Canon EOS 5D Mark IV DSLR Camera Introduced

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV

Check out this newly introduced DSLR camera ‘EOS 5D Mark IV’ from Canon. Featuring a robust magnesium alloy body design, this interchangeable lens camera boasts a 30.4MP Full-Frame CMOS sensor, a 3.2-inch 1.62m-dot touchscreen LCD monitor, dual CompactFlash & SD memory card slots, a mini-HDMI output port and built-in WiFi, GPS and NFC connectivity.

Powered by Canon’s DIGIC 6+ image processor, the EOS 5D Mark IV can record DCI 4K video @ 30fps. Other highlights include 8.8MP Still Grab, 61-Point High Density Reticular AF, Native ISO 32000, Dual Pixel RAW, AF Area Select Button, Dual Pixel CMOS AF and Movie Servo AF and 7fps Shooting.

The Canon EOS 5D Mark IV is currently available for pre-order for $3,499 (Body Only). [Product Page]

The post Canon EOS 5D Mark IV DSLR Camera Introduced appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

ASUS’ Upcoming ZenPower Pro Mobile Battery Charger

ASUS ZenPower Pro

Here we have another upcoming mobile battery charger from ASUS, the ZenPower Pro. Corresponding to the Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0, this travel-friendly battery charger (w/ dedicated silicon cover) is equipped with a 4 point LED status indicator, 1x USB 5V 2.4A output port, 1x Quick Charge 2.0 output port, a micro-USB 5V 2.0A charging port and a high-capacity 10,050mAh battery.

Not to mention, the ZenPower Pro also comes with various protection functions including overcharge, overload, overvoltage, overcurrent, overheat and short-circuit.

Measuring only W59.6mm x D100mm x H22mm and weighing just 230 grams, the ASUS ZenPower Pro will hit the market from September 2nd for 6,980 Yen / $67 in Black, Silver, Pink, Blue and Gold color options. [ASUS]

The post ASUS’ Upcoming ZenPower Pro Mobile Battery Charger appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

Angle of Descent: Demagogues and the Collective Situation

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Mathematician and visionary Arthur M. Young introduced his book The Geometry of Meaning with the enigmatic words “All meaning is an angle.”

Does meaning emerge from the tension of varying angles of perception? And if this is true, what angle of inquiry might be worthwhile to pursue?

In this series of posts, I explore an angle of inquiry that is working its way into collective consciousness — the confrontation with shadow and its meaning for a new narrative based on inclusion, wholeness, spirit, and sustainable systems.

The shadow is personified by the emergence of Donald Trump, whose narcissism, sociopathic disposition, and lack of discipline have unnerved even traditional Republican Party loyalists. Many in the progressive community are breathing a sigh of relief that such a disorganized, vacillating, and bigoted figure could not possibly win the election. Yet, it is sobering to remember that, even as pundits ponder that he actually wants to lose the election, his polling hovers at 40% of the electorate, and he remains in striking distance of his Democratic opponent. The angle of justification that “he’s not perfect but we need him to shake things up” remains a viable political perspective for many.

In what might seem a separate universe, the growing movement for “a world that works for all” is also active, a grassroots phenomenon that is revealing itself in innumerable projects that seek economic and social justice. In a few days, I will be co-hosting a conference in Germany called “Leading as Sacred Practice.” It is but one example of efforts aimed at linking self-awareness and social awareness as two interconnected phenomena.

I hope to provoke in this new series of posts a further understanding of shadow as having a collective element. Although the shadow, as described by Jung, has been understood mostly in personal psychological terms, its greater meaning lies in the collective social field. And to understand what is stirred up in the collective, we must go beyond the individual to the tribal and spiritual elements of human behavior. To do so risks some personal discomfort, as our current understanding is challenged, but the reward is an expanded angle of comprehension and a deeper regard for the intermingling of the social and the sacred. To be satisfied with demonizing Trump risks aborting a critical opportunity for learning about the collective situation we face.

Finally, I want to offer a reframe for the meaning of descent. It can refer to a movement downward, even a sudden violent attack. It can also refer to origins, such as the background of a person’s family or nationality. All these meanings show up in my writing, but it is the angle of descent that concerns me. If the descent is too extreme, meaning unconscious, it can indeed result in a violent end. However, if the descent allows us to penetrate into the depths of our situation, and we return with greater consciousness, then we will be able to see our situation with new eyes and contribute to our world with new understanding. This is the journey we are all on, managing the boundary between conscious and unconscious awareness. Let it be a joyful one, opening the soul’s eyes, embracing multiple perspectives, and joining the company of those we most value and respect.

For more information on the author, go to www.alanbriskin.com

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Konami Not Finishing Metal Gear Solid 5’s ‘Mission 51’

metal-gear-solid-5If you have played Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain, you know that the game pretty much ends after Mission 50. However if you’re a huge fan and have been following news about the game, you might have heard that there is a Mission 51 whose footage was shown in the Collector’s Edition disc, but for some reason it was not included in the game.

The bad news is that it looks like Konami has no plans on completing it or releasing it to gamers. According to Konami, they claim that the footage shown on the disc was just to give gamers some behind-the-scenes content to show how the game was developed, and not necessarily to act as a precursor for future content.

This is quite a bummer as websites such as Kotaku have claimed that Mission 51 is actually a very important part of the story and is supposed to act as a resolution. However according to Konami, “The ending is found in the missions within. Many threads continue in Metal Gear and subsequent games.”

From what we can tell, it sounds like Konami really will not be releasing Mission 51 to players so if you are planning on picking up Metal Gear Solid 5: The Definitive Experience, don’t expect to find Mission 51 in it either.

Konami Not Finishing Metal Gear Solid 5’s ‘Mission 51’ , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

EA’s Peter Moore Says No Plans For Mass Effect Trilogy Remaster

Mass-Effect-Characters-MuralRemasters are pretty popular these days, especially when it comes to older titles with huge followings, such as Final Fantasy VII, Skyrim, Resident Evil, and so on. However if you were hoping that maybe we could be getting a remaster for the original Mass Effect trilogy, you would be disappointed.

In an interview with IGN (via PCGamesN), EA’s Peter Moore pretty much dashed any hopes you might have had for a remaster. According to Moore, “We’re a company that is focused on delivering for the future. I was asked a question once [about remasters and I said] it’s just not what we do. We’ve got incredibly talented dev studios around the world who are focused on delivering new IP, new experiences, [and] more and more live services.”

Moore adds that right now they are focused on the next chapter of Mass Effect, which is Andromeda, and that anything that distracts them from it is of no interest to the publisher. However Moore concedes that creating a remaster for the original Mass Effect trilogy would be a quick and easy way to make some money, and as much as he’d love to give into the demands of fans, he believes in delivering new experiences.

Will this change in the future? It certainly doesn’t seem like it, but hey, you can always revisit the original trilogy anytime you want, it’s just that it might start to look a bit dated in the graphics department, but otherwise it’s still the game that many have come to know and love.

EA’s Peter Moore Says No Plans For Mass Effect Trilogy Remaster , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Google uses AI to build a better cucumber farm

Artificial intelligence technology doesn’t just have to solve grand challenges. Sometimes, it can tackle decidedly everyday problems — like, say, improving a cucumber farm. Makoto Koike has built a cucumber sorter that uses Google’s TensorFlow machi…

Logitech UE ROLL 2 Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker Unveiled

Logitech UE ROLL 2

Logitech has unveiled a new Bluetooth speaker ‘UE ROLL 2’ to its line-up. Unlike most Bluetooth speakers, this disk-shaped Bluetooth speaker (IPX7 rated) can spread the sound to 360 degrees in all directions.

Powered by a built-in rechargeable lithium-ion battery (up to 9 hours of continuous music playback), the UE ROLL 2 is equipped with a 3.5mm stereo mini jack, a micro-USB charging port, 1x 50mm full-range driver and 2x 19mm tweeters.

Measuring W135mm x D135mm x H40mm and weighing 330 grams, the UE ROLL 2 can deliver a maximum output power of 9W. The Logitech UE ROLL 2 will begin shipping from September 15th for 12,880 Yen (about $125) in Volcano, Atmosphere and Sugarplum color options. [Product Page]

The post Logitech UE ROLL 2 Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker Unveiled appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

Finding the Right Fit For Your Child

Going back to school isn’t always a fun and exciting time for a child. They can have anxiety about going to a new school, making new friends or returning to the same school but with fears of a new teacher, harder schoolwork and more homework. You want going back to school to not only be an enjoyable experience for the student but also the right fit for them as well.

Having four children, I have gone from having my children in three different schools at one time to all going to the same school. This year, my youngest son will be going to a different school than the other three. I had to make a choice of putting him in the right school. He would be attending pre-K for the second year and I knew it was time for kindergarten prep.

I decided to move him to a private school with an academic structure that would prepare him for kindergarden the following year, while my three other children will continue to attend public school in our town. I have been asked many times why I have chosen public school over private. When choosing a school it’s what’s best for your family. And the best choice for us is public school. The services that our daughter needs are provided at public school – with speech given in class and one-on-one. The local private school was not able to offer these services for my daughter and, as her mom, I had to be her biggest advocate. No one cares as much as we do.

As the years go by, I evaluate each child differently to make sure they are getting the best education possible. When my son reaches high school, private school may be his best option since he is a student-athlete. My choice to break up the family is about making the best decision for each child’s personal needs. Yes, it brings more work for me with pick-ups and drop-offs but this job is one I wouldn’t trade for the world.

I look at each child’s needs, strengths and weaknesses when finding the right school, as well as the right teacher. Be a presence in the school by asking other parents their opinion and their personal experiences. This will help you with placing your child with the right teacher. Remind yourself that it’s OK to separate them. They spend enough time together and when in school they barely cross paths. You want each child’s in-class experience to be the best whether that is at the same school as his/her siblings or not.
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Amber Sabathia is a woman full of passion and purpose. She is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, mentor, public speaker and published writer. Amber is a ‘mommy mogul,” mother of four, executive director and co-founder of PitCCh In Foundation, and creator/designer of CCandy clothing for kids. She is married to her high school sweetheart, CC Sabathia, with the New York Yankees. Follow Amber on Instagram and twitter @AmberSabathia

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Beyond Hollywood: The Real Los Angeles

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Malibu (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

There’s no city better suited for a staycation than good ol’ Los Angeles. The destination’s many facets–from the broad beaches of Venice and the sea-kissed cliffs of Malibu in the West to the granitic peak of Mt. Baldy and the arid hills in the East–as well as its different cultural textures guarantee an endless array of pursuits, all clamoring for everyone’s attention. I never, therefore, pass up an opportunity to explore it whenever I’m home from my travels and in quick need of a temporary cure to fix my wanderlust.

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Downtown LA skyline (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

Still reeling from my great love affair with England, I’ve been finding myself distracted with ridiculous efforts to recreate the trip–scouring the entire city for a Full English breakfast or even just rashers, for example. Naturally, when my family was invited for an afternoon tea at the Langham Huntington in Pasadena, we had to jump at the chance.

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Afternoon tea at the Langham Huntington (Credit: The Langham Huntington)

Afternoon Tea with Wedgwood is a brand standard for all Langham hotels worldwide, with Langham London being the first luxury hotel in Europe to serve the ritual. We came on a Sunday for the hotel’s chocolate-themed tea service, which essentially means guests get to spend an hour or so indulging in sublime and at times surprising chocolate creations. Served in the fine “Langham Rose” teaware exclusively made by Wedgwood for the brand and set in the airy Lobby Lounge with an immense bay window that looks out to the property’s Horseshoe Garden and the neighboring affluent city of San Marino, it was quite the elegant (and also delightfully comforting) affair. It’s also wonderfully, quintessentially British, transpiring in a place whose very name evokes stereotypical images of leggy, blonde girls in Daisy Dukes and rollerblades gliding along a sunny boardwalk.

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Afternoon tea at the Langham Huntington (Credit: The Langham Huntington)

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The historic Langham Huntington (Credit: The Langham Huntington)

Earlier that day, we stopped by at the Rose Bowl Flea Market, one of the biggest and coolest in the city. The second Sunday of the month affair, with the famous Rose Bowl as its venue, boasts wares brought in from countries like Colombia, El Salvador, and even as far as Tibet and Ghana atop the usual tangle of flea market stalls selling antique furniture and vintage clothing. It’s a goldmine for shoppers and bargain hunters alike; and it’s also a wonderland for people who dream of someday seeing the world. What I love most about it, however, is it perfectly sums up what Los Angeles really is: an eclectic mix of cultures, cuisines and diversions.

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Baskets from Ghana (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

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Fabrics from Ghana (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

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Bags from Colombia (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

Which brings me back to my earlier point: there’s no finer town for a glorious staycation than Los Angeles. Forget Hollywood, red carpet events, celebrities who won the genetic lottery and the rest of those clichés. Los Angeles is not just all glitz, glamour and gorgeous women with toned legs that come up to your shoulder. It’s not only relentless and unapologetic in its pursuits, whether it’s surfing in the Pacific, window-shopping in Beverly Hills, apple picking in an orchard, or blazing a trail in the desert. It’s also a melting pot of cultures, a place to sample the world: nosh on authentic Oaxacan dishes with abandon, shop for kimonos and mangas in Little Tokyo, indulge in German beer at a German tavern, see European street art in Downtown LA, hang with the hipsters in Echo Park or just have a proper English afternoon tea.

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Authentic Oaxacan fares at Guelaqueta (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

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Historic Grand Central Market in Downtown LA (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

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Echo Park Lake (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

Los Angeles is essentially the entire world crammed into a golden, sunshine-swathed sprawl, a destination that’s far greater than the world gives it credit for. And if, for some unfortunate reason, I can no longer travel the world, there’s no place I’d rather be to experience it still.

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Downtown LA skyline (Photo: Michelle Rae Uy)

Stay:

The Langham Huntington. 1401 S Oak Knoll Ave, Pasadena, CA | (626) 568-3900

Eat:

Afternoon Tea with Wedgwood. 1401 S Oak Knoll Ave, Pasadena, CA | (626) 568-3900
For a great cause, attend The Langham Huntington’s Imagine Tea service on Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 10am and 1:30pm. The event is part of the hotel’s family-oriented partnership with the junior program of Magic Castle to benefit local children’s non-profit organizations.

Shop:

Rose Bowl Flea Market. 1001 Rose Bowl Dr, Pasadena, CA | Every second Sunday of the month

Michelle Rae Uy is a travel writer, editor and amateur photographer based in Los Angeles. Check out her other adventures on Another Spur on the Road.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Two-Party Hamster Wheel Makes a Mockery of Democracy: The Need for Expanded Electoral Options, Open Presidential Debates & Approval Voting

Current politics is not “Capitalist vs. Socialist,” but rather, “Corporatist vs. the People”

A Republican delegate at the Cleveland Party Convention drew a contrast between Republicans and Democrats, describing “Capitalists” vs. “Socialists.” In fact, it is the Corporatists vs. the People that have spawned the huge gulf of wealth disparity and the takedown of democracy. The two major U.S. political parties represent two aspects of the corporatist state. Whether Republicans or Democrats predominate, wealthy elites rule and the financial-medical-military-fossil-fuel-industrial complexes prevail, effectively defining down democracy, the middle class, education, health care – all in service of the huge upward transfer of wealth and power.

No surprise, a 2014 Princeton study attests to the U.S. transformation over several decades from a democracy into an oligarchy, with elites steering the direction of the country regardless of the will of the majority of voters. Researchers cite data since the 1980s demonstrating a trend toward substantial impacts on government policy by prevailing economic elites and business interests, while citizens/groups have had little or no influence.

The two major political parties reinforce establishment power, not power of the people

Each of the two major political parties holds as its primary purpose the perpetuation of its own power, enabled by endless campaign cash. The U.S. political system is largely unrepresentative of the electorate by design. Parties act to benefit themselves at the polls – e.g., supporting open primaries or closed primaries in different states, depending which enhances their control over elections. Manipulation of electoral districts and election laws by the parties are designed to tilt competition to one party or another, even as they override individual voting rights.

The two-party stranglehold places the country in a race to the bottom, serving interests of the wealthiest, betraying democracy and holding hostage the common good of the people. The “red vs. blue” narrative greatly restricts people’s choices and limits dialogue around issues.

Following 16 years as an Oklahoma Republican congressman Rep. Mickey Edwards described the political parties as the “cancer at the heart of our democracy.” He describes how parties so dominate the process that party leaders control who runs for office, what bills make it to the floor, selection of committee chairs and how lawmakers vote, all with an eye to perpetuating a party’s power, rather than the interests of the electorate. Power of a political party reinforced by big money becomes more sacrosanct than democracy. Even choice of candidates is dictated by power and money that serves corporate/party goals. The singular goal, describes Edwards, is “to be true to my party” and “defeat the other party.”

DNC Election Interventions

Even before hacked emails confirmed such intervention, it was no secret that the Democratic National Committee has often intervened on behalf of the party establishment’s preferred candidate. The party actively promoted Hillary Clinton before the caucuses/primaries, even as two other candidates vied for the nomination, and a third person’s attempted run was bulldozed.

Democratic presidential candidate and former governor of Maryland Martin O’Malley told the Democratic National Committee’s 2015 annual summer meeting that the party’s process for nominating a candidate for the 2016 presidential election was “rigged” in favor of Hillary Clinton. He noted the committee had scheduled just four debates before the first primary vote in Iowa, just six debates total, most scheduled opposite football games or during the Christmas holiday season when they were least likely to be viewed.

In November 2015 Lawrence Lessig abruptly ended his presidential bid when the Democratic Party changed the rules after he initially met their terms to participate in the Nov. 14 Iowa Democratic primary debate. Lessig achieved the party requisite one percent in three polls during the six weeks prior to the debate, only to have the Party move the goal posts, changing the qualifying deadline to the beginning of October. Consequently, Lessig was denied his chance to participate in any candidate debate, and to advance his single platform item – the Citizen Equality Act of 2017 designed to implement campaign finance reform, ban gerrymandering and expand voting access.

Coincidentally, then-governor and current VP candidate Tim Kaine was chair of the Democratic National Committee in 2010 when the DNC intervened in the Colorado Senate Primary (How the DNC Sandbagged the Colorado Senate Primary). President Obama assumed a prominent role in the Colorado state primary, with an immediate endorsement, money-raising, robo calls, mailers, TV spots, and the enlisting of cabinet members to campaign for the establishment’s chosen candidate, Michael Bennet. The president’s former campaign group Obama for America (OFA) transitioned from base of the Obama campaign to Organizing for America, described as an adjunct of the DNC. In Colorado DNC efforts more than doubled Bennet’s $6 million campaign investment, giving him a 6:1 financial advantage over alternate candidate Andrew Romanoff. Then-state senator and Bennet supporter Chris Romer justified the Obama and DNC interventions, asserting that Obama would be more affected by the outcome of the election than Coloradans, and therefore, the White House had “every right” to get involved in the senate primary.

Washington Politics: “The art of posturing as a populist while catering to plutocrats”

In recent history, Republicans have largely represented the party of oligarchs, fundamentalist Christian nationalists and white male supremacists backed by a right-makes-right gun culture. Corporatists advance exclusionary policies that serve the few, while eschewing the common good and accelerating a race to the bottom for the many. The 2016 Republican presidential candidate can be viewed as the culmination of the Republican party’s downward spiral to the lowest common denominator of incivility, racism, incoherence and demagoguery.

The Democratic party that once represented working people has over several decades become an echo of Republicans’ corporatist narrative, and Democrats have been complicit in rigging the economy for those at the top while undermining the working class. The party has too often been AWOL as corporations pummeled trade unions, Wall St. gambling was unleashed by repeal of Glass-Steagall and rewarded by bailouts, as many lost homes to reckless bank speculation, and “free-trade” NAFTA-like deals increased trade deficits, exported jobs and transferred evermore power to corporate elites – much occurring during Bill Clinton’s term. The 1994 crime bill, recently regretted by Bill Clinton, exploded the U.S. prison population to the largest worldwide, its mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug offenses leading to disproportionate incarceration of minorities. The transfer of billions of dollars from public housing to the prison system in the ’90s also contributed to an explosion of private for-profit prisons.

Democratic candidates often run as progressives and govern as corporatists.

Political posturing in 2008 saw primary candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton each accusing the other of supporting NAFTA. Each vowed they would renegotiate or opt out of NAFTA, citing flaws with its labor and environmental provisions. Candidate Obama declared opposition to trade deals that “put the interests of multinational corporations ahead of interests of workers,” and stated concern for protections for labor, environmental and consumer safety.

Fast forward to 2015 and President Obama has doubled down to promote the ultimate assault on democracy, jobs, food safety and national sovereignty – the corporate power grab known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade treaty, also referred to as “NAFTA on steroids”. Even as Pres. Obama campaigns for Hillary Clinton, effectively seeking a third term for himself, he blatantly promotes lame-duck passage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. So confident is party leadership that they do not have to pay heed to the people, that immediately after speaking at the Democratic Party Convention, Virginia Gov. Terry McAullife, expressed confidence that Clinton would reverse her position to support the TPP after the election.

Clinton reportedly garnered more than $2.5 million for speeches made to groups lobbying to fast track the TPP, and millions more speaking to corporations and special interests who were actively lobbying Congress. Hillary Clinton’s State Department was reported to approve almost twice as many arms sales to nations as George W. Bush’s State Department in his second term. Twenty of those nations, among them Middle Eastern nations including Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, also contributed to the Clinton Foundation and the Clinton family.

Hillary delegates to the DNC rejected a platform plank opposing the TPP ostensibly because they did not want to “embarrass” President Obama. Convention attendees reported that one of the signs confiscated from delegates entering the convention read “no Oligarchs” – “Oligarchs” with a superimposed red circle & slash mark – because, one certainly wouldn’t want to embarrass the oligarchs.

Bipartisan corporatists have required that health care reform be structured around for-profit health insurance and pharmaceutical industries. The Affordable Care Act was modeled on a Republican plan for industry-centered health care reform. Serving industries’ bottom line, bipartisan legislative efforts continue to make it illegal for Medicare to negotiate bulk drug rates, as the Veterans Administration has done for years.

Democratic leadership has too often been willing to deal away Medicare and Social Security as bargaining chips. In response to a manufactured deficit ceiling crisis in 2011, President Obama made deficit crisis a primary focus of his 2010 State of the Union address, subsequently offering a “grand bargain” of spending cuts (including Medicare and Social Security) at the expense of working people, while refusing to veto extension of Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest 1%.

Language of “entitlement” is manipulated to serve various political agendas. Health care, Social Security, Medicare and civil service pensions have been targeted as “entitlements” by Republicans and Democrats alike, though working people are financially invested in all of these.

Two-Party Control of Presidential Debates

Corporate media cover presidential elections like a 2-horse race, reinforcing the two-party stranglehold, while excluding independents and third parties. The two-party duopoly and their corporate backers ultimately determine which candidates will be included in presidential debates.

Associate professor of journalism and former TV journalist Jeff Cohen writes that “the standard that does justice to real democracy is that any candidate who is on enough ballots to achieve 270 electoral college votes should be included in the [presidential] debates.” There are very few independent parties or candidates who make it onto enough ballots to achieve the potential of 270 electoral college votes. However, in 2016 he notes, there are four campaigns who have done so, including the Green and Libertarian candidates.

From 1976 through 1984, presidential and vice-presidential debates were sponsored and run by the nonpartisan League of Women Voters. In 1980, the League insisted on allowing independent candidate John Anderson to debate. Ronald Reagan agreed, Jimmy Carter did not, so Reagan debated Anderson without Carter’s participation.

In 1985 the national chairs of the Democratic and Republican parties, Paul Kirk and Frank Fahrenkopf, signed an agreement designating that future televised presidential/vice presidential debates take place between the two major political parties – that such “joint appearances be principally and jointly sponsored and conducted by the Republican and Democratic Committees.” In 1987 the two party chairs announced the formation of the “bipartisan” Commission on Presidential Debates, designed to advance the joint will of the two parties, with themselves as co-chairs.

Kirk and Fahrenkopf Jr. declared the newly formed commission would ”institutionalize” the debates and strengthen the role of the two political parties in the electoral process. The New York Times quoted Fahrenkopf saying the CPD was “not likely to to look with favor on including third-party candidates in the debates.” Mr. Kirk declared that third party candidates should be excluded, stating “As a party chairman, it’s my responsibility to strengthen the two-party system.”

In 1988 the League of Women Voters withdrew from its role as debate sponsor because demands of the two campaign organizations “would perpetuate a fraud on the American voter.” The League declared the debates had become a charade “devoid of substance, spontaneity and answers to tough questions. The League has no intention of becoming an accessory to the hoodwinking of the American public.”

After nearly three decades, the two CPD co-creators remain its co-chairs. Both have been long-time high-powered corporate lobbyists, engaging with corporations that have funded the commission, including oil and gas, insurance, pharmaceutical and Wall St.

Through seven presidential elections, major TV networks have bowed to the two-party hegemony that holds hostage the American people and maintains a vice-like grip on the electoral process and presidential debates. An obsequious media have abandoned their journalistic role, acceding to the major-party control of debates, including format, content, moderators, and efforts to freeze out independent and third-party candidates. Only in 1992 did the CPD allow participation by a person outside the two political parties. Billionaire Ross Perot was permitted on stage only because each of the two parties thought they would benefit in some way by his inclusion, at a time when Perot only had 7 to 9 percent support in the polls.

In 2000, majorities of the voting public expressed the will to see Patrick Buchanan and Ralph Nader included in a four-way presidential debate. Nevertheless, the CPD had erected a new barrier, specifying that to participate in the debates, a candidate had to be polling at 15 percent.

In 2016, the CPD has raised the bar yet again for participation by independent or third-party candidates, requiring that candidates poll at 15 percent in five national surveys (of the CPD’s choosing) before the three scheduled debates, and that “they garner enough spots on state ballots to chart a path to the White House.” The CPD purposefully creates an electoral Catch-22: If you can’t get in the debates, you will not be a legitimate candidate; if you’re not a legitimate candidate, you can’t get into the debates. Another catch-22: Most polling outlets only focus on the 2 major parties.

Hofstra University, scheduled to host the first 2016 presidential debate, has been complicit with exclusionary policy of the Commision on Presidential Debates. In October 2012, Hofstra University President Rabinowitz’s administration apparently ordered campus security guards to arrest Green Party’s 2012 presidential candidate, Jill Stein and vice presidential candidate Cheri Honkala when they attempted to enter the debate site – never mind the notion that U.S. university campuses are “free marketplaces for all ideas and viewpoints.” Stein and Honkala were handcuffed and detained in a warehouse for 8 hours before being released.

Judge Rosemary Collyer dismissed a lawsuit filed in 2015 by the Libertarian and Green parties and their respective 2012 presidential nominees, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and Dr. Jill Stein. The lawsuit argued that the Commission debates violated federal antitrust laws and the First Amendment by their failure to include third-party candidates; that independent and third-party candidates are excluded by imposing arbitrary polling criteria; and the possibility of additional nationally-televised debates being sponsored by anyone other than the CPD is eliminated by “agreements among the CPD and the two major party nominees forbidding participation in other debates or joint appearances.”

Collyer judged antitrust law had no relevance to the situation, and that many of the ills the plaintiffs complained of were of their own making, not the debate commission. “Plaintiffs in this case have not alleged a non-speculative injury traceable to the Commission,” wrote Collyer, who was appointed by President George W. Bush. “Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries are wholly speculative and are dependent entirely on media coverage decisions. Furthermore, because the commission was a private institution and not a government body, the commission was not subject to First Amendment obligations and, therefore, could not violate the amendment.”

Furthermore, she stated, the alleged injureds’ “failure to receive media coverage and to garner votes, federal matching funds, and campaign contributions–were caused by the lack of popular support of the candidates and their parties sufficient to attract media attention….Plaintiffs have not alleged a concrete injury traceable to the Commission, and thus they lack standing,” the judge added. A decision chock full of Catch 22s.

Media, Do Your Job!
Media has failed to do its job of fully informing and educating the public about election choices and issues. The media should step up and do its journalistic job, and cease acting as a subsidiary of the two-party system. Even some media figures are questioning the process in 2016 that has narrowed everyone’s choice to the least of evils between the two most unpopular candidates in recent history. It is necessary to expand candidate choices and media has the ability to introduce more candidates to the electorate, and to reject the arbitrary constraints applied by the two major parties.

The Need to Open Up the Electoral Process with Approval Voting

Coloradoan Frank Atwood, a long-time advocate of Approval Voting, cites three necessities for opening up the electoral process:

1) Debate access
2) Approval voting and
3) Ballot access, including the need to address voter suppression laws and voting machine susceptibility to hacking.

By permitting affirmative votes for more than one candidate, Approval Voting would open up the electoral process for voters beyond the choice of least of evils, as well as bypassing the “spoiler” effect, where a vote for a preferred candidate risks electing the least preferred candidate. Voting for more than one candidate levels the field for candidates, provides more candidate choices, and a more accurate account of voters’ candidate preferences, while opening up the electoral process to independent and third party candidates.

Atwood notes that Approval Voting, distinct from “ranked voting,” permits a “yes” vote on as many candidates or options as appear on a ballot, and has been used in local elections. In 1990, Oregon used approval voting in a statewide advisory referendum on school financing, presenting voters with five different options and allowing them to vote for as many as they wished. Atwood’s website ApprovalVotingUSA.org links to The Center for Election Science, which provides evaluation of various voting methods. Watch a short video that illustrates the concept of Approval Voting.

Atwood is currently working to introduce Approval Voting at state and local levels. He is conferring with the Colorado Secretary of State’s office about proposed legislation that would set up instructions for optional use of Approval Voting by statutory municipalities and special districts, should they choose to use it.

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