New comment by sebastianconcpt in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (August 2023)"

  Location: Brazil
  Remote: Yes
  Willing to relocate: we can discuss about it.
  Technologies: Full-stack with JavaScript, Smalltalk, Rust, Swift

In 2008 I’ve implemented a SaaS as a solo-founder in Brazil (very good LTV, shutdown in 2015).

Résumé/CV:

  http://sebastiansastre.co/cv

  https://github.com/sebastianconcept

  Email: sebastianconcept [at] gmail com

Rand Paul lambasts Fauci for getting 'treated like a president' with taxpayer-funded security

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., expressed outrage over new revelations that recently-retired ex-NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci is privy to a taxpayer-reimbursed security detail.

Documents obtained by “Jesse Watters Primetime” from the U.S. Marshals Service through a request described how the marshals took over that responsibility from the Department of Health & Human Services at the beginning of 2023.

Paul sent a letter to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra in June requesting additional details about Fauci’s current employment status and special taxpayer-funded benefits.

On “Jesse Watters Primetime,” host Jesse Watters said a source’s tip led to a FOIA request to the U.S. Marshals that revealed the security detail for Fauci.

FAUCI STILL GETTING US MARSHAL SECURITY DETAIL ON TAXPAYERS DIME DESPITE RETIREMENT: DOCS

Watters reported the documents also stated Fauci’s perks include limousine transportation.

Paul said he also was told Fauci still has a detail, and that he questioned HHS about it.

“HHS actually came back to us and said they haven’t been paying for it since January. But then we discovered that Fox did a Freedom of Information Act and a judge forced them to say that, well, while HHS wasn’t directly funding it, the U.S. Marshals were funding it,” he said.

Paul said the federal officials told him they weren’t directly paying for it, but that, in the senator’s words, “somebody else is doing it and then we’re reimbursing them.”

“So it’s a terrible example of the government lying to its representatives and to the people. But also, why is a retired guy, the only retired official I know of that gets this kind of treatment is a former president,” Paul added.

EX-CDC DIRECTOR SAYS UNREDACTED FAUCI EMAILS REVEAL AGRESSIVE ATTEMPT TO CHANGE NARRATIVE

“So I have no idea why this bureaucrat still has a limo driver security detail.”

Paul wondered aloud if Fauci also gets pro bono legal representation in retirement as well, quipping the doctor may need it one day.

The senator said Fauci’s wealth increased 30% during the pandemic, and that he should be able to afford his own security without expending taxpayer funds.

By the end of his 54-year career in the bureaucracy, Fauci rose to become the highest-paid federal official. 

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The doctor and the senator also often sparred while he was at NIAID, with Paul once asking if he wished to revise past testimony to Congress based on new revelations at the time, while Fauci notably once declared the Kentuckian – who is a doctor of ophthalmology – had “no idea what he was talking about” when it came to his medical analysis of the coronavirus.

Fauci has since been replaced at NIAID in an acting capacity by Dr. Hugh Auchincloss, an immunologist and father of Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Mass.

Fox News’ Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

Nango (YC W23) Is Hiring a Founding Engineer (full-stack/back end)

Article URL: https://nango.dev/jobs

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35491192

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Big Labor Strikes Back in Michigan Against Right to Work

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New comment by ucyo in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (December 2022)"

Location: Karlsruhe, Germany Remote: Yes Willing to Relocate: Possible Technologies: Python | Rust | WASM | Geoscience | Data Compression Resume/CV: Upon request Email: cayoglu at lavabit dot com Github: https://github.com/ucyo/ The post New comment by ucyo in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (December 2022)" appeared first on ROI Credit Builders.

New comment by ubmit in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (September 2022)"

Location: Porto, Portugal

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: Maybe

Technologies: JavaScript, TypeScript, React, HTML, CSS, Git

Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xEqksrpqtYPIXa-Sz3TXyaxOUqK…

Email: guilhermedeandrade@proton.me

GitHub: https://github.com/guilhermedeandrade

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andradedeguilherme

Railway Labor Unions reach deal

Negotiators have just hammered out a tentative deal to prevent a railway strike that could have devastated our economy.

All 13 railway unions in the U.S. have reached agreements with the railroads. News of the deal came just hours before a midnight deadline, preventing the first railway strike in 30 years.

Professor Allan Zarembski is the Director of Railway Engineering at The University of Delaware. He says the railway plays a major role in U.S. transport. 

RAILROAD UNION VOTES TO AUTHORIZE STRIKE THAT COULD HAMMER ECONOMY

“If we were to look worldwide, we see railroads always playing a key role in the movement of passengers and movement of goods,” Zarembski said. 

The negotiations over a new contract begun nearly 3 years ago. Unions demanded raises, better attendance policies, vacation days and sick days.

“The recommendations of the Presidential Emergency Board looked at both sides and said ‘Yes, labor has a point, management has a point, and this is what we will recommend in-between,’” Zarembski said. 

After 20 straight hours of negotiating, the new contracts give 24% pay increases through 2024, with a 14.1% wage increase effective immediately, and five annual $1,000 lump sum payments.

RAIL STRIKE AVERTED, TENTATIVE AGREEMENT REACHED

The new deal stopped a national rail strike that would have affected more than 60,000 railway employees, stopping more than 7,000 trains, and possibly costing the U.S. Economy up to $2 billion per day.

In a statement, Union Pacific, says in part: “All tentative agreements are subject to ratification by unions’ memberships.”

Book banning in America: Censoring literature in US dates back centuries, but this time is different: experts

Thomas Morton, an Englishman who traveled to Plymouth Colony in 1622, wasted no time in clashing with his strait-laced Pilgrim neighbors, leading a nearby village called Merrymount of fellow English miscreants and Algonquian Indians. 

Dubbed the “Lord of Misrule” by Plymouth Colony Governor William Bradford, Morton and his followers affixed antlers to the top of an 80-foot maypole, around which they hosted a festival with dancing and drinking that was no doubt sinful by Puritan standards. 

After being banished from the colonies multiple times and traveling back to England, Morton wrote the “New English Canaan” around 1633 about his travails across the pond, a book that offered a scathing critique of the Pilgrims and is widely considered to be the first banned book in America. 

Morton returned to the colonies 10 years later, but his reputation preceded him, and Massachusetts leaders exiled him to what would eventually become Maine due to the “mocking accusations Morton had hurled against them in print,” University of Southern California history professor Peter Mancall writes in “The Trials of Thomas Morton.”

While it’s been nearly four centuries since Morton’s magnum opus was banned, the urge to censor has not disappeared in America, and has erupted in K-12 schools during the 21st century. 

The American Library Association reports that nearly 1,600 individual books were challenged or removed in libraries and schools in 2021, the highest number since the ALA started tracking bans three decades ago. 

“There has been an unprecedented increase in the number of challenges reported,” Deborah Caldwell-Stone, the director of the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom, told Fox News Digital. “We are receiving multiple challenge reports on a daily basis when we used to maybe get two or three reports a week.”

INDIANA BASED GRASSROOTS ORGANIZATION TRAINS SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATES TO ‘RESTORE ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE’

Most of the challenges in recent years have come from conservative parents who object to LGBTQ content and topics that cover racial issues in a way that they see as divisive. 

Book bans come from across the political spectrum though. 

“To Kill a Mockingbird” – the 1960 Pulitzer-prize winning novel by Harper Lee that has been a staple in high school classrooms for decades – was #7 on ALA’s list of the most banned books as recently as 2020. 

The classic American novel was removed from the 9th-grade reading list by a Seattle-area school board earlier this year for its use of the N-word and what some community members see as an antiquated portrayal of racial issues. 

In other instances, book bans cut both ways. A school district in Texas temporarily removed 41 books from library shelves last month that were challenged by community members. Among the challenged titles were books with LGBTQ themes like “All Boys Aren’t Blue,” but also “Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation” and even the Bible. 

“Whether you’re liberal or conservative, you need to understand that that that ax swings two ways,” Will Creeley, the legal director at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, told Fox News Digital. “No matter what your values are, teaching a generation of students to call the proverbial speech police if they encounter ideas they don’t agree with – that’s setting ourselves up for problems down the line.” 

UTAH STATE SCHOOL BOARD APPROVED CHANGES THAT GIVE PARENTS MORE OF A VOICE IN THE CLASSROOM

Some view this new front of the culture war as a symptom of America’s one-size-fits-all education system, which forces parents to send their kids to certain public schools for seemingly arbitrary reasons like the zip code where they reside, as opposed to the educational values they aspire to. 

The implementation of school choice polices, which allows parents to decide how taxpayer funds for their children’s education are spent, would allow families to pick and choose schools that are more closely aligned with their values, according to Neal McCluskey, the Director of the libertarian Cato Institute’s Center for Educational Freedom. 

“It fundamentally changes what the education money does or how it’s allocated. Right now, what happens is people get taxed at the local, state, and federal level and that money goes to public schools, so that if you want to use that money, you have got to use those schools. But that means diverse people are all being pushed into one school, and that’s what leads to conflicts,” McCluskey told Fox News Digital. 

“Choice says: Let’s have the money follow kids. A corollary to that is let’s give educators the autonomy to start different schools, run different schools.” 

School choice is an umbrella term that refers to the many vehicles for transferring power from state boards to parents. Vouchers allow parents to put public funding that was set aside for their children’s education toward private school tuition. Education savings accounts take things a step further, allowing families to use those funds for anything from tutoring to curriculum used at home. 

“What that does is it ends the conflict, at least it ends the need for conflict. Instead of saying you all have to fight to grab the brass ring, it says go seek whatever ring you want, go find a school that is consistent with your values,” McCluskey said. 

“Everybody gets to do that, rather than everybody has to be put into an arena to battle for control of a single school.”

THE SECRETS OF SAVING MONEY ON BACK-TO-SCHOOL ITEMS AMID TODAY’S HIGH INFLATION

While battles over book bans have mostly brewed at the local and state level, First Lady Jill Biden chimed in on the issue last week. 

“All books should be in the library. All books,” she told NBC News. “This is America. We don’t ban books.”

Former First Lady Melania Trump had her own brush with challenges to books in 2017, when she sent a collection of 10 Dr. Seuss books to schools around the nation for “National Read a Book Day.” 

Liz Phipps Soeiro, a school librarian at Cambridgeport Elementary School in Massachusetts, rejected the books and sent them back to Trump, writing in the Horn Book Blog that her library didn’t need them and that “Dr. Seuss’s illustrations are steeped in racist propaganda, caricatures, and harmful stereotypes.”

Battles over book bans exist along a sliding scale, from a librarian rejecting books, to a school district pulling books challenged by parents, to state legislatures implementing policies outright banning specific titles. 

Caldwell-Stone, the head of ALA’s Office of Intellectual Freedom, said that government-mandated censorship is the most concerning category. 

“Any individual, any parent has the right and the ability to raise concerns about a school assignment or a book,” she said. 

“That’s the First Amendment right to petition a government agency, but we are deeply concerned about efforts by elected officials, governing bodies that are governed by the First Amendment, that are censoring materials based on their viewpoint, or because they deal with a controversial topic in a way that they may not always agree with.”

New comment by lpundock in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (June 2022)"

*[HIRING] [FULL-TIME] [FULL-REMOTE]*

* Nav is growing :seedling: and we’re hiring for Engineers (Sr. Staff and Sr. Staff level) and Engineering Leaders (100% remote in the US OR in office PA, UT, CA). *

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*Who is Nav?* Nav is the largest marketplace of curated financial products for Small Businesses. Nav uses real business data and proprietary scoring to quickly match borrower qualifications with the best business loans and credit cards. Nav offers a unique, free Financial Health dashboard showing credit and cash flow insights alongside recommended financing options. In addition to aggregating traffic directly, Nav’s platform seamlessly integrates within other software and websites, making it the leading Embedded Finance solution for SMBs. We are profitable and backed by Point72 Ventures, Goldman Sachs, and Experian.

*Tech Stack: *Backend- Go, Python, Ruby, and Elixir; Frontend- React, Node.js, GraphQL; Orchestration & Shared – Containerization – Kubernetes & Docker, SCM – GitLab, AWS Cloud, Linux environment; Database- PostgreSQL; CRM & Reporting- Salesforce (Apex, Lightning), Tableau, Tealium.

*No 3rd parties or agencies please. Due to contractual obligations, we can only hire in the US.

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