2017年1月29日 星期日

產業學界抗議Trump 禁移民; The University is a member of Association of American Universities (AAU), strongly support regarding the evolving immigration situation after the recent executive order

The CEOs of Google, Twitter, Facebook and Apple all issued statements condemning the ban and complaining that the order was pushed through so quickly it left great uncertainty about the status of some of their best employees.

Leaders in the U.S. tech sector say President Trump's executive order banning immigrants from some Muslim-majority countries will sow confusion…
NPR.ORG


Harvard University
“Benefiting from the talents and energy, the knowledge and ideas of people from nations around the globe is not just a vital interest of the University; it long has been, and it fully remains, a vital interest of our nation.” Read President Faust's letter to the Harvard community.


President Faust's letter to the community underscores that our international students and scholars are essential to our identity and excellence.
HARVARD.EDU

A message from Robert J. Zimmer, President, and Daniel Diermeier, Provost regarding immigration:
At this moment of national concern on matters of immigration, we are writing to reaffirm, in the strongest terms, the commitment of the University of Chicago to our international students, faculty, scholars, and staff as well as to those members of our community with undocumented immigration status or who qualify for relief under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. We are committed to continued deep engagement and active exchange with students, scholars, and visitors from across the globe.
Unnecessary restrictions on the flow of talented scholars and students into the United States damage the University’s capacity to fulfill its highest aspirations in research, education, and impact. This has been an important part of the University’s stance since its inception, and in the past decade we have actively sought to increase the presence on campus of those from around the world. We are committed to articulating the importance of this matter to policy makers, and we are committed to the direct support of those in our own community who may be affected by changes in current immigration policy.
The current situation is both fluid and of considerable uncertainty. The University has offered resources and support to individuals most directly impacted by the current climate and is working to provide additional resources to support members of our community through the Provost’s Office, the Office of Legal Counsel, the Office of Civic Engagement, and the Office of Global Engagement. The Office of International Affairs (OIA) website, https://internationalaffairs.uchicago.edu, is being updated as the situation develops and will provide details on information sessions for affected students and scholars that are being arranged with experts on immigration law.
The University is a member of Association of American Universities (AAU), a consortium of 62 leading research universities, which plays a significant role in advocacy regarding issues of common concern. The AAU issued a statement http://www.aau.edu/news/article.aspx?id=18366 which we strongly support regarding the evolving immigration situation after the recent executive order.
This is a challenging moment around an issue of critical importance for us all. We look forward to working together within the University and with partners outside the University to address the human and policy issues vital to the University’s ability to welcome scholars and students from all nations and backgrounds.

This message was sent to the campus community on January 29, 2017. To: Members of the University Community From: Robert J. Zimmer, President, and Daniel Diermeier, Provost Date: January 29, 2017 Subject: Message Regarding Immigration
NEWS.UCHICAGO.EDU

ACLU,The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)


The American Civil Liberties Union is a nonpartisan, non-profit organization whose stated mission is "to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in this country ... Wikipedia
FoundedJanuary 19, 1920

The ACLU Nationwide said it has received roughly 290,000 online donations totaling $19.4 million since Saturday morning.




Robert Reich
The ACLU is fighting to defend the rights of our Muslim brothers and sisters. Please donate to make sure the ACLU can continue the fight – at least until either Trump is deposed or we have a Congress with enough principled and courageous members to stop him (hopefully in 2018).


I just made a donation to the ACLU. They’re defending our fundamental freedoms, from free speech to reproductive rights, and they need our support. They’ll take on anyone who violates civil liberties—including Donald Trump.…
ACTION.ACLU.ORG

The American Civil Liberties Union said it would argue in U.S. District Court in New York at 7:30 p.m.


WWW.REUTERS.COM|由 REUTERS EDITORIAL 上傳

The right to bear arms. What the draftsmen of the United States Constitution originally meant

The right to bear arms, guaranteed by the second amendment in 1791, was not at that time conceived as a personal right. It did not apply to bearing a weapon for self-protection or hunting—it was intended to preserve the state militias that won the war for independence

How Baltimore Invented the Modern World


A good wrap-up of Baltimore's history and impact on the modern world, noting the beneficence of our founder and more in the latest issue of Baltimore magazine. Thanks, Baltimore magazine.
From the B&O Railroad to Frank Zappa, we chronicle all the ways Baltimore…
BALTIMOREMAGAZINE.NET|作者:BALTIMORE MAGAZINE
MAGAZINE FOOD & DRINK EVENTS NEWS & COMMUNITY PROMOTIONS BLOGS
BEST OF BALTIMORE ARTS & CULTURE HEALTH HOME SPORTS STYLE & SHOPPING TRAVEL BRIDE SUBSCRIBE

Written by Rafael Alvarez, Ron Cassie, Lauren Cohen, Bruce Goldfarb, Ronald Hube, Ken Iglehart,

Jane Marion, Jess Mayhugh, Amy Mulvihill, Gabriella Souza, Max Weiss, and Lydia Woolever

993


The birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution is tricky to get to. It’s not on any street map, but I can tell you how to find it. Take Lombard Street from downtown, continue past Hollins Market until you reach Monroe, and then make a left. After crossing the overpass, park at the City Farm-Carroll Park community garden. This is where it gets funky. You have to scramble down the hillside beneath the overpass, through woods and thicket—admittedly a surreal setting in West Baltimore—until you reach the clearing and train tracks.


If you go in the afternoon, follow the sun and tracks and start walking west. After a quarter of a mile, other tracks will merge into your path. You’ll pass a warehouse and a rusted steel edifice and start thinking you’ve gone too far and missed it. You haven’t. Amble on another five minutes, and suddenly what you’re looking for will pop into view on the right—a kelly-green, bellybutton-high metal box tagged with graffiti. Next to it, there’s a telephone pole tagged with graffiti, backed up by a stretch of abandoned boxcars and more graffiti, and behind that, a salvage yard.


It sounds underwhelming. The history born on this spot and marked by that green metal totem is anything but. Those tracks you’ve just walked down? Turn around. That rail line carried the first commercial passenger and freight trains in the United States. Turn back around, walk a little farther. See that? The 312-foot-long stone arch over the Gwynns Falls? That’s the Carrollton Viaduct. The first railroad bridge built in this country.


On July 4, 1828, Charles Carroll, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, put the first shovel into the dirt here for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. That green metal box is the exact location where the first stone, now kept in the B&O Railroad Museum on Pratt Street for safekeeping, was laid. (A replica sits inside the box). Three-fourths of Baltimore’s citizens gathered to celebrate the occasion with a four-hour parade. The 90-year-old Carroll told the crowd he considered the groundbreaking among the most important acts of his life, “second only to my signing of the Declaration of Independence, if even it be second to that.”


Two years later, the first 13-mile section reached the mills of Ellicott City with wagons pulled on the rails by horses. The steam engine was on its way, however. All along, Baltimore’s founding fathers, taking a tremendous risk on the untested railroad technology being developed in England, had hopes of extending the line through rocky Western Maryland and West Virginia (then Virginia) to the Ohio River. Still, it would take 25 years of hard labor and trial-and-error engineering before the first steam locomotive whistled through the Alleghenies and arrived in Wheeling on New Year’s Day, 1853. In terms of capital—and virtually every citizen of Baltimore had made an initial B&O stock purchase—nothing in the nation’s 75-year history came close to matching the cost of the $30 million project. But the city’s gambit to open the West and build on the economic advantage afforded by its inland, deep-water port would transform Baltimore, then the second-largest U.S. city, and the country like nothing else before or since.


It was an effort so bold, imaginative, and daunting that historian Herbert Harwood Jr. called it “the moonshot” of the 19th century.


When the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad became the first Eastern Seaboard line to reach the Midwest, it laid down the first link in a giant network that, after the Civil War, would integrate America into a single national economy. The B&O, of course, played a pivotal role in the Union victory, moving troops and delivering key intelligence, but it had also remained an innovator since its inception. The B&O made communication history when it became the first railroad to carry the U.S. mail in 1838. And then again, when it partnered with telegraph companies—the first communication technology of the Industrial Revolution—to string overhead wire next to its rail lines. (It is no coincidence that Samuel Morse’s first message in 1844—“What hath God wrought?”—sped in dots and dashes from the U.S. Capitol along the B&O’s right-of-way to Baltimore’s Mount Clare station.)


By the start of the 1860s, nearly 30,000 miles of rail and 50,000 miles of telegraph cable crisscrossed the country, obliterating previous conceptions of time and distance. In fact, it would be the railroad industry, in an attempt to standardize its schedules, which established the first U.S. time zones.


The launch of the B&0 was not the only seismic event in Baltimore in 1828, however. The formation that same year of an enormous real estate enterprise, the Canton Company—though not permanently memorialized like the B&O with a spot on the Monopoly board—would eventually remake Capt. John O’Donnell’s plantation into one of the great industrial waterfronts of the world. An Irish-born merchant seafarer and one of the richest men in the U.S. when he died, O’Donnell had amassed his 18th century fortune through trade in the Far East—including teas, silks, spices, and opium—naming his estate after the Chinese port.





The cornerstone of the B&O, now displayed at the B&O Railroad Museum, was laid July 4, 1828. Ninety-year-old Charles Carroll, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, told the crowd he considered the groundbreaking among the most important acts of his life, “second only to my signing of the Declaration of Independence, if even it be second to that.


A brief history: The incorporation of the B&O had sparked talk of an economic boom in the pubs, parlors, and boardrooms of Baltimore. In the spring of 1828, Columbus O’Donnell, the captain’s eldest son, and William Patterson, donor of the first acres of the park that bears his name, met with Peter Cooper, a New York capitalist and inventor, to pitch their plan to buy all of the property from Fells Point to Lazaretto Point—the entrance of the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel today. Convinced of the benefits the B&O would endow to Baltimore’s port, Cooper bought a major stake (the only stake, it would later turn out) in the new Canton development corporation, which was given the right to purchase up to 10,000 acres by the state of Maryland. Think Port Covington times 40 in a city with 80,000 people. Two years later, worried his entire investment would be lost as the B&O struggled to create a viable steam engine, it was the polymath Cooper who took it upon himself to design and construct the first successful American-built locomotive—aka the Tom Thumb.


(According to lore, Cooper’s coal-burning prototype raced a horse-drawn car to prove its worth, leaving its steed-powered competitor in the dust before a belt snapped. Bottom line: Although the Tom Thumb lost the race from Ellicott City to Baltimore, Cooper’s steam engine design won the day.)


“I call 1828 the ‘big bang.’ That was the year it all came together and Peter Cooper’s the lynchpin,’’ says Raymond Bahr, a retired physician, Canton native, and local historian, who hopes to create a museum in Canton honoring the community’s industrial past. “Between the B&O and the Canton Company, which is the earliest, largest, and most successful industrial park in America, Baltimore stands at the intersection of U.S. commerce and trade, and technological advances in transportation and communication.”


With its world-renowned Clipper ships, Baltimore already led the nation in shipbuilding when the Canton Company was launched. The USS Constellation, the first U.S. Navy ship ever to set sail, had also been built in a shipyard at Canton’s Harris Creek—the shipyard and creek both long since buried beneath the Boston Street Safeway.




In 1828, new Canton Company development corporation, was given the right to purchase up to 10,000 acres by the state of Maryland,and it became the earliest, largest, and most successful industrial park in the U.S.


In the ensuing decades, the Canton Company slowly began to lease, sell, and develop its vast holdings. At its peak, it owned a swath of land that stretched from Fells Point to Patterson Park—across all of Highlandtown—to the Baltimore County line. Not long after the Canton Company was founded, nearby oyster beds and the city’s expanding rail and labor force would establish the city, and Southeast Baltimore in particular, as the canning center of the U.S. (See: the American Can Company complex.)


Shipbuilding, lumber, iron, coal, and canning companies followed on the waterfront—as well as cotton duck and steel-rolling mills, distilleries, beer makers on Brewers Hill—and the largest U.S. copper smelting plant. Some 69 manufacturing companies were in business by 1871. The Canton Company built wharves and piers and initiated two railroad ventures of its own the Union, later bought by the Northern Central, and the Canton Railroad. If you’ve ever kayaked in the harbor off the Canton Waterfront Park and wondered about the towering steel structure in the water there, it’s the remnant of a massive lift that once pulled railcars—crossing on barges from Locust Point—onto Canton trains.


Major oil refineries arrived, too. Up until 1925, Oklahoma crude was still being sent via pipeline to Baltimore for refinement in Canton.


But the Canton Company was developing more than just an industrial powerhouse. It laid out Southeast Baltimore’s familiar grid streets and its iconic—and then inexpensive—rowhouses for its blue-collar workers. (The proximity of Baltimore’s industry and marble rowhouse stoops in neighborhoods like Canton would prove a bonanza for Bon Ami cleaning powder.)


And, now long forgotten, Canton even flourished as a thriving summer destination. With music and dance halls, roller coasters, a roller rink, a shooting gallery, taverns, restaurants, and a swimming pier, it was billed as “the Coney Island of the South,” drawing 600,000 visitors a season at the turn of the 20th century.


The intertwined origin stories of the B&O and the Canton Company are crucial to understanding the history of Baltimore—and subsequently the United States—because nearly everything that happened during the city’s boom over the next century and a half is connected, one way or another, to those two landmark events. George Peabody, William Walters, and Enoch Pratt were each involved with the B&O. Johns Hopkins became one of the directors of the railroad in 1847 and bequeathed his vast B&O stock holdings to fund the city’s elite university and hospital.


The immigration pier at Locust Point—the second or third busiest in the country (depending on the year)—was built by the B&O after the Civil War, delivering thousands of Eastern and Central European workers into the port’s factories. That pier also welcomed the German-born Otto Mergenthaler, who would invent the modern typesetting machine and send U.S. literacy rates skyrocketing. It also welcomed Sen. Barbara Mikulski’s Polish Catholic grandparents and Sen. Ben Cardin’s Jewish grandparents.


When Bethlehem Steel joined the industrialization of the port in 1916, it amassed the largest steel plant in the world at Sparrows Point.


Those jobs, as well as others around the port—at General Motors, Lever Brothers, Western Electric, in the rail yards—also attracted African Americans to Baltimore. It’s no surprise that both Thurgood Marshall and his father worked for the B&O.





– Sean McCabe


It is also no surprise that Baltimore, so long on the cutting edge of modern America—from the moonshot of the B&O to the camera that captured Neil Armstrong walking on the moon—produced so many peerless innovators. It’s a list that includes geniuses as varied as Abel Wolman, who perfected purified public drinking water, and Eubie Blake, whose hands are enshrined in plaster casts at the National Museum of African American History and Culture.


In the following pages, we list 110 ways that Baltimore helped invent modern America. The number is a nod to Baltimore ’s 110th anniversary as the oldest continually published city magazine in the country. More importantly, the list is a reminder that Baltimore was—and is—one of America’s greatest cities. We tried to put the city’s most prominent contributions up top, but the list is largely chronological. We don’t pretend to be able to discern whether the invention of the electric streetcar is more significant than the invention of the submarine, or whether Billie Holiday or the Baltimore Colts had a more profound cultural impact. What we do know is that in Baltimore, we walk in the footsteps of giants every day.




—Ron Cassie

2017年1月28日 星期六

Philip Roth Calls Trump an Ignorant Con Man With ‘Vocabulary of 77 Words’




Excluded from Trump's list of restricted countries are several majority-Muslim nations where the Trump Organization is active.

The seven nations named in executive order don’t include countries with…
WASHINGTONPOST.COM|作者:ROSALIND HELDERMAN



Novelist Philip Roth has lashed out at President Trump as an ignorant “con man” who could do untold damage to the country.
FORWARD.COM



In the past 40 years, there has been not a single fatal terrorist attack in America carried out by anyone belonging to the seven nationalities targeted by the order

The president gets tough on refugees
ECONOMIST.COM

Airport Detentions of Muslim Travelers Spark Class-Action Suit. Trump Visa Ban 七個以穆斯林為主的國家的公民移民禁令與科技公司


Ghassan Assali, a Syrian dentist in Allentown, Pennsylvania, who worships at a local Roman Orthodox Church, was en route to pick up his relatives when he received a call informing him that they had been barred from entering the country. A few hours later, one of Mr. Assali’s brothers called from the airplane. Everyone was on a plane back to Doha, Qatar, from where they had flown to the U.S.
President Donald Trump’s order to immediately halt refugee resettlement and the U.S. entry of nationals from several predominantly Muslim…
WSJ.COM|由 MIRIAM JORDAN 上傳




特朗普下移民禁令 谷歌緊急召回出國員工

在美國總統特朗普宣佈關於限制移民入境的新規定之後,美國科技公司谷歌已經召回目前正在國外出差旅行的員工。
此前,特朗普簽署行政命令,對七個以穆斯林為主的國家的公民採取入境限制。
其中包括禁止敘利亞難民入境,何時解禁要等待後續通知。
另外六個國家,包括伊朗和伊拉克的公民,90日之內禁止入境美國。
美國接受難民計劃將暫停120日,接受難民人數最高上限也下調為五萬人。

高科技人才

美國科技公司谷歌對BBC表示,他們擔心這道行政命令可能會阻擋(高科技)人才進入美國工作。
谷歌CEO桑達·皮採在給僱員的備忘錄中說,大約有187名員工受到移民新規定影響,已經有一名正在新西蘭度假的員工緊急暫停假期趕回美國。
美國科技業公司目前通過特別的H1-B簽證,從世界各國聘僱高科技人才到美國工作。
新的行政命令對這些通過H1-B簽證聘僱全球高科技人才的美國科技業公司可能有重大影響。
有報道說,擁有美國永居身份的「綠卡」持有者因為這道行政命令而無法登機飛往美國,但是行政命令內文中並沒有特別提到綠卡,因此綠卡持有者目前的處境仍不清楚。
周六(1月28日),從開羅飛往紐約的一架航班,有幾名伊拉克和也門的旅客被迫無法登機,儘管他們都持有有效的美國入境簽證。
美國伊斯蘭關係協會(CAIR)勸告目前在美國的這七個國家的公民,只要沒有拿到美國公民身份,不管有沒有永久居留權,最好在90天之內都不要出國,以免再次入境美國時遭遇困難和麻煩。

Critics said it appears that President Trump is picking favorites and overlooking terrorist links in countries such as Saudi Arabia and Turkey that have their own history of terrorism.

The executive action targets seven majority-Muslim countries, but not six others where the president's private businesses are engaged.
NPR.ORG


Citizens of the seven countries identified by President Donald Trump for a 90-day visa ban who hold dual nationality also will be barred from entering the United States, the U.S. State Department said in a statement Saturday.


Citizens of the seven countries identified by President Donald Trump for a…
WSJ.COM|作者:TAMER EL-GHOBASHY


2017年1月27日 星期五

Mexico–United States barrier: Donald Trump 要建長城 ;Mexico's President Says 'I Regret and Reject' Plan for Border Wall;關於選票舞弊,川普繼續說謊




2017年除夕,讀到John Berger 在2011年寫/讀的 Fellow Prisoner。其中一段:
Over six million Mexican women and men work in the US without papers and are consequently illegal. A concrete wall of over one thousand kilometers and a “virtual” wall of eighteen hundred watchtowers were planned along the frontier between the US and Mexico, although the projects have recently been scrapped. Ways around them—though all of them dangerous—will of course be found.


初一,查Mexico–United States barrier - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MexicoUnited_States_barrier
The Mexico–United States barrier is a series of walls and fences along the Mexico–United States border aimed at preventing illegal crossings from Mexico into the United States and vice versa.[1] The barrier is not one continuous structure, but a grouping of relatively short physical walls, secured in between with a "virtual fence" which includes a system of sensors and cameras monitored by the United States Border Patrol.[2] As of January 2009, U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported that it had more than 580 miles (930 km) of barriers in place.[3]

Who will really fund Donald J. Trump's border wall?

Berlin knows a thing or two about walls.


"We in Berlin know best how much suffering the separation of a continent by…
WASHINGTONPOST.COM|作者:RICK NOACK




ABC News
Mexican Pres. Enrique Peña Nieto speaks out against Pres. Donald J. Trump's plan to build border wall, saying he rejects the move. "Mexico does not believe in walls."




Mexico's President Says 'I Regret and Reject' Plan for Border Wall
ABCNEWS.GO.COM|由 ABC NEWS 上傳





~~~~~



Asked about President Trump's latest mention of this unproven claim, White House press secretary Sean Spicer affirmed that "the president does believe that." But there is no evidence.



Trump repeated the unproven claim to congressional leaders on Monday, and his press secretary on Tuesday affirmed "the president does believe that."
NPR.ORG


The New York Times Chinese -Traditional 紐約時報中文網
川普總統宣稱有300萬到500萬的非法移民把票投給了希拉蕊,致使他未能贏得普選。白宮新聞發言人斯派塞也支持了這一說法,並提出兩項研究作為依據。
但通過事實核查可以發現,這兩項研究均無法支持川普的說法。其中一項研究更是建立在錯誤的數據基礎上,已經受到了政治學者的嚴厲指責。
而在國會山莊,川普的共和黨同僚也沒有支持他。


川普繼續堅稱有數百萬人的投票無效,因此他不僅贏得了選舉人團,也贏得了普選的多數。但並無證據支持這種說法。國會共和黨人也基本不贊同。
CN.NYTSTYLE.COM

~~~~
川普上任之後,雖然很多人唱衰他,
但對於競選承諾,川普可是非常有行動力的!
繼簽署了退出TPP的文件後,
今天還準備簽署建美墨邊境的邊境牆文件,
同時還準備下令禁止敘利亞難民進入美國,
並縮減「易有恐怖活動」國家難民移入......

2016.1.25
紐約時報
President Trump on Wednesday will sign an executive order to direct funds to the building of a wall on the Mexican border, a signature issue of his campaign.



2016.8月

因為美國總統​​候選人之一Donald Trump有此一政見......

此類投資專案(如近來的拆掉台北車站重蓋多功能大樓)的(政)經濟分析,通常屬於所謂的"工程經濟"學,此是陳寬仁老師之"專業"之一。

Building a wall 1,000 miles long and 40 feet high would require $711m worth of concrete and $240m of cement
The economics of Donald Trump's wall
Building materials companies are poised to profit if Donald Trump builds his wall
ECONOMIST.COM