On the eve of the weekend, we hope all enjoy this "musical interlude" as we wish all a joyous and restful final weekend before Christmas:
Welcome to Perspectives, A Daily Outsider Property Working to Help transform our Conversation About Our World.
Friday, December 16, 2016
Thursday, December 15, 2016
What is True and what is Hype About Africa; Hollywood and Disney World Meet Africa Season 1
The other day, I passed by the San Francisco Cinematheque. This place was founded by experienced film-makers who also own different film companies. I am familiar with Frameline because once in 2013, I helped mentor young people who later presented a film in one of the Frameline competitions (http://www.frameline.org/). The fact that this company encourages anyone who can, to present a film project in an annual competition appealed to me as social change agent. From then on I liked this particular brand and from time to time I receive updates about their films. It is around this time, that I thought about doing a project on images and conversations depicting how America perceives Africa. As much as possible, I collected on the street responses. I shall provide my answers in subsequent blogs if time allows. As of now, I want to interest your mind in finding time to answer my questions.
A Walt Disney Flagship Movie about laid back Africa. Source: Google Pics.
Hakuna Matata are two Swahili words which can be translated as: No Problems/No Worries. Source: Google Pics
A snapshot when a mosquito was bothering the Lion. Source: Google Pics
I do not want us to talk about or refer to ABC, CNN, FOX, CBS, NPR, BBC, New York Times or LA Times’ depiction of Africa. I want you to find time and look for 20 Hollywood and Disney Land films about Africa in all genres and see for yourself the depiction of Africa. I do not want to bias your responses but this can give you a clue.
The animals (insects, worms, ants, flies, rodents, cheetah, viruses, bacteria and parasites) on the African continent have lived there for a far longer period than the first human being. They have a super-evolved mechanism that has enabled them to survive the vagaries of Africa. I know of a country where elephants raid villages and destroy food crop that could have fed people for 1 full year. There is another country where grasshoppers and locusts fly in large swarms that they darken the noon time sky. When these grasshoppers and locusts land on green foliage, trees are left bare of green leaves. This is the region where the mosquito and tsetse fly are two deadliest animals. In fact they deserve to be called the kings or queens of the jungle. Have you heard of this kind of Africa? Or is the one you have heard the kind where famine, poor work ethics, corruption and poverty abound?
Please write back answering my questions. Thank you so much in advance.
Hakuna Matata are two Swahili words which can be translated as: No Problems/No Worries. Source: Google Pics
A snapshot when a mosquito was bothering the Lion. Source: Google Pics
The Mosquito. Source: Google Pics |
The Presentation of The Lion Cub. Source: Google Pics |
Notations From the Grid: #Aleppo
As we are going to press here, evacuations are continuing as the ceasefire seems to be holding. According to the UN, there are still 50,000 people are still remaining as the first convoy of buses left Aleppo. It is just horrific beyond words as Idlib may well be the next Aleppo as refugees are headed there:
It took 4000 years to build #Aleppo. "One generation managed to tear it down in 4 years" - senior @UN aid official. https://t.co/UBjSQ3sQQM pic.twitter.com/sSYnDJNbUs— UN News Centre (@UN_News_Centre) December 15, 2016
On Our World: Brief Thoughts as 2016 Withers Away....
Beyond the wars and the attempts by President-Kings in Africa to hold on to power, there are also rays of hope. Our team is pleased to feature this padlet from the Freedom Hub that does some great work to prepare those who have been victims of Human Trafficking to return to the Workforce. As we welcome 2017, we look forward to featuring such organizations because they are the rays of hope for us all:
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Notations On Our World: On #Syria & The Last Call From #Aleppo, #PEOTUS Watch and other Thoughts
The World has been witness to the inhumanity that is going on in Syria right now. As our team finished off the latest review available on our Twitter Feed @ordinaryfaces, we wanted to give voice to the plight of all those who have been trapped--especially as Syrian Regime Forces have begun shelling Aleppo again as we went to press courtesy of the Observers at +FRANCE 24. As we remember such valiant souls, this statement underscored the true predicament in Syria now: ".. "This (victory) was achieved through excessive reliance on regional supporters, the destruction of the country, the tearing of its social fabric, and a long-term generational crisis of unparalleled trauma. Nobody can claim victory after all of this."--We could not agree more.
We are also witness to the continued formation of the emerging Trump Government. The CEO of Exxon is the latest to be named as his nominee for Secretary of State. It is of interest how the so-called establishment Republicans have fallen in as epitomized by what Senator Jeff Flake noted:
It is also of interest that Rick Perry, the Former Governor of Texas, has been named to lead the Energy Department. Mr. Trump noted that, "...."As the Governor of Texas, Rick Perry created created a business climate that produced millions of new jobs and lower energy prices in his state, and he will bring that same approach to our entire country as Secretary of Energy,..". It is in line with Mr. Trump's apparent view that Government can and should be run like a business. It is also of note that Mr. Trump had scheduled a December 15, 2016 conference to discuss disengaging from his business which has been postponed--in the meantime, the Office of Government Ethics came out and noted that Mr. Trump's plans falls short.The fact that Condi Rice, James Baker and Bob Gates are recommending Tillerson carries considerable weight. I look forward to the hearings.— Jeff Flake (@JeffFlake) December 13, 2016
One thing we agree with that was noted in a recent column in +Econsultancy as trends for 2017 was discussed: "...Not many people will be sad to see the back of 2016...."
Onward....
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Celebrating the Holidays in our Hometown of @LagunaNiguelCty
Our hometown, @LagunaNiguelCty is fully in the holiday spirit as the Annual Holiday Parade was held this past Saturday. Some 3,000 people participated--and we are very pleased to feature our Community here today during this joyous season:
On the Tragedy in #Syria: The Ordinary Faces of Eastern #Aleppo Speak Out
As we went to press with our daily review here, we wanted to extend our salute to the people of Eastern Aleppo as we are seeing distressing stories from Aleppo as Assad Forces have defeated the Syrian Rebels. The residents have been pleading for help and nothing has happened. The World is silent as people are dying with reports of summary executions with this latest from the Al Jazeera News grid--and the headline said it all:
UN has reported shooting 82 people being summarily shot by Regime forces. The plight of this 7-Year Old Eastern Aleppo Resident said it all:"Save Aleppo. Save humanity."— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) December 13, 2016
Residents of East Aleppo are giving their final messages to the world. pic.twitter.com/Hzd4VWp0wC
My dad is injured now. I am crying.-Bana #Aleppo— Bana Alabed (@AlabedBana) December 12, 2016
My name is Bana, I'm 7 years old. I am talking to the world now live from East #Aleppo. This is my last moment to either live or die. - Bana— Bana Alabed (@AlabedBana) December 13, 2016
Monday, December 12, 2016
Thought For the Week
During this joyous season, our team wanted to share this as we wish you all and your loved ones the most joyous of holidays and a prosperous 2017:
To love. To be loved.
To never forget your own insignificance.
To never get used to the unspeakable violence
and the vulgar disparity of life around you.
To seek joy in the saddest places.
To pursue beauty to its lair.
To never simplify what is complicated
or complicate what is simple.
To respect strength, never power.
Above all, to watch. To try to understand.
To never look away. And never, never, to forget.
- Arundhati Roy
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Looking Back to 2016: What 2016 Taught us about ourselves
As 2016 is withering away, we wanted to continue some periodic updates in all #Outsider properties. For this edition of "View of the week", please enjoy this courtesy of the team at +TED :
PLAYLIST OF THE WEEK
What 2016 taught us about ourselves
A year in reflection: What we learned about our personalities, health, hopes and world as we know it. Watch »
13 TED Talks • Total run time 2:54:56
Friday, December 9, 2016
A Charlie Brown Christmas: Please Enjoy!!!
It is never Christmas without Charlie Brown. This is from 1965 as we hope all enjoy!!!
Eli Manning Agent of Social Change
We welcome our newest contributor, Edith, as she shares our inaugural column dedicating her dissertation to Eli Manning:
Here is an agent of social change that personifies the mission of Walden U which is why I dedicated my dissertation to him:
Eli Manning
QUARTERBACK
NEW YORK GIANTS
A two-time Super Bowl champion and two-time Super Bowl MVP, former No. 1 overall pick Eli Manning has spent the entirety of his 13-year NFL career at the helm of the New York Giants. He holds numerous team records, including passing touchdowns, pass completions and passing yards, and also currently is the league leader in consecutive starts with an impressive 167 mark.
Manning is driven by a passion and energy, which also fuels his commitment to creating positive change in the community. As a father of three daughters, championing causes that involve children has always been a priority for Manning. He has served as the Chair of the New York March for Babies for the past seven years, joining thousands of New Yorkers in the walk in support of March of Dimes. Manning's efforts with March for Babies helped to raise over $25M over the past seven years.
Since volunteering to quarterback the Tackle Kids Cancer campaign ahead of the 2015 Season, Eli Manning has been the charity's most valuable player. His visits to the Children's Cancer Institute have warmed the hearts of the children and families battling cancer. His fundraising, appearances and personal donations are exemplified by the creation of the "Sohn-Manning Pediatric Cancer Survivorship Program", resulting in a grant of $500,000, among the many fundraising efforts he inspired. During its inaugural season the Giants, Manning and Hackensack University Medical Center were surprised by the many local grass roots organizations supporting Tackle Kids Cancer, so Manning pledged $100,000 for the 2016 season to match and inspire those efforts - and "Eli's Challenge" was born, raising over $30,000 from local community groups in the first few weeks of the program. To date, his support of the program has directly led to more than $1,000,000 in fundraising in just over one year, and propelled the new charitable program to over $3,000,000 in funds raised since its inception.
Manning along with his wife, founded the Eli and Abby Manning Children's Clinics in 2007 and kicked off a five-year fundraising campaign that ultimately raised close to $3M. Building on that accomplishment and model, they also created the University of Mississippi Medical Center Manning Family Fund, which received close to $1.5M in its first year last year.
Manning devotes his time and resources to a myriad of other initiatives, including working with the American Red Cross; his nearly 10-year relationship with and commitment to Guiding Eyes for the Blind, an organization that trains guide dogs; his participation in the No More campaign as part of the NFL Against Violence program; his contribution to Operation Smile's NYC gala; his scholarship endowment at the University of Mississippi; and his fulfillment of numerous Make-A-Wish and Wounded Warrior experiences.
Due to his continued commitment to charity, Manning has been the Giants' nominee for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award as well as the team's nominee for the Byron "Whizzer" White NFL Man of the Year Award numerous times.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Notations From the Grid (Special Edition): On the Need to Confort Hate Now in All Its' Forms
Our team picked this up while on the "Grid" as this was the headline from yesterday's New York Daily News--a very telling reality that should be addressed in the strongest possible terms by all political leaders.
This one was even more bothersome:
Making critics pay a huge price is how you silence future potential critics. Trump knows it and does it effectively. https://t.co/2tBKfOs5qG— Arash Karami (@thekarami) December 8, 2016
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Notations On World (Special Edition): A Musical Interlude With a Message
As we are seeing reports out of Syria about a surrender in Aleppo and the spectre of a looming Civil War in Iraq and the broader challenges in the Middle East as the battle for Mosul continues, our team wanted to share this Musical Interlude with a message that we hope it resonates with all the leaders of the World as a follow up to what our Columist & Editor , Nancy Doyle, noted earlier--We have no choice but to "hold on":
Don't Fear the Next 4 Years - Trouble is Nothing New.
A "Virtual Treat" To Enjoy :)
An #Outsider Newsflash: Introducing Amazon Go and the world’s most advanced shopping technology
We were just "blown" away" as we saw this that Amazon is testing in Seattle:
Fortune's @adamlashinsky reflected on it this morning in his latest commentary:
There it goes again. Amazon, the most disruptive retailer since Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward hit the scene is noodling again on something new. It’s called Amazon Go, a convenience-store-sized shop staffed by robots and sensors rather than humans.
As with much of what Amazon does, this is only a test. Its current Amazon Go store in Seattle is only open to employees for now. But Amazon is like a computer virus: It probes, it examines, it learns. And then it attacks. The company announced Amazon Go with a video, and Fortune’s Andrew Nusca and Robert Hackett also produced a video discussing the move. I’m with Nusca, who argues that Amazon is a master at building on top of its existing infrastructure. Just as Amazon Web Services was able to jumpstart itself by being its own best customer, Amazon’s massive distribution network is a natural partner to a chain of convenience stores.
Amazon doesn’t succeed at everything it does. (Think: Fire Phone.) Nor does it do everything quickly. It has been investigating the grocery business for years without achieving the dominance it has in online commerce. But when Amazon tries something new, it is worth paying attention.
Fortune's @adamlashinsky reflected on it this morning in his latest commentary:
There it goes again. Amazon, the most disruptive retailer since Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward hit the scene is noodling again on something new. It’s called Amazon Go, a convenience-store-sized shop staffed by robots and sensors rather than humans.
As with much of what Amazon does, this is only a test. Its current Amazon Go store in Seattle is only open to employees for now. But Amazon is like a computer virus: It probes, it examines, it learns. And then it attacks. The company announced Amazon Go with a video, and Fortune’s Andrew Nusca and Robert Hackett also produced a video discussing the move. I’m with Nusca, who argues that Amazon is a master at building on top of its existing infrastructure. Just as Amazon Web Services was able to jumpstart itself by being its own best customer, Amazon’s massive distribution network is a natural partner to a chain of convenience stores.
Amazon doesn’t succeed at everything it does. (Think: Fire Phone.) Nor does it do everything quickly. It has been investigating the grocery business for years without achieving the dominance it has in online commerce. But when Amazon tries something new, it is worth paying attention.
Saturday, December 3, 2016
And Still to USA they Get!
To leave home,
old friends,
with nothing,
but tales,
hope,
desire,
desperation,
fed,
into the ears,
somatized,
every breathe,
every step,
every dose,
of sleep,
tinged,
with arrival,
to USA,
a friend,
aunt,
uncle,
friend of,
a friend,
father,
mother,
were told,
it becoming,
a communal task,
to get,
the daughter,
or son,
to USA,
a street cabby-hole,
housing a trafficker,
is the first stop,
promises are made,
money,
a lot,
is exchanged,
the next day,
the cabby-hole,
and the trafficker,
disappear,
but still,
the hope,
desire,
to come,
to USA,
remains,
one,
two,
years,
pass,
revived plans,
goats and lamb,
chicken and cow,
entire estates,
are sold,
and still to USA they get.
Three Very Important Things to me!
This is my first blog here. I pondered so much, on what to write. This, being my first time. I did go through almost all other blogs written by a mentor who is also my friend, someone who inspires me and who kindly invited me to contribute blogs here.
I am a poet storyteller/ griot. In my culture, poems are used to tell stories as well as capture events. My culture only began writing in 1944. A week before leaving Uganda for good to come to USA via a short stay in Europe, I went to the elders of our clan to have them place their hands on me (as well as spit in my face as a way of giving me blessings). A goat and chicken were rounded up by very fast running young boys who were charged with slaughter, roasting and serving us. It was a send off as well as an opportunity to have one from our clan "go on yonder to the world." That was also a ritual pact to never forget them! For they sacrificed two prize animals for me.
I am a poet storyteller/ griot. In my culture, poems are used to tell stories as well as capture events. My culture only began writing in 1944. A week before leaving Uganda for good to come to USA via a short stay in Europe, I went to the elders of our clan to have them place their hands on me (as well as spit in my face as a way of giving me blessings). A goat and chicken were rounded up by very fast running young boys who were charged with slaughter, roasting and serving us. It was a send off as well as an opportunity to have one from our clan "go on yonder to the world." That was also a ritual pact to never forget them! For they sacrificed two prize animals for me.
I was now joining a line of long dead ancestors who were skilled hunters, herbalist-botanists, itinerant harp players, cloth traders and metal workers said to have loved adventure and travel. Unlike them, I was travelling with a passport; I cannot smell the wind for water or a predatory animal; the biology skills I have are only good enough to join medical school; I can't even tell my direction by a star; the only hunting I had done was when I was looking for a misplaced shoe, socks, pen or pencil. In other words, I am the early 70's born new kind of black man whose way of life is between that of a Western culture and less of my own culture.
But, I digress. The purpose of my premiere short blog is to tell you about the three important things to me now: America; Blackness; and education. A poem first to that insignia that is distinctly American;
Star Spangled banner in spring
This balmy spring,
Once again,
a welcome moment,
swans swimming in the pond,
the woodpecker,
bang, bang, bang.
An occasional clear sky,
The sun,
a fiery globe,
A puddle here and there,
The snow,
grudgingly giving up its horde.
The banner,
on a lofty perch,
Spread fully,
by a blowing wind,
Dotted glimmering glint,
Of random stars and stripes.
Enjoy!
Thought For the Week (W-End Edition)
We hope all enjoy these selections of thoughts as December is before us....
Life is Unpredictable
Love may arrive when it’s least expected.
Laughter may occur at any moment
and tears may fall without warning.
Happiness may be around the corner
or sadness over the next hill.
Embrace every moment and every emotion.
Your life is unique
and it’s a journey that only you can travel.”
~ Susan Gale
Thursday, December 1, 2016
An #Outsider Newsflash: New Malware Compromises More Than 1 Million Android Devices
Please note this for reference courtesy of Technilious as Checkpoint has created a nice little tool for all to check to see if devices has been hacked.
New Malware Compromises More Than 1 Million Android Devices: In the largest breach of Google accounts ever, Gooligan malware gains access to all of your data, including Gmail and Google Docs. Find out if you're infected.
New Malware Compromises More Than 1 Million Android Devices: In the largest breach of Google accounts ever, Gooligan malware gains access to all of your data, including Gmail and Google Docs. Find out if you're infected.
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