Thursday, September 15, 2022

Desperately Seeking Attention: ONE-WAY TICKET CHEAP WAY TO POLITICAL STUNTS


Billionaire investor and Trump megadonor Peter Thiel praises Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as 'the best of the governors' for offering 'a real alternative to California'

Billionaire investor Peter Thiel (L) praised Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in a speech at the National Conservatism Conference.
Billionaire investor Peter Thiel (L) praised Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in a speech at the National Conservatism Conference. 
J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo and Jeff Swensen/Getty Images
  • Thiel said Republicans need to do more than point to problems in liberal states like California.
  • Of all GOP governors, DeSantis was the one doing it right, Thiel said. 
  • But he added that he worried about soaring housing prices in the Sunshine State. 

AVENTURA, Florida — Billionaire investor Peter Thiel on Sunday said he feared Republicans were too focused on bashing liberal states such as California, when they should instead be offering a "positive agenda" for the future of the party. 

In a speech delivered at the National Conservatism Conference, Thiel painted a bleak picture of his home state of California and said at least one governor was going about alternative policymaking the right way: Florida's Ron DeSantis. 

"DeSantis in Florida is probably the best of the governors in terms of offering a real alternative to California," Thiel said, speaking before a crowd of attendees at the JW Marriott Miami Turnberry Resort.

But Thiel also had one major disclaimer, saying that he worried about how expensive housing in Florida had become. Thiel said he bought an $18 million home in Miami in 2020 that was now worth about $35 million. A test for the state's policies, he said, would be whether housing prices fall. 

"The fact that real estate in Florida or Texas has melted up over the last two or three years is not evidence that you're succeeding and building a better model than California," he said. "I'm worried that that's evidence that you're becoming like California." 

Housing prices are among the top issues Democrats are weaponizing against DeSantis as he seeks reelection in November. The state has faced an influx of residents since the COVID-19 pandemic, which has contributed to rising costs. 

DeSantis has pushed through numerous policies as governor that have drawn the ire of the left, including policies on abortion, voting rights, and limiting the way race, gender, and sexuality are discussed in schools. 

DeSantis also faced his fair share of tussles with California. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has criticized the governor and has run ads attacking him in Florida. The dispute led to speculation that the two could potentially face off in the 2024 presidential race if they both decided to run for their respective parties' nominations. 

Thiel cofounded PayPal and was an early investor in Facebook, the company now known as Meta. He was one of former President Donald Trump's most outspoken supporters and has criticized Silicon Valley, relocating to Los Angeles in 2018. 

On Sunday, Thiel said during his remarks that his "intuition" told him that Republicans' "nihilistic negation" wouldn't suffice in creating an alternative vision for growth. 

"The temptation on our side is always going to be that all we have to do is say that we're not California," he said. "It is just such an ugly picture, the homeless poop, people pooping all over the place, it's the ridiculous rat-infested apartments that don't work anymore, it's the woke insanities, there's so much that it feels like shooting fish in a barrel. It's so easy, so ridiculous to denounce."

The question Republicans should be asking, he said, was: "How can we concretely offer a vision for the 21st century that's better than California?" 

Bashing California "might be enough to win in the midterms in '22," Thiel said, "It might be enough to win in '24. But we want to have more of a program positive vision, something like that to be credible." 

Thiel raised concerns about the 2022 cycle, saying Republicans weren't doing as well as during the Tea Party swell in 2010, or in 1994 when then-Minority Whip Newt Gingrich presented the GOP agenda in the form of the Contract for America.   

Thiel didn't raise any specific senators by name, but Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has not offered an agenda for the party ahead of the 2022 midterms, while National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Rick Scott of Florida has, in the form of a "12-point Plan to Rescue America." 

Several news articles have indicated there's a rift between the two GOP leaders. But Scott, in a letter to supporters, accused the media of trying to "divide and defeat Republicans."

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, bashed Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's record in California.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, bashed Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's record in California. 
Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

DeSantis hasn't received a campaign donation from Thiel, records show

As of May 2022, Thiel had an estimated net worth of $7.19 billion and was ranked 297th on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index

Though Thiel praised DeSantis on Sunday, he has not given to the governor's reelection efforts, according to a disclosure document from his political action committee, Friends of Ron DeSantis, and campaign finance disclosures from the State Division of Elections. The DeSantis campaign declined to comment on campaign donations. 

DeSantis has become one of the most famous Republicans in America and has raised more than $140 million for his reelection bid, an extraordinary sum for a governor's race. The money puts him on track to break a national fundraising record. 

GOP Senate candidates and Thiel protégés Blake Masters and JD Vance each received $15 million. Thiel was also one of Trump's biggest donors when he ran in 2016, and this cycle has donated to at least 14 other MAGA-aligned House and Senate candidates...


 https://www.cnn.com › politics › ma...


DeSantis claims credit for sending 2 planes carrying migrants to Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts - CNN

1 hour ago — Two planes carrying migrants were sent by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to Martha's Vineyard on Wednesday night, his office said, ...


1 hour ago — Two planes carrying migrants were sent by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to Martha's Vineyard on Wednesday night, his office said, ...

Ron DeSantis sends two planes of illegal immigrants to Martha's Vineyard

·3 min read

EXCLUSIVE: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis followed through on his promise to drop off illegal immigrants in progressive states, sending two planes full of migrants to Martha’s Vineyard on Wednesday.

A video provided to Fox News Digital shows the migrants deboarding the planes at Martha’s Vineyard Airport in Massachusetts.

"Yes, Florida can confirm the two planes with illegal immigrants that arrived in Martha’s Vineyard today were part of the state’s relocation program to transport illegal immigrants to sanctuary destinations," the governor’s  communications director, Taryn Fenske, told Fox News ...

4:38
50 migrants relocated to Martha's Vineyard by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
CBS News · CBS News
2 days ago 

Ron DeSantis Sent Planes Full of Confused Migrant Families to Martha’s Vineyard


The migrant families Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sent to Martha’s Vineyard reportedly weren't told where they were going.

PB

By Paul Blest 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is boasting about sending two planes full of undocumented immigrants, including children, to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts on Wednesday, apparently just to make a point about liberal  immigration policies.

The flights reportedly didn’t even originate in Florida but rather Texas, and the migrants weren’t told where they were going and were wooed with promises of expedited work papers, NPR reported.

"She offered us help. Help that never arrived," 30-year-old Andres Duarte, from Venezuela, told NPR about a woman who identified herself as “Perla.” 

The woman approached the migrants outside of a shelter in San Antonio where they were staying and said the flights would take them to Boston, NPR reported.

"Now we are here. We got on the plane with a vision of the future, of making it,” Duarte added.

The planes arrived in Martha’s Vineyard, a popular tourist destination, especially for the wealthy, in Massachusetts, around 3:15 p.m Wednesday, according to NPR. The flights originated in San Antonio, however, and only made a layover stop in Florida (and then South Carolina) before heading to Massachusetts, NPR reported.

“States like Massachusetts… will better facilitate the care of these individuals who they have invited into our country by incentivizing illegal immigration through their designation as ‘sanctuary states’ and support for the Biden administration’s open border policies,” a spokesperson for DeSantis told Fox News, which published exclusive video showing the migrants deboarding one of the planes. 

Florida’s budget that passed earlier this year included $12 million for an “immigrant relocation program,” and DeSantis had said he would bus undocumented people to locations such as Delaware, President Joe Biden’s home state. 

But last month DeSantis said the state hadn’t started because the Biden administration had stopped sending undocumented people to Florida. Texas has also been busing undocumented people to cities like New York, Washington, D.C., and Chicago.   

“The governor of one of the biggest states in the nation has been spending time hatching a secret plot to round up and ship people—children, families—lying to them about where they’re going just to gain cheap political points on Tucker Calrson and MAGA Twitter,” Massachusetts state Rep. Dylan Fernandes, a Democrat who represents the area, tweeted Wednesday. 

“It's fucking depraved.” 

Local officials told multiple outlets that the migrants had no idea where they were when they landed. 

“Somebody sent them here, and they didn’t realize where they were going,” a staffer at Martha’s Vineyard Community Services told the Martha’s Vineyard Times

“We have talked to a number of people who've asked, 'Where am I?'” Bruce McNamee, the police chief in Edgartown, told NPR. “And then I was trying to explain where Martha's Vineyard is.”

The majority of the migrants DeSantis’ office put on the plane are from Venezuela, according to the New York Times. They’ve been provided with food and other supplies by the local community and are staying in a shelter at a local church, according to the Martha’s Vineyard Times.

“The Baker-Polito Administration is in touch with local officials regarding the arrival of migrants in Martha’s Vineyard,” a spokesperson for Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, told VICE News. “At this time, short-term shelter services are being provided by local officials, and the Administration will continue to support those efforts.”

State Sen. Julian Cyr, a Democrat who represents the area, compared DeSantis’ stunt to the “fundamentally racist tactics” used by segregationists in 1962, when they tricked nearly 100 Black families into moving to Hyannis, Massachusetts, apparently to prove racism was just as prevalent in the North as it was in the South. 

“This is deeply disgusting,” Cyr told the Martha’s Vineyard Times. “This is a cruel ruse that manipulates families that are seeking a better life.”

Want the best of VICE News straight to your inbox? Sign up here.


September 15, 2022, 9:11am

STEPHEN KINZER: Honest Content and The State of Journalism Today

 Intro: This is a revised and up-dated post from June 2021 by Eva Bartlett ...Boston Globe Columnist Stephen Kinzer on Honest Content and The State of Journalism Today

No name recognition there yet..you might want to get to know him and find out more information


Eva Bartlett is a Canadian independent journalist and activist. She has spent years on the ground covering conflict zones in the Middle East, especially in Syria and Palestine (where she lived for nearly four years). Follow her on Twitter @EvaKBartlett 

"I asked the author and journalist Stephen Kinzer how the corporate media came to be so devoid of honest content and discussed the rise of censorship by Big Tech. 

The job of journalists is to rebel against the narrative. We are out there as the eyes and ears of the world. If you don’t want to do it, fine, but don’t pretend that you’re doing it, and sit in your little cubicle and think of the stereotypes you’ve been fed and just regurgitate them. That is not journalism, it’s just public relations.”

He started as an independent journalist in Central America in the mid-70s, when few journalists were going there, later reporting from Central Asia, Turkey, the Caucasus, and Europe.

✓ ... Kinzer learned journalism by going places and writing firsthand what he saw and heard. According to Kinzer, there are many qualifications for being a journalist that are much more important than what school you went to or what you studied.

“The most important one is independent thinking. The great curse of our press in the West is willingness to accept the official narrative,” he said. In his view many American journalists are merely stenographers. “They’re sitting down at a press conference, they write down what some government spokesman says, then they go and print that in a newspaper. . .

“And when you want to have a story that’s very well-sourced, they call the State Department, and the Defense Department, and several think tanks, and some congressmen. And they think, ‘Well I sure covered the landscape on this one!’”

But that, Kinzer argues, is not what covering the landscape is about. 

“The great qualification you need for a journalist is the confidence to go out and see for yourself, and believe that your eyes are actually telling you more than press releases from some other country. . .

“It’s truly amazing, I’ve seen the decline of this profession into such willing subservience. We don’t have any core of regular columnists or people trying to challenge established narratives. We do have voices that pop up periodically, but they’re so drowned out by the regular columnists who just voice the same tropes over and over again,” Kinzer said. 

“The intellectual laziness of the American press in covering the world has never been as extreme as it is now.

In the past several years, there has been an increase in social media giants deciding what content is acceptable and what “violates” so-called “community standards.” Commenting on the matter, Kinzer said that “the power of private companies to decide what people see and don’t see is greater now than ever.”

APRIL 10, 2006 


Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change

Mr. Kinzer talked about his book Overthrow : America’s Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq, published by Times Books. He discussed the U.S.'s long history of regime change and proposed that the U.S. invasion of Iraq had historical roots going back to the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy in 1893. He said that while the policy of direct military involvement to achieve regime change was put on hold during the Cold War, it had been reestablished since the fall of the Soviet Union. Mr. Kinzer also talked about fourteen episodes of regime change contained in his book, including America’s involvement in Cuba, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Iran. He answered questions from members of the audience following his remarks. 


AUGUST 25, 2022 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 


Letters, August 25, 2022 

For Stanton, the Challenger

To the editor:

Although I’m not enrolled in any political party, I’ve asked for a Democratic ballot in the Sept. 6 primary so I can vote for the insurgent candidate for state representative, Jack Stanton, who is challenging the entrenched incumbent, Sarah Peake.

This is a classic David vs. Goliath clash. A veteran politician is being challenged by a “climate radical” less than half her age. She dismisses systemic change as “not ready for prime time.” He grasps the urgency of this moment and is determined to slow our rush toward regional and planetary suicide.

Rep. Peake is part of the tight leadership group that serves the Speaker of the House. That group is the most regressive force in the State House, dedicated to maintaining secrecy and discipline. Peake has opposed measures that would give legislators and voters 72 hours to read bills that emerge from the Speaker’s office instead of 24. She opposes releasing committee votes on key legislation. As a tested loyalist, she helps the Speaker maintain one of the most opaque legislative regimes in the U.S.

In 2018, Rep. Peake defended the Speaker’s use of tax money to pay off women who have been sexually harassed or assaulted by legislators in exchange for nondisclosure agreements. She said that payoffs and nondisclosure agreements actually benefit victims.

It’s valuable to have a legislator from your neighborhood who’s powerful. But if proximity to power means participating in an antidemocratic leadership clique, the price isn’t worth it.

Jack Stanton is rebelling against get-along, go-along politics. Peake refused to appear with him in public until five days before election day.

I’m from the same generation as Rep. Peake. I say: vote us out! We made a mess of the world. Maybe the next generation can save it. The standard-bearer for that generation is Jack Stanton.

Stephen Kinzer
Truro in

Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq is a book published in 2006 by New York Times foreign correspondent and author Stephen Kinzer about the United States's involvement in the overthrow of foreign governments from the late 19th century to the present

OK Blog More!

 Get set...Go! 

Welcome to the new Verge

Revolutionizing the media with blog posts



 ". . .a whole new Verge for you today. Radically new. Sometimes you just have to blow things up and start over.

Yes, we have a sharp new logo that started with the idea of an unfinished interface between the present and the future. Yes, we have a bright new color palette that highlights our work in confident new ways. Yes, we have new typefaces across the board, including serifs for our body copy. Look at these ink traps in our new headline font, Poly Sans. I love them.

The new Verge typeface
All of those things were designed and developed with great care by Vox Media’s spectacular in-house design team, and they will serve as the foundation for our site and our brand for years to come. The Verge is meant to be beautiful and boundary-pushing, and our new design reflects that.

But new colors and typefaces are not the point of our redesign. Not even a little bit.


Five squares showing colors: purple, teal, yellow, red, and pink.
The Verge primary color palette.

Our goal in redesigning The Verge was actually to redesign the relationship we have with you, our beloved audience. Six years ago, we developed a design system that was meant to confidently travel across platforms as the media unbundled itself into article pages individually distributed by social media and search algorithms. There’s a reason we had bright pink pull quotes in articles and laser lines shooting across our videos: we wanted to be distinctly The Verge, no matter where we showed up.

But publishing across other people’s platforms can only take you so far. And the more we lived with that decision, the more we felt strongly that our own platform should be an antidote to algorithmic news feeds, an editorial product made by actual people with intent and expertise. The Verge’s homepage is the single most popular page at Vox Media, and it should be a statement about what the internet can be at its best. 

So we sat down and thought about what was really important to us and how to make our homepage valuable every time you open it. We also thought about where we came from and how we built The Verge into what it is today. And we landed on: well shit, we just need to blog more.

So we’re back to basics with something we’re calling the Storystream news feed, right on our homepage. Our plan is to bring the best of old-school blogging to a modern news feed experience and to have our editors and senior reporters constantly updating the site with the best of tech and science news from around the entire internet. . ."

READ MORE 

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

PROJECT LOON..."A fully networked battlespace has been the dream of commanders for decades, but is now finally within reach."

 First, a note about that name: ".. Besides needing to constantly navigate the varying atmospheric airways, Loon balloons have to be continually recovered and relaunched to maintain a steady stream of overhead balloons. Besides being a reference to the big weather balloons, the name "Loon" was chosen as a nod to how infeasible the idea sounds. Eventually that infeasibility proved to mostly just be a money problem,.."

✓The US Defense Innovation Unit put out a press release about the Aalyria contract back in July, saying, "A fully networked battlespace has been the dream of commanders for decades, but is now finally within reach." For now, the initial goals are "on-demand or near-real-time satellite imagery," "theater-wide tracking" of a battle, and "reliable broadband Internet at remote forward operating bases." 

arstechnica.com

Google spinoff Aalyria salvages Project Loon technology for the US military

by Ron Amadeo - Sep 13, 2022 6:31 pm UTC
5 - 6 minutes

Loon's laser communications and networking software get new life as Aalyria.

Aalyria's vision of a connected Earth, though SpaceX's Starlink network basically already looks like this.

Aalyria

A pair of reports from CNBC and Bloomberg are detailing a new Google connectivity spinoff called "Aalyria." The new company sounds like it's taking the canceled Project Loon technology, packaging it up under a new brand name, and spinning it out from Alphabet as an independent company, where it will hopefully survive in the wilderness. The company is apparently going public today, complete with a spiffy new website.



Project Loon was a Google/Alphabet company for eight years and wanted to provide Internet for low-connectivity areas with flying cell towers suspended overhead by weather balloons. It's sort of the same idea as a low Earth orbit satellite, but rather than a satellite in space, these balloons were only 20 km in the air. Besides needing to constantly navigate the varying atmospheric airways, Loon balloons have to be continually recovered and relaunched to maintain a steady stream of overhead balloons. Besides being a reference to the big weather balloons, the name "Loon" was chosen as a nod to how infeasible the idea sounds. Eventually that infeasibility proved to mostly just be a money problem, and Google shut down Loon in 2021, saying it wasn't a "long-term, sustainable business."

The CNBC report paints the spinoff as yet another consequence of Google CEO Sundar Pichai's plan to cut costs at Google. Pichai said in August that "productivity as a whole is not where it needs to be" and that the company would be "consolidating where investments overlap and streamlining processes." CNBC says that the push for cost-cutting means Google is looking to "advance or wind down experimental projects." Some Alphabet companies, like Waymo, have taken external funding to stay afloat.

Enlarge / Aalyria's space laser.

Aalyria

Aalyria's two big technologies are "Tightbeam" and "Spacetime." Tightbeam seems born out of the Project Loon research and uses a laser to communicate with satellites. Project Loon was using lasers for intra-balloon communication, and now Aalyria promises to beam data to space, terrestrial, and airborne targets "at rates faster than any other solutions available today and covering greater distances than previously imagined." 

✓ SpaceX, which is probably Aalyria's biggest competitor in the field of bringing Internet to low-connectivity spaces, already uses lasers for satellite-to-satellite communication.


Spacetime is "a software platform for orchestrating networks across land, sea, air, space and beyond." Aalyria's site says the software is for "orchestrating networks of ground stations, aircraft, satellites, ships, and urban meshes." Spacetime "optimizes and continually evolves the antenna link scheduling, network traffic routing, and spectrum resources—responding in realtime to changing network requirements" and is "designed for interoperability with legacy, hybrid space, 5G NTN and FutureG network architectures."

Loon had to manage a loosely tied-together network of constantly moving (and crashing) balloons, and building an Internet service on top of that unstable infrastructure probably required robust routing software. Bloomberg says: "The key technology behind Spacetime is algorithms that predict, for example, when a plane is about to lose its connection with a given satellite or ground station and then direct a new signal toward the plane without missing a beat."

✓CNBC reports that Alphabet retains a minority stake in the new startup, and Alphabet "transferred nearly a decade’s worth of intellectual property, patents and physical assets, including office space, to Aalyria." Aalyria will need to survive on funding from places other than Alphabet, and it also has funding from the founders of Accel, J2 Ventures, and Housatonic.

Aalyria's "Who we work with" is a big lineup of US defense divisions.

Aalyria

✓ The startup seems to have a heavy US military focus right now, including an $8.7 million "commercial contract" with the US Defense Innovation Unit. The "contracted by" section of Aalyria's website shows the logos for the US Space Force, Space Warfighting Analysis Center, US Air Force, and US Special Operations Command. The company's advisory board includes former Deputy Defense Secretary Robert O. Work and Former US Space Force Chief Innovation & Technology Officer Kim Crider.

The US Defense Innovation Unit put out a press release about the Aalyria contract back in July, saying, "A fully networked battlespace has been the dream of commanders for decades, but is now finally within reach." For now, the initial goals are "on-demand or near-real-time satellite imagery," "theater-wide tracking" of a battle, and "reliable broadband Internet at remote forward operating bases." 

FULL PRESS PLAY IT FORWARD 

c, Aalyria launches today as an independent company with a mission to orchestrate and manage hyper-fast, ultra-secure, and highly complex communications networks that span land, sea, air, and space

...
Read more

Google’s Loon Project Gets Resurrected. Without Google. Or Balloons

Bloomberg
,
September 12, 2022

The startup Aalyria Technologies wants to provide high-speed internet using software and networking technology from an abandoned moonshot.

...
Read more

Google spins out secret hi-speed telecom project called Aalyria, and keeps stake in startup

CNBC
,
September 12, 2022

Inside Google, a team of techies has been working behind the scenes on software for high-speed communications networks that extend from land to space.

...
Read more

There’s a plan for Google’s failed balloon-based internet, and it involves lasers

The Verge
,
September 12, 2022

Alphabet’s Loon project, which aimed to provide internet via a series of balloons, was shut down last year — but the tech associated with it has been spun off into a startup

...
Read more

"Into the ‘outernet’: Secure ‘internet in space’ key to future Space Force hybrid architecture"

Breaking Defense
,
July 14, 2022

The Defense Innovation Unit's (DIU's) Hybrid Space Architecture (HSA) program seeks to provide global, ubiquitous, and secure internet connectivity throughout the space domain for commercial, civil, and military users, including international allies and partners

...
Read more

"Initial contracts for Hybrid Space Architecture Program"

Defense Innovation Unit
,
July 7, 2022

The Pentagon has taken the first steps toward a future “hybrid space architecture” comprising military and commercial satellites in multiple orbits, moving to design a foundational cyber-protected network integration capability — i.e., a hack-proof (or close to it anyway) “internet in space,” officials say

...
Read more