This Super Bowl commercial was reportedly censored because it featured a border wall

Fox, the network broadcasting the Super Bowl reportedly would not air a Pennsylvania company’s commercial because it featured a Spanish-speaking woman and young girl confronted by a border wall—something Fox deemed “too controversial.”

Aquí no hay mexicanos Mr. President

 

 

 

The world according to Trump

https://www.facebook.com/CollegeHumor/videos/10154415417907807/

PLANES. CAN. FLY. OVER. WALLS.

(…and other reasons this is a bad idea)

La primera semana de gobierno de Trump

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UG2TRe7c9bU

Transcurrió ya la primera semana de Donald Trump en la presidencia de Estados Unidos y sus acciones de gobierno han sido como se esperaban. Firmó la salida de su país del Acuerdo de Comercio Transpacífico (TTP, por sus siglas en inglés), el retiro de fondos económicos para subsidiar a grupos que practiquen o asesoren sobre el aborto en el extranjero; envió al Congreso la iniciativa para reformar el “Obamacare”; anunció que pedirá una investigación sobre un probable fraude electoral que, según su premisa, le habría dado la mayoría del voto popular a Hillary Clinton, y se adelantó, porque se tenía previsto para el miércoles próximo, a firmar la orden ejecutiva para construir un muro en la frontera con México, además de que con su anuncio de iniciar las negociaciones del Tratado de Libre Comercio de América del Norte prácticamente lo anuló al confirmar que su propósito es recuperar empleos para los estadunidenses repatriando las compañías productoras.

Hasta ahora ha gobernado como si su país fuera su empresa, acompañado de su gabinete, cuyos miembros fungen como parte del Consejo de Administración. Parece ser que se hace lo que él dice porque está en el periodo de la presentación de sus iniciativas. Su conducta se irá modificando conforme éstas tengan consecuencias. Por ahora la más probable, en el plano comercial, es el potencial arribo de China al TTP para llenar el vacío que dejará Estados Unidos en una de las zonas comerciales más dinámicas del mundo, lo que modificaría necesariamente el equilibrio geopolítico-económico a favor de la potencia asiática, algo que pretendía evitar el ex presidente George W. Bush cuando promovió y firmó este acuerdo.

En el plano doméstico los esbozos ofrecidos por su gabinete de que el muro fronterizo con México será pagado con un incremento arancelario a los productos mexicanos o con el retiro de las asistencias económicas a programas bilaterales, como puede ser el Plan Mérida, sólo perjudicarían a los estadunidenses, porque en el primer caso se incrementaría el precio de esos productos, y en el segundo se cancelaría la transferencia tecnológica, muchas veces obsoleta, del país vecino al nuestro.

Pero es en la región latinoamericana donde la reacción ha sido inmediata y las consecuencias de mediano plazo pueden ser graves. La amenaza discursiva de Trump contra México ha generado llamados a la unidad en nuestro país para enfrentar con su vecino una situación tirante en las relaciones bilaterales como no se daba hacía tanto tiempo, probablemente desde el pasaje de Francisco Villa en Columbus y la expedición punitiva estadunidense posterior.
En el Caribe, la situación política, y por ende la económica, volverá a tensarse con Cuba donde seguramente se revertirán los avances logrados durante la administración Obama.

El proteccionismo de Trump también ha empezado a impactar en Sudamérica, donde, por ejemplo, inició un bloqueo a los limones argentinos y se prevé el de otros productos, En el plano político es de esperarse que se agudicen las presiones contra los gobiernos considerados de izquierda, como Venezuela, Ecuador y Bolivia.

La hostilidad de Donald Trump puede propiciar populismos y nacionalismos que en otros momentos históricos dieron lugar a gobiernos de esas tendencias, contrarios a los intereses estadunidenses, y que justo por ese motivo fueron sometidos con dictaduras militares promovidas o auspiciadas por las administraciones norteamericanas de la década de los 70. El saldo, lo sabemos y lo lamentamos, fueron miles de muertos y desaparecidos.

Borderlands: The United States–Mexico Divide

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Moving Walls is an annual documentary photography exhibition produced by the Open Society Foundations Documentary Photography Project. Moving Walls is exhibited at our offices in New York, London, and Washington, D.C., and includes five to seven discrete bodies of work.

Since 1998, the Moving Walls exhibition series has showcased nearly 200 photographers in 23 group exhibitions that align with the Open Society Foundations’ mission to advance human rights and social justice.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_masonry_media_grid element_width=”12″ grid_id=”vc_gid:1485387238852-cb292b30-a604-7″ include=”8569,8570,8571,8572″][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]

See more… 

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Stanford study examines fake news and the 2016 presidential election

Fabricated stories favoring Donald Trump were shared a total of 30 million times, nearly quadruple the number of pro-Hillary Clinton shares leading up to the election, according to Stanford economist Matthew Gentzkow. Even so, he and his co-author find that the most widely circulated hoaxes were seen by only a small fraction of Americans.

Of all the heated debates surrounding the 2016 presidential race, the controversy over so-called “fake news” and its potential impact on Donald Trump’s victory has been among the fiercest.

Now there’s concrete data proposing that false news stories may not have been as persuasive and influential as is often suggested. But the economists behind the research do not conclude one way or the other whether fake news swayed the election.

In their study, Gentzkow and Allcott analyzed three sets of data. The first tracked the amount of traffic on news websites that was directed by social media. The second examined the top fake news stories identified by BuzzFeed and two prominent fact-checking sites, Snopes and PolitiFact. The third consisted of the researchers’ own post-election online survey of 1,200 voters.

Gentzkow and Allcott show that social media wasn’t the major source of political news for most Americans in 2016; only 14 percent say they relied on Facebook and other social media sites as their most important source of election coverage.

See more…

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Gun kid, signs of violence

As the school year winds down, one student finds himself starting an unexpected relationship.

When you don’t know what to look for, it can be easy to miss signs of someone who is in crisis or planning violence. This video is meant to learn how to Know the Signs. With Social inclusion programs are one way to create safer, healthier homes, schools and communities for kids.

History of Earth’s surface temperature 1880-2016

It is the third year in a row that global average surface temperature set a new record, and the fifth time the record has been broken since the start of the twenty-first century.

This animation shows annual temperatures each year since 1880 compared to the twentieth-century average, ending with record-warm 2016. Because of global warming due to increasing greenhouse gases, the maps from the late 1800s and the early 1900s are dominated by shades of blue, indicating temperatures were up to 3°C (5.4°F) cooler than the twentieth-century average.

By the 1980s, the maps take on shades of yellow, with a few large cooler-than-average spots shifting around from year to year. By the 2000s, most of the planet is orange and red—up to 3°C (5.4°F) warmer than the long-term average, with only a few isolated cool spots from year to year.

UNAM students to hold research internship in Spain

Undergraduate students under the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM, for its acronym in Spanish) will hold research internships at the University of Salamanca (USAL, for its acronym in Spanish) in Spain and collaborate on projects developed by the professors of the General Seminar of Research Methods.
The 12 university students were welcomed by the vice-rector of Internationalization of the Spanish university, María Ángeles Serrano García, who hoped that teaching and research activities will increase at other levels.

The USAL sought teachers from the areas involving the degree the students are currently studying to act as tutors; “The idea is also to integrate research groups to see how they develop jobs in different fields and learn good practices to conduct quality research,” she said.

The students who joined the USAL classrooms are Mayte Fernanda Ángeles Delgado, under the Faculty of Arts and Design; as well as Ximena Gutiérrez González, Cinthia Nayeli Ramírez García, Ilse Monserrat Tapia Patiño, Daniela Scanda Téllez Carbajal and Daniel Roberto Torres Arteaga, under the Faculty of Higher Studies Acatlan.

As well as René Ramírez Gómez and Óscar Magdaleno González, students under the Faculty of Chemistry; And Laura Noemi Barroso Vázquez, Fernando Insensé Arana, Jorge Daniel Olaiz Valle and Fernanda Estefanía Vargas Aceves, under the National School of Higher Education campus Leon.

The students traveled to Spain as part of the Research Methods Training Program. SEP-UNAM-FUNAM 2016.

Meanwhile, the General Seminar of Research Methods is organized by the representative office of the Spanish university in Mexico, in collaboration with international courses and taught by professors of the Faculty of Social Sciences.

In addition to the research experience, university students will also have cultural visits to places of interest in and around Salamanca.

In a statement issued by the maximum house of studies in Mexico, Serrano García indicated that with the UNAM the International System of Evaluation of the Spanish Language (SIELE, for its acronym in Spanish) was developed, as well as with the Cervantes Institute and the University of Buenos Aires.

She recalled that they also have agreements for research internships for students of the Master’s in Philosophy of Science of USAL at the Institute of Philosophical Research under the National University.

As well as the master’s degree in Democracy and Parliament, organized by the University of Salamanca and the Institute of Legal Research under the UNAM, in addition to a dozen projects that are in their planning stage.

The two universities will participate in the Laser & Accelerators project, which will bring together the USAL’s Pulsed Lasers Center (CLPU, for its acronym in Spanish) and the Complexity Science Center (C3) of UNAM.

In the field of the humanities, a collaboration agreement will be implemented between the postgraduate course of History and the doctorate program of Medieval, Modern, Contemporary and American History of both institutions.

This agreement will be promoted for the co-supervision of doctoral theses, mobility of academics and researchers and the implementation of joint projects.

This year, the USAL will be the guest of honor in the first edition of the International University Book Fair (FILUNI, for its acronym in Spanish), which will be held in the middle of the year in the central campus of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

Enviado de Trump a Davos descarta guerra comercial con China


“No va a haber una guerra de comercio” aseguró Anthony Scaramucci, enviado del presidente electo de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, durante su participación en un panel sobre las perspectivas de la economía estadounidense en el 2017, organizado en la jornada inaugural del Foro de Davos.

Respecto a China y a su presidente “espero que tengamos una relación fenomenal”, aseveró Scaramucci en el evento donde se dan cita presidentes de mil de las principales multinacionales del mundo, además de 50 jefes de Estado y de gobierno.

Piden a Trump que cierre su cuenta de Twitter

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Parodiando al Comandante en jefe

Saturday Night Live lo hace de nuevo y de esta forma Alec Baldwin, actor estadounidense de cine y televisión, parodió a Donald Trump en su primera conferencia de prensa.

I’ll make Brexit great: cover’s The Daily Telegraph

Donald Trump says Britain was right to vote Brexit and he will offer a ‘quick’ and ‘fair’ trade deal.

The comments came in an interview with Michael Gove, the former minister who led the Brexit campaign then was sacked by Mrs May.

See more at: The Daily Telegraph

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Trump “At the wheel”

blitt-car-final

The early cover of The New Yorker featured Donald Trump on a wheels car for kids. This will be publish on january 23, after Trump takes office president at january 21.

See more…
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UNAM and Stanford University make wires 3 atoms wide

LEGO-style Building Method Has Potential for Making One-Dimensional Materials with Extraordinary Properties

Menlo Park, Calif. — Scientists at Stanford University and the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered a way to use diamondoids – the smallest possible bits of diamond – to assemble atoms into the thinnest possible electrical wires, just three atoms wide.

By grabbing various types of atoms and putting them together LEGO-style, the new technique could potentially be used to build tiny wires for a wide range of applications, including fabrics that generate electricity, optoelectronic devices that employ both electricity and light, and superconducting materials that conduct electricity without any loss. The scientists reported their results today in Nature Materials.
“What we have shown here is that we can make tiny, conductive wires of the smallest possible size that essentially assemble themselves,” said Hao Yan, a Stanford postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the paper. “The process is a simple, one-pot synthesis. You dump the ingredients together and you can get results in half an hour. It’s almost as if the diamondoids know where they want to go.”

This animation shows molecular building blocks joining the tip of a growing nanowire. Each block consists of a diamondoid – the smallest possible bit of diamond – attached to sulfur and copper atoms (yellow and brown spheres). Like LEGO blocks, they only fit together in certain ways that are determined by their size and shape. The copper and sulfur atoms form a conductive wire in the middle, and the diamondoids form an insulating outer shell. (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory)

The Smaller the Better

Although there are other ways to get materials to self-assemble, this is the first one shown to make a nanowire with a solid, crystalline core that has good electronic properties, said study co-author Nicholas Melosh, an associate professor at SLAC and Stanford and investigator with SIMES, the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences at SLAC.

The needle-like wires have a semiconducting core – a combination of copper and sulfur known as a chalcogenide – surrounded by the attached diamondoids, which form an insulating shell.
Their minuscule size is important, Melosh said, because a material that exists in just one or two dimensions – as atomic-scale dots, wires or sheets – can have very different, extraordinary properties compared to the same material made in bulk. The new method allows researchers to assemble those materials with atom-by-atom precision and control.

The diamondoids they used as assembly tools are tiny, interlocking cages of carbon and hydrogen. Found naturally in petroleum fluids, they are extracted and separated by size and geometry in a SLAC laboratory. Over the past decade, a SIMES research program led by Melosh and SLAC/Stanford Professor Zhi-Xun Shen has found a number of potential uses for the little diamonds, including improving electron microscope images and making tiny electronic gadgets.
Constructive Attraction

For this study, the research team took advantage of the fact that diamondoids are strongly attracted to each other, through what are known as van der Waals forces. (This attraction is what makes the microscopic diamondoids clump together into sugar-like crystals, which is the only reason you can see them with the naked eye.)

They started with the smallest possible diamondoids – single cages that contain just 10 carbon atoms – and attached a sulfur atom to each. Floating in a solution, each sulfur atom bonded with a single copper ion. This created the basic nanowire building block.

The building blocks then drifted toward each other, drawn by the van der Waals attraction between the diamondoids, and attached to the growing tip of the nanowire.

“Much like LEGO blocks, they only fit together in certain ways that are determined by their size and shape,” said Stanford graduate student Fei Hua Li, who played a critical role in synthesizing the tiny wires and figuring out how they grew. “The copper and sulfur atoms of each building block wound up in the middle, forming the conductive core of the wire, and the bulkier diamondoids wound up on the outside, forming the insulating shell.”

A Versatile Toolkit for Creating Novel Materials

The team has already used diamondoids to make one-dimensional nanowires based on cadmium, zinc, iron and silver, including some that grew long enough to see without a microscope, and they have experimented with carrying out the reactions in different solvents and with other types of rigid, cage-like molecules, such as carboranes.

The cadmium-based wires are similar to materials used in optoelectronics, such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and the zinc-based ones are like those used in solar applications and in piezoelectric energy generators, which convert motion into electricity.
“You can imagine weaving those into fabrics to generate energy,” Melosh said. “This method gives us a versatile toolkit where we can tinker with a number of ingredients and experimental conditions to create new materials with finely tuned electronic properties and interesting physics.”

Theorists led by SIMES Director Thomas Devereaux modeled and predicted the electronic properties of the nanowires, which were examined with X-rays at SLAC’s Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, to determine their structure and other characteristics.

The team also included researchers from the Stanford Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and Justus-Liebig University in Germany. Parts of the research were carried out at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS) and National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), both DOE Office of Science User Facilities. The work was funded by the DOE Office of Science and the German Research Foundation.

Citation: Yan et al., Nature Materials, 26 December 2016 (10.1038/nmat4823)

The superluminous transient ASASSN-15lh as a tidal disruption event from a Kerr black hole

In 2015, the All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) detected an event, named ASASSN-15lh, that was recorded as the brightest supernova ever—and categorised as a superluminous supernova, the explosion of an extremely massive star at the end of its life. It was twice as bright as the previous record holder, and at its peak was 20 times brighter than the total light output of the entire Milky Way.

An international team, led by Giorgos Leloudas at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, and the Dark Cosmology Centre, Denmark, has now made additional observations of the distant galaxy, about 4 billion light-years from Earth, where the explosion took place and they have proposed a new explanation for this extraordinary event.

I had the slightest chance of winning the Nobel Prize than standing on the moon: Bob Dylan

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVhqlYlG7zs

Nobel Banquet speech by Nobel Laureate Bob Dylan
(abstract)

I’m sorry I can’t be with you in person, but please know that I am most definitely with you in spirit and honored to be receiving such a prestigious prize. Being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature is something I never could have imagined or seen coming. From an early age, I’ve been familiar with and reading and absorbing the works of those who were deemed worthy of such a distinction: Kipling, Shaw, Thomas Mann, Pearl Buck, Albert Camus, Hemingway. These giants of literature whose works are taught in the schoolroom, housed in libraries around the world and spoken of in reverent tones have always made a deep impression. That I now join the names on such a list is truly beyond words.

I don’t know if these men and women ever thought of the Nobel honor for themselves, but I suppose that anyone writing a book, or a poem, or a play anywhere in the world might harbor that secret dream deep down inside. It’s probably buried so deep that they don’t even know it’s there.

If someone had ever told me that I had the slightest chance of winning the Nobel Prize, I would have to think that I’d have about the same odds as standing on the moon. In fact, during the year I was born and for a few years after, there wasn’t anyone in the world who was considered good enough to win this Nobel Prize. So, I recognize that I am in very rare company, to say the least.

Not once have I ever had the time to ask myself, “Are my songs literature?”

So, I do thank the Swedish Academy, both for taking the time to consider that very question, and, ultimately, for providing such a wonderful answer.

My best wishes to you all,

Bob Dylan

Online social integration is associated with reduced mortality risk

People who have stronger social networks live longer. However, can we say the same about online social networks? The University of California, Berkeley compared 12 million Facebook users to nonusers.

More importantly, they also look within Facebook users to explore how online social interactions—reflecting both online and offline social activity—are associated with longevity.

Facebook users who accept more friendships have a lower risk of mortality, but there is no relationship for those who initiate more friendships. Mortality risk is lowest for those with high levels of offline social interaction and moderate levels of online social interaction.

Stanford unveils innovative solar generating station

Era un día frío y ventoso en Rosamond, California., Pero los espíritus eran altos en una pequeña tienda de campaña, el viento sacudió donde alrededor de 30 personas se reunieron para la inauguración de la Estación de Generación Solar de Stanford.

La última gran pieza de Innovaciones Sistemas de Energía de Stanford (SESI) – lo que reducirá las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero de Stanford en un 68 por ciento y el uso de combustibles fósiles en un 65 por ciento – la matriz de casi 155.000 panel producirá el equivalente a más de la mitad de la energía eléctrica utilizada por el campus de Stanford.

See more at: Stanford News

Visions of Harmony