Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Why no inflation since the 1990s

 The same reason the rich got richier, while the gap between the rich and the Middle Class getting bigger and bigger.  At the same time the Middle Class has since getting smaller and smaller. 

The minimum wage barely change since the 1990s. 


Thursday, November 4, 2021

something is rotten with Youngkin's election

 Dem should poke around to make sure everything is on the up and up

I think Youngkin campaign is using Trump's dirty tactics.  


Dem bring an ice cream refrigerator to a gun, and will be wipe out in 2022 just as did to Obama.

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Critical Race Theory CRT

 Why white people shown such fervent reaction toward CRT?

White supremacists don't want the rest of the white people to learn the true history of people of color being deliberately kept down.  And people of color are NOT inferior.

This is the same reason The Republican Party, Trump, #GQP and MAGA trying to erase Jan 6.

The same reason ArlNOW dot com shadow banned me when I commented that I will point out unconscious bias/racism.

Simply put, White people only want to know how superior they are.  They don't want to know the history of their real history of getting to today.


I am a former Applied Physics researcher/scientist/EE Adjunct Professor, but treated as a sterotypical China man, re-enforced by 1st gen Asians/Asian Operatives of sterotype of Asian American women as 'slut, whore, etc'.  It is like living in a Trump/MAGA world.



Inside the life of a tech activist:

 Tracy Chou's life as a tech activist: abuse, and optimism (fastcompany.com)

Inside the life of a tech activist: abuse, gaslighting, but ultimately optimism

Tracy Chou has been a tech activist for almost a decade. Her story reveals what it’s like to fight Silicon Valley’s establishment.  BY PAVITHRA MOHAN

: :

A decade ago, at the height of society’s optimism for Silicon Valley as a force for good, even the biggest players in the data-obsessed tech industry refused to divulge the makeup of their workforce. When CNN tried to obtain data on race and gender from a handful of tech heavyweights in 2011, the inquiry was met with stony silence from all but three companies. (Many tech firms also thwarted Freedom of Information Act requests from CNN and other media outlets.)

In the fall of 2013, Chou headed to the Grace Hopper conference, an annual gathering of women in tech. She was troubled by a keynote conversation with Sheryl Sandberg, who claimed the number of female engineers was actually falling. “not to be morbid,” Chou tweeted en route back to San Francisco, “but if this flight out of minneapolis goes down, silicon valley is going to be down a substantial % of female engineers.” The Medium post that Chou wrote soon after asked the uncomfortable questions, “Is the percentage of women in engineering going up? What’s working? Is anything? Does anybody know?” Chou then implored companies to share data on the number of women in technical roles. “For me at that time,” she says, “it was, I’m just writing down some thoughts occasionally. That ended up getting a life of its own.”

:

A decade ago, at the height of society’s optimism for Silicon Valley as a force for good, even the biggest players in the data-obsessed tech industry refused to divulge the makeup of their workforce. When CNN tried to obtain data on race and gender from a handful of tech heavyweights in 2011, the inquiry was met with stony silence from all but three companies. (Many tech firms also thwarted Freedom of Information Act requests from CNN and other media outlets.)

In the fall of 2013, Chou headed to the Grace Hopper conference, an annual gathering of women in tech. She was troubled by a keynote conversation with Sheryl Sandberg, who claimed the number of female engineers was actually falling. “not to be morbid,” Chou tweeted en route back to San Francisco, “but if this flight out of minneapolis goes down, silicon valley is going to be down a substantial % of female engineers.” The Medium post that Chou wrote soon after asked the uncomfortable questions, “Is the percentage of women in engineering going up? What’s working? Is anything? Does anybody know?” Chou then implored companies to share data on the number of women in technical roles. “For me at that time,” she says, “it was, I’m just writing down some thoughts occasionally. That ended up getting a life of its own.”

:

As big tech companies finally released their first diversity reports, starting with Google in 2014, each was bleaker than the last, with women accounting for less than a quarter of leadership and technical roles at most companies; Black and Latinx representation in those departments hovered around 3%. The tech industry proclaimed that diversity, equity, and inclusion were important, spawning a cottage industry of DEI consultants and experts, training sessions, and hiring initiatives, and throwing hundreds of millions of dollars at the problem.

Around this time, Pao lost her gender discrimination suit against Kleiner Perkins and then was pushed out of Reddit. Meanwhile, Erica Joy Baker—an engineer who’s now CTO of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee—had compiled a spreadsheet of salaries while at Google to help stamp out pay disparities. Chou’s blog post had prompted diversity reports and a wave of admissions from tech leaders that their numbers were disappointing and as they reflexively admitted, there was more work to be done.

:

she says. “I can speak much more authentically to [how] it’s not great to be sexually harassed while fundraising. And apparently it still happens—even in my case, where I have made a partial career out of calling people out for their shit.”

:

t the time, her harassers had multiplied to include someone who was peddling an absurd theory that Chou was romantically involved with a public figure, and they had even manipulated images in an effort to prove it. By the fall of 2018, Chou had done extensive research on the market for anti-harassment and moderation tools and set her sights on what would turn into Block Party, a suite of tools to screen out online abuse on platforms such as Twitter.

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 she hosted a Reddit “Ask Me Anything” session. It was promptly overrun with trolls, sparking an onslaught of abuse across Twitter and email, and polluting the Block Party waitlist. “There were thousands of trolls that descended on me, and Reddit’s response was: ‘We don’t condone harassment. You can report any harassment you see,'” she says. “I was like, ‘Why is the burden on me?'”

:

Me:  there should be a report that Asian Americans and Americans of color are being systematically targeted and ousted by 1st gen Asians in the Silicon Valley, Tech and STEM.

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Virginia Election

 As I keep insisted over and over, Virginia just turned blue in 2019.  And as an outsider - New Yorker, I see Virginia is still a red State.

Don't delude yourself into thinking Virginia is blue.

I've been saying, to who ever asked.

- Youngkin is not a rabid Trump supporter; too normal.

- Voters will vote the opposed of the just elected President. 

... 

  The question is, how would this affect Youngkin's campiagn?