NASA Announces First All-Female Spacewalk After Previous One Canceled

Astronauts Christina Koch and the newly arrived Jessica Meir will venture out Oct. 21 to plug in new, upgraded batteries for the solar power system. It will be the fourth of five spacewalks for battery work.”

… “The latest class of NASA astronauts, selected in 2013, includes four women and four men. What’s most interesting … is not the gender parity. Two of the women have something the earliest female astronauts couldn’t: Military backgrounds. One of them, Anne McClain, is an Army major who flew helicopters during combat missions in Iraq.”

NASA Announces First All-Female Spacewalk After Previous One Canceled | The Daily Wire

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Trump impeachment probe: How voters reacted in a Pennsylvania district

She’d come to Muhlenberg College ready to defend why Democrats in the House of Representatives were moving forward on an impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump.

…It wasn’t until about 20 minutes into the event that someone brought up the issue. That person argued a majority of Americans don’t support removing Trump from office and that the inquiry would prevent Congress from being able to solve problems and work together.

…To those who criticized her, Wild argued that impeachment would not be a distraction from the issues that got her elected. She pointed to her work on the Education and Labor committee and legislation aimed at lowering prescription drug prices. 

But some backed Wild’s call for an inquiry – and took it a step further. 

“Why can’t the House hold those who refuse to cooperate in contempt, find them, and put them in jail?” one woman asked Wild as the crowd cheered.

…Others like Dawn Dobrosky noted she wasn’t “a fan” of Trump but felt as though Democrats were picking on him. 

“It’s like they won’t give him a break,” she said while loading groceries in her car. 

Dobrosky, who says she wrote in a candidate instead of voting for Hillary Clinton or Trump in 2016

Trump impeachment probe: How voters reacted in a Pennsylvania district

hmmm…

Also…. Concerning people like Ms Dobrosky….

Saying she didn’t vote for Trump is beyond splitting hairs. Whether or not she wants to admit it to herself, by writing someone in, she voted for Trump. The “Oh, the media/Democrats/etc are so unfair to him,” shtick  is just camouflage for cowards. Unless she said the exact same (or reciprocal) thing about Obama and HRC, then she is 100% supporting Trump, she’s just too embarrassed to say it out loud.

Job applicant outraged after company shares her bikini photo on Instagram as ‘PSA’: ‘This is not doing you any favors’

Job applicant outraged after company shares her bikini photo on Instagram as ‘PSA’: ‘This is not doing you any favors’ – AOL Finance

Well, the company was out of line to post a picture from an actual applicant’s feed without prior approval but they had a point. It’s not a professional look. By providing access to her instagram the applicant did herself no favors.

Border wall book details turbulent week of Donald Trump’s directives

Trump had at times privately talked about “fortifying a border wall with a water-filled trench, stocked with snakes or alligators, prompting aides to seek a cost estimate. He wanted the wall electrified, with spikes on top that could pierce human flesh.”

Additionally, after aides told him that his public suggestion of soldiers shooting migrants if they threw rocks was illegal, he backed down. But, he later suggested that they “shoot migrants in the legs to slow them down.”

“That’s not allowed either, (staff) told him,” according to the excerpt.

…The comments came around the same time [that Trump] publicly threatened to close the border, saying he would if “Mexico doesn’t get with it.” [He] later backed off from that threat. 

Border wall book details turbulent week of Donald Trump’s directives

jesus-facepalm1

Research: When Women Are on Boards, Male CEOs Are Less Overconfident

Having women on the board results better acquisition and investment decisions and in less aggressive risk-taking, yielding benefits for shareholders. What’s less clear is why these effects happen.

Our research suggests one potential reason: Having female board members helps temper the overconfidence of male CEOs, improving overall decision making for the company.

…One benefit of having female directors on the board is a greater diversity of viewpoints, which is purported to improve the quality of board deliberations, especially when complex issues are involved, because different perspectives can increase the amount of information available. At the same time, research has found that female directors tend to be less conformist and more likely to express their independent views than male directors because they do not belong to old-boy networks.

…Our study has two important policy implications. First, it suggests that female board representation matters more in certain industries, because some industries have more overconfident CEOs. Second, our findings suggest female board representation can be especially beneficial in helping firms weather crises. Overall, our research supports the view that having women on boards improves strategic decision making and benefits firms.

Research: When Women Are on Boards, Male CEOs Are Less Overconfident

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Is it Rude, Is it Mean, or is it Bullying?

In the last few years, Americans have collectively paid attention to the issue of bullying like never before; millions of school children have been given a voice, 49 states in the U.S. have passed anti-bullying legislation, and thousands of adults have been trained in important strategies to keep kids safe and dignified in schools and communities. These are significant achievements.

At the same time, however, I have already begun to see that gratuitous references to bullying are creating a bit of a “little boy who cried wolf” phenomena. In other words, if kids and parents improperly classify rudeness and mean behavior as bullying—whether to simply make conversation or to bring attention to their short-term discomfort—we all run the risk of becoming so sick and tired of hearing the word that this actual life-and-death issue among young people loses its urgency as quickly as it rose to prominence.

It is important to distinguish between rude, mean, and bullying so that teachers, school administrators, police, youth workers, parents, and kids all know what to pay attention to and when to intervene. As we have heard too often in the news, a child’s life may depend on a non-jaded adult’s ability to discern between rudeness at the bus stop and life-altering bullying.

Is it Rude, Is it Mean, or is it Bullying? | Psychology Today

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Hawaiian Tourism Authorities Launch New Visitor Education Campaign

…The Pono tourism movement. “Pono” is a Hawaiian word having a multi-faceted meaning, but, concisely, it connotes an ethos of respect, uprightness, prosperity and well-being.

“Many travelers visiting the Hawaiian Islands don’t necessarily understand why we stay on the trail when we hike, why we care about protecting our reefs, and many of the dangers they need to be mindful of,” said Jay Talwar, HVCB’s chief marketing officer. “Rather than scold them, we felt that, if our residents shared the ‘whys’ behind appropriate behavior, then most visitors would follow along; in other words, if we don’t show them the trail, how can we expect them to stay on it? That’s what our new Kuleana Campaign aims to do.”

Hawaiian Tourism Authorities Launch New Visitor Education Campaign | TravelPulse

nice!

Trump calls on China to investigate Biden in extraordinary demand

Trump has called for China to investigate his leading political rival, in defiance of impeachment proceedings in Congress where he stands accused of abusing his office to put similar pressure on Ukraine.

At the same time as calling for an investigation of the former vice-president and frontrunner in the Democratic primary, Joe Biden, and his son Hunter, Trump noted that the US was in trade talks with China and “if they don’t do what we want, we have tremendous, tremendous power.”

…Hunter Biden was on the board of an energy company in the eastern European country, where Joe Biden, as vice-president, pressed for the dismissal of the chief prosecutor. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by father or son.

Trump has insisted he did nothing wrong in his dealings with the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelinskiy, and has even accused an intelligence whistleblower of treason for providing evidence that the president used the power of his office – the withholding of military aid and a summit meeting – for his own political ends.

However, Trump appeared to do just that in front of the cameras on the White House lawn on Thursday, when he openly called for Ukraine and China to investigate the Bidens.

…Trump’s China comments seemed likely to broaden the impeachment enquiry, which is already at fever pitch in Congress.

Trump calls on China to investigate Biden in extraordinary demand | US news | The Guardian

Oy…

Trump administration privatizing migrant child detention

“The United States is the country in the world that detains the most children for immigration reasons, and probably for the longest period of time. No other country comes close,” said Michael Bochenek, a Human Rights Watch attorney who serves on a United Nations research team examining the global detention of children. “To have private companies move into the area of the care and custody of children in detention-like settings is especially troubling.”

…Nonprofit providers, however, have faced criticism of their own. Earlier this year, a review of 38 legal claims obtained by the AP — some of which have never been made public — showed taxpayers could be on the hook for more than $200 million in damages from parents who said their children were harmed while under care from nonprofit foster providers and other shelters.

…The Trump administration has started shifting some of the caretaking of migrant children toward the private sector and contractors instead of the largely religious-based nonprofit grantees that have long cared for the kids.

So far, the only private company caring for migrant children is CHS, owned by beltway contractor Caliburn International Corp. In June, CHS held more than 20% of all migrant children in government custody. And even as the number of children has declined, the company’s government funding for their care has continued to flow. That’s partly because CHS is still staffing a large Florida facility with 2,000 workers even though the last children left in August.

…DC Capital Partners bought CHS, a company with a troubled past. The firm agreed in 2017 to pay out $3.8 million to settle an investigation involving allegations that it double billed and overcharged the federal government for medical services.

Despite the fraud settlement, CHS went on to win a no-bid contract to operate Homestead. At the time, federal officials said they didn’t have to open the bidding to competitors, typically the way taxpayer dollars are spent, because there was “unusual and compelling urgency.”

…No-bid contracts can lead to higher costs. CHS, a contractor, typically hires locally, staffing up as quickly as it can, hiring hundreds of people through online ads and at community job fairs. In contrast, nonprofits typically are paid through grants. They have screened staffers on call, who can be flown in if a shelter needs to care for a sudden increase of children for a short period.

…Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly joined Caliburn’s board this spring after stepping down from decades of government service; he joined the Trump administration as Secretary of Homeland Security, where he backed the idea of taking children from their parents at the border, saying it would discourage people from trying to immigrate or seek asylum.

Critics say this means Kelly now stands to financially benefit from a policy he helped create.

…Kelly and other corporate directors including Retired Gen. Anthony C. Zinni, Retired Admiral James G. Stavridis and Retired Rear Admiral Kathleen Martin could have received at least $100,000 a year for their service and advice, and a $200,000 bonus if the company went public.

…CHS’s business plan going forward depends on having more kids in their shelters, according to a prospectus its parent company Caliburn filed last year to go public with a $100 million stock offering.

…Overall, the federal government spent a record $3.5 billion caring for migrant children over the past two years to run its shelters through both contracts and grants.

…The government doesn’t disclose the names of individual shelters, nor how many children are in each one. But confidential government data obtained by the AP shows that in June nearly one in four migrant children in government care was housed by CHS. That included more than 2,300 teens at Homestead, Florida, and more than 500 kids in shelters in Brownsville, Los Fresnos and San Benito, Texas. For each teen held at Homestead at that time, it cost taxpayers an average $775 per day.

Trump administration privatizing migrant child detention – MarketWatch

sigh….

Hillary Clinton: ‘Gutsiest’ things I’ve done? Stay in my marriage, run for President, and get up every day and keep going

At the end of the joint interview, host Amy Robach asked Clinton “what’s the gutsiest thing you’ve ever done?”

“Ah, boy, I think the gutsiest thing I’ve ever done — well, personally, make the decision to stay in my marriage,” Clinton answered. “Publicly, politically, run for president. And keep going. Just get up every day and keep going.”

Hillary Clinton: ‘Gutsiest’ thing I’ve done was stay in my marriage

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Pete Buttigieg met with Black Lives Matter after Eric Logan shooting

Members of Black Lives Matter …say the 37-year-old Democratic mayor brushed off their concerns about police violence in the city he has led since 2012.

“He seemed to have already taken a side. It did seem that he was prioritizing who he thought was important, and it didn’t seem to be black people.”

…Activists pushed Buttigieg to address the disparities …between the national figure …campaigning on a forceful pledge to go after systemic racism, and the local public official who …caved to bureaucratic obstacles and political opposition.

…“He tried to argue that there was support for the chief, and that there were members of the public who wanted more police. …When you think about these issues, who is the public that you’re thinking about? The white public or the black public?”

…The mayor had pledged to attend some of the community meetings the city had scheduled in the wake of the shooting to review police policies, they said. But there have been six so far, and he hasn’t showed.

Instead, they said they were met by police officers openly carrying weapons.

…The activists …pressed Buttigieg …to deliver on promises that he had made …concerning providing mental health resources to Logan’s family members, and releasing data about how members of the police department fared in an online test administered by Harvard University that measures racial bias.

…[Buttgieg’s] promises [to members of Black Lives Matter] fizzled, as they were passed along to more city officials who ultimately turned them down.

…“If you ask black South Bend what they think of Mayor Pete, I don’t think he has a very big fan base,” she said. “So if he hasn’t been able to win the support of black South Bend, I don’t think he should win the support of black America.”

Pete Buttigieg met with Black Lives Matter after Eric Logan shooting

Despite what the progressive community would like to think, being a member of one minority does not automatically make you sensitive to the positions and issues of another group.

If the Mayor was doing more than giving lip-service, if he really understood and empathized with the position of the black residents of South Bend, if he truly cared about criminal justice reform and parity under the law for black citizens, these promises would have turned into action instead of empty air.

Zuckerberg says if Warren becomes president, Facebook would sue U.S. gov’t: ‘You go to the mat and fight’

“You have someone like Elizabeth Warren thinks that the right answer is to break up the companies … I mean, if she gets elected president then I would bet that we will have a legal challenge, and I would bet that we will win the legal challenge,” Zuckerberg is quoted as saying in two Q&A sessions with Facebook employees during July.

“And does that still suck for us? Yeah. I mean, I don’t want to have a major lawsuit against our own government. I mean, that’s not the position that you want to be in when you’re, you know, I mean … It’s like, we care about our country, and want to work with our government and do good things. But look, at the end of the day, if someone’s going to try to threaten something that existential, you go to the mat and fight.”

Zuckerberg says if Warren becomes president, Facebook would sue U.S. gov’t: ‘You go to the mat and fight’

Strong words for someone who, under a different administration, could be looking at legal difficulties for assisting a foreign government influence national elections.

Hillary Rodham Clinton & Chelsea Clinton on “Gutsy Women” and Trump

No one looms larger, for Hillary Clinton, than Eleanor Roosevelt: “When I ended up being first lady she was one of the people that most inspired me, because of how she tried to keep thinking about those who were left out, left behind, marginalized.”

Pauley said, “You write about discovering that her husband had had an affair with his secretary. This was devastating, and she offers Franklin a divorce, which he rejects. And you write, ‘She decided to stay in the marriage parenthetically, which can be, as I know well, a gutsy decision.’ You had to discuss with your daughter putting that in [the book]. What did you say?”

“Well, part of the reason that I admire Eleanor Roosevelt is the way she handled that happening to her,” said Hillary. “And I say, look, when something happens in your marriage, as I know well, it can be gutsy to leave, it can be gutsy to stay. I felt like I had learned so much from her that I wanted to share that with the reader.”

And Chelsea’s response? “It’s my mom’s story to tell. I’ve always felt that way.”

…”I believe he knows he’s an illegitimate president,” said Hillary. “He knows. He knows that there were a bunch of different reasons why the election turned out the way it did. And I take full responsibility for those parts of it that I should. But hey, it was like applying for a job and getting 66 million letters of recommendation, and losing to a corrupt human tornado. And so, I know that he knows that this wasn’t on the level. I don’t know that we’ll ever know everything that happened.

“But clearly, we know a lot, and are learning more every day. And history will probably sort it all out. So of course, he’s obsessed with me. And I believe that it’s a guilty conscience (insomuch as he has a conscience).”

Hillary Rodham Clinton & Chelsea Clinton on “Gutsy Women” and Trump – CBS News

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Tamarac, Florida official shames cop for ‘false’ arrest at ceremony

Minutes earlier, Gallardo was honored with a Deputy of the Month award for the month of April for arresting a man wanted for a murder committed in El Salvador.

“You probably don’t remember me, but you’re the police officer who falsely arrested me four years ago,” Gelin, who is black, told Gallardo. “You lied on the police report. I believe you’re a rogue police officer, you’re a bad police officer and you don’t deserve to be here.”

[The Tamarac mayor] shamed Gelin for his remarks, which she told the station could have violated the city’s civility code, and might result in his censure.

…Gelin said that the current County Sheriff Gregory Tony reached out after the ceremony and offered “for us to work constructively together to bring about positive change.”

Tamarac, Florida official shames cop for ‘false’ arrest at ceremony

The mayor was more concerned about the fact that someone criticized a police officer than the fact that the police officer made a false arrest then lied about it in official documents? Can you say, c-u-l-p-a-b-l-e?

 

Trump’s ‘Civil War’ Quote Tweet Is Actually Grounds for Impeachment, Says Harvard Law Professor

“This tweet is itself an independent basis for impeachment – a sitting president threatening civil war if Congress exercises its constitutionally authorized power,” Coates wrote on Twitter on Monday.

Trump’s ‘Civil War’ Quote Tweet Is Actually Grounds for Impeachment, Says Harvard Law Professor

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Elizabeth Banks First Female Director To Be Awarded Pioneer Of The Year – Deadline

As she pointed out to the crowd, “I just wanted to remind you why you gave me this Pioneer Award here tonight. It is because everything you can do, I can do bleeding.” Whereas that might have been TMI for many, it got roars of approval from this crowd.

Elizabeth Banks First Female Director To Be Awarded Pioneer Of The Year – Deadline