Peeple is a small camera and sensor that attaches to the peephole on your front door. When someone knocks, Peeple takes a video and sends a mobile notification. With Peeple, co-founder Chris Chuter says, the front door is no longer a blind spot. Read More
The action camera category has a clear leader in GoPro, but others like Contour aren’t taking GoPro’s dominance lying down; the Utah-based maker of POV camera has joined forces with iON Cameras, a New Jersey-based maker of similar devices, in a merger that could help both remain competitive in a space where everyone from Sony to HTC is entering the ring. Contour made a return to… Read More
One of the benefits of subscribing to Amazon’s Prime service is that you get access to free two-day shipping on eligible purchases. Users will also get access to videos, books, and music, all for a fee of $99 a year. Sounds good if you’re a frequent shopper at Amazon, but now it looks like Wal-Mart wants in on the action as well.
A report from The Information (via Reuters) has revealed that Wal-Mart is reportedly planning an Amazon Prime-like service of their own, but instead of being priced at $99 a year, it will be priced at a more affordable $50. The downside is that unlike Amazon Prime which offers more than just free two-day shipping, Wal-Mart’s offering will reportedly be more limited which we guess could explain the cheaper subscription.
However The Information claims that more features are expected to be added at a later date which might involve Vudu, a video streaming service that they own. The service is said to enter its trial phase this summer and will be invitation-only for now, where Wal-Mart will offer subscribers free shipping in three days or less on eligible products.
According to Wal-Mart spokesman Ravi Jariwala who spoke to Reuters, “Depending on customer feedback we will see how the programme evolves.” It is unclear as to how well-received the service will be, but what do you guys think? Is Wal-Mart’s Prime-like service something you might be interested in subscribing to?
Wal-Mart Reportedly Planning To Compete Against Amazon’s Prime , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.
When Wildstar was launched, many had high hopes and expectations of the game. After all it was developed by a group of former Blizzard employees, and given Blizzard’s reputation for making quality games, many had thought it would apply to Wildstar as well. The game had originally adopted a subscription-based model but if the speculations are to be believed, it could soon be going free-to-play.
According to a report from Destructoid, this started when the game was taken off the shelves in Australia which led to speculation that it could go free-to-play, or adopt the Guild Wars model in which the game would cost players money, but after that it would be free. However recently Wildstar was spotted in the Steam database where it was listed as “free on demand” which basically means free-to-play.
This is later backed up by a post on Reddit in the Wildstar sub-Reddit where an alleged Carbine employee confirmed that the game would be adopting the model. According to the poster, “Wildstar is going to be changing its business model in August(tentatively of course, patch stuff etc) to a Hybridized Free to Play model. Now thankfully it is not going Pay to Win, I suppose you could call it “Freemium” in a way as a lot of the stuff that the paid accounts will get is buffs to experience/rep/renown etc gain and character slots and the like, no direct power buffs or anything like that.”
They also note that there will be microtransactions included in the game moving forward. This isn’t the first time we’ve heard MMORPGs revert to the free-to-play model. In fact Blizzard at one point even stated that they are open to the idea of making World of Warcraft free-to-play one day.
Wildstar MMORPG Might Be Adopting Free-To-Play Model , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.
If you’re a World of Warcraft and have been sneakily using a bot and thinking you could get away with it, think again because there is a good chance Blizzard knows that you’ve been using it. In fact recently the developer has announced a wave of bans following players who have been detected using bots.
According to Community Manager Lore, “We’ve recently taken action against a large number of World of Warcraft accounts that were found to be using third-party programs that automate gameplay, known as “bots.” We’re committed to providing an equal and fair playing field for everyone in World of Warcraft, and will continue to take action against those found in violation of our Terms of Use. Cheating of any form will not be tolerated.”
According to GameSpot, one of the bots that has been targeted is the HonorBuddy which basically lets players run around Battlegrounds in World of Warcraft and collect honor without actually having to fight anyone. Given that honor points can be exchanged for certain items and perks in the game, it does make it tempting to farm these points using bots.
Thankfully the ban is not permanent as it is said that it will last 6 months which is admittedly rather long, but at least your characters will remain intact. This isn’t the first time Blizzard has successfully fought off bots. Previously the company won a lawsuit against a bot maker, and last year the developer of a Hearthstone bot was forced to shut down.
Blizzard Issues Bans Against Players Using World Of Warcraft Bots , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.
Bikini waxing isn’t for everybody. While we’re of the belief that women should do whatever they want when it comes to body hair of any kind, that includes people who submit themselves to be tortured — err — get waxed.
The reviews are all over the board. There are those waxers who swear by it. They make monthly appointments and claim it “hurts less and less every time.” There are those who opt out except for the rare special occasion, like a vacation, and those who did it once and vowed to never to do it again.
Regardless of which type of waxer you are, there are some common thoughts that run through everyone’s minds before, during and after the process. With a bit of help from our Facebook followers (and some of our own editors), here are some of those colorful thoughts.
1. Hesitation
“Am I really going to do this?”
2. Anxiety
“Oh man, the stupid stuff we do for the sake of beauty!” Facebook user Janise Bachler
3. Self-Assurance:
“It’s as easy as ripping off a Band-Aid. Just a really long Band-Aid.” Facebook user Rachel Lucht
4. Awkwardness
“Why yes, of course I’d love to make small talk with you while my legs are swung up around my head.”
5. Vulnerability
“Please don’t hurt me.”
6. Sheer Terror
“That’s it. I’m going to die here.” HuffPost reader Alexandra Kaplan
7. Pain (duh)
“OUCH.” Facebook user Maurie Taylor Marcil
8. Confusion
“You want me to get on my hands and knees and do what?!” Facebook user Michelle Lynn Van Cleave
9. Regret
“I can’t do this any more. I don’t care what weird shape this is in right now. It’s not worth it.”
10. Accomplishment
“That wasn’t so bad.”
11. Self-Righteousness
“If I don’t get laid after this, sh*t ain’t right.”
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The D Train: Dark Humor
Posted in: Today's ChiliJack Black’s comedic talents are unquestioned. From his brash, bombastic breakthrough role in the superb High Fidelity, he has repeatedly demonstrated the ability to seize a scene by the throat and thrash comedy out of it. Not always subtle, but generally effective. He’s the irascible, often lovable character actor, a bit plump and goofy, living largely on the surface.
But lurking just below is a more complex artist. Margot at the Wedding and Bernie rewarded us with glimpses of the troubled character who is more than the sum of his pratfalls, physical comedy, loud posturing and easy laughs.
There are no easy laughs in The D Train. This humor is earned the hard way… cutting into character and peeling back the skin. The character Black creates, Dan Landsman, is the undistinguished, forgettable nebbish who has never left his hometown, nor even succeeded at his dead end job. He survives by keeping his boss, Jeffrey Tambour, his wife, Kathryn Hahn, and his son, Russell Posner, at some length while pretending to be working on important tasks.
He bolsters his ego by referring to himself in the third person by a variety of nicknames such as D Train or D Fresh, failed attempts to ingratiate or elevate his profile in the eyes of others… hollow posturing, irritating over familiarity ratcheting up his un-likeableness.
Dan’s high school reunion provides him with the chance to rewrite history and inflate the present. He tries to take control of the reunion committee, hoarding the computer password, issuing un-followed orders to committee members and falsely claiming to be the chairman. He is largely ignored, excluded from their social gatherings and treated derisively.
To redeem his de-valued social currency, Dan hatches a plan. He’ll persuade former high school star Oliver Lawless (James Marsden) to attend the reunion. Lawless has become the national spokesperson for Banana Boat Sunscreen, his face plastered over national television. To recruit him and bask in this reflected glory, Dan must travel to Hollywood.
Things do not go quite as planned. Dan’s false bravado and Oliver’s own identity issues intersect in cringe worthy comedic fashion fueling Hollywood, home and reunion encounters. The fragile world of Dan’s family which seems to be founded on cognitive dissonance and denial collapses under the weight of Oliver’s introduction. The reunion fares no better. It is in resolution, as much as it is possible, that we find out more about the characters.
Writers and directors Andrew Mogel and Jarrad Paul spent three years working on the project. Paul drew on his acting experiences and Mogel on various writing. Although they heavily credit the fine ensemble for their work, it is clear that their vision and engineering more than kept The D Train on track.
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By: Abha Maryada Banerjee
When the big idea struck and you knew that your breakthrough thought could change something around you or your environment, something that could lead to an obvious solution or an answer to a long forgotten problem…the moment that turned you into an entrepreneur. That moment will stay with you for the rest of your life but how would you manage to stay with the thought, get it to the ground, turn it into reality, work your way into and above the roadblocks, create the solution that you know and make money on the way and at the end of it!
With a few ventures under my belt, I have had the opportunity to meet so many passionate people with splendid ideas and the people who have turned their ideas into reality. I have also met people who gave up, failed, turned cynical, lost interest and went back to their jobs finding the entrepreneurial journey too tedious. There was little difference in their levels of passion but the one big difference that I often see is ‘The M Factor’ or motivation to stay the course!
The success and failure of ventures boils down to who can stay motivated on this journey, who can handle the roller coaster ride, who is willing to give it their all, who enjoys the challenge, who can think on their feet, who has a sense of humor, who walks the talk, who is emotionally resilient, who is mentally strong, who is good at troubleshooting, who is a solution driver, who can work under pressure, who is capable of change and adaptation, who manages the lows well…Who leverages the highs fast, who refuses to give up and who has the strength to stay on track until the idea is visible and making money? Tall order, is it?
Investors know for a fact, that they can only trust the first two phases of growth. Any venture to grow to its capacity needs a minimum of five years to anything between ten and more years. It can take many years to even build the basic framework of what the whole idea is going to look like. Motivation, not something that is fervently advocated and discussed as an entrepreneurial essential is one of the big keys to succeeding as an entrepreneur. Why is that so?? Despite all the plans and projections, an entrepreneur has no idea how to plan the roadblocks or difficulties that will come in the way of a new idea. Execution of their idea is the biggest achievement as well as the biggest challenge for any entrepreneur, be it a new or an experienced entrepreneur. A splendid plan can fail if the entrepreneur is not determined to turn himself into a splendid executor and stay motivated. It is as much about ‘you’ as it is about the idea. How do you do that?? Know the following:
The ride will be bumpy: Are you in a habit of facing bumps! If you do not have the capacity to stay in your seat with a smile when the bumps hit you, you are bound to fall. Strengthen your mental and emotional capacity to face difficulties. The best way to do this is to walk into the difficulty rather than running away from it. Confront difficulties even in your day to day life as the practicing ground. Solve them, fight them, beat them and condition yourself mentally, emotionally and physically so your body responds as a difficulty solver whenever you are faced with one. It is much about Habits and your capacity to face difficulties.
Never be a piece-meal entrepreneur: In my experience, you have to give it your all to succeed. What does this really mean? If you can dream, think, talk, walk, eat, sleep, drink your idea, you are close. A half-hearted approach to anything is usually not effective or successful. It is no different with entrepreneurship. It needs dedication, devotion, presence, continuous learning, ideating, solving, working, breathing your ideas that creates the necessary energy to succeed. The best way to do this is to be unabashedly proud of your idea, keep improving upon it, and keep working upon it. Your idea is to be custom tailored by you, so make that happen
The danger zone — Comfort zone: I meet a lot of new entrepreneurs who have the most brilliant thoughts but they discuss why the idea cannot be successfully executed. Yes, it is contradictory, but if your personal space is not customized to continuously work on your idea or your thoughts are focused more on what cannot happen as against what can happen, check your desire to stay comfortable while working on the business. Accept that comfortable and entrepreneurship are polar opposites and if you desire to do it comfortably, chances are you will give up when it gets tough.
When I started my venture SUCCESS INDIA in 2008, I had little money to spare and instead of hiring a professional to do the paperwork, I used to go to each registration office myself to save money and make sure that things were in order. As a Mental Strength Coach for elite Indian Olympic athletes, I used to work with them even in a restaurant or coffee shop to save time on traveling for 2-3 hours in Mumbai traffic. I have chalked out business plans while in a taxi and raised money on the phone from top shelf investors. Comfort and being comfortable should be shown the door if entrepreneurship is on your mind.
Thinking on your feet: Be clear that your idea has no precedents and normal is not always the way of things with new ideas. You should have thought out your idea in its depth and width that you can take any questions about it, for it and in it with an open mind, allowing new thoughts that bring the idea to life. As an entrepreneur, thinking on the feet is a huge talent. The best way to do that is to spend time alone, understand your own thought process, understand if you have any mental blocks, know where you are weak and what are your strength areas. You are the source of the idea and its execution, your thought and how your process new information to convert it into thoughts becomes very important.
Do you have a sense of humor: You wouldn’t find this one in the books on entrepreneurship. Every successful entrepreneur will vouch for this one. Humor, laughter, enjoyment, fun are very powerful ways to de stress yourself as an entrepreneur. There is enough advice saying, you must love doing what you do, you must enjoy the journey.I say, build the capacity to laugh at yourself first, then at your mistakes, then at the World that will tell you to go back to your job. Mistakes will happen, blunders may happen, you may begin to question your own competence, you may hit roadblocks.. Humor is a great companion
Walk the talk and talk the walk: No idea can stand on its feet if it does not have a person behind it who believes in it, works for it and goes out of the way to make it successful. The entrepreneur is the brand ambassador of the idea. His expression, his talk, his demeanor, everything is representative of the idea that needs to be executed. The best way is to begin living your idea in every possible way. For others to believe in your idea, you have to show extreme belief in yourself as the ‘owner’ of that idea.
Are you emotionally resilient? As an expert on emotional intelligence and leadership, this is yet another area that I found ignored in entrepreneurship literature. Emotions are one of the biggest resource that help us build resilience and the capacity to bounce back. The cliché’ that business and emotion do not go together is the most misunderstood when it comes to entrepreneurship. We must deal with our emotional side so as to deal with the outside world better. Many ventures fail when entrepreneurs cannot face failure and get back on their feet. The best way to do this is to know that emotions are good and that learning about your emotions, how they affect you, how you can feel empowered is different from being emotional. It is about your personal strengths that you must understand how your emotions affect you.
Are you mentally strong? This is yet another one for resilience and bouncing back. Mental strength is taught to athletes to stay focused and resilient and I have always asked the question, why not to entrepreneurs? Entrepreneurship is like an extreme sport. It is one of the human needs to look for certainty and also look for variety at the other end. Without being certain about what they are going to do during the day, people may not move out of their homes. As an entrepreneur, uncertainty however, is a daily ritual. You have no idea what may come up and from where. Are you prepared mentally to live with uncertainty? The best way to do this is to mentally assign 50% of your day to new happenings. Call them new happenings instead of thinking that you have no idea what may come up. Get excited to meet anything new that comes up, become the problem solver, practice thinking on the feet, get your power emotions into play. Condition your mind to stay strong by daily practice.
Are you good at troubleshooting? Make this your biggest hobby and favorite pastime. Your idea may be the best solution for an existing problem, but if you cannot troubleshoot daily issues effectively, it will be a drain on your time. Troubleshooting must become second nature for an entrepreneur. Most delays are caused here, most thought is spent here, many opportunities may be lost over here. The best way to do this, is to know that time is precious and must not be used negatively. Make positive use of time by learning to troubleshoot and do it fast
Do you think solutions? You have to become a solution driver by habit. Call this the profit habit or call it a breathing style, solutions take you ahead faster than any talk, discussion, thought or analysis. Each time you drive the solution, you are strengthening your mental and emotional muscle as well to deal with the entrepreneurial blues. What can you do about a certain thing is important, but let us go out and deal with it is far more important. Act fast and you will become an expert at removing the roadblocks
Can you work under pressure? As an entrepreneur, you are your own boss, so where is the pressure! That is exactly where the pressure is, there is no boss, so there are no rules, there is no reporting, there is no checking. You are solely and fully responsible for yourself, your idea, its execution and its progress. Can you take the pressure of doing it all without any supervision? Are you geared to stay on track, stick to the time frames, finish the tasks and still enjoy yourself? Many new entrepreneurs, lose it right here. Procrastination sets in. The best way to do this is to know exactly what to do each day, make daily to do lists, be unconventional, stick up notes on your walls, in the car, on the doors. Do what you need to stay on track and not procrastinate
Become an expert at change and adaptation: No book or class can teach you this, you have to practice on your own. Most people abhor change and adapting to something new. An entrepreneur will be crippled if he cannot adapt to a changed circumstance or a new way of looking at things. He cannot afford to be a conventional rule follower. He will have to make new rules as he goes along. Change is a personal process and like we talked earlier about understanding your thought process, you have to see your reaction to change within your own thoughts and how easy or difficult it is for you to be able to change. Once you are mentally and emotionally comfortable with changing with a new circumstance, the road will be relatively smoother
Manage the lows and leverage the highs: All of the above will teach you very clearly how to manage the lows and stay on track, not get distracted, depressed and not give up. What about the highs and the successes? Should you spend time celebrating? Of course you must celebrate but adapt to the changed circumstance in your business and always attempt to turn the highs into multiplied opportunity. Think of ways in which you can expand the success, multiply it, innovate it. Just make it bigger and broader. These are areas which have succeeded and which must be utilized to the maximum. While you will continue to correct mistakes, you must never sit on the successes. Immediately broaden their leverage and scope. These give you extra breathing space. So never miss an opportunity to think how you can leverage the success to increase your success.
Abha Maryada Banerjee is a lawyer by profession and is the author of “Nucleus – Power Women: Lead from the Core.” ( Motivational Press) She is India’s first female motivational speaker of international acclaim, rates as one of the Top 10 Life, Business and Success Coaches in Asia Pacific, and is an expert in Leadership, Human Peak Performance and Emotional Intelligence. For more information visit http://www.abhamb.com/
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Starting and running a business is without a doubt a life-changing experience. And failing your business start-up can be a jolting change. In fact, an astounding 70% of Americans cite fear of failure as the main roadblock for starting up a business (Source). One of my personal heroes, Joe Mancuso, used to say:
These are producers who strike out on their own, who know high highs and low lows, great devotions, and who overextend themselves for worthwhile causes. Without exception, they fail more than they succeed and appreciate this reality even before venturing out on their own. But when these producers of wealth fail, they at least fail with style and grace, and their gut soon recognized that failure is only a resting place, not a place in which to spend a lifetime.
This message is not only empowering, but it is realistic. Failure is frequent and sometimes inevitable when you are trying to bring a new product or service to a market. But failure is only a resting place–where you learn lessons about your mistakes and move on to your next success. With that in mind, I share Part Two of my interview with a resilient and inspiring young entrepreneur, Joshua Termeer.
Mr. Termeer today.
SM: How did your life improve once you started your commercial real estate business?
JT: My commercial properties allowed me to enjoy a nice life without constantly working. There were thirteen tenants on the properties with enough rent that I had passive income to live from, though I soon learned how tricky the business is. In the meantime, our family lived in a beautiful home right on a creek in Bucks County. We had an RV, luxury cars–everything we wanted, it was ideal. It’s funny because now that we have lost everything, I only miss one thing–the RV.
Josh and his wife, Marissa
SM: At what point did the business start to crumble?
JT: It was in 2009. That year really felt post-apocalyptic to me–the economy was shrinking rapidly and the real estate bubble that I had been living comfortably in started to evaporate. My real estate investments–built up from the blood, sweat, and tears of my 20s–were in decline as several of my tenants went under and simply could not pay rent. I looked around for a regular job, only to find dismal options–after all, I had spent the past several years living off the rental income and volunteering my time in downtown Philly.
Faced with financial failure, I started scalping tickets–not concert or sports tickets, but for museums. Through a membership to a local museum, I was allotted a daily set of tickets for free, which I would sell for 50% of their value. Since it was working pretty well, I bought a membership to another museum and started scalping those tickets as well. When we moved to New Jersey, I did the same in Museum Mile in New York City. I spent those days somewhere between shell-shocked by the economy but peace–I got to enjoy some of the best art museum in the world set against the chaotic streets of New York.
The Met on Museum Mile in New York City (source).
People asked me why I was scalping these tickets and I would tell them my story: that I had been a successful entrepreneur who had experienced business failures. Now it was simple: with no unemployment check and a family to feed, I had to make ends meet. It was an a rough time for me–financially as well as emotionally and psychologically. (I’ve recounted much of this in darkly comedic ways, in a memoir on kindle called Sublime Absurdity and on my personal blog)
SM: What are your hopes for the future?
JT: My passion is speaking and writing, which I’ve spent much of my last years doing while working as a limo driver in Princeton. This has allowed me to interact with some of the brightest minds in the world and hone my material with them. I’m also studying communications at a New Jersey state university. In addition to the memoir, I’ve written a screenplay that revolves around the rich comedy I’ve mined through all this drama! I am also helping start and manage Calm Waters Coffee in historic Bristol in Bucks county. We just had a successful kickstarter and will open this summer! (www.CalmWatersCoffee.com)
Josh and his family today.
SM: What are the most important lessons you’ve learned?
JT: Don’t go for money for its own sake it’s not a very whole way to look at things. Do quality, innovative things, creating something of value and the money will come. Or not. But remember to be grateful, you too can lose it all and end up roaming the streets of NYC scalping tickets! On second thought that may not be the most universally transferable principle..
SM: What should young entrepreneurs keep in mind in order to stay grounded and realistic about succeeding in business?
JT: If you are successful money can buy autonomy. However, people don’t often talk about the isolation that comes with that autonomy–it can be quite destructive. Humility is the only reasonable option given our frailty as humans. Money is one metric and not the best one of your success as a person.
Connect with Joshua Termeer on Facebook or Twitter @JoshuaTermeer
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During the height of the recent Baltimore unrest over the Freddie Gray tragedy, I was in New York City. After monitoring its reported developments for some time, I watched a 46-year-old episode of the original Star Trek series entitled “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield”. The episode is an allegory on racial discord that is as relevant today as the night it first aired — less than a year after Baltimore’s 1968 Holy Week Uprising sparked by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination.
Very few things can be current, timeless, dated and ahead of their time all at once. The 1960s Star Trek series is one of those things. The grim “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield” must seem even grimmer today because the issues that inspired it still plague us.
In the episode, two nearly identical aliens from the same planet board the Starship Enterprise (in very different ways) hell-bent on defeating each other. The ideology, tactics, rationale and leverage of each alien are telling. Roughly halfway through the story, one of them co-opts the Enterprise and declares, “You cannot change the course of this ship any more than you can change me.” Soon thereafter, the resourceful Captain Kirk initiates the ship’s self-destruct sequence.
The startling conclusion opines on the astronomical price of the “alien” zealotry. Ultimately, the episode speaks for itself better than I can so I encourage you to watch it.
After its closing credits, I took a bicycle downtown, had lunch and then stepped into the midst of the scene pictured here.
The police eventually ran these people off the street and arrested 142 of them.
An hour later, I was back home working while learning that these protesters reassembled and made their way to Times Square–their originally intended destination. Some time afterwards, I even heard them chanting in the distance through my window.
Just as I returned to work in earnest, a dear friend called me. She was close to tears after having been ordered to vacate an apartment for the second time in less than two years through no fault of her own. It seems her latest landlords were willing to upend her life and those of her neighbors for additional profit. She said the situation was even more catastrophic for some elderly residents in her building.
At this point, it was nearly 11 p.m. and I really hoped to get back to work. Before I could, however, a cable network informed me that for the first time in history, a major league baseball game took place with no “civilian” spectators due to fears associated with the local uprising. The significance of that moment was striking. America’s pastime, like the American dream, had finally been vacated.
None of this was lost on John Angelos, the COO of the Baltimore Orioles organization. Days earlier, he authored a remarkable distillation of our times. It was eloquent, succinct and evocative, and it contains the following passage.
My greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts, but is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle-class and working-class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state.
With any luck, the tragedy of Baltimore will be our last and a significant number of Americans may no longer live in fear of those hired to protect and serve them. However, luck has been in short supply for the everyman. And, the plunder of a CVS in Baltimore pales in comparison to the astonishing nation looting abetted by elected officials, many of whom effectively bought their way into office with vast wealth from special interests expecting a return on their investment. It seems the destructive acts of the uprising qualify as a lesser offense.
Star Trek’s original series isn’t the only thing that is current, timeless, dated and ahead of its time all at once. Clearly, the cry for equity and justice is another.
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