Media Search:



As ‘The Matrix’ turns 25, the chilling artificial intelligence (AI) projection at its core isn’t as outlandish as it once seemed – TechRadar

Living in 1999 felt like standing on the edge of an event horizon. Our growing obsession with technology was spilling into an outpouring of hope, fear, angst and even apocalyptic distress in some quarters. The dot-com bubble was swelling as the World Wide Web began spreading like a Californian wildfire. The first cell phones had been making the world feel much more connected. Let's not forget the anxieties over Y2K that were escalating into panic as we approached the bookend of the century.

But as this progress was catching the imagination of so many, artificial intelligence (AI) was in a sorry state only beginning to emerge from a debilitating second 'AI winter' which spanned between 1987 and 1993.

Some argue this thawing process lasted as long as the mid-2000s. It was, indeed, a bleak period for AI research; it was a field that "for decades has overpromised and underdelivered", according to a report in the New York Times (NYT) from 2005.

Funding and interest was scarce, especially compared to its peak in the 1980s, with previously thriving conferences whittled down to pockets of diehards. In cinema, however, stories about AI were flourishing with the likes of Terminator 2: Judgement Day (1991) and Ghost in the Shell (1995) building on decades of compelling feature films like Blade Runner (1982).

It was during this time that the Wachowskis penned the script for The Matrix a groundbreaking tour de force that threw up a mirror to humanity's increasing reliance on machines and challenged our understanding of reality.

It's a timeless classic, and its impact since its March 31 1999 release has been sprawling. But the chilling plot at its heart namely the rise of an artificial general intelligence (AGI) network that enslaves humanity has remained consigned to fiction more so than it's ever been considered a serious scientific possibility. With the heat of the spotlight now on AI, however, ideas like the Wachowskis' are beginning to feel closer to home than we had anticipated.

AI has become not just the scientific, but the cultural zeitgeist with large language models (LLMs) and the neural nets that power them cannonballing into the public arena. That dry well of research funding is now overflowing, and corporations see massive commercial appeal in AI. There's a growing chorus of voices, too, that feel an AGI agent is on the horizon.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

People like the veteran computer scientist Ray Kurzweil had anticipated that humanity would reach the technological singularity (where an AI agent is just as smart as a human) for yonks, outlining his thesis in 'The Singularity is Near' (2005) with a projection for 2029.

Disciples like Ben Goertzel have claimed it can come as soon as 2027. Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang says it's "five years away", joining the likes of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and others in predicting an aggressive and exponential escalation. Should these predictions be true, they will also introduce a whole cluster bomb of ethical, moral, and existential anxieties that we will have to confront. So as The Matrix turns 25, maybe it wasn't so far-fetched after all?

Sitting on tattered armchairs in front of an old boxy television in the heart of a wasteland, Morpheus shows Neo the "real world" for the first time. Here, he fills us in on how this dystopian vision of the future came to be. We're at the summit of a lengthy yet compelling monologue that began many scenes earlier with questions Morpheus poses to Neo, and therefore us, progressing to the choice Neo must make and crescendoing into the full tale of humanity's downfall and the rise of the machines.

Much like we're now congratulating ourselves for birthing advanced AI systems that are more sophisticated than anything we have ever seen, humanity in The Matrix was united in its hubris as it gave birth to AI. Giving machines that spark of life the ability to think and act with agency backfired. And after a series of political and social shifts, the machines retreated to Mesopotamia, known as the cradle of human civilization, and built the first machine city, called 01.

Here, they replicated and evolved developing smarter and better AI systems. When humanity's economies began to fall, they struck the machine civilization with nuclear weapons to regain control. Because the machines were not as vulnerable to heat and radiation, the strike failed and instead represented the first stone thrown in the 'Machine War'.

Unlike in our world, the machines in The Matrix were solar-powered and harvested their energy from the sun. So humans decide to darken namely enslaving humans and draining their innate energy. They continued to fight until human civilization was enslaved, with the survivors placed into pods and connected to the Matrix an advanced virtual reality (VR) simulation intended as an instrument for control while their thermal, bio-electric, and kinetic energy was harvested to sustain the machines.

"This can't be real," Neo tells Morpheus. It's a reaction we would all expect to have when confronted with such an outlandish truth. But, as Morpheus retorts: "What is real?' Using AI as a springboard, the film delves into several mind-bending areas including the nature of our reality and the power of machines to influence and control how we perceive the environment around us. If you can touch, smell, or taste something, then why would it not be real?

Strip away the barren dystopia, the self-aware AI, and strange pods that atrophied humans occupy like embryos in a womb, and you can see parallels between the computer program and the world around us today.

When the film was released, our reliance on machines was growing but not final. Much of our understanding of the world today, however, is filtered through the prism of digital platforms infused with AI systems like machine learning. What we know, what we watch, what we learn, how we live, how we socialize online all of these modern human experiences are influenced in some way by algorithms that direct us in subtle but meaningful ways. Our energy isn't harvested, but our data is, and we continue to feed the machine with every tap and click.

Intriguingly, as Agent Smith tells Morpheus in the iconic interrogation scene a revelatory moment in which the computer program betrays its emotions the first version of the Matrix was not a world that closely resembled society as we knew it in 1999. Instead, it was a paradise in which humans were happy and free of suffering.

The trouble, however, is that this version of the Matrix didn't stick, and people saw through the ruse rendering it redundant. That's when the machine race developed version 2.0. It seemed, as Smith lamented, that humans speak in the language of suffering and misery and without these qualities, the human condition is unrecognizable.

By every metric, AI is experiencing a monumental boom when you look at where the field once was. Startup funding surged by more than ten-fold between 2011 and 2021, surging from 670 million to $72 billion a decade later, according to Statista. The biggest jump came during the COVID-19 pandemic, with funding rising from $35 billion the previous year. This has since tapered off falling to $40 billion in 2023 but the money that's pouring into research and development (R&D) is surging.

But things weren't always so rosy. In fact, in the early 1990s during the second AI winter the term "artificial intelligence" was almost taboo, according to Klondike, and was replaced with other terms such as "advanced computing" instead. This is simply one turbulent period in a long near-75 year history of the field, starting with Alan Turing in 1950 when he pondered whether a machine could imitate human intelligence in his paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence'.

In the years that followed, a lot of pioneering research was conducted but this early momentum fell by the wayside during the first AI winter between 1974 and 1980 where issues including limited computing power prevented the field from advancing, and organizations like DARPA and national governments pulled funding from research projects.

Another boom in the 1980s, fuelled by the revival of neural networks, then collapsed once more into a bust with the second winter spanning six years up to 1993 and thawing well into the 21st century. Then, in the years that followed, scientists around the world were slowly making progress once more as funding restarted and AI caught people's imagination once again. But the research field itself was siloed, fragmented and disconnected, according to Pamela McCorduck writing in 'Machines Who Think' (2004). Computer scientists were focusing on competing areas to solve niche problems and specific approaches.

As Klondike highlights, they also used terms such as "advanced computing" to label their work where we may now refer to the tools and systems they built as early precursors to the AI systems we use today.

It wasn't until 1995 four years before The Matrix hit theaters that the needle in AI research really moved in a significant way. But you could already see signs the winter was thawing, especially with the creation of the Loebner Prize an annual competition created by Hugh Loebner in 1990.

Loebner was "an American millionaire who had given a lot of money" and "who became interested in the Turing test," according to the recipient of the prize in 1997, the late British computer scientist Yorick Wilks, speaking in an interview in 2019. Although the prize wasn't particularly large $2,000 initially it showed that interest in building AI agents was expanding, and that it was being taken seriously.

The first major development of the decade came when computer scientist Richard Wallace developed the chatbot ALICE which stood for artificial linguistic internet computer entity. Inspired by the famous ELIZA chatbot of the 1960s which was the world's first major chatbot ALICE, also known as Alicebot, was a natural language processing system that applied heuristic pattern matching to conversations with a human in order to provide responses. Wallace went on to win the Loebner Prize in 2000, 2001 and 2004 for creating and advancing this system, and a few years ago the New Yorker reported ALICE was even the inspiration for the critically acclaimed 2013 sci-fi hit Her, according to director Spike Jonze.

Then, in 1997, AI hit a series of major milestones, starting with a showdown starring the reigning world chess champion and grandmaster Gary Kasparov, who in May that year went head to head in New York with the challenger of his life: a computing agent called 'Deep Blue' created by IBM. This was actually the second time Kasparov faced Deep Blue after beating the first version of the system in Philadelphia the year before, but Deep Blue narrowly won the rematch by 3.5 to 2.5.

"This highly publicized match was the first time a reigning world chess champion lost to a computer and served as a huge step towards an artificially intelligent decision making program," wrote Rockwell Anyoha in a Harvard blog.

It did something "no machine had ever done before", according to IBM, delivering its victory through "brute force computing power" and for the entire world to see as it was indeed broadcast far and wide. It used 32 processors to evaluate 200 chess positions per second. I have to pay tribute, Kasparov said. The computer is far stronger than anybody expected.

Another major milestone was the creation of NaturallySpeaking by Dragon Software in June 1997. This speech recognition software was the first universally accessible and affordable computer dictation system for PCs if $695 (or $1,350 today) is your idea of affordable, that is. "This is only the first step, we have to do a lot more, but what we're building toward is to humanizing computers, make them very natural to use, so yes, even more people can use them," said CEO Jim Baker in a news report from the time. Dragon licensed the software to big names including Microsoft and IBM, and it was later integrated into the Windows operating system, signaling much wider adoption.

A year later, researchers with MIT released Kismet a "disembodied head with gremlin-like features" that learns about its environment "like a baby" and entirely "upon its benevolent carers to help it find out about the world", according to Duncan Graham-Rowe writing in New Scientist at the time. Spearheaded by Cynthia Greazeal, this creation was one of the projects that fuelled MIT's AI research and secured its future. The machine could interact with humans, and simulated emotions by changing its facial expression, its voice and its movements.

This contemporary resurgence also extended to the language people used too. The taboo around "artificial intelligence" was disintegrating and terms like "intelligent agents" began slipping their way into the lexicon of the time, wrote McCorduck in 'Machines Who Think'. Robotics, intelligent AI agents, machine surpassing the wit of man, and more: it was these ingredients that, in turn, fed into the thinking behind The Matrix and the thesis at its heart.

When The Matrix hit theaters, there was a real dichotomy between movie-goers and critics. It's fair to say that audiences loved the spectacle, to say the least with the film taking $150 million at the US box office while a string of publications stood in line to lambast the script and the ideas in the movie. "It's Special Effects 10, Screenplay 0," wrote Todd McCarthy in his review in Variety. The Miami Herald rated it two-and-a-half stars out of five.

Chronicle senior writer Bob Graham praised Joe Pantoliano (who plays Cypher) in his SFGate review, "but even he is eventually swamped by the hopeless muddle that "The Matrix" becomes." Critics wondered why people were so desperate to see a movie that had been so widely slated and the Guardian pondered whether it was sci-fi fans "driven to a state of near-unbearable anticipation by endless hyping of The Phantom Menace, ready to gorge themselves on pretty much any computer graphics feast that came along?"

Veteran film director Quentin Tarantino, however, related more with the average audience member in his experiences, which he shared in an interview with Amy Nicholson. "I remember the place was jam-packed and there was a real electricity in the air it was really exciting," he said, speaking of his outing to watch the movie on the Friday night after it was released.

"Then this thought hit me, that was really kind of profound, and that was: it's easy to talk about 'The Matrix' now because we know the secret of 'The Matrix', but they didn't tell you any of that in any of the promotions in any of the big movie trailer or any of the TV spots. So we were really excited about this movie, but we really didn't know what we were going to see. We didn't really know what to expect; we did not know the mythology at all I mean, at all. We had to discover that."

The AI boom of today is largely centered around an old technology known as neural networks. Despite incredible advancements in generative AI tools, namely large language models (LLMs) that have captured the imagination of businesses and people alike.

One of the most interesting developments is the number of people who are becoming increasingly convinced that these AI agents are conscious, or have agency, and can think or even feel for themselves. One startling example is a former Google engineer who claimed a chatbot the company was working on was sentient. Although this is widely understood not to be the case, it's a sign of the direction in which we're heading.

Elsewhere, despite impressive systems that can generate images, and now video thanks to OpenAI's SORA these technologies still all rely on the principles of neural networks that many in the field don't believe will lead to the sort of human-level AGI, let alone a super intelligence that can modify itself and build even more intelligence agents autonomously. The answer, according to Databricks CTO Matei Zaharia, is a compound AI system that uses LLMs as one component. It's an approach backed by Goertzel, the veteran computer scientist who is working on his own version of this compound system with the aim of creating a distributed open source AGI agent within the next few years. He suggests that humanity could build an AGI agent as soon as 2027.

There are so many reasons why The Matrix has remained relevant from the fact it was a visual feast to the rich and layered parables one can draw between its world and ours.

Much of the backstory hasn't been a part of that conversation in the 25 years since its cinematic release. But as we look to the future, we can begin to see how a similar world might be unfolding.

We know, for example, the digital realm we occupy largely through social media channels is influencing people in harmful ways. AI has also been a force for tragedy around the world, with Amnesty International claiming Facebook's algorithms played a role in pouring petrol on ethnic violence in Myanmar. Although not generally taken seriously, companies like Meta are attempting to build VR-powered alternate realities known as the metaverse.

With generative AI now a proliferating technology, groundbreaking research found recently that more than half (57.1%) of the internet comprises AI-generated content.

Throw increasingly improving tools like Midjourney and now SORA into the mix and to what extent can we know what is real and what is generated by machines especially if they look so lifelike and indistinguishable from human-generated content? The lack of sentience in the billions of machines around us is an obvious divergence from The Matrix. But that doesn't mean our own version of The Matrix has the potential to be any less manipulative.

Continued here:

As 'The Matrix' turns 25, the chilling artificial intelligence (AI) projection at its core isn't as outlandish as it once seemed - TechRadar

Malia Obama’s Street Style Look Features a Cool Girl Styling Trick – W Magazine

Leave it to L.A. resident and Harvard graduate Malia Obama to provide a masterclass in off-duty chic. Yesterday, the former First Daughter (and emerging film director) stepped out on the West Coast in a look that epitomized casual, cool girl fashion.

Obama, who now goes by the professional name Malia Ann, was spotted making her way to an acting class on Thursday in a pair of low-rise, oversized denim that pooled loosely against her black puddle boots. Uptop she opted for a simple, but high-impact, layering trick. She wore a white Oxford shirt underneath another button down, this one in a mint pinstripe fabric. Street style is as much about the pieces you have on as it is about how you carry them. Here, with her half-buttoned top and utilitarian tote bag, Obama reiterated that sentiment through her handful of easygoing pieces.

As the daughter of the first social media president, theres a particular air of mystery surrounding the 25-year-old. She doesnt have any public social media presence and (understandably) rarely speaks to the press. Still, theres no denying the Gen Z influences in her latest look. Obamas chock-a-block full satchel is a downtown staple across coasts (as are extra large tote bags in general) while her model-worthy jeans look like they were just plucked from the Balenciaga runway.

Weve gotten glimpses of Obamas pared-back, fashion sense before. There have been cigarette breaks in between her classes at Harvard (she now holds a degree in Visual and Environmental Studies), sightings alongside her equally stylish sister Sasha, and solo outings in floral Boho skirts.

Back towards the beginning of this year, Obama made her red carpet debut during the Sundance Film Festival in support of her shirt film, The Heart, which premiered at the event. She sported a gray coat and plunging button down shirt that she paired with chunky brown boots and a Bella Hadid-approved accessory: the skinny, skinny scarf.

Theres definitely hints of menswear within Obamas style and her latest look, too. But theyre also just cool. Something youd definitely expect a budding director and a former First Daughter to traipse around town in.

Read the original here:
Malia Obama's Street Style Look Features a Cool Girl Styling Trick - W Magazine

Obama, Biden and Clinton ditched ties at a fundraiser. Are ties out of fashion? – NPR

Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Bill Clinton attend a campaign fundraising event in New York on March 28. Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Bill Clinton attend a campaign fundraising event in New York on March 28.

Last week, Joe Biden, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton three Democratic presidents were all in one place to help Biden raise money for his reelection campaign.

This is not a campaign finance story, though. This is a look at fashion, because not one of these current or former commanders in chief was wearing what's typically a standard part of presidential outfits: a necktie.

This prompted several men's fashion watchers on the internet to declare the death (or at least the beginning of the end) of the tie. Because if presidents are not wearing them at fancy events in Midtown Manhattan, then who is?

To dig more into this critically important topic, All Things Considered host Scott Detrow spoke to fashion historian Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell about what is happening.

This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

Scott Detrow: I was wondering what your first reaction was to the discourse or the pictures of this event.

Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell: Well, I wasn't really surprised to see this for a lot of reasons. People have been, of course, predicting the death of the tie for at least a hundred years. But it really picked up after the pandemic and everybody went back to work, back to the office the tie did not.

Detrow: Right. And like you said, this has been a long time coming. But is there something to the idea that there are far fewer ties in circulation than before?

Chrisman-Campbell: Absolutely. The sales of ties have been dropping for a long time. And I don't think they're ever going to go away, but it's not surprising to me that, especially at a Democratic fundraiser, which is a slightly more casual event than, say, a White House press conference, the tie-lessness was both a fashion statement and, I think, a subtle message to America.

Joe Biden with a tie delivers the State of the Union address on March 7. Shawn Thew/POOL/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Detrow: What does it say? Like, especially now that it's more optional in more formal and more work setting for men or people who wear ties what is the statement at this point of "I am putting on a tie" or "I'm not putting on a tie"?

Chrisman-Campbell: They really are reserved for the most formal events: for weddings, for graduations, job interviews, things like that. And they can actually work against a man in a less formal setting because they may come off as stuffy or pretentious. If you're the only one wearing a tie and everyone else is casual, that's a problem. And the opposite if everyone else is wearing ties and you're not, you're going to stand out.

Detrow: This kind of restarted a conversation that pops up every once in a while of are they even still relevant? Can you remind us what the original practicality was?

Chrisman-Campbell: Well, in the 17th century, men's shirts were tied with thin laces rather than buttons, so the tie or the cravat at the time actually helped keep the shirt collar closed, helped keep you warm. It had a practical function. But it very quickly became a marker of taste and respectability, social class, wealth, even sexuality and intellect, as in school ties. And it still functions in those ways, even though it's completely lost its practical value.

Detrow: When you look at the pictures of these three presidents, what do you think about the look of "I'm wearing a formal suit but not a tie because I want to look casual, even though I'm clearly a formal person in an important job"?

Chrisman-Campbell: Looking at those pictures, I was really fascinated by the different gradations of formality that we saw, particularly in the pictures of the presidents with the celebrity podcasters or some of the younger guests, because you still have a hierarchy there. There's the collared shirt versus the uncollared shirt. There's the matching jacket and pants versus the mismatched jacket and pants. There were dress shoes and tennis shoes. So there was still a generational divide there, and there was still sort of a formal hierarchy.

Excerpt from:
Obama, Biden and Clinton ditched ties at a fundraiser. Are ties out of fashion? - NPR

"We all have power:" Michelle Obama says Beyonc’s "Cowboy Carter" reminds us of voting power – Salon

Michelle Obama, a long-time Beyonc fan and supporter, praised the musician's new country album "Cowboy Carter," while also calling for voters to use their power and vote.

The former first lady took to Instagram on Wednesday to shower Beyonc with praise, telling the Texas pop star, "You are a record-breaker and history-maker." She continued that "Cowboy Carter" has"changed the game once again by helping redefine a music genre and transform our culture.I am so proud of you!"

Moreover, Obama said the album is a "reminder that despite everything weve been through to be heard, seen, and recognized, we can still dance, sing, and be who we are unapologetically."

Outside of praising the singer, Obama used the post as a rallying call to appeal to voters, stating that "Cowboy Carter" reminds us that "we all have power. Theres power in our history, in our joy, and in our votes and we can each use our own gifts and talents to make our voices heard on the issues that matter most to us."

Obama urged voters to stand up for their beliefs, saying, "We must do that at the ballot box this year. The issues that impact us most are on the ballot across the country from equal pay and racial justice to reproductive healthcare and climate change."

She concluded with a voter registration link and stated that "Queen Bey says at the end of 'Ya Ya,' we need to 'keep the faith' and 'VOTE!'"

Link:
"We all have power:" Michelle Obama says Beyonc's "Cowboy Carter" reminds us of voting power - Salon

Obama could be Biden’s secret weapon with Black voters – TheGrio

As President Joe Biden navigates shaky terrain with Black voters ahead of the 2024 presidential election, he may have at least one secret weapon on the campaign trail: former President Barack Obama.

President Obama continues to be an asset for Democrats, Joel Payne, a Democratic strategist, told theGrio. Fundraising [and] mobilizing Black voters is a place he can help.

[Obama] was a key part of the closing crew in 2020 [and] he was engaged in 22 in some key places, said Payne, referencing Obamas stumps throughout the final days of the 2020 presidential election, and the 2022 midterms. The election two years ago resulted in Democrats over-performing in contests against Republican candidates following the majority-conservative U.S. Supreme Courts overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Payne, who was a staffer with the 2008 presidential campaign of former Sen. John Edwards, Obamas opponent in the Democratic primary, remembers the effectiveness of Obamas campaign style and how much it resonated with Democratic voters. That same political savvy can be an asset to his former vice president, Payne believes, by holding together his coalition, particularly Black voters, the Democratic Partys most reliable and consistent voting bloc.

Americas first Black president, who maintained a solid approval rating when he left office in 2016, remains a popular political figure who draws turnout and enthusiasm among key groups important to the Biden coalition. That coalition, held together by Black voters and arguably architected by Obamas 2008 presidential campaign, sent Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to the White House.

Obama could be an effective surrogate to energize and persuade Black voters amid steady polling that shows they remain unmoved by Bidens handling of the economy and outraged by his administrations response to Israels war in Gaza against the terrorist group Hamas that has so far killed more than 32,000 Palestinians.

Last week, Obama, along with former President Bill Clinton, joined Biden for a historic fundraiser that drew 5,000 attendees and raised a record $26 million. During a discussion with The Late Show host Stephen Colbert at New York Citys Radio City Music Hall, Obama made the case for why Biden is the best choice over presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump when it comes to the Middle East conflict.

The 44th U.S. president said he selected Biden as his vice president because of his moral conviction and clarity and willingness to acknowledge that the world is complicated. Obama said that while the death toll in Gaza is heartbreaking, there is room for nuance to say we unequivocally support the people of Israel and have our hearts broken watching innocent people being killed.

Hes exactly the kind of voice that can convey to Black folk: I know, you may not like everything thats happening, but I would rather trust our future with Biden, than the risk our future with Trump, Michael Blake, a former Obama campaign operative, told theGrio.

Reflecting on Obamas winning political trademark of hope and inspiration and how it could benefit Biden, Blake said that Obama is able to communicate a positive vision for the future in a hopeful manner. The CEO of the Kairos Democracy Project added, Running against a man whose entire approach is lets go backward, I would probably want to have a surrogate in President Obama whos talking about hope and moving forward.

Antjuan Seawright, a Democratic strategist and adviser to Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., a Biden confidant, told theGrio that Obama can serve as a validator and advocate for Joe Biden the man, as well as for what the Biden-Harris agenda means for not only this country but for the world and particularly the African-American community.

I think thats a clear contrast to the other side when he cant even get his own vice president to stand with him, said Seawright, in reference to former Vice President Mike Pence, who unsuccessfully ran against Trump in the Republican primary. Seawright noted that the electorate seems swayed by style over substance, seemingly referencing Trumps continued appeal to certain voters.

We dont dismiss that certainly, Obama brings style and substance, he said. Its gonna take everybody to help this Democratic Party.

Payne, who worked on former Sen. Hillary Clintons 2016 presidential campaign, noted that while Obama has used his star power to support the Biden agenda in the last few election cycles, it doesnt overshadow what President Biden needs to do.

I think he has some awareness of the challenges that President Biden is facing, he said, and also the fact that he does not need an ex-president not giving him the space to still develop his own political identity.

Payne predicts the Obama and Biden camps will be smart and measured about when they use him.

Blake, who served three terms as a New York state assemblyman and vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, said Black voters have to consider the future they want to see for America at a time when democracy and stability around the world are on the line.

As it relates to the Israel war in Gaza, which has particularly incensed young Black voters, Blake said Black people who care about whats happening in the Middle East will have toask themselves, Do you want a president who seeks to be a diplomat and actually resolve conflict, or do you want someone who says that he wants to be a dictator, and wants to create more conflict?'

There is no perfect candidate, he said. But I would rather put policy in the hands of Joe Biden than ever putting it in the hands again of Donald Trump.

During last weeks star-studded fundraiser, Obama made clear that the presidential election wont solely rest on the negative case against Trump, but also the positive case for Bidens outstanding job in the presidency. The former president listed the Biden-Harris administrations accomplishments, including record-breaking job growth, the lowest recorded unemployment for Black Americans, lowering health care costs, and historic climate-smart investments.

We also have a positive story to tell about the future, and that is something JoeBidenhas worked on diligently each and every day on behalf of working Americans, said Obama, and I expect him to continue to do that for the next four years and eight months.

Never miss a beat:Get our daily stories straight to your inbox with theGrios newsletter.

The rest is here:
Obama could be Biden's secret weapon with Black voters - TheGrio