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GREG GUTFELD: Stanford and UC Davis protests show the left has a recipe for failure

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Let’s talk about Stanford. Some call it a college, although now it looks like nothing more than a kindergarten for brain-dead gassed patients. It started last week when Fifth Circuit Judge Kyle Duncan was invited – remember that word, invited – by the Federalist Society of Stanford Law School to give a speech? But when he started, it happened.

JUDGE KYLE DUNCAN: So you invited me to speak here, and I get interrupted all the time, and I’m just asking the administrator…

CROWD: She is an administrator.

STANDFORD DEI DEAN SLAMS INVITED FEDERAL JUDGE AT CAMPUS EVENT AND ASKS IF FREEDOM OF SPEECH IS WORTH “WORTH IT”

You know, keep in mind, these are not kindergartners with poop in their pants. They’re Stanford law students with ragged pants, but their dean is even worse. A giant bag of poop, if you will.

TIRIEN STEINBACH: I’m uncomfortable because this event is tearing at the fabric of this community that I care about and I’m here to support… I have to ask myself, and I’m not a cynic, to ask: is it worth squeezing?… And it’s embarrassing to say this to you as a human being, it is embarrassing to say that for many here your work has done harm.

Oh shut up, sorry. Thank you. I will take it. So she’s a victim, or at least plays her because it’s her job, after all. She’s Thirienne Steinbach, Associate Dean of Stanford, you guessed it, diversity, equality and inclusion. Although really it should be diversity, inclusion and equality, because that would mean DIE, and that’s what she wants all successful people to do – die. Because it’s all about equality. The idea that no matter how hard you work and no matter how talented you are, you will not and should not be ahead of anyone. The left is always changing words because we used to call it communism.

Thirien Steinbach, Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at Stanford University Law School, criticizes U.S. District Court Judge Kyle Duncan during his presentation at the school as an invited guest on March 9, 2023. (Screenshot/ Vimeo – Center for Ethics and Public Policy)

To Stanford’s credit, the president and dean of the law school then apologized to the judge for what the judge called “grossly uncivil bully behavior.” So guess what happened next? The same students who molested the judge are now molesting administrators, now they are protesting the apology. Lucky for me, I never apologize. I know though. When Stanford University Dean Jenny Martinez left the classroom after the lecture, she found hundreds of students lined up along the hallway, dressed all in black and wearing masks that read, “Counter-Saying is Free Speech.”

ELON MUSK AND OTHERS RESPOND AFTER EGG-THROWING WINDOW-BREAKING PROTESTURS AT CHARLIE KIRK COLLEGE CAMPUS EVENT

So what is counter-speech? These are screams that drown out freedom of speech. So their concept of free speech is that neither side can ever speak. I thought you had to get married for this. But like I always say, if someone calls you a bully, just bully them until they shut up. she still has that job, so she’s safe. It’s the fun of the awakened industrial complex that teaches you nothing more than how to complain about people who are trying to succeed and no one wants that person in the workplace. So you need to find a Steinbach-like job to survive, because even though students fail in real life, the dean of outrage still makes quite a bit of money. Elsewhere in California, meanwhile, Antifa rioted at UC Davis because conservative Charlie Kirk was speaking.

That’s a lot of wow. Of course, the teaching staff stood with anti-speech freaks. This is the president of the University of California, Davis.

GARY MAY: UC Davis, along with our transgender and non-binary Aggies, are standing up to these hateful and divisive messages.

Protesters held signs and tried to disrupt an event with Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk at UC Davis on March 14, 2023.

Protesters held signs and tried to disrupt an event with Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk at UC Davis on March 14, 2023. (CTXL)

How’s that for a sharing message? You are a shower. But he’s also scared, he’s afraid of losing his job, so he has to raise the mafia. But we’re seeing ridiculous contradictions again, right? The left thinks that the speech that makes them uncomfortable is violence, but the literal violence they unleash in response is freedom of speech. So why do these students go to college anyway? Why go there in the first place? You think they want to succeed in life, but they don’t. No one succeeds as a victim, and this failure only angers them, which fuels their sacrifice. It’s a self-perpetuating loop of defeat.

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA CANCELLED US TURNING POINT EVENT AFTER PROTESTERS BREAKING

It’s like they want to be like Brian Kilmead, and he’s not even here. Rest in peace. I’m kidding, he’s alive. God, don’t die during the show, Brian. But we see this recipe for failure throughout society.

This DIE BS gives the appearance of progress while not really paying attention to customer needs. They’ll say, “Hey, look at our assessment of weakness. It doesn’t matter if it’s a bank and we’re going broke.” And it becomes an incentive for weak minds. I mean, you can do a good job, a really good job, and maybe no one will notice, or you can show off your pep and get recognition without working at all. dude, and the only choice of diversity left, because this pool is already depleted, she is going to hire the leftovers to meet her diversity quota, so companies go into decline, while those who prefer fairness over competence manage to keep their jobs . Just like that dean of equity.

But now it is everywhere, even in finance. The Silicon Valley Bank probably didn’t collapse because of Wakeism, but how does Wakeism make someone want to put their money in your bank? How does all this make someone more reliable? Once, when you opened a bank account, they gave you a toaster for free. Now this is a lecture on pronouns.

A customer stands outside the closed headquarters of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) on March 10, 2023 in Santa Clara, California.  The Silicon Valley Bank was closed Friday morning by California regulators and placed under the control of the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

A customer stands outside the closed headquarters of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) on March 10, 2023 in Santa Clara, California. The Silicon Valley Bank was closed Friday morning by California regulators and placed under the control of the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

SUBSCRIPTION BANK: The most common pronouns people are familiar with are she and he. Perhaps you have clients who use them/them as pronouns, they are intentionally gender-neutral pronouns. We’ve been talking about non-binary people who deliberately don’t identify as either male or female, so some of these people use them/them as pronouns. Ze is another gender-neutral pronoun, and its other part is hir, spelled as HIR.

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It was Signature Bank, which is in big trouble right now. So the bad news is that you could lose your home. The good news is that when the movers arrive, you can call them with the appropriate pronoun.

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Georgia activist killed by soldiers was shot first, officers say

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ATLANTA– Georgia authorities allege that in January, state troopers shot and killed an environmental protester who opened fire on authorities after the trooper fired pepperballs at a protester’s tent, according to incident reports obtained Friday by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The newspaper received several reports of Georgia Department of Public Safety use of force incidents upon request for open records. The records offer the authorities’ most complete account of the January 18 assassination of Manuel Paez Terán, who went by the name Tortugita and used the pronoun they.

Paez Teran was killed in the South River Forest in DeKalb County as officers tried to clear activists camped near the site of a planned police and training facility that protesters derisively call “Police City.”

Protesters questioned officials’ claim that officers shot Paez Terán in self-defense after a 26-year-old man shot a soldier. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is continuing its investigation into the shooting and has released few details about the incident, except that preliminary evidence supports the authorities’ claims and that the soldier was hit by a bullet from a handgun Paez Teran legally purchased in 2020.

According to recent reports of the incident, Paez Teran spoke briefly to the officers who approached the protesters’ tent and refused their demands to leave the area, prompting the authorities to fire pepperballs. Authorities say Paes Teran then fired several shots from the tent and six police officers returned fire, shooting the activist more than a dozen times.

“I knew the suspect in the tent was shooting at us because I heard the shots from inside the tent,” the report, written by a Georgia Department of Public Safety Corporal, says, “I could see the front of the tent.” the door slammed as the bullets pierced it, and I could hear the bullets hitting the vegetation around me.”

The corporal authorities claimed to have met Paez Teran inside the tent, and at one point the activist told the officers, “No, I want you to leave.”

The corporal said that Paes Teran “very confidently” asked the authorities to leave, and “it was immediately obvious” that the protester “has no intention of cooperating.”

The corporal also wrote that before the shooting, he told Paez Teran that the officers were going to shoot poisonous substances at the tent and that Paez Teran would be charged with trespassing.

Paez Terán’s death and their commitment to opposing the training center propelled the “Stop Cop City” movement onto the national and international stage, with left-wing activists from across the country picketing and encouraging some to travel and join the protest movement that began in 2021. They say officers at the 85-acre (34-hectare) center will be trained on how to become more militarized and crack down on dissent while hundreds of trees are cut down, damaging the climate and mitigating the effects of flooding in the impoverished, predominantly black neighborhood.

Several protests escalated into violence, including earlier this month when more than 150 masked activists left a nearby music festival and stormed the proposed training center site, setting fire to construction equipment and throwing rocks at retreating law enforcement officers.

The Atlanta City Council has approved construction of the proposed $90 million Atlanta Public Safety Training Center in 2021, saying a modern campus will replace substandard offerings and boost police morale, which is suffering from hiring and retention struggles following violent acts. protests against the racial injustice that has swept the city since the killing of George Floyd by police in 2020.

For more than two months, Paez Terán’s family and their lawyers have been calling on officials to provide information about the shooting. According to the family’s autopsy, Paez Teran was sitting cross-legged with his hands up at the time they were shot. The autopsy report also noted that it was “impossible to determine” whether the activist was holding a firearm at the time of the shot.

The family ordered an autopsy after the DeKalb County Medical Examiner’s Office conducted an initial examination. Officials did not release the DeKalb County report, so it is not clear if they came to a similar conclusion that Paez Teran raised his hands, palms inward, during the shooting.

Lawyers for the family did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Can AI programs like ChatGPT be trusted to break the news?

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As local newspapers grapple with shrinking budgets and overburdened journalists, some newsrooms are experimenting with an idea that skeptics say threatens the very role of reporters: integrating artificial intelligence into the newsroom.

Editors remain cautious about the use of AI in reporting, one of the main reasons for which is that it cannot distinguish fact from fiction. But used responsibly, they say, it can provide a cost-effective set of tools to lighten the burden on local journalists and expand their reach, such as through AI-generated city council meeting summaries.

Why did we write this

As local news organizations shrink or disappear, journalists are turning to artificial intelligence to fill the gap. Can you trust an AI that can’t tell truth from fiction?

Renee Richardson, Editor-in-Chief of Brainerd Dispatch in Brainerd, Minnesota, is an AI integration pioneer in her local newsroom. Their artificial intelligence experiment will begin in June to automate public safety announcements from police bulletins. Ms. Richardson hopes to maximize the efficiency of her staff’s workflow and give the dispatch reporters back something priceless: time.

“We are constantly asking our employees to do more and provide more information in a variety of ways. Whether it’s social media, video podcasts, audio segments, all of our photos, or all the parts that go into them. We rarely do anything that turns back time for them. The advantage I see in this is to finally give them back that time.”

As local newspapers grapple with shrinking budgets and overburdened journalists, some newsrooms are experimenting with an idea that skeptics say threatens the very role of reporters: integrating artificial intelligence into the newsroom.

Editors remain cautious about the use of AI in reporting, one of the main reasons for which is that it cannot distinguish fact from fiction. But used responsibly, they say, it can provide a cost-effective set of tools to lighten the burden on local journalists and expand their reach, such as through AI-generated city council meeting summaries.

Silicon Valley AI company OpenAI helped spark interest and debate around writing and reporting on AI by releasing its conversational chatbot ChatGPT in late 2022. The AI-based program can quickly respond to text commands, and then write essays, summarize books. and prepare financial reports. Its release attracted nationwide attention and additional funding from Microsoft.

Why did we write this

As local news organizations shrink or disappear, journalists are turning to artificial intelligence to fill the gap. Can you trust an AI that can’t tell truth from fiction?

In California’s Humboldt County, 300 miles north of Silicon Valley, Hank Sims and his local Lost Coast Outpost newsroom began experimenting with ChatGPT last year. The web-only newsroom used the program to develop its own version, dubbed LoCOBot. The program downloads and summarizes the agendas of local community meetings.

Mr. Sims says LoCOBot replaces the human need to review planned lengthy agendas for city council and other meetings, and frees up journalists to investigate larger events.

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South Florida duo accused of stealing over $225,000 from elderly dementia patient

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Miami-Dade County Attorney’s Office has charged two home health care assistants with multiple felonies after an investigation concluded they stole more than $225,000 from a 90-year-old woman with dementia.

Natsky Nelson, 48, of Miami, and José Mito Pierre-Toussaint, 55, of Pembroke Pines, stole the money and also amended the woman’s revocable trust deed to leave them more money, according to warrants released Friday from the office of Katherine Fernandez Rundle. .

Nelson has been arrested and is on $125,000 bail, but police say Pierre-Toussaint is at large.

They started working for their wife Lorraine Laderman in October 2017 through Avanti Home Health Services. They were sent to Laderman’s home to take care of her daily.

Laderman was 92 when she hired Nelson and Pierre-Toussaint, and they continued to work for her until she died in February 2021 at the age of 97, according to sworn testimony from Miami Police Detective Sonia Fernandez.

The sworn letter states that during their time at Laderman, Nelson and Pierre-Toussaint withdrew approximately $227,100 from several of her accounts and transferred the money to the company they founded.

On December 31, 2020, the Laderman trust was completed and amended to leave Nelson with $200,000, the affidavit says.

“This investigation found that the victim was mentally or physically unable to make a legal decision or understand and agree to the revocable trust deed dated December 31, 2020, and was also unable to consent. both [defendants] took advantage of the physical and mental deterioration of the victim with the intent to permanently deprive the victim of their funds,” Fernandez wrote in a March 21 sworn letter.

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