So true!
RAGCs are facilitated sessions involving participants grouped according to self-identified racial or ethnic identity to support integration of antiracism curricula into clinical practice.
So true!
RAGCs are facilitated sessions involving participants grouped according to self-identified racial or ethnic identity to support integration of antiracism curricula into clinical practice.
Seems like everyone's got an opinion about the impact of A.I. Here are some recent ones that I thought were worth sharing:
There's no science behind this. It's all someone's whim.
"There is literally no data on how well a single dose of a bivalent mRNA vaccine will protect anyone. But we have known for over 2 years that a single dose of the original vaccines was not good enough."
I think it's because they know the vax is essentially ineffective, even with potential harm outweighing any benefit, but they can't just say not to get it anymore, because just recently they were still urging people to get it. So this is probably a compromise - get the token jab, and we'll pretend all's good.
Geoffrey Hinton is quitting Google in order to speak freely about the risks of AI. His first concern is not about what the AI might do of its own volition. Hinton’s second concern is that AI will soon eliminate rote jobs. His final concern is that he
is literally worried that an advance Artificial General Intelligence
could eventually “possibly eliminate humanity itself. Hinton mentored A.I. legends like Yann LeCun and Alex Graves, so he knows what he is talking about. Humanity can be destroyed in different ways. I don't think that A.G.I. will necessarily kill us by dropping bombs us. It may not even disable our financial system. It could trigger the end of humanity as we know it by causing humans to think in destructive ways, by exploiting new powers that people didn't have before. Powers to deceive us, to distract us, to demoralize us and to cause harm and grief to each other.
Man, this must suck.
Once in a while, Jay Inslee is right. Washington state passed a law similar to GDPR, which prohibits companies from collecting health data, and share or sell it. Some feel that it won't stop determined companies, but it's a start. Why can't they pass sensible laws all the time?
That's different. I never thought I would see someone describe living in a house in SE Portland preferable to living in the Pearl District. Yup, while it's been hard to sell your home in SE Portland, especially near a homeless shelter, there's always someone who thinks it's a step up. And that person is someone who is fed up with life in downtown's Pearl District, which is now criddler central.
A casualty of government policies. So many Oregon restaurants closing. First it was the George Floyd riots, then coronavirus, then homelessness and more crime. All avoidable problems.