CNN’s Sally Kohn Wants To Fight Terrorism With ‘Tolerance’ And ‘Political Correctness’ – The Daily Caller

Liberal CNN contributorSally Kohn wants to fight terrorism with tolerance and political correctness.

President Trump demanded an end to political correctness in counterterrorism following the London terror attacks that left seven people dead and dozens more wounded. Kohn took offense at the presidents tweets and fired back, saying that political correctness are, according to her, the solutions to terrorism.

Political correctness is simple idea everyone should be treated with equal dignity [and] respect. Its not cause of terrorism. Its antidote, Kohn wrote in a series of tweets. When we make political correctness the scapegoat, we undermine values of tolerance and equality that are ALWAYS our best weapon against hate.

Of course we cant snap our fingers make all current terrorists just become more tolerant and respectful, she conceded. But long term, do we help future would-be terrorists turn toward respect, tolerance, away [from] hate? Or do we become more hateful ourselves?Our values of pluralism and inclusion and equality are under attack. The answer to terrorism CANNOT be to throw away our values.

Kohn previously took issue with then-candidate Donald Trumps call for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States.

Kohn claimed that Sharia law isnt a threat because even progressive Muslims adhere to it.

Follow Hasson on Twitter @PeterJHasson

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CNN's Sally Kohn Wants To Fight Terrorism With 'Tolerance' And 'Political Correctness' - The Daily Caller

Hackers caught cloning activist Twitter accounts to spread fake news – The Independent

Designed by Pierpaolo Lazzarini from Italian company Jet Capsule. The I.F.O. is fuelled by eight electric engines, which is able to push the flying object to an estimated top speed of about 120mph.

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A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

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A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

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Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

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Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

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The giant human-like robot bears a striking resemblance to the military robots starring in the movie 'Avatar' and is claimed as a world first by its creators from a South Korean robotic company

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Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

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Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi

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Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi and Kaptain Rock playing one string light saber guitar perform jam session

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A test line of a new energy suspension railway, resembling a giant panda, is seen in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China

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The Jaguar I-PACE Concept car is the start of a new era for Jaguar. This is a production preview of the Jaguar I-PACE, which will be revealed next year and on the road in 2018

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Japan's On-Art Corp's CEO Kazuya Kanemaru poses with his company's eight metre tall dinosaur-shaped mechanical suit robot 'TRX03' and other robots during a demonstration in Tokyo, Japan

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Japan's On-Art Corp's eight metre tall dinosaur-shaped mechanical suit robot 'TRX03'

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Japan's On-Art Corp's eight metre tall dinosaur-shaped mechanical suit robot 'TRX03' performs during its unveiling in Tokyo, Japan

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Singulato Motors co-founder and CEO Shen Haiyin poses in his company's concept car Tigercar P0 at a workshop in Beijing, China

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The interior of Singulato Motors' concept car Tigercar P0 at a workshop in Beijing, China

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Singulato Motors' concept car Tigercar P0

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A picture shows Singulato Motors' concept car Tigercar P0 at a workshop in Beijing, China

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An exhibitor charges the battery cells of AnyWalker, an ultra-mobile chasis robot which is able to move in any kind of environment during Singapore International Robo Expo

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A robot with a touch-screen information apps stroll down the pavillon at the Singapore International Robo Expo

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An exhibitor demonstrates the AnyWalker, an ultra-mobile chasis robot which is able to move in any kind of environment during Singapore International Robo Expo

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Visitors experience Samsung Electronics' Gear VR during the Korea Electronics Grand Fair at an exhibition hall in Seoul, South Korea

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Amy Rimmer, Research Engineer at Jaguar Land Rover, demonstrates the car manufacturer's Advanced Highway Assist in a Range Rover, which drives the vehicle, overtakes and can detect vehicles in the blind spot, during the first demonstrations of the UK Autodrive Project at HORIBA MIRA Proving Ground in Nuneaton, Warwickshire

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Ford EEBL Emergency Electronic Brake Lights is demonstrated during the first demonstrations of the UK Autodrive Project at HORIBA MIRA Proving Ground in Nuneaton, Warwickshire

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Full-scale model of 'Kibo' on display at the Space Dome exhibition hall of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Tsukuba Space Center, in Tsukuba, north-east of Tokyo, Japan

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Miniatures on display at the Space Dome exhibition hall of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Tsukuba Space Center, in Tsukuba, north-east of Tokyo, Japan. In its facilities, JAXA develop satellites and analyse their observation data, train astronauts for utilization in the Japanese Experiment Module 'Kibo' of the International Space Station (ISS) and develop launch vehicles

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The robot developed by Seed Solutions sings and dances to the music during the Japan Robot Week 2016 at Tokyo Big Sight. At this biennial event, the participating companies exhibit their latest service robotic technologies and components

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The robot developed by Seed Solutions sings and dances to music during the Japan Robot Week 2016 at Tokyo Big Sight

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Government and industry are working together on a robot-like autopilot system that could eliminate the need for a second human pilot in the cockpit

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Aurora Flight Sciences' technicians work on an Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automantion System (ALIAS) device in the firm's Centaur aircraft at Manassas Airport in Manassas, Va.

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Stefan Schwart and Udo Klingenberg preparing a self-built flight simulator to land at Hong Kong airport, from Rostock, Germany

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Hackers caught cloning activist Twitter accounts to spread fake news - The Independent

Did the microbiome help drive human evolution? – STAT

I

often think about the long and winding road from organic compounds floating in the so-called primordial soup to humans. Lately Ive been wondering if microbes helped drive the bus.

Even just a few years ago, that would have been a truly ludicrous idea. But thanks to our growing understanding of the human microbiome, it could represent a thrilling example of evolutionary symbiosis that has mutually benefitted humans and their microbial passengers.

Our bodies are made up of many more microbial cells than human cells. Thousands of species of bacteria, fungi, viruses, and other microbes live almost everywhere in and on our bodies, including the digestive system, nose, and skin, to name just a few. Some of the earliest research showed that the microbes that live in our digestive systems help us digest food, make some of the vitamins we need, and balance the immune system.

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Since then, weve learned that these microbes, collectively called the microbiome, can affect body weight, susceptibility to cancer, and even behavior. The gut microbiome interacts with its host using signaling networks that employ the immune system, hormones, and the nervous system. In short, it has a profound effect on our overall health.

Another kind of superbug: Seeking an edge in the elite athletes microbiome

Ive been studying the microbiome for more than 20years. My research team at Massachusetts Institute of Technology explores how microbes help keep us healthy. Weve learned that our daily diet and habits dramatically influence our microbiomes. Weve specifically studied aspects of wellness in mice (which often make good stand-ins for humans) that are influenced by diet and microbes, including healthy skin, a slender physique, and breeding success across generations. Several findings from our work make me think that microbes helping steer the evolution of humans isnt such a far-fetched idea.

For starters, in our glow of health study, we fed to mice bacteria extracted from human breast milk. This dietary addition gave them thicker skin, more lustrous fur, and, in females, more acidic vaginal mucus. That change in mucus is correlated with increased fertility in mice and in humans.

Or take the case of oxytocin, sometimes called the love hormone. In humans, oxytocin not only stimulates reproductive behaviors, but also induces childbirth, releases breast milk, bonds babies with their moms, and joins couples in monogamy to share child rearing. Oxytocin promotes nerve growth, fosters creativity in the brain, and serves as glue for complex mammalian social networks that have been integral in evolving social organizations. When fed to mice, certain kinds of bacteria found in human breast milk elicit production of oxytocin in the brain and bloodstream.

Likewise, testosterone levels in mice soar after eating these bacteria. Such microbe-treated mice display larger testicles with higher sperm counts and also build extra muscle. The resulting mouse swagger would give these mice a competitive edge in combat and romance, letting them spread their genes and microbes more widely and for a longer time. During bad times, these microbiome-related changes could provide a huge survival advantage for both the host and its microbial allies.

Even thyroid hormone, sometimes called the gas pedal that controls the bodys metabolism and thus body temperature, is influenced by our resident bacteria. It makes sense that heat-loving (thermophilic) bacteria originally dwelling in decaying swamp plants would try to set the body temperature of their new hosts so they could live year-round in total comfort with a competitive edge over other microbial interlopers. This stabilized host environment could then have chaperoned the evolution from external egg laying to internal placental pregnancy. As a bonus for microbes, by increasing mother-infant intimacy, internal pregnancy abets the transfer of microbes from mother to child, and thus the creation of future suitable dwellings for the mothers microbial descendants.

It turns out that our minuscule microbial manipulators also boost levels of a transcription factor (a protein that helps turn the instructions of DNA into body-building proteins) called Forkhead Box N1. It helps build tissue in the thymus gland that produces specialized immune cells that sustain pregnancy in mammals. Thanks to the exquisitely synchronized immune interactions choreographed by this tissue, the immune system doesnt swarm and kill sperm cells or the developing fetus. Instead, it opens the door to internal fertilization and lengthy pregnancy while still combating invading bacteria and other pathogens.

Microbe-stimulated Forkhead Box N1 is also involved in the growth of body hair which, along with the production of thyroid hormone, supports the stable body temperature (called endothermy) needed for an extended pregnancy. Forkhead Box N1 is also implicated in the development of mammary glands. Its just a small stretch to imagine that microbes helped modify sweat glands into lactating breasts in order to create a yummy and nutritious food for human infants and at the same time spread their own microbial sprouts to future generations.

Interestingly, mouse moms consuming probiotic bacteria from human breast milk actually take better care of their infants and are less likely to eat them compared with untreated mice or those eating other types of diets. Following this line of reasoning, the bacteria help make more mice and thus more future microbe hosts.

The idea that humans are a kind of deluxe love bus for microbes sounds preposterous, even diabolical. But maybe its actually a winner for everyone.

Susan E. Erdman, DVM, is a principal research scientist and assistant director of MITs Division of Comparative Medicine.

Susan E. Erdman can be reached at serdman@mit.edu

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Did the microbiome help drive human evolution? - STAT

Wolf evolution and ‘settled science’ – Phys.Org

June 9, 2017 by Ricki Lewis, Phd, Plos Blogs A coyote (Canis latrans)

Are the red and eastern wolves separate species, or hybrids with coyotes? And what has that got to do with climate change? Actually a lot, in illustrating what scientific inquiry is and what it isn't.

Comparing canid genomes

A report in this week's Science Advances questions conclusions of a 2016 comparison of genome sequences from 28 canids. The distinction between "species" and "hybrid" is of practical importance, because the Endangered Species Act circa 1973 doesn't recognize hybrids. But DNA information can refine species designationsor muddy the waters.

At first, genetic marker (SNP) studies hinted at a mixing and matching of genome segments among coyotes, wolves, and dogs. Then came full-fledged genome sequencing.

Last year Bridgett M. vonHoldt, head of Evolutionary Genomics and Ecological Epigenomics at Princeton and colleagues, scrutinized the 28 full genome sequences for signs of "lack of unique ancestry." They compared the genomes of 3 domestic dog breeds (boxer, German shepherd, and Basenji), 6 coyotes, a golden jackal from Kenya, and various wolves to 7 "reference" genomes from 4 Eurasian gray wolves (to minimize recent mutations) and 3 coyotes. The conclusion: lots of genes have flowed from coyotes and gray wolves into the genomes of the animals that became what we call red and eastern wolves, in different proportions.

A bit of background.

Classifying these animals based on geography and visible traits gets confusing, with all the overlaps and shared DNA sequences. Apparently various pairings can successfully mate but probably don't do so very much in the wild when populations are large. Tracking genomes reveals a classic cline, in the parlance of population genetics, with coyote gene introgression into wolf genomes rising from Alaska and Yellowstone (8-8.5%), to the Great Lakes (21.7-23.9%), to Ontario (32.5%-35.5%), and to Quebec (>50%). (BTW the Basenji, the barkless dog, is 61% gray wolf.)

Paul A. Hohenlohe of the University of Idaho and colleagues maintain that the 2016 findings actually support 2 hypotheses: recent admixture (hybridization) or that red and eastern wolves are distinct species. Actually it's 3: hybridization might have happened a long time ago, something that following genes with known mutation rates might reveal.

The new paper challenges the 28-genome comparison:

Dr. vonHoldt's team responded to Dr. Hohenlohe's team's comments, reiterating that the results show red wolf and eastern wolves are "genetically very similar to coyotes or gray wolves," reflecting recent hybridization.

Discussion of wolf classification goes back a quarter century, and this trio of papers is only a recent glimpse of the debate. But I love the respectful back-and-forth of the efforts to extract a compelling narrative from the data that might be what actually happened. Multiple interpretations of the same data and amending interpretations as new data accumulate is the very essence of the scientific process.

Anti-science rhetoric

Let's reframe the wolf papers using the language of the popular climate change discussion.

Are Hohenlohe and his co-workers "coyote deniers?"

Do vonHoldt and her colleagues "believe in" wolf-coyote couplings and Hohenlohe et al don't?

The science of wolf origins is clearly not "settled" for science is NEVER settled. Facts aren't proven, but instead evidence demonstrated and assessed, from both experimentation and observation. The information from tested hypotheses may be so consistent and compelling that it eventually builds to gestate a theory, or even a law, that then explains further observations. But to get there, science is all about asking questions. As I've written in all 35 or so editions of my various textbooks, science is a cycle of inquiry.

In fact the history of genetics is a chronicle of once-entrenched dogma changing with new experiments and observations. I was in grad school when Walter Gilbert's famed "Why Genes in Pieces?" was published. The classic paper introduced introns, the parts of genes that aren't represented in the encoded protein. It was an astonishing idea circa 1978, but with compelling evidence. Yet even Mendel's pea crosses sought an alternate explanation for the prevailing notion that traits simply disappear between generations.

Before I'm hurled insults, let me assert that although my expertise isn't in climate science, I think that the evidence very strongly supports the hypothesis that the planet is warming at an accelerated rate compared to some other times. And fossil fuel use is likely a partial cause, not just a correlation or association, because the relationship is linear and a mechanism plausible. But I don't "believe" in global warming as if it is the tooth fairy or a deity.

I cringe when politicians and celebrities appoint and anoint themselves experts on climate change, then use language that illustrates profound unfamiliarity with the ways of science.

Why did Eddie Vedder begin his speech at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony for Pearl Jam with "climate change is real?" He's a musician, not a meteorologist. Why not, "semi-conservative DNA replication is real?" Or "hydrogen bonds are real?" "Noble gases are real?"

I've long had a problem with the term "climate change," because of course climate changes! Why would it ever be static, given weather ups and downs?

Climate dynamics are a little like the composition of blood, or any other manifestation of biological homeostasis. Have a complete blood count at various times and, if you're healthy, results are likely to be within a narrow normal range. Ditto blood sugar, liver enzymes, serum cholesterol level. But steady blood counts don't mean that the same blood cells hang out forever. Bone marrow stem cells continually pump out blood cell progenitors as the older specialized cells die off. Natural systems change over time, with fluctuations large and small.

Climate always has and always will change.

We can learn about normal blood circulation by studying off-kilter situationsleukemia, infection, anemiawithout fear of being labeled a "denier." It's not only a scientifically inappropriate term, but one that is offensive to some, with its echoes of the Holocaust.

I'm interested in other times deep, geologic time, not the president's simplistic reference to the next century when the climate warmed at the rate that it is doing so now. How long did the warming escalate and persist? What forces or events might have precipitated warming? What factors accompanied its ultimate reversal as ice ages neared? By asking questions we can learn what we can expect from nature, so that perhaps we can better understand what we can do to counter the warming trend.

And so those who claim to believe in climate change and vilify those who ask questions might learn a lesson in what science actually is from the elegant discussion of wolf origins.

Explore further: Study doesn't support theory red and eastern wolves are recent hybrids, researchers argue

This story is republished courtesy of PLOS Blogs: blogs.plos.org.

A team led by University of Idaho researchers is calling into question a widely publicized 2016 study that concluded eastern and red wolves are not distinct species, but rather recent hybrids of gray wolves and coyotes. In ...

Research by UCLA biologists published today in the journal Science Advances presents strong evidence that the scientific reason advanced by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to remove the gray wolf from protection under ...

Scientists have successfully produced hybrid pups between a male western gray wolf and a female western coyote in captivity.

Today's Great Lakes gray wolf, de-listed by U.S. officials as an endangered species, probably is a hybrid and no longer the historic animal, biologists said.

Wolves and other top predators need large ranges to be able to control smaller predators whose populations have expanded to the detriment of a balanced ecosystem.

Wolves in the eastern United States are hybrids of gray wolves and coyotes, while the region's coyotes actually are wolf-coyote-dog hybrids, according to a new genetic study that is adding fuel to a longstanding debate over ...

The nematode worms that cause the world's most devastating crop losses have given up on sexual reproduction and instead rely on their large, duplicated genomes to thrive in new environments. A group led by Etienne G. J. Danchin ...

Flatworms that spent five weeks aboard the International Space Station are helping researchers led by Tufts University scientists to study how an absence of normal gravity and geomagnetic fields can have anatomical, behavioral, ...

The diverse 'coats' which protect a deadly microbe from our immune cells are generated by a 'hotspot' of rapidly evolving genes, a study has found.

(Phys.org)A group of scientists from several institutions in Germany has suggested that extinct animals that are resurrected through scientific means be given a tag on their name to indicate their origins. In a Policy ...

It's well known that young babies are more interested in faces than other objects. Now, researchers reporting in Current Biology on June 8 have the first evidence that this preference for faces develops in the womb. By projecting ...

(Phys.org)A small team of researchers from Austria and Sweden has found that ravens are able to remember people who trick them for at least two months. In their paper published in the journal Animal Behavior, the group ...

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How did a review of wolf studies turn into a "climate dynamics" rant?

Really tired of these spoiled whelps that think the world hangs on their every thought. And don't expect a moment's gratitude for the fact that the author was trying to be even handed on the subject. That's the thing with the alt-right and evangelicals where they will always have an advantage. No one else is that rude.

"Climate change "deniers" aren't as dangerous to our children as is science illiteracy." Odd statement. Like there's a difference. All 'deniers' are either science illiterate, or act that way in a conscious scam to appeal to those...that are scientifically illiterate. It's like saying gravity isn't nearly as life threatening as falling out of a window.

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Wolf evolution and 'settled science' - Phys.Org

Five things you need to know about DUP politicians and science – New Scientist

Nigel Dodds and Arlene Foster, DUP deputy leader and leader

Charles McQuillan/Getty Images

By Frank Swain

Having failed to win an overall majority in the UKs general election, Theresa Mays Conservative party is hoping to foster an informal coalition with Northern Irelands Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). Members of the party have taken controversial stances on everything from climate change to evolution, with one assembly member being unaware that heterosexual people can contract HIV. Here are five things you need to know when it comes to science and the DUP

The party has a history of speaking out against climate change. Senior member Sammy Wilson has called climate change a con, and described the Paris Agreement as window dressing for climate chancers. During his time as Northern Irelands environment minister, he said that people would eventually look back at this whole climate change debate and ask ourselves how on Earth we were ever conned into spending billions of pounds on the issue.

It isnt just Wilson though in 2014, DUP ministers tried to oppose proposals to introduce local measures against climate change in Northern Ireland.

Northern Ireland remains the only part of the UK where women cannot access abortion unless their life is endangered by pregnancy a legal situation that is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, according to a Belfast High Court ruling in 2015.

But on taking leadership of the party in 2016, Arlene Foster promised to block any attempt to change these laws, telling reporters I would not want abortion to be as freely available here as it is in England.

Foster did, however, say she might consider an amendment in cases of rape. But the DUPs Jim Wells formerly the health minister for Northern Ireland opposes abortion even in these circumstances.

DUP assembly member Thomas Buchanan has previously called for creationism to be taught in schools. In 2016, he voiced support for an evangelical Christian programme that offers helpful practical advice on how to counter evolutionary teaching. He has expressed a desire to see every school in Northern Ireland teaching creationism, describing evolution as a peddled lie.

Buchanan told the Irish News Im someone who believes in creationism and that the world was spoken into existence in six days by His power, adding that children had been corrupted by the teaching of evolution.

The DUPs leader narrowly survived a no-confidence motion following a disastrous attempt to bolster green energy in Northern Ireland by providing subsidies for wood burners. Arlene Foster introduced the scheme in 2012 when she was head of the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment. The original budget was 25 million, but a lack of price controls meant that, over five years, almost 500 million went up in smoke.

Last year, DUP assembly member Trevor Clarke admitted that he had thought only gay people could be infected with HIV, until a charity explained otherwise. He made the comments during a parliamentary debate around a campaign to promote awareness and prevention of HIV in Northern Ireland and to increase support for those living with HIV.

Read more: How YouGovs experimental poll correctly called the UK election

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Five things you need to know about DUP politicians and science - New Scientist

Shattered Sun Detail ‘The Evolution of Anger’ Album, Unleash ‘Burn It Down’ Video – Loudwire

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Its time to add to the summer release calendar as Shattered Sun are on their way back with new music. The band just announced that their sophomore set will be titled The Evolution of Anger and theyve also unleashed a new video for the song Burn It Down.

The rising rockers settled into the studio with producer Mark Lewis earlier this year. Lewis, who has previously worked with DevilDriver and Fallujah, definitely had an impact on the band. Mark brought a sound to the band that we didnt think we were capable of, says guitarist Jessie Santos. You can check out the track listing for the album below and look for the disc arriving via Victory Records on July 21. Pre-orders are being taken here.

As for the song, theres some serious low end pummeling going on. People are fed up and I am certainly fed up, says singer Marcos Leal, reacting to the worldwide state of affairs. The singer continues, We almost burned this band into the ground internally. Guitarist Daniel Trejo decided to leave the band in late 2015, and internal issues began to surface before the band worked them out and Trejo returned. Between all the things we have done over the years, things finally came to the surface. Once Daniel came back into the fold, the first song he showed me was Burn it Down, and it is a perfect reflection of what occurred within Shattered Sun. You can watch the Dustin Smith-directed video for Burn It Down above.

Meanwhile, you can look for Shattered Sun playing select shows on the Vans Warped Tour this summer. See the dates below, and stay tuned for a fall tour announcement coming soon.

Shattered Sun, The Evolution of Anger Track Listing

1. Keep Your Eyes Shut 2. Blame 3. Declassified 4. Hollow Chains 5. Out for Justice 6. Die for Nothing 7. Burn It Down 8. Like Gasoline 9. Terminal 10. Hope Dies

Shattered Sun on Vans Warped Tour 2017

7/26 Maryland Heights, Mo. @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre 7/27 Bonner Springs, Kan. @ Providence Medical Center Amphitheatre 7/28 Dallas, Texas @ Starplex Pavilion 7/29 San Antonio, Texas @ AT&T Center 7/30 Houston, Texas @ NRG Park 8/1 Las Cruces, N.M. @ NMSU Intramural Field 8/4 Mountain View, Calif. @ Shoreline Amphitheatre 8/5 San Diego, Calif. @ Qualcomm Stadium 8/6 Pomona, Calif. @ Pomona Fairplex

Best Metal Albums of 2017 (So Far)

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Shattered Sun Detail 'The Evolution of Anger' Album, Unleash 'Burn It Down' Video - Loudwire

WHO Releases Full Report On Evolution Of Global Public Health Since 2007 – Kaiser Family Foundation

WHO Releases Full Report On Evolution Of Global Public Health Since 2007
Kaiser Family Foundation
'Ten years in public health 2007-2017' chronicles the evolution of global public health during the tenure of Dr. [Margaret] Chan, WHO director general. This series of chapters evaluates successes, setbacks, and enduring challenges during her ...

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WHO Releases Full Report On Evolution Of Global Public Health Since 2007 - Kaiser Family Foundation

The First Church of Darwin – Personal Liberty Digest

Underlying much of American life and politics is an unshakeable faith in Darwinian evolution. Almost 60 percent of us mistake this theory for fact and, watching Congress, who can doubt that politicians at least are descended from apes? No wonder most Americans regard evolution as the basis of all modern biological science, supported by everything we know about geology, genetics, paleontology, and other fields and extol its importance as a unifying concept in science and its overall explanatory power. Even those who consider themselves Christians like their Bible diluted with Darwin: Half of Americans believe humans evolved, with the majority of these saying God guided the evolutionary process.

The assumption that our ancestor crawled out of primordial sludge pervades everything from health to entertainment. Our taxes pay to indoctrinate students with evolutionary theory while lobbyists insist its the only permissible explanation of our origins. Occasionally, schools also present creationism, but this doesnt necessarily refer to the account in Genesis: Mentioning a deity in any way while discussing mankinds birth apparently turns the topic creationist. No doubt even the most profane teacher avoids taking the Lords name in vain when inculcating Darwinism.

Yet evolution and the Biblical report of Gods creation are actually two sides of the same coin. Both require belief or what we commonly call religious faith since no human eyes saw the advent of man. Just as preachers tell their flocks that God created the heavens and earth, so evolutionists tell theirs that natural processes did. But sheep from neither fold can observe humanitys arrival to confirm the accuracy of these statements.

And observation is essential. The dictionary defines science as a systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation. Ergo, water boiling at 212 degrees Fahrenheit is a scientific fact. We can verify it by observation; we can experiment to see whether it boils at lower temperatures and demonstrate that it does not. But [t]he central ideas of evolution that life has a history it has changed over time and that different species share common ancestors is an opinion. Nor can we verify it because no one has observed millions of years of changes.

That misfortune compels evolutionists to extrapolate backwards from evidence they see in the natural world. But their reckonings could be as false as those of the global-warming nuts (note that the idea of climate change relies on studying current phenomena as well as historical data and yet proponents still argue about whats accurate and true. How much more unobservable events that lie entirely in the past?) Yes, the scientists screaming about rising temperatures had political incentive to do so. But so do evolutionists. They are hardly the disinterested pursuers of Truth that they fancy themselves; like anyone else, they cling to their opinions and prejudices.

And they rabidly defend both especially when Christians find strong proof for direct creation by God in the very data that supposedly upholds Darwins theory. Astoundingly, critics who refuse to acknowledge evolutionists preconceptions dismiss Christian interpretation of evidence because of bias! Such blatant double standards should sicken anyone sincerely interested in the truth.

Evolution, then, is no more than a religion masquerading as science. And since our era worships science, too many folks swallow whatever evolutionists say. They buy the bizarre idea that an infinitely intricate world evolved with no Designer while laughing at the gullible peons who ascribed to Roman Catholic dogma during the Middle Ages. What ironic hypocrisy!

Christianity and Darwinism share another characteristic: They answer mans most fundamental questions. How did the world come to exist, and what is mans place in it? Is there a god? Whats the meaning of life? The two faiths differ only in their answers chillingly so.

If eons of time and fortuitous chance produced the universe and life itself, we need no Creator. And the Book that claims to be His inspired Word is obviously false from its very first words: In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. Only fools would believe anything that follows such a whopper. There is no heaven or hell, no final judgment of our sins or salvation from them, no Creator who fashioned man in His image. Life is mere happenstance, not a divine gift that no man may arbitrarily end and when the strong kill those who are weaker or inconvenient, they do so without fear of eternal damnation. Likewise with our liberty: We have no rights, inalienable or otherwise, because no Creator endowed us with them.

Its no accident that historys most brutal regimes have espoused Darwinian evolution. Indeed, communisms authors embraced the philosophy precisely because it rejected God: Marx and Engels accepted evolution almost immediately after Darwin published The Origin of Species. Evolution, of course, was just what the founders of communism needed to explain how mankind could have come into being without the intervention of any supernatural force, and consequently it could be used to bolster the foundations of their materialistic philosophy. Should it surprise anyone, then, that communist governments massacre and torture millions? (Some of that blood lust is due to the nature of the State; non-communist and even Christian governments persecute and murder as well. But arming politicians with communism is like handing a serial killer hundreds of fully loaded machine guns rather than a penknife.)

Hitler and the Nazis endorsed Darwins ideas, too, particularly survival of the fittest and the justice of a superior races dominating inferior ones. Under such reasoning, butchery went from unspeakably heinous to justifiable: The Nazis alleged that their racial hygiene benefited not only Germany but humanity.

As Americans increasingly join the First Church of Darwin, theyre unlikely to resist the evils evolutionary theory brings in its wake. We already murder unwanted babies and the elderly; American governments at all levels destroy rather than protect our rights.

But perhaps evolutionists themselves will save us. After all, they continue insisting that religion has no place in the public square. We simply have to hold them to that creed.

Becky Akers

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The First Church of Darwin - Personal Liberty Digest

Hear from top robotics educators at TC Sessions: Robotics – TechCrunch


TechCrunch
Hear from top robotics educators at TC Sessions: Robotics
TechCrunch
TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics will feature the industry's best roboticists, technologists and investors. But what about the next generation? We've enlisted the help of three amazing educators at the forefront of STEM education who will lay out their ...

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Hear from top robotics educators at TC Sessions: Robotics - TechCrunch

SoftBank buys robotics firms Boston Dynamics, Schaft from Alphabet – MarketWatch

Google parent Alphabet Inc. GOOGL, -2.55% will sell robotics companies Boston Dynamics and Schaft to SoftBank Group Corp. 9984, +7.43% the Japanese tech giant announced late Thursday. Alphabet had reportedly been shopping Boston Dynamics, which it bought in 2013, for about a year. A price was not announced. Boston Dynamics is known for its humanoid and animal-like robots, which often became the subject of viral videos. "We at Boston Dynamics are excited to be part of SoftBank's bold vision and its position creating the next technology revolution, and we share SoftBank's belief that advances in technology should be for the benefit of humanity," Boston Dynamics CEO Marc Raibert said in a statement. SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son welcomed the company into his fold with a statement of his own: "Today, there are many issues we still cannot solve by ourselves with human capabilities. . . . Smart robotics are going to be a key driver of the next stage of the Information Revolution, and Marc and his team at Boston Dynamics are the clear technology leaders in advanced dynamic robots." Japan-based Schaft specializes in bipedal robots, and was also bought by Google in 2013. SoftBank has long been a leader in robotics, and created the helper robot Pepper.

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SoftBank buys robotics firms Boston Dynamics, Schaft from Alphabet - MarketWatch

FIRST Robotics team puts on demonstration for school board – Cheboygan Daily Tribune

Kortny Hahn Staff Writer, @khahnCDT @khahnCDT

INDIAN RIVER- After doing very well at its last competition of the year, the Inland Lakes Schools FIRST Robotics team put on a demonstration of what their robot could do for the board of education.

They did really, really well this year, so they wanted to come down and make sure they kind of show it off a little bit, said Inland Lakes teacher and robotics adviser Kelly LaPeer.

The team competed in two different competitions this year, one in Gaylord and one in Traverse City. They didn't do so well at the Gaylord competition due to several software issues and an electrical issue.

Once they got that worked out, there was no stopping them. They just took off and did really well the rest of that competition, said LaPeer. But they had gotten themselves in such a hole that Gaylord didn't work out real great.

When the team got ready for its Traverse City competition, they made sure they had all of the changes made and everything was ready to go, just the way they wanted it. At that competition, they took off out of the gate and did very well in each of the matches.

The team had the high score of the day and ended up being the team with the highest number of points at the end of the qualifying rounds. They were second after the qualifying rounds overall.

It's a different kind of sporting event,said LaPeer. It's always more fun when you're doing well.

The theme of the competition was Steamworks, all designed around the use of steam for power. The robot had to be able to put balls into a container, to store the fuel and build up pressure. The number of balls it takes to achieve this pressure is based on the high or low efficiency goal of the team. It also needed to be able to get the rotors turning by placing gears on a peg. Once the gear train is complete, they turn the crank to start the rotor and get that turning.

At the end of the match, the robots needed to attach themselves to the team's airship by climbing the rope and signaling they are ready for takeoff.

Two of the robotics team members accompanied LaPeer to the school board meeting, Anna Beardsley, a junior, and Luke Passino, a senior, who is going on to Lake Superior State University to study robotics and electrical engineering.

The school board was shown several videos taken at the competition that had been posted online. After watching the videos, they were able to go into the hallway, where Passino was driving the robot around and Beardsley was explaining the different components of the machine they had built.

Each joystick drives one side of the robot, said Beardsley. The front wheels don't have any motors on them so it allows it to turn like it does.

The robot also has a camera mounted on the body, which is connected wirelessly to a computer. Although there is a little bit of a delay between the robot and the computer, the driver is still able to see what is happening and what the robot sees. This helped when putting the gears on the pillars and collecting the fuel at the competition.

Passino also demonstrated how the robot was able to climb the rope at the end of the competition, after they were able to get all of the rotors moving.

School Board Vice President Carolyn Sackett said it was really great to be able to see the robot up close and personal during the demonstration because at the competitions, you don't really get to have a feel for the size of the robot.

The robot used at the competition was completely built by the students in the robotics program at Inland Lakes. They were able to fabricate many of the parts used on the robot and were able to find out what worked and what didn't through trial and error, as well as following the many regulations placed on the machines.

Overall, the robot weighed 96 pounds and was one of the lightest robots in the competition.

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FIRST Robotics team puts on demonstration for school board - Cheboygan Daily Tribune

Hotels Of The Future Will Rely Heavily On AI And Robotics – Forbes


Forbes
Hotels Of The Future Will Rely Heavily On AI And Robotics
Forbes
Answer by Ayush Sharma, MS Robotics, Northwestern University, on Quora: I can envision a lot of roles that might seem ridiculous now but might become completely possible in the future of the hotel industry. These are just some that come to the top of ...

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Hotels Of The Future Will Rely Heavily On AI And Robotics - Forbes

Robots’ role in humanity to be a core topic at TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics – TechCrunch


TechCrunch
Robots' role in humanity to be a core topic at TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics
TechCrunch
At least since Isaac Asimov posited the Three Law of Robotics, many have wondered whether robots would ultimately help or harm humanity. Or maybe do a little of both. Humanity still has time to shape the answer to that question, and we're pleased to ...

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Robots' role in humanity to be a core topic at TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics - TechCrunch

Cable: Where Are We Headed After This Political Meltdown? – Seeking Alpha

What a disaster for Mrs. May. From a majority to a hung parliament. The pound reacted dreadfully on the exit poll, leading to a loss of approximately 200 ticks finding an initial base at 1.2700.

This analysis is for slightly longer term positioning and as of next week I will resume uploading intraweek trades that I shall be taking, well in advance of entry.

So, we are currently quite muted going into the weekend. I do not expect anything hugely drastic since May has said that she is not going to resign and is likely to form a minority government with the DUP.

You can see from the chart above that the support created from spiral has been breached. Instantly when I saw the drop after the exit poll last night it was a classic 'break of the ice' - a low volume fall through support or resistance in a topping or bottoming pattern. Price faces some resistance early morning (red line) and I was building a short position in my head from then.

Don't get me wrong - longer term, I am bullish cable. I think that in 12-18 months we will regain 1.40 (I have the same opinion on EURUSD if you note my previous article) but I believe that these markets really do enjoy shaking out positions. This is why I have notes the downside zones and the key price level for me is 1.2350/40. This is where I am looking to target. Why? Well my old friend COT positioning on sterling comes to mind.

We can see from the COT data that sterling non commercial positioning long has increased drastically over the last month or so. This uncertainty from political weakness gives a certain viability to traders wanting to hold sterling longs, and it's likely that CHFGBP and JPYGBP will see flows into them short term. This would indicate a fall in price and a cascade of stops pretty quickly. Interestingly, looking at CME options, 1.23 has the highest volume currently. I'm going to be honest and say that I am not an options guy so I don't know the ins and outs, but it seems pertinent so it's something that I'd mention (and if someone wants to give me any lessons on options trading I would be most open to it!).

The upside risk is of course still there. If we have a break above 1.3025 then I'll scratch the trade (where my stop will be) because that we will likely form key support at the high of the late April - current range (similar to how we are forming resistance at the low of the range currently).

So the trade -

Short at market sub 1.2850 (next week)

Stop at 1.3025

Target of 1.24/2350 (the latter if you feel it will extend fully through demand)

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a short position in GBPUSD over the next 72 hours.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Cable: Where Are We Headed After This Political Meltdown? - Seeking Alpha

I Don’t Care What You Think, I Love My Facial Birthmark – SELF

Mariana Mendes has a striking facial birthmark , and she absolutely loves it.

When Mendes was born with a large birthmark stretching over her nose, right cheek, and forehead, her mother worried she would get bullied as she grew older. And when Mendes was 5 years old, her mother looked into laser procedures to remove the birthmark . After attending just three laser sessions, Mendes decided to stop the procedures. Now, Mendes, 24, tells SELF she can't imagine herself without her birthmark. "[I] wouldn't be the same."

Mendes says she's never felt insecure about her facial birthmark. Sure, she's gotten stares and weird looks from passersby. She's faced Instagram trolls who've told her that her birthmark is ugly or strange. She's even had to explain to people that her birthmark is, in fact, realit isn't tattooed on or applied with makeup. But Mendes really doesn't mind. "You have to be the person you love most in life, [so] I've always accepted myself as I am," she says. "Your opinion of you is what should be important."

Mendes explains that she's become kind of immune to criticism over the years. She's spent so much time dealing with what other people think about her appearance, that at a certain point, she just stopped caring. She loves her birthmark, and if someone has something to say about it, that's their problemnot hers. And she hopes to help others feel as confident when it comes to their own so-called "imperfections." That's why she's always uploading new pictures of herself to Instagramshe wants to help her followers see that their unique characteristics are what make them truly beautiful. "Everyone should feel happy," she says.

Mendes (follow her at @melzitahh ) uploads a new photo every day for her 10,700 Instagram followers. In each one, she's modeling her birthmark or otherwise enjoying life. "I want to encourage people not to criticize anyone," she says. "No physical characteristic should be criticized, because we're all different...The moment everyone is feeling good, we'll have a society with more happiness and love."

See some of Mariana Mendes' Instagrams below.

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You might also like: This Body-Positivity Clothing Line Will Change How You Think About Wedding Dresses

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I Don't Care What You Think, I Love My Facial Birthmark - SELF

Disney and other media giants are betting VR is the next big play in entertainment – CNBC

Jaunt co-produced "Invisible," a six-part supernatural drama series created by "The Bourne Identity" director Doug Liman's 30 Ninjas company that premiered on Samsung's VR service before being shown on Jaunt's VR app, YouTube, Facebook and co-producer Conde Nast's "The Scene" digital video platform. "Invisible" tells the story of a powerful New York family with the supernatural ability to make themselves invisible.

In January, Jaunt announced a slate of five new series to be produced at its 10,000-square-foot Santa Monica, California, studio, including a six-part stoner comedy series "Bad Trip" and a series based on the 1992 cult horror movie "The Lawnmower Man." Klaivkoff won't say when the shows will be making their debut.

The company is also building out the distribution network for VR content with commercial-like programming, like the Land Rover video, that it makes for companies that want to use virtual reality video to promote their products. Jaunt has made videos for more than 50 "brands," the company says, including those for Budweiser, Google and Mattel.

More from CNBC Disruptor 50: Inside the Warby Parker "Optical Lab" in tiny Sloatsburg, New York Meal delivery start-up Blue Apron files to go public, revenue growing fast 'Street Fighter' moves into the mobile eSports market for gamers

The company made a four-minute VR short starring Danny DeVito and other cast members of the FX sitcom "Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia," which took viewers along a ride on a smoke-filled motorcycle stunt or allowed them to swivel in another direction to watch a scantily clad young woman who stopped just short of a doing a striptease. The VR segment played on FX's site as well as Jaunt's VR app and Facebook.

Sky TV used Jaunt's equipment for some of the programming when it introduced its SKY VR app. Among the shows were "Sky Sports: Closer," hosted by soccer legend David Beckham, and a performance of the English National Ballet's production of "Giselle." The satellite service also gave away thousands of Google cardboard headsets.

Kliavkoff says Disney, which in September 2015 led Jaunt's $65 million Series C round, will soon offer its fans a 360-degree online trip to Pandora, the mythical planet in James Cameron's film "Avatar," which is also the backdrop for the media giant's new "PandoraThe World of Avatar" attraction at its Disney Animal Kingdom in Orlando, Florida.

"We constantly strive to create standout experiences for our customers through our partnerships," said Mark Cameron, Jaguar Land Rover's brand experience director of global marketing, in a statement about the America's Cup video. "By using Jaunt's cutting-edge VR technology, we were able to give unprecedented access to the team and America's Cup sailing in a thrilling firsthand experience."

The big prize, of course, will come if virtual reality takes hold with consumers who want to immerse themselves in the action on the big screen. That's coming slowly. IMAX, which operates a chain of giant-screen movie theaters, is rolling out a dozen IMAX VR centers in major markets, including Los Angeles, New York and Tokyo, for goggle-wearing consumers to watch shorter-form VR content for about $1 a minute.

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Disney and other media giants are betting VR is the next big play in entertainment - CNBC

Virtual reality exhibit bridges gap between tech and public – The Mercury News

You are soaring high above the Manhattan Skyline, feeling the cool breeze on your face. Looking down at the rooftops of thousands of buildings, your muscles begin to ache from flapping your wings, but the view is so beautiful and the experience so mind-blowing, you cannot help but continue your flight.

Suddenly, as Manhattan Beach comes into view, the words Simulation is Over, appear before your eyes. Removing your headset, you prepare to visit the other stations at the digital experience lab that is Reboot Reality.

Opened on May 26 as a permanent exhibit at The Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, Reboot Reality contains several virtual reality (VR) simulations created by technology companies such as Google and Adobe, with the help of artists and researchers.

In addition to Birdly, which simulates flying, Reboot Reality includes Wetbrush by Adobe, which allows you to create 3D paintings on a screen; Tilt Brush by Google, where you use a headset to create 3D art pulled from your imagination; and Medium by Oculus, where you experience 3D sculpting with digital clay. Each of these interactive simulations are intended for people 13 years of age and older, but Reboot Reality includes others for younger children.

The purpose of Reboot Reality is to bridge the gap between the public and tech companies, to ensure that the public has access to new innovations they cannot afford. The Tech hopes that this influences the younger generations to take up careers in the STEM industry.

Our mission is to inspire the innovator in everyone and a big piece of that is making sure every kid has access to STEM education and feels confident to pursue a career in STEM. We also hope to inspire people to use technology to solve big problems, said Marika Krause, The Techs public relations manager.

A Reboot Reality goer, Ying Liang, 24, believes that children would benefit from this lab because it would put them in touch with their creative side and inspire them to work in the technology industry. Liang said that an exhibit such as Wetbrush by Adobe is particularly accessible to kids since they simply use a digital brush to make realistic paintings.

Liang added that while virtual reality could be treated simply as a toy, it could also become a valuable tool.

Krause agreed. She pointed to The Diridon Project by Gensler, which allows you to walk into a world where you can see the blueprints of a building translated into 3D before construction begins. Krause said a simulation such as this can improve the life of architects because they would be able to virtually step into a building before it is physically created.

Neesha Pammi, 44, also a museum-goer, said that she can see how a virtual reality system could be used in the workplace, as her husband is an architect and is beginning to work with a system similar to The Diridon Project.

Simulations can also improve communities by helping people develop their sense of empathy, said Clarissa Buettner, a gallery program specialist. She pointed to Stanford Universitys Human Interaction lab, where Reboot Reality visitors can live the life of a homeless person and experience the struggles they go through on a daily basis.

In the simulation, you sit at your desk, staring at the few valuables still in your possession. Your landlord knocks, asking for the rent money you owe, moments before evicting you. After selling whats left of your valuables, you begin to sleep on an overnight bus, dealing with sex offenders, thieves, and the anxiety of getting back on your feet.

Pammi can attest to how real the simulations feel. In addition to The Diridon Project, Pammi also tried flying with Birdly. She said that the experience actually made her feel dizzy afterwards. During her first ride on Birdly, her husband encouraged her to take a dive from the skyline, down to the streets of Manhattan and she said, You can go all the way down, but theres no way Im going to do that.

Sophia Rodriguez, a graduate ofAndrew Hill High in San Jose, is a 2017 Mosaic staff writer.

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Virtual reality exhibit bridges gap between tech and public - The Mercury News

Virtual reality returns to Iron Dragon at Cedar Point – WXYZ

(WXYZ) - Why ride a regular ole roller coaster, if you could kick it up a notch with some virtual reality technology?

Cedar Point has added a bit more amusement to its park with virtual reality and augmented reality offerings.

Starting today, fans of the Iron Dragon will get to experience the ride using special VR headsets. The park began testing out the feature last year.

Now, Iron Dragon: VR will be available to coaster fans starting at 6 p.m. each day through September 4. Just a note: you have to be 13 or older to be able to participate in the VR experience, according to a news release from the park.

And if you need some entertainment while waiting in line, you can check out the park's revamped "Battle for Cedar Point" mobile game. The free game can be played through the Cedar Point app.

Cedar Point says it has augmented reality features, and lets guests virtually battle with other visitors and unlock interactive billboards around the park.

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Virtual reality returns to Iron Dragon at Cedar Point - WXYZ

Ai | Poetry Foundation

Ai is a poet noted for her uncompromising poetic vision and bleak dramatic monologues which give voice to marginalized, often poor and abused speakers. Though born Florence Anthony, she legally changed her name to Ai which means love in Japanese. She has said that her given name reflects a scandalous affair my mother had with a Japanese man she met at a streetcar stop and has no wish to be identified for all eternity with a man she never knew. Ais awareness of her own mixed race heritageshe self-identifies as Japanese, Choctaw-Chickasaw, Black, Irish, Southern Cheyenne, and Comancheas well as her strong feminist bent shape her poetry, which is often brutal and direct in its subject matter. In the volumes of verse she published since her first collection, Cruelty (1973), Ai provoked both controversy and praise for her stark monologues and gruesome first-person accounts of non-normative behavior. Dubbed All womanall human by confessional poet Anne Sexton, Ai has also been praised by the Times Literary Supplement for capturing the cruelty of intimate relationships and the delights of perverse spontaneitye.g. the joy a mother gets from beating her child. Alicia Ostriker countered Sextons summation of Ai, writing: All womanall human; she is hardly that. She is more like a bad dream of Woody Allens, or the inside story of some Swinburnean Dolorosa, or the vagina-dentata itself starting to talk. Woman, in Ais embodiment, wants sex. She knows about death and can kill animals and people. She is hard as dirt. Her realitiesvery small onesare so intolerable that we fashion female myths to express our fear of her. She, however, lives the hard life below our myths.

Ai explained her use of the dramatic monologue as an early realization that first person voice was always the stronger voice to use when writing. Her poems depict individuals that Duane Ackerson characterized in Contemporary Women Poets as people seeking transformation, a rough sort of salvation, through violent acts. The speakers in her poems are struggling individualsusually women, but occasionally menisolated by poverty, by small-town life, or life on a remote farm. Killing Floor (1978), the volume that followed Cruelty, includes a poem called The Kid which is spoken in the voice of a boy who has just murdered his family. Sin (1986) contains more complex dramatic monologues as Ai assumes actual personae, from Joe McCarthy to the Kennedy brothers. Ais characters tend to speak in a flat demotic, stripped of nuance or emotion. Poet and critic Rachael Hadas has noted that although virtually all the poems present themselves as spoken by a particular character, Ai makes little attempt to capture individual styles of diction [or] personal vocabularies. For Hadas, however, this makes the poems all the more striking, as her stripped-down diction conveys an underlying, almost biblical indignationnot, at times, without compassionat human misuses of power and the corrupting energies of various human appetites.

Fate (1991) and Greed (1993), like Sin before them, contain monologues that dramatize public figures. Readers confront the inner worlds of former F.B.I. director J. Edgar Hoover, missing-and-presumed-dead Union leader Jimmy Hoffa, musician Elvis Presley, and actor James Dean as voices from beyond-the-grave who yet remain out of sync with social or ethical norms. Noting that Ai reinvents each of her subjects within her verse, Ackerson added that, through each monologue, what these individuals say, returning after death, expresses more about the American psyche than about the real figures. Vice: New and Selected Poems (1999) contained work from Ais previous five books as well as 18 new poems. It was awarded the National Book Award for Poetry. Ais next book, Dread (2003), was likewise praised for its searing and honest treatment of, according to a Publishers Weekly reviewer, violent or baroquely sexual life stories. In the New York Times Book Review, Viijay Seshadri wrote that Dread has the characteristic moral strength that makes Ai a necessary poet. Aiming her poetic barbs directly at prejudices and societal ills of all types, Ai has been outspoken on the subject of race, saying People whose concept of themselves is largely dependent on their racial identity and superiority feel threatened by a multiracial person. The insistence that one must align oneself with this or that race is basically racist. And the notion that without a racial identity a person cant have any identity perpetuates racismI wish I could say that race isnt important. But it is. More than ever, it is a medium of exchange, the coin of the realm with which one buys ones share of jobs and social position. This is a fact which I have faced and must ultimately transcend. If this transcendence were less complex, less individual, it would lose its holiness.

In addition to the National Book Award, Ais work was awarded an American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation, for Sin, and the Lamont Poetry Award of the Academy of American Poets, for Killing Floor. She received grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Bunting Fellowship Program at Radcliffe College and the National Endowment for the Arts. She taught at Oklahoma State University. She died in 2010.

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Ai | Poetry Foundation