Video: Mitch McConnell on Why He Would Back Trump in 2024 – Party Comes First!

Dear Commons Community,

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell may have said Donald Trump was “practically and morally responsible” for the January 6th insurrection, but he admits there is nothing the former president could do that would cause him not to support Trump if he’s nominated in 2024.

In a new interview (see excerpt above), McConnell told Axios.com reporter Jonathan Swan that his obligation “to support the nominee of my party” extends to Trump despite the vast evidence suggesting the former president conspired to overthrow the 2020 election.

McConnell has made similar comments about supporting a Trump bid in 2024, but his most current comments came after Swan asked McConnell about his “moral red lines.”

“Help me understand this,” Swan said. “I watched your speech last year in February on the Senate floor after the second impeachment vote for Donald Trump.”

Swan was surprised that McConnell could support a man he called “morally responsible” for an attack on the U.S. Capitol.

“After you said that about him, I think it’s astonishing!” Swan said.

“I think I have an obligation to support the nominee of my party,” McConnell explained.

Swan wondered if there is anything a Republican nominee could do that would lose McConnell’s support.

The senator couldn’t think of anything.

“Well, that will mean that whoever the nominee is has gone out and earned the nomination,” McConnell argued.

Swan then pointed out that McConnell was seemingly holding “two concurrent conflicting positions,” but McConnell insisted he wasn’t “inconsistent” at all.

“I stand by everything I said … because I don’t get to pick the Republican nominee for president. They’re elected by the Republican voters all over the country,” McConnell said.

After Swan noted that Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) said she believes “there are some things more important than party loyalty,” McConnell said, “Well, maybe you ought to be talking to Liz Cheney.”

Swan then insisted his question wasn’t meant to be a “gotcha.”

“I’m actually trying to understand. Is there any threshold for you?” Swan asked.

“You know, I say many things I’m sure people don’t understand,” McConnell responded.

And that is the problem with our country and its party politics today!

Tony

China Warns House Speaker Nancy Pelosi Not to Visit Taiwan Next Week!

China warns against US House Speaker's possible visit to Taiwan- The New  Indian Express

Dear Commons Community,

China warned yesterday that it would take strong measures if U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan and said such a visit would severely impact Chinese-U.S. relations.

China considers democratically ruled Taiwan its own territory and the subject is a constant source of friction between Beijing and Washington, especially given strong U.S. military and political support for the island.

The possible visit has not been confirmed by Pelosi’s office or Taiwan’s government, but some Japanese and Taiwanese media reported it would take place after she visits Japan this weekend.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian told reporters that Beijing firmly opposed all forms of official interactions between the United States and Taiwan, and Washington should cancel the trip. As reported by Reuters.

“If the United States insists on having its own way, China will take strong measures in response to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity. All possible consequences that arise from this will completely be borne by the U.S. side,” he added, without giving details.

In Taipei, Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokesperson Joanne Ou would only say that inviting U.S. officials and dignitaries had always been “an important part” of the ministry’s work, and that it would announce any official visits at an appropriate time.

Sunday marks the 43rd anniversary of the United States signing into law the Taiwan Relations Act, which guides ties in the absence of formal diplomatic relations and enshrines a U.S. commitment to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself.

The last time a House speaker visited Taiwan was in 1997, when Newt Gingrich met then-President Lee Teng-hui.

Pelosi, a long time critic of China, particularly on human rights issues, held a virtual meeting with Taiwan Vice President William Lai in January as he wrapped up a visit to the United States and Honduras.

Pelosi is one of the ruling Democratic Party’s most high-profile politicians, and second in the U.S. presidential line of succession after the vice president.

Taiwan has been heartened by continued U.S. support offered by the Biden administration, which has repeatedly talked of its “rock-solid” commitment to the island.

That has strained already poor Sino-U.S. relations.

In March, a delegation of former senior U.S. defense and security officials sent by President Joe Biden visited Taiwan, a strong show of support coming soon after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Given the state of world affairs, maybe it would be prudent for Speaker Pelosi to skip a visit to Taiwan at this time.

Tony

Ketanji Brown Jackson Makes History as First Black Woman on Supreme Court:  Senate Vote was 53-47!

Ketanji Brown Jackson has been confirmed to the Supreme Court.

Nicole Rifkin for HuffPost

Dear Commons Community,

In an historic vote, the Senate confirmed Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court today, making her the first-ever Black woman and former public defender to serve on the nation’s highest court.

Jackson, 51, was confirmed in a 53-47 vote. Every Democrat voted for her, along with three Republicans: Sens. Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Susan Collins (Maine) and Mitt Romney (Utah). When the vote was over, the Senate chamber erupted with cheers and applause from the balcony.

Jackson’s confirmation seals a promise by President Joe Biden, who vowed as a candidate to pick a Black woman for the Supreme Court.  As reported by the Huffington Post.

“In the 233-year history of the Supreme Court, never — never — has a Black woman held the title of ‘Justice,’” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said ahead of Jackson’s vote. “This milestone should have happened generations ago — generations ago — but we are always trotting on a path towards a more perfect union. Nevertheless, America today is taking a giant step towards making our union more perfect.”

In yet another historic moment, Vice President Kamala Harris, the first Black woman to serve in this post, presided over Jackson’s confirmation vote.

Jackson, who has been a federal judge for nearly a decade and comes in with an exceptional resume, endured ridiculous and ugly attacks by Republicans during her confirmation process — despite the fact that most of those GOP senators had previously voted to confirm her one, two or even three previous times to other judgeships or the U.S. Sentencing Commission.

Several falsely accused her of being lenient on child sex offenders as a judge, even though they know her record is well within the mainstream. They mocked her for declining to define a “woman” during her confirmation hearing — an attempt to bait her into a contentious debate about transgender people — even though those same Republicans flailed when asked by HuffPost how they would define “a woman.”

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) falsely claimed that Jackson likes to help terrorists, and said she would have defended Nazis at Nuremberg. His absurd leap echoes a GOP theme dwelling on Jackson’s stint as a public defender representing Guantanamo Bay detainees accused of terrorism. As a public defender, Jackson did not pick her clients.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) made a show of grilling Jackson on whether she thinks “babies are racist,” waving an anti-racism children’s book in the air as he tried to tie her to the GOP’s misleading attacks on an academic discipline known as critical race theory. (Cruz’s effort to smear that book ended up making it a No. 1 bestseller on Amazon.)

But Jackson navigated her hearing with grace and composure, with even some of her toughest GOP critics admitting they were impressed by her. She had staunch defenders around the country who were glued to the hearings and even went to the Supreme Court to rally in support.

By the end of Jackson’s two full days of being grilled by the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), the only Black member of the panel, delivered an incredible speech that brought her to tears as he talked about the “joy” that her critics can’t take from him as he watches Jackson make history on the court.

“I’m not letting anybody in the Senate steal my joy,” Booker said emphatically.

“You’re a person who is so much more than your race and gender,” he told Jackson. “You have earned this spot. You are worthy. You are a great American … You’re here. And I know what it’s taken for you to sit in that seat.”

Booker said Harriet Tubman has long been his “harbinger of hope,” and now, Jackson is, too.

“This country is getting better and better and better,” he said, becoming emotional. “When that final vote happens, and you ascend onto the highest court in the land, I’m going to rejoice. And I’m going to tell you right now: The greatest country in the world, the United States of America, will be better because of you.”

Congratulations Justice Jackson!

Tony

All Eyes on Tiger Woods Today at the Augusta Masters!

Tiger Woods practicing at Augusta National, per reports

Dear Commons Community,

Amid professional baseball’s opening day and the NBA in the throes of games to determine seeding in its playoffs, the sports world will have all eyes on Tiger Woods today as he competes in the Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia.  This will be his first professional tournament since a car accident in February 2021 almost cost him his life.  As reported by the Associated Press.

At around 10:34 a.m. on Thursday, the five-time champion will stick his tee into the ground at Tea Olive, the name of the first hole at Augusta National, take a couple of practice swings and continue a familiar walk that began over a quarter-century ago.

It’s what happens when Woods sticks his driver back into his bag that will determine whether his surgically rebuilt right leg — or the rest of the 46-year-old Hall of Famer for that matter — is ready for a test unlike any other he’s faced in his career.

The five-mile or so walk between the Georgia pines at Augusta National is 11,000-plus steps of up and down and up again. It requires hitting shots from uneven lies. Of digging into the pine straw when required. Of trying to peak over bunkers that can run so deep — as it does on the par-3 fourth hole — you need to jump if you’re going to see the flag.

No one other than Jack Nicklaus has navigated the sprawling course as well as Woods. No active player is as well-versed in the contours of every inch of perfectly manicured Bermuda grass.

That’s why Woods wasn’t complaining when he said on Tuesday “walking is the hard part.” He’s merely stating a fact. And he’s hardly the only one who knows how physically draining competing in the Masters can be.

Two-time U.S. Open champion Curtis Strange used to leave the tournament with shin splints. And Strange didn’t have to do it while working with a leg crammed with rods and plates metal detectors shudder when they see you coming around the corner.

“You know, 72 holes is a long road, and it’s going to be a tough challenge and a challenge that I’m up for,” Woods said.

At least in theory. He hasn’t played 18 holes at Augusta National on consecutive days since shredding h is leg in a car accident in February 2021 that led doctors to consider amputation. Now he’s asking the same leg that anchored 15 major championships and a PGA Tour record-tying 82 victories to hold up for four rounds in the span of 81 or so hours.

That doesn’t even include the warm-up or recovery, routines that require far more time than they did when he fist-pumped his way to his first green jacket 25 years ago.

It’s asking a lot. Yes, it’s just walking. Only it’s no ordinary walk. And it’s no ordinary week. For Woods or anyone else.

“I think most of the stress that we have is probably more mental than physical,” said world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who at 25 was born less than a year before Woods captured his first Masters title.

The stress is no longer between Woods’ ears, but underneath his feet. The elevation changes are nearly constant from your opening shot. Down the hill to the first fairway, then back up toward the green. Down a hill again at No. 2. Rolling terrain on No. 3. An elevated tee at No. 4. Uphill nearly all the way at No. 7. Ditto No. 8. A climb to the turn at No. 9.

The back nine is a jumble. The 10th fairway could double as a ski slope. Another trek down the 11th into Amen Corner. The 12th and 13th offer a bit of a respite. Mounds and a slanted fairway on the 14th, where a flat lie is basically a myth. A gentle downhill to the 15th green. The 16th provides a respite, before the 17th tee begins one last climb back to the clubhouse.

Woods admits his mobility is so limited he ditched Nike cleats for FootJoys because it provided more comfort. He’s hoping the jolt of adrenaline fueled by the first capacity crowd to come to Augusta since his titanic victory in 2019 will help him get by.

Still, golf is golf. Throw in the crucible that is the Masters and Woods knows adversity is unavoidable. He stressed he wouldn’t come back just to be a field filler. That’s simply not his way. He’s not going to ask his leg to simply help him get around, but to stand on the 18th green late Sunday afternoon and have Hideki Matsuyama drape a sixth green jacket over his shoulders.

It sounds impossible. It very well may be impossible.

“When I decide to hang it up when I feel like I can’t win anymore, then that will be it,” he said. “But I feel like I can still do it, and I feel like I still have the hands to do it, the body’s moving good enough. I’ve been in worse situations and played and won tournaments.”

Yes and no. He won the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines basically on one leg. Yet he was just 32 then. He’s closer to 60 now than that brilliant Father’s Day weekend in the sun back home in California.

The spirit remains willing. It has since the first time he ducked inside the ropes at Augusta as an amateur in 1995.

It’s the rest of him, particularly the right ankle that will have to bear the weight of so much — including internal and external expectations that come when your name happens to be Tiger Woods — that will determine whether this long walk will be spoiled.

“I don’t have to worry about the ball striking or the game of golf, it’s actually just the hills out here,” he said. “That’s going to be the challenge, and it’s going to be a challenge of a major marathon.”

We wish him well!

Tony

 

Congress Grills Oil Company Executives over Price-Gouging!

For President Biden, Surging Gas Prices Are a Familiar Problem as Oil Eases  - Bloomberg

Dear Commons  Community,

Congressional Democrats slammed oil and gas industry executives during a hearing yesterday, accusing them of profiteering amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its impact on the global energy market.

The consensus among committee Democrats and Republicans, as well as the executives who testified, is that the U.S. needs to boost domestic production in the short term in order to provide Americans relief at the pump. Where they fiercely disagree is on the barriers keeping that from happening.  As reported by the Huffington Post.

Rep. ​​Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), chair of the House Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations subcommittee, displayed a chart showing that while the price of crude oil has dropped in recent weeks, gasoline prices in the U.S. remain near historic highs.  

“Why?” she asked. “If the price of gas is driven by the global market, why is the price of oil coming down but the price at the pump is still at record highs?”

“Something just doesn’t add up,” she added.

Industry executives from Exxon Mobil, BP, Chevron, Shell USA, Devon Energy Corp and Pioneer Resources said the global market controls prices, not individual companies, but struggled to explain the widening gap.

“Changes in the price of crude oil do not always result in immediate changes at the pump,” said Mike Wirth, CEO of Chevron. He added that “it frequently takes more time for competition among retail stations to bring prices back down.”

“It is a very complex set of factors that impact the price of gasoline,” including supply risk across all fossil fuel products, said David Lawler, president of BP America.

Republicans on the committee ran to the industry’s defense. Reps. Morgan Griffith (Va.) and Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.) argued that the Biden administration’s “anti-American energy agenda” and “war” on fossil fuels are to blame for inflated prices.

“It is impossible to generate confidence or invest in production today when future production is clearly being blocked by this administration,” Griffith said.

Griffith asked each of the executives if their company was “taking advantage of the crisis in Ukraine to keep prices artificially high in order to increase your own profits?” All of them said they were not.

“We have no tolerance for price-gouging,” Wirth, of Chevron, said in his opening remarks.

But as DeGette and other Democrats on the panel pointed out, and as the executives acknowledged, the industry is raking in record profits. The six companies present Wednesday brought in a combined $75 billion in profits last year. And when the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas surveyed 139 industry executives last month, the majority — 59% — cited investor pressure as the main reason producers have not ramped up production.

Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said the industry is “ripping off the American people.”

“At a time of record profits, big oil is refusing to increase production to provide the American people some much-needed relief at the gas pump. Instead, they are buying back their stock at an estimated $40 billion this year. Big oil is lining their pockets with one hand and taking millions in taxpayer subsidies with the other.”

Stock buybacks are when a company uses its profits to buy up its own stock, often leading to a surge in the stock price. Pallone asked each of the executives if they would commit to reducing stock buybacks and dividends for shareholders, which would enable them to increase production instead amid ongoing turmoil in the energy market. None of them said they would.

“I can’t commit to a reduction in buybacks,” Lawler said.

Monday’s hearing and U.S. lawmakers’ push for more fossil fuel development come against the backdrop of a new United Nations report that warns global carbon emissions need to peak by 2025, then go down 43% by 2030, in order to prevent catastrophic planetary warming.

Last week, Biden ordered the largest-ever release of oil from the nation’s strategic reserves — an average of 1 million barrels per day for six months — to combat high prices and act as a “wartime bridge” until domestic production can ramp up later this year. He also called on Congress to pass “use it or lose it” legislation requiring oil and gas companies to pay fees on idle wells and unused federal leases.

Highlighting the tightrope that Democrats are walking on energy ahead of the midterms later this year, when gas prices are likely to be high on voters’ minds, Pallone called on industry executives to “take some action to reduce the pain at the gas pump.”

“Produce more oil,” he said yesterday. “Produce more with the wells you have.”

Tony

New Study:  Red State Murder Problem – Republican-controlled states have much higher violent crime rates than Democratic ones!

Red States Murder Problem Header

The Red State Murder Problem

Dear Commons Community,

Every news outlet from FOX to CNN to The New York Times to local newspapers has a story with attention-grabbing headlines like “US cities hit all-time murder records.” Fox News and Republicans have jumped on this and framed it as a “Democrat” problem. They blame it on Democrat’s “soft-on-crime” approach and have even referred to a New York District Attorney’s approach as “hug-a-thug.” Many news stories outside of Fox have also purported that police reform is responsible for this rise in murder and have pointed to cities like New York and Los Angeles.

There is a measure of truth to these stories. The US saw an alarming 30% increase in murder in 2020. While 2021 data is not yet complete, murder was on the rise again this past year.  Some “blue” cities, like Chicago, Baltimore, and Philadelphia, have seen real and persistent increases in homicides. These cities—along with others like Los Angeles, New York, and Minneapolis—are also in places with wall-to-wall media coverage and national media interest.

But there is a large piece of the homicide story that is missing and calls into question the veracity of the right-wing obsession over homicides in Democratic cities: murder rates are far higher in Trump-voting red states than Biden-voting blue states. And sometimes, murder rates are highest in cities with Republican mayors.

But a comparison of violent crime rates in jurisdictions controlled by Democrats and Republicans tells a very different story. In fact, a new study from the center-left think tank Third Way shows that states won by Trump in the 2020 election have higher murder rates than those carried by Joe Biden. The highest murder rates, the study found, are often in conservative, rural states.

The study found that murder rates in the 25 states Trump carried in 2020 are 40% higher overall than in the states Biden won. (The report used 2020 data because 2021 data is not yet fully available.) The five states with the highest per capita murder rate — Mississippi, Louisiana, Kentucky, Alabama and Missouri — all lean Republican and voted for Trump.

There are some examples of states Biden won in 2020 that also have high per capita murder rates, including New Mexico and Georgia, which have the seventh- and eighth-highest murder rates, respectively. And there are Trump-supporting states with low murder rates, such as Idaho and Utah. Broadly speaking, the South, and to a lesser extent the Midwest, has more murders per capita than the Northeast, interior West and West Coast, the study found.

Those findings are consistent with a pattern that has existed for decades, in which the South has had higher rates of violent crime than the nation as a whole.

Demonstrators march in Atlanta on April 14, 2021, to protest the shooting death of Daunte Wright three days earlier. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)

“We as criminologists have known this for quite some time,” Jennifer Ortiz, a professor of criminology at Indiana University Southeast, told Yahoo News. “States like Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama have historically had high crime rates.”

Criminologists say research shows higher rates of violent crime are found in areas that have low average education levels, high rates of poverty and relatively modest access to government assistance. Those conditions characterize some portions of the American South.

“They are among the poorest states in our union,” Ortiz said of the Deep South. “They have among the highest rates of child poverty. They are among the least-educated states. They are among the states with the highest levels of substance abuse. All of those factors contribute to people engaging in criminal behavior.”

“I thought that was a very good study,” Richard Rosenfeld, a professor of criminology at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and former president of the American Society of Criminology, told Yahoo News about the Third Way report. “In Republican states, states with Republican governors, crime rates tend to be higher. I’m not certain that’s related to the fact that the governor is a Republican, but it’s a fact nonetheless.”

Police and emergency personnel work on a crime scene in Waukesha, Wis., in November 2021. (Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)

(While the Third Way study divided states by presidential vote in 2020, using gubernatorial party affiliation leads to similar results because most states have recently chosen the same party for governor and for president. Based on presidential vote, eight of the 10 states with the highest murder rates lean Republican, versus seven of the top 10 if one uses the governor’s party.)

Although murder rates tend to be highest in the South, the biggest increases in 2020 were found in the Great Plains and Midwest, according to Third Way. The largest jumps were in Wyoming (91.7% higher than in 2019), South Dakota (69%), Wisconsin (63.2%), Nebraska (59.1%) and Minnesota (58.1%). Wyoming, South Dakota and Nebraska all voted for Trump and have Republican governors. Wisconsin and Minnesota voted for Biden and are led by Democrats.

Few large cities are governed by Republicans — only 26 of the 100 largest U.S. cities have Republican mayors — making apples-to-apples comparisons difficult. But cities that do have Republican mayors do not have lower murder rates than similarly sized Democratic-led cities, the study found.

Some experts warn against the impulse to use crime data to score quick political points.

“​​Being a Republican or Democratic state or city is correlated with many other issues,” David Weisburd, a professor of criminology and executive director of the Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy at George Mason University, wrote in an email to Yahoo News. “That means that the murder rate may be due to the state being Republican, or it may be due to the fact that Republican states have many other risk factors related to crime or murder rates. Even with a very comprehensive modeling of all of these factors, it is very difficult to get a valid causal result for explaining crime rates.”

That argument cuts both ways, however. Weisburd also thinks the claims of Trump and other Republicans who say Democrats have caused a crime wave in the cities and states they govern are unfounded. “I don’t think this argument can be supported no matter which way you go,” Weisburd said.

Murder rates in the U.S. rose dramatically in 2020 from record lows, and the increases are similar across states — regardless of partisan preference. For homicides in 2020, Third Way found a 32.2% uptick in Trump-backing states versus a 30.8% rise in those that voted for Biden. Some states with large cities, such as New York and Pennsylvania, saw larger-than-average increases: New York went up 47% and Pennsylvania is up 39%. But the largest increases were in rural, Republican-led states, including Montana (+84%) and South Dakota (+81%).

The higher national murder rate is naturally causing public concern, although violent crime does remain far below its early 1990s high point. “Using the FBI data, the violent crime rate fell 49% between 1993 and 2019,” from 757 incidents per 100,000 people to 379 per 100,000, the Pew Research Center noted last November. Between 2019 and 2020, the murder rate jumped from 6 homicides per 100,000 people to 7.8 homicides per 100,000, but that was still 22% below the rate in 1991 of 10 homicides per 100,000.

Red state murder problem indeed!

Tony

Thenkurussi “Kesh” Kesavadas – SUNY Albany to Make AI ‘Part of Everything We Do’

Director chosen for new Health Care Engineering Systems Center | The  Grainger College of Engineering | UIUC

Thenkurussi “Kesh” Kesavadas

Dear Commons Community,

SUNY Albany’s new vice president for research and economic development,  Thenkurussi “Kesh” Kesavadas, sees artificial intelligence as foundational to many fields and wants it to be incorporated into both research and instruction. And he  wants to make sure that his university takes full advantage of all the opportunities and technological advances that are coming with the widespread use of AI in society — a tech revolution that is taking place whether we are ready or not.

Kesavadas is the new vice president for research and economic development for SUNY Albany, taking over for James Dias, who retired late last year.

Before he accepted the job at UAlbany, Kesavadas was the founding director of the Health Care Engineering Systems Center at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The center was started in 2014 as part of the university’s engineering school. It develops simulation training systems for medical students and professionals and medical robots used in surgery. It also runs a health care analytics program that brings together medical researchers with engineers, AI experts and data scientists.  As reported by the Times Union.

“I am very confident that Dr. Kesavadas will provide the strategic vision and leadership necessary to successfully grow the university’s research enterprise and economic development capacity in the years to come,” President Havidán Rodríguez.Rodríguez said in a letter to the university community when Kesavadas was hired back in November. Kesavadas started Jan. 24.

He has a bold vision for SUNY Albany and its use of AI technology in both research and basic studies starting with students in their first year at the school, regardless of their major.

Kesavadas says the AI revolution has already started, and those who embrace the technology will succeed — and those who ignore its power will fall behind.

“It’s going to be part of everything we do, if not already everything we already do,” Kesavadas, who goes by Kesh, told the Times Union in an interview. “We already deal with AI without realizing that we do.”

AI is really about the intersection of big data, advanced software and ultra-fast computing.

That includes things like robotic surgery, which has been in use for decades, allowing surgeons to complete precision procedures they wouldn’t otherwise be able to do by hand.

Companies like General Electric Co. have already developed “digital twins” of power plants they build that can be used to predict when parts and systems will break down and need to be replaced.

And electric utilities are using AI to help them predict how severe weather will impact where outages will likely happen on their electrical grids, a process that used to be largely done with guesswork and luck.

UAlbany’s climate and weather prediction centers are already working with IBM, a leader in AI and data analytics, to help companies predict how weather and climate changes are impacting transportation, renewable energy systems, and water, which is rising across the globe due to climate change.

“The use of AI and machine learning for weather prediction and forecasting is rapidly evolving,” said Chris Thorncroft, who heads UAlbany’s Atmospheric Sciences Research Center and Center of Excellence in Weather & Climate Analytics.

With AI being such an important part of the future economy, Kesavadas says its even more important that students at UAlbany be prepared for that future that will require a workforce skilled in using AI, from engineers to English teachers.

“There’s not enough graduates (able to use AI),” Kesavadas said. “There’s not enough being done by universities. My vision is to change that in the Capital Region.”

What’s needed is access to supercomputing power in order to crunch the amount of data needed for software and machines to think like humans. UAlbany is totally behind that effort.

The program is envisioned as New York’s Next Generation AI Supercomputer Cluster for Education and Research. UAlbany has already pitched the idea to state officials and says it will take $200 million in private and public funding, some of it from the state.

The effort will include wrapping AI instruction into all majors, what UAlbany called its “AI+X” program, and a workforce development program called Albany AI Academy.

And UAlbany’s AI initiative has plenty of local support to build this educational and research program of the future. That’s includes Albany Nanotech, which is home to IBM’s AI center, as well as Renssealer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, which hosts one of IBM’s supercomputers at the Rensselaer Technology Park in North Greenbush.

And of course there is the state’s public health lab, the Wadsworth Center, which is located in Albany as well.

Even scientists at Albany Nanotech could benefit from UAlbany’s new AI program, which would obviously have a large presence at UAlbany’s new College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. That would only be enhanced with the move of the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering from SUNY Polytechnic Institute back into UAlbany, where it originated, a plan supported by Gov. Kathy Hochul.

AI, Kesavadas said, can even make better, faster and more intuitive computer chips, which is the constant goal of companies like IBM and Applied Materials that are tenants at Albany Nanotech.

“What AI can do is, you can create more efficient chips,” Kesavadas said. “You can also build systems that continuously learn from themselves.”

Bold vision.  May he have great success in achieving it!

Tony

 

Has the College Workplace Changed Forever – Four Leaders Express Their Views!

Illustration of a woman facing a bunch of floating computers, laptops, smart phones, and tablets

Pat Kinsella for The Chronicle of Higher Education

Dear Commons Community,

The Chronicle of Higher Education recently held a forum wherein four leaders expressed their opinions on how colleges are trying different strategies to adapt to a new reality.  The two years of the Covid pandemic forced everybody including college administrators to move to online instruction and services.  Now that the pandemic has waned, what is the new realities facing our colleges and universities.

To get a better understanding of what the campus workplace looks like now and how it might look in the future, The Chronicle held a virtual forum with several higher-education leaders.  The conversation, led by Megan Zahneis, a staff reporter at The Chronicle, included Malou C. Harrison, executive vice president and provost at Miami Dade College; Cathy A. Sandeen, president of California State University at East Bay; Daniele C. Struppa, president of Chapman University; and Allison M. Vaillancourt, a vice president and senior consultant at Segal, a human-resources consulting firm.  Below is an abbreviated version of the exchanges.

Lots of interesting responses here!

Tony

_____________________________________________

 

Megan Zahneis: How are you thinking about things right now? How are you handling flexible-work policies?

Daniele C. Struppa: Our greatest challenge has been to put in place a policy for our staff. We pride ourselves on personalized education, and we want to have our faculties in the classroom, so that’s never really been a long-term consideration. Staff, on the other hand, we’ve learned can work very well remotely in many circumstances. Before the reopening of the country, we put together a policy which allows for three types of remote working: telecommuting, flexible work time, and remote work. As of now, 40.7 percent of our staff are taking advantage of one form or another of remote working. Telecommuting allows people to work out of different locations and not necessarily be here for up to three days a week. Flexible work time requires them to work here, but with different time schedules. So there is a period, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., in which everybody has to be here, but they can come early and leave at 3 or come in at 9 and leave later than 3. Remote work is for people that can completely perform their jobs from their homes. Staff seems to be happy, and it has become important in terms of retention and hiring new staff.

Malou C. Harrison: Our faculty now are able to teach via different modalities, whereas prior to the pandemic, our faculty, if they had five courses, had the opportunity to teach one course online asynchronously and four had to be in person. Now they can teach all five courses via a live, synchronous, virtual modality. Not every single discipline is conducive to a virtual-learning environment. So we’re looking at all of our disciplines to determine what courses within each discipline we can still optimize by delivering it in any particular modality.

Zahneis: Traditionally, higher education has been insulated from the corporate sector and how it operates. How are those differences playing out now, and what cues can higher ed take from the corporate world?

Allison M. Vaillancourt: In the corporate sector, we have more of a tradition of having remote work distributed around the country, and that doesn’t work quite so well for higher education right now. Even something as simple as payroll: Every state has different employment laws and leave laws and taxation things. And when you’ve got an internal operation that does that work rather than a national organization doing that for you, it’s really hard to have expertise in order to manage that. At the beginning of the pandemic, there was this early conversation about, “We could recruit people from anywhere. We have access to all the talent.” And then people started looking at the details going, “Oh, that’s a little harder than I thought it was going to be.” And so we sort of have seen a pullback on that. Also, we’ve learned that people really value remote work, but they can be very lonely during remote work. And so I think we can learn from the corporate sector about how to build a a sense of team, a sense of community, strong levels of connection that keep people wanting to work for us.

Zahneis: Higher education is facing a really stiff job market, in many cases losing out to corporations that have even-more-flexible work policies and better salaries. How are you thinking about the job-market competition, particularly on the staff level?

Struppa: We are in Orange County, which is one of the most expensive areas in the country, and the pricing for housing is almost a scandal. It’s really hard for people with regular salaries to make it. We have been impacted. We have a significant vacancy rate, almost twice as much of what we would usually have during a normal time. We are increasing the number of houses that we have available for people that we hire. We have a long waiting list. We have some properties in Orange, but certainly not enough. The sticker shock coming from other parts of the country is horrendous, so we are also working on salaries. We just released a significant amount of money that has been allocated in the last couple of weeks to retain the staff most at risk for flight.

Cathy A. Sandeen: We are seeing a lot of churn and turnover in our employees. While that is concerning, we’re also seeing on the plus side that we are recruiting quality individuals to our university. It’s not like we have huge vacancies that we can never fill. I think people are re-examining their lives following the pandemic. We are attracting people who are very committed to our mission. We’re also able to provide some upward career progression for our employees who were kind of stuck. Many people were feeling frustrated that they couldn’t move up within their own university, but now that’s opened up in some cases. But it is a challenge when individuals leave. There’s additional work, at least temporarily, for the people who remain. So we’re able to provide stipends for that additional work. We’ve also been able to revise our position descriptions to make jobs a little more complex so that we can justifiably raise the salaries within our HR system.

Zahneis: How do you navigate questions of workplace culture and employee relations in this kind of weird, squishy, in-between space?

Vaillancourt: Let me blow that up into a bigger question: What is the culture of higher education, and how is that contributing to people wanting to stay in higher education or not? For so long, we have thought, “We have such an important mission. People will, of course, want to work for us. Maybe we don’t pay as much as the private sector, but we’re doing important work.” What’s happening now is that other sectors are also doing really meaningful work. It’s possible to have a corporate career with a strong sense of mission and purpose, and so higher education and the nonprofit sector no longer have the market on work with purpose and meaning. Also, higher education can be a very tough culture. There are caste systems. Nobody likes to talk about them, but we know that they exist. If you’re a staff person, you feel that you are not in the top echelon of people in the organization. And that is very painful. Colleges have to think about how to create a culture where people want to want to work for us as an organization but also want to be with their colleagues.

Struppa: I think that people from outside look at us sometimes with starry eyes and then, when they come here, realize that we are no better, but in some ways we are not worse, either. What is happening that is damaging to us is this kind of bipartisan agreement that higher education is not doing its job. It’s a bipartisan agreement, though from a different perspective. The right and the left think poorly of universities for different reasons. That percolates and takes the shine away a little bit from our being a purpose-driven organization. One of the things we try to tell people is that the environment tends to be less cutthroat than in corporations. But the other side of less cutthroat is the lack of, in many cases, meaningful advancement possibilities.

Harrison: We’re serving a heterogeneous group of employees at our institutions. And while there are employees that thrive well in a remote environment, there are employees that really embrace coming to work every day because they love the socialization and they want to be in the midst of the engagement and activity that a college or university brings. At Miami Dade, we’ve worked at re-energizing our campuses post-pandemic. All of our institutions have ensembles, all of our institutions have student organizations, all of our institutions have scholars who can speak to and convene groups of faculty and staff on various topics. How can we bring this life back to our campuses so our faculty, staff and students really embrace this and want to be here?

Zahneis: How are you thinking about equity, especially when it comes to decisions about who can work remotely and who can’t?

Sandeen: Early in the pandemic, essential workers were brought back to campus first: facilities, university police departments, some frontline workers, student health, and so forth. Proportionately employees in those jobs tended to be people of color. And there’s kind of a natural structural racism based on the nature of who’s working in which jobs. That’s something that’s hard to change overnight, but it’s important for us to recognize that and to provide opportunities for employees in all different categories to progress. For example, we have some of our employees who are in our facilities area who are taking advantage of our tuition-waiver program to earn degrees and then are applying for other jobs at the university. Maybe they’re working from moving from our frontline grounds position to a financial-analyst position in another department. So it is possible as long as there is awareness of those opportunities and we make it equitable in terms of who can take advantage of them.

Zahneis: What would you say to your fellow administrative colleagues who are resisting modernization and not embracing what we’re seeing as a changing campus work force?

Vaillancourt: One is that if you want to be able to attract amazing people, you’re going to have to be flexible. Two, don’t assume that face to face is always better. We’re talking to a lot of advising teams, for example, who tell us that no-shows are much lower when they’re virtual meetings and that students like it better. So there’s a lot to be said for this new approach.

Struppa: The response has to be tailored to different institutions. In some areas, remote or telecommuting may not be so necessary. We also have to remember to be indulgent with our colleagues because some of these changes are very expensive. The setup that we put in place to move to remote instruction during the pandemic has been incredibly costly and costly to maintain. We need to provide a very different kind of structure for when people who are telecommuting come to campus. They don’t have an office anymore; it’s more like a hotel system. So I don’t want the fact that we are all so positive and embracing this to be a source of anxiety for our colleagues. It is complicated, and they may have to go through different answers than we did.

Sandeen: Reflect on your own internal inherent biases about remote work. Are you the type of person that doesn’t believe employees are working unless you see them? The pandemic has showed us that that’s not the case. People worked even harder, I think, during the time when we were mostly remote. Also the bias that we can’t treat different jobs differently. I implemented a formal telecommute policy that does treat different jobs differently, and it’s been widely accepted. Some of those biases might be holding you back a bit.

 

Video: Jen Psaki Shuts Down Fox News Reporter Peter Doocy On Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Law!

 

Dear Commons Community,

White House press secretary Jen Psaki shot down Fox News reporter Peter Doocy yesterday when she asked if he could name any sex education program in a Florida kindergarten that would justify the state’s new “Don’t Say Gay” law (see video above).

Doocy had pressed Psaki on the Biden administration’s opposition to the highly controversial law, which bans discussion of gender identification and sexual orientation in classrooms from kindergarten through third grade.

In a peculiar question, Doocy asked, “Does the White House support that kind of classroom instruction before kindergarten?”

Psaki shot back: “Do you have examples of schools in Florida that are teaching kindergarteners about sex education?”

“I’m just asking for the president’s opinion …” Doocy started to respond.

Psaki: “I think that’s a relevant question” because the law is nothing more than a “politically charged, harsh law that is putting parents and LGBTQ+ kids in a very difficult, heartbreaking circumstance.”

She said the White House thinks the law is a reflection of “politicians in Florida propagating misinformed, hateful policies that do absolutely nothing to address the real issues.”

Psaki responded that the U.S. Department of Education is weighing next steps, including possible action against the measure for violating federal civil rights law.

Several LGBTQ advocacy groups and families filed a joint federal suit against the law Thursday, arguing that it is unconstitutional and has already begun to harm children and families.

But the law could be far more universal than many initially imagined.

The Florida law, in fact, does not mention the word “gay” in the text in a weak effort to skirt the Constitution. And since it now bans addressing gender identity and sexual orientation issues in lower grades, the law could convincingly be understood to apply to all sexual orientation and genders.

Peter Doocy should learn that Jen Psaki is not someone to mess with!

Tony

 

Intellectual Freedom on Trial – Number of Books Challenged in Libraries Soared in 2021!

Book Challenges: Coming Soon to a School Near You? - Knowledge Quest

 

Dear Commons Community,

Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, has never been so busy.

“A year ago, we might have been receiving one, maybe two reports a day about a book being challenged at a library. And usually those calls would be for guidance on how to handle a challenge or for materials that support the value of the work being challenged,” Caldwell-Stone told The Associated Press. “Now, we’re getting three, four, five reports a day, many in need of support and some in need of a great deal of support.”

“We’re on the phone constantly,” she added.

Accounts of book bannings and attempted book bannings, along with threats against librarians, have soared over the past year and the ALA has included some numbers in its annual State of America’s Libraries Report, released Monday. The association found 729 challenges — affecting nearly 1,600 books — at public schools and libraries in 2021, more than double 2020′s figures and the highest since the ALA began compiling challenges more than 20 years ago.

The actual total for last year is likely much higher — the ALA collects data through media accounts and through cases it learns about from librarians and educators and other community members. Books preemptively pulled by librarians — out of fear of community protest or concern for their jobs — and challenges never reported by libraries are not included.

The number could well grow again in 2022, Caldwell-Stone said, as conservative-led school boards and legislatures enact more restrictions. Last week, the Georgia legislature passed a bill that would accelerate the process for removing books seen as “harmful to minors.”

“Nothing would surprise me,” Caldwell-Stone says.

The two most challenged books on the ALA’s top 10 list have been in the news often: Maia Kobabe’s graphic memoir about sexual identity, “Gender Queer,” and Jonathan Evison’s “Lawn Boy,” a coming-of-age novel narrated by a young gay man. Both have been singled out by Republican officials.

Last fall in Virginia, Glenn Youngkin backed a local school board’s banning of the two books during his successful run for governor. Around the same time, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster supported a school board’s decision to remove “Gender Queer.”

In Florida recently, Gov. Ron DeSantis criticized “Gender Queer” and “Lawn Boy” upon signing a law that would force elementary schools to provide a searchable list of every book available in their libraries or used in instruction and allow parents, DeSantis said, “to blow the whistle.”

Kobabe and Evison noted during recent interviews an irony of their books being targeted: Neither set out to write a story for young people. But they gained a following among students with the help of the American Library Association, which has given each book an Alex Award for works “written for adults that have special appeal to young adults, ages 12 through 18.”

“I think a big part of our books getting so much attention is that they’re award winners and ended up being purchased by libraries all over the country,” Kobabe said.

Others on the ALA list, virtually all cited for LGBTQ or racial themes, include Angie Thomas’ bestselling “The Hate U Give,” centered on a police shooting of a Black teen; George Johnson’s “All Boys Aren’t Blue,” Juno Dawson’s “This Book Is Gay” and Susan Kuklin’s “Beyond Magenta.” Two older works that have been on the list before also appear: Sherman Alexie’s autobiographical novel “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison’s debut novel “The Bluest Eye.”

The library association defines a “challenge” as a “formal, written complaint filed with a library or school requesting that materials be removed because of content or appropriateness.” The ALA doesn’t keep a precise figure for how many books have actually been removed, but cases have come up routinely over the past year. Last December, a school district in San Antonio, Texas, pulled hundreds of library books to “ensure they did not have any obscene or vulgar material in them.”

A sad situation when a democracy limits its freedom of intellectual expression!

Tony