fared poorly against British regulars. The Continental Congress quickly
established a conventional army. Militias did play an important role in winning American
Independence, but only when they operated under proper authority and in support of regular troops.
The Founding Fathers envisioned militias as protectors of the government not protectors of the people
from government.
Militias are thus the ancestors of the modern National Guard, not of self-proclaimed "patriots" who
show utter contempt for any form of authority beyond themselves. The extremists playing solider in
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the woods of Oregon are at best criminals and at worst domestic terrorists, and they need to be
identified as such. Fighting extremism requires contesting ideology as much as combating
organizations. These people must, therefore, be denied even the shred of legitimacy they try to claim.
As such why then are virtually all media outlets dignify these people by calling them "militiamen?"
They are terrorists, pure and simple.
Let's remember that these are some of the same people that skewered Black Lives Matter for being
discordant and disruptive, the same people that mocked the death of Tamir Rice, the same people who
post over and over again about how Eric Garner should have just followed the rules, and the same
people that say Michael Brown deserved what he got for allegedly refusing to comply with police
orders -- are the exact same people who get an erection every time some stars-and-bars waving neo-
confederate chambers a round in the direction of a cop.
To be sure, the government has at times resorted to violence in response to right-wing terrorists, but
the more common reaction from the police and military is that of seeming nonchalance, as has been
observed with the siege in Oregon, which contrasts tremendously with the deadly violence often used
against radical armed groups of people of color. And the racist hypocrisy and double-standards of
politicians and the media has been a constant, with terms like "terrorists" and "thugs" unquestioningly
applied to radical people of color, armed or not, whose murder is readily justified, while similar white
radicals are defended and described with a heavy dose of euphemism.
This racist hypocrisy that has even descended into tacit support for terrorism from prominent
Republicans like Donald Trump, is a grave danger, not only because it reinforces the proto-fascist
mindset of the core right-wing constituency but also because right wing terror is an increasingly grave
threat to the nation. Indeed, more Americans have died at the hands of right-wing terrorists than
jihadist ones since 9/11 and yet the latter is granted wall-to-wall fear-mongering coverage and the
former is almost entirely ignored by politicians and the media.
Apparently, blue lives only matter when they're busting up civil rights demonstrations -- but not at all
when they're jumping in front of bullets in abortion clinics or trying to apply the law to white
criminals. The Hammond family very well might have a legitimate grievance against the government,
except that even they have renounced the actions of these yahoos. And yes... I am a New Yorker living
in Los Angeles, so I really can't speak to the burden the government foists on the cattleman. But what
I do know is that if these ranchers were paying market prices for grazing rights, they would be paying
much more than the government currently is charging them. And more importantly, what I do know is
that if these same people were armed Muslims or people of color advocating the overthrow of
government the outcome would be drastically different.. Hence White Privilege.... And this is my
rant of the week...
WEEK's READINGS
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Humans Need Not Apply
NO MAINTENANCE MIN. LIFETIME 35,000 HOURS
ROI: 3-8 MONTH
Web Link: https://voutu.be/7Pq-S557XQU
I recently watch an interesting 15 minute documentary, Humans Need Not Apply that posed an
interesting observation/question. It starts out explaining that there was a time when every human use
to have to hunt or gather to survive, leading to humans making tools to make life easy. From sticks to
plows to trackers, we have gone from everyone needing to make food to modern agriculture whereby
almost no one has to make food and we still have an abundance. But this evolution is not just in
farming, it is everything and everywhere. We have spent the last several thousand years inventing
tools to reduce physical labor of all kinds. These mechanical muscles are stronger, more reliable and
more tireless than human muscles ever could be. And in many ways this is a good thing because
replacing physical muscles with mechanical muscles gives us more time to specialize, leaving everyone
better off, even those who are still doing physical labor. This is how economies grow and standards of
living rise. Over the last sixty plus year a number of people have specialized to become programmers
and engineers, whose job is to build mechanical minds. And just like mechanical muscles made human
labor less in demand, so are mechanical minds making human brain labor less in demand.
This is an economic revolution. And although you may think that we have been here before, but we
haven't. This time is different.
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When most people think of automation they usually think of giant custom built expensive efficient
really dumb robots doing repetitive tasks. And the only reasons why these big machines haven't taken
over the world is because they are only cost effective in narrow situations. They are the old kind of
automation. The new kind don't require skilled operator and technicians and millions of dollars. The
new kind can see and can learn what you want them to do by watching you do it. More importantly
they cost less than the annual salary of a human worker. And unlike their older brothers they aren't
programmed for one specific job, doing whatever work within the reach of their arms.
This new generation are considered general purpose robots and this is a big deal. Think computers,
which started out as highly custom and highly expensive but when cheap general purpose computers
were introduced they quickly became vital to everything. A general purpose computer and as easily
calculate change, assign seats on an airplane or play a game, just by swapping its software. This huge
demand for general purpose computers is what makes them both more powerful and cheaper at the
same time. And even when a general purpose computer is slow, their hourly cost are pennies worth of
electrify, whereby his human replacement at least cost minimum wage.
A tenth of the speed is still cost effective when it is a hindered of the price. And although today these
computers are considered dumb, they are still smart enough to takeover many low-skilled jobs.
Evidenced by automated check-out cashiers in supermarkets and DYI stores. So in new supermarkets
where there were 3o human cashiers, there can be one human overseeing 3o automated cashier
machines. Let's take the hundreds of thousands baristas employed around the world. There is a
barista robot coming to replace them. And although your favorite barista may make your double-
mocha lane just like you like it, millions people don't care and just want a decent cup of coffee. By the
way this robot can be part of a giant network of robots that remembers who you are and how you like
your coffee no matter where you are... Pretty convenient I would say...
We think about technical change as the fancy new expensive stuff like the latest satellites. But the real
change comes from last decades stuff getting cheaper, smaller and faster. And this is what is
happening to robots now. And because their mechanical minds are capable of decision making, they
are out-competing humans for jobs in a way that no form of mechanical muscle ever could. Imagine a
pair of horses talking about technology. One is concern that technology might somehow replace them
while the other points out that technology has made their lives much easier, no pulling plows, street
cars, riding across the country delivering mail or into battle all terrible. With the other speculating
that the new city jobs of pulling people around in small carriages being cushy and even if this car
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thingy comes off there will be new jobs for horses that we can't imagine. Obviously we know what
happened. Although there are still working horse but nothing like before with the horse populating
peaking in 1915 and since then it gone down precipitously. The idea of better technology making better
jobs for horses sounds ridiculous but swapping people for horses you can get the drift of what possibly
is in store. Mechanical muscles push horse out of the economy mechanical intelligence most likely will
do the same to humans.... Maybe not immediately or not everywhere but in large enough numbers
whereby someday soon, it is going to become a problem if we are not prepared.... And we are not
prepared.
•
Today you may think that technology won't replace your job but technology is gets better, cheaper and
faster at a rate biology can't match. Just like the car was the beginning of the end for the horse-labor
economy, today's AUTOS show us the shape of things to come. Self-driving cars aren't the future they
are here and they work. Self-driving cars have traveled hundreds of thousands of miles up and down
the California coast and though cities all without human intervention. The question is not if they will
replace today's cars, but how quickly. And they don't have to be perfect, they just have to be better
than us. Human drivers kill 40,000 people a year with cars, just in the United States. Given that self-
driving cars don't blink, don't text while driving, don't get sleepy or stupid, it is easy to see them being
better than humans because they already are.
Calling self-driving cars at all is like calling the first cars, mechanical horses... Cars in all of their forms
are so much more than horses, therefore using the name limits your thinking about what they really
can do. So as the video suggests, let's call self-driving cars AUTOS, "the solution to the transportation
from one point A to point B." Self-driving cars only look like cars because they are designed to
transport humans, but little AUTOS work in warehouse and gigantic AUTOS work in open-pit mines,
both moving stuff around. Who knows how many jobs will be replaced but the transportation industry
today employs about 3 million people and worldwide more than 70 million jobs. And for many, these
jobs are over.... The idea that unions may save these jobs is almost nil, as history has shown us that
workers often fight new technology but they always lose in the end. Economics always win and there
are huge incentives across widely diverse industries to adopt AUTOS, especially in most transportation
companies where labor is approximate 1/3 of the cost (that's straight salaries, not including time,
accidents, etc.), so anyway to reduce this cost will be embraced and adopted. AUTOS are coming but
there are also many places that are less visible that you can see changes today.
It is easy to assume that dumb robots and AUTOS have always and will just replace low-skilled jobs
we didn't want people doing anyway, but today's intelligent machines will soon challenge white-collar
workers as well. For those workers sitting in front of a computer screen typing, BOTs are coming for
them too. Software BOTs are faster and cheaper than physical robots and given that white collar
workers are more expensive than low-skilled workers, the incentive to automate their work is great.
Currently there are legions of engineers and programmers whose entire jobs are to replace white-collar
jobs. And although software BOTs won't replace all white-collar workers, engineering today is focused
on creating BOTs that teach themselves how to do things that the programmer could never teach them
to do themselves.
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How this works is extremely complicated, but the bottom line is that there are limited ways to show a
BOT a bunch of stuff to do and then show the BOT a bunch of correctly done stuff and it will figure out
a solution to get it done. So just with a goal and no knowledge of how to do it, the BOTs of the future
and in many cases now will learn and solve. Take the stock market, which in many ways is no longer a
human endeavor. BOTs that have taught themselves to trade stocks and are now trading stocks with
other BOTs who have taught themselves. Today, the floor of the New York Stock Exchange is not full
with traders doing their job as much it is a TV set for the media. BOTs have learned the market, as
well as learned to write. If you picked up a newspaper lately you have probably read a story written by
a BOT. There are companies now that teach BOTs to write anything, sports stories, obituaries, as well
as company quarterly reports that were the purvey of analyst. Paperwork, decision making, writing all
fall in this category challenging the demand of human labor.
Even the professions are not safe from BOTs. When you think lawyer, it is easy to think trials. But the
bulk of lawyering is actually drafting legal documents, predicting the likely outcome of lawsuits and
something called discovery, where boxes of paperwork are dumped on the lawyers who then need to
find the pattern or the one out-of-place transaction among thousands and sometimes millions of
documents. This can be BOT work, as discovery is already not a human job in many law firms. Not
because there isn't paperwork to go through, as there is more than ever but to go through, but because
clever research BOTs can shift through millions of emails, memos and accounts in hours, not weeks,
crushing human researchers not just in cost and time, but most importantly in accuracy. BOTs don't
get sleepy reading through a million emails but this is the simple stuff.
IBM has a BOT named Watson, whom you may have seen on TV destroying humans playing Jeopardy
but that was just a fun side-job for him. Watson's day job is to be the best medical doctor in the world;
to understand what people say in their own words and give back diagnoses. He is already doing this at
Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York, with guidance on lung cancer treatment. And just like AUTOS
don't have to be perfect, they just have to make less mistakes then humans, the same goes to doctor
BOTs. Human doctors are no less perfect as the frequency and severity of misdiagnosis is terrifying
with an estimated 400,000 preventable deaths a year. Human doctors can be severely limited with
dealing with patient's complicated medical histories. Understanding every drug and every drug's
interaction with every other drug is beyond the scope of human know-ability, which doctor BOTs can
do. There are research BOTs whose sole job is to test thousands of new drugs at a time. Moreover,
human doctors can only improve through their own experiences, while doctor BOTs can learned from
the experience of every other doctor BOT it is connected with. They can read the latest in medical
research and keep track with everything that happens with all of their patients worldwide and make
correlations that would be impossible to find otherwise. Not all doctors will go away but when the
doctor BOTs are comparable to humans and they are only as far away as your phone or computer the
need for general doctors will be less.
As for you creative types, creative BOTs are on the way. Creativity may feel like magic but it isn't. Yes,
the brain is a complicated machine and one of the most complicated machines in the whole universe,
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but it hasn't stopped us from trying to simulate it. Just like mechanical muscles allowed us to move
into thinking jobs, mechanical minds will enable us to move into creative jobs. Therefore, even if we
assume that the human mind is blissfully creative, it's not true in every field, as artistic creativity is not
what a majority of creative jobs depend on, because the number of poets, writers, musicians, directors
and artist who act who actually make a living doing their work is a tiny portion of the labor force and
given that these are professions dependent on popularity they will always be a small portion of the
population. There can't be such a thing as a poem and painting based economy. Still today there are
BOTs that create music, draw and paint without most people realizing the difference. Thus the route
of artificial intelligence being creative is really no different than people being surprised when
computers started beating Grand Master chess champions at chess. And so goes the same for human
talents.
What we are talking about is not science fiction these robots are here right now. There is a terrifying
amount of working automation in labs and warehouses around the world today. We have been though
economic revolutions before but today's robot revolution is different. Horses aren't unemployed now
because they became fat and lazy as a species. They just became unemployable, as there is little work
that horses can do to pay for their housing and hay. And many bright capable humans will find
themselves like the horse. Unemployable through no fault of their own. But if you think that new jobs
will save us there in one final point to consider.
OCCUPATION NUMBER of WORKER
Transportation 3,628,000
Retail Salesperson 3,286,000
First Line Supervisors 3,131,000
Cashiers 3,109,000
Secretaries 3,082,000
Managers, all others 2,898,000
Sales Representatives 2,865,000
Registered Nurses 2,843,003
Elementary School Teachers 2,813,006
Janitors /Cleaners 2,186,000
Waiters & Waitresses 2,067,000
Cooks 1,951,000
Nursing, psychiatric, and 1.928,030
Customer Service 1,896,000
Labors & Freight 1,700,000
Accountants & Auditors 1,646,000
First Line Supervisors 1,507,000
Chief Executives 1,505,000
Stock Clerks & Order Fillers 1,456,000
Maids & Housekeeping 1,407,000
Postsecondary Teachers 1,300,000
Bookkeepers 1,297,000
Receptionists 1,281,000
Construction laborers L267,000
Childcare Workers 1,247,000
Carpenters 1,242,000
Secondary School Teachers 1.221,000
Grounds Maintenance 1,195,000
Financial managers 1.141,000
Non-Retail Managers 1,131,000
Construction Managers 1083,000
VVMS 1,040,000
Computer Programmers 1,026,000
Two hundred years ago the U.S. census only tracked lo kinds of jobs, while today there are loos of
kinds of jobs, but many of the new ones are not a significant part of the labor force. Above is a list of
jobs ranked by the number of people who perform them. It is a sobering list that starts with
transportation at the top and all of this work existed in some form a hundred years ago and almost all
of them are easy targets for automation, but only when we get down to 33 (Computer Programmers)
do we find a job category that wasn't around a loo years ago. This doesn't mean that every barista
worker or while collar employer will lose their job. During the Great Depression 25% of American
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workers were unemployed, while the above list only equals 45% of the country's labor force. But
without a doubt, automation replacing human labor could easily push us over the 25% unemployment
figure of the Great Depression. And this would be a big problem. We have to understand that
automation isn't bad as much as it is inevitable. So we need to start thinking now about what to do
when large sections of the population are unemployable through no fault of their own. Because if we
don't, one day in a future for most jobs, humans need not apply.
How do Sunni and Shia Islam differ?
Saudi Arabia's execution of Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr could escalate sectarian tensions in the
Muslim world even further. The supreme leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Sunday that
Saudi Arabia, which is ruled by a Sunni monarchy, would face "divine vengeance" for the killing of the
outspoken cleric, which was part of a mass execution of 47 men. Al-Nimr had advocated for greater
political rights for Shiites in Saudi Arabia and surrounding countries. Saudi Arabia had accused him of
inciting violence against the state.
Here is a primer on the basic differences between Sunni and Shia Islam.
What caused the split?
A schism emerged after the death of the Prophet Muhammad in A.D. 632. He died without appointing
a successor to lead the Muslim community, and disputes arose over who should shepherd the new and
rapidly growing faith.
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Some believed that a new leader should be chosen by consensus; others thought that only the prophet's
descendants should become caliph. The title passed to a trusted aide, Abu Bala; though some thought
it should have gone to Ali, the prophet's cousin and son-in-law. Ali eventually did become caliph after
Abu Bakr's two successors were assassinated.
After Ali also was assassinated, with a poison-laced sword at the mosque in Kufa, in what is now Iraq,
his sons Hasan and then Hussein claimed the title. But Hussein and many of his relatives were
massacred in Karbala, Iraq, in 680. His martyrdom became a central tenet to those who believed that
Ali should have succeeded the prophet (it is mourned every year during the month of Muharram). The
followers became known as Shiites, a contraction of the phrase Shiat Ali, or followers of Ali.
The Sunnis, however, regard the first three caliphs before Ali as rightly guided and themselves as the
true adherents to the Sunnah, or the prophet's tradition. Sunni rulers embarked on sweeping
conquests that extended the caliphate into North Africa and Europe. The last caliphate ended with the
fall of the Ottoman Empire after World War I.
How do their beliefs differ?
The Sunni and Shiite sects of Islam encompass a wide spectrum of doctrine, opinion and schools of
thought. The branches are in agreement on many aspects of Islam, but there are considerable
disagreements within each. Both branches include worshippers who run the gamut from secular to
fundamentalist. Shiites consider Ali and the leaders who came after him as imams. The 12th imam, a
boy, is believed to have vanished in the ninth century in Iraq after his father was murdered. Shiites
known as Twelvers anticipate his return as the Mandi, or Messiah. Because of the different paths the
two sects took, Sunnis emphasize God's power in the material world, sometimes including the public
and political realm, while Shiites place great value in martyrdom and sacrifice.
Which sect is larger, and where do they live?
More than 85 per cent of the world's 1.5 billion Muslims are Sunni. They live across the Arab world, as
well in countries like Turkey, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia. Iran, Iraq and
Bahrain are largely Shiite. The Saudi royal family, which practices an austere and conservative strand
of Sunni Islam known as Wahhabism, controls Islam's holiest shrines, Mecca and Medina. Karbala,
Kufa and Najaf in Iraq are revered shrines for the Shiites.
Saudi Arabia and Iran, the dominant Sunni and Shiite powers in the Middle East, often take opposing
sides in regional conflicts. In Yemen, a Shiite movement from that country's north, the Houthis,
overthrew a Sunni-dominated government, leading to an invasion by a Saudi-led coalition. In Syria,
which has a Sunni majority, the Alawite Shiite sect of President Bashar Assad, which has long
dominated the government, clings to power amid a bloody civil war. And in Iraq, bitter resentments
between the Shiite-led government and Sunni communities have contributed to victories by the
Islamic State.
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John Harney — New York Times — January 3, 2016
Map ranks what are supposedly the smartest and dumbest states
During his bizarre 95-minute rant, GOP hopeful Donald Trump mused "How stupid are the people of
Iowa?" when addressing how Ben Carson pulled ahead of him in the polls.
The Washington Post took that question (maybe a little too) literally and decided to gauge just how
intelligent the people of Iowa are, along with the residents of every other state.
As you can see, the darker areas are the supposedly more intelligent states.
"Intelligence" score, by state LOWIR
Post analysks of SAT. ACT. IQ and college faille percentiet.
sad
Here's the criteria by which Washington Post arrived at its findings:
• IQ, as estimated by Virginia Commonwealth's Michael McDaniel in 24306
• 2015 SAT scores, as compiled by The Post
• 2015 ACT scores, via the company that administers the tests
• The percentage of college graduates in the state, compiled by the Census Bureau
• To create an intelligence score, we determined the percentage-point difference between a
state's score and the national median score. Then, since IQ seemed to be the most on-the-nose
metric, we doubled that value and then added it all up.
For bragging purposes, here are the 10 alleged "smartest states:
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IQ SAT ACT College grad
Rank • State Score
deviation deviation deviation deviation
1 Massachusetts 35.3 3.4 C.1 14.6 14
2 Minnesota 32.8 2.8 14.5 6.6 6.1
New
3 27.5 3.3 0.8 14.1 6
Hampshire
4 Connecticut 26.4 2.2 -2.5 14.6 9.9
5 Wisconsin 22.2 2 14 4.2 0
6 Kansas 22 1.9 12.6 2.8 2.8
7 Vermont 21.8 2.9 0.1 10.3 5.6
8 Iowa 21.5 2.3 13 4.2 -0.3
9 New Jersey 20.4 1.9 -2.1 8.9 9.8
10 Colorado 19.5 0.7 11.8 -2.8 9.1
And here are the states that are arguably "the dumbest." As you can see, the
South isn't very well represented.
IQ SAT ACT College grad
Rank • State Score
deviation deviation deviation deviation
41 Arizona -16.2 -3.4 0.1 6.6 2.7
42 North Carolina -16.8 -0.6 4.8 -10.8 0
43 Louisiana -18.7 -5.5 7.9 -8.9 -6.7
44 West Virginia -19.1 -2.1 -3.3 -2.3 -9.3
45 South Carolina -19.4 -2.4 -7.1 4.2 -3.3
46 Florida -21.5 -2.4 -7.7 -6.6 -2.4
47 Alabama -21.9 -5.1 4.1 -10.3 -5.5
48 Mississippi -22.4 -6.6 10.3 -10.8 -8.7
49 Nevada -23.4 4.3 -6.1 -1.4 -7.3
50 Hawaii -27 -5.2 -5.2 -13.1 1.7
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The Post went through a lot of trouble to prove that Iowa as a whole is a lot smarter
than Trump thinks it is.
Maggie Scrota — November 16. 2015
The Secret Health Benefits of Lemon Water
By Dr. Donna: Jun 05, 2015
-J. 1
There's a popular health habit that many natural lifestyle enthusiasts have been practicing lately that
you might want to know more about — drinking water flavored with fresh- squeezed lemon. No, it's
not lemonade, as there's no sugar involved. Some people even use hot water instead of cold. So, why
are people so passionate about lemon water and is it really that good for you?
Here are five benefits of drinking lemon-flavored water:
1. Better Hydration
By flavoring the water, you're able to get a lot more water into your body. Some people abhor the taste
of water — and that's an interesting fact on its own. Pure water should be tasteless, but many
municipal water supplies taste or smell like chlorine or other chemicals. In some places where
fracking is taking place, methane and other chemicals produce a foul smell to the water. (How horrible
is that?) The water even lights up on fire when a match is placed near it!
The point is that if you don't like pure water's flavor, you are tasting the toxins from your own body.
The water is pulling out some toxins from your oral tissues as you drink it. Your body is 70% or more
water, and hydration can successfully lower the amount of body aches and pains you have. Water is
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essential for every function in your body and optimal health is impossible if you do everything right
but still don't consume enough water.
2. Lemon is a good source of Vitamin C
Vitamin C helps keep your immunity high so you don't succumb to infections. Drinking lemon water
helps keep your Vitamin C levels consistently high, which is an excellent way to keep your immune
system in good shape. When your Vitamin C intake is inconsistent, it doesn't do as much good for your
immunity.
3. Lemon changes the pH of your body
Lemon water helps restore the alkalinity of the body. You want to be more alkaline instead of more
acidic. Being acidic means you'll feel more joint aches and pains as well as other pains in the body.
Being alkaline means you'll be pain-free more often.
4. Lemon water resets your thirst mechanism
When you drink lemon water in the morning, you are hydrating yourself after a night of no water. By
drinking three glasses of lemon water in the morning, you can reset your thirst mechanism for the
entire day. You won't have to drink so much water the rest of the day; only when thirsty.
5. Lemon water helps the colon
The three glasses of water you drink in the morning hydrate the colon, so regular bowel movements
become standard. That's always good because someone who is constipated is irritable and can be
mean! Someone who is not constipated is friendlier and more pleasant to be around.
Beware: The one big risk
You may wonder, are there any drawbacks when drinking so much lemon water? Well, it depends on
how you prepare it, and what you do afterward. Lemon is one of the most acidic fruits, and when you
squeeze the lemon juice into the water, you make the water acidic. The lemon water can now eat away
at the enamel of the teeth. That's the only drawback, and it's a major issue. And plenty of people have
found this out the hard way - when they go in for their dental appointment, and the dentist tells them
that their enamel has eroded off the teeth.
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The truth is that if you're going to drink lemon water, you must have a plan of action of how to prevent
the enamel erosion from happening. It could be as simple as making sure you brush your teeth
thoroughly after drinking the glass of lemon water. You can also use a straw, to help reduce contact
between the lemon and your teeth.
THIS IS BRILLIANT
An actual tweet from Chicago
"I thought my vasectomy would keep my wife from getting pregnant but apparently it
just changes the color of the baby."
THIS WEEK's QUOTE
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"To learn who
rules over you,
simply find out
who you are
not allowed
to criticize."
- Voltaire
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
Two Sides of the Same Coin
Web Link: hnps://www.facebook.com/United.Syrian.Republicivideos/1730600583840768/
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Take several minutes to look at the video via the above web link as it would be
funny if it wasn't so true.
BEST VIDEO OF THE WEEK
It's alright to be different...
Web Link: httpsi/www.facebook.com/404147323119785/videos/447153652152485/
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
Ms. Lisa Fischer
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Being the first weekend in 2016 you are invited to enjoy the music of Ms. Lisa Fischer who is finally
stepping into the spotlight at last after four decades of singing background for icons like the Rolling
Stones, Tina Turner, Chaka Khan, and Nine Inch Nails. Born December 1, 1958 in the Fort Greene
neighborhood in the borough of Brooklyn, New York. Fischer's love for singing was encouraged by her
mother, a homemaker; father, a security guard and warehouse worker; and two younger brothers. Lisa
rose to fame in 1991 with her debut album So Intense, which produced the Grammy Award -
winning hit single "How Can I Ease the Pain". Known for her wide, high-reaching vocal range,
Fischer has been recognized as one of the most successful session vocalists of the era. She has been a
back-up singer for a number of famous artists, including Luther Vandross and Tina Turner, and has
toured with The Rolling Stones since 1989, where her popularity with the fans has brought her to
routinely duet with Mick Jagger on several songs when performing onstage
The unexpected success of the Oscar-winning documentary Twenty Feetfrom Stardom (2013)
altered the course of Lisa's musical journey. The film told her story, complete with dips of her 1991
Grammy-winning R&B hit "How Can I Ease The Pain," live footage of her legendary duets with
Mick Jagger on "Gimme Shelter," and glowing testimonials from famous colleagues like Sting, Patti
Austin, and Chris Botti. It showcased her virtuosity and vulnerability, opened a window on her
sometimes lonely life on the road, earned her a second Grammy award, and left audiences eager to see
and hear more. In performance, she draws from an eclectic palette of influences, whether putting her
stamp on Led Zeppelin and Little Willie John or recasting rock anthems from her tours with the Stones
and Tina Turner.
While Lisa's range is legendary, her greatest gift is the ability to connect, to reach the hearts of her
listeners. Raised in the Fort Greene neighborhood of Brooklyn, Lisa emerged from New York's fervent
studio scene in the early-198os and quickly became session singer royalty. She paid her dues as a
member of the Maruelettes before legendary vocalist Luther Vandross invited her to sing background
with his touring band. He became her mentor and friend, nurturing her talent over a 20-year period
until his untimely passing in 2005. During Lisa's two decades working with Luther, her voice also
powered albums by a constellation of music legends including Aretha Franklin, Bobby McFerrin,
George Benson, Diana Ross, Laurie Anderson, Teddy Pendergrass, Dionne Warwick, Grover
Washington, Billy Ocean, Melba Moore, Al Jarreau, Patti. LaBelle, and other major recording artists.
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Lisa joined the Rolling Stones on tour for the first time for their 1989 Steel Wheels tour; she has graced
their stage for 26 years. When the spotlight catches Lisa singing with Mick Jagger she is a
quintessential rock and roll goddess, soaring above the band's earthy groove. "It's always a high point
in the showfor me," says Mick. Keith Richards commends Lisa's "amazing power, energy, and
projection."
In 1991, in the midst of touring with both the Stones and Luther Vandross, Lisa recorded a solo
album, So Intense, for Elektra Records. "I used members of my session singing community on
the CD, so I felt surrounded by love," she says. "The most difficult thing wasfinding the right musk.
It was also the most exciting thing." The album featured Lisa's songwriting collaborations with
producer Narada Michael Walden on both the Top to R&B hit "Save Me" and the number one
and Grammy-winning R&B single "How Can I Ease the Pain." Lisa also won the Grammy for "Best
R&B Vocal Performance, Female," an honor she shared with Patti LaBelle, whose award-winning
project Burnin' also featured Lisa on background vocals.
Though she continued to record for soundtracks and various studio projects, Lisa's career revolved
around supporting other artists. Then, in 2011, the late Gil Friesen and director Morgan Neville
approached Lisa when he began interviewing singers for Twenty Feetfrom Stardom, a feature-
length documentary celebrating the contributions of background vocalists. Alongside vocal
trailblazers like Darlene Love and Merry Clayton, Lisa candidly discussed the delicate balance between
life and career, success and challenges, as well as the nuance of singing with other vocalists. "Ms.
Fischer has become the unexpected star of Mr. Neville'sfilm," said the New York Times. "She's the
empress of that world," music legend Patti Austin declared in the film. "That's a powerhouse yoke. I
think of her as a star," said Sting. Between her down-to-earth persona in interview footage, her vocal
mastery in archival clips, and her multi-tracked performance of Samuel Barber's "Sure on This
Shining Night," Lisa moved viewers with her voice, her soft-spoken charm, and her thought-
provoking insights. "This movie is going to make Lisa Fischer a star," said music industry pundit Bob
Lefsetz. "And she deserves it, because she's just that damn good.
Whether fronting her own band or supporting other artists, Lisa's passion for music in all its forms
leads her to constant growth and experimentation with different styles. She recorded the title track for
Billy Childs' all-star tribute to Laura Nyro, Map to the Treasure (204), collaborated with YoYo Ma and
Gregory Porter, and co-created music with J.C. Maillard for the Alonzo King LINES Ballet. "It's an
exciting new chapterfor an artist who had early career success but eschewed the trappings of
celebrity infavor of the satisfaction of making honest musk every night," Broadway
World observes. With spiritual truth-telling as her compass and loving kindness as her guide, Ms.
Lisa Fischer is on a creative journey, destination unknown. "Inspiration is all around," said Lisa in a
recent interview with New York's Daily News. "My heart is wide open and I'm in love with the
thought of singing to anyone who wishes to listen." With this you are invited to enjoy the
talent and soul ofMs. Lisa Fischer....
Lisa Fischer — How Can I Ease The Pain Live -- Imps:!'youtu.be/IXDF_V32ZOU
Lisa Fischer — Save Me -- hups:i/voutu.be/iS-7nOhM6d4
Lisa Fischer — Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time) -- https://youtu.be/mHeWYV4EJBw
Lisa Fischer & Chris Botti - Look of Love -- huos://youtu.befrjg4Srg
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Lisa Fischer — Beneath the Wings of an Angel -- https://youtu.be/YzGXMWN44UU
Lisa Fischer — Wild Horses -- https://youtu.be/tgW14MhjtmE
Lisa Fischer — Gimme Shelter -- https://youtu.be/2CStjpw6hKw
Lisa Fischer — Last Goodbye -- https://youtu.bel3FcZyy_DdUs
Lisa Fischer & CCC Pop Orchestra — Stairway to Heaven -- https://youtu.be/4Wi6DAfz1JI
Chris Bad & Lisa Fischer — The Very Thought of You -- https://youtu.be/yPuwMFlolvc
Lisa Fischer — Human Beings -- https://youtu.be/JVwlvdAel0
Lisa Fischer — Fever -- https://youtu.be/mcSbC_4MjnA
Luther Vandross & Lisa Fischer — Whether Or Not The World Gets Better —
https://youtu.be/iGtP9EQvJE0
Lisa Fisher — Colors Of Love -- https://youtu.be/pk20ADhy3Vc
The Rolling Stones ft Lisa Fisher — Gimme Shelter -- https://youtu.be/STNeUx1dFHk
Teddy Pendergrass & Lisa Fischer — Glad to be alive -- https://youtu.be/69mXfTkxPAQ
Tina Turner 8r Lisa Fisher — Only Rock n Roll -- https://youtu.be/H0rxZUVMDeY
Lisa Fischer — Special Performance at 'Twenty Feet From Stardom' Screening -
https://youti gzoKmI4Og
I hope that you enjoyed this week's offerings and wish you and
those whom you love a great week
Gregory Brown
Chairman & CEO
GlobalCast Pannell. LLC
US:
Tel:
Fax:
Skvt
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