WELCOME TO THE 21ST CENTURY: New Army Rifle Fires Laser-Guided Smart Bullets With Onboard Targeting⬦
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
WELCOME TO THE 21ST CENTURY: New Army Rifle Fires Laser-Guided Smart Bullets With Onboard Targeting Chips.
WELCOME TO THE 21ST CENTURY: New Army Rifle Fires Laser-Guided Smart Bullets With Onboard Targeting⬦
[Source: Good Times Society]
posted by tgazw @ 12:41 PM, ,
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING AND THE AMERICAN WORKER.
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What's the administration's specific aim in bailing out GM? I'll give you my theory later.
For now, though, some background. First and most broadly, it doesn't make sense for America to try to maintain or enlarge manufacturing as a portion of the economy. Even if the U.S. were to seal its borders and bar any manufactured goods from coming in from abroad -- something I don't recommend -- we'd still be losing manufacturing jobs. That's mainly because of technology.
When we think of manufacturing jobs, we tend to imagine old-time assembly lines populated by millions of blue-collar workers who had well-paying jobs with good benefits. But that picture no longer describes most manufacturing. I recently toured a U.S. factory containing two employees and 400 computerized robots. The two live people sat in front of computer screens and instructed the robots. In a few years this factory won't have a single employee on site, except for an occasional visiting technician who repairs and upgrades the robots.
Factory jobs are vanishing all over the world. Even China is losing them. The Chinese are doing more manufacturing than ever, but they're also becoming far more efficient at it. They've shuttered most of the old state-run factories. Their new factories are chock full of automated and computerized machines. As a result, they don't need as many manufacturing workers as before.
Economists at Alliance Capital Management took a look at employment trends in 20 large economies and found that between 1995 and 2002 -- before the asset bubble and subsequent bust -- 22 million manufacturing jobs disappeared. The U.S. wasn't even the biggest loser. We lost about 11 percent of our manufacturing jobs in that period, but the Japanese lost 16 percent of theirs. Even developing nations lost factory jobs: Brazil suffered a 20 percent decline, and China had a 15 percent drop.
What happened to manufacturing? In two words, higher productivity. As productivity rises, employment falls because fewer people are needed. In this, manufacturing is following the same trend as agriculture. A century ago, almost 30 percent of adult Americans worked on a farm. Nowadays, fewer than 5 percent do. That doesn't mean the U.S. failed at agriculture. Quite the opposite. American agriculture is a huge success story. America can generate far larger crops than a century ago with far fewer people. New technologies, more efficient machines, new methods of fertilizing, better systems of crop rotation, and efficiencies of large scale have all made farming much more productive.
Manufacturing is analogous. In America and elsewhere around the world, it's a success. Since 1995, even as manufacturing employment has dropped around the world, global industrial output has risen more than 30 percent.
More after the jump.
--Robert Reich
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING AND THE AMERICAN WORKER.
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING AND THE AMERICAN WORKER.
[Source: News Argus]
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING AND THE AMERICAN WORKER.
[Source: State News]
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING AND THE AMERICAN WORKER.
[Source: Chocolate News]
posted by tgazw @ 10:52 AM, ,
Not To Be That Guy
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by Jesse Taylor
But, pro-lifers, there may be something wrong with your movement when you have to send out press releases making clear that you don’t actually condone cold-blooded murder.
As Ezra and Ann Friedman point out, it is part and parcel of the activist anti-choice movement to proactively interfere with and intimidate people who are in the process of providing or seeking a medical procedure which is protected by law.
The question I’ve heard over and over again is whether or not the pro-life movement bears responsibility for the murder of George Tiller. It does. There is no other “mainstream” political movement in this country which keeps as a part of its bag of tricks the intent to frighten those in the midst of a legally protected activity.
Pro-gun control liberals don’t show up at gun shows and hector attendees. (And if your response is, “Damn right they don’t, because they’d get shot,” you’re proving my point.) Fundamentalists don’t have to worry about fleets of bike-riding hippies showing up at the entrance to their church every Sunday, telling them that their God is false. Religious “family planning” clinics don’t live in constant fear of a Molotov cocktail flying through their plate glass window, don’t have to train their employees on how to handle bomb threats, don’t need to worry about their clients’ safety on the way from their car to the front door. But if you provide abortion services - even if you’re not actually providing an abortion to the person coming in the door, even though it has been repeatedly declared legal - you live in fear.
This culture of fear was borne and is bred by the way the pro-life movement conducts itself. They certainly have every right to protest - and I mean that, and I truly believe that. But freedom of speech and freedom of assembly does not create freedom from responsibility for your conduct. A movement whose primary focus is intimidation through immediate and overwhelming physical proximity, coupled with hugely dishonest and inflammatory rhetoric cannot escape responsibility when it is embraced by an actor or actors who take that rhetoric to a logical, if extreme, end. By declaring that “abortion is murder” and premising a movement on preventing that “murder” in increasingly radical and ostentatious ways (while oftentimes failing to propose or advocate for the more logical and responsible methods of preventing the alleged “murders"), the pro-life movement has built up over decades an angry base stewing in its own feelings of oppression and righteousness. It’s the perfect environment to breed radicalism and violence.
This also puts into context the recent uproar over Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination. She has made a mission of bringing to light racial injustice, particularly as it relates to Hispanics. Her efforts are not designed to hold down white people, or designed to invalidate their experiences, but instead to bring to light the full range of experiences available in America. She is not a radical, she is not a racist, yet the same movement that is rushing out to make clear that they don’t want people to murder just because it might seem like they want people to murder is trying to tar her some sort of Latina conquistador, rampaging through our suburbs in order to take away our Constitutional right to white dudes in power. This same sort of decontextualized radical rhetoric is being used over and over again to stir up hatred and resentment so that Tony Blankley and Rush Limbaugh and Grover Norquist and the rest of their ilk can make millions off of this razor’s edge. People must be angry - angry enough to act, but not angry enough to lash out; hopeful for a “better” future, but unwilling to accept anything but the total domination of their enemies as a victory.
Lacking that, you’ll be able to make a pretty penny off of teaching every abortion provider in this country how to set up their speed dial for the bomb squad. Never let it be said that terrorism doesn’t stimulate the economy.
Not To Be That Guy
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Not To Be That Guy
[Source: La News]
Not To Be That Guy
[Source: China News]
Not To Be That Guy
[Source: Cbs News]
posted by tgazw @ 9:20 AM, ,
Mitt Romney loses debate with his own strawman
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Mitt Romney loses debate with his own strawman
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Mitt Romney loses debate with his own strawman
[Source: Online News]
Mitt Romney loses debate with his own strawman
[Source: Rome News]
Mitt Romney loses debate with his own strawman
[Source: Channel 6 News]
posted by tgazw @ 8:50 AM, ,
What Kind of Book Will Bob Woodward Write About Obama?
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What Kind of Book Will Bob Woodward Write About Obama?
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
What Kind of Book Will Bob Woodward Write About Obama?
[Source: Boston News]
What Kind of Book Will Bob Woodward Write About Obama?
[Source: Daily News]
What Kind of Book Will Bob Woodward Write About Obama?
[Source: News Weekly]
posted by tgazw @ 8:32 AM, ,
Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week
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The TV gold rush will start earlier this year. The 61st Primetime Emmy Awards has been rescheduled to Sunday, Sept. 13, a week earlier than the original date, CBS announced.
The move was made to accommodate ...
Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week
[Source: News Headlines]
Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week
[Source: Wb News]
Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week
[Source: Abc 7 News]
posted by tgazw @ 8:29 AM, ,
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
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Do you feel safer today? Let's hope so, since you're certainly less free to travel about the Northern Hemisphere. Beginning just after midnight, every American returning from Canada, Mexico, and various island paradises now have to flash a U.S. passport to get back in the country. For the 70 percent of citizens who don't have passports, that means a minimum four to six weeks waiting time (and probably more, given the new filing rush) to legally escape the national boundaries. Better hope you weren't birthed by a midwife and have a funny-sounding surname!
No one informed Betancourt that his American citizenship was in question before – not in all the presidential elections he's voted in, not when he served in the Marines and not when he first became an emergency medical technician a decade ago. His father, a U.S. citizen, also served in the Marines.
"It's like a slap in the face," Betancourt said. "It doesn't change the way I feel or act, but I'm trying to do something as American as apple pie and go on vacation, and it feels like I've got the rug pulled out from under me."
Well, at least our country's top political leaders are totally aware of this grimly important trade of liberty for security.
Bill Clinton and George W. Bush admitted yesterday they had no idea the U.S. was implementing a new rule Monday that would require Canadians and Americans to have passports to cross the border.
The former presidents were caught off guard during a 90-minute joint appearance in Toronto when moderator Frank McKenna, the former Canadian ambassador to the U.S., spoke about how Canadians feel slighted by the new rule.
"I'll be frank with you Frank, I don't know about the passport issue," Bush told the crowd of 6,000.
"I thought we were making good progress on using a driver's licence to cross the border. What happened to the E-Z card?"
Clinton said he'd only heard about the passport requirement a day earlier, adding that in all likelihood most Americans were completely unaware of it as well. [...]
"I promise you, you have got my attention with this, so I'm going back home I'll see if there is anything else I can do," he said to cheers from the audience.
Yet another indication that our previous two presidents would have been better off reading Reason.
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: Rome News]
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: Accident News]
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: October News]
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: News Headlines]
Seventy Percent of Americans Can't Leave the County
[Source: News Weekly]
posted by tgazw @ 6:43 AM, ,
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
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Over at NRO I have an article suggesting that the Tea Party movement adopt as its program what I am calling “Reagan’s Unfinished Agenda.”? In one sentence, it describes a way of going on offense, and getting out of the defensive crouch that is the dominant posture of conservatives at the moment.
… starting in 1987, Reagan offered a more comprehensive package he called the ?SEconomic Bill of Rights.? In addition to the balanced-budget and line-item veto amendments, Reagan proposed three additional amendments that would impose a federal spending limit, require a two-thirds vote of the House and Senate for any tax increases, and prohibit wage and price controls.
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: Santa Barbara News]
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: The Daily News]
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: Duluth News]
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: Daily News]
Brew for the Tea Parties: ??Reagan?"s Unfinished Agenda?"
[Source: China News]
posted by tgazw @ 4:11 AM, ,
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