Production: Tracking and Hacking

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I saw this Story about office sensors tracking your every move. It struck me as something the great James Altucher (who won’t answer a text) would comment on. He didn’t, that I’m aware of, so I will.

Sensors that keep tabs on more than temperature are already all over offices—they’re just less conspicuous and don’t have names that suggest Bond villains. “Most people, when they walk into buildings, don’t even notice them,” says Joe Costello, chief executive officer of Enlighted, whose sensors, he says, are collecting data at more than 350 companies, including 15 percent of the Fortune 500. They’re hidden in lights, ID badges, and elsewhere, tracking things such as conference room usage, employee whereabouts, and “latency”—how long someone goes without speaking to another co-worker.

Proponents claim the goal is efficiency: Some sensors generate heat maps that show how people move through an office, to help maximize space; others, such as OccupEye, tap into HVAC systems. The office-design company Gensler has 1,000 Enlighted sensors lining its new space in New York. Embedded in light fixtures, the dime-size devices detect motion, daylight, and energy usage; a back-end system adjusts lighting levels. The sensors also learn employees’ behavior patterns. If workers in a given department start the day at 10 a.m., lights will stay dim until about that hour. So far, Gensler has seen a 25 percent savings in energy costs. It estimates the investment—installation cost the company about $1.70 per square foot, or roughly $200,000—will pay off in five years.

Legally speaking, U.S. businesses are within their rights to go full-on Eye of Sauron. “Employers can do any kind of monitoring they want in the workplace that doesn’t involve the bathroom,” says Lewis Maltby, president of the National Workrights Institute. And as long as the data is anonymized, as Enlighted’s is, some people don’t mind tracking if it makes work life easier. “It doesn’t bother me. It doesn’t feel intrusive,” says Luke Rondel, 31, a design strategist at Gensler. “It’s kind of cozy when you’re working late at night to be in a pod of light.” A majority of U.S. workers the Pew Research Center surveyed last year said they’d tolerate surveillance and data collection in the name of safety.

Up to a point, perhaps. The Boston Consulting Group has outfitted about 100 volunteer employees in its new Manhattan office with badges that embed a microphone and a location sensor. Made by Humanyze in Boston, the badges track physical and verbal interactions. BCG says it intends to use the data to see how office design affects employee communication. Outside critics have called the plan Orwellian and despotic—“It is a little bit invasive,” says Ross Love, 57, a BCG managing partner who volunteered—but the data collected is anonymized, and the company has pledged not to use it for performance evaluation.

Full Eye of Sauron? And, just who would that make your employer?

Companies, large and small, always look for ways to save money. It helps the bottom line. But it’s also a method of control – control of the HVAC, the light bill, and you. If ever you tire of slaving for the Dark Lord, you might consider self-employment. Altucher did it with writing, among other things. I’ve followed suit.

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Pexels.

The other day James posted some tips on overcoming the obstacles to successful writing, as books are concerned. These points are worth considering. His points (with my commentary):

A) SITTING

Writing is boring. It’s unnatural. It’s basically sitting and staring at a scream and typing into a keyboard.

 

This one is a killer – perhaps literally. Sitting is unhealthy. Break it up with bouts of random movement. Exercise during the day, twice if you can. Drink some coffee while you sit.

B) NO DISTRACTIONS

Because of the above, I always had to create an environment of zero distractions.

For my very first book, my family went to stay with my in-laws and I spent two weeks locked in my house and did nothing but write.

I turned off Internet, no TV, nothing. Just wrote. This was very hard. I’m too used to being distracted. It’s natural to be distracted.

I’m lucky in this regard as I can usually write anywhere and under any circumstance. However, for serious or strenuous work – editing for example – it needs to be quiet. No way around that.

C) STORY

Everything has a story.

Fiction, non-fiction, self-help, even a good tweet.

 

A good story helps work flow. That leads to better reading and more engagement – even if one writes about tax policy or book writing tips. I started this piece with an “Eye of Sauron” hook…

D) BOOK-SPECIFIC STUFF

This is a post about books and not writing in general so there are other book-specific items that a writer can’t ignore.

A book is not just the 40–80,000 words in the middle.

A book is a cover. A back-cover. Two flaps. And an interior.

 

 

In an odd way, writing the base material is the easiest part. It’s what writers do, in defiance of that history James mentioned. The other stuff, so much of it, is actual work.

E) PSYCHOLOGY

Finishing the book, delivering the book, watching the book come out, dealing with both good and bad reviews, requires some self-awareness.

Dealing with that psychology is painful.

Most of us in this business over think the hell out of everything. Analysis becomes paralysis if you let it.

F) THE NEXT BOOK

The hardest part of finishing a book is starting the next book. This is often the most important way to market the first book. How many authors didn’t achieve success until their second or third books?

 

Here, James is way ahead of me. When that first tome is finished there’s a temptation to relax. It’s needed but can lead back to paralysis. I finished my second book two months after my first – and that was 14 months ago… A few little pseudo e-books and pubs for other people later and I’m still looking at several new drafts.

We’ve all got something to work on. I’m going to work on my coffee now. Y’all enjoy life in Mordor…

A Day WITH Migrants

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Much has been made of the lauded “Day Without Immigrants”. I think this refers to a day (maybe today) when non-American invaders slack off with the crime, terrorism, and general nuisance. They seem to think people will notice the lack and want more. I’m not sure how this helps them.

Anyway, the dwindling ranks of taxpaying citizens in Los Angles were recently treated to a Day WITH Immigrants, courtesy of the “students” at Grover Cleveland High “School”.

“Students” Brawl:

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CBSLA.com.

This video shows scenes reminiscent of a third world prison riot. One would not be able to convince Grover Cleveland that this was, in fact, America.

And it isn’t. The student body at GCHS is only about 17% American. This mirrors the demographics of the entire Los Angeles Unified “School” District. This is the new Amerika, that post-1965 dystopian melting pot everyone is talking about. And it is spreading.

Soon, your child’s zoo school could host such exciting events. Except, perhaps, for one day per year without the joy of multiculturalism. It may not be an education (most assuredly will not be) but it will be an experience. Make sure your kids wear helmets.

To Pay or Not to Pay: American’s Taxing Issues

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Last month President Trump ordered that heaven and earth be moved to spare Americans the financial horror and burden of the failing Obamacare boondoggle. It seems the IRS at least may have taken note. Rumor, and I need to look into this, has it that they will no longer require oppressed taxpayers to answer the little (penalty ridden) question about yearly coverage.

Following President Donald Trump’s executive order instructing agencies to provide relief from the health law, the Internal Revenue Service appears to be taking a more lax approach to the coverage requirement.

The health law’s individual mandate requires everyone to either maintain qualifying health coverage or pay a tax penalty, known as a “shared responsibility payment.” The IRS was set to require filers to indicate whether they had maintained coverage in 2016 or paid the penalty by filling out line 61 on their form 1040s. Alternatively, they could claim exemption from the mandate by filing a form 8965.

For most filers, filling out line 61 would be mandatory. The IRS would not accept 1040s unless the coverage box was checked, or the shared responsibility payment noted, or the exemption form included. Otherwise they would be labeled “silent returns” and rejected.

Instead, however, filling out that line will be optional.

Consider this, if true, amnesty for people who actually deserve it. And hopefully by next year it will be a moot point. Trump is ready and Congress claims that they will act next month to repeal the lingering disaster of President What’s-His-Muslim. Of course, the GOP has said this for the past 6 years. Still, hope abounds.

Other Americans, those who normally love sending aid to Washington, are taking hope in civil disobedience. They are refusing to pay any federal income taxes. Because Trump.

Andrew Newman always pays his taxes, even if he hates what the government is doing with them. But not this year. For him, Donald Trump is the dealbreaker. He’ll pay his city and state taxes but will refuse to pay federal income tax as a cry of civil disobedience against the president and his new administration.

Newman is not alone. A nascent movement has been detected to revive the popularity of tax resistance – last seen en masse in America during the Vietnam war but which has been, sporadically, a tradition in the US and beyond going back many centuries.

“My tax money will be going towards putting up a wall on the Mexican border instead of helping sick people. It will contribute to the destruction of the environment and maybe more nuclear weapons. I think there will be a redistribution of wealth from the middle class to the wealthy elite and Trump’s campaign for the working man and woman was an absolute fraud. If you pay taxes you are implicated in the system,” said Newman, an associate professor of English and history at Stony Brook University on Long Island, part of the State University of New York.

“The government wants our money and if a lot of people were thinking about this kind of peaceful protest, it would get their attention,” he added.

I love the attention. I love civil disobedience and I hate taxes and all the evil they fund. I wish these folks well. And, Andrew is right: if everyone stopped paying – for any reason -maybe things would change. He hates the wall idea. I hate everything D.C. does and is.

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Probably not yours, Dearie. Scott Olson / Getty.

However, things like this usually don’t end very well. They usually end in prison. If Andrew doesn’t like his 1040 IRS number, he’ll hate his B.O.P. number.

Still there’s that hope thing.

Teaching and Preaching the Gospel Truth. Or Not.

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McMurry University a Methodist college formerly Christian college in Texas has opened up a prayer room just for Muslims.

The Methodist-affiliated McMurry University dedicated the space in one of the school’s residential dorms for its Muslim students’ daily prayers.

Before its creation, Muslim students met for prayer in a nearby hotel, a student who helped establish the new prayer room told The College Fix in an interview.

That student, Joe Yousef, is president of McMurry’s Saudi Student Club. Of the roughly 1,000 students attending McMurry, about 60 are Muslim and many come from Saudi Arabia, Yousef said.

Yousef said now that Muslim students have a prayer room on campus, it will be much easier for them to meet both their religious and scholastic obligations.

Could these be the same scholarly pursuits the Ninth Circuit was concerned about? TATP 101, etc.?

Some students are also supportive.

“Being Christians, we should be open to free religion and letting everyone do what they want to do and I think the Muslim prayer room gives them that chance,” student Hector Flores told BigCountry.com.

Being a Christian does not mean “letting everyone do what they want to do”. Or, at least it didn’t to Christ. Actual Christian schools used to get that. But, here and now, I suppose McMurry is just extending the same sort of courtesy that Saudi colleges lend their numerous Christian students. Oh. Wait. No…

I checked and McMurry has a Center for Community Inclusion AND! a Diversity Affairs Council. And that’s as far as I checked. These names are mere code for anti-Western and anti-Christian. It’s probably safe to dispense with McMurry if one wants an education or a Christian experience. SJWs, feel welcomed! Volunteer for the exciting and diverse TATP 101 Lab – it’s a blast!

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Just ask Saint Valentine – or any American Christian college student. The Federalist.

Top 17 Reasons MAGA Really Can’t Happen Fast Enough

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Once again the Heritage Foundation released its annual Index of Economic Freedom.

And once again, America slides. Last year we were number 11. Now, we’re number 17. Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand, Switzerland, Australia, Estonia, Canada, UAE, Ireland, Chile, Taiwan, the UK, Georgia, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, and Lithuania all placed ahead of the U.S.

We’re number one! Until we’re not. I’ve tracked this index for a long time. It’s been a while since we’ve even been in the top ten. The indispensable nation.

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Heritage.

We’re still in the “mostly free” category. But we’re drifting closer to “moderately free” – where one starts to find the third world.

MAGA. Please.

Here’s To Your Health (or Lack)

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Richie Bernardo of WalletHub wrote up a substantive list of America’s healthiest cities (and least healthy too).

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(The bigger the circle, the worse things are).

The study measured: health care, food, fitness, and “green space”. San Francisco took the top spot; Detroit came in dead last. This is interesting. I was unaware anyone still lives in Detroit.

Click HERE for the full list.

The top ten:

1 San Francisco, CA
2 Salt Lake City, UT
3 Scottsdale, AZ
4 Seattle, WA
5 Portland, OR
6 Irvine, CA
7 Huntington Beach, CA
8 Honolulu, HI
9 Washington, DC
10 Santa Clarita, CA

(West much?)

The methodology seems sound. I’m sure anyone would want to rearrange a few towns. For instance, I can’t see anything healthy about D.C. except for spending and corruption levels. Still, if you work in and for Mordor, things must be pretty good.

I’ve been to many or most of these places and the findings seem to fit. I was surprised Asheville didn’t place. Maybe there was a population limit. Plenty of smaller cities are healthy too. Then again, where’s Charleston?

Anyway, for a very short while longer, I’m stuck between two of the ranked areas: #27 Tampa and #141 Augusta. Again, the rankings seem about right. Let’s us briefly examine those two for comparative value (if any):

Tampa, FL

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Tampa takes its worst hit on healthcare. I don’t go to the doctor but I know people who do. Tampa General seems like a pretty good hospital – for others… “Food” seems an average score; plenty of grocery stores and many decent restaurants. Fitness is appropriate at “10”. It’s a young, bustling city full of attractive people. They make an art out of taking care of themselves. The “green spaces” seems a little low – just a little. There are parks, even if they have a decidedly urban flare. And the countryside is not that far away.

All in all, it is a top 30 place, health-wise. There’s also an abundance of money, women, cigars, fast cars, women, beer, and other things to do.

Augusta, GA

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“Smaller, Southern Detroit” is 141 out of 150. A city that prides itself on hospitals (and other government spending) comes in at 140 for healthcare. Again, my personal experience here is lacking. The food score seems a little low; the eateries may be a little plain but there are plenty of them. “Green spaces” is also low; I hike everyday in one of many available parks. Some double as crime scenes but at least they’re there. I hate to say it, but 107 for fitness seems a little generous.

That may detract from the healthcare (many hospitals but overloaded with unhealthy patients) and the green spaces (what good are they if no one uses them). Being out of shape in Augusta seems to be the second most important character trait (just behind apathy and just ahead of gleefully willful ignorance). The Golden Ticket bus may have just parked on Washington Road but the locals are parked at Golden Corral.

The Masters aside, the most popular activity in town is mourning the pile of magic bricks recently toppled by a local drunk (it’s not the pillar that’s cursed, folks). There’s a geological reason for much of this lowness. Still, thank God for Detroit.

**

The article also comes complete with “best vs. worst” ranking in several in-depth categories and some expert opinions about something. In fairness, I did not consult the experts. You might.

Check and see where your city stands (or lies).

If your town is out of sync with you, or visa versa, consider a move.

The Screws Tighten: Cashing Us Out

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All is well on Wall Street. Goldman Sachs Steven Mnuchin has been confirmed as Treasury Secretary. Janet Yellen is up to something. It’s all good for them. And that’s what really matters. The government and its banking owners get complete discretion to do whatever they please. And they are utterly unaccountable to anyone (impossibly improbable war of righteous vengeance aside).

For you, it’s a different story. You must be controlled in everything you do and at all times. And the controls are coming for your cash money, for the money itself, for you.

The time will come when you won’t be able to buy a cup of coffee without being traced, warns investment guru Jim Rogers. To control people, governments will increasingly seek to hunt down cash spending, he adds.

“Governments are always looking out for themselves first, and it’s the same old thing that has been going on for hundreds of years

“When it’s done, the governments are going to be very, very happy they are going to say they’re doing it for our own good, this is not them, this is for our good. That they’re doing this, but it’s coming, and it’s going to be a whole different world in which we live. Probably we are not going to have as many freedoms as we have now even though we are already losing our freedoms at a significant pace,” Rodgers told the radio.

It’s not really your money. All money belongs to the Big Club. They just let you borrow it, in very small amounts, for a time. But the anonymity of cash bothers them. They want you on a digital leash. And that’s exactly what’s coming. Leashed like animals “for your own good”.

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Sovereign Investor.

The saddest part is that most people won’t just accept this, they’ll probably demand it.

Me? I’m thinking it may almost be time to water Jefferson’s tree.

Happy Saint Valentine’s Day 2017!

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Hope your’s is a great one. Here’s part of my historical, inspirational piece lifted from Freedom Prepper this morning:

Now, before we indulge in the modern secularism of the day – the flowers and chocolates – a quick word from history. Saint Valentine was a real man. He lived in the Roman Empire in the 3rd Century, before the acceptance of Christianity.

He is remembered today as the Saint of Love and with good reason. He traveled and converted young lovers to Christ. And he married them in Christ’s name. For this he was arrested, persecuted, and executed (Martyred) outside of Rome in 269 A.D.

For us, there are several lessons from his story. Today, Christians are under constant attack – from the secularists and the communists, from radical Muslims, and even from each other. We must know we’re on to something because of the attacks. More importantly, in the end, love concurs all – the love of Jesus and our more earthy romantic loves.

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By Hand, With Heart.

Though they may not execute us now – or yet – the hardships are real. But they shall not endure. Love on. And have a great day!

Perrin

TATP 101: The Pot Melts

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The other day I half-jokingly wrote about TATP 101 studies – a response to the stupidity of the Ninth Circuit’s “reasoning” on immigration. If you’re not familiar with TATP, just wait. It may be coming to a church, business, school, or social gathering near you.

A 16-year-old girl was among four terrorists arrested in southern France for TATP possession. Now a 16-year-old girl in Denmark has been arrested for the same thing.

For the first time in its history, Denmark has charged a woman with terrorism. The morbid debut involves a 16-year-old Danish girl, who converted to Islam and intended to blow up a historic Jewish school.

The girl was arrested in January 2016 for possessing explosives. Later it emerged that the explosive TATP (which is also known as acetone peroxide and was used in the November 2015 Paris attacks) was meant to be used in an attack against two schools in Denmark, Danish Radio reported. Due to the delicate nature of the case and the amount of sensitive information, much of the data in the so-called “Kundby case” (named after the village where the girl was arrested) has been withheld from the public. The court hearings are being held behind “double-locked” doors.

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Scholarly immigrants creatively combine fashion and chemistry studies. DW.com.

I guess all that scholarly teaching and research does have some value. The lessons are spreading far and wide. Maybe we need more of this in Proposition America, the molten pot. BOOM! Like that…

If You Body Shame Lady Gaga, I Want To Knock Out Your Teeth

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Not really. Wait. Yes, yes I do.

Still getting over Super Bowl LI here – maybe the best football game I’ve ever seen. And part of the experience was Lady Gaga’s knock-out halftime show. She killed it. She was the runner-up MVP to Brady. Well, maybe not, but she was great.

Then I heard some rumors on these interwebs about someone – and I have no idea how anyone could do this – someone was “body shaming” my beloved Gaga. I then learned that that means they made fun of her for being out of shape…

I was out of shape myself for a decade or more. I know a thing or two about it. I know how hard it is to come back and to keep it up. Fitness is a big part of what I write about here. Nothing makes me happier than seeing someone lose the weight and hit the gym, etc. Anyway, I then returned my thoughts to Lady Gaga and her appearance last Sunday.

How the hell is this out of shape?

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Billboard / Fox / NFL / Gaga.

?????!!!!!?????

I look at that and see …. talented, beauty! Trying not to be a pig here. Sorry. Love her. She’s the total package: great voice, energetic, plays her own instruments, upbeat pop, etc., etc. Strictly speaking to her physical appearance, I’m thinking “dream girl”.

Some dork named “Nanath” noted her “flab”. I don’t see that (revert to the above pic for reference) but I can see “Nathan” being a fat loser. “Jake” says she has a “gut”. Any bets “Jake” has never kissed a girl? Somebody “AppleCore” says she has a “flabby belly”… That fruit is rotten to the core. There’s probably no teeth to knock out. Certainly no couth.

But she doesn’t need me to defend her. The classy little lady strode right past her pitiful detractors:

“I heard my body is a topic of conversation so I wanted to say, I’m proud of my body and you should be proud of yours too,” she wrote on Instagram in the caption of a photo of her performing. “No matter who you are or what you do.”

Instantly turned these idiots into a positive message for everyone. Amazing.

It’s not often I side with the feminists. Even more amazing. But that’s the power of Gaga. No shame it that at all.

*Note: Perrin may have developed a crush on Lady Gaga. If you are her, please contact him immediately…