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Deadlock Bzzz! Bzzz! The alarm went off, and Susan Calvin rolled over.
Deadlock
“Bzzz! Bzzz!” The alarm went off, and Susan Calvin rolled over. It was 6:30 in the morning, and RoboTimer(tm) had done its job admirably, waking her up to the second of the time that it had been factory-programmed. Unfortunately, it hadn’t been set to the correct date, and when it announced “Saturday, December 14th! Good morning!” in a load cheery tone, she groaned out load with the realization that it was Saturday, and after that affair with the hyperdrive motor, she wanted to sleep in, since it she had just come back to earth.
“I hate this stupid robot!” she yelled out loud, then suddenly closed her mouth.
For Susan Calvin had just remembered that her pact with the Satan’s, as she thought of them, known to the robotics world as the team of Powell and Donovan. She stretched, rolled out of bed, and went downstairs, wrapping a robe around her as she went, to get some coffee. “Well, since I’m already up, I might as well take a look at the rest of those Rasssjemani-Quazaric-Smith Equations and see why they were causing all those robots to go psycho,” she thought. “Good thing that U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men hushed up that little incident, I’d be out of a job if the whole world, the xenophobic and primally-fearful lot of them, knew about that!” As she got out and buttered her toast, she mulled the day ahead of her in her mind. Weekends were never truly weekends for Susan Calvin, as she was forced to work for most of the weekend, with her only respite being Sunday, which she was allowed to come in an hour late for. However, she usually found herself working late into the night on Sundays, out of an artificially induced guilt that she knew was not real, but could do nothing to correct.
After being driven to work (working for the company that produced every
MechTaxi(tm) in existence did have some perks after all), greeting the doorman, and going up to her office, Susan Calvin was ready to look at those equations! She only needed a small period of time to warm up, and the wakeup-breakfast-come to work routine sufficed.
Almost as soon as she had sat down to work, the Founder of U.S. Robots came in and said, “I need to speak with you, Calvin. There’s been more reports in across the nation of those psycho robots, all of them with positronic brains built using the Rasssjemani-Quazaric-Smith Equations. We will be ruined, and drawn and quartered by the masses if we don’t start hushing this up again and fix that problem!” Susan smiled at him, with an evil glint in her eye. “Junk the equations. They are obviously unstable. Why do you bother me with this? I am not even a full-time mathematician! Have completely new equations written up, not those kludges that the robots have been running on since the late nineties almost!”
The Founder laughed, his white beard and flowing locks shaking slowly as his chest vibrated. “That is possibly the first joke I have heard you crack in the thirty years we have been at this company that I founded!” He paused. “It is a joke, right?” he whispered. When Susan shook her head, he simply stared at her, astonished, with a growing look of perplexity spreading across his face. “You do understand what would be entailed in the creation of an entirely new set of robotic codes, right? The hackneyed name of the last ones show by their complexity that it took a group of seven hundred men an entire year to build the codes! They are the building blocks of everything that we now know of the various fields of Robotics! You, yourself, would become useless, with all your knowledge outdated! Rasssjemani, Quazaric, and Smith were only the principal authors of the code, all of them geniuses! There are not even three geniuses in the field of robotics alive today!” He paused for breath after this long exposition, and Susan Calvin stepped in with some comments of her own.
“Calm yourself, man! I was just offering a suggestion! I have been making the same type of suggestions such as those for the last thirty years!”
“If you had made suggestions such as that all the time, you would not be here after thirty years! You must be losing it, Calvin!”
“I am the chief robotics in the entire field, and you are treating me as if I know nothing at all of the field!”
“You are the field, Calvin! Don’t kid yourself, you are the only rob psychologist in the entire world, and a decreasingly useful one at that! Why do you think there is only one? There is no need for one even!”
“Hah! You pathetic Moses imitator, you don’t fool me, your entire education consists of a G.E.D.! And you were born when they still had G.E.D.s! So don’t say I’m useless, I’m not trying to create the next generation of mechanical men without a college diploma!”
At this the Founder left the room, swearing vengeance in his mind against all
Rob psychologists, then correcting himself and remembering that there was only one. Susan Calvin sat down, realizing that this day might be her last with the company that she had served so faithfully. Sadly, so called over her robotic child, Eddie, and sat all of his 400 pounds on her lap. Groaning slightly, she told him that she wasn’t going to be seeing him anymore, but she would be back someday to see him again.
“But Mommy! I’ll miss you! And what will they do with me once you’re gone? They’ll junk me! Mommy, don’t let them hurt me!” And he went on like this for hours, but the end of which they were both crying.
“Don’t worry, the only reason I’m leaving is because of some stupid man here who hates me, and won’t listen to reason!” She cried, and thought of all the happy times she’d had at the factory…
Then she remembered. Remembered everything. About the pact with the Satan’s, and how she had prayed every day to be released from her job, as that was the only way she could be free forever. She got up, knocked the heavy childish robot aside, packed up her desk, and walked out.
Just then, as she was walking home, something appeared in front of her. She thought she might be hallucinating, since it had been a long stressful day, until she thought of the way that the team of Donovan and Powell had come to propose the ill-fated deal to her. She groaned out “Leave me alone, please!” and fell to the ground. The now fully formed ghostly team grinned at each other, grabbed her, and carried her back to her house.
Susan regained consciousness lying on her couch, to see the two men walking around her living room, critiquing her design taste.
“Rather homely designs, don’t you think, Powell?” “Oh stopit, you crazy redhead! She hasn’t had anyone over she had to impress for the last 20 years I’d bet!” Susan reached over, and grabbed the two men from her position on the couch my arms, and made them come closer. “Well,” she asked, “what is it? My pact with you is dissolved, and I shall see robots nevermore. Goodbye.” She got up to leave, and was stopped firmly by the hand of Powell, who reached out while Donovan was still getting up. “Sit down, the agreement does not release you that easily! As you recall, U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men must release you, you can’t quit!” Calvin sat down and began to speak. “After today, I think that as soon as I call the office, the first message they will give me will be the date of my official retirement! You should have seen that fight I had with the Founder!” However, here she was cut off. “So, you are saying that you were the one who provoked the fight, and therefore you will not be released from your agreement!” “This is ridiculous! I did nothing of the kind!
Susan Calvin took of the helmet, and breathed a sigh of relief. “I am tired of these new virtual reality dream simulators. The private sector may just have to own up that there really is absolutely no use for mind-reading machines in commercial life. Everything is either an invasion of privacy, or it simply scares the customer. And did you see how foolish and emotional I was in that?!” She walked away from the machines, her guides in the factory arguing heatedly with her, as they showed her the new applications for mind-reading that they had extracted from the data that she had given to them from her work on finding the cause of the defect in the positron brain of the mind-reading robot that she had worked with so many years ago, and had thought that she had killed.
Congress The ultimate responsibility of a member of the Congress is to vote on a wide variety of bills
Political Science
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Congress
The ultimate responsibility of a member of the Congress is to vote on a wide variety of bills, motions and amendments. Members of the Congress take voting seriously as the overall average rate of participation is around 95% of all votes held. Among the questions that members are asked to vote to include the gun control, school safety, abortion rights, education assistance, environmental programs, social security reform as well as the Medicare costs. Before the major voting, the members get overwhelmed with the different opinions that are sent months, weeks, days or even hours prior to voting. The offices of the Congress receive mailbags that are full of letters, faxes, emails as well as phone calls from the constituents expressing the wide thoughts of their conflicting opinions. The members receive statements from the expert witnesses testifying before the congressional hearings, special interest groups also contribute by sending up the background material. The congressional agencies provide the members with reports and studies while the colleagues in the Congress also send letters to which contain recommendations and the administration weighs in its position.
How a member does decides to vote
The question arising here is how then after obtaining all these materials and information with the conflicting voices, does a member of the Congress make his or her voting decision? People tend to claim that the members prefer voting according to their political affiliations or the special interest groups while others believe that the members vote according to how they deem it to be fit regardless of all the pressure that is put on to them. The decision on voting involves a complex process to which members interact among themselves and a variety of influences including the president, constituents and the party leaders. Special interest groups, the media along with the political contributors are among the groups to which are consulted in the process of decision making. The decision making process is a solo responsibility and therefore cannot be easily categorized, but there are some factors that are usually present during the process of decision making.
Information gathering is an important aspect of the decision-making process. Members become familiar with the main arguments that are being offered by the various sides that are surrounding the public policy issue. The arguments may get based on the constitutional or the legal analyses, on statistics or on the data compilations, on the moral or ethical basis or on the public policy arguments. During the review of the above materials, the members also get to pay attention to factors such as costs of the taxpayers, overall social benefit and the perceived consequences on the future. The members are privileged to obtain neutral objective research and analysis from the congressional research services, a non-partisan in-house of staff experts. The committee reports, editorials, newspaper articles also provide the members with a sense of the main argument surrounding the issue. The members also may choose to rely on the information to which is provided by the advocacy organizations such as special groups or the trade associations based on the issue at hand. The members are accountable to their constituents and others for each vote and are therefore regularly asked to explain why they voted in the manner they did.
Constituency interests are among the factors that influence the decisions of the members. The members tend to spend most of their time in seeking the accurate idea of how the majority of their constituents feel about the prospected legislative proposals and therefore do not fully rely on the correspondence or the calls that made by their offices for they understand that majority of the constituents won’t make the initiative to contact them. The members are also aware that the constituents along with other interest groups with passionate views on a subject will organize mass mailings or calls to which may not apply to the case reflecting the interests of the constituents. Majority of the members, therefore, engage actively to a broad spectrum of the electorate to listen to their constituent’s views, following closely the public views and opinions as they are keenly aware that they have a responsibility to reflect the viewpoint of a majority of their electorate.
The members of the Congress relies heavily on expert opinions as the congressional issues are so many and often so complex and that their wide range may fall outside the individual member’s expertise thus the need to seek for consultation. Consultation with the experts often helps the members to be informed relying on the expert recommendations and colleagues within the Congress and whose judgments and specialization in particular issues are respected.
Political ramifications tend to also contribute to the decision of the members. The majority and minority leadership in Congress make certain that their members fully understand the party’s positions on particular issues supplying their own research and analysis to their members, therefore, promoting specific arguments and positions. The political influence of the president is also very important. The president has a bully pulpit from which the nation’s agenda is set and appealing directly to the American citizens to support his positions.
After considering all the information provided, both from the constituents and from the experts, the member can now make his personal judgment according to what he deems to be right. The core beliefs of the members may be influenced by religious faith or secular ethics. The issues with moral components do not confine the members to partisan categories. Other factors that may influence personal judgment include ethnic heritage, family or gender.
The process of voting is vital as it seeks to represent even the generations to come and that’s why it calls for proper consultation before the implantation of a certain issue. The members have to seek proper guidance in order to arrive at a better conclusion that is free from bias, greed and represents the interests of the constituents to which they get to represent. Members of the public need to be much involved in the decision making as they are mostly affected by the issues passed in the House of Representatives and therefore their vote should count as the majority.
Public Criticisms of Congress
The public criticism on to the Congress has now for a long time provided to some extent to the public as well as notifying the public of the selfish interest of the Congress. It is always obvious that the issue of criticism arises from the wrong things that are done and to which need to be rectified to seem better. One of the biggest public critics on the Congress is the political cartoons to which depict the various selfish interests of the politicians on different occasions.
For one occasion, the Congress from the different states has not united an event that seemed to attract the public interest. It is always good for the political unity for a nation to develop and when a country is divided, the development agendas are always invited creating a rift to progression. In criticizing the act, the political cartoon drew a viper cut down into pieces and displaying the various body parts with the initial of the different states of America. In this critic, the call for unity among the states’ congressmen was evident saying ‘Unite or die”. This has the implication of what can happen in the case of the discontinued unity among the states meaning that the nation may end up crippling economically or even engage in violence.
The public cartoon has not only criticized the unity of the Congress but also to their greedy and self-nature especially the reaction towards salary increment. The political cartoon drew a deep valley with the members of the Congress salivating, trying to find a way to reach the salary increment on the other side but are restricted by the political dangers. The cartoon shows how the Congress tend to be greedy and selfish in that they are led by their own interests and not that of the public to whom elected them to the congress positions.
The media also is not left behind in criticizing the Congress, during the death of Wilbur Mills, instead of the media announcing his achievement, they went ahead exposing an event to when Mils was caught with a stripper calling the legislators a bunch of crooks. The type of critic is good because it lets the members of the Congress become aware that the public is looking at their behaviors very closely and thus they must be well behaved and disciplined.
The Dynamic Legislative Process
The legislative process starts with the main idea that comes from Article 1 section 7 of the constitution. There are basically five dynamic legislative processes in making a bill into a law. The House of Representatives to which is entitled to making laws are two and they include the Senate and the Congress. The first step involves writing the bill and introducing it to the Congress for acknowledgement. At this stage, the members are notified of a certain bill whose presence needs to be noticed. After being introduced, a substitute committee is formed to revise, edit and change the bill where necessary. The committee is entrusted to make the major corrections to the areas that seem to irrelevant as well those that seem to have been omitted during the drafting of the bill.
After the revision, the bill is taken back to the Congress, where a full committee is formed to look at the bill once more. Here the committee looks deeply into the intentions of the bill indicating whether it is of any benefit to the country as well as the community in the American nation. At this stage, the full committee can declare the life of the bill to whether it is qualified to go to the next stage. The bill is taken back to the Congress for debate, here the members set rules for the debate and approves the bill. After the congress approval, the final step involves the president of the United States. The president has to sign the bill for it to become a law such that its implementation can start immediately. If the president declines to sign the bill, it can be taken back to the Congress for further rectification or it may be deemed irrelevant leading to its death. All processes of legislation are similar to the bill has to pass the relevant stages before it becomes a law.
Dead Wake
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Dead Wake
‘Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of Lusitania’ is a novel written by Erik Larson and is ranked as one of New York Times’ Bestseller. The book is about the American Ship known as Lusitania that sets out on a voyage which turns out to be its last. The ship was believed by the Americans to be unsinkable and had a large number of passengers on board when it happened. The book explores the characters of several passengers in the boat as well as the perspective of the Germans and British who were at war. The book is centered on the First World War in which the two countries attacked each other’s ships. America had long refused to be drawn into the war, and the sinking of Lusitania by a German submarine was an act of provocation. The provocation worked, and the United States under President Woodrow finally joined the war in 1917 (Gwin). The author recreates the events around the sinking of the boat vividly from many different sources to give the reader an enthralling and unforgettable read.
Lusitania was a humongous passenger ship, seven stories high and thought by the Americans to be just as invincible as the Titanic before it. The fact that it was a passenger ship made those in it reasonably sure that it would not be attacked. Germany and Britain were at war and had declared that they would attack the opposing country’s ship, but this was regarded to mean military vessels and not passenger lines such as Lusitania (Larson). Britain had sought to enlist the help of the United States as an ally in the war, but President Woodrow was reluctant (Gwin).
On the first of May 1915, Lusitania began its voyage from New York for Liverpool with many notable citizens on board including millionaire Alfred Vanderbilt, Charles Lauriat who was a famed bookseller, Hughes Lane, a renowned art collector, a pioneer female architect as well as many others (Larson). The book also explores other characters aboard the ship such as the two brothers, Cliff and Leslie Morton who were deckhands on the Lusitania. The number of women and children aboard the ship was also quite significant, more than any in other ships before it. The air in the vessel is described as being nonchalant and mundane; there was eating, drinking, and smoking, a lot of the latter two. The ship’s captain was William Thomas Turner. The sinking of the boat might have been blamed on several instances of oversight. The New York Times had on 1st May 1915 announced that the Germans might target non-military vessels, but the warning was ignored (Larson). America had been accused of using passenger ships to ferry military equipment to Britain.
The German submarine U-20 was responsible for sinking Lusitania (Lauriat Jr). The German submarine’s captain was Captain Walther Schweiger who was only thirty-two years old at the time. By leading the sub that sank the Lusitania and killed hundreds upon hundreds of people, it is tempting to regard the captain as a cold and unfeeling murderer. He is however described to have had a love of dogs, and the action of sinking the ship was merely an act of duty, his duty to lead his men and serve his country. The German officers were stuck in the claustrophobic submarine in which the air was stale and shared a small toilet. These problematic conditions make the reader sympathize with the Germans even as they were on a deadly mission. They are the antagonists of the story. When the Germans launched the torpedo that sunk the Lusitania, even they were surprised that they were successful.
Erik Larson based his story on several sources. These include the accounts of survivors such as Dwight Harris who old of the sinking of the ship in an exhaustive letter to his mother. Many other survivors gave their first-hand account of the events they had witnessed during the sinking of the ship and this helped the author to recreate the moment that the boat sank. The author also describes the photographic evidence of the deaths that he accessed by the University of Liverpool. The photographs enabled him to understand just how great the magnitude of the number of fatalities especially of infants and children on that fateful day.
The author of ‘Dead Wake’ achieves his objective of telling the story of the sinking of the Lusitania in a vivid and realistic manner. The audience can get a glimpse of the events and feel like they lived through the harrowing happenings of the day. The description of the German submarine and its determined officers, the calm mood of indestructibility on the Lusitania as well as President Woodrow’s affair with Edith lead the reader into conjuring a convincing image in their minds. The main strength of the book lies in its ability to give an accurate picture to its audience mainly based on the secondary sources that the author referred to. The book tells the story of the facts that triggered the American involvement in the First World War and leaves the reader wondering whether the loss of life might have been intentional on the part of the British as they sought to involve the United States in their war with Germany (Preston). Overall, the book makes for an informative read, and the reader gets the closest reenactment of the events of the time as possible.
Works Cited
Gwin, Mary E. “” More Precious Than Peace”: Woodrow Wilson, the German U-boat Campaign, and America’s Path to World War I.” (2016).
Larson, Erik. Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania. Broadway Books, 2015.
Lauriat Jr, Charles E. The Lusitania’s Last Voyage: Being a Narrative of the Torpedoing and Sinking of the RMS Lusitania by a German Submarine Off the Irish Coast May 7, 1915. Simon and Schuster, 2016.
Preston, Diana. Wilful murder: The sinking of the Lusitania. Random House, 2003.
