Monday, November 12, 2018

Guest Post: New Literacy: Eulogy for Gutenberg

By Charlotte Ann Hu
A former Marine print-photojournalist, State Department Public Diplomacy Officer & U.S. Air Force Supervisory Public Affairs Specialist

New Literacy: Eulogy for Gutenberg
I haven’t yet seen any news reports or research or thought leadership books by techies about the impact of smart speakers on the fundamental structure of our social fabric. I think Alexa is a technical revolution as radical as Gutenberg’s press.
In 1436, Johaness Gutenberg, a German goldsmith, created the printing press. Before then, all texts had to be laboriously copied by hand. Corresponding this critical new technology, born in Eisleben, Germany, in 1483, Martin Luther disrupted religion by translating the Bible and removing control from the hands of the clergy. Since that time, the ability to read text on paper has largely determined economic potential and earning capability in the job market.
Right now, in 2018, there remain some 20% of the world’s population who are illiterate. Others born or who later became blind or severely sight impaired have also been limited in their economic potential due to their inability to access information.
Alexa and other technologies like her, Siri and Google Home, but more importantly, the computing power that has made text to speech and speech to text capability possible will make reading letters on paper altogether irrelevant with regard to accessing information.
I read a book by Microsoft MVP Ben Clothier who explained how to integrate Access and Sharepoint nearly 10 years ago. He seemed at that time to be the only person in the world who knew how to do what we wanted to do with our information. I reached out to him on the web and he said he worked for a consulting firm. I reached out to them and contracted him to help our project. I also contracted two American sign language translators because this brilliant expert was severely hearing impaired and had very limited sight. I offered to pick him up from his home on my way to work, because I learned from a tour at the Lighthouse for the Blind that getting to work every day is one of the biggest challenges in a car culture like ours for sight-impaired professions.
Centuries or even decades ago, Ben would never have been access all the knowledge that put him at the top of his specialty. While limited options were available, like braille, few of the worlds books were available in braille. Because of the digital revolution, information is now available to almost anyone and the final wall is coming down with voice user interface.
At the end of this holiday season, some 50% of American homes will have a smart speaker. Amazon’s website likens it to Star Trek ship communication technology. Ease of use has never been more fluid. No manual required. Even my two-year old can activate Alexa, although she has yet to correctly format a request to get a response. Alexa’s ring turns blue, delighting my toddler when she says, “Alexa.” Amazon just announced Alexa is available in Mexico.
Once this technology is available worldwide and once the world is online, Gutenberg will finally be truly just a note in the history books. The world he created of text will no longer determine one individual’s economic potential by serving as the only path to knowledge and information and ultimately professional expertise.
I have long loved books, and I will miss Gutenberg dearly. Still I can see that Alexa joins the Internet as the most powerful flattening forces of my lifetime.

Monday, October 29, 2018

My Political Meme Under Fire



            Perhaps you, like me, have been appalled at the anti-American behavior advocated and taken up by liberals and political members of the Democratic Party as the mid-term election approaches.  Apparently, having lost an “managed” election for President, and a steaming, riotous, lying effort to keep a President’s nominated judge from taking his place on the Supreme Court, the Democratic Party has further blackened its reputation by riot, upset and thoroughly uncivil behavior toward those of opposing political opinions.
            To make it worse, the leadership of the Democratic Party has publicly urged that Americans be mistreated, that Democratic supporters “get in their face,” be thrown out of restaurants, and declared “civil behavior” on their part will only be restored when they win.
            This is a story of one man’s efforts to stand up to that, to refuse to knuckle under to bullies and demagogues.  It’s a story with a good ending, even though not thoroughly understood by its author.
            You see, I spent 30 years in the U.S. Marine Corps, then upon retirement 17 years with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a federal civilian.  That got me to four battlefields.  I then was called into the ministry as a Pastor.  Besides my own service to the nation in uniform, there is that of my father, grandfathers, uncles, aunts, lifelong friends that constitute a solid investment in the freedoms and liberties of this grand experiment we call the United States of America.  Some of those investments still lie in foreign soil around the world, gone but not forgotten.
            Although every American has the right to be appalled and angry at this decidedly un-American activity taking place in our society, and being egged on by the Democratic leadership, I feel a special commitment to my nation to stand tall and declare “not on my watch!”  Perhaps some of you feel the same.  If so, surely you are aware you have every God-given right to express yourself in a legal and civil response to this travesty being advocated by liberals and the Democratic Party.  This is not the America we fought for.  Our citizens, our duly elected politicians, and our police men and women should not be put in harms way by this over-the-top behavior.  That is NOT the American way.
            Liberals and Democrats, masked and as individuals, have made a mockery of America, to us and to our enemies around the world.  They have talked about blowing up the White House, been photographed carrying a mock severed head of President Trump.  A Broadway Play depicted the assassination of President Trump that asked publicly, “How long has been since an actor assassinated a President?”  Music videos have been released about assassinating President Trump. Conservatives and Republicans have been attacked as individuals and shot to death at a music concert, and seriously wounded at a baseball game.  A Hollywood actor goes on television and announces “somebody needs to take out Trump”. They ask "Where's John Wilkes Booth when you need him?"  A Republican Party Office was set on fire.  The Trump family members received suspicious packages depicting poison in the mail, along with death threats to Secretary of Defense James Mattis.  No less than Democratic Senator Maxine Waters said “you get up in their face at the mall, in restaurants, at gas stations and you tell them Republicans they’re not welcomed anywhere”.   Republican spokesperson Sarah Sanders and her family were harassed at a restaurant, instructed to leave and chased down the street.  Republican Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was harassed and chased out of a Mexican restaurant.  Trump adviser Stephen Miller’s life was threatened and he was chased out of a restaurant. Attorney General Pam Bondi was harassed and chased out of a theatre.  Republican Senator Rand Paul was attacked and beaten up in his own yard.  Two Republican senators, Rob Portman of Ohio and John Boozman of Arkansas, were harassed in their own yards and on their own doorsteps.  A 71-year-old female staffer for California Representative Dana Rohrbacher was knocked unconscious by an angry group of liberal protesters.
            Is this the America we fought for, the America my friends and family members died for?
            My response, and the reason for this missive, was a fairly quiet and determined one.   Besides “liking” in support every post I saw on Facebook that took issue with this behavior, I wrote a short meme that I began to share everywhere.  As one with nearly the cap of 5,000 “friends”, I have access to many, many pages, as do they.  And so I shared, liberally.
            The meme said simply: “Violence, verbal and physical, has long been the hallmark of the Democratic Party. Reject such un-American behavior.  I began to post it far and wide.  But then a funny thing happened.  As I pasted it as a response to the like posts of others, I would get a red exclamation point and the message “This could not be posted.  Try again.”  Trying again was a joke.  It could not be posted.  Okay, I went on, posting in other pages.  Same red exclamation point.  Unable to post.  Try again.  It went on and on like that.
            Now, many probably know the Marine Corps’ official motto is “Semper Fidelis”; Always Faithful.  And we are, to our God, to our nation, its Constitution, our Corps and to ourselves.  But there is another motto among Marines, a grittier motto, a “git’er done” saying that carries us forward despite ambush and treachery: “Improvise, Adapt, and Overcome.”
            And so I continued on.  In an ambush Marines don’t stop, lay down a base of fire and stay there until the enemy is gone.  We fire and maneuver through that ambush.  I continued page by page, red exclamation point after red exclamation point.  Until suddenly, it stuck.  It published.  What happened?
            Now, I know that Facebook hires a vast array of minions who operate by constructed algorithms to “police” the conversations and posts.  (And I’ve already told you more than I know about that.)  I’ve had some of them send me a message now and then that I was “taking advantage of the system.”  Of course I was, that’s what it is there for, whether they agree with my opinion or not.  I would not want you to think I am attacking Facebook, because in a democracy, the voluntary airing of free speech is vital to our continuance, just as a free press is vital, although I think the current incestuous news media is endangering that.  But that’s a discussion for another day.
            Actually, I much rather believe that somewhere “out there” in the vastness of Facebook there remain those minions still true to the principles of the original creator of Facebook, dedicated to providing a free platform for opposing ideas and conversation, a growing electronic discussion that allows people to blow off steam and yet remain a cohesive family of Americans.  And that, perhaps, is why the red exclamation points stopped.  There may well be a much more complicated, and perhaps truer explanation, but if so I’m not aware of it.  All I know is that I was given back my “right” to free speech.
            So to end I simply want to encourage each of you to exercise your American rights to speak up, to improvise, adapt, and overcome efforts to make you sit down and shut up.
            I’m not advocating embarrassing people in restaurants, or disrupting peaceful meetings, or any of the treachery-laden activities the Democratic leadership has been advocating.  I don’t believe fighting fire with fire gets you anywhere but burnt.  The current ashen status of the Democratic Party is a fair example.
            My Lord Jesus Christ tells us to love our enemies, those who oppose us, for thereby we heap coals on their heads.  And I do believe the Democratic Party is on fire.  I pray for them.  Without prayer, without my Lord I’d have a hard time loving such hate-filled people.
            March on.  Make yourself heard.  America is worth it.

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

I Disagree with Bob Woodward

Several of my friends have contacted me in support of Bob Woodward's book about President Trump's administration; Fear, Trump in the White House.  One friend went so far as to say, "I'm to chapter 24.  Proof to a certainty, so far: Trump is dangerous, incompetent, a poorly organized mind & a personal danger to economic health.  The 25th Amendment was created with this type of nutcase in mind.  Not a matter of opinion; a matter of fact.  He very seriously needs to be gone."

The online dictionary states the meaning of the noun "treason" is "the crime of betraying one's country, especially by attempting to kill the sovereign or overthrow the government."  Proof of dementia, idiocy, some mental disability, or the commission of a charegeable crime would, I believe, remove the charge of treason.  But I don't see it.

Nope, Woodward established his legacy and his agenda long before the book came out.  He promoted his anti-Trump agenda and then wrote his book to back it up.  I don't believe Donald Trump is a perfect human being, as none of us are, but his results prove he is what this nation needs right now.  Many, many backroom deals and swamp-based personal agendas are being upended and destroyed in Washington, D.C., and around the world because of Trump's business sense.  A businessman in the White House was needed just as much as we needed Harry Truman in the White House when we did.
No, I have no faith in what Mr. Woodward writes and contends.  His actions and words prior to the book's publication belie what he says in the book, and Trump's administrative staff have made that clear.  Too many of them have spoken up to say "That never happened" or "I never said that."  Woodward is selling books, not making history.
Just one man's opinion.

Friday, June 15, 2018

The Christian's Responsibility Before God

The "un-churched" look to Christians for a delineation of what is right and what is wrong. They know right from wrong as well as we who belong to Jesus Christ, and when they see Christians dodge the responsibility to call evil for the evil that it is, we who call ourselves Christians have effectively sabotaged their spiritual experience. Ezekiel 33:8 should be a red flag to us: "When I say to the wicked, O wicked man, you shall surely die; if you do not speak to warn the wicked from his way, that wicked man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at your hand." Who and what purpose have we served by our silence in the face of this responsibility before God?
More specifically, the silence of the Christian Church in the face of continuing rampant evil, lack of integrity, and public shame even among the Christian Church is appalling. Jesus is the Prince of Peace, but He also took a whip and drove the unfaithful out of His Father's house. We are closer today to the end times than we were yesterday, and we are already seeing lampstands removed from churches (Rev. 2:5). When we do not solve the problem with the responsibility to share light that God has put in our hands, God will solve the problem. Almighty God is going to do what God is going to do.

Sunday, January 28, 2018

As Problem Solvers Have We Lost Our Way?

My friend Al Dooley has posted:
"I listened to a half hour radio discussion about why it takes so long for anything to be done about incidents such as abuse by the Michigan State athletic doctor. They hemmed and hawed about the propriety of internal investigation, wondering why it dominates. I can answer with one word: MONEY. When stadiums cost a $half billion, when coaches make 7 and 8 figures, power and winning are ALL that count. Right, wrong, abuse and cheating are all distant second or far lower."

I believe Al has put his finger directly on it.
As a nation, as a people, we seem to have lost track of what is important; things like dignity, integrity, honor. The life-impacting things like education, vocational training, human values. Instead we are mesmerized by entertainment, whatever the cost. 
Problems require solutions, and we have lost our way.

Your thoughts?
On Dying      

            By observation, dying is something best not done alone, and yet, it is lonely walk.  When that moment arrives for me I can only hope to have a flesh and blood hand to hold onto as I slip away.
            In the Ridley Scott movie “Blade Runner,” actor Rutger Hauer, playing the robot replicant Roy Batty, has his opponent dead to rights atop a building in the year 2019, in the falling rain, and as his own measured life span runs out, he sits down in front of this cornered opponent.  Hauer’s last lines as the dying robot are spoken here, in the rain: “I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.”  And he dies.
            The most meaningful part of all of this, for me, is that Ridley Scott’s original script had other words for Hauer to say.  Hauer rewrote his script.  When that scene was filmed, as it ended, it is recorded that the crew applauded.  Some cried.
            Those words, “All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain,” those sentiments touch every human being, melting right into the core of who we are.  We have all seen things we wish we could preserve and share.  We have seen things, heard things, thought things gone in the wisp of a moment that no one else will ever see, hear, think, but still carry the scent of eternity with them, and yet they die with us, lost in time, like tears in rain.  More’s the pity.