Chile becomes first country to pass neuro-rights law

Connected Brain

Chile became the first country in the world to protect neuro-rights after the Chamber of Deputies approved Wednesday an amendment to the Chilean Constitution. The bill is expected to be signed into law by their president soon.

The amendment to the Chilean Constitution aims at defining mental identity for the first time in history as a non-manipulable right to protect it against technological advancements in neurosciences and artificial intelligence. The bill sets out to protect the right to mental privacy, personal identity, the free will of thought, equitable access to technologies that increase human capacities, and protection against discrimination.

Guido Girardi, the opposition senator, said, The amendment to the Chilean Constitution “is the first law in the world on neuro-rights, and it is the first step in a legislative ecosystem that will regulate artificial intelligence and neuro-technologies. ”

The Chamber of Deputies said in a statement that “Chile’s law establishes that scientific and technological development must be at the service of people and that it will be carried out with respect for life and physical and mental integrity.”

https://www.jurist.org/news/2021/10/chile-becomes-first-country-to-pass-neuro-rights-law/

Herbicide Free Campus Becomes Re:wild Your Campus

A newsletter I received this morning. Progress is being made in many directions!
To our Herbicide Free Campus Community,
I want to share some incredibly exciting news with you all that will shape the future of our organization and movement.
Ever since HFC was born, our goal was to one day become an official partner of a larger organization to guarantee continuity and stability in the long term. Originally, my fellow co-founder Bridget and I took this campaign beyond Berkeley in a leap of faith, compelled to expand this movement in light of the Johnson v. Monsanto trial, first throughout California and then across the United States.
It was not my intention to create my own nonprofit, but after reaching out to my network to explore the possibility of becoming a program of a larger organization, it was clear that I first had to take the issue of pesticide use on school grounds into my own hands. Without a notable track record of success to prove myself or the mission worthy of being taken on by an established group, the only option was to start my own organization.
It’s been four years since we expanded the campaign on our own, and after raising money, working tirelessly, building an incredible team, and mentoring dozens of students, I can now proudly say that our small but scrappy team has truly started a movement. We are recognized nationally and have earned the respect of the prominent organizations I had first emailed when this vision was only an idea in 2018.
This is where the exciting news comes in. Starting September 1, 2022, Herbicide-Free Campus will become a fiscally sponsored project of Re:wild, an environmental nonprofit that seeks to protect and restore biodiversity through the “re-wilding” of outdoor space. Herbicide-Free Campus will rebrand as Re:wild Your Campus, a project of Re:wild.
Earth Island Institute was our original fiscal sponsor and provided critical support when we were a nascent operation. We are so grateful for their assistance in getting us to this moment.
Our transition to Re:wild is the culmination of many months of thoughtful conversations and careful consideration. Re:wild Your Campus will promote biodiversity and climate resilience through transforming college campuses to become regenerative ecosystems. Being part of a global organization that works directly with activists on the ground will help us expand our reach while staying true to our deepest aspiration — empowering the next generation of leaders to eliminate herbicides and decolonize aesthetics to create safer spaces for us all.
To the HFC family, which is every single one of you on this list: Your support means the world. We are so incredibly thankful for you all helping us get to this point. Hopefully, the world will be a bit wilder and safer because of the work that we have all done together. Now let’s build on that and take this further than we ever imagined possible!
Please take a moment to check out our new website and please consider supporting us in this new chapter of growth. If you are not yet following us on social media, we welcome you to check us out there too, you can find us on Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook and TikTok. Keep your eye out for future emails from Re:wild Your Campus, campus@rewild.org!
Mackenzie Feldman
Project Director, Re:wild Your Campus (formerly known as Herbicide-Free Campus)
“We are cultivating a new paradigm in land management that shines importance on soil health, human health, biodiversity, and native plants. With students as leaders, groundskeepers as land stewards, and campuses as examples for the world to follow, we see universities as the starting point for our movement.” – Mackenzie Feldman

Slavery, A Short History

Slavery

As best I can gather, this is an factual depiction of the history of slavery. Those who adhere to Critical Race Theory, (CRT – a THEORY!) seemingly do not want to actually LOOK at the factual historical and current events regarding this issue.

Slavery was not “invented” by white people.

It did not start in 1619 when the first slaves came to Jamestown.

It existed before then.

It did not start in 1492 when Columbus discovered the New World.

In fact, when the intrepid explorer landed in the Bahamas, the native Taino tribe hoped he could help them defeat their aggressive neighbors, the Caribs. The Caribs enslaved the Taino and, on occasion, served them for dinner.

Slavery existed in Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

The word “slave” actually comes from the Slavs of Eastern Europe. Millions of them — all white by the way — were captured and enslaved by Muslims in the ninth century and later by the Ottoman Turks.

Slavery existed when the Roman Empire controlled the Mediterranean and most of Europe from the 1st through the 5th centuries.

Slavery existed when Alexander the Great conquered Persia in the 4th century BC. It was so common that Aristotle simply considered it “natural.” The slave/master model was just how the world operated in the great philosopher’s day.

Slavery existed during the time of the ancient Egyptians five thousand years ago.

As far back we can go in human history, we find slavery.

As renowned historian John Steele Gordon notes, from time immemorial, “slaves were a major item of commerce…As much as a third of the population of the ancient world was enslaved.”

Here’s the second thing you need to know.

White people were the first to formally put an end to slavery.

In 1833, Britain was the first country in the history of the world to pass a Slavery Abolition Act. They were quickly followed by France, who in 1848 abolished slavery in her many colonies. Then, of course, came the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. After centuries of human slavery, white men led the world in putting an end to the abhorrent practice.

That includes the 300,000 Union soldiers, overwhelmingly white, who died during the Civil War.

Am I saying that this makes white people better than anyone else?

Of course not.

My purpose here is to simply tell the truth, and the truth is that human history is complicated; no one, regardless of skin color, stands guiltless.

Yet today we are never told to consider the murderous Persian Empire or the cannibalism of indigenous tribes of North and South America, or the heinous actions under the imperialistic Muslim, Chinese, Mongol, or Japanese Empires, to name just a few.

Instead, we’re told that slavery is a white phenomenon.

Like all persistent lies, this lie spawns a bunch of other lies.

On social media I come across extraordinary depictions about how Africans lived liked pharaohs before Europeans came and laid waste to their paradise.

I wish any of this were true. But it’s not. It’s a fantasy.

The truth is that Africans were sold into slavery by other black Africans. And in many cases, sold for items as trivial as gin and mirrors.

Whites didn’t go into the interior and round up the natives. They waited on the coast for their black partners to bring them black bodies.

The stark reality is that our lives had very little value to our ancestors.

Here’s the third thing you need to know.

If you think slavery is a relic of the past, you’re wrong.

There are some 700,000 slaves in Africa today. Right now. That’s the lowest estimate I could find. Other sources say there are many more.

For context, that’s almost twice as many slaves as were ever brought to the United States. Child soldiers, human trafficking, forced labor—these are the conditions that currently exist within the same sub-Saharan region where the transatlantic slave trade originated.

African bodies are being sold today like they were sold then—and no, they are not being purchased by any country of white men. In fact, slavery, by any traditional definition, is exclusively practiced today within nonwhite countries.

But we hear almost nothing about this.

Just like we hear nothing about how slavery was universal until good people in Europe and America ended it two centuries ago.

Why?

Because our so-called “leaders” — black and white — wouldn’t profit from it. Black victimhood is nothing if not profitable.
It elects politicians and funds racial grievance groups.

And if black Americans began to view themselves as partners in the American dream…

If we embraced the patriotic spirit that holds all men are created equal, the patriotic spirit that is our real heritage…

Then the race hustlers would soon be out of business.

And who wants that?

I’m Candace Owens, author of Blackout, for Prager University.

Gillian

Gillian

Gillian is a seven-year-old girl who cannot sit in school. She continually gets up, gets distracted, flies with thoughts, and doesn’t follow lessons. Her teachers worry about her, punish her, scold her, reward the few times that she is attentive, but nothing. Gillian does not know how to sit and cannot be attentive.
When she comes home, her mother punishes her too. So not only does she Gillian have bad grades and punishment at school, but she also suffers from them at home.
One day, Gillian’s mother is called to school. The lady, sad as someone waiting for bad news, takes her hand and goes to the interview room. The teachers speak of illness, of an obvious disorder. Maybe it’s hyperactivity or maybe she needs a medication.
During the interview an old teacher arrives who knows the little girl. He asks all the adults, mother and colleagues, to follow him into an adjoining room from where she can still be seen. As he leaves, he tells Gillian that they will be back soon and turns on an old radio with music.
As the girl is alone in the room, she immediately gets up and begins to move up and down chasing the music in the air with her feet and her heart. The teacher smiles as the colleagues and the mother look at him between confusion and compassion, as is often done with the old. So he says:
“See? Gillian is not sick, Gillian is a dancer!”
He recommends that her mother take her to a dance class and that her colleagues make her dance from time to time. She attends her first lesson and when she gets home she tells her mother:
“Everyone is like me, no one can sit there!”
In 1981, after a career as a dancer, opening her own dance academy and receiving international recognition for her art, Gillian Lynne became the choreographer of the musical “Cats.”
Hopefully all “different” children find adults capable of welcoming them for who they are and not for what they lack.
Long live the differences, the little black sheep and the misunderstood. They are the ones who create beauty in this world.

 

Maya Angelou – My Mission

Maya Angelou - My Mission

“You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them.”

“You can only become truly accomplished at something you love. Don’t make money your goal. Instead pursue the things you love doing and then do them so well that people can’t take their eyes off of you.”

MESSAGE TO THE UNVACCINATED

(Tom: I concur with the majority of this but I do not agree with “but they didn’t care” as I personally know of many who were hurt by the ignorance, intolerance and discrimination. I think it more accurate to say that those who remained unvaccinated maintained their personal integrity to the truth despite all the illegal coercion and immoral pressure to cave to the evil agenda.)

“Even if I were pollinated and fully vaccinated, I would admire the unvaccinated for withstanding the greatest pressure I have ever seen, even from partners, parents, children, friends, colleagues and doctors.

People who were capable of such personality, courage and critical ability are undoubtedly the best of humanity. They are everywhere, in all ages, levels of education, states and ideas. They are of a special kind; they are the soldiers that every army of light wants to have in its ranks. They are the parents that every child wants to have and the children that every parent dreams of having. They are beings above the average of their societies, they are the essence of the people who have built all cultures and conquered horizons. They are there, next to you, they look normal, but they are superheroes.

They did what others could not, they were the tree that withstood the hurricane of insults, discrimination and social exclusion. And they did it because they thought they were alone, and believed they were the only ones.

Banned from their families’ tables at Christmas, they never saw anything so cruel. They lost their jobs, let their careers sink, had no more money … but they didn’t care. They suffered immeasurable discrimination, denunciation, betrayal and humiliation … but they kept going.

Never before in humanity has there been such a “casting”, now we know who are the best on planet Earth. Women, men, old, young, rich, poor, of all races or religions, the unvaccinated, the chosen of the invisible ark, the only ones who managed to resist when everything collapsed.

That’s you, you passed an unimaginable test that many of the toughest Marines, Commandos, Green Berets, astronauts and geniuses could not withstand.

You are made of the stuff of the greatest who ever lived, those heroes born among ordinary men who glow in the dark.”

Author unknown

The Masses

The Masses

“So long as they continued to work and breed, their other activities were without importance. Left to themselves…they had reverted to a style of life that appeared to be natural to them, a sort of ancestral pattern…work, the care of home and children, petty quarrels with neighbors, films, football, beer and above all, gambling filled up the horizon of their minds. To keep them in control was not difficult.” George Orwell

(Tom: From this we work to awake, enlighten, inspire and unenslave them.)

WOMAN. . . . . . . . .

Author unknown
When God created woman he was working late on the 6th day…….
An angel came by and asked, “Why spend so much time on her?”
The lord answered. “Have you seen all the specifications I have to meet to shape her?
She must function on all kinds of situations,
She must be able to embrace several kids at the same time,
Have a hug that can heal anything from a bruised knee to a broken heart,
She must do all this with only two hands,
She cures herself when sick and can work 18 hours a day”
THE ANGEL was impressed, “Just two hands…..impossible!
And this is the standard model?”
The Angel came closer and touched the woman.
“But you have made her so soft, Lord”.
“She is soft”, said the Lord,
“But I have made her strong. You can’t imagine what she can endure and overcome.”
“Can she think?” The Angel asked…
The Lord answered. “Not only can she think, she can reason and negotiate.”
The Angel touched her cheeks….
“Lord, it seems this creation is leaking! You have put too many burdens on her.”
“She is not leaking…it is a tear.” The Lord corrected the Angel…
“What’s it for?” Asked the Angel….. .
The Lord said. “Tears are her way of expressing her grief, her doubts, her love, her loneliness, her suffering and her pride.”
This made a big impression on the Angel,
“Lord, you are a genius. You thought of everything.
A woman is indeed marvelous.”
Lord said, “Indeed she is.
She has strength that amazes a man.
She can handle trouble and carry heavy burdens.
She holds happiness, love and opinions.
She smiles when she feels like screaming.
She sings when she feels like crying, cries when happy and laughs when afraid.
She fights for what she believes in.
Her love is unconditional.
Her heart is broken when a next-of-kin or a friend dies but she finds strength to get on with life.”
The Angel asked: “So she is a perfect being?”
The lord replied: “No. She has just one drawback
She often forgets what she is worth.”