Monday, September 10, 2018

Black Leader? I'm glad leaders are for those that need to be led

Al Sharpton sued for $1.75m over claims he swindled trucker who asked for help with discrimination case out of $16,000



  • Reggie Anders Sr. is suing the outspoken preacher for $1.75 in damages
  • He claims Sharpton took $16,000 to help him with his discrimination dispute with Verizon
  • But Anders says the reverend's promises to promote the case in the media and arrange mediation meetings were never carried out
  • He was later shocked to read allegations by the New York Post that Sharpton received thousands in donations from Verizon
  • When confronted, Sharpton said he has 'no idea' who Anders was
Civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton has been accused of swindling an Arizona trucker out of $16,000 after he agreed to take on his discrimination case, according to a lawsuit.
Reggie Anders Sr. is suing the outspoken preacher after he claims Sharpton took no action in his discrimination dispute with Verizon, the New York Post reports.
Anders claims that he agreed to pay Sharpton $16,000 - in cash - in exchange for him publicizing the dispute in the media and on his weekly radio broadcast, as well as setting up mediation meetings with the communications giant.
It was only later he read a report in the New York Post claiming that the preacher, and his National Action Network (NAN), received thousands of dollars in donations from Verizon and other large corporations in what the newspaper alleged what 'protection money'. 
Firms that didn't pay up were threatened with bad press or boycotts, it reported last year.
'He's a crook, he's a fraud, and that's all he is,'Anders told the Post. 'He didn't do anything he promised. Absolutely nothing.' 
Anders says that when he called Sharpton to confront him about his lack of action, and links with Verizon, that the civil rights leaders was furious.
'He said people write stuff about him all the time,' Anders said. 'Then for a year and a half he strung
Representatives for Sharpton deny the claims which they have branded 'untrue and frivolous'. 
Anders was advised to get in touch with Sharpton last year by his own minister, the Rev. David Wade of Phoenix, when his 2009 case against Verizon - who he claims were in breach of contract and discriminated against him - after his suit was thrown out in 2014.
 You'll have to finish this one on your own, my boat is starting to smell funny and my craptop has some brown stuff coming out of it.


Hurricane Florence Will Hit East Coast as a 'Very Scary' Major Storm This Week


*People often tease "preppers" yet they're never teasing in these situations. I was tempted to say something about your president, I'm human and have my ignorant moments.

The Southeastern United States is bracing for Hurricane Florence.
The hurricane’s center is expected to affect Bermuda and the Bahamas on Tuesday and Wednesday, and to hit North Carolina on Thursday, USA Todayreported.
North CarolinaSouth Carolina and Virginia have all declared states of emergency, AccuWeather reported.
On Monday, the Weather Channel tweeted, “#Hurricane #Florence is rapidly intensifying. Now with 105 mph maximum sustained winds. Expected to become a Cat. 3 hurricane today.”
The coast could receive water as high as 15 feet, and inland areas could see up to 20 inches of rainfall, according to CNN’s Chad Myers.



How to Deal with an Alcoholic

 *Personally I simply leave them alone, people don't stop drinking and or getting high until "they" want to. *I can't bring myself to care about a person "more" than they care about themselves.


Learning how to deal with an alcoholic is something no one is taught in school. Dealing with an alcoholic isn't even something people think about until they find themselves caring about, or living with, an alcoholic. But alcoholism is a chronic disease that left untreated, will continue to hurt the alcoholic and those around them and learning how to deal with an alcoholic can improve the alcoholic's chance for successful recovery.

How to Deal with an Alcoholic - Stop Alcoholic Denial

Denial is a term used to indicate the unwillingness or inability of a person to admit to some truth, in this case alcoholism. For example, an alcohol addictmay vehemently disagree with concerns of those living with the alcoholic that he is drinking too much, in spite of the fact that he has been charged with driving under the influence of alcohol three times in one month.
But denial is not just something seen in the alcoholic, denial is also common in those living with an alcoholic.
One of the reasons alcoholics continue to function while drinking and stay in denial is because the family and friends refuse to admit to dealing with an alcoholic. Because there is stigma attached to the term "alcoholic," loved ones want to deny that they are living with an alcoholic. However, admitting to a problem is the only way to start dealing with an alcoholic.

Ways to Remove the Denial Around Living with an Alcoholic:

  • Admit that you are living with an alcoholic and that it is a problem.
  • Clearly look at the behaviors, emotions and physical symptoms of the alcoholic. Admit that they are due to alcoholism and not another ailment.
  • Do not deny the destructive actions of the alcoholic.
  • Shed the guilt and shame associated with living with an alcoholic - the alcoholic's disease and actions are not your fault.
  • Do not get rid of the alcohol and pretend it wasn't there.
  • Understand there is nothing you can do to stop alcoholic behaviors - alcoholism is a disease and not a character flaw or poor judgment on the part of the alcoholic.

How to Deal with an Alcoholic - Admit to the Effects of Living with an Alcoholic

A huge amount of harm comes from living with an alcoholic. Refusing to deny the alcoholism also means admitting to the effects that living with an alcoholic, or caring for an alcoholic, has on you and your family. Dealing with an alcoholic also means dealing with alcoholism's effects in an honest way.
How to deal with the effects of living with (or caring for) an alcoholic:
  • Admit that living with an alcoholic is hurting you and your family.
  • Acknowledge the effects alcoholism is having on the alcoholic and those around them.
  • Talk about how you feel about the alcoholic's behaviors. Allow others to do the same.
  • Be honest about your feelings with respect and do not threaten, bribe or make overly emotional appeals which may increase the alcoholic's guilt.

How to Deal with an Alcoholic - Stop Enabling the Alcoholic

The term "enabling" is used to refer to any action used in support of the alcoholic's behavior. Dealing with an alcoholic may seem impossible when the alcoholic denies there is a problem and it may seem easier to just give the alcoholic what they need to go on with the day, but enabling will never stop alcoholic behaviors. The alcoholic must make their own choices and face the consequences of those choices without the help of those living with the alcoholic.
Dealing with an alcoholic by not enabling the alcoholic in the following ways:
  • Do not make excuses for the alcoholic.
  • Do not take over the responsibilities of the alcoholic.
  • Do not cover up the actions, or the consequences of the actions, of the alcoholic.
  • Do not supply the alcoholic with alcohol.
  • Do not drink with the alcoholic.
  • Do not argue with the alcoholic when he is intoxicated.
  • Do not allow the alcoholic to pull people into his drama. For example, if the alcoholic is arrested for drinking and driving, do not try to get him out of it. The alcoholic created the problem and the alcoholic has to find a solution.

How to Deal with an Alcoholic - Get Help for Yourself and Those Living with an Alcoholic

There are many families living with an alcoholic who refuses help. In these cases, it's useful for the family members to seek their own help when dealing with an alcoholic.
People who can help those living with an alcoholic include:
  • Therapists
  • Social workers
  • Support groups, like Al-Anon or Alateen
  • Trusted friends or members of a faith community

Do you wish to get rid of your old electronics

 Let me give you a little warning, you won't be getting what your device or electronic is worth but it is an alternative if you're in a pinch.


America’s Collective Normalcy Bias


“The reason why the totalitarian regimes can get so far toward realizing a fictitious, topsy-turvy world is that the outside nontotalitarian world, which always comprises a great part of the population of the totalitarian country itself, indulges also in wishful thinking and shirks reality in the face of real insanity just as much as the masses do in the face of the normal world.”
– Hannah Arendt, 1951

We are a nation of Godwin’s Law (or at least some distorted version of it). Any time someone invokes an analogy to Nazi Germany, no matter how educated the person or how salient the similarities, we collectively and summarily dismiss the argument. The analogy always strikes as a form of intellectual and rhetorical laziness. It is viewed as a fear tactic, and thus anyone who proposes it, at best, need not be taken seriously or, at worst, is a hyper-partisan crackpot. Surely it can’t happen here.

The dismissal is itself lazy. People who invoke the analogy are not actually arguing that the systematic execution of Jewish people in camps is on America’s political horizon. Rather, most are warning us about more abstract similarities. Those similarities are worth considering carefully since, as the analogy suggests, something abstract and implausible can lead to concrete atrocities. And when they do, people wonder how it happened and search for a definitive point at which their world crossed over from demagogic threats to real horror. Was there a single moment of moral choice in which one of the options was pure moral depravity? What we learn from Nazi Germany is that there is no definitive point. There were people sounding the alarm from the beginning. Unfortunately they were viewed as hyper-partisan crackpots.



The dismissal is also a ‘hasty generalization’: it draws a broad conclusion from an insufficient set of evidence. There are plenty of weak Hitler analogies. They are easy to parody in conversation (“ya know, the Nazis had pieces of flare that they made the jews wear.”). But it is gross illogic to leap from the weak analogies in conversation to the conclusion that we can dismiss all Nazi Germany analogies. If an American politician proposed making America Judenrein, wouldn’t Hitler analogies be an acceptable part of our condemnation of this person?


Why do we dismiss the analogies? The answer perhaps has to do with some form of pride. We as a nation are too good to fall into such evil. America would never kill large numbers of innocent people on the basis of race or religion! Those actions are relegated to the barbaric ancient times of the 1940s. Or the pride might be personal. I myself am too good and reflective. Surely I wouldn’t stand by and watch (let alone participate) in killing or harming innocent people. For instance, I would never be a slave owner, a segregationist, or someone contributing to mass incarceration! Hannah Arendt suggested that personal confidence in one’s probity is usually never tested in ways that could lead to the type of condemnation we give the Nazis. We are simply lucky not to be given historically significant moral choices. We know from history that when faced with those choices, many normal and decent people fail. We might well be facing those choices now. Time will tell. But while we wait for history to judge us, perhaps we can fill our time with some honest moral self-reflection.

Another way to explain the dismissal of the analogies is through a common cognitive failure: the normalcy bias. We underestimate the possibility of disaster, especially when the disaster is unprecedented. The normalcy bias comes through in our “normalizing.” If you suggest that America qua stable democracy is facing an existential crisis, you immediately place yourself on the crackpot fringes. Keith Olbermann, who is consciously trying to overcome normalcy bias in “The Resistance” video series, is being placed in the looney bin. If something has never happened before, we wrongly assume that it will not happen. When it does happen, we contort it into something normal. We normalize it by explaining it retroactively, by making it an effect of a familiar cause, a past that, in hindsight, holds still long enough for us to conjure up a rationalization of how we got here from there.


We do not do it intentionally or consciously. Even when we recognize that we have done it, we continue to do it. The future will be like the past. The sun will rise tomorrow because the sun has risen every day so far. If I predict that the sun will not rise at a certain point in the future, even if I have fairly compelling evidence, the initial epistemic urge is to dismiss me. We trust that urge (and label it ‘conventional wisdom’) within the realm of politics. If a US president has never become an authoritarian in the past, then it will not happen in the future. Q.E.D.

When we state it explicitly we see how absurd it is. The normalcy bias was on display all throughout the campaign.

“Trump won’t be taken seriously as a candidate.”
“There is no way Trump will win a primary state.”
“He couldn’t possibly win the nomination.”
“He couldn’t win the general election.”

Why did so many people say these things? Typically they had no reason other than the fact that something like it had never happened before. They knew on some rational level that it was possible, but that possibility was not reflected in their thinking, speaking, and writing. The past was meant to be a good guide to the future. The sun always rises.

There is another possible psychological explanation: perhaps people discounted the possibility of Trump’s rise because the potential reality of an avowed pussy-grabber becoming president was so disturbing that they could not countenance the thought. They assigned it a lower probability as a defense mechanism. But again, we have a responsibility—if at least to ourselves alone—not to believe what soothes our sensibilities or aligns with our preferences. It is more comforting to believe that the sun will rise, and so we have a temptation to ignore evidence to the contrary. Wishful thinking is dangerous, especially in the realm of politics, where it is people fighting to prevent the worst from happening that prevents the worst from happening.

It is time to start thinking clearly and honestly. Our inductive inferences need to be based on a broader conception of the past, one that includes atrocities and pogroms, even if our pride tells us to ignore them.    

We have opportunities to improve each day. What are the new predictions?

          “Trump cannot severely undermine American democracy.”
          “Trump will not transform America into a Russia or the Philippines.”
          “Trump will not start a devastating war through his stunning ineptitude.
          “Trump will allow the 2020 election to take place.”

Surely he will, right? But we must ask ourselves why we believe it. When we reflect honestly we find no good answer. We find assumptions that American traditions hold with unbreakable strength. Traditions, we must ask, like not insulting respected war heroes? Like not mocking a reporter with a disability? Like releasing any tax returns? Like not admitting to and bragging about sexual assault? Like not saying that a sexual assault accuser is not attractive enough for him to assault? Traditions and customs like a respect for facts and reality, respect for national intelligence agencies, respect for the democratic process, and respect for the press have been attacked and undermined by a man who is now the most powerful person in the world.

We must stop basing predictions on these traditions. They are comforting and it is nice to believe that they are ironclad. But they have been slipping away. What justification do we have to think that our most cherished traditions will remain? our most cherished institutions? democracy itself? Our answers, so far, are rooted in cognitive biases.


We should adopt a precautionary principle:

Since Trump’s presidency may lead to unacceptable and unprecedented damage that is plausible but uncertain, actions should be taken to avoid or diminish that harm.

In other words, where there are threats of serious and unprecedented damage, lack of conclusive reasons to think Trump will not cause such damage should itself be a reason to fight to prevent the damage. (My phrasing is parallel to the UN’s Rio Declaration.) If the reasons are not forthcoming, we must take the abnormal and destructive possibilities very seriously. We cannot continue to close our eyes and hope for the best. We cannot wait for the damage before acting. Do we have good reason to think that Trump will allow the 2020 election to take place? The answer is no. In fact, everything is in perfect position for him to stand behind the presidential podium and say, “We must postpone the election until we can figure out what the hell is going on.” So we must fight adamantly to ensure that our tradition of regular and binding elections stays in place. Important American institutions, as we have seen, survive largely through convention and the respect leaders have for convention. In the absence of that respect, we have no reason to believe that the institutions will survive. The principle tells us to be proactive, even if it makes us look like crackpots.

I realize that many people can't be as clinical as myself

 As I walk my path of life and someone shares information I take it into account "lightly" because in most instances I can't search for at "least" two more sources to quantify the statement(s).
Even as I sit at my craptop and have access to three sources, the information still has to be taken lightly. People were incorrect about the earth being flat, the sun orbiting the earth that iron couldn't float and a trillion more misconceptions.


 Listening, reading, gathering information and discerning the truth "for yourself" is a delicate art.
With no priori experience an individual would be wise to consider the source, consider hidden agendas, consider the mental aptitude of the speaker or writer, consider information loss, consider the speaker's take on life or his/her spin, I even have to consider my ability to grasp what has been shared. This doesn't even take into account that the speaker/writer believes vehemently in something completely false.
 "Hearing" and "listening" are only relative, not sequential. I.e. A monkey hears you yet that doesn't in any way prove that he can discern what you just said. Repetition of a command to evoke a specific response has nothing to do with cognitive listening. I would wager money that you speak to monkeys every day.
 To top this menagerie off, we inadvertently become monkeys attempting to respond intelligently to some monkey shit.
 This is only a 5 minute dive into the subject of "listening" and or reading, do you feel mislead at times? You may wish to adjust your listening settings?

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Nations that build weapons to destroy America are idiots

 I see my analytics and if you really really want to destroy America, this is how you do it!

No, not these.

THESE!









 Countries borrowing all that money from the World Bank for weapons when they could make everything above this statement "free of charge" and we'd kill ourselves for you.

Ms. America 2019'

 Have you seen this? There will be no more swimsuit competition, ok. And now there will be no more evening gown competition, you do realize where this is headed?

From This

To This

I'm not from Cali but ok.

And

From This

To This

Fast Forward 10 Years

From This

To This

 Gosh damn, chuckles. I'm glad I'm closer to the end of life than the beginning!

I apologize, thanks for bringing the "phone" format to my attention.

 This should make "Sys Nica" more phone friendly. I have never used a phone to view websites or blogs.


At times I just slam cultures from all over the world on one plate

 We have southern American 3 hour slow cooked giblets in a Jamaican Jerk/Asian sweet & sour sauce, with a highly cilantro'd/balsamic thickened salad dressing, topped off with a much lighter version of GA. hot water bread, Fusion!


 Once you've mastered base as opposed to acidic, there's nothing that can't be created.

What's the number one thing that gets Americans killed overseas

 I could care less what your State Department says!



 Are you ready? It's Arrogance!

 With 11 countries under my belt, I've seen it all! From the way a person approaches the claims area to retrieve their bags to the way they hail for a cab, Sheesh! I've witnessed men with their "children" step out on to the roadway in front of Costa Rican taxi drivers and I'm thinking, "Oh shit".

 I'm not trying to single you out but "Whaite folks", you've got it really bad! From throwing temper tantrums at waiters to walking up to people in Cambodia asking, "Where can I find teen hookers". (It's one of the hidden facts that a sizable number of European and American men go to Cambodia for little girls)

 The next few things, spawned through arrogance, that will end your life rather quickly?

 - Wearing expensive jewelry *including wearing designer logoed clothing plus having fancy                luggage.

 - Messing with the local women.

 - Searching for drugs, any damned kind.

 - Getting drunk and talking shit.

 - And borrowing money and or drugs.

 I'm heading back overseas for a little weekend getaway in the heart of Mexico's current "hot spot".
I'll exit the plane in some old boots, my camo shorts with old matching hat, a dollar store prepaid phone (I have to switch it out anyways or at least the SIM), a DG backpack with an old army duffle bag.
 As far as money, old NYC trick, put a wad of singles in a front pocket, larger notes in my back pockets. When they come at you with a machete LOL Most can't afford guns or bullets, throw the wad of singles on the ground and run, pretend to run, run. They'll be busy. 
Money belts and crap are now recognized, get a Fidelity Check Card (Easy to stop payments and replace)and that will be about it.

Socrates was guilty as charged and *I never knew

 While beginning to read Plato's "Apology", "The Death of Socrates" I simply stumbled upon this information. I'm glad I know nothing...


One of the most famous trials in history has been misrepresented as a miscarriage of justice, when it was really a legitimate case of democracy in action, a controversial new study claims.

Ever since it occurred in 399BC, the trial of the Athenian philosopher Socrates has been portrayed as a travesty in which the founding father of Western thought was made to face trumped-up charges invented by his ignorant and prejudiced fellow-citizens.
He was found guilty of “impiety” and “corrupting the young”, sentenced to death, and then required to carry out his own execution by consuming a deadly potion of the poisonous plant hemlock.
Politicians and historians have often used the trial to show how democracy can go rotten by descending into mob rule. Athens, it is argued, rid itself of one of its greatest thinkers because he was a perceived threat to the political status quo.
But in a new study launched today (Monday, June 8th), Cambridge University classicist Professor Paul Cartledge claims that, rather than being a farce, Socrates’ trial was legally just and that he was guilty as charged. Instead of being a warning from history, he argues, it is an example of just how different Ancient Greek politics often were.
“Everyone knows that the Greeks invented democracy, but it was not democracy as we know it, and we have misread history as a result,” Professor Cartledge said. “The charges Socrates faced seem ridiculous to us, but in Ancient Athens they were genuinely felt to serve the communal good.”
The study appears in Professor Cartledge’s new book, Ancient Greek Political Thought In Practice, which examines Greek political thought in action from Homer to the time of Plutarch. In it, he questions traditional arguments that Socrates was purely the victim of political in-fighting.
Historians, influenced by ancient writers including Plato and Xenophon, have claimed that Socrates’ open criticism of prominent Athenian politicians had made him many enemies. By pinning charges of “impiety” and “corrupting the young” on him, they were able to remove a threat to their own power.
The corruption charge is seen as particularly important. Athens in 399BC had been hit by successive disasters – plague, internal political strife and a major military defeat by Sparta aided by Persian money. Claiming that Socrates’ teachings created political deviants made him a convenient scapegoat for some of these problems.
According to Professor Cartledge, however, Socrates was not just the unfortunate victim of a vicious political vendetta, but a scapegoat used for an altogether more spiritual bout of self-purging within a culture very different in kind from our own.
Rather than a made-up, token accusation, he argues that the “impiety” charge mattered. Ancient Greeks were, after all, instinctively religious people, who believed that their cities were protected by gods who needed to be appeased.
To many, it must have seemed as if these gods were far from happy after the years of disaster leading up to 399BC. Athenians probably genuinely felt that undesirables in their midst had offended Zeus and his fellow deities.
Socrates, an unconventional thinker who questioned the legitimacy and authority of many of the accepted gods, fitted that bill. Worse, he claimed to be guided by his inner daimonon – a term which he may have intended to mean “intuition”, but which could also be interpreted as a dark, supernatural influence inaccessible to conventional believers and practitioners.
And crucially, Professor Cartledge argues that these charges were entirely acceptable in a democracy of the Athenian type. Unlike in modern democracies, he points out, accusations were brought by amateur prosecutors before a jury of 501 ordinary citizens of “good standing” who acted on behalf of what they took to be the public interest. If the prosecution could prove that a defendant was responsible for jeopardising the public good, he was likely to be found guilty.
With the gods clearly furious and more disasters perhaps just around the corner, a charge of impiety was not only appropriate, but clearly very much in the public interest. In other words, Socrates had behaved impiously, and was a victim of literally “awe-ful” times.
The study then argues that Socrates essentially invited his own death. Under the Athenian system, in this kind of trial a defendant could suggest his own penalty. Instead of taking this seriously, however, Socrates first joked that he should be rewarded, and eventually suggested a fine that was far too small.
Unsurprisingly, his jurors did not see the funny side and passed the death sentence by a greater majority than that by which he had been convicted. Instead of fleeing to save his skin, he accepted the verdict, claiming that “he owed it to the city under whose laws he had been raised to honour those laws to the letter.”
“There is no denying his bravery, and he could even be seen as an intellectual hero,” Professor Cartledge added. “But the idea that Socrates himself was not guilty, but executed by mob rule, is wrong. By removing him, society had in, Athenians’ eyes, been cleansed and reaffirmed.”
Ancient Greek Political Thought In Practice is published by Cambridge University Press. The book will be launched at the University of Cambridge’s Museum of Classical Archaeology this evening.


Your offer of a $10,000 donation is appreciated yet I have no way to justify it

 Thank you so much, "Ms. State of Nebraska" but currently I don't have anything in the works to justify such a large donation.



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 - You can share posts with your friends and family.

 - You can submit specific questions that you feel are important and deserve to be answered.

 - You can simply strive to be your own "free Spirit" and lead by example.

- You can email me and be brutally honest as to how you feel about posts.

 - You can develop your own plan of action and I'll research the idea, brainstorm various means and advise you on how to bring that plan of action into being.

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@Systems_Nica

 

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The Great Pacific Garbage Patch'(S) Are Extremely Disturbing

*Fish and other sea life consume small pieces of plastic and think that they are full going on to starve to death. You do realize no matter what country you're in, when the fish are gone so are we.


The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is the largest accumulation of ocean plastic in the world and is located between Hawaii and California. Scientists of The Ocean Cleanup have conducted the most extensive analysis ever of this area.

                                             Get Involved

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