Society's Child
Announced on Wednesday, the new feature activates when a user says, "Alexa, donate to [candidate name]." Candidates signed up to the program will be able to receive donations of up to $200, starting next month, according to Amazon's blog.
Though Alexa users can already donate to charity through their monitoring device - sorry, "virtual assistant" - the new foray into campaign financing is slightly more controversial. Some Twitter commenters joked that the devices might strategically "mishear" requests to donate to President Donald Trump's re-election campaign.

Baltimore defense attorney Kenneth Ravenell is facing federal charges of racketeering conspiracy, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and narcotics conspiracy.
According to the indictment, Ravenell violated the "legitimate and lawful purpose of the law firm where he worked," in order to enrich himself and another by getting payments from a drug trafficker client and his associates in exchange for telling the client and his associates how to evade law enforcement and continue their trafficking.
Ravenell allegedly would protect and assist co-conspirators by "coaching" them about ways to avoid the law and evade law enforcement while trafficking narcotics.
The offer is part of the company's broader computing strategy, which includes investing in basic research around its products to support new technology such as artificial intelligence. The firm also said it will make its hardware and software more readily available to its customers and partners.
Huawei announced its developer program four years ago. The company says it has supported more than 1.3 million developers since then, as well as 14,000 independent software vendors around the world.
Citing a reactionary "cycle of panic and neglect" in which health emergencies are dealt with as they arise, rather than before they start, the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board - an entity formed last year by the World Bank and the World Health Organization - has called for immediate and massive investment in emergency preparedness systems in its first-ever report, titled "A World At Risk."
"The world is not prepared for a fast-moving, virulent respiratory pathogen pandemic," the report, posted on Tuesday, warns, claiming that such a crisis would kill off 50 to 80 million people - 2.8 percent of the population - ravage the global economy and trade, and "destabilize national security." Countries must "be prepared for the worst," if they want to avoid getting crushed by the next pandemic.
The other six "urgent actions" governments are advised to take mostly consist of throwing money at the problem, according to the report. "Heads of government must commit and invest," "countries and regional organizations must lead by example" (so that reluctant and/or poor countries are persuaded to commit and invest), "all countries must build strong systems" with those investments, "financial institutions must link preparedness with financial risk planning" i.e. budget for spending lots of money on preparedness, "development assistance funders must create incentives and increase funding for preparedness," and "the UN must strengthen coordination mechanisms" so the money gets to the right place.
Comment: While this could be an example of fearmongering to encourage the passing of even more stringent vaccine legislation, one might wonder if there is something more sinister to these warnings:
- Blast & fire hits major virus lab in Russia, where HIV, Ebola & anthrax strains are stored
- Biowarfare, Nazi scientists and the creation of Lyme Disease in the US
- Congress investigating possible secret 'bioweaponization' of insects by the Pentagon
The first example that I would like to discuss is something that came out in court on Thursday...
The CEO of StemExpress essentially admitted in court Thursday that her biotech company supplies beating fetal hearts and intact fetal heads to medical researchers.This is Nazi-level evil, and it is happening all across the United States every single day.
She also admitted at the preliminary hearing of David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt of the Center for Medical Progress that the baby's head could be procured attached to the baby's body or "could be torn away."
Of course the mainstream media is completely avoiding this story, because they fully approve of what is happening and they don't want to cause any sort of an uproar. And most "conservative" media outlets are avoiding this story as well, because the truth is that they aren't actually very "conservative" at all.
Companies such as StemExpress are making a tremendous amount of money selling baby body parts to medical researchers, and the "research" that is being conducted is incredibly sick and disgusting.
Comment: Watch the full Watson video:

Protestors run past a fire during clashes with riot police in Hong Kong on Sunday, September 15. Hong Kong riot police fired tear gas and water cannon at hardcore pro-democracy protesters who were hurling rocks and petrol bombs on September 15, tipping the violence-plagued city back into chaos after a brief lull in clashes.
What's going on deep down in Hong Kong? For a former resident with deep cultural and emotional ties to the Fragrant Harbor, it's quite hard to take it all in just within the framework of cold geopolitical logic. Master filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai once said that when he came up with the idea for Happy Together, he decided to shoot the story of his characters in Buenos Aires because that was as far away from Hong Kong as possible.
A few weeks ago I was walking the streets of far away Buenos Aires dreaming of Hong Kong. That Hong Kong that Wong Kar-Wai refers to in his masterpiece no longer exists. Unfortunately deprived of Christopher Doyle's mesmerizing visuals, I ended up coming back to Hong Kong to find, eventually, that the city I knew also no longer exists.
"Watching Bernie pander to different groups to get their vote has always disgusted me, but now it's personal," Crenshaw tweeted. "I didn't go to war so that you would take care of me, Bernie. I went because I wanted to serve and our country needed it."
This "look at me, I'm a veteran" song and dance is par for course with Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL who lost an eye to an improvised explosive device on his third deployment in America's evil and unjustifiable Afghanistan occupation. When Crenshaw says "I went because I wanted to serve and our country needed it," he is being delusional, and feeding into his delusion allows him to continue dominating public discourse with obnoxiously propagandistic takes like the notion that the US should continue its forever war without even so much as ensuring that it can take care of the people whose lives are chewed up and spat out by the imperial war machine.
After decades of unsuccessful searching, police believe they have finally made a breakthrough in the infamous "Hwaseong murders" case, announcing that the prime suspect is a man in his 50s who is currently serving a prison sentence for another rape and murder, the Yonhap news agency reports.
"The BRICS countries' economy today accounts for a third of the global economy. According to our conservative estimates, by 2030 our economies will make up more than half of the entire world economy," Siluanov said at the BRICS International Competition Conference in Moscow on Wednesday.
Members of the alliance continue to work on eliminating trade barriers between them and can set an example for other counties, the minister added.
BRIC was established in 2006 by Brazil, Russia, India and China, before South Africa joined the bloc in 2010, adding the "S" to the acronym. As of 2018, combined nominal GDP of these five emerging economies amounted to $18.6 trillion.
In line with efforts to boost trade, members are working on the integration of payment systems, increasing payments in national currencies, as well as the establishment of an independent channel on information exchange. It was earlier reported that BRICS states are set to create a new joint payment system called BRICS Pay that will be similar to existing Apple Pay and Samsung Pay services.
"Cooperation in terms of developing the use of our national currencies in international settlements seems very promising," Russian President Vladimir Putin said in June as he met BRICS leaders ahead of the G20 summit.
Comment: As the unipolar hegemon crumbles, the multipolar world is rising. The West can try to stop it, but it doesn't look like they'll succeed.
This was, in the 1990s, the thing to be in history departments across North America. Gender history — and then gender studies, more generally, across the academy — was part of a broader group of identity-based sub-disciplines that were taking over the liberal arts. History departments across the continent were transformed. When the American Historical Association surveyed the trends among major fields of specialization in 2007, and then again in 2015, the single largest field was women's and gender history. This was right up there with social history, cultural history, and the history of race and sexuality. Each of these fields shared the same worldview as I did — that just about every identity was a social construction. And, that identity was all about power.
Comment: Mr. Dummitt is courageous in admitting his part in the current societal disaster, but the fallout is everywhere. Will Dummitt continue to raise his voice against the poisonous ideology he helped spread?
- The Truth Perspective: Explaining Postmodernism - Interview with Stephen Hicks
- Canadian professor: Ideological authoritarianism, assault on pursuit of truth have caused universities to lose their way
- University of Minnesota planning policy to fire or expel those who don't use 'preferred pronouns'
- Use gender-sensitive language or lose marks, university students told
- More gender pronoun craziness: Associated Press issues guidelines to 'avoid' referring to 'both' or 'either' sexes
- The Health & Wellness Show: The medical and social implications of gender multiplicity













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