Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Saturday, June 6. 2020Saturday morning linksThe Gospel According to Peter Thiel - Wherever there’s a major shift in the American landscape, one can usually find Silicon Valley’s iconoclastic investor. Students call for laxed grading for black students. University goes along with it. Title lX: When Did Democrats Abandon 'Presumed Innocence'? If you’re shopping at Walmart because you believe it’s one of the last big chains with mainstream American values, you might want to rethink that idea. "THESE NUMBERS ARE INCREDIBLE" Trump Booms After Job Report Shock: May Payrolls Soars By 2.5 Million, Unemployment Rate Drops, Crushing Bearish Expectations Might be exaggerated, but still good news 'Somebody cooked up the plot': The hunt for the origins of the Russia collusion narrative Twitter Removes Trump Campaign's Tribute to George Floyd, Citing Copyright Claim Media will do absolutely anything to keep Trump from being re-elected America is not a racist nation " Over 30 tabs open and I am already repulsed by the continuing use of oxygen by those who have and continue to work to kill my nation." Heather Mac Donald: Rioting, looting, arson and violence have become a civilization-destroying pandemic The Barbarians Behind the Gate - The intelligentsia rationalizing the mob is America’s biggest “systemic” failure Rasmussen: Black Voter Approval for Trump Has Surged to Over 40 Percent WHO changes its mind about masks again UN atomic watchdog says Iran now violating all restrictions of nuclear deal Big surprise Comments
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Students call for laxed grading for black students.
Will their transcripts be marked with an asterisk for these relaxed standards? And how many professors realize that do this, at a state university, constitutes unequal treatment under the law, and opens them up to lawsuits from some deep-pockets uppity Whitey? Most professors would scoff and tell you that it is an equalising remedy for an oppressively unequal circumstance. For the time being, many of them can count on the Party's AGs and the Party's judges to support them without regard to law. It is this premeditated self-deception that is their greatest weakness, once you figure out how to fight it effectively.
They can also count on the Supreme Court to support them. Remember dear old Sandra Day O'Connor!!!
While grades are needed in the paper chase, grades are a farce when it comes to real learning. And real learning is needed these days as computers overtake even the college-level mundane repetition jobs.
Paul Graham wrote 'The Lesson to Unlearn' in December 2019, which eloquently exposes that while good grades are rewarded, they are not indicative to real learning. QUOTE: The most damaging thing you learned in school wasn't something you learned in any specific class. It was learning to get good grades. When I was in college, a particularly earnest philosophy grad student once told me that he never cared what grade he got in a class, only what he learned in it. This stuck in my mind because it was the only time I ever heard anyone say such a thing. For me, as for most students, the measurement of what I was learning completely dominated actual learning in college. I was fairly earnest; I was genuinely interested in most of the classes I took, and I worked hard. And yet I worked by far the hardest when I was studying for a test. In theory, tests are merely what their name implies: tests of what you've learned in the class. In theory you shouldn't have to prepare for a test in a class any more than you have to prepare for a blood test. In theory you learn from taking the class, from going to the lectures and doing the reading and/or assignments, and the test that comes afterward merely measures how well you learned. In practice, as almost everyone reading this will know, things are so different that hearing this explanation of how classes and tests are meant to work is like hearing the etymology of a word whose meaning has changed completely. In practice, the phrase "studying for a test" was almost redundant, because that was when one really studied. The difference between diligent and slack students was that the former studied hard for tests and the latter didn't. No one was pulling all-nighters two weeks into the semester. Even though I was a diligent student, almost all the work I did in school was aimed at getting a good grade on something. As for the future of even the college-educated, real learning with real application to solve new problems is how you avoid the race to the bottom competition with computers as you both apply AI. QUOTE: But, I want to go to the other end of the spectrum, which is intellectual services. It used to be, if you wave your Bachelor's degree, you're going to get a great job. When I graduated from college, it was a sure thing that you'd get a great job. And, in college, you'd basically learned artificial intelligence, meaning, you carried out the instructions that the faculty member gave you. You memorized the lectures, and you were tested on your memory in the exams. That's what a computer does. It basically memorizes what you tell it to do. -- UCLA prof Ed Leamer, Econtalk Podcast, April 2020But now, with a computer doing all those mundane, repetitive intellectual tasks, if you're expecting to do well in the job market, you have to bring, you have to have real education. Real education means to solve problems that the faculty who teach don't really know how to solve. And that takes talent as well as education. So, my view is we've got to change education from a kind of a big Xerox machine where the lectures are memorized and then tested, into one which is more experienced-based to prepare a workforce for the reality of the 20th century. You've got to recognize that just because you had an experience with, say, issues in accounting, doesn't mean that you have the ability to innovate and take care of customers who have problems that cannot be coded. Sorry Professor, but I disagree. Those "high-tech" jobs will never materialize; and besides, we can't build an economy on app developers. We need an economy which embraces the full industrial spectrum. Manufacturing, assembly, welding, injection molding, steel production. Etc. Those jobs don't require a college degree. Almost all information is acquired through on the job training. In fact, many companies used to have formal apprenticeship programs.
This drive toward automation will end in failure, because computers drive a wedge between people. Everyone is always looking at their phone, instead of talking to each other. We need fewer computers, not more. People have to recognize the value of the human relationships which hold us together. Computers destroy those relationships. I ordered a robotic machine which has now been sitting in the dealers lot for 3 months. They are not allowed to install it because their techs have not gotten the "training" which was supposed to happen in May or upcoming in August but blocked by shelter orders. Not a new technology, just new version. Sent a harsh email to district rep, who responded with a call in 10 minutes, the end result of which was "we're still not going to deliver because" excuses. They couldn't pull off a skype training?
It's a $20,000 machine. They are killing their future possibility of selling me 8 machines worth $2 million in the not to distant future. MI Supreme Court Sides with 77-Year-Old Barber over Gov. Whitmer 7-0
QUOTE: In a unanimous 7-0 decision, the Michigan Supreme Court sided with 77-year-old barber Karl Manke over Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Friday. https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/06/05/michigan-supreme-court-unanimously-sides-with-77-year-old-barber-over-gov-gretchen-whitmer/Whitmer and Attorney General Dana Nessel have been relentlessly pursuing Manke, attempting to force the closure of his shop during the coronavirus pandemic. Great Lakes News reported on Facebook late Friday that the Court ruled unanimously in favor of the Owosso barber — a stunning decision, given the narrow 4-3 ideological split in favor of conservatives. . . . A Michigan Court of Appeals upheld that Manke’s license suspension was valid, but the Supreme Court decision reversed that. Manke was defiant after the Appeals Court ruling and told WILX, “I’m still open, still working until they cut my hands off.” re: Walmart
So that explains why Walmart went from being the redheaded stepchild of retail to it's okay to shop there now. I always wondered what was up with that. I haven't been in the local one where I live since several months ago. You have to wait outside until someone comes out of the store. No way in hell I'll wait in a line to get into Walmart. This ingratiation to the lowest common denominator may curtail my shopping there even more. But on the plus side, Alice Walton built one heck of an art museum in Bentonville. Crystal Bridges is fantastic! Re: Collusion
I wonder when the rats will begin to speak out to save their ssa. And how many of them will cower in fear. Flak is what you catch when you have an unpopular opinion. It was German AAA in WWII. A flack is a PR type.
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