Friday, December 14, 2018

Snap thoughts

I was reading in the Houston Chronicle about Maria Butina. Spy stories are always super juicy. But this story involves the NRA, which is a landmine in my opinion. People seem to see the NRA as a villain, a scapegoat. And I'm reminded of something that my counselor shared mentioned, that some people are in it for their own selfish interests, to control other people. She was speaking of Christianity, but I'm realizing now that it applies to pretty much every institution. The NRA is a political organization, so that should be a given, but I often overlook such things.

The problem that see is that when it comes to gun control, the problem is bigger than the NRA. It's the second amendment, and what it means to a significant part of the population. The one side doesn't seem to understand what it means to the other. That this veers into strongly held beliefs territory.

I keep thinking that the left is going about things the wrong way. They need to reach out to the other side, not vilify it. I googled "you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar" and I found an interesting eecard here:


I don't have an answer.


Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Undocumented vs. Illegal

I have never been comfortable with the term undocumented in terms of immigration. To me it sounds like it's just a paperwork error. I have come to understand that the term illegal immigrant has fallen out of favor, with opponents saying that is dehumanizing. As near as I can tell, that doesn't apply if one uses the phrase illegal immigration or that a person entered the country illegally.

I did a quick Google search, and an article came up from the Washington Post. It helped educate me on some of the terms. Senator Kamala Harris said that undocumented immigrants are not criminals. And in a certain sense, she's right. The act of being in the country without permission is not a criminal matter, it is a civil one. But it's still a violation of law. And crossing the border illegally is a criminal offense. But technically, a person isn't a criminal until they've been convicted. So she can still say they aren't criminals if they haven't been caught. But that's pretty disingenuous in my opinion.

I came across another article from PolitiFact that further explains that the reason why immigration is a civil matter is because that makes it easier for the government to deal with. Because it isn't a criminal matter, there is no due process. The government doesn't have to provide a lawyer if the person cannot afford one. The burden is on the person to prove that they belong here, not the other way around.

But these articles are bringing up yet another term--criminality. Apparently criminal immigration is now a phrase. But these articles are basically saying that something can be illegal without being criminal, so they basically support the illegal label.

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

AI and Machine Learning

So how does one break into the Machine Learning field. This article provides some insight. Previously I looked at a Quora answer that I was thinking to link here, but now I think it's probably more worthwhile to link the question, How do I start learning artificial intelligence? There's lots of answers with lots of good stuff. Coursera courses are recommended, and Udacity, among others.