really i think he s kind of jumping on the bandwagonk he s is a kind of interesting debate. right. what is it? th what they reach tha superintelligence. they became smarter than human beings in a good time travelhume too. yeah. which didn t make sense to me. but they also took the machinerebuildy the machine jim could rebuild itself. but the thing is, if h se is sou good at predicting, why couldn t he predicges t the four marriages that ended in divorce ? i think they all left him. there wa greg: il les i think tl left him. i including linda hamilton. remember linda hamilto n, terminator. i do think she was hot. and then terminator two. there shterminat jim: e is.e sh call me linda. might be. might be. is she a lot ? i don t know. tho jim wilcoxught, i, i honestly tk you re going to fear a.i. now he s been way ahead ofn wa us. we we may be all i right now you you re right. we may not be here. yes you may noay not bhet here f you watch biden, he s a guy
Joan Osborne takes the stage at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m., April 14. She’ll be joined by special guests Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams.
(Archived document, may contain errors) WAGING AND WINNING THE WAR OF IDEAS by Edwin J. Feulner, Jr. President, The Heritage Foundation T he Public Relations Society of America 39th National Conference Washington, D.C. November 12, 1986 INTRODUCTION For four days early in November more than 2,000 of the nation's leading institutional communicators members of the Public Relations society of America met in Washington for their 39th National Conference.