Ascension Island Flights Cancelled; Oceanwide Issues Cruise Updates – Travel Agent

The cancellation of all flights from Ascension Island has forced passengers to remain onboard Atlantic Odyssey voyages from Oceanwide Expeditions.

According to a letter provided to Travel Agent, Oceanwide Expeditions passengers booked on Atlantic Odyseey voyages PLA33-18 and PLA35-18 will have to remain onboard on voyage PLA36-18 from Ascension to Praia, Cape Verde, for six nights. From Praia passengers will be able to depart for their outbound flights.

Passengers already booked on the affected Atlantic Odyssey voyages will receive a 50 percent discount on the original cruise fare for the Ascension to Praia voyage. For new bookings, Oceanwide Expeditions will offer a 20 percent discount on the original cruise fare of the Ascension to Praia voyage.

Due to the flight cancellations, voyages PLA32-18 and PLA34-18 have been canceled.

All flights have been cancelled from the British-run Ascension Island until at least 2019 because of potholes on the islands only runway, The Guardian reports. Additionally, flights to the Falklands will have to be rerouted because the Airbus A330 Voyager that operates the route is too heavy for the damaged runway.

According to the official website of the islands government, the RMS St. Helena continues to provide the main access route to the destination by sea. The ship will continue its route from Cape Town, South Africa, to St. Helena and then Ascension Island. The service is currently scheduled until February 2018, or until the St. Helena air service is in place.

Ascension Island is an island in the Atlantic Ocean, just south of the equator and 700 miles northwest of St. Helena, the United Kingdom territory by which it is administered.

Luigi De Angelis Named Captain of Carnival Horizon; Whats Next for Ship

Slideshow: Inside CroisiEuropes New MS Douce France II

This Week in Cruise: Three Newly Renovated Cruise Ships Debut

The Art of Cruise Upselling: Top Tips From Avoya Travel's Tammie Rice

Read the original:

Ascension Island Flights Cancelled; Oceanwide Issues Cruise Updates - Travel Agent

Around Ascension for June 15, 2017 – The Advocate

Potter trivia

Harry Potter fans of all ages can test their knowledge of the series with Harry Potter Pub Trivia at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Gonzales Branch of Ascension Parish Library.

Gryffindors, Hufflepuffs, Ravenclaws and Slytherins will compete against one another to correctly answer the most trivia questions. Costumes are encouraged but not required.

Call (225) 647-3955 for details or to register.

Ascension Parish Library's summer reading program offers a variety of events for youths of all ages.

STARS AND STRIPES WREATH: Make a festive fabric wreath with Nan Riffe, The Bookmark Lady: 10 a.m. Tuesday, Dutchtown. For all ages.

BROWN BEAR: Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Brown Bear, Brown Bear with fun and games: 6 p.m. Monday, Gonzales. For all ages.

OREGON TRAIL: Hunt for dinner, ford a river and experience pioneer life; costumes are welcome but not required: 2 p.m. Tuesday, Galvez and 6 p.m. June 22, Dutchtown. For all ages.

HARRY POTTER 20TH ANNIVERSARY: Get sorted into a house, attend classes and compete at Quidditch: 2 p.m. Tuesday, Galvez. For all ages.

CACTUS ROCK: Paint rocks to look like cactuses to create a mini desert: 10:30 a.m. Monday, Dutchtown. For children entering grades two through five.

3-D STRAW SCULPTURE ART: Create original artwork with neon straws and washi tape: 2 p.m. Monday, Galvez. For children entering grades two through five.

SALT DOUGH: Make salt dough from scratch: 6 p.m. June 22. For children entering grades two through five.

TISSUE-PAINTED CANVAS: Create a work of art using a canvas, tissue paper and water: 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dutchtown and 10:30 a.m. June 23, Donaldsonville. For children entering grades two through five.

TWEEN SPA DAY: Make a cotton candy lip scrub and paint your nails: 2 p.m. Wednesday, Galvez. For children entering grades four through eight.

SEED BOMBS: Make seed bombs from dirt, clay and flower seeds: 2 p.m. Wednesday, Donaldsonville. For children entering grades four through eight.

EMOJI PILLOW: Design and create a no-sew emoji pillow with felt and fabric glue: 6 p.m. Tuesday, Gonzales. For teens entering grades six through 12.

TEEN SPA DAY: Learn easy, eco-friendly, chemical-free ways to look good and reduce stress: 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dutchtown. For teens entering grades six through 12.

Learn about risk factors for heart disease and changes to improve personal heart health with Charla Johnson, at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Donaldsonville Branch of Ascension Parish Library.

The free, hourlong seminar is sponsored by St. Elizabeth Hospital. Registration is preferred but not required; call (225) 621-2906.

Ascension Parish Librarys Donaldsonville Branch invites adults to an evening of coloring and coffee at 6:30 p.m. June 22. Supplies will be provided.

Registration is required; call (225) 473-8052.

A class for preteen boys and their parents about the physical and emotional changes that accompany puberty is slated for 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. June 24 in the Sister Vernola conference room of St. Elizabeth Hospital.

Cost is $15. Preregistration is required; call (225) 621-2906.

Contact Darlene Denstorff by phone, (225) 388-0215 or (225) 603-1996; or email, ascension@theadvocate.com or ddenstorff@theadvocate.com. Deadline: noon Monday.

See the original post:

Around Ascension for June 15, 2017 - The Advocate

Widening of I-10 from Highland Road to Ascension Parish set to … – The Advocate

A $72 million project to widen Interstate 10 from Highland Road in Baton Rouge to La. Hwy. 73 in suburban Ascension Parish will start early next year and take up to 2 1/2 years to finish, state officials announced Tuesday.

The widening, which will expand the corridor from four lanes to six lanes, was not linked to the failed drive to increase Louisiana's gasoline tax.

The plan was announced in September. The money already was allotted and not dependent on additional state monies.

+2

A key legislative panel Monday approved the state's plan to widen Interstate 10 from Highlan

"The reality is that major enhancements like this I-10 project will be very limited moving forward due to the current revenues for transportation," Shawn Wilson, secretary for the state Department of Transportation and Development, said in a statement.

Wilson said the work will be done by James Construction Group LLC.

"Our financial means are very limited compared to our need, but we will continue to use every tool at our disposal to deliver what we can," Gov. John Bel Edwards said.

The roughly seven-mile stretch set for widening is used by about 80,000 motorists per day.

The governor has called it one of the most congested sections of highway in Louisiana.

Eastbound traffic on weekdays is regularly backed up, and travelers getting off at Highland Road are often stopped on the interstate two miles or more from the exit.

The work will be financed with a combination of state and federal dollars, including more than $40 million in federal earmarks originally intended for other projects in Louisiana. Those projects are supposed to be delayed, not scrapped.

The pricetag was originally $60 million but was raised to $72 million to make improvements at Highland Road. However, utilities and work on Highland Road will be completed in the future.

Plans to widen I-10 have won praise from lawmakers in the Baton Rouge area, which is considered the most congested city in a state and is plagued by transportation problems.

The undertaking is called design-build, which allows the designer and contractor to collaborate so that the work can be done three or four months faster.

The work will extend from west of Highland Road to the La. 73 interchange, which is the Prairieville/Geismar exit.

The La. 42 overpass structures will also be replaced.

The high-profile expansion is something of an outlier amid the state's $13.1 billion backlog of road and bridge projects.

"We are moving the boundaries of innovation to deliver important projects for Louisiana, but this project is only one of many that are desperately needed to enhance the I-10 freight corridor," Edwards said.

Follow Will Sentell on Twitter, @WillSentell.

Go here to see the original:

Widening of I-10 from Highland Road to Ascension Parish set to ... - The Advocate

NASA Prepares for Future Space Exploration with International Undersea Crew – Space Daily

NASA will send an international crew to the floor of the Atlantic Ocean this summer to prepare for future deep space missions during the 10-day NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) 22 expedition slated to begin June 18.

NEEMO 22 will focus on both exploration spacewalks and objectives related to the International Space Station and deep space missions. As an analogue for future planetary science concepts and strategies, marine science also will be performed under the guidance of Florida International University's marine science department.

NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren will command the NEEMO 22 mission aboard the Aquarius laboratory, 62 feet below the ocean surface near Key Largo Florida. Lindgren was part of space station Expeditions 44 and 45 in 2015, where he spent 141 days living and working in the extreme environment of space. He conducted two spacewalks on his first spaceflight.

Lindgren will be joined by ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Pedro Duque; Trevor Graff, a Jacobs Engineering employee working as a planetary scientist at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston; and research scientist Dom D'Agostino from the University of South Florida and the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition.

"The close parallels of inner and outer space exploration will be clearly demonstrated during this undersea mission," NEEMO Project Lead Bill Todd said.

"The daily seafloor traverses, or extravehicular activities in space jargon, are jam packed with technology and operations concept testing, as well as complex marine science. In the interior of Aquarius, aquanauts and astronauts will tackle an array of experiments and human research related to long duration space travel."

Objectives for the crew include testing spaceflight countermeasure equipment, technology for precisely tracking equipment in a habitat and studies of body composition and sleep. The crew also will assess hardware sponsored by ESA that will help crew members evacuate someone who has been injured on a lunar spacewalk.

The NEEMO crew and two professional habitat technicians will live in Florida International University's Aquarius Reef Base undersea research habitat 6.2 miles (5.4 nautical miles) off the Florida coast.

With the rise of Ad Blockers, and Facebook - our traditional revenue sources via quality network advertising continues to decline. And unlike so many other news sites, we don't have a paywall - with those annoying usernames and passwords.

Our news coverage takes time and effort to publish 365 days a year.

If you find our news sites informative and useful then please consider becoming a regular supporter or for now make a one off contribution.

See the rest here:

NASA Prepares for Future Space Exploration with International Undersea Crew - Space Daily

Op-ed | Mars mania is completely rational – SpaceNews

Arabella Wojnar, left, Bianca Wojnar, and Valentina Wojnar, right, pose for a photograph with a model of a spacecraft and alien during the Mars New Year celebration Friday, May 5, 2017, in Mars, Pennsylvania. The town is hosting two days of Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics (STEAM) activities. Photo Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

This commentary originally appeared in the May 22, 2017 issue of SpaceNews magazine.

In April, NASAs robotic probe Cassini attracted widespread media coverage as it neared the end of its expedition of Saturn and its moons. While NASA celebrates the remarkable success of Cassini, it is hard not to look towards the future and ask, whats next?

For the White House, the answer remains Mars. Recently, President Donald Trump showed his enthusiastic support for NASAs mission to the red planet during a call with astronaut Peggy Whitson, boldly declaring, we want to try and do it during my first term. But, beyond the impossibility of such a near-term goal, is there sufficient motivation for a manned mission to Mars? Or is our nations money better spent on more affordable, reliable, and safer robotic missions like Cassini?

Before answering these questions, it is important to understand the common rationales behind manned space exploration. As determined by the National Academies government-funded Committee on Human Spaceflight in their 2014 investigation, Pathways to Exploration, these rationales can be broken up into two categories: pragmatic and aspirational.

Pragmatic rationales represent the practical reasons such as economic benefits, scientific discovery, or technological advancement. Aspirational rationales, on the other hand, are more intangible reasons like a shared human destiny to explore or the survival of the human race.

In researching these two categories, the committee determined human space exploration is rationalized only by a combination of both pragmatic and aspirational justifications. They conclude, the aspirational rationales, when supplemented by the practical benefits associated with the pragmatic rationales, do argue for a continuation of our nations human spaceflight program. Ultimately, their conclusion relies on our ability to see evidence of the practical benefits and to prove the legitimacy of the aspirational ones.

When searching for evidence of practical technological and economic benefits, it is common practice for NASA and its proponents to point towards so-called spin-off technologies. Created through commercial licensing of NASA inventions, these spin-offs include, among many other common household technologies, quartz-crystal clocks, MRIs, cordless power tools and solar panels.

Obviously, spin-offs play an important role in our modern society, but it is unclear whether their development is dependent on manned missions. To the committee and other experts in the field, it seems that similar technological advancements could be stimulated through inexpensive robotic missions or other government-funded programs on Earth.

The fate of human space exploration, therefore, rests more in our ability to demonstrate the validity of the aspirational rationales. The philosophical and emotional aspects of these rationales, however, make them nearly impossible to prove universally true. Alternatively, public opinion polls seem to illustrate strong support of NASA and human space exploration in the United States, suggesting the actuality of the aspirational rationales.

Support for previous human spaceflight missions are approaching unanimous. Since 1979, when fewer than 50 percent of U.S adults reported the moon landing was worth it, support has risen, reaching 71 percent in 2009. This support also extends to NASAs Mars endeavors. A Boeing-sponsored poll in 2013 found that 75% of Americans Strongly Agree or Agree that it is worthwhile to increase NASAs percentage of the federal budget to 1 percent to fund a mission to Mars. And, 67 percent of Americans agreed the United States should send both humans and robots to Mars.

Given this apparent mandate that space exploration should include humans, experts have offered their alternatives to traditional manned missions. Sociologist William Bainbridge proposes that we transport human personalities through space embodied in information systems. But it is unlikely this idea will hold the same emotional value with the populace.

For now at least, it seems that with the practical and aspirational benefits, NASA should continue to fund manned exploration of deep space. After all, exploration is a human endeavor and, therefore, should include humans. As for Cassini, if anything, it showed the world that there are plenty of interesting places for humans to visit and study.

Micah Roschelle is an engineering student and space enthusiast at Columbia University.

Original post:

Op-ed | Mars mania is completely rational - SpaceNews

DefCon level REDUCED to SAFEST rank despite North Korea WW3 threat – Express.co.uk

GETTY

The lowered threat level comes despite continued tensions in the Korean peninsula between the hermit state of the North and the United States and South Korea.

The DefCon Warning System is a private intelligence organisation which has monitored and assessed nuclear threats against the US by national entities for more than 33 years.

According to reports on the site, South Korea has not expressed any desire for war with its neighbouring country, causing the United States to re-evaluate its plans for the region.

The statement added the public should make their own evaluations and not rely on the DefCon Warning System for strategic planning, adding all citizens should learn what steps to take in the effect of a nuclear attack.

North Korea has repeatedly flouted United Nations and international sanctions to test a range of long-range ballistic missiles - with experts claiming the despot nation could potentially launch a missile test every two weeks for the rest of the year.

Last months launch of the Hwasong-12 rocket is believed to have had the capability of reaching the US mainland.

AFP/Getty Images

1 of 8

The ground-to-ground medium-to-long range ballistic missile

Only last week, the reclusive state fired what appeared to be several land-to-ship missiles off its east coast, just one day after the South Korean military postponed full deployment of a controversial US anti-missile system designed - THAAD - to deter a North Korean attack.

Compared to the different types of ballistic missiles Pyongyang has tested in recent months, the missiles launched last week are considered to be more defensive in nature, designed to defend against threats such as enemy warships.

In recent weeks, a US expert claimed that Kim Jong-un is only one step away from developing a nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), to which the Trump administrations head of missile defence expressed great concern.

North Korea has stated that it has accomplished high precision in newest missile test, which if true, would mark significant progress in the countrys ballistic programme.

Tensions in the Korean peninsula have been running high for weeks, with Washington refusing to rule out a military strike against the dictatorship in response to any attacks.

North Korea has carried out five nuclear tests in the last 11 years and is widely believed to be making progress towards its dream of building a missile capable of delivering a warhead to the continental US.

GETTY

Since assuming office, Kim Jong-un greatly increased the number of tests he authorised from eight in 2012, to an averaged total of 15.3 tests per year up to 2016.

Each Spring, the regime raises the tone of its warnings in response to joint exercises carried out by Washington and Seoul.

The regime has condemned these military exercises, accusing them of being rehearsals for an invasion.

Read the original post:

DefCon level REDUCED to SAFEST rank despite North Korea WW3 threat - Express.co.uk

Posted in Ww3

World War 3: Putin deploys ‘kill all’ missile system and points it at North Korea – Daily Star

VLADIMIR PUTIN has deployed his "matchless" missile system to Kim Jong-un's border defend against attacks as World War 3 looks imminent.

The Buk-M3 is the most advanced anti-missile system in the world, according to Moscow.

The move is seen as a deliberate effort to stem the tide of North Korean aggression which resulted in a number of successful nuke tests over the last few weeks.

Putin has previously expressed "profound concern" over Kim's recent missile launches.

Reports said the deployment was "a precaution due to the situation in the Korean peninsula escalates".

GETTY

Since 2008, photographer Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, he was able to save photos that was forbidden to take inside the segregated state

1 / 62

Taking pictures in the DMZ is easy, but if you come too close to the soldiers, they stop you

Expert Vasily Kashin, from the Institute of the Far East, said: "Re-arming the air missile defence brigade in Ulan-Ude will become another guarantee in case of escalation in the Korean peninsula.

"The brigade can be relocated further east and used to cover administrative and industrial centres from possible missile or aviation attack."

The Buk-M3 is seen as countering cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, aircrafts and helicopters, and this is its first deployment in the east of the country.

GETTY

Training will go on for two months after which the Buk-M3 "will be fully prepared for combat missions".

Kim has previously promised "weekly" missile tests in the face of US aggression in the peninsula.

And the tubby tyrants persistence with the North Korean nuclear programme has led to international condemnation from world leaders, including Putin.

Kremlin newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta said: "The Buk-M3 can fire 20 seconds after stopping. In fact, it almost fires on the move.

Putin has an arsenal of state-of-the-art weaponry at his fingertips. Could this be the hardware that wages WW3?

1 / 11

The T-90 tank: equipped with a 125mm smoothbore cannon and remote controlled anti-aircraft gun

"A transporter-loader vehicle from which it can also be fired, simultaneously carries 12 launch containers with missiles.

"The Buk-M3 is able to destroy strategic and tactical aviation aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, guided aircraft bombs, and other flying objects.

"It can fire at surface and ground radio-contrast targets, that is, to be used as a tactical guided missile."

While Ulan-Ude is some 2,130 miles west from the Russian border with North Korea, experts say the Buk-M3 can be swiftly relocated in the even of rising tensions.

Visit link:

World War 3: Putin deploys 'kill all' missile system and points it at North Korea - Daily Star

Posted in Ww3

What it’s like to take psychedelics in small doses at breakfast – New Scientist

By Sam Wong

Microdosing, the practice of regularly taking small amounts of psychedelic drugs to improve mood and performance, has been taking off over the past few years. But the fact that these drugs are illegal makes it difficult to research their effects and possible health consequences. There are no rigorous clinical trials to see whether microdosing works (see Microdosers say tiny hits of LSD make your work and life better).

Instead, all we have are anecdotes from people like Janet Lai Chang, a digital marketer based in San Francisco. She will present her experience of microdosing at the Quantified Self conference in Amsterdam from 17to 18 June.

I started in February 2016. I wanted to understand how my brain works and how it might work differently with the influence of psilocybin [the active ingredient in magic mushrooms].

I had been struggling with a lot of social anxiety. It was really preventing me from advancing professionally. I was invited to give a talk at Harvard University and a TedX talk in California. I didnt feel ready. I felt all this anxiety. I procrastinated until the last minute and then didnt do it. It was one of my biggest regrets.

At first I was taking 0.2 grams of mushrooms every day, with a day or two off at the weekend. In August, Ihad a month off. From October to April, it was a few times a week.

I was less anxious, less depressed, more open, more extroverted. I was more present in the moment. Its harder to get into the flow of the focused solo work that Im normally really good at. But its good for the social aspect.

I have some symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder left over from childhood abuse. Pretty much the only other negative thing was being more aware of negative emotions I had. I have a repressed anger response, according to my therapist. When I was microdosing I felt like I could really feel it; I felt the anger.

Occasionally, but Ive stopped the experiment. I dont want to be dependent on a substance to enable me to achieve certain desirable states of productivity.

I think everyone would benefit fromhaving at least one kind of experience with psychedelics. Thedosage really depends on the individual and what theyre looking toget out of it.

This article appeared in print under the headline Leading the high life

More on these topics:

See the article here:

What it's like to take psychedelics in small doses at breakfast - New Scientist

‘Changing Our Minds’ explores psychedelic drugs and spiritual healing – Religion News Service

book By Kimberly Winston | June 13, 2017

BERKELEY, Calif. (RNS) In his new book, Changing Our Minds: Psychedelic Sacraments and the New Psychotherapy, award-winning author and former religion reporter Don Lattinlooks at how therapy sessions with psychedelic drugsare helping heal the psychological and spiritual woes of cancer patients, alcoholics, war veterans and the seriously depressed.

As Lattin details in the book, there are sometimes positive spiritual and religious changes for those who take these drugs under clinical supervision a key component of the treatment.During sessions to treat addictive behavior, post-traumatic stress disorderand depression, some patients report everything from a greater oneness with the universe to visions of Jesus on the cross.

Lattin, who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area,is about to embark on a summer book tour that will take him from the Telluride Mushroom Festival in the Rocky Mountains to a psychedelic consciousness convention in London. He sat down with RNS to discuss the changing attitudes toward these drugs psilocybin (magic mushrooms), ayahuasca (a psychoactive tea brewed from two Amazonian plants), MDMA (ecstasy) and more and how they can bring religious and spiritual insight to some.

This interview has been edited for space and clarity.

Members of an ayahuasca church taking psychedelic tea as a sacrament in Brazil. Photo courtesy ofTom Hill

Well, the first difference between recreational use and the clinical trials now underway into psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy is a difference of legality. Taking these drugs for fun is illegal, not to mention dangerous because when you buy psychedelics on the street you are never sure what you are getting. The clinical trials are legal approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. The purity and the dose are clearly established. Many people in my book are trying to overcome some serious psychological problem, or they are people in ayahuasca churches who are seriously trying to commune with God. Both are in it for the long term and will tell you this was not always a fun or easy experience. But it was cathartic. It was healing. This is not the way most people take psychedelics many thousands of people take MDMA (ecstasy) every weekend and most have a good time. The difference here is the intention healing or insight and that those who take these medicines or sacraments are being guided through the experience and get help to integrate whatever insights they have into their real lives.

Changing Our Minds: Psychedelic Sacraments and the New Psychotherapy by Don Lattin. Image courtesy of Synergetic Press

There is some truth to that critique. Someone in my book calls the psychedelic experience gratuitous grace. In a recreational drug context, it is too easy, and it becomes too easy to just dismiss it as some weird experience. But people in some of the clinical trials I write about say what they experienced in a couple of sessions with a therapist and psychedelics was like 10years of normal therapy. It can take less time. But psychedelics are not a magic bullet. They can show you another way to be. They can be an opening, that is all. The goal of a lot of this work, whether it is therapeutic or spiritual, is to help people make some lasting changes in their lives. They (researchers and spiritual guides) are trying to take psychedelics more seriously than one does at a party or a concert or a festival. Even though it can take one to a mystical place, the goal is to bring all this back down to earth.

You can have a mystical experience through lots of different means. You can have it by fasting a very accepted practice in almost every religious tradition. What happens when you fast? Things happen in your brain, a biochemical reaction. If you go on a hardcore meditation retreat with sensory deprivation, you are having a biochemical reaction in your brain. So whether it is through fasting or meditation or drugs or plant medicines, I believe what is happening in your brain is the same an alteration of consciousness through brain chemistry. It can happen through prayer and through meditation, and it can happen with psychedelic drugs. That is why the experiences are so similar. But the rubber hits the road with what you do with the experience. Does it make you a better person, kinder, more aware? (Religion scholar and mystic) Huston Smith used to say of psychedelics, It is not about altered states, it is about altered traits.

Don Lattin, author of Changing Our Minds, discusses the therapeutic uses of psychedelic drugs at Books Inc. in Berkeley, Calif. RNS photo by Kimberly Winston

There are actual churches in the U.S. that can legally have psychedelic communion with ayahuasca under a 2006 Supreme Court ruling, but they must be affiliated with one of two Brazilian sects. Outside of those brands of organized religion, I dont see much destigmatization. Religious leaders, like a lot of other people, have a very black-and-white attitude toward drugs. Roland Griffiths at Johns Hopkins is doing a study of religious professionals with clergy burnout to see if these substances could revive their interest in their calling through a mystical experience that might hit the reset button for them. But he has found it very hard to find clergy who want to volunteer. That said, I think psychedelics are slowly are being destigmatized by the universities and medical centers across the country that are sponsoring research. Peoples minds are changing about these substances when used in the proper context. The media coverage of the clinical trials has been very positive. At the same time, I think it is important to say these drugs are not for everyone. They are probably not for most people. But there are a large number of people these medicines can help.

Faithful Viewer logo. Religion News Service graphic by T.J. Thomson

Kimberly Winston is a freelance religion reporter based in the San Francisco Bay Area. She covers atheism and freethought for RNS.

More here:

'Changing Our Minds' explores psychedelic drugs and spiritual healing - Religion News Service

Entheogen

This is Entheogen. Elevate the Conversation.

Its March 12, 2017, and we are discussing psychedelic healing with Dr. Neal Goldsmith.

Neals book Psychedelic Healing: The Promise of Entheogens for Psychotherapy and Spiritual Development provides copious discussion points for our conversation today.

Neal's therapy practice, and how his use of psychedelics has informed his practice of psychotherapy

Imago therapy

LSD is a tool: Charles Manson becomes more Charles Manson; Richard Alpert becomes Ram Dass.

The substitution of the eucharist as a proxy for the original psychoactive sacrament. Can we please go back to the active version? What are the consequences of inactive substitutes in religious ceremonies? How have alternative spiritual practices sprung up in the absence of sanctioned Entheogenic rituals?

George Carlins Modern Man.

Are we in the midst of McKennas Archaic Revival? Is this another way to internalize the unfolding ecological apocalypse?

If were going to be post-post-modern, if were going to be integral, we cant have a fight between tribalism and modernity. We cant have a fight between spirituality and the material world.

Meditation, mindfulness, yoga, breathing

Deep breathing to expel carbon dioxide in addition to inhaling oxygen.

McKennas conjecture that its possible to get to the same state of consciousness that psychedelics provide access to, using meditation or chanting or drumming, but who has time for that?

What do you recommend to listeners who might be interested in some form of psychedelic therapy, present company included?

The dichotomy of tribalism vs. modernism: our human ancestors living naturally but for shorter time, vs. modern humans living longer but disconnected from nature. Spiraling up vs. retreating to tribalism.

Spirituality vs. science. The concept of rational mysticism. Einstein quote via Rick Doblin: There's no real conflict between science & religion; there's a conflict between bad science & bad religion.

Please support Entheogen by making a donation on Patreon. Become a Patron for as little as $1. Pledge just $3 or more, and get early access to new episodes, plus exclusive Patron-only features. Head over to EntheogenShow.com and click on Support.

Find the notes and links for this and other episodes at EntheogenShow.com. Sign up to receive an email when we release a new episode. Follow us @EntheogenShow on Twitter and like EntheogenShow on FaceBook. Thanks for listening.

Read more here:

Entheogen

Trance hits which turn 20 in 2017 – Trance Hub (satire) (press release) (blog)

Trance music came into existence in the early 1990s in Germany & Goa. Since then genre has been a musical therapy for millions of listeners. They say Trance heals and some tracks are accurate representation of that thought. Hence it makes perfect sense to take a trip down memory lane and talk about a time which was golden and unadulterated.

Team Trance Hub has listed down a few tracks which turn 20 in 2017, classics which have cemented their legacy in the sands of time.

A track which literally starts with the wordsLets go to the beach cannot be missed. With a peppy bass line the track also has the ability to make you fly. A definite classic which still brings a smile on your face.

Perhaps the prime example of progressive trance, Flaming June sees two absolute legends combine. The track name is no way connected to the famous 1895 painting but according to Brian, he got the name courtesy a cab driver who termed the weather as Flaming June

Produced by Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne, the track is of real beauty as it has the melodious vocal of Dominique Atkins. With lyrics that speak about heartbreak, this song had a huge debut on the UK charts. Noteworthy mention to the fast paced Ascension remix as well.

A 21 year old young boy from Netherlands took over the world with a storm by producing a tune that laid the foundation of his legacy. 20 years later Armin has leapfrogged everyone and become number 1, but pretty sure after countless hits Blue Fear will always remain close to his heart as it kick-started his career.

Pacific Melody was the reason for Johan Gielen to change his groups name from Body Heat to Airscape. This 1997 tune with Peter Ramson reached the UK top 50 charts. With a lot of highs and lows the tune is a wonderful listening experience.

If you are sucker for vocal trance, this is definitely one tune you should not miss. This is one of the most iconic tunes from the house of British producers Ricky Simmons & Steve Jones. With a slightly eerie background the vocals of Kate Cameron give the tune a perfect emotive feeling.

This aint our normal trance tune, but something different. Since the start Nick loved experimenting with new sounds, and Sunstroke is a beautiful example. With a laidback vibe & a sample of an angelic voice, this downtempo tune is perfect lullaby for trance listeners.

Spice of life, is one tune which flirts nicely with two high paced genres of dance music. Citadel of Kaoss have always had a lot of techno & breakbeat influence in all their songs. But for this classic, it was slightly different, as this build up from a tech trance sound to a slightly more psychedelic one.

Robotic samples echoing the words Freak Tonight, Alien Factory were so much in love with their creation that they created three different styled mixes for this. But one thing which remains common through all the mixes is the wonderful use of synth.

Curator of Edm4Pune, sports enthusiast assisted by having a taste bud for delicious food. Open to all genres of music yet staying close to his first love, Trance.

Next Post

Were just a few days away from Luminosity Beach Festival a 4 day...

Read the original:

Trance hits which turn 20 in 2017 - Trance Hub (satire) (press release) (blog)

Trance Over The Years at EDC Las Vegas – EDM Identity (blog)

From circuitGROUNDS to quantumVALLEY, trance has always had a special place at Electric Daisy Carnival

Over the years,Electric Daisy Carnival Las Vegas has played home to almost every genre of dance music. Of all the sounds that have graced the EDC Las Vegas stages, there is one that has taken us on quite the exhilarating and momentous rollercoaster ride: trance. Though there have been many ups and downs, as the winds of popularity and demand are continuously changing, trance has been rebirthed from the ashes to take its rightful place, staking its claim as one of the most sought after genres at one of the biggest dance events on the planet.

Is trance dead? If we take a look at its history over the years at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, I can firmly tell you that that trance isnt going anywhere. In fact, it is now bigger than it has ever been before!

In 2011, EDC Las Vegas hosted artists such asCosmic Gate, Above & Beyond, Paul Oakenfold, John OCallaghan, Markus Schulz, Simon Patterson, Sean Tyas, Ferry Corsten, and ATB.They took trance fans on a journey of ethereal beats solidifying the genre as one that simply refused to die. Reminding the dance universe that trance was a genre unlike any other, these DJs took listeners on a true musical journey of melodic beats and ethereal rhythms. It was in these moments that a movement would be sparked in the souls of many as 2011 was the first year EDC was hosted in Las Vegas.

In 2012, history would be made as both A State Of Trance and Group Therapy would take over the circuitGROUNDS stage for a full weekend of pure unadulterated trance insanity. With the trance family representing if full force, the electricity in the air resounded louder at circuitGROUNDS than at any other stage that whole weekend.

A freak sandstorm put a hold in the festivities on night two except for a small art car in the middle of the speedway. Who stuck around to make sure that the music would live on? None other than Coldharbour King, Markus Schulz, kept the music goingwith an impromptu performance that sparked life back into a disastrous situation.

Although the trance greats like Bryan Kearney, ATB, Armin van Buuren, Markus Schulz, and Ferry Corsten were on the ticket, what was happening to our beloved trance scene at EDC Las Vegas? The trance family was left confused and disappointed to say the least. How could a genre that touches so deeply be ignored or forgotten? The mainstage sound was quickly changing into big room house and the lineup reflected this greatly.

EDC Las Vegas 2014 Mainstage Photo Credit: Insomniac Events

The following year, 2014, proved to be slightly better but still lacked the type of trance lineup from years before. Trance artists were experimenting with the mainstage sounds, such as Ferry Corsten and Markus Schulz partnering to form New World Punx. With passion in tow and a voice that would not be ignored, the trance family would come together to shout their disappointment with the lack of trance presence.

In true Pasquale Rotella fashion, he answered back letting headliners know that in 2015 trance would have a full day dedicated to some of the most celebrated names in trance. This would be the beginning of a beautiful resurgence of trance at EDC.

Dreamstatewas announced as a 2-day trance extravaganza that would take place at the NOS Events Center in San Bernardino, California on Thanksgiving Day weekend. Since the announcement of the Dreamstate event, the trance presence at EDC Las Vegas would forever be changed as 2016 played host to a brand new circuitGROUNDS design. Dreamstate took over the massive 360 entity for one wild celebration on day three, which marked a resurgence for trance.

With Ben Nicky kicking off the trance extravaganza, Sunday would be the night that the trance family would come together as one. People came together linking their spirits together to celebrate a genre that gloriously beat out all of the odds that once seemed to be on its last heartbeat.

This year Pasquale announced Dreamstate would expand even further for Electric Daisy Carnival Las Vegas. The biggest and best trance artists from all over the globe will take over the airwaves for three, yes THREE full days, at a brand new dedicated stage called quantumVALLEY hosted by Dreamstate! As history has shown us, we are continually blessed with bigger and better stages and lineups. With quantumVALLEY designed specifically for our beloved trance family, this will be the year that trance will be properly represented at Electric Daisy Carnival.

When were coming up with new ideas and experiences, we draw inspiration from all different places including from within our amazing community. Our newest stage at EDC Las Vegas this year exists because of the energy, passion and love many of you have for the trance sound and culture. After a late night of planning and perfecting, the team and I are finally ready to officially debut our newest addition to the EDCLV family of stages: quantumVALLEY. A few of you spotted some designs last week on my Insta but I wanted to make it official. Dreamstate will be hosting all 3 nights Under the Electric Sky.

Pasquale Rotella

EDC Las Vegas 2017 is just days away and I hope to see you at quantunVALLEY to celebrate trance in all of its glory this year. Check out my top five trance must-sees for EDC Las Vegas 2017 righthere!

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Event Page

Maria first fell in love with electronic music in the early 2000's when she heard a little tune called "Satisfaction" by Benny Benassi. Since then she has dived head first into the scene and become passionate about the trance, techno, and tech house genre's. Festival's like EDC, Dreamstate, and TomorrowWorld hold the key to her soul and dance music will always and forever be a major part of her life.

Read this article:

Trance Over The Years at EDC Las Vegas - EDM Identity (blog)

E3 2017: The Last Night revealed, shows off an incredibly stylized Cyberpunk world – GameZone

With all of the big game announcements that were made at Microsoft's E3 2017 presser, a little game called The Last Night debuted in what is perhaps the most stylish trailer of all. The Last Night is described as a post-cyberpunk cinematic platformer that takes place in a dystopia where humans are slowly destroying themselves through the creation of AI that does everything for them. Work and creativity have all but disappeared and many people find themselves caught in a hopeless quest for meaning.

Here is the debut trailer:

It's certainly a more novel approach to dystopian worlds in games, which typically lay blame at the feet of mega corporations and tyrannical governments for the undoing of humanity. What's creepy about The Last Night's narrative setup is that it's completely plausible. An announcement post on the game's Steam page describes people "defining themselves by what they consume, not what they create," which adds a much more refreshing spin on the whole humanity going to hell trope.

The Last Night doesn't have a release date at the moment, but it is currently scheduled to arrive sometime in 2018.

Read the rest here:

E3 2017: The Last Night revealed, shows off an incredibly stylized Cyberpunk world - GameZone

UCLA doctors use magnetic stimulation to ‘rewire’ the brain for … – UCLA Newsroom

Americans spend billions of dollars each yearon antidepressants, but the National Institutes of Health estimates that those medications work for only 60 percent to 70 percent of people who take them. In addition, the number of people with depressionhas increased 18 percentsince 2005, according to the World Health Organization, which this year launched a global campaign encouraging people to seek treatment.

TheSemel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA is one of a handful of hospitals and clinics nationwide that offer a treatment that works in a fundamentally different way than drugs. The technique, transcranial magnetic stimulation, beams targeted magnetic pulses deep inside patients brains an approach that has been likened to rewiring a computer.

TMS has been approved by the FDA for treating depression that doesnt respond to medications, and UCLA researchers say it has been underused. But new equipment being rolled out this summer promises to make the treatment available to more people.

We are actually changing how the brain circuits are arranged, how they talk to each other, saidDr. Ian Cook, director of the UCLA Depression Research and Clinic Program. The brain is an amazingly changeable organ. In fact, every time people learn something new, there are physical changes in the brain structure that can be detected.

Nathalie DeGravel, 48, of Los Angeles had tried multiple medications and different types of therapy, not to mention many therapists, for her depression before she heard about magnetic stimulation. She discussed it with her psychiatrist earlier this year, and he readily referred her to UCLA.

Within a few weeks, she noticed relief from the back pain she had been experiencing; shortly thereafter, her depression began to subside. DeGravel says she can now react more wisely to lifes daily struggles, feels more resilient and is able to do much more around the house. She even updated her resume to start looking for a job for the first time in years.

During TMS therapy, the patient sits in a reclining chair, much like one used in a dentists office, and a technician places a magnetic stimulator against the patients head in a predetermined location, based on calibrations from brain imaging.

The stimulator sends a series of magnetic pulses into the brain. People who have undergone the treatment commonly report the sensation is like having someone tapping their head, and because of the clicking sound it makes, patients often wear earphones or earplugs during a session.

TMS therapy normally takes 30 minutes to an hour, and people typically receive the treatment several days a week for six weeks. But the newest generation of equipment could make treatments less time-consuming.

There are new TMS devices recently approved by the FDA that will allow patients to achieve the benefits of the treatment in a much shorter period of time, saidDr. Andrew Leuchter, director of the Semel Institutes TMS clinical and research service. For some patients, we will have the ability to decrease the length of a treatment session from 37.5 minutes down to 3 minutes, and to complete a whole course of TMS in two weeks.

Leuchter said some studies have shown that TMS is even better than medication for the treatment of chronic depression. The approach, he says, is underutilized.

We are used to thinking of psychiatric treatments mostly in terms of either talk therapies, psychotherapy or medications, Leuchter said. TMS is a revolutionary kind of treatment.

Bob Holmes of Los Angeles is one of the 16 million Americans who report having a major depressive episode each year, and he has suffered from depression his entire life. He calls the TMS treatment he received at UCLA Health a lifesaver.

What this did was sort of reawaken everything, and it provided that kind of jolt to get my brain to start to work again normally, he said.

Doctors are also exploring whether the treatment could also be used for a variety of other conditions including schizophrenia, epilepsy, Parkinsons disease and chronic pain.

We're still just beginning to scratch the surface of what this treatment might be able to do for patients with a variety of illnesses, Leuchter said.Its completely noninvasive and is usually very well tolerated.

Learn more about the UCLA Brain Research Institute andtheDepression Grand Challenge.

Read the original:

UCLA doctors use magnetic stimulation to 'rewire' the brain for ... - UCLA Newsroom

Posted in Tms

Neurotechnology Wins Fisheries-Focused Computer Vision Competition – findBIOMETRICS

Posted on June 14, 2017

Neurotechnology researchers have won first place in a competition designed to find AI solutions for fisheries monitoring.

The competition was organized by Kaggle, an online crowdsourcing platform aimed at the tech and research communities. Organized by The Nature Conservancy and aimed ultimately at applying sophisticated computer vision technology to the fight to protect global fisheries from overfishing and other threats, the Nature Conservancy Fisheries Monitoring competition essentially asked participants to develop algorithms that could automatically detect and identify different species of fish and other marine life.

A group composed entirely of members of Neurotechnologys AI development team, working under the team name TROLL (Towards Robust Optimal Learning of Learning), beat 2,292 other teams to take the companys $50,000 first prize with their algorithm solution.

Its extracurricular as far as Neurotechnologys business goes, but the Kaggle win highlights the talent at work in the company, which recently announced a new version of its MegaMatcher Accelerator platform, which Neurotechnology says is now the fastest biometric engine in the world.

June 14, 2017 by Alex Perala

Excerpt from:

Neurotechnology Wins Fisheries-Focused Computer Vision Competition - findBIOMETRICS

Neurotechnology Researchers Win Kaggle Competition with Deep Neural Network Solution for The Nature … – PR Newswire (press release)

The Fisheries Monitoring competition was one of the biggest Kaggle competitions. According to The Nature Conservancy, which initiated this competition, illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing practices are threatening marine ecosystems, global seafood supplies and local livelihoods. By using computer technology to aid in monitoring fisheries, human capital can be re-allocated to management and enforcement, helping local, regional and global partners preserve the integrity and viability of these fisheries today and into the future.

2,293 teams submitted algorithms for the identification of fish and other marine species from video streams. Competing solutions were evaluated based on an unseen test set that resembles a real-life scenario.

The Neurotechnology employees, who entered the competition independently under the team name "Towards Robust-Optimal Learning of Learning," used state-of-the-art deep neural networks to solve the problem and provide the best overall solution in the competition. The winning team is comprised of Gediminas Peksys, Ignas Namajunas and Jonas Bialopetravicius, all of whom work on Neurotechnology's AI development team, which designs and delivers a range of products and services based on deep neural networks, including computer vision and object recognition.

"This was one of the first Kaggle competitions that was comprised of two stages, which means that models developed during the first stage were frozen and evaluated on unseen data that was made available during the second stage," said Gediminas Peksys from the Towards Robust Optimal Learning of Learning team. "In such a setting, it is very easy for a team's models to overfit the data by using too many trainable parameters. We were able to utilize our team's experience using deep neural networks to come up with a robust model that performed a lot closer to the original estimate from stage one and generalized in a predictable manner on unseen data."

"We congratulate our employees who won this difficult competition," said Dr. Algimantas Malickas, owner of Neurotechnology. "These individuals along with many other excellent employees working on our client projects demonstrate the qualifications of our Neurotechnology staff and their ability to solve the most complex pattern recognition and neural network training problems."

About Neurotechnology

Neurotechnology is a developer of high-precision algorithms and software based on deep neural network (DNN) and other AI-related technologies. The company offers a range of products for biometric fingerprint, face, iris, palmprint and voice identification as well as AI, computer vision, object recognition and robotics. Drawing from years of academic research in the fields of neuroinformatics, image processing and pattern recognition, Neurotechnology was founded in 1990 in Vilnius, Lithuania and released its first fingerprint identification system in 1991. Since that time the company has released more than 130 products and version upgrades. More than 3000 system integrators, security companies and hardware providers integrate Neurotechnology's algorithms into their products, with millions of customer installations worldwide. Neurotechnology's algorithms also achieved top results in independent technology evaluations including NIST MINEX and IREX.

Media ContactJennifer Allen Newton Bluehouse Consulting Group, Inc. +1-503-805-7540 jennifer (at) bluehousecg (dot) com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/neurotechnology-researchers-win-kaggle-competition-with-deep-neural-network-solution-for-the-nature-conservancy-fisheries-monitoring-300473515.html

SOURCE Neurotechnology

http://www.neurotechnology.com

Read the rest here:

Neurotechnology Researchers Win Kaggle Competition with Deep Neural Network Solution for The Nature ... - PR Newswire (press release)

Neurotechnology Releases MegaMatcher Accelerator Extreme, the Fastest Biometric Engine in the World – PR Newswire (press release)

MegaMatcher Accelerator Extreme edition includes enhanced functionality and reliability compared to the previous MegaMatcher Accelerator version, with more fingerprint, face and eye iris capabilities and significantly faster speeds. It provides bigger capacity, handling up to 160 million fingerprints, up to 40 million faces and up to 200 million eye iris templates on single server.

Neurotechnology is offering a simple upgrade path into the Extreme edition from other MegaMatcher Accelerator editions for the existing customers.

MegaMatcher Accelerator is available through Neurotechnology or from distributors worldwide. For more information and trial version, go to: http://www.neurotechnology.com.

About Neurotechnology

Neurotechnology is a developer of high-precision algorithms and software based on deep neural network (DNN) and other AI-related technologies. The company offers a range of products for biometric fingerprint, face, iris, palmprint and voice identification as well as AI, computer vision, object recognition and robotics. Drawing from years of academic research in the fields of neuroinformatics, image processing and pattern recognition, Neurotechnology was founded in 1990 in Vilnius, Lithuania and released its first fingerprint identification system in 1991. Since that time the company has released more than 130 products and version upgrades. More than 3000 system integrators, security companies and hardware providers integrate Neurotechnology's algorithms into their products, with millions of customer installations worldwide. Neurotechnology's algorithms also received top results in independent technology evaluations such as NIST MINEX and IREX.

Media ContactJennifer Allen Newton Bluehouse Consulting Group, Inc. +1-503-805-7540 jennifer (at) bluehousecg (dot) com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/neurotechnology-releases-megamatcher-accelerator-extreme-the-fastest-biometric-engine-in-the-world-300472075.html

SOURCE Neurotechnology

http://www.neurotechnology.com

The rest is here:

Neurotechnology Releases MegaMatcher Accelerator Extreme, the Fastest Biometric Engine in the World - PR Newswire (press release)

Neurotech panel shares successes from first year – Cornell Chronicle

Faculty from Cornell Neurotech shared stories of technologies and tools they have developed in their first year of operation at a Reunion 2017 panel, Unlocking the Brain: Cornells Search for the Key.

University Photography

Arts and Sciences Dean Gretchen Ritter '83, Engineering Dean Lance Collins and Stephen Mong '92, MBA 02, MEN 93, take in the panel discussion June 9.

The June 9 discussion featured Joseph Fetcho, director of Cornell Neurotech and professor in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior; and Chris Xu, M.S. 93, Ph.D. 96, the Mong Family Foundation Director of Cornell Neurotech and a professor in the Department of Applied and Engineering Physics.

In the first year alone, Cornell Neurotech is already realizing many newfound research collaborations, said Gretchen Ritter 83, the Harold Tanner Dean of Arts and Sciences. These multidisciplinary partnerships have developed several key advances in our understanding of the brain and in the tools we can use to further decode its mysteries.

Cornell Neurotech a joint initiative of the College of Engineering and the College of Arts and Sciences launched with a multimillion dollar seed grant from the Mong Family Foundation, through Stephen Mong 92, MBA 02, MEN 93. The initiative aims to build tools that enable scientists to better understand and treat disorders such as Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, autism, epilepsy, schizophrenia and depression.

Fetcho brought the presentation to a personal level by sharing videos of his mother, who no longer recognizes her children. He said research into diseases like hers needs to answer questions such as: Have the nerve cells in his mothers brain died? If not, where are they? Have their connections been damaged? Has the pattern of activity in the brain changed?

To find the answers, scientists are developing tools to look deep into the brain with high-resolution imagery, to look at neurons as they fire, as they search for connections, as they gain and lose synapses and to try to connect that brain activity to various behaviors and conditions, he said.

Fetchos lab does brain research using young zebrafish, whose transparency is a huge advantage in viewing brain activity.

Transferring this research from transparent fish to mammals has been one of the challenges given to Xu, who is developing tools and techniques that see deep into the brains of mice and can image several different regions of the brain at the same time.

Our Laboratory for Innovative Neurotechnology at Cornell is using technology to enable answers to currently impossible neuroscience questions, Xu said.

Along with support for labs and research, one feature of Cornell Neurotech is the Mong Fellowship Program, which pairs life scientist postdocs with postdocs in engineering, physics or chemistry to work together on a pressing problem.

We havent solved the brain yet, but we have done some remarkable things with respect to tools to understand it, Fetcho said of the first years progress.

Lance Collins, the Joseph Silbert Dean of Engineering, said the neurotech initiative began, and will continue to grow, because of the natural curiosity and collaboration of Cornell faculty.

This idea nucleated through interactions happening within the faculty and was taken to the next level by an outstanding alumni gift, Collins said. Faculty did this because they were genuinely and intrinsically interested in the problem, so they brought their expertise together. Thats how we do it here.

Kathy Hovis is a writer for the College of Arts and Sciences.

Read more from the original source:

Neurotech panel shares successes from first year - Cornell Chronicle

Comparing Stryker Corporation (SYK) & Accuray (ARAY) – Markets Daily

Comparing Stryker Corporation (SYK) & Accuray (ARAY)
Markets Daily
The Company offers a range of medical technologies, including orthopedic, medical and surgical, and neurotechnology and spine products. The Company's segments include Orthopaedics; MedSurg; Neurotechnology and Spine, and Corporate and Other.

and more »

The rest is here:

Comparing Stryker Corporation (SYK) & Accuray (ARAY) - Markets Daily

NeuroHacking – Home | Facebook

Your alcoholism will kill you before your HIV does, says a doctor to one of our characters. Worldwide, alcohol abuse kills more people than HIV, nearly 3.3 million per year. Yet what the public believes, and Alcoholics Anonymous purports, Once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic, is not as true as you think. Nor is the fundamental principle for treating alcoholism that we all take as truth; abstinence.

Science has shown that abstinence not only doesnt take away the addicti...on, but also increases the craving. So why has one modality dominated our thought since the 1930s? Why are profitable rehab facilities reluctant to change? And why are millions of people still being denied the opportunity of a simple life saving method and drug that have been FDA approved since 1994?

One Little Pill takes an in depth look at a simple, safe method with success rates of 78%, the suppressing obstacles surrounding it, and those people just now finding it. This character driven film will leave you compelled to help spread the word that "Options Save Lives."http://play.google.com/store/movies/details

Read the original here:

NeuroHacking - Home | Facebook