Summary
The US onAir Network of 50 state onAir hubs and this national US onAir Hub will be launching July 4, 2024.  This US onAir Hub brings together in one hub the key posts from the 50 state onAir hubs including:
- Posts on the 50 state onAir hubs that aggregate summaries of their governors, senators, and House members with links to their profile posts. You can also access and view profiles of representatives by party, region, or by state;
- Posts on important challenges facing the US under the “Issues” menu;
- Posts on the US and each state’s legislative, judicial, and executive branches as well as a general post about each state under the “Government” menu.
Every post also has a discussion section where you can ask the post’s curators questions, make suggestions, and participate in forums and Reddit communities.
01/03/2024 (02:00)
News
PBS NewsHour, April 11, 2024 – 11:00 am (ET)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has been invited to address a joint meeting of Congress on Thursday. He will be just the second Japanese leader to address the body; Shinzo Abe gave a speech to Congress in 2015.
Kishida is expected to address Congress at 11 a.m. ET. Watch live in the player above.
The prime minister began a much-anticipated visit to Washington on Tuesday that spotlights shared concerns about provocative Chinese military action in the Pacific and at a rare moment of public difference between the two nations over a Japanese company’s plan to buy an iconic U.S. company.
Kishida and his wife stopped by the White House Tuesday evening ahead of Wednesday’s official visit and formal state dinner as President Joe Biden looks to celebrate a decades-long ally he sees as the cornerstone of his Indo-Pacific policy. Kishida will be the fifth world leader honored by Biden with a state dinner since he took office in 2021.
The two shook hands and first lady Jill Biden embraced Kishida’s wife, Yuko. The foursome posed for a photo and briefly toured the grounds before heading to an upscale seafood restaurant, BlackSalt, for dinner.
The Bidens were presenting the prime minister with a three-legged table handmade by a Japanese American-owned company in Pennsylvania. The president was also gifting Kishida a custom-framed lithograph and a two-volume LP set autographed by Billy Joel. Jill Biden was giving Yuko Kishida a soccer ball signed by the U.S. women’s national team and the Japanese women’s national team.
WATCH:Â Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Kishida hold joint news conference
Chris Hayes breaks down the apples-to-apples comparison of Trump’s record vs. Biden’s record. “These are just the facts,” says Hayes
The race for the White House is officially a two-man race as the most recent occupants of the office clinch their party nominations and prepare for a 2020 rematch. To help unpack Trump’s path forward, and whether Biden can appeal to disaffected Republicans, we speak to Doug Heye, the former communications director to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and the Republican National Committee.
– April 19, 2024
This slideshow is a demo of of how US onAir curators will display and give viewers access to all the news items posted in this post during the day. At the end of each day, curators will assemble links to the day’s news items into a slideshow like this one. Select the “forward arrow” to advance the slides. Select the three vertical dots to open the slideshow in fullscreen mode.
Videos can be viewed directly within the slideshow. Selecting the blue links, will take viewers to each news item which will include a link to the most related onAir post. At the end of the day, all the news items including the slideshow will be stored in the US onAir Hub post which will also spotlight the news items that curators assess are the most important ones from the day’s events and stories.
During the day, any onAir member can post their news item, submitted it to the curators of the post(s) where they would like them to appear, and moderate the discussion related to the news item.
In the 1968 film “2001: A Space Odyssey,” audiences found themselves staring at one of the first modern depictions of an extremely polite but uncooperative artificial intelligence system, a character named HAL. Given a direct request by the sole surviving astronaut to let him back in the spaceship, HAL responds: “I’m sorry, Dave. I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
Recently, some users found themselves with a similarly (though less dramatic) polite refusal from Gemini, an integrated chatbot and AI assistant that Google rolled out as a competitor to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. When asked, Gemini politely refused in some instances to generate images of historically White people, such as the Vikings.
Unlike the fictional HAL, Google’s Gemini at least offered some explanation, saying that only showing images of White persons would reinforce “harmful stereotypes and generalizations about people based on their race,” according to Fox News Digital.
The situation quickly erupted, with some critics dubbing it a “woke” AI scandal. It didn’t help when users discovered that Gemini was creating diverse but historically inaccurate images. When prompted to depict America’s Founding Fathers, for example, it generated an image of a Black man. It also depicted a brown woman as the Pope, and various people of color, including a Black man, in Nazi uniforms when asked to depict a 1943 German soldier.
New York Times columnist David Brooks and Washington Post associate editor Jonathan Capehart join Amna Nawaz to discuss the week in politics, including a recent poll that found many American adults are ready to accept violence in the U.S. political system.
PBS NewsHour, April 8, 2024 – 12:00 pm (ET)
Charles Duhigg is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and best-selling author whose latest book seeks to unlock the secret language of communication. He shares his Brief But Spectacular take on super communication.
Sen. Chris Murphy, a key negotiator on a possible border deal, said Sunday that text of a compromise could be ready to go to the Senate floor in the coming days.
Components of the deal include a new authority that allows the president to shut down the border between ports of entry when unlawful crossings reach high levels, reforming the asylum system to resolve cases in a shorter timeframe, and expediting work permits.
Under the proposed deal, the Department of Homeland Security would be granted new emergency authority to shut down the border if daily average migrants crossing unlawfully reach 4,000 over a one-week span. Certain migrants would be allowed to stay if they proved to be fleeing torture or persecution in their countries.
About
US onAir Overview
- Each state onAir Hub supports their residents to become more informed about and engaged in local, state, and federal politics while facilitating more civil and positive discussions with their representatives, candidates, and fellow citizens.
- Each state onAir Hub will be forming onAir chapters in their colleges and universities to help curate Hub content. As more students participate and more onAir chapters are started, we will expand to include more state and local content as well as increase the number of aircasts – student-led, livestreamed, online discussions with candidates, representatives, and the public.
Find out more about Who Represents Me in each state onAir Hub under the representatives category.
All hub content in onAir hubs is free to the public. Hub ontent is under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license which permits content sharing and adaptation by nonprofit organizations as long as proper attribution is given to its author(s) and is used for non-commercial purposes. Content and moderation guidelines reinforce our commitment to fact-based, comprehensive content and civil and honest discourse.
To participate in aircast and post discussions, email usdemocracy@onair.cc and include your first name last name, and zipcode. Your real name and any other profile information will not be displayed unless you choose to do so. Your personal information is not shared with any other website or organization.
Hub membership will enable you to:
- Participate in issue and interview aircasts (student-led livestreamed discussions);
- Interact directly with post authors and curators giving them feedback, content suggestions, and asking questions;
- Ask questions, make suggestions, and give endorsement to representatives
Federal Government
The federal government of the United States (U.S. federal government or U.S. government)[a] is the national government of the United States, a federal republic located primarily in North America, composed of 50 states, five major self-governing territories, several island possessions, and the federal district and national capital of Washington, D.C., where most of the federal government is based.
The U.S. federal government, sometimes simply referred to as “Washington”, is composed of three distinct branches: legislative, executive, and judicial, whose powers are vested by the U.S. Constitution in the Congress, the president, and the federal courts, respectively. The powers and duties of these branches are further defined by acts of Congress, including the creation of executive departments and courts subordinate to the U.S. Supreme Court.
White House & Agencies
Summary here
Congress
Summary here
More Information
Key Sources
In addition to politician campaign and government web sites and wikipedia entries, our curators also integrate content into posts content from a variety of sources such as Congress.Gov, US.Gov, Open Secrets, Vote Smart, Ballotpedia, Vote 411, and Vote Smart.
Creative Commons sources include:
The Conversation, States Newsroom online papers,
Open Media sources include:Â
YouTube videos, CNN.com, Associated Press, Reuters, PBS NewsHour
Judicial
Wikipedia
Coming Soon