Help EFF Track the Progress of AI and Machine Learning – EFF

The field of machine learning and artificial intelligence is making rapid progress. Many people are starting to ask what a world with intelligent computers will look like. But what is the ratio of hype to real progress? What kinds of problems have been well solved by current machine learning techniques, which ones are close to being solved, and which ones remain exceptionally hard?

There isnt currently a good single place to find the state of the art on well-specified machine learning metrics, let alone the many problems in artificial intelligence that are still so hard that there are no good datasets and benchmarks to keep track of them yet. So we are trying to make one. Today, were launching the EFF AI Progress Measurement experiment, and encouraging machine learning researchers to give us feedback and contribute to the effort.

We have drawn data from a number of sources: blog posts that report on snapshots of progress; websites that try collate data on specific subfields of machine learning; and review articles. Where those sources didnt have coverage, weve gone to the research literature itself and gathered data.

Weve placed this information in an Jupyter / IPython Notebook, which you can read at https://eff.org/ai/metrics. The Notebook is hosted on Github, where the community can directly contribute.

What we have thus far is an experiment, and wed like to know: Is this information useful to the machine learning community? What important problems, datasets, and results are we missing?

EFFs interest in AI progress is primarily from a policy perspective. We want to know what types of AI we need to start engaging with on legal, political, and technical safety fronts. Beyond that, were also just excited to see how many things computers are learning to do over time.

Given that machine learning tools and AI techniques are increasingly part of our everyday lives, it is critical that journalists, policy makers, and technology users understand the state of the field. When improperly designed or deployed, machine learning methods can violate privacy, threaten safety, and perpetuate inequality and injustice. Stakeholders must be able to anticipate such risks and policy questions before they arise, rather than playing catch-up with the technology. To this end, its part of the responsibility of researchers, engineers, and developers in the field to help make information about their life-changing research widely available and understandable. We hope youll join us.

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Help EFF Track the Progress of AI and Machine Learning - EFF

Crop Progress Report Shows Indiana’s Corn Struggles – AgWeb

TAGS: Marketing, Overseas

December 18, 2014

After an early run-up of summertime heat in the Corn Belt last week, grain traders are watching the latest crop progress report from the USDA to see if the condition ratings felt the effects.

In Mondays report, 67 percent of corn was rated good to excellent. The combined total is unchanged from last week, but there was a two-point shift into the excellent category. Minnesota saw a three-point gain with 81 percent rated good to excellent. However, Indiana continues to struggle with 45 percent in good to excellent condition.

In soybeans, 67 percent was rated good to excellent, a one-point improvement from the week prior. 89 percent has emerged, which is five points ahead of average.

Winter wheat harvest saw decent gains overall from last week. 28 percent is now in the bin, up 11 points from last week. Texas harvesters saw minimal gains, up two points, but the harvest is well ahead of average with 74 percent of the crop completed.

Spring wheat continues to struggle over much of the northern tier states. 41 percent is good to excellent; however, Minnesota is the exception with 89 percent rated good to excellent.

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Crop Progress Report Shows Indiana's Corn Struggles - AgWeb

St. Louis Cardinals: Alex Reyes making progress towards throwing program – Redbird Rants

Sep 29, 2016; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Alex Reyes (61) pitches against the Cincinnati Reds during the fifth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports

St. Louis Cardinals: Matt Adams shows REAL clubhouse problems by Dr. Michael D. Miles

St. Louis Cardinals: Busch Stadium Christian Day Controversy by BobLee Says

As reported by St. Louis Post-Dispatchs Derrick Goold, St. Louis Cardinals top pitching prospect Alex Reyes is making good progress in his rehabilitation from a partial UCL tear in his right elbow, and could begin a throwing program in four weeks.

While some players, including fellow Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright, can pitch with a partial tear for an extended period. However, it proved either too difficult or too irrational for a young hard thrower like Reyes to suffer through that.

Reyes spent some of his summer rehab at Busch Stadium studying the other St. Louis Cardinals pitchers during their throwing sessions on the advice of Cardinals starter Lance Lynn. Lynn was forced to miss all of the 2016 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery of his own.

This has given Reyes some valuable observational experience into the complexities of the preparation that a pitcher needs to go through on a daily basis to remain sharp over six months of consistent work. Reyes told Goold that the experience was especially impactful in helping guide the cerebral side to his transition into MLB.

Via St. Louis Post-Dispatch

It really gets to a point for me that I want to learn where I can get mentally, where I need to be, Reyes said recently. Im trying to take in as much from these guys as I can, even if it is just watching them. I need to know what a full season is like and how to make sure I have the stamina when its my chance.

For a young pitcher like Reyes, whose control has been an issue at times, refining his mentality this early is especially important, so that the coaching staff can dedicate more time and effort to mechanical issues that may arise following his full recovery and expected integration into the Cardinals rotation over the next couple of years.

When Reyes is healthy, he has a non-existent ceiling based on the potential of his already-strong arsenal of pitches. He mainly operates using the pair of a sizzling fastball that can hit over 100 MPH on the gun coupled with a deceptively-sinking change-up that pulls the string on many batters who dont expecting the movement.

He also throws a slider, which he uses as a strikeout pitch against both left- and right-handed batters, and tops it off with a nasty hook of a curveball that has knee-buckling movement. These pitches together form an abundant and flexible arsenal. We have seen flashes of Reyes potential already, perhaps no more so than at the 2016 Futures Game, where Reyes picked up four swinging Ks in a dazzling 1 2/3 innings.

Want your voice heard? Join the Redbird Rants team!

All in all, this news marks a positive step in the rehab process, and will hopefully continue smoothly as the Cardinals continue to both repair and prepare Reyes for life as an MLB starter.

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St. Louis Cardinals: Alex Reyes making progress towards throwing program - Redbird Rants

Anne Arundel County program shows progress fighting opioid epidemic – ABC2 News

Heroin addiction is a growing problem across the state. The number of deaths are staggering and with the influx of new and more potent opioids, like fentanyl and carefentanil, a solution to the epidemic doesn't seem to be in site.

Yet, a program in Anne Arundel County is making an impact on the deadly problem. The Safe Stations program started two months ago.

Any county resident battling addiction can come to any county fire station and ask for help in their journey to recovery. Soon after the announcement, Jenna Keefer walked into a fire station.

After seeking help,Keefer says she's more in control of her life. She said heroin isn't making the decisions on how she lives her life now.

"I wanted to do something, my life was no way to live. So I got up and I took myself there and it was the best decision I ever made," she said.

Keefer may have been the first person to walk into an Anne Arundel County fire station, but she isn't alone. Officials say 55 others in just the first 60 days have sought help from the Safe Stations.

"So everything just snowballed," she said. "This is definitely not where I saw myself when I was a little girl but It happened and it happens to some really good people."

This year in Anne Arundel County alone, 530 people have overdosed on heroin, 59 have lost their lives.

"You either get clean or you die. I knew that's where my life was headed. I was going to end up dying," Keefer said.

Like many addicts, Keefer had tried to get help before.

"I looked and I looked and I couldn't find it," she said. "I had people turning me down daily. I was so distraught and at the end I thought I wasn't going to have a way out of that life."

Anne Arundel County is trying to make it easier for addict to "find their way out of the life." When you go to a Safe Station, even with drugs or paraphernalia, you won't be arrested. The police will come and discard the drugs, while the firefighters will help you start your fight against heroin.

"They welcomed me with open arms. When I walked into that fire station and I had all the EMT's all the fire fighters just right at my beck and call. They took my vitals they talked me through this process, they were really comforting and made me feel comfortable about what I was doing. They made that transition a lot easier for me," Keefer said.

Sixty days ago, life for Keefer was dark as it's ever been. Now, thanks to the Safe Stations program, she finds herself in a better place.

"I never thought I would be here. Life today is amazing. Life today is amazing. I'm learning to love my life again," she said.

Of the 56 people who came in looking for help, it's not certain how many are going to beat their addiction for good, but what is certain is there are 56 more people that were given a chance by the county to get their lives back together, away from the disaster that it was under heroin.

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Anne Arundel County program shows progress fighting opioid epidemic - ABC2 News

Norsk Titanium announces supply chain progress – Plattsburgh Press Republican

PLATTSBURGH Norsk Titanium has reached another milestone in its efforts to expand into the commercial aerospace-component market.

The company has established an industrial-scale supply chain to move high-quality, low-cost parts that are made through Norsk's rapid-plasma-deposition process and completed by the machining/finishing expertise of Mechachrome's Mirabel, Quebec, operation.

It is the result of a long-term agreement the two firms, signed last year to develop the processes needed to turn Norsk's near-finished 3D-printed titanium components into finished pieces.

FASTER, LESS COSTLY

Mecachrome is extremely proud and excited to collaborate with Norsk Titanium and be part of that journey towards the shift to production of a disruptive innovation, leading to shorter cycle times and competitive costs, Mecachrome CEO Arnaud de Ponnat said in a press release.

Norsk Titanium Senior Vice President Christopher Bohlmann said Mechachrome's expertise helped pave the way for its low-cost production of Federal Aviation Administration-certified components.

100-PERCENT YIELD

Earlier this year, Norsk landed a contract to supply components to Boeing for its 787 Dreamliner aircraft.

Their capability has allowed for greatly improved buy-to-fly ratios with a 100-percent machining yield on the first production lot," Bohlmann said.

"Mecachromes ability to achieve 100-percent yield with the extremely small machining margins of RPD is a testament to their capability."

That perfect yield builds on Norsk's ability to save companies time and material, compared to traditional forging and machining.

Norsk prints 3-D components that require minimal finishing compared to creating parts from larger blocks of material.

The two companies continue to work together on cost-improvement initiatives. They are bidding on production orders from multiple aerospace customers, both in Europe and North America.

PARIS SHOWCASE

Bohlmann previously told the Press-Republican that Norsk chose Plattsburgh as the site of its North American manufacturing operation in part due to its proximity to the Montreal aerospace sector and companies such as Mechachrome.

Norsk will have examples of its Boeing components on display at its booth at the Paris International Airshow from June 19 to 25, as well as a mock-up of the Merke IV machine used in its manufacturing process.

Three machines are presently operating at its facility in Air Industrial Park in Plattsburgh, with about 20 expected there by late 2017 or early 2018.

Email Dan Heath:

dheath@pressrepublican.com

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Norsk Titanium announces supply chain progress - Plattsburgh Press Republican

Mason’s Mailbag: Areas of progress for Paxton Lynch, Trevor Siemian – DenverBroncos.com (blog)

You can tweet questions to me with the hashtag #AskMase or use the submission form to your right (if you're viewing on a standard browser) or at the bottom of the page if you're on the mobile site.

What is your evaluation of the quarterbacks so far? Are both of them progressing and improving? I'm asking you because you give a neutral opinion. There seems to be a narrative that only Paxton Lynch is progressing because that seems to be all that is written about except from your reports. You talk about both QBs.

-- Taryn O'Neil

In reflecting on the four weeks of OTAs and minicamp, both were better when they finished than when they began. In particular, Lynch improved in his touch passes and his resiliency; he was much better at shaking off a mistake and resetting his focus for the next play than he was last year. This is as much a result of increased maturity that any second-year quarterback would have as it is of his comfort level in the system. He also showed palpable growth in getting to his second read and making quicker decisions.

As for Trevor Siemian, I liked the patience he showed in the pocket, which gave him the opportunity to identify late-opening receivers downfield. Siemian was able to make some big plays to tight ends and other inside targets down the seam because he gave them a chance to get some separation. It's also clear how quickly he ingests a tip from a coach and implements it into his play.

One example of this came during a minicamp practice. Siemian had one pass that was knocked down at the line of scrimmage that could have been avoided if he had released the football at a higher point. On the next play, the ball came out higher, soared past two outstretched hands from defensive linemen, and a completion and a first down followed.

There was much to like about both quarterbacks, but as is the case with all young passers, much needs to be improved. The phrase "work in progress" will likely apply, no matter who ends up starting Week 1.

I'm finally getting up to Denver from Vegas this year for the preseason game against the Packers. What are some good Broncos-related things to do before the game? Possible autographs, sights, activities, food, etc. Thanks!

-- Wendell Hayes

This page has some information on activities that take place before the game at the stadium. Autographs from current players will be tough to get because it's a game day, but you can greet them as they arrive at the southwest tunnel.

If you want to get there early and take part in the team's official tailgate, head to the Mile High Mountain Village, which is accessible through Gate 4 (the northwest gate) and features an all-you-can-eat menu for $20 (if your ticket is bought in advance).

You should also take time to visit the Mile High Monument, the scaled-down replica of Mile High Stadium that sits in the north parking lot.

Beyond the stadium, I recommend using Visit Denver's website page on "things to do" as a starting point for finding ideas that are tailored to your personal tastes. That said, August is a perfect time of year to visit Rocky Mountain National Park, hit Red Rocks or spend a day on a hiking trail. You can't go wrong with any of those.

As much as we've all heard about the left tackle competition, I don't believe I've heard/read one lick of how Menelik Watson is looking so far?

-- Tyler German

So far, so good. Good health is going to be the key for him, but if he can avoid the injuries that plagued him, he could be an effective power blocker at right tackle, which is where he received all of his work during OTAs and minicamp. If the Broncos keep Ron Leary at right guard, the right side of their line has some road-grading potential that could clear plenty of holes for their running backs.

When does training camp begin?

-- Deb Grenzke

The exact dates and times will be announced soon, but the earliest it can begin is Thursday, July 27. Teams cannot hold their first practice until two weeks before the preseason opener, which for the Broncos comes on August 10 at Chicago.

This QB battle between the Trevor Siemian and Paxton Lynch is heating up and is as savory as a chicken fried steak and potatoes on a cold Friday evening, That being said, I want to know who are you rooting for and why?

-- Marc Aguirre

That is a tremendous analogy, but I have no rooting interest. It is unwise for someone who must accurately report and analyze the quarterbacks' daily performances to pick a side.

Submit a question for the next Mailbag!

The analysis, opinion and speculation in this story represents that of the author, gathered through research and reporting, and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Denver Broncos organization.

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Mason's Mailbag: Areas of progress for Paxton Lynch, Trevor Siemian - DenverBroncos.com (blog)

Final Fantasy XIV Stormblood Progress Report: Lost Connections – Kotaku

GIF

Since Final Fantasy XIVs Stormblood expansion launched in early access on Friday morning, Ive leveled a Red Mage from 50 to 60 and taken my first steps into the city state of Ala Mhigo. Imagine what I could have accomplished had the servers been anywhere near stable!

While the crux of the Stormblood expansion involves characters venturing into Ala Mhigo and the Asian-inspired Doma with the intention to free them from the oppression of the Garlean Empire, I spent precious little time in the new areas. This was mainly due to the fact that one of the major progression quests for the new lands was nearly impossible to complete for the first two and a half days of early access.

When a special cinematic solo quest begins, the game creates a special instance just for the player doing the quest. Slammed with players new and old all attempting to do the quest at once, the games servers were having trouble creating new instances, leading to players lining up or gathering around the quest giver, desperately trying to move on.

Some players made it through. Others were kicked back to the same area after the quests cinematic played, having to start the process over. The problem wasnt limited to the one quest, either. I spent a large chunk of Saturday trying to log back in after a Red Mage quest disconnected me from the game upon trying to enter it. I could log other characters in, but my poor Red Mage was stuck in an endless disconnect loop. As an added bonus, my server (Goblin) had a login queue for most of Saturday, so I was essentially lining up to be disconnected from the game.

Instead of spending time in the new lands, I did what I could in the older areas. First I logged in to my original character, Back Clawtooth, and fiddled around with his revamped skills.

The Stormblood expansion brings with it a massive change to the games skill system. Core powers and abilities for each job have been removed or consolidated in order to make the game more approachable and less complex. It seems to work, though theres a bit of a learning curve.

Unfortunately Back hasnt finished Final Fantasy XIVs story quests leading up to Stormblood, so I set him aside (for now) in favor of a new character.

This is Clan. Clan Destine. I created her for the expansion, leveled her to 60 and completed the games story using potions available in the games offline store for $25 each (one for experience level, one for story progress).

The idea was to take her through the new areas as a level 60 Black Mage, but when I hit the quest roadblock I decided to take her in another direction.

The Red Mage is an interesting class, balancing White and Black magics and using it to power ridiculously strong melee attacks. In groups its a lot of hanging back, rotating a series of spells to help fill both sides of an on-screen meter. Once filled, the Red Mage rushes into battle, takes some powerful swipes and then leaps right back out. Its casting damage plus melee damage, the best of both worlds as far as I am concerned.

The new jobs start at level 50, so I had to earn 10 levels before trying the new area quest again. That worked out rather well, as the older areas of the game where I performed repeatable Fates (dynamic spawning quests for large groups) in order to level were stable for most of the weekend. Leveling went by quickly, and the only real issues I ran into were some of the aforementioned instances.

It was not a smooth start for Final Fantasy XIV. There were times I couldnt connect to the game at all. Players reported the game crashing on PlayStation 4, requiring the entire thing be reinstalled in order to fix it. Game producer Naoki Yoshida took to the forums on Saturday, apologizing for the problems and ensuring players fixes were in the works.

I finally managed to complete that first story quest in the new area late last night. The crown around the NPC had vanished, and chat was lit with reports of success. Looks like the major issues should be cleared up for the expansion packs wide launch tomorrow.

I completed the initial set of quests in the area, which left Clan Destine a sliver below level 61. I hopped into the leveling queue in the hopes of getting a random dungeon group to help earn the extra experience points. After waiting over a half hour the instance began to load. Then . . .

Look for more on Final Fantasy XIVs Stormblood expansion as we continue to explore the new lands, servers willing.

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Final Fantasy XIV Stormblood Progress Report: Lost Connections - Kotaku

Students recognize progress by Vanderbilt four years after high-profile assault – WZTV

NASHVILLE, Tenn.

This week marks four years since a high-profile sexual assault on an unconscious woman in a dorm at Vanderbilt University.

Four men were accused in the case. Brandon Banks' case is the third one to go to trial. Two have already stood trial for their roles in the assault.

Vanderbilt said it's made great strides to improve the culture of reporting and preventing sexual assault on campus since then. Students agree.

Approach any student on Vanderbilt's campus four years later, and they've heard about the case.

"My grade, we were applying to college when it was going on," Vanderbilt Senior Michael Nwauche said. "I think most people know about it."

"What happened all these years ago was so unfortunate," Vanderbilt Sophomore May said. "I think our university has grown and changed so much for it, and I feel proud now. I feel proud to represent that."

Students said it's made the school a safer place, thanks to an expanded Project Safe Program, bystander intervention education, and an online sexual assault training module for all new students.

One area that they feel needs improvement would be how students are notified when sexual assaults are reported.

Right now, an email goes out explaining where and when the incident occurred. They feel it's too generic.

"It's a little impersonal, and I don't know if it's causing a change," Vanderbilt Senior Jimmie Sanders. "I think it's just getting people used to it. It makes it just an everyday thing, which it shouldn't be."

"I don't think 'brush it off' is the right term, but it is just a stock email," Vanderbilt Senior Kelsey Clinton said. "There really is no personal aspect to it."

Vanderbilt University declined a request for an interview, but provided the following statement:

The tragic sexual assault that occurred on our campus four years ago was a critical moment for our university. The incident raised additional awareness of and dialogue around the issue of sexual violence, and caused us to reflect on who we are as a campus community and to consider what additional actions we could take to promote a culture of respect, civility and decency. Continuously strengthened efforts to prevent sexual assault, provide support for victims, and enhance the safety and security of our campus are ongoing.

All incoming first-year, transfer, graduate, and professional students are required to complete an interactive online educational module on preventing sexual violence that also introduces students to Vanderbilt policy and Tennessee state law, on and off-campus resources, and law enforcement and university reporting options. Sexual assault prevention is addressed during the week-long orientation activities for first-year students. Our Project Safe Center for Sexual Misconduct Prevention and Support was expanded from a longstanding program at our Womens Center to a free-standing center with increased staffing and resources. Building on our bystander intervention education efforts that began in 2009, bystander intervention training is offered to the campus community throughout the year. The Project Safe Center also offers a dating violence awareness-raising and prevention program, as well as programs on understanding effective consent, supporting survivors, setting boundaries, and maintaining healthy relationships.

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Students recognize progress by Vanderbilt four years after high-profile assault - WZTV

Amtrak Conductor Still Hospitalized, But Making Progress CBS … – CBS Chicago

June 19, 2017 6:15 PM By Jeremy Ross

(CBS) An Amtrak conductor shot at Napervilles train station last month is still hospitalized but on the mend and with high spirits, his wife tells reporters.

Michael Cases wife, Sara, has been by his bedside every day ever since the May 16 shooting.

Weeks ago, the 45-year-old Amtrak employee was in critical condition. Today, hes in serious condition but is no longer in the ICU. His family continues to be grateful for that improvement.

Cases family was at his side on Fathers Day.

Hes had multiple surgeries. Hes able to talk, unable to eat solid foods but on occasion walking around. Doctors say he may get out of the hospital within a couple of weeks.

The shooting occurred May 16 at Napervilles commuter rail station. A 79-year-old train passenger from Wisconsin is charged with shooting Case after Amtrak employees tried to prevent the man from getting off at the wrong stop.

Edward Klein, the alleged shooter, is being held in jail.

A GoFundMe page has been set up to help the Case family.

Jeremy Ross is a general assignment reporter for CBS 2. Jeremy joined the station in July 2014. He is an award-winning journalist, who came to CBS 2 from WITI-TV in Milwaukee. Before that, he worked in Lansing, Mich. Jeremy, who is...

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Amtrak Conductor Still Hospitalized, But Making Progress CBS ... - CBS Chicago

Tebow remains a work in progress – Albany Times Union

Tim Tebow hits a single during his first at bat against the RiverDogs at Joseph P. Riley Jr. Park in Charleston S.C. on Friday, June 16, 2017. (Michael Pronzato/The Post And Courier via AP) ORG XMIT: SCCHA105

Tim Tebow hits a single during his first at bat against the RiverDogs at Joseph P. Riley Jr. Park in Charleston S.C. on Friday, June 16, 2017. (Michael Pronzato/The Post And Courier via AP) ORG XMIT: SCCHA105

Tebow remains a work in progress

Columbia, S.C.

Tim Tebow's first half of his first professional baseball season is complete. The former Heisman Trophy winner appears to have made progress with the New York Mets Class A affiliate.

Tebow began the season like a storybook star, hitting two home runs in his first four games as an outfielder-designated hitter for the Columbia Fireflies. The Mets prospect has had just one homer in the 10 weeks since. Yet, he's continued to grind heading into the league's All-Star break this week.

He had a five-game hitting streak the longest of his career and helped the Fireflies finish second in the Southern Division of the South Atlantic League. The team entered Sunday with a half-game lead, yet lost to the Charleston (South Carolina) RiverDogs while Greenville beat Rome (Georgia) 4-3 to claim the Southern Division.

A look how Tebow has fared this week and this season:

Highlights: Tebow had a hit in five straight games, his longest streak of the season. His best game this week was Wednesday in a 6-2 victory at Greenville. Tebow went 1-for-2 with a double and two RBIs. He also walked twice.

At the plate: Tebow's average held steady at .224 after going 5-for-23 for the week at the plate. He had eight strikeouts during the week, including three in Sunday's 5-1 loss when a victory would've earned the Fireflies the division's first-half title and the playoff spot that goes with it.

On the season: Tebow is 45-for-201 on the season with 21 RBIs and 66 strikeouts.

In the field: Tebow made his fifth error of the season this week with a bad throw in a loss to Charleston.

Bat toss: Tim Tebow's most impressive feat may have been the inadvertent bat toss Saturday night during a 3-0 loss at Charleston. Tebow lost the grip on the bat and sent it soaring deep into the second level seats on the first base side of the stands. Tebow, unfazed, found another bat but struck out in Columbia's defeat.

What's next: After a couple of days off, Tebow and the Fireflies pick up the second half of the season at home with a four-game series against the Kannapolis (North Carolina) Intimidators.

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Tebow remains a work in progress - Albany Times Union

Seahawks’ DeShawn Shead making great progress, still not expected for start of season – NBCSports.com

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Seahawks cornerback Deshawn Shead tore an ACL in his knee during Seattles Divisional Round playoff loss to the Atlanta Falcons in January.

Shead was unable to participate in any of the teams offseason program as he continues to recover from surgery. Head coach Pete Carroll said following the conclusion of mini-camp last week that Shead is progressing well from the injury at the five-month mark in the recovery process.

Hes making great progress, Carroll said. He is one of the all-time best healers. He applies himself as well as a person can do in terms of getting back. Hes got all the grit and the perseverance about making it through this as quickly as you possibly can, so hes doing great.

Shead will be just over seven months removed from surgery when the regular season starts in September. Carroll said he didnt expect Shead to be ready to play by then.

No, I dont think so, he said. I dont think well be pushing him on that regard. Maybe he does it, I should never say no to him. Maybe he can pull it off. Well see.

Shead wasnt tendered as a restricted free agent following the injury but elected to re-sign with Seattle on a one-year deal in March. Shead started 15 games last year for Seattle and recorded 81 tackles with 14 passes defended, one interception and one forced fumble. Starting the season on the Physically Unable to Perform list is a distinct possibility.

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Seahawks' DeShawn Shead making great progress, still not expected for start of season - NBCSports.com

Crews make progress against Lake fire amid spiking heat near Castaic Lake – LA Daily News

CASTAIC >> Crews took advantage of cooler overnight temperatures to beat back a wildfire that broke out near Castaic Lake amid a heat wave Saturday.

Officials said the Lake fire, which began Saturday afternoon as a wind-blown fire in terrain near the 5 Freeway, was holding at 1,000 acres and 10 percent contained Sunday.

Firefighters will be working throughout the day utilizing aircraft and troops on the ground to fight this fire, Angeles National Forest spokesman Nathan Judy said. We have some smoldering spots within the fire perimeter and some brush thats inside the line itself that will catch fire this afternoon so if you see some smoke its just due to those interior islands of fuel that havent burned off yet.

A firefighter suffered a minor injury battling the blaze just after 10 a.m. and was taken to an area hospital, Judy said, adding that the upper northeastern portion of the lake has been closed.

Video: Angeles National Forest spokesman gives Lake fire update Sunday

The fire, which had burned two outbuildings Saturday night, is in dry, difficult terrain and arson units are investigating the fires origin. The location of the fire is the peninsula northwest of the upper Castaic Lake, Judy said.

We have fire crews all around this fire he said. The east side of the perimeter is where well be working this afternoon to make sure we can tie the dozer line, which is up to the north of us, down to the lake itself.

No homes are currently threatened, according to Judy.

Fire crews will be working hard today to put a containment line all the way around this fire, but right now the fire is looking really good, he said.

The fire was first reported around 2 p.m. Saturday and by 9 p.m. had burned 1,000 acres.

Its a largely recreational area, Los Angeles County Fire Department Inspector Richard Licon said Saturday. We are directing those that are in the area just know that the air quality is going to be poor.

There are a total 450 total personnel working to battle the fire including overnight and Sunday firefighters from the ground and aircraft, Judy said. Additionally, there are nine aircraft committed to fighting the fire but are not all used at once, Judy said.

Fire personnel know it will continue to be hot with temperatures in the 100s, Judy said, while humidity will be in the teens but are optimistic.

The winds for the most part are going to remain low, Judy said, with winds ranging from 4 to 8 mph and gusts up to 13 mph as of noon Sunday. The winds arent as big of a concern as the heat. Were just making sure our firefighters are staying hydrated when theyre out on the fire line.

The National Weather Service forecasts the high to be 102 degrees in the area Sunday with a southwest wind around 15 mph, with gusts up to 25 mph.

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Judy said the U.S. Forest Service was requested to the scene for a brush fire call at 5:26 p.m. Saturday.

When the forest service arrived, the incident was at 50 acres before it grew exponentially from grasses in the area that fueled the flames.

The fire eventually slowed down as it moved through the terrain which gave firefighters enough time to attack it by boat and from the air, Judy said. Fire crews were initially transported via boat to fight the fire, he added.

Officials were later able to find another road off Templin Highway that took them around to the back side of the west side, which is the flank of the fire, Judy said.

And that allowed us to get engines and hand crews over on the west side where they were able to work off the dirt road that was in the area to slow the progression of the fire using that natural barrier of that road, he said.

Judy expects the containment number to increase and he doesnt expect the acreage to grew unless theres a large wind push or fire spots found outside the line.

The west side of the recreation area with a boat launch is open but the east side, where fire crews are at and is called the main boat launch, is closed.

He asked people who are boating to stay away from the peninsula with the smoldering smoke where fire personnel are working.

If they are out enjoying the holiday, be very safe with fire, Judy said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation with the U.S. Forest Service, the Los Angeles County Fire Department and the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department.

City News Service and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Crews make progress against Lake fire amid spiking heat near Castaic Lake - LA Daily News

Advocates of gay adoption see both progress, obstacles – New Haven Register

With tens of thousands of children lingering in foster care across the United States, waiting for adoption, Illinois schoolteachers Kevin Neubert and Jim Gorey did their bit. What began with their offer to briefly care for a newborn foster child evolved within a few years into the adoption of that little boy and all four of his older siblings who also were in foster care.

The story of their two-dad, five-kid family exemplifies the potential for same-sex couples to help ease the perennial shortfall of adoptive homes for foster children. Yet, even as more gays and lesbians are adopting, there are efforts by state and federal politicians to protect faith-based adoption agencies that object to placing children in such families.

Sweeping new measures in Texas and South Dakota allow state-funded agencies to refuse to place children with unmarried or gay prospective parents because of religious objections. A bill passed last month in Alabama applies to agencies using private funds. A newly introduced bill in Congress would extend such provisions nationwide.

For those who support gay adoption, the entire phenomenon is very much a good news/bad news story. Gays and lesbians have ever-expanding opportunities to adopt, and a strong likelihood of finding community support if they do so. Yet bias against prospective gay adoptive parents remains pervasive, whether its overt or subtle, and experts in the field believe that many thousands of gays and lesbians are dissuaded from adopting for fear of encountering such bias.

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Some of these agencies are quite clear that they dont work with certain sorts of people, said Currey Cook, who handles adoption and foster care issues for the LGBT-rights group Lambda Legal.

Some would-be gay adopters seek out other agencies, Cook said. But some people think, Im not going to risk being stigmatized and turned away, so Im not going to step up at all.

Theres no official, up-to-date count of gay and lesbian adoptive parents, but the number is on the rise.

Same-sex couples are nearly three times as likely to adopt as heterosexual couples, says Gary Gates, a specialist in LGBT demography. His latest analysis of Census Bureau data indicates that in 2015, the year that same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide, there were 44,000 adopted children being raised by 28,000 same-sex couples. That number of children was double his estimate from 2013.

For some gays and lesbians, particularly those able to afford the $20,000 to $40,000 cost of a typical private adoption, the odds of success are good.

If you have financial means, you can find providers who are welcoming and inclusive and help you through that process, said Ellen Kahn, who oversees youth and family programs for the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBT-rights group.

She says problems often arise when gays and lesbians seek the far less costly option of adopting out of foster care, given that many of the placements are handled by faith-based agencies under contract with child-welfare departments.

We wouldnt have kids waiting if we had enough families seeking to adopt, Kahn said. Yet the LGBT community is being pushed aside.

Kim Paglino, program director for the Donaldson Adoption Institute, says gays and lesbians can benefit from networking and careful research as they seek an agency to work with.

It can take a while to find the right place, she said. You have very clear messages from the agencies that are not interested in same-sex couples. Sometimes knowing where you shouldnt go is helpful.

Among the supportive agencies is Vermont-based Friends in Adoption. Its founder and director, Dawn Smith-Pliner, says shes heartened by the overall trends of LGBT adoption in the past decade, but now worries about a resurgence of frantic phone calls if, given recent political developments, more agencies feel emboldened to refuse placements with gays and lesbians.

Do we have to go backward again before we go forward? she asked.

Of the couples currently posting profiles on her agencys web site, expressing their yearning to adopt, about half are same-sex couples. Smith-Pliner says birth mothers are increasingly open to placing babies with such couples, once the agency raises it as an option.

Don Dupont and Brian Hiller, music teachers in New Yorks Westchester County who married in 2011, decided they would try to adopt, and turned to Friends in Adoption at the recommendation of friends. They posted their profile online, stressing their love of music and love for each other, and it struck a chord with a pregnant woman in Californias Napa County who chose them to provide an adoptive home for her child.

Hiller and Dupont were on hand, and welcomed warmly, at a Catholic hospital in Napa County when their son, Brandon, was born in 2015. They have arranged an open adoption thats intended to include annual visits with Brandons mother and her family in California.

As for their home turf in New York, Weve been fully embraced by every person weve met, Dupont said.

In Illinois, Kevin Neubert and Jim Gorey opted to pursue adoption out of foster care after calculating that a private adoption might be too costly.

Following night classes to qualify as foster parents, they agreed in December 2011 to provide a temporary home for a newborn baby. A stay intended to last only for a few days was extended into several months, and Neubert and Gorey learned that the baby had four older siblings who were also in foster care.

Initially, the two men thought about trying to adopt three of the children, and eventually decided to adopt all five, a process finalized in June 2014.

Some people thought we were crazy, but everyone was supportive of keeping the kids together, Neubert said.

The youngest, Derek, is 5; the eldest, Luke, is 12. There are two other brothers, 10 and 7, and a middle sister aged 9.

Neubert and Gorey, who married in 2010 and live in the Chicago suburb of Naperville, said the family has enjoyed strong community support, though shopping trips could be a spectacle. We didnt know if people were looking at us because were two guys with kids, or because we had so many kids in tow, said Gorey.

The dads have coached their children on how to handle potentially awkward situations.

If someone asks, Wheres the mom? Derek knows to say there are all different types of families, and in our family there are two dads, and no mom, Neubert said.

The path to adoption was bumpier for Dr. Christopher Harris, though by some measures he was an ideal candidate when he first pursued that goal 17 years ago in Nashville, Tennessee. He was a pediatrician and faculty member at Vanderbilt University, but he also was single and openly gay.

For more than a year, he worked with a church-affiliated adoption agency, taking parenting classes, submitting to home visits. Yet his application never progressed, and he finally deduced that it was because he was gay. He reached a similar dead end with a second agency, which took fees from him, and only later when he pressed for an update said it would not place children with single men.

It was frustrating for me to get passed over, Harris said. As a pediatrician, I look at the science and see there are no data that children raised by gay and lesbian parents dont do well.

He persisted, finally finding an agency that was able to connect him with a woman open to having her soon-to-be-born child adopted by a gay man. The baby, Maria, was born in November 2002, and adopted soon afterward by Harris.

Father and daughter now live in Los Angeles, where Maria has completed her first year of high school. During several summers, the two of them have attended a weeklong gathering of LGBT families on Cape Cod. Its very good for me and my daughter to be around families like ours, Harris said.

Those annual events on Cape Cod are organized by the Family Equality Council, a national group that supports LGBT families.

The councils chief policy officer, Denise Brogan-Kator, went to Texas to testify against the adoption-related bill there and was distressed by its passage. The bill is designed to allow agencies to turn qualified families away, she said.

There are more than 100,000 children in foster care in the U.S. waiting to be adopted, and child welfare officials constantly struggle to find enough qualified adoptive families. Some jurisdictions such as New York City and Los Angeles have stepped up efforts to recruit gays and lesbians to adopt, but agencies that shun gay clients operate in most states.

Buckner International, a large agency based in Texas, specifies on its web site that applicants seeking to adopt should be heterosexual married couples or single adults who are not cohabiting with a partner.

Catholic Charities, which does child-welfare work across the country, says it seeks to ensure that the children it places in adoptive homes enjoy the advantage of having a mother and a father who are married.

In some jurisdictions, authorities have said Catholic Charities must serve same-sex couples. Rather than comply, Catholic Charities shut down adoption services in Massachusetts, Illinois, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

While many faith-based agencies contend that children fare best in the home of a married father and mother, theres a growing body of research contending that children fare just as well in the homes of same-sex couples.

Initially, such research focused on lesbian couples. However, Charlotte Patterson, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia, said recent research suggests children adopted by gay male couples also are faring well. Indeed a 2014 study in Britain , led by University of Cambridge researchers, asserted that gay dads did better at parenting than lesbian and straight couples, likely because they faced more challenges en route to parenthood.

It seems that those who successfully complete the adoption process become particularly committed parents, the researchers concluded.

Bethany Christian Services, which provides adoption and foster-care services in more than 30 states, says its religious principles preclude serving same-sex couples directly, but it has established procedures for referring them to LGBT-supportive agencies.

When we meet with them, were very respectful, said Bethanys president, Bill Blacquiere. We want them to have all the rights any citizen has, including the right to be adoptive or foster parents.

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Advocates of gay adoption see both progress, obstacles - New Haven Register

Pride Fest celebrates progress, remembers Pulse – WBIR-TV

Thousands of supporters showed their support for the LGBT community at Knoxville's Pride Parade and Festival on Saturday.

Grant Robinson, WBIR 10:28 PM. EDT June 17, 2017

KNOXVILLE - Thousands of supporters showed their support for the LGBT community at Knoxville's Pride Parade and Festival on Saturday.

The event comes just before the two year anniversary of the Supreme Court's monumental decision on marriage equality ,and barely one year after the shooting at Pulse nightclub in Orlando that killed 49 people.

Festival-goers said celebrating and remembering both events made this year's Pride Fest even more meaningful.

"I've never felt so much love and acceptance," Krista Bunch said.

2017 marked Bunch's third Pride Fest and first time participating in the parade.

"I have seen an increase of support among people that, honestly, I would have never thought would show support," Bunch said. "People are becoming more open, more accepting and it honestly makes my heart happy to be able to see so much support, especially in Tennessee."

Yet despite the progress made for LGBT rights in recent years, some say there's still more work to do.

"A lot of people were under the impression that when marriage equality passed that civil rights issues for gays were done, but because we do have the housing discrimination, because there's so much employment discrimination it's important that we have these gatherings and kind of encourage each other," Perry Stevens said.

About half a dozen protestors stood at the end of the parade with signs, speaking through megaphones. Stevens says they just help the LGBT community become even more tightly knit.

"It's not easy to listen to some of the things they say," Stevens said. "They certainly have the right to say them, but we also have a right to drown them out with our cheers, so we've been doing that too."

Mayor Madeline Rogero reaffirmed her support to the LGBT community.

"It just lets everybody relax and have some fun," Mayor Rogero said. "And you know when you're in the midst of a struggle, which we are on this issue, you have to take some time to celebrate."

Several festival-goers wore shirts supporting the victims of last year's Pulse nightclub shooting.

RELATED:Pulse shooting: Remembering the victims one year later

"It made quite an impression," Stevens said. "Last year at this time, it was a very somber mood because of that. This year we're still remembering them and we don't want anybody too forget what happened to them. That's one of the reasons we're out here."

Stevens says events like Saturday's Pride Fest are important because they help move the community forward, even through hard times.

Though Saturday's Pride Parade and Festival is the summer's largest event, Knox Pride will host other events throughout the summer. You can find a list of those HERE.

2017 WBIR.COM

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Pride Fest celebrates progress, remembers Pulse - WBIR-TV

Firefighters make progress on North Millsap Fire – Canon City Daily Record

The lightning-caused North Millsap Fire is burning in rugged terrain about 11 miles north of Caon City and 5 miles southwest of Victor, (BLM Royal Gorge Field Office / Courtesy Photo)

Fire crews Saturday made significant progress toward containing the North Millsap Fire burning between Shelf Road and Phantom Canyon.

As of Sunday afternoon, the fire had spread to 22 acres and was considered 20 percent contained.

The fire first was reported Thursday afternoon 11 miles north of Caon City. On Saturday, firefighters from the Royal Gorge Field Office, along with other federal, state and local agencies were working to actively suppress the lightning-caused fire.

"Regardless of the difficult terrain, significant line construction was accomplished," said Gregg Goodland, Public Information Officer for the Royal Gorge Field Office, in a media release Sunday. "Aircraft assisted on the more active portions of the fire."

He said cooler and wetter weather Sunday and Monday is expected to provide excellent opportunities for continued progress.

The fire is burning in mixed conifer, ponderosa pine and Gambel oak fuels.

Resources include 70 total personnel including a Type-3 Incident Commander; a Type-1 hand crew; a Type-2 hand crew; a Type-1 and a Type-3 helicopter; and various overhead and support.

This fire is being managed with a full-suppression strategy because of the proximity of private land.

There have been no road closures, but the Fremont County Sheriff's Office has asked that if motorists must use Shelf Road or Phantom Canyon Road to use caution as there will be heavy truck traffic with fire apparatus responding to the fire.

Updates on the fire are posted on Inciweb at https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/5249.

Carie Canterbury: 719-276-7643, canterburyc@canoncitydailyrecord.com

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Firefighters make progress on North Millsap Fire - Canon City Daily Record

Garson Fire reaches 50-75 acres west of Reno; evacuations in progress – KRNV My News 4

by News 4-Fox 11 Digital Staff

A brush fire burns near Garson Road west of Reno on Sunday, June 18, 2017 (Photo: Reno Fire Department)

Crews are responding to a brush fire that sparked near Boomtown west of Reno Sunday, according to fire officials.

Truckee Meadows Fire Protection District reported the fire at Garson Road south of I-80 has burned 50 to 75 acres. The Reno Police Department said an unknown number of nearby residents are being evacuated.

Crews are working on structure protection on Quilici Ranch Road.

Truckee Meadows Fire, Nevada Division of Forestry and the Reno Fire Department are responding, and air resources are on scene.

The Nevada National Guard is providing a water tender to assist as well. Truckee Meadows Fire said target shooting is the suspected cause, though it has not been officially confirmed.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

For a live stream of the fire, click here.

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Garson Fire reaches 50-75 acres west of Reno; evacuations in progress - KRNV My News 4

Why Obama’s presidency didn’t lead to black progress – New York Post

Since the 1960s, black leaders have placed a heavy emphasis on gaining political power, and Barack Obamas presidency represented the apex of those efforts. The assumption rarely challenged is that black political clout must come before black social and economic advancement. But as JASON L. RILEY argues in this excerpt from his new book, False Black Power (Templeton Press), political success has not been a major factor in the rise of racial and ethnic groups from poverty to prosperity.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was followed by large increases in black elected officials. In the Deep South, black officeholders grew from 100 in 1964 to 4,300 in 1978. By the early 1980s, major US cities with large black populations, such as Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Washington and Philadelphia, had elected black mayors. Between 1970 and 2010, the number of black elected officials nationwide increased from fewer than 1,500 to more than 10,000.

Yet the socioeconomic progress that was supposed to follow in the wake of these political gains never materialized. During an era of growing black political influence, blacks as a group progressed at a slower rate than whites, and the black poor actually lost ground.

In a 1991 book, social scientist Gary Orfield and his co-author, journalist Carole Ashkinaze, assessed the progress of blacks in the 1970s and 80s following the sharp increase in black officeholders. The thinking, then and now, was that the problems of the cities were basically the result of the racism of white officials and that many could be solved by black mayors, school superintendents, policemen and teachers who were displacing white ones. The expectation, they added, was that black political and education leaders would be able to make large moves toward racial equity simply by devising policies and practices reflecting their understanding of the background and needs of black people.

But the integration of these institutions proved to be insufficient. Many blacks have reached positions of local power, such as mayor, county commission chairman or superintendent of schools, positions undreamed of 30 years ago, they wrote. Their findings, however, showed that these achievements do not necessarily produce success for blacks as a whole. The empirical evidence, they said, indicates that there may be little relationship between the success of local black leaders and the opportunities of typical black families.

When Michael Brown was shot dead after assaulting a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014, a large fuss was made over the racial composition of the police department and city leaders, which supposedly explained the subsequent civil unrest.

A Justice Department report responding to the incident noted that although the citys population was 67 percent black, just four of its 54 police officers fit that description.

While a diverse police department does not guarantee a constitutional one, it is nonetheless critically important for law-enforcement agencies, and the Ferguson Police Department in particular, to strive for broad diversity among officers and civilian staff, said Justice.

But if racial diversity among law enforcement and city officials is so critically important, what explains the rioting in Baltimore the following year after a black suspect there died in police custody?

At the time, 63 percent of Baltimores residents and 40 percent of its police officers were black. The Baltimore police commissioner also was black, along with the mayor and a majority of the city council.

Contentious relations between the police and ghetto communities are driven mainly by high crime rates in those areas, something that the political left doesnt like to acknowledge. The sharp rise in violent crime in our inner cities coincides with the increase of black leaders in many of those very same cities, which makes it hard to argue that racist or indifferent authorities are to blame.

What can be said of Baltimore is also true of Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Atlanta, New Orleans and Washington, where black mayors and police chiefs and city councilmen and school superintendents have held sway for decades.

In her 1995 book, Facing Up to the American Dream, political scientist Jennifer Hochschild examined data from the late-1950s to the early-1990s an era that covers not only growing black political clout but also the implementation of the War on Poverty and two full decades of affirmative-action policies in hiring and college admissions.

Hochschild reported that between 1959 and 1992, poverty fell from 55 percent to 33 percent for blacks and from 18 percent to 12 percent for whites, which means that the ratio of black to white poverty has remained at 3 hardly a victory in the war on racially disproportionate poverty.

The absolute numbers, she added, tell the same story: there are now about 4 million fewer poor whites than 30 years ago, but 686,000 more poor blacks.

Germans, Jews, Italians and Asians saw economic gains precede political gains in America.

Moreover, low-income blacks lost ground to low-income whites over the same period. Between 1967 and 1992, incomes for the poorest fifth of blacks declined at more than double the rate of comparable whites.

This history should have served to temper expectations for the first black president. Without taking away anything from Barack Obamas historic accomplishment, or the countrys widespread sense of pride in the racial progress that his election symbolized, the reality is that there was little reason to believe that a black president was the answer to racial inequities or the problems of the black poor.

The proliferation of black politicians in recent decades which now includes a twice-elected black president has done little to narrow racial gaps in employment, income, homeownership, academic achievement and other areas.

Most groups in America and elsewhere who have risen economically have done so with little or no political influence, and groups that have enjoyed early political success have tended to rise more slowly.

Group cohesion, expressed in political pressure and bloc voting, is often regarded as axiomatically the most effective method of promoting group progress, explains the economist Thomas Sowell.

But historically, the relationship between political success and economic success has been more nearly inverse than direct. Germans, Jews, Italians and Asians are among those who saw economic gains precede political gains in America.

Similarly, the ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia, the English in Argentina and Jews in Britain, among many other examples, all prospered economically while mostly shunning politics.

A counterexample is the Irish, whose rise from poverty was especially slow even though Irish-run political organizations in places like Boston and Philadelphia dominated local government. The Irish had more political success than any other ethnic group historically, according to Sowell. Yet the Irish were the slowest rising of all European immigrants to America. The wealth and power of a relatively few Irish political bosses had little impact on the progress of masses of Irish Americans.

Even if a group has the ability to wield political influence, they dont always choose to do so.

German immigrants to the US in colonial times were not lacking in numbers. In Pennsylvania they were one-third of the population, a situation that was not lost on non-Germans. Why should Pennsylvania, founded by the English, become a colony of aliens, who will shorty become so numerous as to Germanize us instead of us Anglifying them? wrote Benjamin Franklin in 1751.

Nevertheless, Germans, many of whom arrived as indentured servants and focused initially on paying off the cost of their voyage, had other priorities and were well known for avoiding politics. Germans began entering politics only after they had already risen economically.

Viewed against this history, many blacks were expecting Obamas presidency to deliver more prosperity than political clout tends to deliver for a group in the US or anywhere else.

The black experience in America is of course different from the Irish experience, which in turn is different from the Chinese or German or Jewish experience. Indeed, we cant even generalize about all blacks in the US, since the experience of black natives is different from the experience of black immigrants from the Caribbean and Africa. But that doesnt mean group cultural traits that show patterns of success or failure should be ignored.

Even if we cant make perfect apples-to-apples comparisons, it doesnt mean we cant make any comparisons or draw any conclusions. Many different racial and ethnic minority groups have experienced various degrees of hardship in the US and in other countries all over the world. How those groups have dealt with those circumstances is something to study closely and draw lessons from going forward even if the only lesson is to manage expectations.

One of the clear lessons from this history is that human capital has proven to be far more important than political capital in getting ahead. And that reality helps to explain why blacks fared the way they did not only in the Obama era but also in the preceding decades.

Obamas election was the end product of a civil-rights strategy that prioritized political power to advance blacks, and eight years later we once again learned the limitations of that strategy.

Reprinted with permission from False Black Power by Jason L. Riley (Templeton Press), 2017.

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Why Obama's presidency didn't lead to black progress - New York Post

Cuba Blasts Trump’s Policy Speech as ‘Hostile Rhetoric’ That ‘Reverts’ Progress – NBCNews.com

Cuba's government slammed President Donald Trump for his "hostile rhetoric" during a speech Friday that it said took "a backward step in the relationship between the two countries."

Trump's address in Miami announced changes in the United States' policy toward Cuba after the Obama administration decided to normalize relations with the island nation following a decades-long freeze of diplomatic ties.

But the Raul Castro-led government didn't care for Trump touting his desire to partially reverse course from the "last administration's completely one-sided deal."

The Castro government said in a statement that Trump's speech "reminded the times of open confrontation with our country, announced the policy of his government towards Cuba which reverts the progress achieved in the past two years."

The Trump administration says it is changing the policy of the U.S. toward Cuba by limiting the amount of money that might go toward the Cuban military, restricting American tourism there and reaffirming the 56-year-old trade embargo. The policy memorandum directs the Treasury and Commerce departments to create new regulations within 30 days, although they wouldn't be in place for several months.

Related: Freely Wandering in Cuba Gets Harder to Do Under Trump

Trump has stopped short of completely resetting relations with Cuba again: He isn't ending diplomatic ties, or closing the U.S. Embassy in Havana or placing restrictions on cigars, rum and other items that Americans can schlep home.

But the changes would ultimately meet four objectives, according to the White House: Ensure compliance with U.S. law, hold the Cuban government accountable for alleged human rights abuses, further the interests of the U.S. and the Cuban people, and "empower the Cuban people to develop greater economic and political liberty."

The Cuban government argued that it would only be a retread of the past, and that the Trump administration is not in a position to lecture.

Its statement takes a swipe at the United States under Trump by noting issues that negatively affect Americans, including racial discrimination and gun violence, and controversial policies on immigration, a border wall and abandoning the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The Cuban government maintained that the new policies would not work, comparing it to the economic embargo that never ushered the Castro regime out of power as the U.S. had hoped.

"The Government of Cuba denounces the new measures for strengthening the blockade, which are destined to fail as proven repeatedly in the past," the statement said. "They will not achieve their purpose of debilitating the Revolution or submitting the Cuban people, whose resistance to the aggressions of any kind and origin has been proven throughout six decades."

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Cuba Blasts Trump's Policy Speech as 'Hostile Rhetoric' That 'Reverts' Progress - NBCNews.com

For advocates of gay adoption, progress but also obstacles – The Spokesman-Review

Sat., June 17, 2017, 2:45 p.m.

With tens of thousands of children lingering in foster care across the United States, awaiting adoption, Illinois schoolteachers Kevin Neubert and Jim Gorey did their bit. What began with their offer to briefly care for a newborn foster child evolved within a few years into the adoption of that little boy and all four of his older siblings who also were in foster care.

The story of their two-dad, five-kid family exemplifies the potential for same-sex couples to help ease the perennial shortfall of adoptive homes for foster children. Yet even as more gays and lesbians adopt, some politicians seek to protect faith-based adoption agencies that object to placing children in such families.

Sweeping new measures in Texas and South Dakota allow state-funded agencies to refuse to place children with unmarried or gay prospective parents because of religious objections. A newly introduced bill in Congress would extend such provisions nationwide.

For those who support gay adoption, its a good news/bad news story. Gays and lesbians have ever-expanding opportunities to adopt, and a strong likelihood of finding community support if they do so. Yet bias against prospective gay adoptive parents remains pervasive, whether its overt or subtle, and experts in the field say many thousands of gays and lesbians are dissuaded from adopting for fear of encountering such bias.

Some of these agencies are quite clear that they dont work with certain sorts of people, said Currey Cook of the LGBT-rights group Lambda Legal.

Some would-be gay adopters seek out other agencies, Cook said. But some people think, Im not going to risk being stigmatized and turned away, so Im not going to step up at all.

Theres no official, up-to-date count of gay and lesbian adoptive parents, but the number is on the rise.

Same-sex couples are nearly three times as likely to adopt as heterosexual couples, says Gary Gates, a specialist in LGBT demography. His latest analysis of Census Bureau data indicates that in 2015, the year same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide, 44,000 adopted children were being raised by 28,000 same-sex couples. That number of children was double his estimate from 2013.

For gays and lesbians able to afford the $20,000 to $40,000 cost of a typical private adoption, the odds are good.

If you have financial means, you can find providers who are welcoming and inclusive and help you through that process, said Ellen Kahn, who oversees youth and family programs for the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBT-rights group.

She says problems often arise when gays and lesbians seek the less costly option of adopting out of foster care, given that many placements are handled by faith-based agencies under contract with child-welfare departments.

Kevin Neubert and Jim Gorey avoided such problems when they pursued adoption out of foster care after calculating that a private adoption might be too costly.

Following night classes to qualify as foster parents, they agreed in December 2011 to provide a temporary home for a newborn baby. A stay intended to last only a few days was extended into several months, and Neubert and Gorey learned that the baby had four older siblings in foster care.

Initially, the two men considered adopting three of the children, and eventually decided to adopt all five, a process finalized in June 2014. The youngest, Derek, is 5; the eldest, Luke, is 12. There are two other brothers, 10 and 7, and a middle sister aged 9.

Neubert and Gorey, who married in 2010 and live in the Chicago suburb of Naperville, said the family has enjoyed strong community support, though shopping trips could be a spectacle. We didnt know if people were looking at us because were two guys with kids, or because we had so many kids in tow, said Gorey.

The path to adoption was bumpier for Dr. Christopher Harris, though by some measures he was an ideal candidate when he first pursued that goal 17 years ago in Nashville, Tennessee. He was a pediatrician and faculty member at Vanderbilt University, but also was single and openly gay.

For more than a year, he worked with a church-affiliated adoption agency, taking parenting classes, submitting to home visits. Yet his application never progressed, and he finally deduced it was because he was gay. He reached a similar dead end with a second agency, which took fees from him and only later said it wouldnt place children with single men.

It was frustrating for me to get passed over, Harris said. As a pediatrician, I look at the science and see there are no data that children raised by gay and lesbian parents dont do well.

He persisted, finally finding an agency that connected him with a woman open to having her soon-to-be-born child adopted by a gay man. The baby, Maria, was born in November 2002, and soon adopted by Harris. Father and daughter now live in Los Angeles; Maria recently completed her first year of high school.

More than 100,000 U.S. foster children are waiting to be adopted, and child welfare officials struggle to find enough qualified adoptive families. Some jurisdictions recruit gays and lesbians to adopt, but agencies that shun gay clients operate in most states.

Catholic Charities, which does child-welfare work nationwide, says it seeks to ensure that the children it places in adoptive homes enjoy the advantage of having a mother and a father who are married.

In some jurisdictions, authorities have said Catholic Charities must serve same-sex couples. Rather than comply, Catholic Charities shut down adoption services in Massachusetts, Illinois, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

Bethany Christian Services, which provides adoption and foster-care services in more than 30 states, says its religious principles preclude serving same-sex couples directly, but it routinely refers them to LGBT-supportive agencies.

When we meet with them, were very respectful, said Bethanys president, Bill Blacquiere. We want them to have all the rights any citizen has, including the right to be adoptive or foster parents.

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For advocates of gay adoption, progress but also obstacles - The Spokesman-Review

Boise Pride Fest draws crowd and hope for further progress – 6 On Your Side

BOISE - Hundreds of people from all over the state were in the City of Trees Saturday to stand together in support of equal rights for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Queer community.

Boise's Pride Parade keeps getting bigger every year. The LGBTQ community converge, along with their friends and family, and feel a sense of unity. They just wish every day could be like this.

"When you say you're getting gay married, or something. It's just marriage, it's just love like everybody else," say Jasper Schultz, who advocates for equality for all. "We don't want anything different, we just want to be respected."

Some of the festival attendees Six On Your Side talked to says the event represents their history and that it's also a way to create awareness that coming out is not an easy path to take.

"When you hate yourself enough," says Rukia Bliss, a Nampa resident. "You don't need everyone else hating you too."

Idaho's only openly gay legislator currently in office had a booth set up at the Capitol Park festival. He thinks having other lawmakers get to know him is helping the LGBTQ community's cause.

"As they [Idaho legislators] get to know that we are here and that we're just like everybody else.. we love the same, we hurt the same, we bleed the same," says Rep. John McCrostie, representing District 16 Seat A (D). "We all work together to try to make our communities better places."

Rep. McCrostie is already preparing for the next legislative session. He will keep working to get a statute passed to ban gay conversion therapy in the Gem state. He says it increases rates of suicide among teens.

In addition, he also wants to amend Idaho's HIV criminalization law created in the late 1980s when not as much was known about the virus and its transmission. Like others, McCrostie is not giving up hope either that the Idaho Human Rights Act will one day include the words sexual orientation and gender identity.

"As someone who is transgender, it [the Add the Words Movement] speaks to me on a really personal level," says Cade Kendall, who just wants to feel more safe in general. "So, I would really enjoy it if it got passed."

The two-day festival ends Saturday night with a Pride Street Party that starts at 10 p.m. along 8th and Idaho Streets.

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Boise Pride Fest draws crowd and hope for further progress - 6 On Your Side