Wednesday, June 26
Not Created by our Species
Paleontologists in South Africa said they have found the oldest known burial site in the world, containing remains of a small-brained distant relative of humans previously thought incapable of complex behavior.
Led by renowned paleoanthropologist Lee Berger, researchers said in 2023 they had discovered several specimens of Homo naledi – a tree-climbing, Stone Age hominid – buried about 30 meters (100 feet) underground in a cave system within the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO world heritage site near Johannesburg.
"These are the most ancient interments yet recorded in the hominin record, earlier than evidence of Homo sapiens interments by at least 100,000 years," the scientists wrote in a series of preprint papers published in eLife.
The findings challenge the current understanding of human evolution, as it is normally held that the development of bigger brains allowed for the performing of complex, "meaning-making" activities such as burying the dead.
The oldest burials previously unearthed, found in the Middle East and Africa, contained the remains of Homo sapiens – and were around 100,000 years old.
Those found in South Africa by Berger, whose previous announcements have been controversial, and his fellow researchers, date back to at least 200,000 BCE. READ MORE...
BACKFIRING
It is these same Democrats who have another strategy of letting into the USA millions of illegal Immigrants... so much so that even the SANCTUARY CITIES AND STATES are now bitching and moaning that it is too much for them to handle.
Why did the Democrats move in this direction?
- Most of the people in the USA both republicans and democrats believe that Donald Trump has been wrongly charged and convicted.
- Most of the people in the USA believe that there is a two-tiered justice system.
- Most people think that the DOJ has been weaponized.
- Most of the people in the USA think that there are too many illegals in this country.
Why do you think most people feel this way?
The democrats have misjudged Americans and because of this, Biden should not be President again.
If the democrats have misjudged their own people, do you think they have the competence to be the influential leader of the world?
I sure don't.
This has nothing to do with Trump, as the Democrats using their intellect did it to themselves...
Therefore, the lesser of the two evils is the only logical course of action to take.
Tuesday, June 25
Business Students
- Who are you?
- What do you know?
Before the student left the class, they wanted me to tell them what they should include in their essays,
whether the essays needed to be typed, and how long they should be.
My response to those questions were always the same: YOU MUST DECIDED THESE ANSWERS ON YOUR OWN
When the student returned to class the following week, most of the essays were less than a half page long and most were untyped, all of them lacked an in-depth analysis of the two questions, and all of them wrote as if they were still in high school.
My students were always JUNIORS and SENIORS in college.
The last three years of my 45-year career in the workforce was spent teaching business classes full time.
Needless to say, I was utterly amazed and extremely disappointed with the results I had uncovered.
What does this tell you?
First - these college students did not know how to write
Second - these college students lacked the self-confidence to be self-directed
Third - these college students lacked the ability to problem solve or dig down on a problem
Fourth - these college students were nowhere near becoming business professionals
I recall one of my students handing in an essay with two sentences.
- I am who I am
- I don't know what I don't know
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers meet tonight (8 pm ET, ABC) in decisive Game 7 in the Stanley Cup Final (More)
> Reigning 100-meter world champ Sha'Carri Richardson runs 2024 world-leading time to qualify for Paris Olympics at Team USA track and field team trials; see complete results (More)
> "Inside Out 2" becomes 2024's highest-grossing film, pulling in $285M at the US domestic box office just over a week after opening (More)
> The US to ban sales of antivirus software products from Russia-based Kaspersky Lab beginning in July, citing national security concerns; company is the world's fourth-largest antivirus software firm by revenue (More)
> Most energetic neutrino ever observed potentially recorded by observatory built at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea (More) | What are neutrinos, nature's "ghost" particles? (More)
> Population of Rapa Nui—or Easter Island, home to more than 1,000 giant statues—was likely small and resilient and relied on subsistence farming; new study counters theory of population collapse due to resource overconsumption (More)
Business & Markets
> Markets end Friday mixed (Dow +0.0%, S&P 500 -0.2%, Nasdaq -0.2%), as chipmaker Nvidia (-3.2%) sees second straight day of drops (More)
> Existing US home prices hit record high in May with a median price of $419K, up nearly 6% year-over-year; rise comes despite new inventory of homes for sale jumping more than 18% over same time frame (More)
> Sportswear giant Under Armour to pay $434M to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by shareholders in 2017 alleging they were misled about the company's financial health (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Four people killed, nine others wounded after shooter opens fire at an Arkansas grocery store; motivation for attack unclear, gunman was taken into custody after sustaining minor injuries (More)
> Russian officials blame the US for a Ukrainian strike in Crimea that killed six, wounded 100 people; Russia bombs the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv in back-to-back days, killing at least three people (More) | See war updates (More)
> More than 1,000 people dead during Hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca; officials blame extreme heat, with temperatures reaching 120 degrees Fahrenheit (More) | See previous write-up (More)
Managing Retirement
In 2015, my wife and I retired. She was 62 and I was 67. During the last three years of my career, I set aside enough money to pay for an individual health insurance policy until she could apply for Medicare. We both applied for Social Security and because she had taken early retirement, her monthly allocation was less than had she waited.
However, because females typically live longer than males and if she lived to 90, she would receive more social security at 62 than at 67.
In 2015, our combined social security checks paid all our monthly expenses but in 2024 that is not the case, and we have to remove money from our savings each month.
This is what our government refers to as inflation and while prices will come down a little, they will never go back to the level they were in 2015 thanks to the present administration.
For people that are considered wealthy, inflation is not really a problem but for those who are not wealthy, it is a huge problem.
Bear in mind 80-90% of the population earn less than $100,000 each year. Depending upon one's geographical location, that is a lot of money or that is not much money at all. For example, it costs more to live up north than in the south.
Being retired has all sorts of advantages but one limitation is MONEY. When someone works, the idea is to make more than you need to live so that you can either save your money, pay off previous debt, or buy things that you may or may not need. But when retired, your income is FIXED and the only way that you can do or have more is to draw down savings.
This is exactly why, retired folks continue to work part-time.
While our social security income is FIXED, we have managed to save enough money so that we can pretty much do whatever we want until we pass away. Of course, doing whatever we want is misleading... since doing whatever is relative to our lifestyle which is not like other people.
For instance,
- we don't want a big house and yard
- we don't want to own luxury cars
- we don't need new clothes/shoes each year
- we don't need a lot of jewelry
- we don't need to fly first class
- we don't need to eat out all the time
- we don't need to spend a lot for a motel room
A photonic alloy with topological properties
Schematic diagram of a topological photonic alloy. The red star indicates the position of the line source, and the arrow indicates the direction of propagation of the chiral edge state. Credit: Qu et al.
Photonic alloys, alloy-like materials combining two or more photonic crystals, are promising candidates for the development of structures that control the propagation of electromagnetic waves, also known as waveguides. Despite their potential, these materials typically reflect light back in the direction where it originated.
This phenomenon, known as light backscattering, limits the transmission of data and energy, adversely impacting the materials' performance as waveguides. Reliably reducing or preventing light backscattering in photonic alloys will thus be a key milestone towards the practical use of these materials.
Researchers at Shanxi University and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology recently fabricated a new photonic alloy with topological properties that enables the propagation of microwaves without light backscattering. This material, introduced in Physical Review Letters, could pave the way for the development of new topological photonic crystals.
"Our paper introduces a new concept: the topological photonic alloy as a nonperiodic topological material," Lei Zhang, co-author of the paper, told Phys.org. "We achieved this by combining non-magnetized and magnetized rods in a nonperiodic 2D photonic crystal configuration. This created photonic alloys that sustain chiral edge states in the microwave regime." READ MORE...
Monday, June 24
Embracing the FUTURE
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) are at the forefront of drone technology advancements. Companies like Skydio are leading the way in this area with drones that can navigate complex environments autonomously using AI. Maris-Tech offers innovative Edge AI accelerated video solutions designed to integrate with autonomous and semi-autonomous platforms for a wide range of applications, such as surveillance and defense.
It's Your Money
If you had enough extra money to make a charitable donation, which one would you give your money?
- DISABLED VETERANS
- CHILDREN WITH CANCER
- ABANDONED ANIMALS
BOOOOOOOM
by Richard Overy
Imagine, for a moment, that the Iranian government announces it has developed a nuclear bomb and threatens to use it on Israel. The United States reacts with the threat of military intervention, as it did in 1991 and 2003 in Iraq. Iran signals that it will not tolerate a third Gulf war and looks for allies. American forces mass to enter Iran, which orders national mobilisation. Russia, China and North Korea express their support for Iran, and Washington expands its intervention force, bringing in a British contingent. Russia enters the game, raising the stakes in the expectation that the West will back down. A nuclear standoff follows, but with tense and itchy fingers on both sides, as leaders gamble on the risk of not striking first, it all ends in disaster. The Third World War begins with an exchange of nuclear fire, and the rest, as they say, is history.
Or picture this: Chinese frustration over the status of Taiwan prompts a build-up of invasion forces. The United States is preoccupied with its own domestic political crisis. Japan anxiously watches the exchange of harsh words between China and Taiwan, wondering whether to intervene. The United Nations condemns Chinese actions, and China repudiates the censure and orders invasion, confident that a quick victory will prevent others from intervening, as Hitler hoped when he invaded Poland in 1939. The United States now activates contingency plans to save Taiwan, and each side uses tactical nuclear weapons against the other’s armed forces. North Korea and Russia side with China. There is no general nuclear strike, but Russia warns Europe to keep out, dividing American strategy between the two theatres, as it was in the Second World War. The conflict continues to escalate. READ MORE...
America Funding China's Growth
"Underwriting the Enemy" invites Fox Nation viewers to listen to experts share their takes on China's financial infiltration into the U.S. economy. (Fox Nation / Fox New
Now could be the "most consequential moment in the history of our country," author Gordon Chang warned as he sat across from FOX Business' Maria Bartiromo.
The "Coming Collapse of China" writer and commentator made his repeated warning that China poses the greatest existential threat to America yet again. But the question is: why do Americans keep funding their enemy?
Chang, along with others, joined Bartiromo for her new Fox Nation series, "Underwriting the Enemy," to explore China's insidious infiltration into the American economy.
"Chinese companies are trading on the New York Stock Exchange, on the Nasdaq right now," Bartiromo said. "That means American investors, unwittingly or not, are funding the expansion of our number one adversary."
Several foreign policy and financial analysts have acknowledged the long, silent war that the Chinese Communist Party has waged against the United States, their cautionary tales repeatedly airing in segments across different media outlets.
One such warning came from former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
"They are deep inside our infrastructure, our capital markets," he warned. READ MORE...
Shopping and Lunch
A couple of days ago, my wife and I went down to Knoxville to buy some items at SAMS Wholesale club. In previous visits, we discovered that not all items in SAMS were cheaper than they were selling at Walmart, so we make sure to compare prices.
We usually buy toilet tissue, paper towels, kleenex, cereal, coffee, olive oil, pretzels, captain's crackers, trail mix and a few other items at SAMS because they are always cheaper. Most of these items we store on shelves in the garage until we need them.
We also noticed the day we went that unleaded gasoline was selling for $2.66/gallon which is by far the best place in town, including the new Buc-ee's.
Before we left SAMS, we purchased two all beef hot dogs and two 32oz drinks for $2.80, bring them home to eat for dinner.
After leaving SAMS we drove across the highway to Cheddars restaurant for lunch. My wife had a grilled chicken salad while I ordered grilled salmon and rice, broccoli, and a loaded baked potato without butter. Our bill was $31.66 which included tax. I got the 8oz (largest) piece of salmon. My meal was under $15, and the salmon was cooked perfectly.
When my wife and I go out to lunch/dinner, we always get water with lemon rather than some other kind of drink because all these other drinks start at $3... so, you have immediately added $6 to the cost of your meal.
I have compared Cheddars to Red Lobster, and I cannot tell the difference in how the salmon were cooked but the price is over $5 less at Cheddars, plus the service is much better. Both cuts of salmon were from fish farm and were not wild which disappoints me.
Sharing this post with you is intentional because I want you, the reader, to know that if you hunt around, you can find clever ways to spend your money while saving money.
We live in EAST TN and this area is cheaper to live in than south TN (Chattanooga) or mid TN (Nashville) and of course, it is much cheaper to live here than Atlanta, GA, Raliegh, NC, or Washington, DC.
I made the decision 34 years ago to move from NC to TN for the sole purpose of lowering my cost-of-living expenses. While that move had its pros/cons, in the long run it proved to be very beneficial, and I have not missed anything that might have been offered in NC that was not offered here.











.jpg)















.jpg)




