Addressing Wage Stagnation and Income Inequality in LA County

With the Los Angeles City Council’s recent approval to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020, it is my hope that we on the Board of Supervisors will move swiftly to address income inequality and wage stagnation in Los Angeles County. This means we must address at least three different areas: the poverty wage, the living wage and the minimum wage.

As one of the largest employers in the region, we in the county are considering adjusting the earnings of home care workers who provide services to the elderly, frail and disabled beyond the poverty wage they currently make. These workers, who take care of the most vulnerable elderly residents among us, are being paid less than $10 an hour — or $20,000 per year. This annual income is less than the federal poverty level for a family of three. How is it that we tolerate this kind of wage for those who take care of our grandparents, parents and, relatively soon, us baby boomers? These workers care for more than 190,000 people in this county and offer policy-makers a less expensive alternative to nursing home care. In May 2013, the Board of Supervisors approved a 65 cent increase to $9.65 per hour. The Board of Supervisors must increase these in-home workers’ wages incrementally every year to $15 an hour.

As a contractor, Los Angeles County is addressing the living wage, by looking into increasing the hourly wages for workers hired by county contractors for janitorial, cafeteria and security services. I have asked for a report on what a living wage in Los Angeles should be. But it is critical that we establish a living wage of up to $15.79 by 2018, the amount the California Budget Project has calculated it takes to actually live in L.A. County, through gradual increases. After 2018, the wage should be adjusted annually based on the Consumer Price Index.

As a municipal government, Los Angeles County has the opportunity to increase the minimum wage so that workers in unincorporated parts of the county see their take home earnings increase. In March, the Board of Supervisors asked for a study on the fiscal impact of increasing the base pay for county employees, temporary contract employees and those working in unincorporated areas. It is my hope that we will come to an agreement by June and determine that a minimum wage must be in the range of $13-$15 an hour.

Income inequality and wage stagnation are the issues of our time. Noted experts, such as Nobel laureate, Joseph Stiglitz, have rightly recognized that the widening gap between the wealthiest in our country and the poor affects crime rates, health outcomes and leads to family dysfunction. The middle class, which has been a driving force in lifting our country to greatness, is particularly impacted.

It is my hope that our presidential candidates will continue to discuss the issues of wage stagnation and income inequality and offer national solutions to a national problem. In the meantime, local elected officials who are disturbed by the failure of national corporate and government leaders to address these decades-old problems, will have to make change happen in Los Angeles County.

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Sexist Depiction of Hillary Clinton Published by McClatchy's Sacramento Bee

Co-authored with Kevin Hall, a clean air activist and organizer in Fresno, Calif.
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The 2016 presidential campaign season is upon us all too soon, and editorial cartoonists across the nation are busily drawing caricatures of candidates. Designed to be instantly recognizable to the reader, these renditions usually emphasize a person’s distinguishing physical features, such as ears, hairstyle, or nose.

So it came as a shock to see likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton reduced to a headless pair of crossed legs and a campaign button in the May 1 Sacramento Bee, a McClatchy publication. Editorial board member and political cartoonist Jack Ohman’s approach to drawing one of the most accomplished and inspiring female politicians of our time left us dumbstruck. It is a gratuitously insulting, sexist depiction.

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In a public radio interview, Ohman stated he did not intend the cartoon to be sexist. He also claimed to have the full backing of his editors and publisher.

Maybe so, but it’s still sexist. To render a portrayal of any woman as a pair of legs is gender stereotyping in its purest form, and it follows a centuries-old pattern of repression of women that seeks to relegate their position to one of inferiority to men in which their primary role is to bear children. All too often this treatment is applied to women who seek higher office. Ohman goes so far in his drawing as to give the reader a view up and under Clinton’s skirt. (Ironically, if she is known for any particular distinguishing characteristic, it’s that she wears pantsuits exclusively.)

Former Sierra Club director Carl Pope once observed that racism is like a virus: one can have it and not know it. The same holds true for sexism. People unconsciously commit acts of racism or sexism despite their best intentions. The real challenge arises when someone confronts us on this behavior. Can we drop our defenses and fully consider the reaction we’ve triggered?

For his part, Ohman, who serves as current president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, has instead accused his critics of seeking to defame him. That is not our intent, and by “our” we refer to the hundreds of people, including many prominent women’s rights advocates, who have signed a petition calling on The Bee to apologize for the cartoon.

We fully recognize and support everyone’s right to free speech and the vital importance of a free press. We also acknowledge this is a sensitive time for editorial cartoonists in light of recent events in Texas and France. We are not seeking to silence Ohman.

However, we do expect major news outlets such as the Sacramento Bee to hold themselves to a higher standard than less scrupulous publications. An apology to its readers would be appropriate, particularly if accompanied by a commitment to more carefully reviewing its portrayal of women – especially women in positions of power in all fields – in future cartoons, editorials and articles.

As the campaign season progresses, it is important as a society to set a respectful tone for the sake of all candidates – they deserve fair, unbiased coverage.

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In Defense of Cherry Picking the Bible

People accuse each other of cherry picking sacred texts, as if the term was an insult. But for those seeking to honor the quest of the Bible writers or to raise healthy children within a Christian tradition, that is precisely the right approach.

No parent with a backyard cherry tree would pick every piece of fruit on the tree and feed it to her children. No matter how excellent a tree, some of the fruit is wormy. Some of it is bird pecked and moldy. Some wasn’t pollinated properly and has been hard and shriveled from the beginning. A loving parent culls through, discarding the bad fruit and feeding her children the cherries that are juicy and nourishing.

But when it comes to handed down ideas about religion — about what is real and what is good and how we should then live — many people don’t apply the same prudent care. They take the Bible or related traditions and pass them on without sifting or sorting.

Bad cherries in the bowl will give a child a stomach ache at worst, but bad religious ideas can leave a person needlessly guilt ridden for life or unable to enjoy sex, or deeply fearful of death, or full of judgment and alienation toward outsiders, or even suffering what some call religious trauma syndrome.

Handing down un-culled religious beliefs from one generation to the next not only passes on psychologically harmful ideas, it is tearing apart our world. Today some of the worst ideas plaguing society are ideas that claim support from the pages of the Torah or Christian Bible or Quran, for example the idea that children are born bad and must be beaten, or that female sexuality is dirty and dangerous, or that homosexuality is abominable, or that religious outsiders lack morals, or that war can be holy, or that the Earth is ours to consume as we please and that God will simply replace it.

These ideas reflect the mentality of our ancestors, but there is every reason to think that they would be far less common today were it not for the fact that they are endorsed in the pages of books now called Holy by hundreds of millions of believers.

To understand how humanity ended up in this dilemma and how we might get past it, we need to understand something fundamental about the Abrahamic religions.

People of the Book

When the Prophet Mohammed embraced Jews and Christians as fellow “People of the Book,” he wasn’t simply acknowledging the shared roots of all three religions in the ancient Hebrew narrative of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. He was also correctly observing that these two religious traditions were centered around written texts akin to the one he was in the process of creating.

Judaism, Christianity and Islam emerged during the time when writing was coming into its own as humanity’s most powerful cultural technology, one that wouldn’t be rivaled until the 20th Century. To a degree unlike any prior religion (or any religion that is likely to emerge in the future), the Abrahamic religions are structured around a specific communication technology — the written word. It is no coincidence that some of the world’s largest religions spread across continents not only in the minds of individual believers but in bundles of papyrus, parchment, scrolls, illuminated manuscripts, and finally mass produced books.

In Christianity, the advent of the printing press, which brought the written word to the masses, directly fueled the Protestant Reformation. Over time, across vast swaths of Christendom the authority of the papacy and Catholic hierarchy were replaced by the authority of the Bible, the Reformation’s “sola scriptura.” (The irony, of course, is that it was the Catholic hierarchy itself that had assembled the collection of texts and declared them, on papal authority, to be God’s best and most complete revelation to humankind. But I digress.)

This focus on the written word is both the greatest strength and greatest flaw of the Abrahamic religions. It has allowed Christianity and Islam to become more powerful than any religion in history. Today over 3.7 billion people identify with one or the other of these traditions. But it has also allowed both traditions to become stagnant and cruel, profoundly corrupted by a phenomenon that might best be described as “book worship” or “bibliolatry.”

Sacred Text as Golden Calf

Today many Christians assert that the Bible is the literally perfect Word of God, timeless and complete — exempt from addition, deletion, or revision. Many Muslims make the same claim for the Quran, according it such high status that either defacing a copy of the book or denying its divine provenance is a crime worthy of death. In other words, they attribute to the Bible and Quran the qualities of divinity, and they treat offenses against the book as if they were offenses against a god. They behave toward the Bible and Quran precisely like their ancestors did toward the wood and stone carvings that represented the divine for pre-literate people.

In an age of widespread literacy, what better golden calf than a “golden” book?

Bibliolatry Violates Both Book and Writer

Ironically, the idea that our sacred texts are perfect and complete, in final form, is diametrically opposed to the stance of the men who wrote those texts. Each of these men took the tradition and teachings he received, processed them, and then offered what he believed to be a better, deeper understanding of reality and goodness. Had this not been the case, the authors would have been copyists, not writers.

Ironically, too, writers of both the Bible and Quran understood the dangers of idolatry, and within the constraints of their own cultural blinders did what they could to warn against it. They recognized that pre-literate people had sought to convey their understanding of the divine through works of art: sculptures, paintings, friezes, and more. They recognized that these objects became idols, treated as if the icons themselves were as holy as the truths they sought to convey. And they recognized that idol worship bound people to harmful ideas and practices, and to inadequate conceptions of divinity.

They felt so strongly about this that they encouraged the destruction of religious symbols and icons. In the intervening centuries, both Christianity and Islam have been plagued with bouts of iconoclasm, purges like the one that currently drives members of the Taliban and ISIS to destroy the last vestiges of ancient pre-Muslim culture and religion, as they are able.

The authors of the Bible and Quran had no way to foresee that their words would eventually cause the greatest developmental arrest in the history of humankind. In their Iron Age context, the advent and spread of writing was an innovation on par with the arrival of computing. It allowed so much more depth, nuance and complexity that earlier symbolic systems that the possibilities must have seemed infinite.

It must have been impossible to imagine that inked texts would ultimately fail to keep up with the growth of human knowledge, and that they would eventually be replace by mass printing, then living documents (like wikis) and other media. It must have been impossible to grasp the limits of the written word — that texts, however sacred, can only, ever, convey a finite set of spiritual understandings, static and frozen in time, small and bound by human psychology, utterly inadequate to encompass the power behind the DNA code or the laws of physics.

The High Price of High Fidelity: Static Books, Static Knowledge, Static Priorities

The spread of writing allowed previously unimaginable advances, but like any new technology it created a new set of problems. Before the advent of the sacred text, religious beliefs and practices were handed down via oral tradition and were represented by symbols, icons and rituals. Religion was necessarily more heterogeneous, more place based, and more grounded in practice, or “praxis,” rather than belief. It was also more free to evolve as culture and moral consciousness themselves evolved in response to changing environmental conditions, population densities, and technologies.

By contrast with oral tradition, a book allows an extraordinary degree of fidelity in transmitting a set of ideas across time and space and between strangers with many degrees of separation. That is the strength, but also the weakness of the written word. This fidelity means that any printed text is frozen in time, a snapshot of a single mind embedded in a specific cultural and historical context. And since the knowledge or insight imbedded in the text is static, when people or institutions bind themselves to a text, asserting that it is final and complete — the definitive authority on whatever matter it addresses — they become stagnant too. An institution or person that declares allegiance to an immutable text becomes developmentally arrested, unable to do what the author himself did, which was to take his received tradition and iterate on it, offering new ideas and insights about the subject at hand.

The Fruit of the Spirit

My friend Eckhart inherited two old cherry trees when he bought his current home. The trees were past their prime and the cherries are prone to be buggy. But with selective pruning and care he has gotten a bounty of sweet, wholesome fruit for his family. Eckhart’s story isn’t surprising to anyone who understands agriculture. But why do we so often fail to apply simple lessons from other parts of life to our spiritual endeavor?

Rather than being used as an epithet, perhaps cherry picker should be a compliment, an acknowledgment of discernment, wisdom, judgment, and responsibility. In actual fact, all religious believers (and nonbelievers) cherry pick their sacred texts or cultural traditions, even fundamentalists, even those who deny doing so. A book like the Bible or Quran contains passages that contradict each other, or that demand a level of perfection (or cruelty) that is simply unattainable for most believers. Whether we are Christian or Muslim or post-Abrahamic freethinkers or practitioners of some other spiritual tradition, the question isn’t whether we cherry pick, it is whether we do so wisely and well, based on some higher principle that tells us which passages are spiritually nourishing and which should be discarded.

Humanity’s shared moral core provides guidance in this regard. Religion scholar Huston Smith says that the world’s great wisdom traditions converge on three values that he calls veracity, humility, and charity, each of which both constrains and enhances the others. Veracity means truth telling and truth seeking, including honest self-appraisal. Humility means recognizing that each of us is just one among many and that the yearnings and insights of others matter. Charity, in the King James sense, is not merely generosity but love, the kind that seeks to value the pleasure and pain of others on par with our own.

The Golden Rule, which can be thought of as a shorthand for these values appears in some form in virtually every religious or secular moral philosophy, and likely is encoded into our genes in ways that scientists are just beginning to understand. As Christian author Rachel Held Evans has said eloquently, in Christianity, this ethic is woven into what Jesus calls the greatest of the commandment, to love God and to love your neighbor, the latter being the tangible manifestation of the former. This, he says, sum up all the writings of the Law and Prophets. In the book of Matthew, he warns against false prophets, saying, “You will know them by their fruit.” The Apostle Paul lists the fruit of the spirit as love, joy, peace, longsuffering, goodness, meekness, temperance and faith. “Against such, there is no law,” he adds, recognizing that these virtues are respected not only within but also outside the nascent Christian community.

These are the measures that let us know what fruit is worth keeping, and what is not. Cherry picking a sacred text doesn’t leave a person without a moral core, lost in a world where anything goes, as some fundamentalists fear. Rather, it anchors that moral core to something clearer, deeper, and more durable than the bindings of a golden book.

Our ancestors were flawed and human, as we are today. And they lacked many of the advantages we have from our privileged vantage in the 21st Century. They were constrained by their own time and place and individual failings, but even so, they took their received traditions and wrestled with them, offering a new understanding of what was right and real, drawing on the past but facing the future. And in doing so, they offered us genuinely timeless and transcendent metrics by which we might do the same.

When we cherry pick their words in accordance with their highest and most enduring ideals, we honor and further their quest. We also show our selves worthy of the privilege we have been given to live at this point in history. What stories might have been told, and what insights might have been attained by an Isaiah or Jesus or Paul or Mohammed who had the advantage of living in the 21st Century?

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CERES Calls on Corporate America to Fight Climate Change

In a world of rampant climate destabilization and skyrocketing global carbon emissions–now about 70 percent above 1990 levels–national and global action to slash carbon emissions is long overdue.

Yet even though we already have found more fossil fuel than we can safely burn without roasting the planet, the global oil industry will spend about $570 billion this year exploring for even more oil and gas. Meanwhile, the fossil fuel industry receives global subsidies estimated by Oil Change International at $775 billion or more.

A world of 7 billion people that is currently overexploiting its energy, water, biodiversity, and soil can ill afford to misspend vast sums of investment capital and public funds on climate-destabilizing fuels.

That’s one reason the Boston-based Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Economies (CERES) is encouraging corporate America–including energy and mining companies–to adopt more sustainable energy and environmental practices.

Founded in 1989, CERES has a Roadmap to Sustainability for companies and has recruited some 1,350 companies, including dozens of Fortune 500 firms, to sign its Climate Declaration calling for national action on climate change.

The group’s current programs on water scarcity and transportation were showcased recently at CERES’s annual conference (May 12-14) at San Francisco’s Fairmount Hotel. Corporate leaders and asset managers rubbed shoulders there with entrepreneurs, foundation executives, and a few environmentalists.

US EPA head Gina McCarthy, California Air Resources Board (CARB) Chief Mary Nichols, NRG Home CEO Steve McBee, and physicist Amory Lovins, co-founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute, all gave upbeat keynote presentations.

“Attacking climate change is a moral responsibility,” McCarthy declared. “The move toward a low-carbon future is already happening. People now recognize it’s inevitable.”

They see climate change as a public health and safety challenge, she said, as well as an economic and national security problem. “We’ve never seen such investments in renewables and efficiency” as we’re seeing today.

CARB chief Mary Nichols proudly noted that California is close to its goal of bringing its 2020 emissions back to 1990 levels without sacrificing economic growth. The state now has upped the ante and plans to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent by 2030. “California is the first state in North America to sign on to that target,” Nichols said.

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Steve McBee, President and CEO of NRG Home, May 14th, 2015. Photo credit: Rob Scheid.

Steve McBee, President and CEO of NRG Home, told the conference that NRG, his parent company, is engaged in a “reset on strategy.” The traditional centralized service-provider business model of independent power providers like NRG is being disrupted, he said.

Distributed generation, coupled with the proliferation of renewable energy and efficiency technologies, is the wave of the future. Recognizing these trends, NRG’s goal is “to disrupt ourselves on our own terms.”

NRG Home now seeks to “empower consumers to take control of their energy experience,” Mcbee said. This will be “an unbelievable opportunity for value-creation.” Moreover, most of the choices made by consumers will be for clean energy and efficiency, McBee asserted.

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Amory Lovins, co-founder, Rocky Mountain Institute, May 14, 2015. Photo credit: Rob Scheid.

The final keynote was by Amory Lovins, chief scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute, founded in Snowmass, Colorado. A brilliant, world renowned energy expert and preeminent apostle of energy efficiency, Lovins has articulated the case for “soft energy paths”–renewables and efficiency–for the past 40 years in 29 books and hundreds of articles.

Speaking on “The Beginning of the End of Oil,” aka the coming demise of the oil industry, Lovins said that oil reserves that are unburnable “may be dwarfed in quantity by reserves that are unsalable.” Using current technology, he said, we could triple the efficiency of trucks and planes. Auto efficiency could ultimately be four to eight times greater than it is today, he asserted.

With much of the transportation sector electrified and with many vehicles using light-weight carbon fiber bodies, overall fuel demand will plummet. People will also be driving less due to smarter urban design, bus rapid transit systems, and even autonomous cars. Car ownership will also decline, Lovins said, as new car-sharing technologies proliferate.

Remnant liquid fuel requirements for heavy trucks will be relatively low, he said, easily met by biofuels, hydrogen, and perhaps some natural gas. Two-thirds of the greatly reduced remnant biofuels could be made from various types of waste, he noted.

Energy industries today are being transformed faster than anyone could have imagined, Lovins said. He believes that profit-maximizing business will eventually end the Age of Oil even without supportive government policy, but that the transformation could be accelerated by sound policy.

CERES, the conference convener, actively encourages its members to reap the economic benefits to be had by reducing their greenhouse gas emissions through greater energy efficiency and renewables.

But CERES goes beyond advocating short-term benefits by urging companies to increase the sustainability of their supply chains and support clean energy policies, including renewable energy tax credits, stronger state renewable portfolio standards, energy efficiency standards, and the EPA’s new Clean Power Plan.

Through CERES’s Investor Network for Climate Change, businesses with over $24 trillion in assets have called on governments to set a meaningful price on carbon and end fossil fuel subsidies. CERES is also mobilizing support in the business community for a strong, binding international climate agreement later this year at the Paris global climate talks.

CERES also engages in research and advocacy on issues such as the water impacts of hydraulic fracturing, heavy truck transportation energy use, and the prevention of deforestation by palm oil producers. Finally, the group develops sustainability performance standards, has a roadmap to sustainability, and it calls carbon asset risks and the long-term risks of water scarcity to the attention of investors, businesses, and communities.

If CERES’s example is any guide, the road to sustainability is paved with innovative policy, new technologies, creativity, and lots of hard work. For more about CERES, see my companion Huffington Post column, “CERES: Mobilizing Business and Investors for Climate Protection.”

John J. Berger, PhD. (www.johnjberger.com) is an energy and environmental policy specialist who has produced ten books on climate, energy, and natural resource topics. He is the author of Climate Peril: The Intelligent Reader’s Guide to the Climate Crisis, and Climate Myths: The Campaign Against Climate Science.

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Activist Emma Sulkowicz Carries Mattress Across Stage At Columbia Graduation

Columbia University student and anti-sexual assault activist Emma Sulkowicz walked on stage at graduation on Tuesday, holding the mattress she’s been carrying in protest since September.

A video posted by the Columbia Daily Spectator shows a crowd cheering as friends help Sulkowicz carry her mattress across the stage. At the start of the academic year, Sulkowicz vowed to carry the mattress with her everywhere on campus as long as the man whom she accuses of raping her remained at Columbia. Her protest, titled “Mattress Performance” or “Carry That Weight,” has served as a performance art piece for her senior thesis project.

Despite a new university policy barring graduates from carrying “large objects” at the ceremony, Columbia officials permitted Sulkowicz to carry her mattress, the Spectator reported.

However, the university has found Paul Nungesser, the fellow graduating senior whom Sulkowicz and at least two other women have accused of sexual assault, “not responsible” in Sulkowicz’s accusations. Last month, Nungesser filed a lawsuit against the school, its board of trustees, President Lee C. Bollinger and Professor Jon Kessler, who approved the mattress project, for allowing Sulkowicz to publicly defame him.

Need help? In the U.S., visit the National Sexual Assault Online Hotline operated by RAINN. For more resources, visit the National Sexual Violence Resource Center’s website.

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Valencia State College Students Sue Over Pressure To Undergo Vaginal Procedure

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Two former students in a Florida community college ultrasound program say they were punished for objecting to a policy that encouraged students to undergo an invasive vaginal procedure to become better technicians.

The two unnamed female students filed a federal lawsuit last week against Valencia State College in Orlando, claiming the policy violated their civil rights under the First and Fourth amendments.

The lawsuit says that instructors told them the procedure, which checks for fertility problems, was voluntary but that students who refused were browbeaten and their academic standing was threatened.

One instructor threatened to blacklist the students from central Florida hospitals if they refused to undergo the procedure, and their complaints fell on deaf ears with administrators, so the students withdrew from the program, the lawsuit said.

In the procedure, a probe is inserted into the patient’s vagina. The lawsuit claimed the school had an alternative to having students practice on each other, including a simulator dummy and could practice on real patients in a medical environment.

“Plaintiffs would disrobe in a restroom, drape themselves in towels, and traverse the sonography classroom in full view of instructors and other students,” the lawsuit said.

The two students experienced “discomfort and embarrassment” during the sessions, the lawsuit said. They are seeking an unspecified amount of money in damages.

School spokeswoman Carol Traynor said Tuesday that the program upholds the highest standards, but officials were reviewing the practice to make sure it was effective for learning. The school hadn’t yet been served with the lawsuit, she said, so she couldn’t comment on the specific allegations.

“The use of volunteers including fellow students, for medical sonography training is a nationally accepted practice,” Traynor said in a statement. “Valencia’s sonography program has upheld the highest standards with respect to ultrasound scanning for educational purposes, including voluntary participation and professional supervision by faculty in a controlled laboratory setting.”

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Dishwashers Are Overrated

Hey Jeff—great meal. Just great. Well, it’s all done. What’s that? Did you say it’s time to “load the dishwasher?” Sorry Jeff—I now think you’re not very smart at all.

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This New Online Reputation Meter Says I'm Barely Trustworthy

For years, startups have tried to capitalize on the internet’s new trust economy — it’s core to services like Airbnb and Ebay, where you have to trust strangers with your money and house. Now, yet another startup thinks it can solve the trust problem and measure trustworthiness with a browser extension. It’s called Karma, and it hates me.

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PayPal Has to Pay $25 Million for Being Sketchy as Hell

After the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau filed a complaint against PayPal today, the company quickly agreed to refund $15 million to customers it ripped off over the past few years.

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Predator wrist blade rehashed as functional replica

Man at Arms has released its latest video, and in it the team yet again recreated a from-a-movie weapon — in this case it was a Predator wrist blade. They’re good sports about the whole process — they have a “Predator” appear one day with a broken wrist blade and a request for it to be repaired. Thus begins the … Continue reading