Tag Archives: United States 1 2014/02/10 Scheduled Select Step away from the whitener? Step away from the whitener? Nativegrl77 ~ Political Action

Just Who’s Lazy


By 

A Timeline of Paul Ryan’s Latest Controversial Comments

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) has a history of attacking anti-poverty programs under the guise of helping the poor. His most recent budgets have gotten two-thirds of their cuts from programs helping low and moderate income Americans, while proposing lopsided tax cuts for millionaires. And in his recent report looking at poverty 50 years after Lyndon Johnson’s “War On Poverty,” he concluded that many aspects of the social safety net were “making it worse” (he tried to cite social science research when doing so, but that didn’t work out so well).

But yesterday, Ryan made controversial comments on Bill Bennett’s radio program that went beyond just policy programs — and have set off a flurry of activity since. We’ve put together a timeline of the events to get you up to speed.

Wednesday Morning:Paul Ryan Blames Poverty On Lazy ‘Inner City’ Men. On the Bill Bennett radio program, Ryan said, “We have got this tailspin of culture, in our inner cities in particular, of men not working and just generations of men not even thinking about working or learning the value and the culture of work, and so there is a real culture problem here that has to be dealt with.” He also cited Charles Murray, a conservative social scientist who believes African-Americans are, as a population, less intelligent than whites due to genetic differences.

Wednesday Afternoon:African-American Congresswoman Slams Paul Ryan For Racially Charged Comments. Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) of the Congressional Black Caucus released a statement condemning Ryan’s comments as “a thinly veiled racial attack [that] cannot be tolerated. Let’s be clear, when Mr. Ryan says ‘inner city,’ when he says, ‘culture,’ these are simply code words for what he really means: ‘black.’”

Wednesday Night:Ryan Defends Comments On Lazy ‘Inner City’ Men. Facing growing outrage over his comments that morning, Ryan told the blog Crew of 42, “This has nothing to do whatsoever with race. It never even occurred to me. This has nothing to do with race whatsoever.” He then changed the focus to poverty in “rural” areas.

Meanwhile…Social Media Set Ablaze Over Comments. By Thursday morning, the ThinkProgress post which first reported the comments had been shared on Facebook over 20,000 times and on Twitter over 2,000 times. Dozens of news articles had been written on it.

Thursday Morning:Paul Ryan Backpedals, But Doesn’t Apologize, For Comments About Lazy ‘Inner City’ Men. In a statement issued to ThinkProgress, Ryan said he regretted the comments and stressed that he did not intend to slander an entire community: “After reading the transcript of yesterday morning’s interview, it is clear that I was inarticulate about the point I was trying to make. I was not implicating the culture of one community—but of society as a whole.” Ryan’s office also confirmed that the Congressman reached out to Rep. Barbara Lee and the two spoke about the matter.

BOTTOM LINE: Everyone understands that people misspeak. But Paul Ryan’s comments raise more serious red flags. Ana Marie Cox at The Guardian sums it up as well as anyone:

“If Paul Ryan was forced to work from the assumption that poor people – including poor black people – have the same basic values and desires as he does, he could no longer diagnose the dysfunction of those communities as dependence on handouts. He’d have to come up with some other reason that poor people are trapped in a cycle of poverty – it might have something to do with systemic racism – and another solution to it. And almost anything would be better than the one he has now.”

Simple changes to food labels can make a big difference


Dept. of Health & Human Services

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration yesterday proposed to update the Nutrition Facts label for packaged foods to reflect the latest scientific information, including the link between diet and chronic diseases such as obesity and heart disease.

Share the news with a friend

FDA Proposes Updates to Nutrition Facts Label.

The proposed label also would replace out-of-date serving sizes to better align with how much people really eat, and it would feature a fresh design to highlight key parts of the label such as calories and serving sizes.Read more about the announcement by clicking here.

~~~ 6 tips for putting your words to music ~~~


I am not a songwriter, but I love to read and definitely hear the spoken word.

My interest is in movement, specifically dance, but great words put to music with innovative patterns can invigorate, irritate, and make you feel good. So good that you want to move.

They also say that music is said to soothe the savage beast, or at the very least, we love to talk about how music impacts us physically and what’s inside our souls

…  And

We all love to love …

1) Make it personal because reading someone’s experience with love at first sight, first love, lust, long-term love, or a one-night stand brings a sense of connection that folks sometimes look for. Setting it to music can only make a good lyric better, right?

2) Be authentic because, as a music lover and voracious reader, I make an effort to learn the lyrics to songs I enjoy and occasionally end up loving them. Most can sense that the performer’s passion is real, not an attempt to be someone else. Sincere lyrics can actually be heard and felt through the spoken word.

3) The music that makes an impression on me also provides imagery, a vision of something of what the song is about; even if it is abstract, the image is sort of like a coffee table object. The meaning of the images can change and are sometimes left up for interpretation, depending on who is listening to, reading, or learning the lyrics. Of course, when it comes to love, when someone is singing to you, take the time to listen.

We often hear the music and skim the lyrics, but we weren’t feeling it

 What gets folks onto the dance floor …

4) Rhymes, Reason, and Rhythm, because who doesn’t like movement?  Usually, rhymes, reason, and rhythm are what make tracks work.  That is what kind of music makes great artists move up into the stratosphere.  I dance because I have to, even as a kid, and if you have a great hook, added to a great bass, or syncopation, it definitely will get played more than once in my house.

The rhythm of life

5) Always assume a video of your creation is a possibility, so … be that visionary

 

6)     🙂  Always believe you were born to make music  (:
 

Source: Nativegrl77

Public Transportation … and our future


Don Hazen – AlterNetlogo
Dear Friend,
Whether you use it or not, public transportation benefits everyone.
By reducing pollution, easing traffic congestion, and supporting local jobs, public transportationhelps our communities thrive and our economy grow. But we need continued investment in America’s public transit infrastructure to help ensure we’re prepared to meet the demands of a growing population—and to protect our environment.
If you agree, join Voices for Public Transit today!
By joining Voices for Public Transit, you can help us educate our lawmakers on the importance of supporting policies that encourage investment in public transit. Affordable, reliable public transportation helps:

  • Connect people to jobs, education, and other community service
  • Reduce air pollution and our carbon footprint
  • Ease traffic congestion
  • Create local jobs and strengthen our overall economy

Join Voices for Public Transit to join the debate over America’s public transportation.
America’s future depends on expanding our public transit infrastructure, and that will take investment and commitment from our elected officials. Show your support by joining Voices for Public Transit.
Together, we can strengthen and secure the future of America’s public transportation.
Sincerely,
Voices for Public Transit

Art, made with code: calling all future interactive artists


In between creating masterpieces like the Sistine Chapel and “Madonna and Child,” Michelangelo dissected cadavers in the hopes of understanding how the human body worked so he could paint it accurately. He’s not the only one: there has long been a connection between science and art. And it’s true today more than ever, as modern artists use technology for inspiration, inventing ways to give life to code, letting it spill from the screen and onto the canvas. We call this “DevArt,” and this summer, we’re teaming up with the Barbican in London and their Digital Revolution exhibition to celebrate DevArt in an interactive gallery. And we want you to be a part of it.

As part of this exhibition, we’re looking for the next up-and-coming developer artist. This is your opportunity to express your creativity, and to have your work featured in the Barbican and seen by millions of people around the world. To throw your hat in the ring, build a project on the DevArt site and show us what you would create. From there, we’ll pick one creator whose work will sit alongside three of the world’s finest interactive artists who are also creating installations for DevArt: Karsten Schmidt, Zach Lieberman, and the duo Varvara Guljajeva and Mar Canet.

The exhibition will open at the Barbican this summer. Until then, visit g.co/devart, where you can submit your own project. If you’re not the creative coding type, visit the site to see some incredible art and follow the artists’ creative process—from concept and early sketches to the finished piece—on their respective Project Pages. You’ll get a rare look into artists’ ways of working with modern technologies (including some Google products), and maybe even get inspired to create something yourself.

If you had the chance to make your mark in today’s art world with technology as your canvas, what would you create? We’d like you to show us.
Posted by Steve Vranakis, Executive Creative Director, Google Creative Lab