Archive for February, 2021

Lil Boosie kicks off a weekend of Super Bowl concerts at Tampa’s Prime Lounge in Temple Crest – Creative Loafing Tampa

lilboosie/Facebook

Last year, Boosieaka Lil Boosie aka Boosie Badazzhad to dispute a false report that said he beat up resident turd, and acquitted child killer George Zimmerman in a Florida Walmart parking lot. "Hey, service announcement from Boosie. I never seen George [Zimmerman] in my life, but on TV," said Boosie in an Instagram post.

On Friday, hes at Prime Designer Loungelocated at 4819 E Busch Blvd. in Temple Crestto play what is going to be a very lit concert at Prime Designer Lounge where both BRS Kash (Throat Baby) and Erica Banks (Buss It) are supposed to play

Sunday. Friday, Feb. 5 10 p.m. $40 & up. Prime Designer Lounge, Tampa. eventbrite.com

See a list of Tampa Bays Safe & Sound live music venues here.

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Lil Boosie kicks off a weekend of Super Bowl concerts at Tampa's Prime Lounge in Temple Crest - Creative Loafing Tampa

4 Times Rihanna Showed Solidarity for Social Movements Around the World – Global Citizen

Why Global Citizens Should Care

When Rihanna isnt selling out her beauty and clothing brands, or inspiring viral memes, shes using her platform to highlight the worlds most pressing social issues.

The superstar shared a CNN article about the escalation of a months-long protest staged by Indian farmers in New Delhi in a now widely shared tweet on Tuesday. Why arent we talking about this? she asked, adding the hashtag #FarmersProtest.

Rihannas post received backlash from pro-government supporters while other Indians applauded her for highlighting the situation.

Also shared by Greta Thunberg, the CNN article reported that the Indian government has blocked the internet in several districts surrounding the New Delhi area after protesters and police clashed over the weekend. Critics have called the shutdown undemocratic.

Indian farmers started demonstrating after three agricultural laws passed in September that they view as a threat to their livelihoods. The laws loosen restrictions on crop selling and farmers believe they could industrialize the agricultural sector and result in corporations taking advantage of them.

Rihannas post was just one of many ways the singer has given back over the years.

The Global Partnership for Education (GPE)Global Ambassadorhasn't been shy about using her platform tocallon world leaders to help bring education to underserved communities around the world. Since 2017, she's joined Global Citizen's campaigns andtweeted at theleaders of the UK, France, Australia, Norway, Canada, Argentina, Japan, Finland, the Netherlands,and Germany, urgingthem to step up their governments' support for GPE, which works to ensure every child in the world has access to a fair, high-quality education.

Working alongside Global Citizens, Rihanna's campaigning efforts not only gotworld leaders to respond and increase their funding, but alsohelped getGermany todouble itscontributionto GPE twice.

She'salso the education ambassador of her home country Barbados and donated $5 million to frontline workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In addition to shining a light on the farmer protests in India this week, here arefour other social movements Rihanna has recently shown support for and helped spread awareness on to her more than 100 million Twitter followers.

Related Stories Dec. 3, 2020 Why Indian Farmers Are Protesting for Their 'Very Survival' in New Delhi

The Myanmar military arrested President Win Myint, leader Aung San Suu Kyi, and activists, and then declared a one-year state of emergency in the city of Naypyidaw on Monday. Following the overwhelming victory of the National League for Democracy party in the November national elections, the military claimed unfounded election fraud and voting irregularities.

Rihanna tweeted a post in solidarity with the people of Myanmar on Tuesday. My prayers are with you #myanmar! she wrote.

The star retweeted a post from the organization Human Rights Watch calling for the international community to unite to demand that the Myanmar military accept the results of the recent election and relinquish power.

The #EndSARS hashtag first went viral in 2017 calling to dissolve Nigerias Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) for carrying out violence against citizens without any consequences. Following new evidence of a brutal violent attack on Oct. 8, 2020, the online protest moved to the streets, and cities outside the country marched in solidarity.

A week later, on Oct. 20, 2020, Rihanna tweeted a photo of a protester holding a bloody Nigerian flag. Its such a betrayal to the citizen, the very people put in place to protect are the ones we are most afraid of being murdered by! she wrote.

Rihanna also shared words of encouragement for protesters.

Im so proud of your strength and not letting up on the fight for whats right! #ENDSARS, she added.

The murder of George Floyd a Black man murdered by a white police officer on camera in May 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota sparked a global uprising against racial injustice. Floyds death increased support for the Black Lives Matter movement, initially launched in 2013 in response to the acquittal of George Zimmerman, the man who shot unarmed Black teen Trayvon Martin.

Rihanna shared a photo of Floyd on May 29, 2020: If intentional MURDER is the fit consequence for drugs or resisting arrest....then whats the fit consequence for MURDER???! #GeorgeFloyd #AhmaudArbery #BreonnaTaylor, she wrote.

Rihanna included hashtags for the names of Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor, two other Black Americans who were murdered in 2020.

A few months later, Rihanna reshared a petition by the racial justice organization Color of Change calling for the cops who shot Taylor to be held accountable.

Civil unrest erupted in Sudan in June 2019 following military crackdowns on pro-democracy protests. Protesters who rallied to stand up against President Omar al-Bashirs oppressive rule were met with violence from police.

Rihanna showed solidarity for Sudanese protesters on June 30, 2019, in a Twitter thread. They have a right to speak out and demand peace, justice, and a transition to civilian rule, she wrote in the first tweet. The star pointed out the violence that had occurred at previous protests and called for peace.

Praying for no more killings or abuse today, she wrote with a photo of protestors. Fight for human rights in #Africa and stand with protesters in #Sudan. #BlueforSudan #IAmSudaneseRevolution #Watch_Sudan_on_June30th.

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4 Times Rihanna Showed Solidarity for Social Movements Around the World - Global Citizen

Im for Abolition. And Yet I Want the Capitol Rioters in Prison. – The Nation

The breach at the US Capitol. (AP Photo)

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To talk about the attempted Capitol coup, I must make frequent use of the word rage. Not the entitled white rage of the insurrectionists, which I and many others have already talked about enough. Im referring to my own angerthe rising rage I felt over hours of watching, in real time, white supremacists not so much laying siege to the national seat of government as strolling unbothered into the building. Thousands of white terrorists were allowed to spend a whole afternoon just hanging out on the Capitol lawn, chilling on its stairways, waving fascist flags from its terraces, a spectacle of menacing whiteness just doing its carefree thing.

Black folks like LaQuan McDonald and Freddie Gray were murdered for looking at cops the wrong way, but here I was watching police hand-holding white terrorists down the Capitol stairs. Police fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice for having a toy gun and being Black, but the white folks on my screen with real guns were allowed to shut down the government, brawl with cops, and walk out unscathed. Apparently, the white supremacist state prefers white supremacist terror to Black anti-racist resistance, even when that terror leaves a trail of broken police bodies and dead cops in its wake. The Capitol insurrection may have, at least for now, failed as a coup. But it succeeded in reminding the rest of us that American whiteness is American freedom.

My anger over all this has tested my ideals. In particular, my commitment to prison abolition. And as of this writing, Im failing that test miserably.

Let me say here that I still believe we should be working toward a society without prisons. The state offers incarceration as the sole remedy to every criminal harm, falsely conflating retribution with justice. This cycle of eye-for-an-eye revenge has put 2.3 million people behind barsmore than any other country in both raw numbers and per capitawith millions more living under correctional surveillance through parole and probation. We know Black and brown people are disproportionately targeted by a racist carceral system rife with physical violence, sexual abuses, and psychological torture inflicted by solitary confinement. And yet, study after study proves locking people up doesnt reduce crimein fact, mass incarceration has destroyed countless families and communities, yielding the very conditions that produce crime. I believe there are humane alternatives to imprisonment that, instead of perpetuating violence and trauma, seek to heal the harms done and address the structural issues that lead people to commit crime in the first place. No one, whatever their crime, is irredeemable. And by the same turn, no one deserves the brutal and dehumanizing treatment thats endemic to our carceral system.Related Article

Yet I still want every lawless white-supremacist Capitol insurrectionist to be arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Intellectually and morally, I know nothing good will come out of a continued national reliance on the corrupt racist for-profit prison-industrial complex. But viscerally, my gut is seduced by the statist myth Ive been steeped in of jail as a route to justice. Not because I think revenge will yield a satisfying end, but because I want white-supremacist violence to be treated, perhaps for the first time in this countrys history, as a serious crime that demands accountability. And on this, Im not alone.

Writing at The Atlantic, prison abolitionists Neal Gong and Heath Pearson note that in response to law enforcements hands-off approach to the storming of the Capitol on January 6, some on the left have demanded harsher policing of right-wing extremism to match the often-brutal treatment of Black Lives Matter and leftist protest. That is, the very people who supported police reform or outright defunding over the summer seemed to want a crackdown.Current Issue

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In other words, like me, there are plenty of people who believe that increased criminalization isnt workingbut who want consequences for those criminals who never seem to be handed them. Part of me wants Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis cop who bore down on George Floyds neck until long after he had choked him to death, to spend the rest of his life in a prison cell. That same part hopes all three men who took part in the execution of Ahmaud Arberywho spat the words fucking nigger at Arbery as he lay dyingto never experience freedom again. I have wished that Donald Trump and his adviser Stephen Miller, the architect of the administrations cruelest immigration policies, were jailed in cages just like those they filled with migrant children. Ive hoped that Kyle Rittenhouse, the white 17-year-old who murdered two Black Lives Matter protesters in August and more recently flashed white-power signs in pics with Proud Boys, will grow into an adult behind bars. And I have fantasized about George Zimmerman, Trayvon Martins murderer who sued the teens bereaved parents for ruining his reputation, suffering a lifelong prison sentence. Thats just a partial list.

The only truly immutable law of this land is that Black life has no value to white America, an estimation that denies Black folks justice as both victims and offenders. Again and again, Black folks witness how a biased criminal systemfrom its cops to its courtsdelivers systematically unfair outcomes. What results is a kind of desperation for any semblance of fairness or justice. Michelle Alexander, pointing out how the state presents imprisonment as the one and only response to crime, writes that when we ask victims Do you want incarceration? what were really asking is Do you want something or nothing? And when any of us are hurt, and when our families and communities are hurting, we want something rather than nothing. The only thing on offer is prisons, prosecutors and police.

Black folks are rarely given even that binary choice. And so the conflict between my ideals and my rage is the desperate want to see Americas white-supremacist criminal systemwhich is, by design, unequipped to punish white supremacy for its harmsfinally work for Black folks. That is, I want something rather than nothing, just this once.

And I want white-supremacist violence to be treated like the danger it is. Black folks have been warning about the increasing threat of white terrorism since Barack Obamas election, and the fears of his assassination by white racists that accompanied it. Americas intelligence agencies have known that white terrorists are the greatest threat to national security since at least 2015, and that only became more true when an open white supremacist became president. But still there was no real response. When the state views peaceful Black protest as more of threat than armed white terrorism, its clear white supremacy is the goal.

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Yet somehow I foolishly thought that armed white supremacists swarming the Senate chambers to stalk politicians who disagree with them might trigger a self-preservationist response. Instead, a complicit Republican Party is seemingly ensuring an attempted coup will be followed by a successful coup. Recently, The Washington Post reported that, behind closed doors, Justice Department officials are debating waiving charges against some of the Capitol terrorists. And while authorities have since denied the report, most of the white insurrectionists who were apprehended have been allowed to await trial at home. The majority of the estimated 800 Capitol invaders were never even arrested.

Meanwhile, historians compare the Capitol attack and the culture of election lies and conspiracies around it to Germanys Stab in the Back myth that led to the rise of Naziism. German historian Michael Bremmer urges that everyone who precipitated and carried out the attempted insurrectionmust face swift and severe consequences for their actions. Princeton historian Rhae Lynn Barnes writes that slavery, Jim Crow and Reconstructions failures to prosecute treasonous Confederates ultimately led to a strain of white-supremacist terror that continues with the Capitol insurrection. Using history as a lesson, both scholars now caution that prosecution and prison is the only way to ensure democracy and national security. And honestly, that message reverberates with me right now.

I know the fear and vengeance that fuel my desire to see Capitol insurrectionists in jail is a reaction to the same systemic abuses that make prison abolition necessary. Of course, American law enforcement, an institution that evolved in part from slave patrols, fulfilled its long-standing role as the protector of white supremacy. Its also no surprise that members of a terrorist mob who spent months openly declaring their intent to kill lawmakers and occupy the Capitol are being undercharged with misdemeanor trespassing by federal officials, even as some Black Lives Matter activists face decades in jail for bringing umbrellas to a protest.

But putting those folks in cages would most likely only make them more vicious and violent, and more likely to externalize that violence toward Black people and other nonwhite folks. An abolitionist framework would attempt to locate the underlying and long-standing societal problems that encourage white-supremacist terror to thrive. This is not to absolve any of the full-grown adults who chose to commit multiple crimes, the very least of which was breaching the Capitol, and in some cases included brutal acts of violence and murder. But without question, the Capitol attack is a symptom of a disease in a white settler colony founded on genocide and enslavement, a sickness that was always lethal. If only we were actually committed to addressing the long-standing conditions that permit American fascism to grow, we could transform society in ways that would preclude future white-supremacist insurrections. Whats more, this unfair racist criminal punishment system cannot be trusted to provide equal justice. When, out of desperation, we lean into this corrupt and primitive system, we cosign its abuses and validate its crimes across the board. Thats why decarcerationnot just selectively, but for everyoneis the only way to ensure this treacherous system can longer inflict harm.

I recognize that truth, and yet, in this moment, find it hard to square so much else with its overwhelming logic. The orgiastic celebration of white power we saw at the Capitol, on the heels of so much white grievance in recent years, has made me look to the only system I know for answers it cannot provide. For everyone also struggling to reconcile the irreconcilable, I see you right now. I have a lot more work to do to bring my anger into alignment with my desire for things to be better. That will ultimately mean wanting abolition even for those I see as the worst.

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Im for Abolition. And Yet I Want the Capitol Rioters in Prison. - The Nation

Here is the smoking gun evidence to back impeachment of Donald Trump | TheHill – The Hill

While the House impeachment managers have focused on events leading up to the Capitol breach, it was the real time response from Donald Trump to the rioters which yields smoking gun evidence of his intent to incite the insurrection. Trump failed to promptly call off his followers or to summon timely assistance for the police, despite pleas from his fellow Republicans caught up in the mayhem. His final words that day connect his incendiary statements about a stolen election to the storming of the Capitol.

As he watched the insurrection unfold on television, with some delight according to witnesses, Trump made no immediate demand that the rioters leave the Capitol. He failed to heed the pleas of Republicans in Congress, who desperately tried to call him with no response. We are begging essentially, and he was nowhere to be found, Representative Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio said. We know Trump did call Senator Tommy Tuberville of Alabama after mistakenly dialing Senator Mike Lee of Utah. Trump called Tuberville not to ask about his safety or to offer assistance, but to discuss a strategy for objecting to the count of electoral votes.

When rioters breached the Capitol in full view of cameras, Trump did not appear on television to denounce them or tell his followers to cease and desist. Instead, he stoked the incitement with a tweet to attack his vice president and double down on claims about a stolen election. He wrote, Mike Pence did not have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our Constitution, giving states a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones.

Trump later sent a tweet in the passive voice, Stay peaceful! He sent a similar message more than half an hour later. He still had not appeared in person on any medium at this point. Trump eventually released a video that told his supporters, You have to go home now. But he prefaced that with another incitement, I know your pain. I know you are hurt. We had an election that was stolen from us. It was a landslide election and everyone knows it. He praised the rioters, We love you. You are very special.

However, the smoking gun tweet came that evening but was later deleted. Trump wrote, These are the things and events that happen when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously and viciously stripped away from great patriots who have been badly and unfairly treated for so long. Go home with love and in peace. Remember this day forever!

Trump admitted in his own words that violent protest was a likely moment of grievances over an election that thwarted the will of his supporters. But it was Trump himself who ginned up these grievances for two months with a drumbeat of lies about the election that culminated in the fiery rhetoric of his rally. In his tweet, Trump further assured rioters with love that they had acted as patriots rather than insurrectionists. Their storming of the Capitol, he implied, should be forever cherished instead of reviled.

The rioters themselves understood they were summoned by him. Video of the mayhem shows them shouting at the police their claims of legitimacy, We were invited by the president of the United States. The Trump loyalist Jenna Ryan declared after the Capitol breach, We were going in solidarity with President TrumpDonald TrumpDOJ to seek resignations of most Trump-appointed US attorneys: report Trump attorney withdraws request to not hold impeachment trial on Saturday Kinzinger in op-ed calls on GOP senators to convict Trump in impeachment trial MORE. This was our way of going and stopping the steal. Meanwhile, Trump has yet to acknowledge the victory of Joe Biden or to retract his claims of a landslide win snatched away by massive fraud.

Allan Lichtman is an election forecaster and a distinguished professor of history at American University. He is the author of The Embattled Vote in America: From the Founding to the Present. He tweets @AllanLichtman.

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Here is the smoking gun evidence to back impeachment of Donald Trump | TheHill - The Hill

Machine Learning | IBM

Machine-learning techniques are required to improve the accuracy of predictive models. Depending on the nature of the business problem being addressed, there are different approaches based on the type and volume of the data. In this section, we discuss the categories of machine learning.

Supervised learning

Supervised learning typically begins with an established set of data and a certain understanding of how that data is classified. Supervised learning is intended to find patterns in data that can be applied to an analytics process. This data has labeled features that define the meaning of data. For example, you can create a machine-learning application that distinguishes between millions of animals, based onimages and written descriptions.

Unsupervised learning

Unsupervised learning is used when the problem requires a massive amount of unlabeled data. For example, social media applications, such as Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat, all have large amounts of unlabeled data. Understanding the meaning behind this data requires algorithms that classify the data based on the patterns or clusters it finds.

Unsupervised learning conducts an iterative process, analyzing data without human intervention. It is used with email spam-detecting technology. There are far too many variables in legitimate and spam emails for an analyst to tag unsolicited bulk email. Instead, machine-learning classifiers, based on clustering and association, are applied to identify unwanted email.

Reinforcement learning

Reinforcement learning is a behavioral learning model. The algorithm receives feedback from the data analysis, guiding the user to the best outcome. Reinforcement learning differs from other types of supervised learning, because the system isnt trained with the sample data set. Rather, the system learns through trial and error. Therefore, a sequence of successful decisions will result in the process being reinforced, because it best solves the problem at hand.

Deep learning

Deep learning is a specific method of machine learning that incorporates neural networks in successive layers to learn from data in an iterative manner. Deep learning is especially useful when youre trying to learn patterns from unstructured data.

Deep learning complex neural networks are designed to emulate how the human brain works, so computers can be trained to deal with poorly defined abstractions and problems. The average five-year-old child can easily recognize the difference between his teachers face and the face of the crossing guard. In contrast, the computer must do a lot of work to figure out who is who. Neural networks and deep learning are often used in image recognition, speech, and computer vision applications.

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Machine Learning | IBM