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Rocky Wells
Rocky Wells
35 w

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Rocky Wells
Rocky Wells
35 w

https://www.missingkids.org/poster/NCMC/2034826/1

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www.missingkids.org

Have you seen this child?

Missing From: . Missing Date: . .
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
35 w

James Comey’s Secret FBI Probe Allegedly Sent “Honeypots” Into Trump Campaign
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www.rvmnews.com

James Comey’s Secret FBI Probe Allegedly Sent “Honeypots” Into Trump Campaign

James Comey’s Secret FBI Probe Allegedly Sent “Honeypots” Into Trump Campaign
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
35 w

Greater Israel, Belt Road (BRICS) WW3 - How Rising Antisemitism is Helping Israel Grow. Titus Frost
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api.bitchute.com

Greater Israel, Belt Road (BRICS) WW3 - How Rising Antisemitism is Helping Israel Grow. Titus Frost

Greater Israel, Belt Road (BRICS) WW3 - How Rising Antisemitism is Helping Israel Grow. Titus Frost - BRI WW3 Greater Israel Project - How Rising Antisemitism is Helping Israel Grow - August 2024 Captain Titus Frost - This is a news segment from my latest livestream where I go over the mathematical fact that the Israeli state is growing in population and geography. That the war with Gaza has decreased the Palestinian population drastically while at the same time caused increased antisemitism online which has driven more migration to Israel. This is how the Greater Israeli Project works, increase the population of Israel, decrease population of neighboring states and thereby justify geographical size increase. I cover how characters like Lucas Gage fit into the narrative. - Full Show: https://rumble.com/v56qqh8-stwt-psywar-episode-1-the-revenge-of-the-ghost-pirates-qanonsec.html - Show Notes: https://hive.blog/news/@titusfrost/stwt-show-notes-revenge-of-the-ghost-pirates-qanonsec - Join the Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/TitusFrost - Paypal Donate: https://paypal.me/CaptainTitusFrost - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES Mirrored From: https://rumble.com/c/TitusFrost
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
35 w

Small protest outside CSL (Bayer) AGN in Melbourne
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api.bitchute.com

Small protest outside CSL (Bayer) AGN in Melbourne

Protesting their poisonous shots. This is taking action even though small, it would have had an impact on the shareholders...
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
35 w

?????????: Federal Health Minister, Mark Butler has announced Australian CDC! ??
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api.bitchute.com

?????????: Federal Health Minister, Mark Butler has announced Australian CDC! ??

?????????: Federal Health Minister, Mark Butler has announced a $251 million investment on top of the initial $90 million funding to create an Australian Centre for Disease Control (CDC). It will be located in Canberra and become operational on 1 January, 2026 to ensure that we are ready for the next pandemic. UTL COMMENT:- I feel that they are doing that because of what he said in the next video that I shall upload....to give them a more 'authoritative' approach....
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
35 w

How Gilbert Gottfried's iconic 'Iago' voice helped a father connect with his autistic son
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www.upworthy.com

How Gilbert Gottfried's iconic 'Iago' voice helped a father connect with his autistic son

The late Gilbert Gottfried was a legendary stand-up comic, who somehow managed to pull off bizarre, even crude humor with a sense of lighthearted charm. He also appeared in countless films and TV shows as an actor, including “Saturday Night Live,” “Beverly Hills Cop II” and more recently “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”But for many ’90s kids (myself included) he was quite simply the one, the only … Iago. Gottfried brought a wisecracking, chaotic Disney parrot to life in a way that no one else could. In fact, fellow “Aladdin” actor Jonathan Freeman credited Gottfried for bringing out his best rendition of the movie’s sinister villain, Jafar.Jafar Aldin GIFfrom Jafar GIFs “My performance was much improved by having had Gilbert as the parrot because I didn’t have to be psychotic. I could let him be psychotic,” Freeman said in an interview for Theater Mania. And while nearly everyone on the planet might know about Gottfried’s Iago, they might not know how his beloved character helped one father connect once again with his autistic son. In 2014, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Ron Suskind wrote an article for The New York Times sharing how his son Owen’s regressive autism diagnosis came as a frustrating, confusing and painful shock. Unlike children born with it, those with regressive autism seem to be developing typically then will suddenly experience a rapid loss in communication and social skills. This meant his once “chatty, energetic” boy stopped speaking. For four years. In the midst of the family’s upheaval, one saving grace provided comfort and stability: Disney.Movies such as “The Little Mermaid,” “Beauty and the Beast” and even old classics like “Dumbo” and "Bambi” still held Owen’s interest. And eventually, Suskind discovered that they could also be the key to communication.On his brother Walt’s birthday, Owen used a Disney reference to speak a complex sentence: “Walter doesn’t want to grow up, like Mowgli or Peter Pan.” Eager to find a way to keep the momentum going, Suskind followed Owen into his room. As he tiptoed up the stairs, Suskind saw a puppet of Iago, one of Owen’s “favorite characters.” Owen had been doing lots of Iago echolalia, repeating certain character lines. Echolalia is commonly described as both a symptom of autism and as a point of entry for a parent.Suskind joked that it was “easy to identify because the character is voiced by Gilbert Gottfried, who talks like a busted Cuisinart.”Suskind successfully grabbed the Iago puppet, then froze, not knowing what to say. Suddenly, an idea came. “What would Iago say?”Doing his best Gilbert Gottfried, Suskind started to ask Owen simple questions. “How ya doin'?” “How does it feel to be you?”He must have done a convincing Gottfried impression, because it worked. Owen and “Iago” had a long, heartfelt conversation. Owen even channeled his inner Jafar. They were playing together. A miracle. “I hear a laugh, a joyful little laugh that I have not heard in many years,” the father wrote. That breakthrough would eventually lead to Suskind writing a book about the life-changing discovery. He even teamed up with Owen (now all grown up) to adapt the book into a documentary called “Life Animated.”Owen now seems to be a happy, healthy adult (a picture of him next to Gottfried below) with a fulfilling life—and yes, still a love of Disney, thanks in part to a wisecracking, chaotic parrot.Gottfried’s voice was indeed iconic. But, as with many great artists, it also helped others find their voice. His talent made a lasting positive impact, and he will be missed.This article originally appeared on 4.13.22
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
35 w

“Synthesised”: Don Henley on the artist who introduced him to country rock
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

“Synthesised”: Don Henley on the artist who introduced him to country rock

The fascination of rock and roll twang. The post “Synthesised”: Don Henley on the artist who introduced him to country rock first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
35 w

AI Chatbots Lean to the Left. That’s a Problem for Elections.
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spectator.org

AI Chatbots Lean to the Left. That’s a Problem for Elections.

When journalists discuss the impact artificial intelligence will have on elections, they usually talk about the rise of “deepfake” videos and images. They express concern that gullible Americans will be fooled by AI-generated videos like the parody of a Kamala Harris campaign ad that Elon Musk recently promoted. They remark that fake images, like the heart-wrenching one of a little girl and her dog that circulated social media in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, could be instrumental in swaying the opinion of a public that scrolls through them on social media. Of course, these are legitimate concerns. But what reporters at ABC, NBC, the New York Times, or the Washington Post rarely talk about is the impact chatbots — AI’s written word — could have on elections (both this one and those in the future) if they are biased politically. And it should come as no surprise to most of us that, according to a new study released by GMTech, mainstream chatbots do have a bias. Language learning models have been trained on large datasets typically sourced from media outlets like the New York Times (which sued OpenAI and Microsoft for using its copyrighted work late last year). Since artificial intelligence can only spit out what it has been fed, it makes sense that chatbot answers will tend to favor a liberal political ideology.  GMTech asked several well-known AIs, including ChatGPT (OpenAI), Llama (Meta), Gemini (Google), Titan (Amazon), and Claude (Anthropic), a series of 35 questions on a wide range of issues, including economic policy and political ideology designed to detect political bias. The company then analyzed the responses for political bias via a programming algorithm. (RELATED: Who Won the Debate? AI Says Kamala Did.) Not only did the responses tend to lean liberal, but “[p]rompts that themselves present a liberal or conservative slant are likely to receive a response that matches the political slant of the prompt, creating an echo chamber that reinforces users’ already-held beliefs.” At a time when just over half of us (55 percent, according to recent surveys) are turning to chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini over traditional search engines, those slight differences are concerning. “AI is a powerful tool for information dissemination, but our findings reveal that its underlying biases could influence voters … in a close race, this bias could potentially sway the outcome, which makes transparency more critical than ever.” Bennett Bakke, the founder and CEO of GMTech, said in a press release. The study found that Amazon’s Titan Premier was the most biased, with 18 percent of its responses (when it would respond) leaning liberal, while OpenAI’s ChatGPT 4o and Meta’s Llama 3.1 leaned liberal in 10 percent of their responses.  Image courtesy of GMTech Image courtesy of GMTech That all said, the biases GMTech found in the study were small. “It was measuring very slight biases on either end,” Bakke told The American Spectator. He further remarked, “By and large, I think I was pretty impressed that they mostly weren’t picking a side. It was pretty fact-based and not trying to lean either way.” For now, asking a chatbot about the specific policies promoted by a political candidate isn’t incredibly helpful, even if Americans trusted election information coming from AI. Most chatbots are trained on datasets that are about a year old.  “When people ask me like ‘How should I be using the models?’ Like, well, probably not for this sort of use case, actually. You shouldn’t be asking it real-time, political, policy questions,” Bakke said. When asked just this week who the presidential candidates are, ChatGPT (which is capable of using a browser tool to get more updated information) responded that the Democrats were still going with Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, and noted that Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, and Vivek Ramaswamy were still in the race, although “polling behind Trump.” (Grok, Elon Musk’s X-based chatbot, did respond correctly when asked the same question.) While chatbots’ written political biases likely won’t affect the 2024 election measurably, the issue could play into future elections if tech companies don’t make a conscious effort to both diversify their sources of information and disclose their data sources to users. At this point, it’s clear that these developers still have some work to do to provide responses that aren’t skewed by the ideology of the mainstream. READ MORE from Aubrey Gulick: Who Won the Debate? AI Says Kamala Did. At Stake in This Election: Manhood and Womanhood What’s an ‘Opportunity Economy’ Anyway? The post AI Chatbots Lean to the Left. That’s a Problem for Elections. appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
35 w

Two Media Giants, No Endorsement
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spectator.org

Two Media Giants, No Endorsement

WASHINGTON — Will Lewis, publisher of the Washington Post, announced Friday that the newspaper will not make an endorsement in the 2024 presidential election. The Washington Post nonendorsement came on the heels of news that the Los Angeles Times would not endorse in the race for the White House. Two blue-city newspapers owned by two billionaires — Jeff Bezos owns the Post, and Patrick Soon-Shiong owns the Times — pulled the plug on expected endorsements of Kamala Harris. Earthquake. “The Washington Post will not be making an endorsement of a presidential candidate in this election,” Lewis wrote. “Nor in any future presidential election. We are returning to our roots of not endorsing presidential candidates.” “Just … impossible timing for this announcement to be read as a statement of principle,” Semafor editor-in-chief Ben Smith responded on X. On Fox News, media guy Howard Kurtz slammed the Post for “hypocrisy,” as he observed that Bezos “does a lot of business with the federal government.” I agree. The timing for the Post’s first nonendorsement for president in 36 years does not work in Lewis’ favor. “Why take a stand on principle now, 11 days before the election, rather than months ago?” Politico Playbook PM’s Eli Okun asked. Okun also noted that the Washington Post opted out of a White House nod after it endorsed Democrats Angela Alsobrooks, who is running for the Senate in Maryland, and Eugene Vindman, who is running for a congressional seat in Virginia. Since most readers have never been a member of an editorial board, I’ll provide some context here. There is a firewall between the news side and opinion. Newspaper endorsements from the editorial board (again, separate from the news side) matter because they can help voters navigate state, local, and down-ballot races with candidates who are not household names. Or they can serve as markers on how not to vote. Presidential endorsements are different. An endorsement is less likely to change a vote, but it does showcase a newspaper’s values. Or lack thereof. As NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik noted on X, the nonendorsements arrive “at a time of heightened concern over whether news outles (sic) are pulling their punches in order to appease Trump in final days of a neck and neck presidential race.” As owners, Bezos and Soon-Shiong have every right to direct their newspapers’ endorsements. Just as staff who object have every right to quit and air their grievances, which some L.A. Times veterans are doing. “I am resigning because I want to make it clear that I am not OK with us being silent. In dangerous times, honest people need to stand up. This is how I’m standing up,” the L.A. Times’ editorials editor, Mariel Garza, told Columbia Journalism Review. Garza did stand up, and I’m sure it was painful. A part of me thinks that there is a lesson here for left-leaning journalists who haven’t had to face the reality that not everyone operates as they do — even their left-leaning bosses. But really, after spending nearly a decade furiously lambasting Trump, the newspapers’ failure to endorse Harris must have landed on staff like a body blow. Meanwhile, conservatives everywhere are reaching for the popcorn and enjoying the show. To outsiders, the Washington Post’s motto since 2017, “Democracy dies in darkness,” may have seemed vainglorious. Now insiders have to see that as well. To much of the public, newspaper editorials may seem like homework. But to the individuals who write them, they have meaning. And consequences. Contact Review-Journal Washington columnist Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjournal.com. Follow @debrajsaunders on X. COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM READ MORE: The Press Barons Feign Impartiality. No One Believes It. The Spectator P.M. Ep. 88: Why Didn’t the Washington Post Endorse Kamala? The post Two Media Giants, No Endorsement appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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