Dominic Grieve Says He’s Received Death Threats Over Brexit Rebellion As He Questions Daily Mail Reporting

Dominic Grieve Says He’s Received Death Threats Over Brexit Rebellion As He Questions Daily Mail Reporting
The senior MP who led the Tory rebellion over Brexit has admitted receiving death threats as a result of his position as he criticised the Daily Mail’s reporting of the vote.

Dominic Grieve, the ex-Attorney General who led 10 fellow Conservatives to vote against Theresa May to give parliament a “meaningful” vote on the Brexit deal, warned of a “febrile” atmosphere that meant detail of the debate was being overlooked, and that it meant any questions raised about quitting the EU was deemed “sabotage”.

The MP told the Guardian this results in “some people expressing themselves in terms that at times include death threats”, and that he had death threats via voicemail and email.

He added: “The form of reporting that the Daily Mail adopts is an incitement to obscuring what the issues actually are. That then adds to the atmosphere.”

The Mail was accused of putting MPs at risk of abuse after it slammed the Tory rebels as “self-consumed malcontents” on its front page, asking: “Proud of yourselves?”

The government was narrowly defeated in a key vote on its Brexit bill last night after a group of Conservatives sided with the opposition and voted in favour of giving MPs a meaningful vote of the exit deal agreed with Brussels.

According to the newspaper, the Tory rebels, which also included Anna Soubry, and Nicky Morgan, have betrayed “their leader, party and 17.4 million Brexit voters”.

Splashing the photos of the MPs across its front page, the Daily Mail lambasted the group for pulling the rug from underneath EU negotiators and increasing the possibility of a “Marxist in No.10″.

Critics condemned the story as “outrageous and irresponsible”, calling the treatment of the rebel MPs “bullying”.

A spokesperson for the Daily Mail said the accusations were “preposterous”.

“Is it now being suggested that because the Mail supports the British public’s decision to leave the EU it should be forbidden to report debates in Parliament?”

Many of the MPs featured in the splash have hit back at the story, with Soubry agreeing that she is indeed proud of her decision to rebel.

“We put our country first exerting British principles of democracy and free speech,” she rebuffed. “You should try it some time.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/dominic-grieve-death-threats_uk_5a32c4ebe4b0ff955ad123ad

Queer comic killed on ‘Tonight Show’ talking about ‘masc’ guys and hitting on Uber drivers

Queer comic killed on ‘Tonight Show’ talking about ‘masc’ guys and hitting on Uber drivers
The gay comedian just made his television debut on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, and it’s well worth a look.

www.queerty.com/queer-comic-killed-tonight-show-talking-masc-guys-hitting-uber-drivers-20171214?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

GOP Rep. Blake Farenthold to Retire from Congress After Vulgar Details of Office Behavior Emerge

GOP Rep. Blake Farenthold to Retire from Congress After Vulgar Details of Office Behavior Emerge
Blake Farenthold

Blake Farenthold

Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-TX) will retire from Congress after additional sexual harassment allegations emerged this week.

Farenthold is already being investigated by the House Ethics Committee over sexual harassment allegations by his former aide, Lauren Greene.

Politico reports:

Asked at a news conference Thursday whether Farenthold should resign immediately, Ryan demurred.

“I think he’s making the right decision to retire,” Ryan told reporters. “There are new stories that are very disconcerting. Unacceptable behavior has been alleged in those stories, and I think he’s made the right decision that he’s going to be leaving Congress.”

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters that the staffers’ accusations are “shocking” and “unacceptable,” and that he should resign rather than retire.

USA Today reports:

Farenthold, who was seeking a fifth term representing the Coastal Bend area of Texas, has been under intense fire since it was disclosed that he settled a sexual harassment lawsuit filed by a former aide with $84,000 in taxpayers’ money. He has said the settlement was a strategic decision to put the matter to rest even though he insists the charges are untrue.

CNN reported on the account of Farenthold’s behavior from a former aide, Michael Rekola:

One comment from the congressman was especially personal. Rekola was about to leave town to get married in July 2015, when, he said, Farenthold, standing within earshot of other staffers in his Capitol Hill office, said to the groom-to-be: “Better have your fiancée blow you before she walks down the aisle — it will be the last time.” He then proceeded to joke about whether Rekola’s now-wife could wear white on her wedding day — a clear reference, Rekola said, to whether she had had premarital sex.

“I was disgusted and I left. I walked out,” Rekola said. Almost immediately after returning from his wedding, he gave his two-weeks notice.

Those crude remarks in the summer of 2015 marked just one of many instances in which Farenthold made sexually charged comments to or in the presence of aides, Rekola said. During the nine months that he worked for the congressman, Rekola said, he was also subject to a stream of angry behavior not sexual in nature — screaming fits of rage, slamming fists on desks and castigating aides, including regularly calling them “f**ktards.”

Rekola also told CNN that when the investigation into Greene’s behavior amped up, Farenthold’s abusive behavior did too:

“Every time he didn’t like something, he would call me a f**ktard or idiot. He would slam his fist down in rage and explode in anger,” Rekola said. “He was flying off the handle on every little thing. I couldn’t find a way to control it.”

Farenthold also frequently made lewd comments about the appearance of women including reporters and lobbyists, Rekola said, remarking on the size of women’s breasts and buttocks. Some of Rekola’s colleagues joked about being on “redhead patrol” — a reference to Farenthold’s well-known affinity for women with red hair (this detail was also described in Greene’s lawsuit against Farenthold).

The post GOP Rep. Blake Farenthold to Retire from Congress After Vulgar Details of Office Behavior Emerge appeared first on Towleroad.


GOP Rep. Blake Farenthold to Retire from Congress After Vulgar Details of Office Behavior Emerge

NASA And Google’s AI Discover First Solar System Other Than Our Own With Eight Planets

NASA And Google’s AI Discover First Solar System Other Than Our Own With Eight Planets

NASA has revealed that by utilising Google’sartificial intelligence researchers have discovered the first known solar system with as many planets as our own.

Using a system called machine learning, Christopher Shallue a senior software engineer at Google AI was able to effectively teach a computer to look through the vast amounts of data collected by NASA’s Kepler space telescope and then identify a planet.

In this instance the computer was able to discover a brand-new planet called Kepler-90i. This increased the number of known planets in the Kepler 90 system to eight bringing it level only to our own solar system for having the most number of known planets.

The discovery confirms that sadly, our solar system is not as unique as we think and that stars are more than capable of supporting large numbers of planets.

Andrew Vanderburg, astronomer and NASA Sagan Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas, Austin believes that this could in fact just be the start for finding more planets in the Kepler 90 system.

“It’s very possible that Kepler-90 has even more planets that we just don’t know about.” he explained.

“In fact it would be surprising if there weren’t anymore planets.”

NASA believes that Kepler-90i is a smallish rocky planet that orbits its host star in just 14.4 days.

Unfortunately it’s not a planet you would want to visit either with temperatures reaching a scorching 800-degrees on the surface.

What’s really incredible about Kepler-90 as a system though is how all its planets are aligned with the star. 

“The Kepler-90 star system is like a mini version of our solar system. You have small planets inside and big planets outside, but everything is scrunched in much closer,” said Vanderburg, a NASA Sagan Postdoctoral Fellow and astronomer at the University of Texas at Austin.

How does Kepler discover new planets?

Despite being one of the most advanced pieces of equipment in space, Kepler’s ability to discover new planets stems from a remarkably simple trick.

When we look towards a star system we have the potential to glimpse something known as a transit. This is when any planet orbiting the star passes in front of it from our point of view.

By constantly monitoring a region of space every few hours, Kepler is able to detect the minuscule drop in light from a single star as a planet passes in front of it.

What’s perhaps even more remarkable is that just by looking at this data scientists can determine its size, distance from the star and even some basic information about its composition and atmosphere.

Kepler has been so successful at capturing these transits that many of the new discoveries we’ve made by trawling through the vast quantities of data that Kepler has captured in the past.

How did Google’s AI discover a new planet?

Well as mentioned above we know that we can find planets by looking at dips of light coming from stars.

Unfortunately for humans Kepler has looked at over 200,000 stars which means there is a frankly staggering amount of information to sort through.

As such humans can only process so much information which meant that more often than not our planetary discoveries were made only by looking at the most visible dips of light.

Shallue realised that much in the same way that he could teach a computer to learn the difference between cats and dogs he could teach it to notice the difference between something that wasn’t a planet and something that was.

“In my spare time, I started googling for ‘finding exoplanets with large data sets’ and found out about the Kepler mission and the huge data set available,” said Shallue. “Machine learning really shines in situations where there is so much data that humans can’t search it for themselves.”

Using machine learning he ‘fed’ the computer some 15,000 samples of what we knew to be planets. The computer used these 15,000 samples to effectively teach itself how to work out when a dip is a planet and when it isn’t.

Having tested that his software could identify a planet with around 96% accuracy he started feeding it actual data collected by Kepler that hadn’t yet been seen.

What it found was Kepler-90i.

What’s next?

It’s a testament to the sheer amount of data that Kepler was able to collect which means that even now after its mission has ended we are still making major discoveries like this one.

Now that Google’s engineers have shown how machine learning can have a positive impact on the search for new planets Shallue intends to start putting it to work on the entire Kepler dataset.

“These results demonstrate the enduring value of Kepler’s mission,” said Jessie Dotson, Kepler’s project scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley.

“New ways of looking at the data – such as this early-stage research to apply machine learning algorithms – promises to continue to yield significant advances in our understanding of planetary systems around other stars. I’m sure there are more firsts in the data waiting for people to find them.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/nasa-and-googles-ai-discover-first-solar-system-other-than-our-own-with-eight-planets_uk_5a32b98ce4b0bb42ac174611

Net Neutrality: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Makes Joke Video Mocking Opponents Ahead of Vote

Net Neutrality: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Makes Joke Video Mocking Opponents Ahead of Vote
Ajit Pai

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai is facing an online backlash after joking about the implications of repealing net neutrality. Pai appeared in a video wielding a fidget spinner and performing the Harlem Shake just one day before a decisive vote is cast over whether to repeal net neutrality—the principle that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) should…

The post Net Neutrality: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Makes Joke Video Mocking Opponents Ahead of Vote appeared first on Towleroad.


Net Neutrality: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Makes Joke Video Mocking Opponents Ahead of Vote

A Tax On Single-Use Plastics Won’t Prevail Over Convenience Culture – But It’s A Start

A Tax On Single-Use Plastics Won’t Prevail Over Convenience Culture – But It’s A Start

The finale of the BBC’s brilliant Blue Planet II was probably David Attenborough’s most important appearance on our screens to date.

“Surely we have a responsibility to care for our blue planet. The future of humanity, and indeed all life on Earth, now depends on us.”

If anyone can influence the masses, it’s Attenborough – a man with the ear of the nation, and the strong and stable reputation of which most politicians can only dream. His parting message left viewers in no doubt that the essential job of saving and protecting our oceans rests on all our shoulders.

The series was the latest milestone in what has been a breakthrough year for ocean campaigners – particularly around the plastic pollution crisis.

Following on from Philip Hammond’s announcement of the consultation on a plastic tax in last month’s budget and a number of other big media moments throughout 2017, it seems the issue is finally getting the attention it deserves.

***

But while public awareness is growing quickly, and we can all now agree that plastics present a vast and critical threat to marine life, we still feel a long way from consensus on how best to tackle the problem.

It is a big and complicated challenge that comes in two parts: we’ve got to rid our oceans of the plastic that’s already there, and put a stop to more finding its way in.

The clean-up of existing waste needed is no mean feat. Eight million tonnes of plastics leak into the ocean every year. That’s one rubbish truck every minute. If we keep going as we are there will be more plastic than fish in our oceans by 2050. It’s going to take more than a few beach clean-ups to get rid of it all, and large-scale technological solutions are still in their relative infancy.

Stemming the flow of plastics into our oceans is possibly an even greater challenge. Single-use plastics are embedded in our everyday lives. As it stands, it’s perfectly normal to use a plastic cup for 10 minutes and then throw it away. Fundamentally, we need to create a new normal. To tackle the problem effectively would be to drive behaviour change on an almost unprecedented scale.

It’s this behaviour change that will prove most critical. Yes – we have a clean-up job to do. But the one thing all marine scientists agree on is that the best way to get rid of the plastic in our oceans is to stop putting it there in the first place.

***

So how do we get there? Crucially, we can only truly understand how to change behaviours when we learn what it is that drives them.

The battle against single-use plastics isn’t really a battle against single-use plastics at all. It’s much bigger than that. The battle is against a culture of convenience that is shaping the world we live in today.

Plastics – and single-use items in particular – are probably the biggest and best example of a convenience culture that has grown exponentially over the last 50 years. And with technology now taking on the mantle, it is here to stay. Just ask Alexa.

When you start looking at the plastic problem in this context, you begin to appreciate why consensus on a solution is so hard to find. All of a sudden, a plastic tax feels a bit like taking a knife to a gunfight.

***

In reality, it’s likely that nothing short of an outright ban will enforce the change that is needed. With France already leading the way with a ban on plastic cups, cutlery and plates from 2020, equivalent legislation in the UK and other countries doesn’t feel out of the question.

Nonetheless, a tax on single-use plastics would mark great progress. It is real action. And an important step beyond governments and corporations massaging their egos with panel debates, white papers and green rhetoric. At the very least, it will keep the issue in the headlines and maintain pressure to find the right solution.

In the meantime it should inspire the rest of us to start taking real action of our own, too. Let’s find reusable alternatives for single-use plastics in our everyday lives. Support campaigns. Join conservation groups.

Because as Britain’s favourite naturalist reminded us, we all need to be part of the solution: “Never before have we had such an awareness of what we’re doing to the planet and never before have we had the power to do something about that.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/single-use-plastics-tax_uk_5a2ffdf7e4b0bad78712704b