Thursday, July 31, 2014

Dow Jones Industrial Drops 300+ Points

Dow Jones plunges over 300 points, erasing gains for July

Share icons
by  Tom Huddleston, Jr.  @tjhuddle  JULY 31, 2014, 2:02 PM EDT



Leading market indexes lose all their gains for the month of July.

Geopolitical worries weighed on investors Thursday, driving the Dow Jones industrial average down more than 300 points, leading a market retreat that left the blue-chip index down for the entire month of July.

In addition to the Dow’s sharp drop, the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq both fell 2% in afternoon trading. Both the Dow and the S&P 500 finished July down slightly, erasing all gains from a month that saw the Dow cross the 17,000-point mark for the first time ever and hit multiple record highs.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index (VIX), known as the “fear index,” rose some 27%, hitting a multi-month high.

Contributing to the market’s retreat: news late Wednesday that Argentina’s credit rating has been downgraded to selective default by Standard & Poor’s. The country’s second default in 13 years sent its Merval stock index plummeting Thursday afternoon.

There are also lingering questions over how the latest round of sanctions on Russia issued by the U.S. and Europe will affect the global economy, including the energy markets. Exxon Mobil  XOM -4.17% , which has a multi-billion dollar partnership with Russian company Rosneft, saw its stock drop 4% on Thursday.

more here:
http://fortune.com/2014/07/31/stock-markets-down-july-close/

==================================================

http://i.imgur.com/5VBnMTk.gif

==================================================

7/31/2014 @ 8:37AM
The U.S. Jobs Report: American Jobs May Finally Be On The Rebound

Jeff DeAngelis , Northwestern Mutual

Jeff DeAngelis is the chief investment officer of Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company.

It’s the kind of economic news many have been looking for: The monthly jobs report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the U.S. economy added 288,000 nonfarm jobs in June. It was the fifth straight month of gains above 200,000—a run unmatched since the period of September 1999 to January 2000. At the same time, the unemployment rate fell to 6.1 percent, the lowest level since September 2008.

Job creation was widespread across sectors, and there were few signs of inflationary pressures, suggesting that the economy is transitioning to a faster pace of growth. This helped to lift the stock market to new highs. In early July, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 17,000 threshold for the first time. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index also recorded a new high, as did the tech-heavy Nasdaq, which had its best outing since the go-go days of 2000.

No One Is Arguing That All Is Well, However
While the number of people out of work for more than six months has slowly chipped downward, long-term unemployment remains high. In addition, the number of Americans employed part time for economic reasons, either because their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find full-time work, increased by 275,000 in June to 7.5 million. This may be better than prolonged joblessness, but it’s not a path to sufficiency, let alone prosperity.

Meanwhile, wages—another key benchmark of labor-market health—haven’t increased significantly for most workers. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings for all employees rose by just 2 percent, aligning closely with consumer-price inflation but doing little to aid economic growth. These slow-to-grow wages suggest that employers don’t yet feel compelled to raise wages—or to scale back their required qualifications—in order to attract workers.

For the First Time in a Long Time, Many Believe This Could Finally Change.
June’s job gains were not just in well-paid white-collar professions; most were in the middle tier of jobs that enable workers to gain a foothold in the middle class. For example, manufacturing companies hired 16,000 workers in June, with all of the increase in durable goods manufacturing; transportation companies added 17,000 employees, up from an average of 11,000 jobs per month over the prior 12 months; and health care employment increased by 21,000. The increases have helped boost Americans’ optimism in their job prospects going forward.

Gallup, for example, found recently that 35 percent of Americans say now is a good time to find a quality job, up 7 percentage points from last month. In fact, this is the most optimistic Americans have been about the job market since the starting point of the Great Recession. Equally significant is that job optimism has increased among all major demographic groups Gallup tracks. In July, young Americans, wealthier Americans, democrats and those with advanced degrees were the most optimistic about finding a job. Even so, the greatest gains in Gallup’s recent poll were seen in how lower-earning, less educated workers see their job prospects.

Better Times Ahead?
While the 35 percent now calling it a good time to find a quality job may not seem very high, Americans’ improving view of the job market is one more sign that better times may lie ahead. If the economy continues to add jobs at the current pace, many economists believe we can reach pre-recession employment levels in the not-so-distant future. And with more Americans back in the workforce, this could be the catalyst that finally pushes wages higher. In the end, that’ll be good news for all of us because real wage growth is the basis for economic growth.

more here:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/northwesternmutual/2014/07/31/the-u-s-jobs-report-american-jobs-may-finally-be-on-the-rebound/

==================================================

Early July Jobs Numbers:

US COMPANIES ADD FEWER JOBS THAN EXPECTED
SAM RO  
JUL. 30, 2014, 8:15 AM   

U.S. companies added just 218,000 new private jobs in July, says ADP.
This was a bit lighter than the 230,000 expected by economists.

This is down from the 281,000 added in June.

"The July employment gain was softer than June, but remains consistent with a steadily improving job market,"
said Moody's Analytics' Mark Zandi. "At the current pace of job growth unemployment will quickly decline. Layoffs are still receding and hiring and job openings are picking up. If current trends continue, the economy will return to full employment by late 2016.”

Good producing companies added 16,000 jobs while services providers added 202,000.

Small businesses (1-49 employees) were responsible for 84,000 of those jobs.

Despite the miss, Wall Street remains optimistic.

"We’re not too concerned that July’s rise in the ADP was smaller than June’s 281,000 increase,"
said Capital Economics' Paul Dales. "Changes in employment always bounce around from one month to the next. The main point is that job growth improved in the first half of the year and appears to have remained strong going into the second half."
"In the context of the strength in employment growth since the start of the year, this report points to further payrolls gains of 215K to 235K in July, which will mark the 6th consecutive months of jobs growth in excess of 200K," said TD Securities' Millan Mulraine. "This will be further confirmation of the sustained pick-up in the labor market, and it will provide further confidence to the Fed in the sustainability of the economic recovery."

The BLS's official July jobs report comes out at 8:30 a.m. ET on Friday. Economists are looking for 231,000 new nonfarm payrolls driven by 230,000 private payrolls.

here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/adp-employment-report-2014-7

==================================================

10:26 am ET | Jul 31, 2014
What to Watch for in Friday’s July Jobs Report

By  BEN LEUBSDORF
The first half of 2014 saw the U.S. economy’s strongest stretch of hiring since early 2006. The jobless rate fell to 6.1% in June from 7.5% a year earlier, its fastest one-year decline since October 1984, and nonfarm employers added a seasonally adjusted 288,000 jobs.

Can hiring keep up its strong pace in the second half of the year? We’ll get our first clue Friday at 8:30 a.m. EDT, when the Labor Department releases its jobs report for July. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expect payrolls to rise by 230,000 and the unemployment rate to remain at 6.1%.

Where’s The Hiring?

Output Versus Jobs

In, Out and on the Fence

Where’s Wage Growth?

The Fed is Watching


The Fed, in its policy statement Wednesday, acknowledged that the labor market is improving though it also noted that “a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources.” Fed officials will closely examine Friday’s jobs reports for signs of a tightening labor market – a rise in wage growth, a broad drop in unemployment – or signs of continued slack, such as a persistently low labor force participation rate. Either, or both, would feed into the Fed’s ongoing debate about when to begin raising interest rates, which have been pinned near zero since December 2008.

details, here:
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2014/07/31/what-to-watch-for-in-fridays-july-jobs-report/

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Amazon.com Just Disrupted the 3D printing Landscape

This is interesting, Amazon.com is now printing things on demand for people to buy.


=================================================

Amazon launches 3-D printing store
By James O'Toole  @jtotoole July 29, 2014: 11:22 AM ET

amazon 3D printing

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)
The future of retail: manufactured by a 3-D printer, delivered by drone.

That's the sci-fi scenario Amazon (AMZN, Tech30) is inching closer to with the launch this week of its 3-D Printing Store, which offers shoppers over 200 products, including toys, jewelry and home decorations.

 The items are produced via 3-D printer, and can be customized by size, color, material or with personal text and images. A "personalization widget" lets you play around with different designs and preview your purchase before you buy.

"The introduction of our 3-D Printed Products store suggests the beginnings of a shift in online retail - that manufacturing can be more nimble to provide an immersive customer experience," Petra Schindler-Carter, Amazon's director for marketplace sales, said in a statement.

In launching the store, Amazon signed on 3-D-printing productions firms including Cincinnati-based 3DLT and Brooklyn's Mixee Labs. Mixee co-founder Nancy Liang said the new marketplace "has the potential to become the app store for the physical world."
more here:
http://money.cnn.com/2014/07/29/technology/innovationnation/amazon-3d-printing/

=================================================

 Jeremiah 9:13-14
13 And the LORD saith, Because they have forsaken my law which I set before them, and have not obeyed my voice, neither walked therein;
14 But have walked after the imagination of their own heart, and after Baalim, which their fathers taught them

This world is going to do whatever their mind comes up with.
After all, it is Babylon.


Sunday, July 27, 2014

The Gold Standard - 07.27.2014

Thought this was interesting, considering how wrong the July 1st predictions were dead wrong.



Looming Financial Crisis? - 06.24.2014
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/06/looming-financial-crisis-06242014.html

Looming Financial Crisis? UPDATE - Where's your Gold now? 07.14.2014
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/07/looming-financial-crisis-update-wheres.html

July 24, 2014, 2:20 p.m. EDT
Gold settles below $1,300 as solid earnings pour in
Analyst: Near-term potential for safe-haven demand is sticking around
By Sue Chang and Shawn Langlois, MarketWatch



SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Gold fell for a third-straight session on Thursday to settle below $1,300 for the first time in over a month as investors continue to focus on equities during this mostly upbeat earnings season.

Gold for August delivery GCQ4 +1.37%   declined $13.90, or 1.1%, to $1,290.80 an ounce. September silver SIU4 +1.86%   was hit even harder, down 58 cents, or 2.8%, to $20.42 an ounce.

On Wednesday, gold fell just fractionally, as bullish corporate news jousted with rising geopolitical tensions.

Gold also grappled with mixed economic data with weekly jobless claims better than projected as the number of people claiming benefits fell to the lowest level since February 2006 while the pace of new home sales in June hit a three-month low.

ANZ Research analyst Victor Thianpiriya said Russia will likely continue to tweak gold prices.

“For prices, we continue to expect gold to come under pressure this year, while keeping in mind the near-term potential for further ‘safe-haven’ demand,” he said.

Elsewhere in metals trading, October platinum PLV4 +0.64%   shed $13, or 0.9%, to $1,473.70 an ounce, while September palladium PAU4 +1.10%   lost $3.35, or 0.4%, to $870.95 an ounce. High-grade copper for September delivery HGU4 -0.57%   tacked on 6 cents, or 1.9%, to $3.27 a pound.

more here:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/gold-dips-again-as-solid-earnings-pour-in-2014-07-24

================================================

Look back at 2011:

gold, predictions, and the real agenda - 2013 - 12.31.2013
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/03/gold-predictions-and-real-agenda-2013.html

Further reading:

Who predicted the Financial Crisis of 2008?
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/06/who-predicted-financial-crisis-of-2008.html

Friday, July 18, 2014

You Don’t Have To Apologize For Being White (and no one is asking you to)

Before you read this, please understand this is not a "Woe is me is my blackself" post.

Please read the entire thing before replying. Thanks.

I wanted to talk about this, because for the last 14 years I've this come up again and again, and its always blurred with emotion and rhetoric.

Email such as the following has been spreading like wild fire all over the Net.

=====================================================================

"How many are actually paying attention to this?

There are African Americans, Mexican Americans, Asian Americans, Arab Americans, Native Americans, etc. And then there are just Americans.

You pass me on the street and sneer in my direction. You call me "White boy," "Cracker," "Honkey," "Whitey," "Caveman" and that's OK.

But when I call you, Nigger, Kike, Towelhead, Sand-nigger, camel Jockey, Beaner, Gook, or Chink you call me a racist.

You say that whites commit a lot of violence against you, so why are the ghettos the most dangerous places to live?

You have the United Negro College Fund.

You have Martin Luther King Day.

You have Black History Month.

You have Cesar Chavez Day.

You have Yom Hashoah

You have Ma'uled Al-Nabi

You have the NAACP.

You have BET.

If we had WET(White Entertainment Television) we'd be racists.

If we had a White Pride Day you would call us racists.

If we had White History Month, we'd be racists.

If we had any organization for only whites to "advance" our lives, we'd be racists.

We have a Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, a Black Chamber of Commerce, and then we just have the plain Chamber of Commerce.

Wonder who pays for that?

If we had a college fund that only gave white students scholarships, you know we'd be racists. There are over 60 openly

Proclaimed Black Colleges in the US, yet if there were "White colleges" that would be a racist college.

In the Million Man March, you believed that you were marching for your race and rights. If we marched for our race and rights, you would call us racists.

You are proud to be black, brown, yellow and orange, and you're not afraid to announce it. But when we announce our white pride, you call us racists.

You rob us, carjack us, and shoot at us. But, when a white police officer shoots a black gang member or beats up a black drug-dealer running from the law and posing a threat to society, you call him a racist.

I am proud. But, you call me a racist.

Why is it that only whites can be racists?

There is nothing improper about this email.

Let's see which of you are proud enough to forward it."

=================================================

Other than the fact that these organizations are actually fronts to hold people back, I want to focus on some interesting points.

=====================

"If we had WET(White Entertainment Television) we'd be racists."
> NBC CBS ABC Fox 'The CW' (and yes, even the globalist PBS) networks have "programming" geared for white audiences, so this argument fails on its face.

Oh, LOL, check this out:
 

Owned by
Robert L. Johnson (1980–2001)
BET Networks (Viacom) (2001–present)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BET


VIACOM

Revenue   

    Decrease US$ 13.794 billion (2013) [1]
    Decrease US$ 13.887 billion (2012) [1]

Operating income   

    Decrease US$ 3.836 billion (2013) [1]
    Increase US$ 3.901 billion (2012) [1]

Profit   

    Increase US$ 2.395 billion (2013) [1]
    Decrease US$ 1.981 billion (2012) [1]

Total assets   

    Increase US$ 23.829 billion (2013) [2]
    Decrease US$ 22.25 billion (2012) [1]

Total equity   

    Decrease US$ 5.19 billion (2013) [2]
    Decrease US$ 7.439 billion (2012) [2]

more here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viacom

List of assets owned by Viacom
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_assets_owned_by_Viacom

=====================

"If we had a White Pride Day you would call us racists."

>Yeah...

The Emancipation Proclamation was a presidential proclamation[1] issued by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863, as a war measure during the American Civil War, directed to all of the areas in rebellion and all segments of the Executive branch (including the Army and Navy) of the United States. It proclaimed the freedom of slaves in the ten states that were still in rebellion,[2] thus applying to 3 million of the 4 million slaves in the U.S. at the time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emancipation_Proclamation

Independence Day (United States)
In 1870, the U.S. Congress made Independence Day an unpaid holiday for federal employees.[16]
In 1938, Congress changed Independence Day to a paid federal holiday.[17]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independence_Day_%28United_States%29

Jim Crow laws
The Jim Crow laws were racial segregation laws enacted between 1876 and 1965 in the United States at the state and local level. They mandated de jure racial segregation in all public facilities in Southern states of the former Confederacy, with, starting in 1890, a "separate but equal" status for African Americans.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Crow_laws

Do you think black people were celebrating July 4th as freely as others during that time?

I mean, come on.

=====================

"If we had White History Month, we'd be racists."

Confederate History Month
Although Confederate Memorial Day is a holiday in most Southern states, the tradition of having a Confederate History Month is not uniform. State governments or chief executives that have regularly declared Confederate History Month are as follows:

    Alabama
    Florida (since 2007)
    Georgia (by proclamation since 1995, by legislative authority since 2009[2])
    Louisiana
    Mississippi
    Texas (since 1999)
    Virginia (1994–2002, 2010)

Four states that were historically part of the Confederacy, Arkansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee, do not have a tradition of declaring a Confederate History Month.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederate_History_Month

Black History Month is meant to appease black people.
Why do you think they put in black president?

=====================

"Proclaimed Black Colleges in the US, yet if there were "White colleges" that would be a racist college."

This is interesting, because it goes into the Agenda a bit:

Black Ivy League
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Ivy_League

Ivy League
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivy_League

Colleges are just breeding and training grounds for the Elite.

read my post:

"ted cruz, the lesser of two evils? - 03.22.2014"
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/03/ted-cruz-lesser-of-two-evils-03222014.html

for more details on this.

=====================

and finally this point:

"You rob us, carjack us, and shoot at us. But, when a white police officer shoots a black gang member or beats up a black drug-dealer running from the law and posing a threat to society, you call him a racist."

Understand something, its not the beat downs and shootings of gangbangers we're upset about.

The simple fact is, we (black people) have been and are guilty until proven innocent, and that's a government funded position (hence my reason for not trusting government) so please chill out with that non-sense.

There is a HUGE difference between being harassed when you are literally just walking and being harassed after you have broken the law.
No, I am not talking about the "Constitution" I'm talking about individuals not commiting crimes.




=================================================

This leads into the next sections.

In May, a young kid wrote about 'White Privilege'.
The artcile made its way into Time magazine.

Why I’ll Never Apologize for My White Male Privilege
Tal Fortgang  May 2, 2014
http://time.com/85933/why-ill-never-apologize-for-my-white-male-privilege/

Here's the response:

Friday, May 9, 2014 01:48 PM CDT
White privilege 101: Here’s the basic lesson Paul Ryan, Tal Fortgang and Donald Sterling need
Here's one way to fight back against ignorance: A refresher on how privilege works, and why race and gender matter
Paul Rosenberg
http://www.salon.com/2014/05/09/white_privilege_101_heres_the_basic_lesson_paul_ryan_tal_fortgang_and_donald_sterling/

So, my wife shows me this today.
I'm posting the entire thing:

You Don’t Have To Apologize For Being White
A letter of support for the kid that wrote that Time article

Tal. Hey bro.

I want to talk to you for a minute.

I read your article, ‘Why I’ll Never Apologize For My White Male Privilege’. First off, congrats on landing an article on Time. That’s huge.

And I get it, dude. You’re annoyed with the ‘check your privilege’ line. Hey, I am too. I think it’s overused, and it’s basically turned into a meme at this point.

I read your piece. You’re Jewish. Your family, or at least your family a couple generations ago, had it pretty damn rough. And your dad worked his ass off so that you could have the opportunities that he didn’t. That’s great.

But, I want to talk about this line right here:

"It was [my grandparents’] privilege to come to a country that grants equal protection under the law to its citizens, that cares not about religion or race, but the content of your character."
This is where you messed up, bro.

This country actually does care about your race. A lot.

You brought up some of the horrors of the Holocaust. That’s a pretty heavy card to play off the bat, but it’s not going to work on me.

I forgot to tell you: I’m black. And I bet you can already guess where I’m going with this. You want to tell me about the systematic extermination of six million? I see that and raise you to ten million.

> Hold up, say what?

== PAUSE ==

WHEN YOU KILL TEN MILLION AFRICANS YOU AREN’T CALLED ‘HITLER’
Posted by Liam O'Ceallaigh on Wednesday, December 22, 2010

King Leopold of Belgium

Take a look at this picture. Do you know who it is?

Most people haven’t heard of him.

But you should have. When you see his face or hear his name you should get as sick in your stomach as when you read about Mussolini or Hitler or see one of their pictures. You see, he killed over 10 million people in the Congo.

His name is King Leopold II of Belgium.

He “owned” the Congo during his reign as the constitutional monarch of Belgium. After several failed colonial attempts in Asia and Africa, he settled on the Congo. He “bought” it and enslaved its people, turning the entire country into his own personal slave plantation. He disguised his business transactions as “philanthropic” and “scientific” efforts under the banner of the International African Society. He used their enslaved labor to extract Congolese resources and services. His reign was enforced through work camps, body mutilations, torture, executions, and his own private army.

Most of us aren’t taught about him in school. We don’t hear about him in the media. He’s not part of the widely-repeated narrative of oppression (which includes things like the Holocaust during World War II). He’s part of a long history of colonialism, imperialism, slavery, and genocide in Africa that would clash with the social construction of a white supremacist narrative in our schools. It doesn’t fit neatly into school curriculums in a capitalist society. Making overtly racist remarks is (sometimes) frowned upon in ‘polite’ society; but it’s quite fine not to talk about genocide in Africa perpetrated by European capitalist monarchs.1

Mark Twain wrote a satire about Leopold called “King Leopold’s Soliloquy; A Defense of His Congo Rule”, where he mocked the King’s defense of his reign of terror, largely through Leopold’s own words. It’s an easy read at 49 pages and Mark Twain is a popular author in American public schools. But like most political authors, we will often read some of their least political writings or read them without learning why the author wrote them in the first place. Orwell’s Animal Farm, for example, serves to reinforce American anti-socialist propaganda about how egalitarian societies are doomed to turn into their dystopian opposites. But Orwell was an anti-capitalist revolutionary of a different kind—a supporter of working class democracy from below—and that is never pointed out. We can read about Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, but “King Leopold’s Soliloquy” isn’t on the reading list. This isn’t by accident. Reading lists are created by boards of education in order to prepare students to follow orders and endure boredom. From the point of view of the Department of Education, Africans have no history.

When we learn about Africa, we learn about a caricatured Egypt, about the HIV epidemic (but never its causes), about the surface level effects of the slave trade, and maybe about South African Apartheid (the effects of which, we are taught, are now long, long over). We also see lots of pictures of starving children on Christian Ministry commercials, we see safaris on animal shows, and we see pictures of deserts in films and movies. But we don’t learn about the Great African War or Leopold’s Reign of Terror during the Congolese Genocide. Nor do we learn about what the United States has done in Iraq and Afghanistan, killing millions of people through bombs, sanctions, disease, and starvation. Body counts are important. And the United States Government doesn’t count Afghan, Iraqi, or Congolese people.

Though the Congolese Genocide isn’t included on Wikipedia’s “Genocides in History” page, it does mention the Congo. What’s now called the Democratic Republic of the Congo is listed in reference to the Second Congo War (also called Africa’s World War and the Great War of Africa), where both sides of the regional conflict hunted down Bambenga people—a regional ethnic group—and enslaved and cannibalized them. Cannibalism and slavery are horrendous evils which must be entered into history for sure, but I couldn’t help thinking whose interests were served when the only mention of the Congo on the page was in reference to regional incidents where a tiny minority of people in Africa were eating each other (completely devoid of the conditions which created the conflict, and the people and institutions who are responsible for those conditions). Stories which support the white supremacist narrative about the subhumanness of people in Africa are allowed to enter the records of history. The white guy who turned the Congo into his own personal part-plantation, part-concentration camp, part-Christian ministry—and killed 10 to 15 million Congolese people in the process—doesn’t make the cut.2

You see, when you kill ten million Africans, you aren’t called ‘Hitler’. That is, your name doesn’t come to symbolize the living incarnation of evil. Your name and your picture don’t produce fear, hatred, and sorrow. Your victims aren’t talked about and your name isn’t remembered.

Leopold was just one of thousands of things that helped construct white supremacy as both an ideological narrative and material reality. I don’t pretend that he was the source of all evil in the Congo. He had generals, and foot soldiers, and managers who did his bidding and enforced his laws. He was at the head of a system. But that doesn’t negate the need to talk about the individuals who are symbolic of the system. But we don’t even get that. And since it isn’t talked about, what capitalism did to Africa, all the privileges that rich white people gained from the Congolese genocide, remain hidden. The victims of imperialism are made, like they usually are, invisible.

found here:
http://www.walkingbutterfly.com/2010/12/22/when-you-kill-ten-million-africans-you-arent-called-hitler/

== CONTINUE ==

You want to talk about a few years of forced labor? Let’s try for a few hundred. You seem to be able to trace your family’s history back pretty far. That’s awesome. I can’t, because they didn’t really keep records for property like that back then.

I’m sure that if you wanted, you could come up with some ways that somewhere in history, Jewish people had it rougher than black people. Or maybe even now. And we could go back and forth about this, endlessly.

But realistically, in the court of general opinion on historical victimhood, you’re not going to win. I will. Black people always do.

But really, is this a game that you want to win? Would you like to be at the bottom rung of the social ladder? Is pity what you want?

Probably not. And right there — that annoyed feeling that you probably had when I asked if you wanted people to be sorry for you — that’s the same feeling that a lot of people probably have when you accuse them of coming up with ‘imaginary institutions’.

It’s not imaginary, bro. It’s real.

It’s good that you’ve put effort into understanding your past. But we also need to understand everyone’s present.

What I’m trying to get at here is that bringing up various ways that your ancestors’ lives sucked isn’t a good defense for racism.

I’m not saying that you’re racist (but it’s okay if you are). I’m saying that you are, probably unwittingly, defending the racism that exists in society.

But, let’s stop talking about the past.
Tal, have you ever had a gun pointed at you?

I have, but only by police. The most recent time was when I was driving home and my car broke down, so I walked up to a highway police station for help. As I knocked on the door, two officers came up from behind me out of the bushes, guns drawn, and shouted at me to freeze. It turns out they thought I was trying to rob them. That wouldn’t have happened if I was white.

I bet you worry about your grades, or how you’re going to finish that last paper before the deadline. All college students deal with that. But you’ve probably never had to worry about whether or not you might die at a routine traffic stop. White people don’t have to deal with that. Because you don’t fit the ‘profile’ of a criminal.

That’s part of what people mean when they talk about ‘privilege’.

The ‘equal protection under the law’ you mentioned — it doesn’t quite work that way for people that look like me.

And again, I’m not trying to ‘win’ a comparison game here. I don’t feel sorry for myself, and I don’t want you to either. I could hit you with a ton of scenes from my life that would be hard to imagine for a dude like yourself. On the flip side, you talked a lot about your family, but I bet you’ve personally dealt with some stuff yourself that I couldn’t imagine.

But I can try to understand, which is what I also ask of you.

Tal, I am upset, but I’m not upset at you.
I want you to know that. I’m not upset at you. I’m upset at Time.

I’m upset at Time for publishing your essay. I’m upset at them for taking advantage of you.

I’m a graduate student, Tal, which means I sometimes teach college classes. Next year, I’ll be teaching a writing course. If you’d handed that essay in to me, you’d get, maybe, a C. Your claims just don’t hold water. You’re good at arguing, but not good at thinking (yet).

Your essay isn’t even particularly well written. There are grammatical and spelling errors all over the place. And that overwrought first paragraph, full of bizarre metaphors and SAT vocabulary, is pretty typical of a kid that still thinks that big words make you sound smarter. (Protip: this only works on dumb people.)

But you seem like a bright kid. I’m pretty sure that with a bit more life experience, some patient friends, and some guidance from a dedicated teacher or two, you’ll start to figure things out.

That’s why I’m so upset that Time would let you make a fool out of yourself on the Internet. It’s precisely because you’re such a smart kid. Because in a couple of years, you’re going to look back and feel horribly embarrassed.

I can’t understand why Time would give a kid that hasn’t even decided on his major, that can’t even use a spellcheck, and that can’t formulate a coherent argument, a national platform.

Actually, no. Tal, I think I know why Time did this. I think somebody over there wanted an article that would stir things up, and put the ‘privilege’-shouters in their place. They had a frankly racist agenda, but nobody had the guts to put their name on something so asinine. So somebody found your piece on the Princeton Tory, and scooped it up.

They needed a front. Someone with some credibility. You’re not perfect, but you’re a pretty good fit. You’re young, you’re at an Ivy League, and you’ve got the whole historical victim/rags to riches/American Dream backstory thing going on. Trust me, if some black or Asian or more interestingly ethnic kid had offered to write a similar article, you would have been dropped like a bad habit, for reasons we’ve already discussed. But they took what they could get.

So, Time, you’re not fooling anyone. And that’s really cowardly of you to use a kid who can’t even drink yet to do your dirty work.

But back to you, though, Tal.
Or more specifically, back to us.

You said that you won’t apologize for your privilege. That’s fine, man. I don’t think anyone actually wants you to apologize for anything. Really, all we can ask of you, especially at this early stage in your development of thinking about the world, is that you give it some thought. It’s hard, I know. If it was easy, all the bad stuff we have today — racism, sexism, homophobia, wars, all that — would be gone. But it’s not easy. These are hard problems.

I said earlier that it’s okay if you’re racist. It is. As long as you’re working at it, as long as you’re trying your best to listen, and to understand, and to not be racist, or sexist, or whatever, that’s all anyone can ask. It’s a hard battle, man. I’m racist and sexist too, but I’m doing my best not to be.

I’ll be honest, man. I don’t have an easy solution for you. But I do know that shutting down and rejecting what your friends are saying isn’t going to help, and really, it’s not an option. Your friends aren’t asking for pity, they’re asking you to understand them and work with them.

One last thing.
I can tell that you read a lot. I know you’re probably going to be busy hanging out and discovering life this summer, but I want to recommend a book. It’s called The Fire Next Time, by a really smart dude named James Baldwin. It’s short, but heavy. Read it slowly. I think you’ll like it.

I know it’s rough being a college student, so if funds are tight, hit me up and I’ll be happy to mail you a copy. I just landed a pretty lucrative fellowship, so I’m in a position of relative financial privilege.

And if you ever want to talk, my twitter is @dexdigi.

Have a good summer, Tal.

found here:
https://medium.com/race-class/you-dont-have-to-apologize-for-being-white-12a3018d5abc

=====================================================================

No one wants an apology. (I certainly don't)

You don't have to feel sorry for anyone to listen to what is happening other people besides yourselves.

We did not create the world we live in, it was created around us, plain and simple.

It's time to stop sugar coating history, and realize that the Elite are screwing the entire planet.

Black people have been the Test Subject.

I mean really.

Ronald Reagan and Gun Control - 01.16.2013
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/03/ronald-reagan-and-gun-control-01162013.html

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Illuminati in Popular Culture

People are always talking about the Elite being the Illuminati , and don't realize that it's just a front organization for the Jesuit Order.

If you needed proof that the "Illuminati" has become popular, look no further than this video.




Illuminati in popular culture
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illuminati_in_popular_culture

Read the latest issues of Newswatch Magazine for more details:

"A Pope for a New Age Part 1"

http://www.newswatchmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/july_2014_coverMED.jpg

The history of the papacy was 1,260 years long. The pope was captured in 1798 by a French general and died in prison. A new pope arose and the papacy is alive today.

People in the 1950-60’s were afraid of John F. Kennedy because he was a Catholic. They feared what the Pope and Catholic Church had done in Europe. Persecution and death reigned. Confiscation of so called heretics’ property took half the peoples property.

Today, the House of Representatives, the Senate, and courts are filled with secret Catholics and Jesuits. There are hundreds of Jesuits sponsored colleges to train young men to infiltrate our colleges, universities, political systems, etc.

The President of Harding University travelled the country lecturing about the Jesuits and Communism. Today, the Society of Jesus or Jesuits are stronger than ever.

The Pope had no entrance into America until President Ronald Reagan sent an Ambassador of America to Rome in 1984. Since then we find every fabric of society loaded with them. They are the military arm of the Vatican.

subscribe here:
http://www.newswatchmagazine.org/magazine/july-2014/

Nation of Immigrants

Other than the fact that our fellow American employers keep hiring those who are not legal, and that the CIA basically destroyed South America, I think he makes a valid concerning Americans attitude towards immigrants.




Another thing I'd like to point out.

I was talking to this guy once, and I mentioned that we (Americans) took this land from other people.

His response:

"That's always happened in this world..."

OK, same applies for America today:

"That's always happened in this world..."


http://i.imgur.com/eGInc.jpg

Monday, July 14, 2014

Looming Financial Crisis? UPDATE - Where's your Gold now? 07.14.2014

FRIDAY:

July 11, 2014, 5:30 a.m. EDT
Gold stock rally ‘foreshadows a trend’ for the metal
Commentary: Mining stocks point to gains for gold prices
By Myra P. Saefong, MarketWatch 



SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch)—The outperformance of gold-mining stocks over gold this year points to some price gains ahead for the metal, but don’t expect a big rally.

A little over halfway into the year, mining stocks have recouped roughly half of what they lost in 2013 and scored about double the percentage gains seen in gold prices.

Gold-mining stocks “generally lead gold, both in the direction of the moves and in the extent of those moves,” said Brien Lundin, editor of Gold Newsletter.

The NYSE Arca Gold Bugs Index XX:HUI -2.68%   has climbed about 22% year to date, after losing 56% last year, while the Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index XAU -2.98%   has gained 21% this year following a loss of 49% in 2013.

The performances for the indexes strongly outdo the 11% year-to-date climb for gold futures prices GCQ4 -2.21%  , which lost 28% last year.

“The gold stocks typically begin rising or falling in advance of the metal, thereby foreshadowing the trend,”
Lundin said, adding that “they move further on a percentage basis than the underlying metal, thereby offering leverage.”
So “the fact that the gold stocks are outperforming gold so far this year is a very bullish indicator for gold itself,” he said.

more here:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/gold-miner-rally-foreshadows-a-trend-for-the-metal-2014-07-11

MONDAY:

July 14, 2014, 3:09 p.m. EDT
Gold plunges 2.3% in biggest daily drop of 2014
Barclays: There has been no long-term shift in bearish sentiment

By William L. Watts and Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Gold futures saw their biggest daily drop of 2014 Monday as solid gains for stocks and lackluster physical demand for the precious metal prompted investors to book profits on recent gains.

August gold futures GCQ4 -2.23%   plunged $30.70, or 2.3%, to $1,306.70 an ounce, marking the biggest one-day drop for a nearby futures contract since December. September silver SIU4 -2.36%   fell more than 54.7 cents, or 2.6%, to $20.91 an ounce.

“Overall, we believe that physical demand has remained short of expectations, the latest price increase having been driven largely by speculation,”
wrote Eugen Weinberg, commodity strategist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt, in a note.

Pointing to India, Weinberg said the country’s decision to maintain a 10% import duty on gold and silver “is also likely to have a dampening effect on future gold demand expectations. In conjunction with a rather below-average monsoon season, this points to below-average gold demand from India.”

Gold prices ended last week on a down note, but still managed to register their sixth straight weekly gain. Gold had probed four-month lows near $1,244.30 an ounce in early June, rallying to more than $1,337 last week.

On the economic front, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen’s testimony will be pored over on Tuesday. Also of note, bank and tech earnings will color equity trading throughout the week.



Analysts at Barclays were also cautious on gold. In a note to clients, analyst Christopher Louney said recent gains across the metals complex look toppy.

“We caution against interpreting recent strength in investor flows as a long-term shift in sentiment, as gold still represents a healthy selling opportunity, in our view,” said Louney. For 2014, Barclays expects gold to average $1,260 an ounce, and drop to $1,200 by the third quarter.

Elsewhere in metals trading, October platinum PLV4 -0.34%   gave up $19.20, or 1.2%, to $1,494.30 an ounce, while September palladium PAU4 +0.37%   fell $4.20, or 0.5%, to $871.10 an ounce. High-grade copper for September delivery HGU4 -0.51%   fell around 2 cents at $3.25 a pound.

here:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/gold-slips-but-trend-still-points-higher-2014-07-14

========

Looming Financial Crisis? - 06.24.2014
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/06/looming-financial-crisis-06242014.html

gold, predictions, and the real agenda - 2013 - 12.31.2013
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/03/gold-predictions-and-real-agenda-2013.html

Friday, July 11, 2014

megacities update - 07.11.2014

In Urbanization Update, U.N. Sees Tokyo Atop Megacities List Until 2030
By ANDREW C. REVKIN  JULY 10, 2014 1:08 PM

With nearly 38 million residents in the metropolitan region, Tokyo remains the world's biggest city and the United Nations projects it will remain so at least until 2030.

With nearly 38 million residents in the metropolitan region, Tokyo remains the world’s biggest city and the United Nations projects it will remain so at least until 2030.Credit Jack Revkin

The United Nations Population Division has completed the 2014 revision of its continuing survey of urbanization, “World Urbanization Prospects.” Interestingly, despite Japan’s shrinking population, Tokyo not only remains atop the list of biggest cities, with close to 38 million people in its metropolitan region, but is expected to stay there through 2030, with Delhi close behind by then, according to the new analysis. There’s a useful set of country profiles to explore.

There are enormous issues managing these burgeoning populations and spreading urban areas — ranging from managing garbage, sewage and water to resolving conflicts when millions of informal settlers are pressed by waves of gentrification, as my students chronicled in a Rio de Janeiro hillside settlement last spring.

But it’s not all “Blade Runner” by a long shot. In Beijing earlier this summer for a Future Earth science planning session, I wandered over to a “fitness park” that, despite being ringed by soaring residential towers, was a humane haven for elderly dancers, couples pushing strollers and children poking at tadpoles in small artificial ponds.

In considering what fast-urbanizing nations can do to make sure the expansion of cities comes with the fewest social and environmental regrets, it’s important not to get too focused on megacities. In many countries, particularly China, the fastest rates of growth are actually in what might be called microcities — urban centers of several hundred thousand to a million or so that were just towns or villages a decade or two ago. It can be harder to influence development patterns in such places, according to Karen Seto of Yale University, a specialist in urbanization and land use. She stressed this point in a recent panel discussion I moderated at The Times on China’s growth patterns. I encourage you to read “Realizing China’s Urban Dream,” a valuable Nature commentary by Xuemei Bai of Australian National University and two co-authors, for a vision of the challenges and opportunities in fast-growing cities.

[Update | Just in time for World Population Day tomorrow, the Population Institute has produced "Population By the Numbers," a batch of informative graphics on population trends, good and bad.]

Here’s the United Nations news release on its new cities report, with lots more — including the latest “top 10″ list (teaser, the New York City metropolitan region is tied with Cairo at the bottom of this list):

Today, 54 per cent of the world’s population lives in urban areas, a proportion that is expected to increase to 66 per cent by 2050. Projections show that urbanization combined with the overall growth of the world’s population could add another 2.5 billion people to urban populations by 2050, with close to 90 percent of the increase concentrated in Asia and Africa, according to a new United Nations report launched today.

The 2014 revision of the World Urbanization Prospects produced by the UN Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs notes that the largest urban growth will take place in India, China and Nigeria. These three countries will account for 37 per cent of the projected growth of the world’s urban population between 2014 and 2050. By 2050, India is projected to add 404 million urban dwellers, China 292 million and Nigeria 212 million.

The urban population of the world has grown rapidly from 746 million in 1950 to 3.9 billion in 2014. Asia, despite its lower level of urbanization, is home to 53 per cent of the world’s urban population, followed by Europe with 14 per cent and Latin America and the Caribbean with 13 per cent.

The world’s urban population is expected to surpass six billion by 2045. Much of the expected urban growth will take place in countries of the developing regions, particularly Africa. As a result, these countries will face numerous challenges in meeting the needs of their growing urban populations, including for housing, infrastructure, transportation, energy and employment, as well as for basic services such as education and health care.

“Managing urban areas has become one of the most important development challenges of the 21st century. Our success or failure in building sustainable cities will be a major factor in the success of the post-2015 UN development agenda,” said John Wilmoth, Director of the Population Division in the UN’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

Mega-cities with more than 10 million people are increasing in number

The report notes that in 1990, there were ten “mega-cities” with 10 million inhabitants or more, which were home to 153 million people or slightly less than seven per cent of the global urban population at that time. In 2014, there are 28 mega-cities worldwide, home to 453 million people or about 12 percent of the world’s urban dwellers. Of today’s 28 mega-cities, sixteen are located in Asia, four in Latin America, three each in Africa and Europe, and two in Northern America. By 2030, the world is projected to have 41 mega-cities with 10 million inhabitants or more.

Tokyo remains the world’s largest city with 38 million inhabitants, followed by Delhi with 25 million, Shanghai with 23 million, and Mexico City, Mumbai and São Paulo, each with around 21 million inhabitants. Osaka has just over 20 million, followed by Beijing with slightly less than 20 million. The New York-Newark area and Cairo complete the top ten most populous urban areas with around 18.5 million inhabitants each.

Although Tokyo’s population is projected to decline, it will remain the world’s largest city in 2030 with 37 million inhabitants, followed closely by Delhi, whose population is projected to rise swiftly to 36 million in 2030. While Osaka and New York-Newark were the world’s second and third largest urban areas in 1990, by 2030 they are projected to fall in rank to the 13th and 14th positions, respectively, as mega-cities in developing countries become more prominent.

more with sources, here:
http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/07/10/in-u-n-population-update-tokyo-still-tops-list-of-megacities/

===================================================

"America is an irradiated wasteland. Within it lies a city. Outside the boundary walls, a desert: The Cursed Earth. Inside the walls: the cursed city, stretching from Boston to Washington, DC. An unbroken concrete landscape. 800 million people living in the ruin of the old world and the mega-structures of the new one. Mega-blocks, mega-highways, Mega City One..."
--Judge Dredd

"megacorporations/megaregions/megacities/urbanization - the control grid"
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/04/megacorporationsmegaregionsmegacitiesur.html

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Facebook Observations - 07.09.2014

This is a perfect example of why people are going to stay stuck in the paradigm...


http://i.imgur.com/FyiLRpf.png




Found here:
http://tinyurl.com/nk8t9l4

Take a closer look at the photo, and tell me what you see?

http://i.imgur.com/pD0RRcF.jpg

You see, emotion blinds people from seeing what is in front of them.
This is not a photo of two people who are diametrically opposed.

This is a photo of two people "coming together" for World Government.
















I mean really.



Monday, July 7, 2014

There's a N*gger in the White House?

Thanks to a friend for sending me this news today, I totally missed it.

===============================================

My reaction to the following article:


http://img.pandawhale.com/107181-that-is-some-good-clean-family-tHga.gif

Newspaper runs headline referring to President Obama as N-word
Eric Pfeiffer
By Eric Pfeiffer 14 hours ago Yahoo News



The West View News ran this op-ed using an offensive word to describe President Obama (West View News)

A local paper is making national headlines thanks to a questionable word choice in one of its own news headlines.

The West View News, a monthly paper in New York’s West Village with a circulation of around 20,000, ran an op-ed from author James Lincoln Collier titled “N----r in the White House.”

If the headline wasn't strange and shocking enough, the New York Post reports that the op-ed is actually a pro-Obama piece, in which Collier argues that, "far right voters hate Obama because he is black."

The Post included a photo of the article headline in its piece with the offending language blurred out.

The West View News ran an opposing view column below Collier’s piece by African American columnist Alvin Hall titled, "This headline offends me."

"The decision to use this headline feels misguided to me," Hall writes. "I don’t see how its use benefits anyone, but I do feel all too clearly how it deeply offends me."

It’s not the first time Collier, 86, has stoked controversy through his use of the N-word in publication. His 1981 historical novel Jump Ship to Freedom (co-written with his brother) uses the word repeatedly in its text. It was reportedly taken down from the shelves from several libraries over the years.

So, why did the paper decide to run a headline with such a controversial, and many might say, unnecessary, word choice? It might just come down to little more than a strange case of journalistic rivalry.

West View News editor George Capsis says Collier convinced him to use the word over objections from the paper’s editorial staff.

“In this article, however, Jim reminded me that the New York Times avoids using the word which convinced me that West View should,”
Capsis says in an explanation published in the paper and reported by The Post.

The West View News has not formally responded to questions about the editorial and did not run a copy of it on its website.

links and sources, here:
http://news.yahoo.com/newspaper-runs-headline-referring-to-president-obama-as-n-word-003206434.html

===============================================

People think this is clever, problem is, this is how people are expressing themselves now, and its' not new language:

Niggers in the White House

"Niggers in the White House" is a poem that was published in newspapers around the United States between 1901 and 1903.[1] The poem was written in reaction to an October 1901 White House dinner hosted by Republican President Theodore Roosevelt, who had invited Booker T. Washington, an African-American presidential adviser, as a guest. The poem reappeared in 1929 after First Lady Lou Hoover, wife of President Herbert Hoover, invited the wife of African-American congressman, Oscar DePriest, to a tea for congressmens' wives at the White House.[2]

Both visits triggered widespread condemnation by many throughout the United States, particularly throughout the South. Elected representatives in Congress and state legislatures from southern states voiced objections to the presence of an African American as a guest of the First Family.

The poem is composed of fourteen four-line stanzas, in each of which the second and fourth lines rhyme. The poem also frequently uses the titular epithet "nigger" (over 20 times) as a term to represent African Americans. Senator Hiram Bingham (R) of Connecticut described the poem as "indecent, obscene doggerel."[3]

The identity of the author, who used the byline "unchained poet", remains unknown.



sources here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niggers_in_the_White_House

===============================================

Ever hear this phrase?
"Go back to Africa!"

News Site Deletes Tweet That Said Obama 'Needs To Go Back To Kenya'
Colin Campbell
May 23, 2014, 2:50 PM

EXdBvQpl

The North Country Gazette, a news site based in upstate New York,  reportedly posted a tweet on its main account Thursday criticizing President Barack Obama and Gov. Andrew Cuomo's visit to Cooperstown's Baseball Hall of Fame by referencing conspiracy theories about Obama's place of birth. The site subsequently deleted the message.

"Obama needs to go back to Kenya and take Cuomo with him.  Hall of Fame is a great place---not a place for politics," the Gazette tweeted Thursday afternoon, according to Boston.com, which posted a screenshot of the now-deleted tweet.

more here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/news-site-tweet-obama-needs-to-go-back-to-kenya-2014-5

video on this:

WATCH: Ted Cruz's Dad Calls US a "Christian Nation," Says Obama Should Go "Back to Kenya"
Want to understand where the tea party champion's hardcore views come from? Meet his father, Rafael.
—By David Corn
| Thu Oct. 31, 2013 6:00 AM EDT
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/10/ted-cruz-rafael-father-video-christian-tea-party


http://images.sodahead.com/polls/004024939/533894563_Obama_kenya_e1337617992918_answer_2_xlarge.jpeg

http://desmond.yfrog.com/Himg830/scaled.php?tn=0&server=830&filename=1alp.jpg&xsize=640&ysize=640


http://rightwingink.com/wp-content/uploads/galleries/post-185/some.jpg


http://images.sodahead.com/polls/002347711/3740412909_tea_party_racist_signs_04_back_to_kenya2_xlarge.jpeg

If you are still confused about where President Obama is from, check this out:

who's his daddy? - 06.26.2012
http://globalistnews.blogspot.com/2014/03/whos-his-daddy-06262012.html

===============================================

Let's cut the non-sense, and say what it is.

If the people truly understood the agenda, they would not even talk about Obama.

Just like during the Bush years when the kids on the left thought it was all about Bush.

They would talk about the Jesuit Order, and the one they call Lucifer.
That of course is the purpose of the left/right paradigm.

One more piece of historical context:



I mean really.

cashless society update - 07.07.2014

Is a cashless society on the cards?
By Tara Kelly and Katie Pisa, for CNN
July 3, 2014 -- Updated 0921 GMT (1721 HKT



larger image, here:
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/07/02/business/is-a-cashless-society-on-the-cards/

===============================================

7 JULY 2014 - 8:14AM UPDATED | POSTED BY JOHN GLENDAY | 0 COMMENTS
London buses drive cashless society closer

Anyone looking to hail a London bus with a pocket full of small change is in for a disappointment from today after Transport for London (TfL) moved to make the service entirely cashless.

The switch means only passengers with a valid Oyster card, pre-paid ticket or contactless payment card will be able to hop onto one of the iconic red double decker’s, an initiative geared toward improving travel times.

TfL cites falling customer demand for notes and coins as fueling the change with surveys showing that as many as 99 per cent of all passengers plump for non-cash methods of payment.

Explaining the move Mike Weston, TfL's director of buses, commented: "The way our customers pay for goods and services is evolving, so we need to ensure our ticketing evolves too. Removing cash from our bus network not only offers customers a quicker and more efficient bus service but it enables us to make savings of £24m a year which will be re-invested to further improve London's transport network."

more here:
http://www.thedrum.com/news/2014/07/07/london-buses-drive-cashless-society-closer

===============================================

Wednesday, 02 July 2014 17:20
Establishment Pushing “Cashless Society” to Control Humanity
Written by  Alex Newman



The global establishment is increasingly pushing the notion of what it calls a “cashless society” — a world in which all payments and transactions would be conducted electronically, creating a permanent record for governments to inspect and track at will. Multiple governments from Africa and Asia to Europe and the Americas are explicitly working toward that goal, and in recent months, even more have joined the effort. Powerful globalist forces and organizations including the United Nations are helping, too. However, analysts are warning that the implications of such a shift would be nightmarish for liberty and privacy. 

Proponents of the government-enforced move away from physical currency cite a wide array of potential real and imagined benefits. Among them: possible reductions in armed robbery, tax evasion, black-market commerce, the cost of printing and securing physical cash, and more. Critics, though, are warning of the dangerous and Orwellian schemes that could be unleashed in a world where out-of-control governments can monitor literally every purchase, transaction, and bit of economic activity. In light of the recently exposed NSA snooping scandal, the possibilities for abuse and total surveillance are more than hypothetical, obviously.

As the supposed “debate” on the alleged merits of the controversial plot rages on, more than a few governments and central banks are already working hard to reduce reliance on cash among citizens and businesses. The end goal, as they openly admit, is an ultimate end to all cash transactions, supposedly ushering in a wonderful world of safety and flourishing digital commerce. The darker side is rarely discussed, but as the move toward a “cashless society” accelerates, critics are increasingly sounding the alarm.

more here:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/tech/item/18619-establishment-pushing-cashless-society-to-control-humanity




megacities and microapartments update - 07.07.2014


Hong Kong's micro-apartment living
Families cram into 40-square-foot rooms

Published On: Jul 06 2014 08:51:02 PM EDT   Updated  11 m

This is the reality for more than 170,000 people in Hong Kong -- homes not much bigger than king-size beds.

video here:
http://www.news4jax.com/news/hong-kongs-microapartment-living/26819108

===============================================

How General Electric Designed 8 Appliances to Fit in a Micro-Kitchen
One module has induction cooktop, two ovens, sink, dishwasher, cooling drawers and $15,000 price tag
By ELLEN BYRON
June 10, 2014 6:51 p.m. ET

Anticipating greater demand for appliances that will fit in so-called micro-apartments, or living spaces of around 450 square feet, General Electric Co. GE -0.33%  designed an entire kitchen inside a 6-foot-long chest of drawers.

The micro-kitchen is hard working, with an induction cooktop, two ovens, a sink, a dishwasher and two cooling drawers, each able to function as a refrigerator or freezer—and all contained in a module no taller than a standard kitchen counter. A separate module contains a washer and dryer.

A boom in high-rise construction is boosting demand for compact kitchen appliances, as 20-somethings and empty-nester baby boomers move to cities, says Lou Lenzi, GE Appliances' director of industrial design. "That led us to know that we needed to change the design of our appliances." Builders like that the module needs just one water line. Draining a sink placed directly above a dishwasher was a challenge, though. A pump was required.

GE plans to share the design with an online community of consumers and designers later this month so they can suggest modifications and create their own designs. GE plans to start producing the final version by year-end with an expected price tag of $15,000.

video here:
http://online.wsj.com/articles/how-general-electric-designed-8-appliances-to-fit-in-a-micro-kitchen-1402440618

===============================================

The Next Big Thing In Urban Planning? Backyard Cottages

As the days of suburban sprawl give way to those of urban density in U.S. metros--"smart growth," most call it--providing sufficient housing remains a challenge. Decades of planning regulations and highway patterns support single-family homes built far outside a city center. Even in areas where big residential towers make sense, developing them takes a long time and costs a lot of money. Manhattan wasn't built in a day.

Planning scholar Jake Wegmann, who's in the process of moving from Berkeley to the University of Texas at Austin, believes there's another way: backyard cottages. Hear him out. Individual micro-units on single-family properties don't require much time or money to build. They don't need much space to sit on. They're affordable almost by definition and are well-suited to the modern family--from the recent college grad living at home to the grandparent who wants to age in place.



In other words, backyard cottages may not scream Manhattanization or even necessarily smart growth, but implemented over a wide swatch of a metro area they might achieve a similar end. Their potential seems even greater in places trying to reduce their reliance on cars and promote access to shops by walking or public transit. At the very least, Wegmann believes, cottages should be part of the broader conversation about the changing shape of American cities.

"The premise that single-family house neighborhoods are, or should be, frozen in amber is increasingly being questioned,"
he tells Co.Design.

One place ripe for such development in Wegmman's mind is the East Bay, an area just across the water from San Francisco that includes parts of Berkeley, Oakland, and El Cerrito. Housing demand is enormous in the Bay Area, but the city itself has become largely unaffordable. Still, the East Bay has strong transit access and clear walkable districts and enough density--at 11,700 people per square mile--to facilitate a more urbanized growth pattern.

more here:
http://www.fastcodesign.com/3032633/slicker-city/the-next-big-thing-in-urban-planning-backyard-cottages

===============================================

D.C.'s Fanciest Micro-Housing Project Is Meant for Millennials
The Patterson House, a historic mansion in the District of Columbia, is being converted into very small units for young one-percenters.

KRISTON CAPPS @kristoncapps Jul 3, 2014

Image
Patterson House, 1927. (Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington)

The Patterson House may be one of the finest private structures in Washington, D.C. The mansion was designed in 1901 by Stanford White, a partner with McKim, Mead and White who also designed the Boston Public Library McKim Building, restored Thomas Jefferson's Rotunda at the University of Virginia, and erected the original Penn Station in Manhattan.

The white marble, glazed–terra cotta, Italianate neoclassical Patterson was built for the editor of the Chicago Tribune and served as the home of President Calvin Coolidge (while the White House was being restored in 1927). Stanford White would know from executive commissions: His firm renovated the White House's West Wing and built its East Wing.

Soon, the Patterson House is getting new tenants. The Washington Club, the longtime owners of the manse at 15 Dupont Circle NW—a very tony address—put it on the market last year for $26 million. The Sotheby's listing suggested that it could be for an "embassy, foundation or association headquarters, social club or, once again, as a personal residence."
Instead, it's going to the Millennials. Wealthy Millennials.

more here:
http://www.citylab.com/housing/2014/07/dcs-fanciest-micro-housing-project-is-meant-for-millennials/373942/

===============================================

Floating Ocean Greenhouses Bring Fresh Food Closer To Megacities
A hydroponics farm that uses salty water from the ocean could help growing coastal cities feed themselves.

While living in Tokyo, Philipp Hutfless, an industrial designer from Germany, saw how much food the Japanese import from abroad. The industrialized nation just doesn't have a lot of room for agriculture, neither in rural areas nor in cities.

His response was to develop Vereos, an idea for coastal cities with limited space for growing food. It's a floating greenhouse that recycles freshwater and gets power from built-in solar panels.



The greenhouse is 42 feet-square with shelves for growing vegetables inside. It has a reverse-osmosis plant onboard, which pushes saltwater at high pressure through a membrane to produce freshwater. Then there's a tank and pump, powered by electricity. The frame is aluminum and the covering is made of a hard-wearing plastic. Most importantly, the greenhouse uses hydroponics, which is less water-intensive than conventional growing (50% of the water is recycled) and less heavy, because there's no soil involved.



Hutfless works at the University of Applied Sciences in Darmstadt, in the middle of Germany. His thesis project is an entry in this year's James Dyson Awards. Apart from Japan, Hutfless thinks Vereos could be useful in cities like Jakarta, Shanghai, Manila, Mumbai, and Lagos. "People can start to take care where their food comes from and how it is planted," Hutfless says. "It does not make sense to carry food over thousands of kilometers."

here:
http://www.fastcoexist.com/3032302/floating-ocean-greenhouses-bring-fresh-food-closer-to-megacities

Saturday, July 5, 2014

robotics and driverless cars update - 07.05.2014


Your Dinner Table: Soon to Be Cleared by Robots
Sympathy for machines' experience has led to a new way for them to interact with the world.
Megan Garber Jun 28 2014, 7:07 PM ET


 Don't feel like doing the dishes? Here, let the machine do it for you. (Voyagerix/Shutterstock)

ASPEN, Colo.—Robots can be awkward. Even the most advanced we have—DARPA's automated pack mule, Softbank's "emotional" machine—are reminiscent of toddlers taking their first, tentative steps. "The Robot" is so named because, no matter how smart our mechanical assistants seem to get, their movements are distinctively stilted.

What this has meant, among other things, is a world of service robots that have been extremely limited in their ability to make our lives a little easier. There are Roombas, of course—oh, such Roombas—but in terms of the robots that can interact smoothly and seamlessly with the world around them, picking things up and putting them away and otherwise lending us a non-human hand ... there aren't many. Algorithms rely on patterns; the patterns of human life are notoriously difficult to discern.

Which is why we have put a robot on Mars, but we have yet to avail ourselves of a robot that can clear the table—or do the dishes, or do the laundry, or make the bed—for us. Robots, like humans, have to coordinate their intelligence systems with their physical outputs. They have to negotiate around a physical world that is full of uncertainty and surprise, using vision—"vision"—that is blurry and out of focus. They have to link their senses to their sensors.

As Ken Goldberg, a professor of engineering at Berkeley, describes the experience of being a robot: "Nothing is reliable, not even your own body."

That kind of sympathy for the robotic experience has led to a new approach to robotic design: "belief space." Which has nothing to do with spirituality—unless your particular religion happens to involve robots—but is related instead to the robots' ability to interact with the physical spaces they occupy. "Belief space" is robots' ability to understand those spaces via statistical descriptions—descriptions of probability distributions.

So if you're a robot, and your task is to pick up a coffee mug ... how do you do that? How do you grasp an object in the way that will allow you to pick up the cup with ease? You'd want to do just what a human likely would: to use the mug's handle to do the grasping. But then: how do you distinguish the handle from the rest of the mug? If you don't have a brain—and, with it, anecdotal experience—that will differentiate mug from handle from table from chair ... how do you complete the task that is so basic for humans?

"Being able to process belief space was extremely daunting," Goldberg said, during a talk at the Aspen Ideas Festival, put on by the Aspen Institute and The Atlantic, this afternoon. But processing it, it turned out, was a matter of collecting experience on behalf of the robots: You can use the basic framework of the Internet—networked information-sharing—to allow robots to learn from each others' experience. You can have robots communicate their learnings—the curve of a mug handle, for example—to each other. It's networked knowledge, robot-style. "Robots are now getting on the Internet," Goldberg says, "to share information and software."

Using that unique kind of crowdsourcing, Goldberg and his fellow roboticists are figuring out ways to help automated machines analyze uncertainty—and, more importantly, developing statistical models that allow the robots to predict, over time, the way they're supposed to treat and move certain objects. Goldberg, for his part, is developing what he calls a "nominal grasp algorithm"—an algorithm that helps robots both to identify objects and to understand where to grasp the object for pickup. And he's developing it with the help of this roboticized Internet.

Which means that, soon, robots could be picking up your mugs ... and clearing your table.

here:
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/06/your-dinner-table-soon-to-be-cleared-by-robots/373653/

====================================================



6/29/2014 at 11:23 AM
Robots Have Become One of 21st-Century Cinema’s Go-To Blockbuster Clichés
By Nick Schager

If you plan on going to the movies this weekend, or this month, or at any point this summer, it might help if you like robots. Not robots with nuanced personalities. Or ones whose relationships with their organic counterparts are symbolic of some larger societal issue. No, just robots. Robots that are BIG, that are LOUD, that shoot laser beams from their FACES. You must have a desire to watch ones that fly across the screen and make weird noises while changing shape, and ones that can withstand thunderous blows from superpowered heroes and shrug off artillery fire from the U.S. military. You must adore their enormity and strength and apparent steel-shell invincibility. You must quiver with excitement over their overwhelming clankity-clanking awesomeness.

Moviegoers got their latest robotic fix with Transformers: Age of Extinction. Michael Bay’s latest robo-saga comes mere weeks after Edge of Tomorrow, in which Tom Cruise’s military man – trapped in a time-loop that forced him to relive the same battlefield day over and over again – combated extraterrestrial foes with the aid of a heavy-duty mecha-suit. And that was preceded by last month’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, which found the persecuted heroes traveling back in time to yada yada yada look out for those Sentinels! While they’re the impetus for the action in Days of Future Past – which is based on one of Marvel Comics’ greatest stories (first told in 1981) – the Sentinels have finally gotten their proper due on-screen because, over the past few years, blockbusters have decided that nothing provides a “wow” factor quite like a cinematic frame awash in hulking war machines. Whether they’re sentient automatons or human-controlled weapons, robots have become the 21st century’s go-to action-spectacle cliché.

And those three movies (as well as The Amazing Spider-Man 2, with Paul Giamatti’s robotic exo-skeleton) come on the heels of Iron Man 3 (robot armor), The Wolverine (mecha samurai villain), Pacific Rim (people-operated robot Goliaths), Elysium (mecha exo-skeleton), the new Robocop (cyborg hero), Thor (alien robot) and even Man of Steel, whose penultimate set piece involves Superman battling two opponents, one of whom is a faceless giant in head-to-toe armor whose appearance and behavior make him a robot in spirit, if not fact. And did I mention that Ultron, the villain of next summer’s Avengers: Age of Ultron is also an evil robot? This is overkill, pure and simple. And it’s a prime reason so many superhero and special effects–saturated extravaganzas feel the same.

We’ve come full-circle, in a sense, as 2007’s original Transformers is to blame for this trend. While it’s altogether too easy to pile onto Michael Bay and his Hasbro toy-based franchise, part of its legacy was providing proof to studio executives that there were untold millions to be made from fundamentally basing films on CGI giant mechanical creatures. And moreover, that those creatures didn’t need to have distinctive traits, or even be visually lucid, to satisfy audiences. Bay’s Autobots and Decepticons make only passing attempts at personality – sure, Optimus Prime is noble and Bumblebee is loyal, but that’s like giving credit to a Superman movie for making the Man of Steel courageous. Furthermore, it ignores the fact that most of the other Transformers are buzzing, rotating, pointy-edged contraptions indistinguishable from one another, giving the films a visual schema defined by blurry metal moving fast through fiery explosions in metropolitan centers.

Of course, science fiction, fantasy, and superhero films have always been fascinated by robots. Yet from Metropolis, The Day the Earth Stood Still, and Westworld to 2001, Blade Runner, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, and A.I: Artificial Intelligence, robots have been capable of serving as more than merely token elements to amplify a movie’s gee-whiz quotient. Rather, they’ve been most compelling when their nature, their personalities, and their relationships to their makers or users have spoken to grander ideas about man’s dependence on technology. Often, as in Alien and The Terminator, they help a story touch upon the dangerous unreasonableness of expecting machines to comprehend and exhibit feelings of compassion and mercy, and to be relied upon to safeguard people’s interests. Or, as in 2009’s underrated Moon, in which computer system Gerty 3000 (voiced by Kevin Spacey) acts as both an emotional friend and foil to Sam Rockwell’s astronaut, they help shine a light on issues of solitude, loneliness, and what it means to be human.

What they don’t do, when at their best, is simply function as special effects to be oohed and aahed at for their size, their volume, and the neat-o technical wizardry that went into creating them. While robots are sometimes necessary as suitably strong, larger-than-life adversaries for superpowered he-men like Superman and the X-Men, their ubiquity has rendered them not just dull, but downright unimaginative – an easy way to provide some been-here, done-that computerized bang for one’s buck at the expense of genuine thrills. The Sentinels may rise up to carry out a murderously intolerant agenda in Days of Future Past; Edge of Tomorrow’s power suits may help humanity defeat invading E.T.s; and the Autobots – and Dinobots! – may help humanity temporarily stave off extermination in Age of Extinction. Yet for the health of our current CG-overloaded big-budget action cinema, it’d be far preferable if it were all these massive mechanical Goliaths who were wiped out.

here:
http://www.vulture.com/2014/06/transformers-edge-of-tomorrow-robots-blockbuster-cliches.html

====================================================

We're Not Ready for Robots
The U.S. government, an insider argues, is ill-equipped for a world of automated warfare.
Megan Garber Jun 28 2014, 4:26 PM ET



ASPEN, Colo.—Should the U.S. establish a new federal agency to regulate robots?

Here's one potential problem with that proposal—one that has very little to do with the law, and very much to do with technology: "The government has virtually no experts on the inside that understand autonomous robotic systems."

That's according to Missy Cummings, a professor of engineering at Duke, an expert on drones and other robots, and a former fighter pilot. Cummings came to that conclusion—one that means, she says, that "the United States government is in serious trouble"—while advising the government in, among other things, its development of a $100 million robotic helicopter program.

"The one thing that I realized while I was on the inside,"
she said during a talk at the Aspen Ideas Festival, put on by the Aspen Institute and The Atlantic, is essentially that "the defense industry really cannot get the people that it needs for the robotics programs it would like to have." The U.S. not only doesn't know about robotics ... it doesn't know, in the words of another former member of the military, what it doesn't know. It doesn't fully understand how to test robots, Cummings says. It doesn't fully know how to regulate them.

Take drones. There are currently six sites, scattered around the country, that the FAA has established as testing areas for unmanned autonomous vehicles. But the agency, Cummings argues, likely won't be able to hire the people they're going to need to run these programs. It's a systemic problem, and one that begins with the education system. "Our country," Cummings says, "simply is not putting out enough" people—engineers, roboticists, software engineers—who have expertise in robotics. The government, in the military and beyond, isn't doing enough to incentivize or compensate technologists. "And the ones that we do train," Cummings adds, "are going to private companies like Google or Apple."

That means, among other things, a government that is ill-equipped when it comes to the work of regulation and oversight. Whether private industry's current hegemony over robotics is a generally good or bad thing is debatable, Cummings allows, "but I think it's certainly a problem when our government cannot assess whether or not technology is decent—or even ready to be deployed."

Which leads to another reason to think that "the United States government is in serious trouble." While the U.S. is lagging in when it comes to robotics' human resources, Cummings says, other countries are quickly catching up. They're developing their own expertise with automated technologies—including, alarmingly, automated weaponry. Drones, for better or for worse, are "are a true democratization of technology," Cummings says; they put significant amounts of power in the hands not just of states, but of individuals and other extra-state actors. And if the U.S. is ill-equipped, systemically, to deal with warfare that is newly democratized and newly weaponized ... "it's my prediction," Cummings says, "that we're about to have our you-know-whats handed to us on a platter."

here:
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/06/our-government-is-not-ready-for-robots/373644/

====================================================

(if for some reason you cannot see this article, let me know and I will email you the pdf copy I made)

What Jobs Will Robots Have in the Future?
July 3, 2014 8:30 a.m. ET

Automation and digitization are transforming the workplace. With this in mind, we asked The Experts: What jobs do you see robots moving into in the near future?

This discussion relates to a recent Leadership Report and formed the basis of a discussion on The Experts blog in June 2014.

The Dark Side of Empowering Robots

NOREENA HERTZ: Do you remember those images of Japanese car factories in the 1980s with robots manning the production line? How futuristic they then seemed? Yet robots will increasingly encroach on the jobs that humans used to do. We already see robots replacing checkout staff in retail outlets. Expect within the next few years to see robots folding clothes at Banana Republic. In hospitals expect soon to see robots reading X-rays with more accuracy than any human radiologist.

Google Chairman  Eric Schmidt  recently said that "Robots will become omnipresent in our lives in a good way." "Omnipresent" I agree with. As for "good," I believe the picture is more nuanced. The takeover of machine by man will have associated costs.

Implications for the labor force will be significant, and it won't just be blue-collar workers who will be replaced. A recent paper by Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne, of the University of Oxford, predicts that as much as 47% of total U.S. employment is at risk from computerization. Jobs likely to be lost include not only production line workers but also paralegals, administrative support staff, telemarketers and a number of other white-collar occupations.

Expect, too, a whole host of machine-associated dangers to emerge. We've all been in taxicabs where the driver has taken us on a circuitous route—because he was "just following the GPS." Or think about how financial institutions massively underestimated their risk profiles at the dawn of the financial crisis because they gave too much ill-considered power to a single figure churned out by their bank's computer—value at risk.

The gravest danger we face when we hand over our thinking to machines isn't that the machines malfunction. It is that we become increasingly incapable of thinking ourselves.

Noreena Hertz (@NoreenaHertz) is based at the Centre for the Study of Decision-Making at University College London. She is the author of the recently published "Eyes Wide Open: How to Make Smart Decisions in a Confusing World."

Where Robots Will Go Next

DOMINIC BARTON: Historically, robots have been used primarily for assembly-line manufacturing or other tasks that involve routine, repetitive actions.

In the future, we expect to see robots moving into more nonroutine jobs that require human interaction, problem solving and creativity. Already we are seeing evidence of this shift—whether in call centers, paralegal roles or advanced manufacturing. This has been driven in part by rapid advances in natural-language processing and machine learning.

The economic value created by increased automation is significant. In the industrial space alone, we expect that robots could provide up to $1.2 trillion in value by 2025 through labor-saving productivity gains. In addition, robot applications in medicine (e.g., mobility aids and surgery), commercial services (e.g., retail and logistics) and personal services could create more than $3 trillion in value by 2025 through improvements in quality of life and time savings.

Dominic Barton is the global managing director at McKinsey & Co.

Will a Robot Take Your Job? Or Provide a New One?

MARK MURO and SCOTT ANDES : The McKinsey Global Institute estimates that the global economic benefits of advanced robotics in manufacturing—to be realized through massive productivity and quality gains—could reach $1.2 trillion by 2025. That's a huge gain to the world's welfare but it comes with some disquiet. It implies that automation is threatening the existence of more manufacturing occupations much faster than might have been anticipated just a few years ago.

The range of what can be automated is widening rapidly. The first robotics revolution—ushered by General Motors GM 0.00%  in the 1960s with robotic arms that stacked hot die-cast metal pieces—substituted capital for labor in the most dangerous, difficult and labor-intensive tasks. Today, we're in the midst of a second robotics revolution. Thanks to the new field of "machine learning," second-generation robots no longer require step-by-step commands by a human. Workers with highly routinized tasks—such as industrial painters, machine setters, laminators, fabricators—are most at risk of replacement. Yet workers with "middle" skills—those with mechanical, electrical or industrial credentials, as well as social perceptiveness and supervisory ability—complement automation and continue to be in high demand.

What is coming now, though, is a much more disruptive third era of industrial automation. Thanks to advances in artificial intelligence, machine vision, sensors, "big data" analytics, motors, and hydraulics, robots are becoming increasingly dexterous, smart and autonomous—not to mention cheap. Coming fast are robots that can take on more delicate tasks such as intricate electronics assembly, and work more easily for and with their human tenders. As a result, various machine operators, precision solderers, and electronic-equipment assemblers are all now at risk of replacement. All told, McKinsey estimates robots will replace 15% to 25% of industrial-worker tasks within a decade. Clearly the coming wave of automation will further reduce America's manufacturing employment per unit of output.

And yet, there could be benefits. For one, the ability of robots to drive costs down could encourage global companies to move some production back to the U.S., creating jobs. Otherwise, for some there will be job opportunities in minding, maintaining or improving the bots. On that score, an increasingly heard word of career advice will be: "robotics!"

Mark Muro (@markmuro1) is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the policy director of the Metropolitan Policy Program there. Scott Andes is a senior policy analyst at the Brookings Institution.

How New Robots Are Smarter Than Ever

ROBERT PLANT: The term "robot" usually brings visions of large automatons, assembly-line machines with sparks flying from welding torches, each with a specific task to perform and all synchronized in perfect harmony. And yes, this is the case in many factory environments. These robots are in many ways amazing in what they do and the precision at which they do it. They have formed the very basis of the re-engineered workplace of today. But just like the human labor they replaced, they themselves are being replaced by more intelligent, agile and adaptive robotic systems. These new robots can understand that with no item in their "hand" they can't fulfill the function of, say, placing a nut on a blot, so the system then has to compensate, interact with the track, locate a blot, reinitiate at the track speed and then undertake the function. Adaptive robotics allows systems to be placed in a variety of new scenarios, including as aides to skilled assembly-line workers, physicians; and the frail or disabled members of our community.

The service industry is ripe for automation; the Dalu Robot restaurant in Jinan Shandong, China says it is developing a robotic system to cook meals and then deliver the food to the customer's table; while Momentum Machines of California says it has created a "smart restaurants" robotic system that not only takes the order but then can create 360 gourmet burgers an hour.

Moving down the supply chain, Kiva, the robotics system acquired by Amazon for $775 million in 2012, provides "innovative material handling technologies" that move the inventory around automated warehouses, removing the human element. It is possible that these systems will soon be integrated with autonomous delivery drones flying packages directly to our homes. Amazon may even be shipping products before you order it through the use of Artificial Intelligence "software robots" that monitor your behavior, lifestyle, and even the inventory in your refrigerator through their "dash" magic-wand hand-held bar code scanner. Shopping will never be the same.

The premise voiced by automation advocates is that robotic systems will free us to do more innovative things and have more free time. Ironically, the same was said about robots and computers in the 1960s and 1970s but it hasn't yet worked out to be that way.

Robert Plant (@drrobertplant) is an associate professor at the School of Business Administration, University of Miami, in Coral Gables, Fla.

Use Robotics to Reimagine Your Business, Not Re-Engineer It

CESARE MAINARDI: Is your job high volume, well defined and repetitive—one that needs tight quality control and involves a lot of lifting and moving? If yes, you're likely in greater danger of being replaced by a robot. Robots won't replace workers in jobs that require imagination, creativity, empathy, solution making and a "human touch." But they will take on work that's dull, dirty, and dangerous.

Every company wants to make a better, faster, cheaper car, phone, [insert your product here]. But digitizing your business smartly goes well beyond just having machines make things that people used to make. Re-engineering your manufacturing through technology isn't a bad thing, but it's a table-stakes move. Most companies are going to get value from applying robotics and automation to manufacturing. So you can't stop there.

The full "art of the possible" isn't to simply to look at how robots or technology could improve your production line, but to look at your entire business without being blinded by legacy beliefs about how people, processes, technology, capabilities and culture all "should" come together. Take the view of someone who's going to disrupt your business—and then design your digital strategy (and hire your robots) from there. This uses technology to fundamentally reimagine your business, not just re-engineer it. And if you do it well, you'll be rewarded with top-line revenue growth, higher multiples by the market, and ultimately a faster, more profitable business.

Cesare R. Mainardi is chief executive officer of Strategy&, formerly Booz & Co.

here:
http://online.wsj.com/articles/robots-how-will-they-be-employed-in-the-future-1404390617

====================================================

Truck of the future aims to drive itself
   
By Ben Brumfield, CNN
updated 9:53 PM EDT, Fri July 4, 2014 |


Mercedes' Future Truck 2025 will drive by itself. A prototype took a 3-mile self-guided trek.


In the spacious cab, the driver will be able to turn away from the wheel, gas and brakes.


Truck drivers will have time to surf the Internet or monitor data, while Future Truck 2025 watches the road.


In the future, vehicles will communicate with each other and tap into Big Data, Mercedes-Benz envisions.


Multiple radar systems, stereo cameras and wireless LAN watch the road and other vehicles.


Mercedes' truck of the future should automatically keep its distance from other vehicles but not pass them automatically.

more here:
http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/04/tech/mercedes-future-truck/index.html?sr=fb070514Truck3pStoryGalLink

====================================================

6/06/2014 @ 1:23PM
Autonomous Cars Like The Google May Be Viable In Less Than 10 Years

Neil Winton
Contributor

BRUSSELS, Belgium – President Barack Obama’s motorcade, abetted by the limousine cavalcades of his G7 leader colleagues and non-stop rain, bought traffic to a standstill here this week, making those stranded in their cars or diving into the underground railroad system for relief wonder whether computer controlled cars might one day make this aggravation a thing of the past.

News of Google GOOGL +0.56%’s autonomous car, which can transport two passengers around at speeds of up to 25 mph with the computer controlling the steering wheel and brakes, has set off speculation about just when this technology will be available.

Could it be with us in less than 10 years?

“Yes,” says Peter Fuss, Germany based automotive specialist from the EY consultancy.

Fuss told the annual Automotive News Congress here that so-called autonomous driving will arrive in less than 10 years, spurred on by safety and comfort benefits.

“No,” said other assorted experts at the conference, led by Volvo, who reckoned 10 to 15 years was more likely.

Nobody thought the computer controlled car was pie in the sky.

The new Mercedes S class already incorporates many technologies on the path to computer control
The new Mercedes S class already incorporates many technologies on the path to computer control

Peter Mertens, senior vice-president at Volvo Cars Corp, said many of the basic technologies have already been developed, including systems like radar cruise control, which keeps a constant speed on the highway and slows the car down when it approaches a slower car. The selected cruising speed is reinstated when the computer senses the coast is clear. Other techniques already in use include “city-brake”, now standard on many Volvos, which takes control of braking from the driver when the computer senses an imminent crash at speeds under 20 mph. Computerized parking, and “steer assist”, which senses that the car will go out of control unless curbed, are becoming commonplace. It’s really a question of developing and consolidating these systems, Mertens said.

The new Mercedes S class sedan already incorporates many technologies on the path to computer control.

On its drive towards autonomous cars, Volvo will have 100 cars in Gothenburg, Sweden in 2017, which will be able to drive around known routes without input from the driver.

These cars will take specially selected and trained customers on selected routes, although it’s not clear why they need to be selected or trained if the computer is doing all the work.

“It will be 10 to 15 years before you can get into the back of the car and read a newspaper,”
Mertens said.

Volvo is experimenting currently with cars which park themselves automatically, but which also recognize actions not directly related to the parking. This allows research to take place under restricted and safe conditions. Mertens said humans are good at recognizing danger, but poor at reacting and the industry needs to merge these two worlds.

“The technology to control cars is still pretty weak, given the scale of possibilities presented by real world driving,”
Mertens said. Accidents are currently 95 per cent the result of human error, but it is not known how many accidents are thwarted by skilful drivers.

Karlheinz Haupt from Germany’s Continental AG said as the technology develops, highways are likely to divide traffic into three sections – one lane for fully automated vehicles, one for highly automated ones, and the other for partially computer controlled vehicles. Haupt said the process will be evolutionary, not revolutionary. He said 2016 will see the first partially automated cars, with fully automated ones arriving from 2025.

The EY consultancy said autonomous cars will also accelerate the change in the way people own cars, driving what it called “different integrated mobility systems” like car sharing, and ideas about offering car rentals for shorter distances as part of the public transport system. EY pointed out autonomous driving makes sense to cut road accidents, now the 8th leading cause of death globally, and to curb the two time increase in car driving delays expected from congestion by 2050, when 6.3 billion people, or 70 per cent of the world’s population, will live in towns and cities.

EY’s Fuss also left the congress with a chilling thought, which reminded the industry players that they will have to hang tough at some point during the introduction of computerized cars.

“The first autonomous car to kill will have a tremendous negative effect,” Fuss said.

here:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/neilwinton/2014/06/06/autonomous-cars-like-the-google-may-be-viable-in-less-than-10-years/

====================================================

Intel Chases Sales on Silicon Road to Driverless Cars
By Ian King June 30, 2014

Hyundai Genesis
Hyundai’s Genesis illustrates the obstacles for Intel, Qualcomm and Nvidia -- whose chips dominate in computers and phones -- as they try to crack a potentially lucrative market. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Intel Corp., Qualcomm Inc. and Nvidia Corp. -- pioneers in the production of chips for computers and phones -- are finding it harder to make inroads into the auto industry.

Consider Hyundai Motor Co. (005380)’s new 2015 Genesis, a luxury sedan brimming with semiconductors that handle everything from automatic braking and lane-keeping sensors to blind-spot detection. Other chips enable the car to open the trunk when it senses the owner’s arms are full, and to sniff for carbon dioxide to decide if the cabin needs more fresh air.

While the Genesis represents the forefront of the auto industry’s use of chips, only a handful of the vehicle’s thousands of semiconductors is provided by Intel. Qualcomm and Nvidia don’t even make the list. The main hurdle is the industry’s safety and reliability standards, which far exceed those for computers or phones. Instead, most of the electronic components are provided by longtime suppliers, like Freescale Semiconductor Ltd. (FSL:US), Renesas Electronics Corp. and STMicroelectronics NV, which have proven track records.

“We don’t get a beta test with our products -- they have to work from the first one,” said Mike O’Brien, a U.S.-based vice president of product planning for the Korean automaker, explaining the company’s cautious approach to chips in its cars. “We can’t say, ‘Oops, we didn’t do that right.’”

Safety Standards

Hyundai’s Genesis illustrates the obstacles for Intel, Qualcomm and Nvidia -- whose chips dominate in computers and phones -- as they try to crack a potentially lucrative market. Cars are increasingly filled with complex computing and communications systems and driverless vehicles are getting closer to becoming a reality.

The market for automotive chips is projected to grow 6.1 percent to $27.9 billion this year, according to IHS Corp. Within that business, sales of chips for automated driver-assistance systems, or ADAS, will increase an average of 13 percent a year through 2020, making it the fastest-growing area.

Even as the systems proliferate and software developers such as Google Inc. and others roll out plans for connected entertainment and mapping systems, carmakers have been slow to switch to unproven chip suppliers because their products are governed by rigorous safety requirements. When a computer crashes, a user might lose some data. When a car crashes, people can get hurt.

For autos, chips have to withstand temperatures as low as minus 40 degrees or as high as 160 degrees Celsius (minus 40 to 320 degrees Fahrenheit). They need to be available to carmakers for up to 30 years and have a zero failure rate, according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. By comparison, consumer-device chips only need to be around for a year and are built to fail less than 10 percent of the time.

“Experience in automotive is something that you don’t grow in one day,” said Luca De Ambroggi, an analyst at IHS. “The requirements are still tough.”

Touting Strengths

The newcomers are initially going after in-vehicle entertainment and driver-assistance functions by touting their strengths -- Intel’s processing, Nvidia’s graphics capabilities and Qualcomm (QCOM:US)’s wireless communications. As consumers come to expect their cars to get better at the same rate as their smartphones, tablets and laptops, the demand is there, yet it takes time to bring new technology to market while keeping the driver safe and free from distraction, Hyundai’s O’Brien said.

For example, deciding that automated steering requires too much effort to turn the car and adjusting software to lighten it could take two months of testing. When Hyundai was building a reversing system with lasers and cameras, it found that the technology initially couldn’t tell the difference between obstacles and steep driveways.

All of this complexity and expense needs cooperation from component suppliers, O’Brien said. Carmakers are looking for chips that they can tune to do the job of many, he said.

Supercomputers in Cars

That should be good news for Intel, Qualcomm and Nvidia, which make some of the fastest processors available. All three say they’ve got products in the market or coming that meet the most stringent automotive requirements.

Nvidia said its processors are now powerful enough that they can be partitioned -- devoting part to functions that must work no matter what, and others to information and entertainment, where hiccups are less dangerous.

“We’re seeing a lot of interest in the industry in the new technologies,” said Danny Shapiro, Nvidia’s senior director of automotive. “Ultimately every car is going to have a supercomputer.”

The ability to quickly capture and process images allows vehicles’ computers to know what’s going on around them and to alert drivers to potential hazards. Shapiro said that requires massive parallel processing -- something that Nvidia’s graphics chips excel at.

here:
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-06-30/intel-chases-sales-on-silicon-road-to-driverless-cars