George Will: Young Libertarian makes a refreshing run in Virginia

ARLINGTON, Va. -- When William F. Buckley, running as the Conservative Party's candidate for mayor of New York in 1965, was asked what he would do if he won, he replied: "Demand a recount." Robert Sarvis, Libertarian Party candidate for governor of Virginia, will not need to do this.

Hours before Gallup reported record nationwide support -- 60 percent -- for a third party to leaven politics, Sarvis was declared ineligible for the final debate for gubernatorial candidates because he fell a tad short of a 10 percent average in recent polls. None of this disturbed his leisurely enjoyment of a tuna-burger lunch before sauntering off in search of free media, about the only kind he can afford.

Equanimity is his default position and almost his political platform: Why be agitated when your frenzied adversaries are splendidly making your case about the poverty of standard political choices? The Democratic and Republican candidates, Terry McAuliffe and Ken Cuccinelli, each say no good can come from electing the other fellow; Sarvis amiably agrees with both.

In Sarvis, the man and the moment have met. He is running at a time of maximum distrust of established institutions, including the two major parties. He has little money but McAuliffe and Cuccinelli have spent millions of dollars on broadcast ads making each other repulsive to many Virginians who surely feel as Will Rogers did: "You got to admit that each party is worse than the other." Furthermore, the partial shutdown of the government especially annoyed Sarvis' state, which has the nation's second highest per capita federal spending (Alaska is first) -- northern Virginia is a dormitory for federal workers and southern Virginia's military installations include the world's largest naval complex.

At the national level, the most potent third-party candidates have had vivid personalities and burning issues: Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, taming corporations; Strom Thurmond in 1948, asserting regional grievances relating to race; George Wallace in 1968, venting class and cultural resentments; Ross Perot in 1992, shrinking the federal deficit. Sarvis is more bemused than burning.

During an intermission in the telecast of a notably disagreeable McAuliffe-Cuccinelli debate, viewers heard from their television sets a woman's voice asking, "Can't vote for these guys?" Then Sarvis' voice:

"Like you, I can't vote for Ken Cuccinelli's narrow-minded social agenda. I want a Virginia that's open-minded and welcoming to all. And like you, I don't want Terry McAuliffe's cronyism either, where government picks winners and losers. Join me, and together we can build a Virginia that's open-minded and open for business."

McAuliffe is an enthusiast for, and has prospered from, government "investments" in preferred industries, which is a recipe for crony capitalism. Cuccinelli is a stern social conservative, an opponent of, among other things, gay marriage. Marriage equality interests Sarvis (whose mother is Chinese) because his wife is African-American, so his marriage would have been illegal in Virginia before the exquisitely titled 1967 U.S. Supreme Court decision Loving v. Virginia.

Sarvis, who is 37 and may look that old in a decade or so, graduated from Harvard with a mathematics degree, earned a law degree from New York University and clerked in Mississippi for a judge on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. After a spell as a mathematics graduate student at Berkeley, Sarvis worked for a San Francisco tech startup, then earned a master's degree in economics at George Mason University. In 2011, he ran as a Republican against the state Senate majority leader, a 31-year incumbent. Outspent 72-to-1, Sarvis got 36 percent of the vote.

He must scrounge for media attention because he fares poorly in polls that reinforce the judgment that he is not newsworthy. But he is.

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George Will: Young Libertarian makes a refreshing run in Virginia

The Case for Progressive-Libertarian Cooperation

This week, Salon published a piece warning anti-NSA progressives to be wary of libertarians, bafflingly describing the ideology as unfreedom of the majority and hard-right support for survival of the fittest. Such mischaracterizations cannot go without response, especially when the author took aim at several libertarian groups like Students for Liberty (SFL) that have been active in pursuing a freer, more open society. Below is a rebuttal from SFLs Vice President Clark Ruper. Andrew Kirell, Sr. Editor, Mediaite

ThisSaturday, October 26, privacy advocates from across the country will gather in Washington, DC for aRally Against Mass Surveillance. The event is supported by a coalition of organizations from across the political spectrum which have united to defend our civil liberties. The official petition calls for Congress to take immediate action to halt this surveillance and provide a full public accounting of the NSAs and the FBIs data collection programs.

Students For Liberty, an international network of libertarian student groups, is proud to be a part of this coalition on such a critical issue.

However, a recentSalon article by Tom Watson argues that libertarians ought not be allowed into this coalition because we are not progressives. While it is true that libertarians arent progressives, Watson does not provide a convincing argument for why that should prevent our working together. Libertarians and progressives share many core values, including tolerance, fairness, respect for human rights, and privacy, to name a few. We both envision a world of opportunity and justice, free from the abuses of power which have become far too common in the modern age.

What Watson fails to realize is that libertarianism is not a philosophy of the right or left. We are actually a radically centrist coalition ourselves. Not beholden to any political party, from the center we can hold both sides accountable for their abuse of power. The past thirteen years of the Bush and Obama administrations have offered plenty of that to go around. Libertarians have been out in front on privacy issues,criticizing the Patriot Act from the beginning andpushing for reform ever since. It is naive to think that working with one party will bring justice on the issue of privacy, especially as left-wing politicians such as Diane Feinstein areleading the defense of the NSA surveillance state.

Our argument for progressive-libertarian cooperation is not idle musing but based on the recent history of successful movements and coalitions. Take two notable examples of the anti-war movement and the fight against the drug war.

The anti-war movement of the 1960s and early 70s was not a monolithic ideological enterprise but a broad coalition in which libertarians played a strong role. Students For Democratic Society, the leading student organizers of the coalition, featured strong libertarian influences and membership. SDS President Carl Oglesby openly identified as a libertarian and recalled his arguments for a broad coalition in his memoirRavens in the Storm, Libertarianism is a stance that allows one to speak to the right as well as the left, which is what I was always trying to do . . . Why go to rightists on this theme when there were so many leftists to choose from? Because you made the strongest case against the war if you could show that both right and left oppose it. Because of the anti-war movements broad nature it was able to galvanize a generation of young people and roll back our nations deplorable wars of empire.

Today young libertarians are leading the charge against expanding the wars and the increasingly prevalent use of drones. Leading progressives like Glenn Greenwald recognize this,having worked with libertarian student groups across the country to bring attention to these issues.

Another prime example is the movement to end drug prohibition, an area where we are making tangible headway to end one of the most harmful andineffective social policies of the past century. Each springStudents For Liberty groups partner with organizations such as Students for Sensible Drug policy to raise awareness of the harms and injustice of the drug war. Libertarian activists and politicians were on the ground working feverishly for the recent legalization initiatives in Washington and Colorado. Together, all advocates of individual autonomy and social justice are making progress towards ending these racist and discriminatory policies.

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The Case for Progressive-Libertarian Cooperation

Obamacare concern: Health care users start to get kicked off insurance plans

The health care laws honeymoon period is over.

For several years, Obamacare provided new benefits: Children could stay on their parents plans longer, insurance companies couldnt impose lifetime benefit caps, and seniors got extra help in buying prescription drugs. But during the past two months, some consumers have been kicked off plans, and they and others are having to navigate the complexities of health care exchanges.

SEE ALSO: More Democrats push for delay in Obamacare mandate

House Speaker John A. Boehner, Ohio Republican, said Wednesday that more people have been kicked out of their health care plans thanks to recently activated provisions than have been able to sign up in the exchanges an equation he said underscored the problems with the law.

When you begin to look at these hundreds of thousands of people, I think what youre going to see at the end of October are more Americans are going to lose their health insurance than are going to sign up at these exchanges, Mr. Boehner told reporters.

Consumers have reported tremendous difficulties in signing up through the federal online portal, HealthCare.gov. That has led Republicans and even some Democrats to urge President Obama to extend the enrollment period and/or delay imposing tax penalties on those who fail to sign up thus violating the laws individual mandate requiring most Americans to get insurance.

As those difficulties emerge, meanwhile, Kaiser Health News reported this week that hundreds of thousands of Americans have received notices from their insurers canceling their policies: 300,000 from Florida Blue and 160,000 from Kaiser Permanente in California, in addition to thousands from other major insurers.

Analysts following the health care law said those are anecdotal figures and there is no way to know for sure whether Mr. Boehners claim is correct about cancellations outnumbering enrollees.

Professor Timothy S. Jost, a health care law researcher, said Mr. Boehners concerns should change as people whose plans have been canceled go to the exchanges and, in many cases, find they can get better, cheaper coverage.

SPECIAL COVERAGE: Health Care Reform

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Doubts plague health care industry's mandatory switch to digital records

Rheumatologist Beth Simpson, D.O., poses with her Samsung tablet running NextGen software in the Arthritis Associates medical records room Wednesday afternoon. Medical practices are transitioning form analog paper records to digital ones stored on computers.

In health care, there are patients and doctors; machines and medicines; office staffs and insurance companies.

And binding them all together is paper.

In a given day, thousands of sheets -- lab results, referrals, billing information -- will change hands at a facility like University Surgical Associates in Chattanooga. The facility, home to 32 surgeons, spends close to $1,200 a month on paper.

That's why, for health care providers, entering the digital age is no small feat.

The shift from paper to digital has happened more slowly in medicine than in other industries.

But a federal program established under the 2009 economic stimulus law has provided billions in incentives for hospitals and physicians to make the switch to electronic records -- and in the next two years, it will begin penalizing providers that have not.

Overall, 291,325 doctors and 3,880 hospitals have made the switch, according to a Wall Street Journal report earlier this year.

The idea of digital health records comes with many goals: Greater efficiency, improved accuracy, more patients, faster billing, prompter payments.

But doctors' offices and hospitals say the transition has not been smooth.

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Doubts plague health care industry's mandatory switch to digital records

Health care for indigenous people

Patin-Ay, Prosperidad, Agusan del Sur Concerned about the proper care of thousands highland village people, the provincial government of Agusan del Sur launched the health care for mothers and children of indigenous people (IPAs).

The signing of a landmark manifesto to institutionalize the health care program of the IPs was witnessed by top officials of the province early this week at the provincial training center here.

The historic launched was called Indigenous People-Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health and Nutrition (IP MNCHN), where Agusan del Sur Gov. Adolph Edward G. Plaza was the leading officials in the signing of the manifesto.

The IP MNCHN delved on the main thrust of giving primary health care to IP pregnant women and the child after giving birth.

The IP MNCHN will run until 2016. However, officials of the province and concerned line agencies of the government assured that they will not stop their health services assistance even after 2016.

The manifesto signing was also witnessed by officials from the Department of Education (DepEd), Philippine Army, Police, Department of Health, Provincial Health Office, Municipal Health Office of San Luis and Philhealth.

To immediately implement the program, the provincial government and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) and United Nations Population Fund will initially serve the lumads of Tagbuligan ku Banwaon Manobo daw Talaandig dini ta Adgawan (TagBaMaTaad) Ancestral Domain in the far-flung areas in San Luis, also this province.

Meanwhile, one of the concerns of this new health program for the IPs is the lack of midwife in highland village communities. Though currently the organization is sponsoring five midwifery grads on their review for the upcoming licensure exam and all of them came from San Luis but still this is not enough to compensate their number.

Gov. Plaza has assured that midwifery will be included to the covered courses for the Provincial Scholarship Program, so that all the women will be safe in times of their pregnancy and delivery.

The said project is also aligned to the Joint Memorandum Circular No.2013-01 Guidelines on the delivery of Basic Health Services for Indigenous Cultural Communities/Indigenous People signed by the Secretaries of Department of Health (DOH), National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) and Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG).

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Health care for indigenous people

A Look at Affordable Health Care ETFs

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- The health care sector has been ground zero in the ongoing ideological battle that shut down the U.S. government this month. Regardless of anyone's politics, the health care sector will become an increasingly important part of the market as global demographics provide a positive catalyst while domestic politics create a negative catalyst or at the very least create uncertainty.

The more than 70 million baby boomers are, of course, moving into retirement which provides the expectation of needing more medical attention. Other economically developed countries also have aging populations and while emerging markets tend to have younger populations, increased economic prosperity in those countries should mean more demand for advanced health care options.

Investors who agree on a future of increased importance for the sector but who do not want to get blindsided by picking "losers" in how the industry evolves under the Affordable Care Act can of course consider exchange traded funds as a solution.

Index Universe tracks 24 funds in the sector excluding levered and inverse funds. The simplest exposure is the broadest exposure through a fund like the Health Care Select Sector SPDR (XLV) or the Vanguard Health Care ETF (VHT).

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A Look at Affordable Health Care ETFs

Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom – Rushing the Train – The Weinstein Company – Video


Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom - Rushing the Train - The Weinstein Company
https://www.facebook.com/MandelaLongWalktoFreedom http://www.twitter.com/WeinsteinFilms In select theaters November 29, 2013 MANDELA: LONG WALK TO FREEDOM is based ...

By: The Weinstein Company

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Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom - Rushing the Train - The Weinstein Company - Video

The slow pace of transformation within the media topped the agenda of Media Freedom Day – Video


The slow pace of transformation within the media topped the agenda of Media Freedom Day
Several role-players, among them the SABC, Government Communications and Information Services and the Media Development and Diversity Agency partnered to com...

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The slow pace of transformation within the media topped the agenda of Media Freedom Day - Video

SCF applauds Freedom Village scholarships

MANATEE -- Lauren Martinez, a State College of Florida student and Freedom Village employee of six years, said she never expected to receive her first scholarship from the senior living community.

"I am following my mother's footsteps," Martinez said.

Martinez and her mother, Wilma Negron, are both recipients of Freedom Village scholarships.

Freedom Village residents have been raising money for employees to pursue higher education since 1995. The Freedom Village Scholarship Foundation has contributed more than $300,000 for more than 250 scholarships for State College of Florida students alone.

Glenn Vergason, scholarship fund chairman, said more funds have gone to support scholarship recipients at other schools.

"We are trying to assist

young people to get an education," Vergason said.

The State College of Florida held a thank-you reception Wednesday at Freedom Villages to show appreciation to the scholarship foundation for students who were able to attend the school through the scholarships.

Martinez was recently accepted into the honors society at the State College of Florida and is working toward a psychology degree with her scholarship. Negron, her mother, finished the school's LPN program and is working on a bachelor's degree in nursing.

Maria Sarver, assistant executive director at Freedom Village, said residents contribute in several ways to the scholarships. Residents can donate to the scholarship program through monthly service fees, remember the scholarship program in their wills or ask loved ones to give memorial donations in lieu of flowers at funeral services.

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SCF applauds Freedom Village scholarships

Carol Saunders: Palm Beaches Crab Cake Cook-Off in its 2nd 'SAUCY' year

PROVIDED PHOTO/COMMUNITY PARTNERS Jaime-Lee Brown and Karen Smyack at last year's event.

PROVIDED PHOTO/COMMUNITY PARTNERS Mark and Ashlyn are having lots of fun, in this file photo.

PROVIDED PHOTO/COMMUNITY PARTNERS Kathleen Kelly

Eight premiere area restaurants are sharpening their respective claws to compete in the second annual Palm Beaches Crab Cake Cook-Off for Childhood Trauma to raise funds for children coping with life-changing mental illness and trauma.

Community Partners, Palm Beach Countys expert agency in providing childhood social-emotional therapy and support for victims of trauma, abuse and neglect, launched the areas most unique new event in 2012 to bring awareness and funds to the more than 2,500 kids they seek to serve each year.

The Palm Beaches Crab Cake Cook-Off, so popular and delicious last season, is a highly-anticipated, fun and different charitable event that focuses on the kids beyond the cooking competition that will award the areas finest crab cake.

We were on board right from the start with this great cause for local kids ... was the response from Lindsey Bader, marketing director for The Capital Grille Palm Beach Gardens, the events VIP Crab Trap Host.

Echo Palm Beach learned of the event and stepped in to host the Crabs and Crowns VIP Kickoff event that precedes the main event. Echo General Manager Chris Haretos will serve on the 2013 competition Judges Panel.

Eight favorite local eateries signed on for the second year of the claw-to-claw competition, all eager to help raise funds to support kids, including Caf Joshua, Christinas Catering, Cod & Capers, Dixie Grill and Bar, Frigates Waterfront Bar & Grill, Hog Snappers Shack & Sushi, Ruths Chris Steakhouse North Palm, and the Tin Fish.

Guests will taste each teams crab cake and will cast their votes for Peoples Choice Award, as well as enjoy wine and beer tasting, entertainment and the CrabFabulous Auction and Bling Bar.

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Carol Saunders: Palm Beaches Crab Cake Cook-Off in its 2nd 'SAUCY' year

World's First Bio-Robot Runs on i-Free Artificial Intelligence Technology

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA and LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwired - Oct 24, 2013) - i-Free, a Russian innovation company, provided the Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology used in the world's first bionic man, a bio-robot named Frank, created by the UK's Shadow Robot Co. Thanks to i-Free's Artificial Intelligence, the robot recognizes human speech and can easily converse with people. Frank can conduct meaningful conversations, and even has a sense of humor.

The Bionic Man is a revolutionary project that showcases the latest achievements in bionics and prosthetics. Frank was assembled with bionic parts replacing those parts and systems of the human body that are already in use in humans: limbs, skin, bones, and some, but not all, internal organs.

The bionic man understands human speech and is able to talk, thanks to the Artificial Intelligence technology donated to the project by i-Free. All verbal commands and requests that Frank receives are processed remotely on i-Free's platform; the robot's responses are formed in the same way, and each incoming request takes only a split second to process.

i-Free has backed AI research and development for many years, viewing the topic as a priority for technology investment. The company hosts AINL (Artificial Intelligence and Natural Language), a desktop and field research conference, and is committed to embedding AI in its products and services. The technology is used extensively in i-Free's family of mobile personal assistant applications, including "Voice Assistant in Russian" and "VoiceMaid".

In 2011, i-Free acquired AI technology from inventor Vladimir Veselov, and enhanced the technology to the point that, in 2012, it won first prize in the Turing 100 AI Machines competition.

Shadow Robot Co, the creator of the bio-robot, asked i-Free to donate its Artificial Intelligence technology to the project, and i-Free agreed.

"AI ideas and projects have always appealed to us here at i-Free -- we have a strong commitment to exploring new fields where Artificial Intelligence products can make life easier for people," said Egor Naumov, AI development leader at i-Free. "The importance of the world's first bionic man cannot be overestimated. It's a real breakthrough, a revolution in modern medical science. We are delighted that Frank's creators chose our Artificial Intelligence solution for their project."

The model for the first bionic man is Bertolt Meyer, a social psychologist from Germany who was born without a hand and uses a bionic prosthesis. The bionic man's co-creator, Meyer also hosts the documentary The Incredible Bionic Man, which was aired on the Smithsonian Channel on October 20, 2013. The film chronicles the entire process of assembling the world's first functioning bionic human body.

More information about the bionic man can be found on the Smithsonian channel website.

About i-Free i-Free is a Russian innovation company that has operated in the CIS since 2001 and internationally since 2006. The company develops and implements cutting-edge solutions in mobile and NFC technology, electronic finance, digital content distribution, electronic payments and micropayments, applications for smartphones and new network devices, digital products for the B2C market, and B2B projects in mobile marketing.

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World's First Bio-Robot Runs on i-Free Artificial Intelligence Technology

Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station designated as a Milestones in Microbiology site

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

23-Oct-2013

Contact: Garth Hogan ghogan@asmusa.org 202-942-9389 American Society for Microbiology

Washington, DC -- October 23, 2013 -- The Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station, site of Herbert William Conn's Research Laboratory at the Connecticut Agricultural College (later the University of Connecticut, Storrs) has been named a Milestones in Microbiology site by the American Society for Microbiology (ASM). A dedication ceremony is scheduled for Saturday, October 26, 2013, at 4:30 pm EST in the University of Connecticut, Storrs Biology/Physics Building Foyer. The ASM Milestones in Microbiology program recognizes institutions and scientists that have made significant contributions toward advancing the science of microbiology.

A symposium, "H. W. Conn's Golden Age of Bacteriology Becomes the New Golden Age of Microbial Biology," precedes the dedication ceremony from 1:30 -- 4:30 pm. During the ceremony, Stanley Maloy, Past President of the ASM, will present an official Milestones in Microbiology plaque on behalf of the Society.

"Herbert Conn played a central role in our understanding of the importance of microbes in agriculture, and how they impact public health -- problems that remain as relevant today as when he worked on them over a hundred years ago," says Maloy. "And, he did not simply publish these discoveries in academic journals for other scientists, but he lucidly explained the importance of microbes to the public as well."

Herbert W. Conn's international fame in dairy bacteriology began during his tenure as the bacteriologist at the Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station on the campus of the Connecticut Agricultural College (1888-1906). His research on the formation of butter and the causes of milk spoilage led to advances in bacterial cultivation and dairy foodstuff production. His findings served as the basis for the "Butter Exhibition" at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, which allowed the public to taste flavors of butters made using different bacteria.

Starting in 1892, Conn served as "Lecturer on Dairy Bacteriology" at the Connecticut Agricultural College and so established the first formal instruction in Bacteriology at what was to become the University of Connecticut. After Conn stepped down from his instructional duties at the College in 1906, his laboratory assistant and former student William Esten continued in Conn's footsteps and became Professor of Dairy Bacteriology at the College.

Conn became a leading advocate for public health laws as a result of his work, and in 1905 was appointed Director of the new Connecticut State Board of Health Laboratory, one of the first such bodies in the United States. He founded the American Academy of Public Health, served on the New York Commission on Milk Standards, and was Director of the Cold Spring Harbor Biological Laboratory from 1889-1897. Conn was also an accomplished educator at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, where he founded the Biology Department and served as its head until his death in 1917.

While working at the Agricultural Station, Conn collaborated with Drs. A. C. Abbott (University of Pennsylvania) and E. O. Jordan (University of Chicago) to found the Society of American Bacteriologists (later the American Society for Microbiology). At the inaugural meeting of the Society held at Yale University in 1899, Conn presented research that reflected his achievements at the Station. His presentation, "Natural Varieties of Bacteria," included an exhibit of cultures of a highly variable Micrococcus which he had isolated from milk.

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Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station designated as a Milestones in Microbiology site