Saturday, November 4
Army Creating False Arrest Records for Soldiers
"Defendants have shown that they would rather indulge in bureaucratic inertia rather than fix a problem that has now destroyed the lives, reputations, and careers of numerous service members," attorneys wrote in the class action suit against the Army, its Criminal Investigation Division (CID), the FBI and the Department of Defense, as well as each agency's respective leader. READ MORE...
Signs of Fall
The school year went for Labor Day to Memorial Day and sometimes extended well into June depending upon how severe the winter was. Winter was winter and we got plenty of snow that usually kept us out of school for about 5 days.
While Spring had some nice weather as it opened its doors to summer... you could count on summer being hot and humid with a little rain of some sort. Fall was the ideal time for me, since winter was always too cold and you had to wear too many clothes when venturing outside.
Fall was jeans and light sweatshirt weather, and one could put in a lot of work having fun and never sweat or get over-heated. It was a perfect time for hot apple cider or hot chocolate although Christmas was a better time for the latter.
But it was the leaves turning colors that was the most spectacular thing of all to observe. When the leaves were turning, we would pile into the family car and our dad would drive us up to the Appalachian Mountains, on Sundays, after church to look at the colors of all the turning leaves. If we had spent a lot of time driving around, we would pick up something to eat or our dad would cook fried chicken in his cast iron frying pan. It was the only one he would use to fry chicken.
So... for me, Fall begins in September and the leaves turn in October, and you eat fried chicken and drink hot apple cider. The temperature is brisk but not cold and there may be just a slight bit of wind. For those of us who don't get cold quick it is T-shirt weather as well, but not shorts.
Somewhere along the way, the seasons of the years changed along with the school year, and I cannot remember when we had an old fashion fall... as it seems to go from summer into winter...
I am sure that many blame this on climate change, but I am not so sure... It's just that our weather patterns have changed which happens every thousands of years or so.
Whatever it is, for me, is not that important, as long as we will one day return to Fall... the old Fall that I remember as a boy.
Companies Required to Share AI Risks
Among them is requiring that artificial intelligence developers share their safety-test results – known as red-team testing – with the federal government.
"In accordance with the Defense Production Act, the Order will require that companies developing any foundation model that poses a serious risk to national security, national economic security, or national public health and safety must notify the federal government when training the model, and must share the results of all red-team safety tests," the White House says. "These measures will ensure AI systems are safe, secure, and trustworthy before companies make them public." READ MORE...
AI Apocalypse Team Formed
How can we ensure that AI is used for good and not evil? How can we prepare for the worst-case scenarios that might arise from AI?
How OpenAI is preparing for the worst
These are some of the questions that OpenAI, a leading AI research lab and the company behind ChatGPT, is trying to answer with its new Preparedness team. Its mission is to track, evaluate, forecast and protect against the frontier risks of AI models. READ MORE...
Friday, November 3
Hezbollah's Leader to Speak
Lebanon is on edge in advance of Hezbollah leader Syed Hassan Nasrallah’s anticipated Friday speech on Israel’s war on Gaza, which residents and experts fear could inflame regional tensions if he pledges to escalate attacks against Israel.
Fighting between Hezbollah and Israel has escalated along their fraught border in recent weeks. The Lebanese armed group claims to have lost 47 fighters while Israel says that six of its soldiers have been killed. At least six civilians have also been killed. READ MORE...
Iran Will Destroy Israel
The New York Times is facing intense backlash for a report focusing on whether Iran will "live up to its fiery rhetoric" and follow through with its vow to "destroy Israel."
The Times suggested Iran was at a crossroads, running the headline, "After Years of Vowing to Destroy Israel, Iran Faces a Dilemma."
"With Israel bent on crushing Iran’s ally Hamas, Tehran must decide whether it and the proxy militias it arms and trains will live up to its fiery rhetoric," The Times report said Wednesday. READ MORE...
Santos Escapes Expulsion
The final vote fell 213-179 against expelling Santos, with 19 lawmakers voting "present." Expelling a member of the House, something that is historically rare, requires a vote of two-thirds of all members present.
Two dozen Republicans voted to expel Santos, while 31 Democrats voted to keep him in the House. READ MORE...
Relatively Protected
- We don't have a lot of people living in this area so traffic and smog is not much of a problem.
- We don't have much crime although drugs are being sold in our elementary schools.
- We don't have a huge WOKE, CRT, BLM, or Defund the Police movement.
- We are not experiencing a whole lot of trouble from illegal immigrants because there is not much for them to do here except harvest crops.
- We don't have a lot of restaurants but we have all we need and then some.
- We don't have Broadway shows because we are kinda country and redneck when it comes to all that shit, even though many of us are WELL EDUCATED.
- Rising prices don't bother us
- Buying a hybrid car has been already figured into our savings
- We have been debt free for the last 15 years
- The money we made on interest paid for our new home renovations
- We made $40,000 profit on the sale of our old home
- Both our vehicles are reliable and we have followed all maintenance plans suggested by the manufacturer
- We don't need any new clothes for the rest of our lives
- We pay $10,000/year for medical insurance and have received $500,000 worth of treatment for the last 10 years
- We are not afraid to walk around in the community after dark
- We don't spend money on anything we don't need
Biden Wants a Pause
The comment came during a campaign event in Minnesota on Wednesday evening, when a member of the audience shouted: "As a rabbi, I need you to call for a ceasefire right now.”
The president — who has not supported a ceasefire since the war began on October 7 — said that he would support a "pause."
“I think we need a pause," Biden began. "A pause means give time to get the prisoners out.” READ MORE...
IDF Soldiers Killed Inside Gaza
Thursday, November 2
Sensorium Galaxy: Metaverse
The legendary British electronic music icon, Carl Cox, will treat fans worldwide on Friday to a mesmerising 30-minute DJ set as part of a free show called "Intermundium."
But here's the twist – he won't actually physically be there. READ MORE...
Instead, an astonishingly lifelike digital avatar of Cox, crafted by Sensorium Galaxy, will take centre stage for a pioneering metaverse experience.
Iceland's Wild Horses
If you were asked to conjure up a picture of wild horses in the barren Icelandic landscape, it's unlikely that your mind would jump naturally to wild psychedelic imagery, bathed in the surreal glow of neon pink, yellow and blue hues.
But for Gareth McConnell, a London-based Irish photographer and publisher, this was precisely the vision he pursued when the New York Times commissioned him to photograph the horses of I
celand.
From the outset his goal was to create something as "non-National Geographic as possible" - and it's fair to say he achieved this with flying colours. READ MORE...





















