Sunday, July 09, 2023

US drone strike kills an Islamic State group leader in Syria, Defense Department says

It was not immediately clear how the U.S. military confirmed that the person killed was al-Muhajir; no other details were provided. 
  • A U.S. drone strike killed an Islamic State group leader in Syria hours after the same MQ-9 Reaper drones were harassed by Russian military jets over the western part of the country, according to the Defense Department.

Three Reapers had been flying overhead searching for the militant on Friday, a U.S. defense official said, when they were harassed for about two hours by Russian aircraft. Shortly after that, the drones struck and killed Usamah al-Muhajir, who was riding a motorcycle in the Aleppo region, said the official, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity to describe details of the military operation.

The official said al-Muhajir was in northwest Syria at the time of the strike, but that he usually operated in the east.

  • Rear Adm. Oleg Gurinov, head of the Russian Reconciliation Center for Syria, said this past week that the Russian and Syrian militaries had started a six-day joint training that ends Monday.
Gurinov added in comments carried by Syrian state media that Moscow was concerned about the flights of drones by the U.S.-led coalition over northern Syria, calling them “systematic violations of protocols” designed to avoid clashes between the two militaries.

U.S. drone strike kills ISIS group leader in northwest Syria, defense official says 



 

WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. drone strike killed an Islamic State group leader in Syria hours after the same MQ-9 Reaper drones were harassed by Russian military jets over the western part of the country, according to the Defense Department.
Three Reapers had been flying overhead searching for the militant on Friday, a U.S. defense official said, when they were harassed for about two hours by Russian aircraft. Shortly after that, the drones struck and killed Usamah al-Muhajir, who was riding a motorcycle in the Aleppo region, said the official, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity to describe details of the military operation.
The official said al-Muhajir was in northwest Syria at the time of the strike, but that he usually operated in the east.
It was not immediately clear how the U.S. military confirmed that the person killed was al-Muhajir; no other details were provided.
  • In a statement Sunday, U.S. Central Command said there are no indications any civilians were killed in the strike. The military was assessing reports a civilian may have been injured.
WATCH: How negligence, systemic issues lead to civilian casualties from U.S. airstrikes
 On Thursday, the U.S. military said Russian fighter aircraft flew “incredibly unsafe and unprofessionally” against both French and U.S. aircraft over Syria.
Col. Michael Andrews, Air Forces Central Command spokesman, said the Thursday incident lasted almost an hour and included close fly-bys, by one SU-34 and one SU-35 and that they deployed flares directly into the MQ-9.
U.S. officials said the drones were unarmed in the earlier flights, but were carrying weapons on Friday, as they were hunting al-Muhajir.

Rear Adm. Oleg Gurinov, head of the Russian Reconciliation Center for Syria, said this past week that the Russian and Syrian militaries had started a six-day joint training that ends Monday.
Gurinov added in comments carried by Syrian state media that Moscow was concerned about the flights of drones by the U.S.-led coalition over northern Syria, calling them “systematic violations of protocols” designed to avoid clashes between the two militaries." 




U.S. drone strike kills Islamic State leader in Syria, Defense Department says

It was not immediately clear how the U.S. military confirmed that the person killed was Usamah al-Muhajir.

Russian military SU-34 and SU-35 aircraft release flares in the flight path of a U.S. Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone.

Annual Bond Exemption Expires Soon | ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE

 

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Annual Bond Exemption Expires Soon

Phoenix, AZ—In the spirit of continuous improvement, the Arizona Department of Revenue would like to inform construction contractors that the Annual Bond Exemption program began its run on July 1, and expires on July 31. In 2018, the Arizona Department of Revenue stopped issuing paper Annual Bond Exemption Certificates to in-state contractors in good standing. Instead, the Department provides an electronic listing of qualified exempt contractors to each city and town on August 1.  

An Annual Bond Exemption provides documentation for city building authorities that contractors have met the bonding requirements under A.R.S. 42-5007 for modification projects valued at $50,000 or more. The qualifications for the Annual Bond Exemption List are the following:

  1. The start date of the transaction privilege license must be at least one year before the current date.
  2. Cannot have more than two delinquencies in the past 12 consecutive months.

  3. No more than $500 in tax liabilities are currently due.

  4. The mailing or physical address must be an Arizona address.

  5. A minimum of $10 was paid in tax liability for the past 12 consecutive months.

To avoid being disqualified from the Annual Bond Exemption List, it is highly recommended that you file and pay your June period at the same time. 

If you have any questions regarding bond exemptions, please reference Publication 539 Taxpayer Bonds or visit our Bond for Contractors page. 

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Hegel against the machines The philosopher’s ideas on intelligence have staggering implications for the future of AI | The New Statesman

In the summer of 2022 Blake Lemoine, an engineer, posted to Medium a transcript of his conversation with LaMDA, a chatbot in development that Google had hired him to troubleshoot. 
  • Lemoine’s post made headlines because of its incredible claims: the engineer declared LaMDA “sentient” and even suggested that it had a “soul”. 
  • At the time Lemoine’s assertions were met with incredulity and disbelief, but several months later, following the public unveiling of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Lemoine’s pronouncements no longer seemed so wild. . ."

The New Statesman

We can’t produce artificial intelligence without also 

producing artificial life.

Have we finally built a machine that can think? That’s the question Jensen Suther asks in this fascinating essay, which takes in the latest developments in AI and complements them with a healthy dose of Hegel. WL

The history of philosophy throws up a potential roadblock on the much-trumpeted march of AI towards human-like intellect. 
Such challenges are nothing new; in 1972 Hubert Dreyfus published What Computers Can’t Do, a landmark book that drew on Wittgenstein and Heidegger to show that AI research at the time misunderstood what intelligence is.
But another improbable protagonist – the 19th-century German philosopher GWF Hegel – goes beyond these attempts, despite having lived and died over 100 years earlier. Hegel developed an explosive account of the relationship between life and mind that overcomes the limitations of Dreyfus’s “critique of artificial reason” and furnishes a new yardstick against which any purported AI must be measured.

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Phoenix Forecast | Today's AQI | USG - Ozone HPA

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Under the Environmental Quality Act of 1986, the Arizona State Legislature established the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality in 1987 as the state agency for protecting and enhancing public health and the environment of Arizon

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The view is looking east from downtown Mesa with the community of Apache Junction between the camera and the mountain vista.

Air Quality By Pollutant:

Pollutant
Sunday
7/9/2023
Monday
7/10/2023
Tuesday
7/11/2023
Wednesday
7/12/2023
Thursday
7/13/2023
O3
101
105
93
93
90
PM10
34
55
58
56
56
PM2.5
33
37
35
37
38
O3 = Ozone, PM10 = Particles ≤ 10 microns, PM2.5 = Particles ≤ 2.5 microns

Notice:
The Maricopa County Air Quality Department has issued a No Burn Day for today, 7/9/2023. Full Details >

Forecast Discussion:

The past couple days, ozone has continued to be the primary pollutant of concern. On Friday, several monitors in the Phoenix area exceeded the federal health standard. While on Saturday, it was just one monitor near downtown Phoenix. Looking ahead, similarly calm and sunny conditions today and tomorrow will bring potential for ozone to continue reaching the Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups AQI category. Therefore, there are Ozone High Pollution Advisories in effect for Sunday and Monday.

Beginning Tuesday, we are forecast afternoon winds to become a little more persistent out of the west, which we are forecasting to provide just enough ventilation to lower ozone into the upper Moderate AQI range. As for particulates, we are forecasting PM10 to reach the low Moderates during the workweek. This is due to elevated concentrations during the calm, morning hours with increased dust-generating work activities. As for PM2.5, we don't anticipate any significant issues. PM2.5 is forecast to stay in the Good AQI range through the forecast period.

- R. Nicoll



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Russia intercepts British-French Storm Shadow Missile 66,787 views Jul 9, 2023