Here’s How Far Cryonic Preservation Has Come in the 50 …

(Inside Science) Early in the 1960s, a group of enthusiasts advanced the concept of freezing humans as soon as they die, in hopes of reviving them after the arrival of medical advances able to cure the conditions that killed them. The idea went into practice for the first time 50 years ago.

On Jan. 12, 1967, James Bedford, an emeritus professor of psychology at the University of California, became the first person to be "cyropreserved." A small team of doctors and other enthusiasts froze him a few hours after he died from liver cancer that had spread to his lungs.

A few days later the team placed the body into an insulated container packed with dry ice. Later still, Bedford was immersed in liquid nitrogen in a large Dewar container. Fifteen years on, after a series of moves from one cryopreservation facility to another, his body found a home at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Arizona, where it still resides.

By current standards of cryonics, the procedure was remarkably untidy and disorganized. Nevertheless, a visual evaluation of Bedford's condition in 1991 found that his body had remained frozen and suffered no obvious deterioration.

"There's no date set for another examination," said R. Michael Perry, care services manager at Alcor.

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But as promoters of cryopreservation celebrate the 50th anniversary of Bedford's death and freezing known to some as "Bedford Day" they emphasize improvements to the freezing and preservation procedures that Bedford's experiences advanced.

The community is also undergoing a significant change in its expectations for reviving frozen patients. Rather than planning for a Lazarus-like resuscitation of the entire body, some proponents of the technology focus more on saving individuals' stored memories, and perhaps incorporating them into robots.

Beyond the cryopreservation community, however, an aura of scientific suspicion that surrounded Bedford's freezing remains.

"Reanimation or simulation is an abjectly false hope that is beyond the promise of technology and is certainly impossible with the frozen, dead tissue offered by the 'cryonics' industry," neuroscientist Michael Hendricks of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, wrote in Technology Review.

Scientists aren't the industry's only critics.

Families of individuals designated for freezing including Bedford's own family have gone to court to protest or defend loved ones' decisions to undergo freezing.

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In a more recent case, in 2011, a Colorado probate judge upheld a contract that Mary Robbins had signed with Alcor over objections from Robbins' children. And last year the High Court of England upheld a mother's right to seek cryonic treatment of her terminally ill 14-year-old daughter after her death, despite the father's wishes.

Public reaction to the technology reached its nadir in New England in 2002, when court documents revealed that Boston Red Sox baseball icon Ted Williams was frozen in the Alcor facility, with his head severed from his body. Williams' son John Henry, who arranged the process, was himself frozen after he died of leukemia.

Politics has also impacted the technology's progress. In 2004, for example, Michigan's state government voted to license a facility called the Cryonics Institute, located in Clinton, as a cemetery. That move, reversed eight years later, prevented the institute from preparing bodies for cryopreservation on its own, because applying such procedures to a dead body required the services of a licensed funeral director.

The cryonics industry flatly disagrees with its critics.

Alcor asserts on its website that "[t]here are no known credible technical arguments that lead one to conclude that cryonics, carried out under good conditions today, would not work." The company adds: "Cryonics is a belief that no one is really dead until the information content of the brain is lost, and that low temperatures can prevent this loss."

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Certainly the controversies have not discouraged candidates for cryopreservation.

Worldwide, more than 250 individuals are now housed in cryonic facilities, at a minimum per-person cost of about $28,000 in the U.S.

Russia's KrioRus company offers a cut-rate level starting at $12,000, with the condition that it stores several human bodies and assorted pets and other animals in communal Dewar containers. Individual contracts can specify the length of storage. At present, the U.S. and Russia are the only countries with facilities that offer human cryopreservation.

The first attempt at cryopreservation did not go particularly smoothly.

Bedford died before all preparations for his cryopreservation were complete. So instead of draining his blood and replacing it with a customized antifreeze solution to protect the body's tissues from freezing damage, the team simply injected the antifreeze into Bedford's arteries without removing the blood.

The team then surrounded the body in dry ice, and started it on a series of transfers from one container to another that ended up in a Dewar container in Alcor's facility.

Because of those difficulties, cryonics experts feared that the body had suffered serious damage. But the examination in 1991 quelled those concerns.

"We were really relieved that he was not discolored," Perry recalled. "And corners of the ice cubes [around him] were still sharp; he had stayed frozen all the time."

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In recent years, cryonics promoters have borrowed from medical advances in such fields as cryobiology and nanobiology.

To prevent ice crystals from damaging cell walls in the frozen state, cryopreservationists replace the body's blood supply with mixtures of antifreeze compounds and organ preservatives a technique developed to preserve frozen eggs for fertility treatments.

Another emerging approach accounts for the separation of Ted Williams' head and body. Based on studies of roundworms, promoters of cryonics argue that freezing can preserve the contents of individuals' brains even if their bodies can't be revived. That opens the possibility of downloading cryopreserved personalities into a robotic future body.

Hendricks disagrees. "While it may be possible to preserve these features in dead tissue, that is certainly not happening now," he pointed out in Technology Review.

Scientists such as Barry Fuller, a professor of surgical science and low temperature medicine at England's University College, London, emphasize that even preserving body parts in such a way that they remain viable on thawing remains a distant dream.

"There is ongoing research into these scientific challenges, and a potential future demonstration of the ability to cryopreserve human organs for transplantation would be a major first step into proving the concept," he told The Guardian. "But at the moment we cannot achieve that."

Nevertheless, Perry expresses optimism about a timeline for the revival of frozen humans.

"We think in terms of decades," he said. "Sometimes we say fifty to a hundred years."

David Gorski, a surgeon at Wayne State University Medical Center in Michigan, takes a darker view.

"Fifty years from now," he said, "it's likely that all that will remain of my existence will be some scientific papers and a faint memory held by my nieces and nephews and maybe, if I'm lucky, a few of my youngest readers."

Reprinted with permission from Inside Science, an editorially independent news product of the American Institute of Physics, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing, promoting and serving the physical sciences.

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New High-Res Images of The Sun Show How Creepy Sunspots Look in Closeup – ScienceAlert

One of the most powerful solar observatories in the world has just completed a major upgrade. And now, the GREGOR solar telescope in Spain has taken some of the most high-resolution images of our Sun ever obtained in Europe.

In the upgraded telescope's new images, details as small as 50 kilometres (31 miles) across can be discerned amid the roiling activity on the surface of the Sun.

"This was a very exciting, but also extremely challenging project," said physicist and GREGOR lead scientist Lucia Kleint of the Leibniz Institute for Solar Physics (KIS). "In only one year we completely redesigned the optics, mechanics, and electronics to achieve the best possible image quality."

GREGOR (left) and its redesigned optics (right). (KIS)

Interestingly, while COVID-19 lockdowns have been a hindrance to scientific research, in this instance, they proved helpful. According to a post on the KIS website, scientists were stranded at the observatory during the March lockdown in Spain. Rather than waste the time, they got to work setting up the optical laboratory.

They were able to correct two significant problems introduced by a pair of mirrors, coma and astigmatism, that resulted in blurred and distorted images. Because of the design of the optics laboratory, and the limited space therein, these mirrors had to be completely replaced with off-axis parabolic mirrors, polished to a precision within 1/10,000th the width of a human hair.

Snowstorms hindered observations for a while then, but when Spain reopened in July, the first thing the GREGOR team did was fire up their upgraded telescope.

(KIS)

The new first light images show solar granules, the tops of convection cells in the solar plasma. The middle of each granule is lighter; that's where hot plasma rises from below. This plasma moves outwards as it cools, then falls back into the depths at the darker edges of each granule.

They look a little bit like popcorn, but don't be fooled - a typical granule is about 1,500 kilometres (930 miles) across, just over 10 percent of the diameter of Earth.

Another image and video show the lone sunspot that graced the face of the Sun on 30 July 2020. This is a temporary region where the Sun's magnetic field is particularly strong, inhibiting the Sun's normal surface convection activity; it appears darker on the surface of the Sun because it is cooler than the material around it.

(KIS)

These sunspot regions are of intense interest to us, because these magnetic field lines snap, tangle and reconnect. That magnetic reconnection results in the release of copious amounts of energy, producing solar flares and coronal mass ejections - a phenomenon that can affect us here on Earth, disrupting satellite navigation and communication.

Images like those obtained by GREGOR, and other high-resolution solar observatories such as the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii, with a resolution of 30 kilometres, along with the Big Bear Solar Observatory in the US, can help us to better understand these solar processes.

Plus, we'll never get tired of looking at the mind-blowing images of the surface of our Sun.

A paper describing the telescope's upgrade has been published in Astronomy & Astrophysics.

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New High-Res Images of The Sun Show How Creepy Sunspots Look in Closeup - ScienceAlert

The End of the Universe Will Probably Be Fairly Disappointing – WIRED

Katie Mack, an assistant professor of physics at North Carolina State University, is quickly becoming one of the internets most popular science communicators. In her first book, The End of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking), she explores various scenarios for the end of the universe.

I noticed that when I gave public talks and talked about the end of the universe, that was something that people got really excited about, Mack says in Episode 430 of the Geeks Guide to the Galaxy podcast. It was something that I thought I could have a lot of fun with, and I did. I really enjoyed writing this book.

Science fiction writers have long been fascinated by the end of the universe, and both Tau Zero by Poul Anderson and The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams involve characters who witness the end of everything. Both of those books, published in 1970 and 1980 respectively, assume a Big Crunch model of cosmology.

The Big Crunch would be interesting to see, Mack says. The expansion of the universe stops, and reverses, and everything comes crashing back together. It would be kind of a neat light show, though it would also be super-lethal for anything thats out there.

Unfortunately for science fiction fans, the current thinking among scientists is that the end of the universe will be pretty boring. Were probably not going to have a Big Crunch, Mack says. Its probably going to be the Heat Death, where the universe just continues to expand and expand, and things sort of fade away. So in principle it might not end up being that interesting, because youd get there and all there is is just lots of cold, dark, empty space.

Given that the end of the universe will be sort of a letdown, Mack says a journey to the near future sounds far more appealing.

Id much rather see a hundred years from now, and then a thousand years from now, and kind of step forward that way, and not go straight to the ending, because I dont think the ending is going to be fun.

Listen to the complete interview with Katie Mack in Episode 430 of Geeks Guide to the Galaxy (above). And check out some highlights from the discussion below.

Katie Mack on the Star Trek episode Remember Me:

Very strange things are happening on the ship, and people are disappearing, and the universe seems to be getting smaller around [Dr. Crusher]. Shes a doctor, so she knows that she could be hallucinating all this, and so she does diagnostics on herself and theres nothing wrong, her mind is working perfectly. So she concludes that if theres nothing wrong with her, there must be something wrong with the universe. I use that as a way to introduce the possibility that the reason we find the force of gravity to be so weak is not that theres something wrong with gravity per se, but that the universe might be a different shape than we anticipatedmight have a different number of dimensions than we anticipatedand that could be why gravity seems so weak. So its not something wrong with gravity, its something wrong with the universe.

Katie Mack on social media:

Once in a while a tweet goes viral, and then a whole bunch of people see it and a whole bunch of people follow you. The biggest example of that was in 2016 where somebody was complaining about climate change, and tweeted to me about it, and I replied to that in a way that got a lot of attention. I had been tweeting about how climate change is depressing, basically, and somebody replied and said that climate change is a scam, and said, You should go learn some science. So I replied that I already got a PhD in astrophysics, and more than that seems like it would be overkill. Somehow that got picked up by a bunch of people and retweeted a whole lot, and then J.K. Rowling took a screenshot of it and posted it on her feed, and that just blew up my Twitter. I think my following doubled in a week.

Katie Mack on long-term survival:

In only about 4 billion years the Andromeda Galaxy will collide with this one, which will make a messitll move the orbits of stars around, and therell be some new star formation, and the supermassive black holes will merge, and that could cause some jets of high-energy radiation, but it wont necessarily affect the solar system all that much. Itll move where we are in the galaxy, and change our night sky, but its not going to hurt us, necessarily. Even the amount of star formation that youll get out of that collisionitll be enough to set off some new supernovae, but it wont necessarily hurt us. So I think we can survive that pretty easily, and then after that its just a matter of slow cooling, where everythings just kind of fading away for billions and billions and billions of years.

Katie Mack on Freeman Dyson:

You want to use less and less energy over time, because youre going to have access to less and less energy as the universe is expanding and cooling. The whole point of [Dysons] exercise was to figure out if there was a way to slow down your processes as the universe is expanding, to the point that you can live technically foreverits just that over time each thought gets farther and farther apart. That would work if the universe were expanding linearly, meaning that it was not speeding up in its expansion, but we know now that the universe is speeding up in its expansion, and that does mess up that plan, in a kind of complicated way. So that doesnt work indefinitely, but it can still buy you some time, if you need to just conserve resources over a very long period of time in the cosmos.

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The End of the Universe Will Probably Be Fairly Disappointing - WIRED

Indian astronomers discover one of the farthest star galaxies in universe – Livemint

Indian astronomers have discovered one of the farthest star galaxies in the universe, estimated to be located 9.3 billion light years away from Earth, announced Department of Space, Indian Government.

This is a landmark achievement for country's first Multi-Wavelength Space Observatory "AstroSat."

Sharing this information, Union Minister of State (Independent Charge), Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER), MoS PMO, Personnel, Public Grievances, Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr Jitendra Singh said, "The galaxy called AUDFs01 was discovered by a team of Astronomers led by Dr Kanak Saha from the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics(IUCAA) Pune."

The importance and uniqueness of this original discovery can be made out from the fact that it has been reported in the international journal Nature Astronomy" published from Britain.

India's AstroSat/UVIT was able to achieve this unique feat because the background noise in the UVIT detector is much less than one on the Hubble Space Telescope of US based NASA, the statement read.

Dr Jitendra Singh congratulated Indias Space Scientists for once again proving to the world that Indias capability in Space technology has risen to a distinguished level from where our scientists are now offering cues and giving leads to the Space scientists in other parts of the world. According to Professor ShyamTandon, the excellent spatial resolution and high sensitivity is a tribute to the hard work of the UVIT core team of scientists for over a decade.

According to Director of Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) Dr Somak Ray Chaudhury, this discovery is a very important clue to how the dark ages of the Universe ended and there was light in the Universe. We need to know when this started, but it has been very hard to find the earliest sources of light, he said.

Pertinent to mention that Indias first Space Observatory AstroSat, which has made this discovery, was launched by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) on September 28, 2015 during the first term of the Modi Government. It was developed by a team led by ShyamTandon, Ex Emeritus Professor, IUCAA with the full support of ISRO.

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Indian astronomers discover one of the farthest star galaxies in universe - Livemint

Zooming In Tight on Dark Matter Equivalent of Being Able to See a Flea on the Surface of the Moon – SciTechDaily

Projected dark matter density map, created using a simulation measuring 2.4 billion light years on each side. The inset square (bottom left) is the deepest zoom in the simulation: it is only 783 light years across, equivalent to 500 times the size of the solar system. In the inset square, the smallest clearly visible dark matter haloes have a mass comparable to that of the Earth (0.000003 the mass of the Sun). Credit: Dr. Sownak Bose, Center for Astrophysics, Harvard University

Cosmologists have zoomed in on the smallest clumps of dark matter in a virtual universe which could help us to find the real thing in space.

An international team of researchers, including Durham University, UK, used supercomputers in Europe and China to focus on a typical region of a computer-generated universe.

The zoom they were able to achieve is the equivalent of being able to see a flea on the surface of the Moon.

This allowed them to make detailed pictures and analyses of hundreds of virtual dark matter clumps (or haloes) from the very largest to the tiniest.

Dark matter particles can collide with dark matter anti-particles near the center of haloes where, according to some theories, they are converted into a burst of energetic gamma-ray radiation.

Their findings, published in the prestigious journalNature, could mean that these very small haloes could be identified in future observations by the radiation they are thought to give out.

An artists impression of dark matter haloes with various mass in the Universe. Credit: YU Jingchuan, Beijing Planetarium

Co-author Professor Carlos Frenk, Ogden Professor of Fundamental Physics at the Institute for Computational Cosmology, at Durham University, UK, said: By zooming in on these relatively tiny dark matter haloes we can calculate the amount of radiation expected to come from different sized haloes.

Most of this radiation would be emitted by dark matter haloes too small to contain stars and future gamma-ray observatories might be able to detect these emissions, making these small objects individually or collectively visible.

This would confirm the hypothesized nature of the dark matter, which may not be entirely dark after all.

Most of the matter in the universe is dark (apart from the gamma radiation they emit in exceptional circumstances) and completely different in nature from the matter that makes up stars, planets, and people.

The universe is made of approximately 27 percent dark matter with the rest largely consisting of the equally mysterious dark energy. Normal matter, such as planets and stars, makes up a relatively small five percent of the universe.

Galaxies formed and grew when gas cooled and condensed at the center of enormous clumps of this dark matter so-called dark matter haloes.

Astronomers can infer the structure of large dark matter haloes from the properties of the galaxies and gas within them.

The biggest haloes contain huge collections of hundreds of bright galaxies, called galaxy clusters, weighing a 1,000 trillion times more than our Sun.

Projected dark matter density map, created using a simulation measuring 2.4 billion light years on each side. . The intermediate square (top right) is just under a million light years across. The smallest square (bottom left) is the deepest zoom: it is only 783 light years across, equivalent to 500 times the size of the solar system. In the intermediate square(top right) the largest dark matter haloes have a mass similar to that of a rich galaxy cluster (a million trillion times the mass of the Sun). In the smallest square (bottom right) the smallest clearly visible haloes have a mass comparable to that of the Earth (0.000003 the mass of the Sun). Credit: Dr. Sownak Bose, Center for Astrophysics, Harvard University

However, scientists have no direct information about smaller dark matter haloes that are too tiny to contain a galaxy. These can only be studied by simulating the evolution of the Universe in a large supercomputer.

The smallest are thought to have the same mass as the Earth according to current popular scientific theories about dark matter that underlie the new research.

The simulations were carried out using the Cosmology Machine supercomputer, part of the DiRAC High-Performance Computing facility in Durham, funded by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), and computers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

By zooming-in on the virtual universe in such microscopic detail, the researchers were able to study the structure of dark matter haloes ranging in mass from that of the Earth to a big galaxy cluster.

Surprisingly, they found that haloes of all sizes have a very similar internal structure and are extremely dense at the center, becoming increasingly spread out, with smaller clumps orbiting in their outer regions.

The researchers said that without a measure scale it was almost impossible to tell an image of a dark matter halo of a massive galaxy from one of a halo with a mass a fraction of the Suns.

Co-author Professor Simon White, of the Max Planck Institute of Astrophysics, Germany, said: We expect that small dark matter haloes would be extremely numerous, containing a substantial fraction of all the dark matter in the universe, but they would remain mostly dark throughout cosmic history because stars and galaxies grow only in haloes more than a million times as massive as the Sun.

Our research sheds light on these small haloes as we seek to learn more about what dark matter is and the role it plays in the evolution of the universe.

###

Reference: Universal structure of dark matter haloes over a mass range of 20 orders of magnitude by J. Wang, S. Bose, C. S. Frenk, L. Gao, A. Jenkins, V. Springel and S. D. M. White, 2 September 2020, Nature.DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2642-9

The research team, led by the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and including Durham University, UK, the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Germany, and the Center for Astrophysics in Harvard, USA, took five years to develop, test and carry out their cosmic zoom.

The research was funded by the STFC, the European Research Council, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Max Planck Society and Harvard University.

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Zooming In Tight on Dark Matter Equivalent of Being Able to See a Flea on the Surface of the Moon - SciTechDaily

Space discoveries that will blow your mind | News | helenair.com – Helena Independent Record

The size of the universe is hard to fathom, and its expanding even fasterthan scientists originally thought. While humans will never map out the entirety of space, that doesnt stop them from exploring it. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has been around since 1958.Japan, Russia, and Francejust to name a few countriesall have space agencies dedicated to exploring the final frontier.

Since NASAs inception in 1958, astronauts have landed on the moon, parked a robot-controlled rover on Mars, and discovered thousands of exoplanetsplanets that orbit stars outside of this solar system. Scientists can even explore the 95% of invisible spacecomprised of dark energy, dark matter, and dark radiation. Each year on the first Friday in May, the United States observes National Space Day in honor of the remarkable achievements already made and those still to come in our continued exploration of space. To celebrate our many milestones in this arena, Stacker compiled a list of 30 mind-blowing space discoveries after searching news archives and reports from NASA. Click through to see what theyve uncoveredfrom a super-Earth and sun twins to the first photograph of a black hole.

You may also like: 1 million species are facing annihilationinside Earth's sixth mass extinction event

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Space discoveries that will blow your mind | News | helenair.com - Helena Independent Record

Astronomers Spot a Black Hole so Massive They Werent Sure it Could Exist – Gizmodo Australia

One of the greatest things about being an astrophysicist is that you keep discovering things you didnt think were possible. Now the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) and Virgo Observatory have discovered their largest black hole yet. Its important because scientists had in fact doubted whether black holes of this mass could even exist.

After months of painstaking analysis, the team has just reported their discovery in papers in the Physical Review Letters and the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The black hole was discovered because its merger with a slightly less massive companion emitted gravitational waves. These are ripples in spacetime that can be detected on Earth the echoes of violent cosmic collisions that, in this case, happened billions of years ago.

The finding is hugely important from a research perspective. It also settles a bet among astrophysicists. In February 2017, a number of us met at the Aspen Center for Physics in Colorado, USA. We were excited to be discussing the results that we already had from LIGO. But we were also looking forward to future discoveries and arguing about how pairs of black holes actually merge.

There were multiple ideas under discussion. One was that pairs of massive stars gradually evolve side by side until both collapse into black holes and ultimately merge. Another was that previously unacquainted black holes can be brought together by the jostling of a crowd of other stars in dense stellar regions. But which is the main process? I got several participants together to make a wager, as shown on the photo below.

Sourav Chatterjee (now at Tata. Institute of Fundamental Research, India); Carl Rodriguez (Carnegie Mellon University, USA); me; Daniel Holz (University of Chicago, USA); Chris Belczynski (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Poland). Author provided

At the end of their lives when stars run out of nuclear fuel and no longer have the support pressure to counter their own gravity they collapse. Low-mass stars, including our Sun, eventually become faint stellar ghosts known as white dwarfs. Stars that started out heavier than about eight times the mass of the Sun become incredibly dense and small objects called neutron stars. And really massive stars of more than 20 solar masses at birth become black holes, with final masses between a few and around 40 solar masses.

But something weird has long been conjectured to happen to very, very massive stars, perhaps those with initial masses between around 130 and 250 solar masses, whose centres get really hot (around a billion degrees Kelvin) late in their evolution. The light bouncing around inside these stars, and providing much of the pressure support, is so energetic that it can transform into pairs of electrons and positrons (positrons are the antimatter counterparts of electron they are nearly identical but have opposite charge).

This, in turn, makes the star unstable: the pressure suddenly drops, the centre of the star contracts and heats up, and runaway nuclear fusion causes the entire star to explode in a bright pair-instability supernova, leaving no remnant behind.

This means that, if all black holes in merging pairs were created by collapsing stars, there should be no black holes with masses between around 55 and 130 solar masses the stars that could have produced such remnants would have ended their lives in explosions that leave nothing behind. More massive black holes, however, can be formed from even heavier stars (of more than 250 solar masses) which do not undergo the same runaway nuclear fusion, and collapse completely into black holes.

But this wouldnt be the case for black holes merging in a crowd. When two black holes merge, they create another black hole, almost as heavy as the sum of their masses. If this black hole remains in the dense environment it can merge again, giving rise to even more massive black holes of a range of sizes, filling in the mass gap. This is what brought us to signing this bet in Aspen: would we find a merging black hole with mass between around 55 and 130 solar masses or not?

GW190521 is a merger of two very massive black holes indeed, the heaviest of any observed so far through gravitational waves. The heavier one, measured to be between 71 and 106 solar masses (at 90 per cent confidence), falls squarely into the mass gap. This seems to suggest that black holes do indeed repeatedly merge.

The merged hole had a final mass of 142 times that of the sun, making it the largest of its kind observed in gravitational waves to date. LIGO/Caltech/MIT/R. Hurt (IPAC).

I was not involved in this marvellous measurement. But by afortuitous coincidence I had the opportunity to referee one of the discovery papers, meaning that I am now well-prepared to perform my duties as arbiter of the bet. My first order of business is to adjudicate the wager in favour of Chatterjee and Rodriguez as well as Fred Rasio of Northwestern University, US, who joined the ultimate winners in an addendum after the original bet was signed.

The bet. Author provided

Congratulations to the deserved winners and may they enjoy the wineowed to them, and the pleasure of being proved right. The bet being resolved, my next to-do item, along with many other astrophysicists around the world, is to start thinking about the implications of this revolutionary observation.

Is this the definitive demonstration of black holes merging repeatedly in a dense cluster of stars? Could we have incorrectly estimated the boundaries of the mass gap because of uncertainty in key nuclear reactions? Could the merger have happened in completely different ways we havent even thought of?

The LIGO-Virgo teams have yet again done an amazing job with theirinstruments and data analysis, obtaining a wonderfully unexpected result.For the rest of the astrophysics community, the fun of making sense of it is only just beginning. Which is why, in such scientific bets, everybody really is a winner.

Ilya Mandel, Honorary Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Birmingham

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Astronomers Spot a Black Hole so Massive They Werent Sure it Could Exist - Gizmodo Australia

How neutrons and protons arrange themselves in the nucleus? – Tech Explorist

The atomic nucleus is the small, dense region consisting of protons and neutrons at the center of an atom. Protons and neutrons are bound together to form a nucleus by the nuclear force. But precisely what keeps them bound within the nucleus and even where they are within the nucleus remains key puzzles for nuclear scientists.

In an effort ti figure out the answers, scientists at Washington University in St. Louis and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California- leveraged data determine how nucleons (neutrons and protons) arrange themselves the nucleus.

They found that for several cornerstone nuclei, a tiny fraction of the protons and neutrons possess most of the overall energy that keeps them bound in nuclei, generally 50% more than expected from standard theoretical treatments.

The study also made new predictions for the neutron skin a region where extra neutrons pile-up of several neutron-rich nuclei. Thus, these predictions are firmly associated with how enormous neutron stars grow and what elements are likely synthesized in neutron star mergers.

The quantitatively demonstrates how asymmetry, charge, and shell impacts add to neutron skin generation and drive a disproportionate share of the total binding energy to the deepest nucleons.

Cole Pruitt, presently a postdoctoral fellow at LLNL, who earned his Ph.D. at Washington University in 2019, said,A comprehensive model should not only reproduce integrated quantities (like the charge radius or total binding energy) but also specify how nucleons share momentum and energy, all while being realistic about the model uncertainty of its predictions.

Jorge Piekarewicz, professor of physics at Florida State University, said,The work reported by Pruitt and collaborators provides a powerful bridge between nuclear physics and astrophysics in the new era multi-messenger astronomy. The measurement of the neutron skin of several nuclei reported in the letter (Physical Review Letters) could provide stringent constraints on the equation of state of neutron-rich matter, which is a critical ingredient for understanding neutron stars.

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How neutrons and protons arrange themselves in the nucleus? - Tech Explorist

Warped gas disc torn apart by three stars directly observed for the first time – ZME Science

Astronomers have discovered a spectacular first in terms of star clusters and planet-forming discs of gas, a systemGW Orioniswith a warped disc with torn out inner rings. The team believes that the discs odd shape which defies the common view of a flat plane orbiting planets and gas discswas created when the misalignment of the three stars at the centre of the disc caused it to fracture into distinct rings.

As well as being extraordinary in its own right, the astronomers believe that the warped disc could harbour exotic and strange exoplanetsnot unlike Tatooine in Star Wars series which formed within the inclined rings and are, for now, hidden from view.

The idea that planets form in neatly-arranged, flat discs around young stars goes back to the 18th century and Kant and Laplace, research team-leader Stefan Kraus, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Exeter in the UK, tells ZME Science.Our images reveal an extreme case where the disc is not flat at all, but is warped and has a misaligned ring that has broken away from the disc.

Tatooine planets that orbit around 2 or 3 suns have already been envisioned by science fiction and some Tatooine exoplanets have already been found. Here, we observe how such planets form and find that they can form on extreme, highly inclined orbits in configurations that are completely different from the neat arrangement observed in the Solar System.

The team saw the warped shape of the system GW Orionis, which sits 1300 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Orion, in observations made by the Very Large Telescope (VLT) operated by European Southern Observatory (ESO), and the Atacama Large Millimeter/ submillimeter Array (ALMA) based in the Chilean desert. But, properly envisioning this shape and its cause meant studying the system for a staggering 11 years.

The most important result from our study is that we can identify the cause for the misalignments and link it to the disc tearing effect that has been proposed by theorists 8 years ago, but has not been observed so far, Kraus continues. For this, it was essential to measure the orbital motion of the three stars that are in the centre of the system over their full 11-year orbital period.

We found that the three stars do not orbit in the same plane, but their orbits are misaligned with respect to each other and with respect to the disc.

We have observed GW Orionis, a triple star system surrounded by a planet-forming disc, with several different telescopes including the VLT and ALMA. After observing the three stars for several years, our team was able to calculate the orbits very accurately, team member Alison Young of the Universities of Exeter and Leicester tells ZME Science. This data allowed us to build a detailed computer model of the system, which predicted that the disc would be bent and even torn to form a separate inner ring.

A couple of years later when we received the data back from the VLT and ALMA, the image of a disc bent and even torn to form a separate inner ring, were stunning.

A paper detailing their work is published in the journal Science.

The images of GW Orionis that the astronomers collected represent the first visualisation of disc-tearing ever captured by researchers. This tearing and the warped effect it created marks this out as a planetary system exceptionally different from the solar system.

The radial shadows in the VLT SPHERE image are clear evidence that the ring is tilted. To form a narrow shadow like this on the disc you need a fairly opaque ring of material that is at an angle to the disc surface blocking the starlight, Young explains. This result is consistent with some modelling done by members of the team which worked out the most likely orientations of the components of the system.

This system is unusual because the orbits of the three stars are misaligned, unlike the planets in the solar system they do not orbit in the same plane, and these stars host a large disc that is also tilted relative to their orbits, Young continues. We see all sorts of intriguing structures now in images of protoplanetary discs but this is the first direct evidence of the disc tearing effect.

The observations also gave the researchers an idea of the vast scale of the GW Orionis disc.

The ring harbours about 30 Earth masses of dust, which is likely sufficient for planet formation to occur in the ring. Any planets formed within the misaligned ring will orbit the star on highly oblique orbits and we predict that many planets on oblique, wide-separation orbits will be discovered in future planet imaging surveys.

As well as being able to reconstruct the torn disc of GW Orionis from the ALMA data in conjunction with data collected from several other telescopes, the team has been able to piece together the process by which this tearing likely occurred. They conclude that it could be a result of those three, misaligned stars. Something that initially came as a surprise to the astronomers.

One very intriguing aspect of GW Orionis is that the orbits of the stars are strongly misaligned with respect to each other, and they are also strongly titled with respect to the large-scale disc. This wasnt clear at the time when we started the study and became only apparent after monitoring the orbit motion for the full 11-years orbital period.

Alison Young explains that because the disc surrounds three stars and the orbits of those stars are misaligned with respect to each other, the gravitational pull on the disc is not the same all the way around. This means that the gas and dust orbiting in the disc around all three stars feels a different force at different positions in the disc. This is what tears the disc apart into separate rings.

Our study shows that the strong distortions observed in the disc such as the warp and torn-away ringcan be explained by the conflicting gravitational pull from the 3 stars. The key aspect is that the orbits are strongly misaligned with the disc.

One interesting consequence of the warping of this gas and dust is that fact that it will wrap rings of material around any planets forming within it. This tearing also has a marked effect on these exoplanets orbits. This leads to conditions that would make the exoplanets in the GW Orionis system significantly different from planets in our own solar system.

The planets in our solar system all have more-or-less aligned orbits. Any planets that form in the warped disc or misaligned ring could have highly inclined orbits, says Young. Further out, the disc is flatter and any planets that form there are likely to orbit in a similar plane to the disc. Of course, any planets that form in the GW Orionis system will also have three suns!

Kraus points out that planets with oblique orbits have been identified beforeparticularly in the case of Hot Jupitersplanets with a mass and size comparable to the solar systems largest planet, but that orbit closer to their star and transit across its face.

Hot Jupiters orbit their stars very close in, and it is clear that they have not formed on the oblique orbits were we observe them. Instead, they must have been moved onto these orbits through migration processes, Kraus says. We havent found yet any long-period planets on oblique orbitscomparable to Earth or Jupiter. However, our research shows that such planets could form in the torn-apart rings around multiple systems.

Given that about half of all stars are found in multiple systems, there could be a huge population of such long-period planets with high obliquity.

Existing under the glare of three suns would make the planets in the GW Orionis system similar in some ways to an exoplanet discovered by astronomers from the University of Arizona in 2016.

The young exoplanet HD 131399Ab, 340 light-years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus, has a scorching hot temperature of around 580 C and exists in a state of constant daytime. It too has been compared to the planet of Tatooine from the Star Wars series. But Straus believes the planets in GW Orionis could be much cooler than thisor could alternate between cool and hot climates.

Planets on such orbits could have stable atmospheric conditions, but would be ice worlds with low temperatures on their surfaces, Kraus says. Planets that might have formed in the circumstellar/ circumbinary disc would experience extreme temperature variations, depending on where they are on their orbit.This should result in a strongly variable climate.

Questions still remain about the GW Orionis system especially in light of research from another team who investigated the system with the ALMA telescope. This work-published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters earlier this year suggests that our understanding of how the disc became warped is missing a vital component. We think that the presence of a planet between these rings is needed to explain why the disc tore apart, says Jiaqing Bi of the University of Victoria, Canada, lead author of a paper.

Speaking to ZME Science exclusively, Kraus addresses this earlier research: This alternative scenario, where a yet-unseen planet located between the inner and middle ring might be the cause for the unusual disc shape, is more speculative, as such as planet has not been found yet, the astrophysicist says. Also, the papers authors had less information on the 3-dimensional shape of the disk as their ALMA observations had 6x lower solution and they did not have scattered-light images showing the shadows. Plus, they did not know the full orbits.

Young continues by adding one future question regarding GW Orionis she would like to see answered also concerns the mechanism that caused the warping of the as and dust planet-forming disc.

An important question we need to look at is how these systems came to be misaligned in the first place. Was the disc formed with the stars, did the material forming the disc arrive later, or did the system get disrupted at some point?

Think of a star as a spinning top tilted at an angle, the researcher suggests. We want to find out how tilted the stars are so we can check whether a stars tiltor spin axis matches the tilt of its disc, or if the stars in a binary or triple system have the same or different tilts.

Some members of the team that made this discovery are currently developing a technique for measuring the spin axis of stars which could massively aid the understanding of how these systems formed.

Remembering that whilst this is not the first system discovered with such a warped disc, it is the first with a directly observed torn disc. This means the key to answering lingering questions likely lies in the direct observation of more systems that share features with GW Orionis.

There are a few planet-forming discs that show some evidence of warping but for these, it is unclear what is causing the effect or there is an alternative scenario that can explain the observations, that has not been ruled out yet, adds Young. This is the first time that disc tearing has been directly observed and the only system so far for which we can link the structure with the physical mechanism behind it.

Young suggests that the results of a larger survey performed by the ALMA array could provide clearer information about the motion of gas in planet-forming discs and their chemical composition, thus helping the team gather more information about the GW Orionis disc.

We would like to obtain high-resolution observations of molecular emission from GW Orionis to shed more light on the motion of the gas in the disc and perhaps reveal any planets that are forming, she explains. Of course, we also are keen to understand if there are differences in how planets might form in warped discs compared to flat discs around a single star and we will be working on new computer models to look at this, using what we have learned from our observations.

Young explains the importance of the GW Orionis images the team captured, whilst focusing on one image that for her, brought home the significance of the investigation in which she played a part.

I find the SPHERE image [above left] in particular amazing because we can really see the disc is a 3-dimensional structure with a surface covered in bumps and shadows. We are looking at what could eventually become an unusual type of planetary system in the very process of forming.

For Stefan Kraus, the beauty of investigating a system such as GW Orionis is the wonder to imagining what it is like to stand on the surface of such a world and stare up into sky. Kraus concludes: Half of the sky would be covered by a massive disc warp that is being illuminated by the 3 stars, intercepted by narrow shadows that are cast by the misaligned disc ring.

I find it fascinating to imagine how the sky would look like from any planet in such a system one would see not only the 3 stars dancing around each other at different speeds but also a massive dust ring extending over the whole firmament.

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Warped gas disc torn apart by three stars directly observed for the first time - ZME Science

Kentucky by Heart: Many Kentuckians have made their mark in fields of science and technology – User-generated content

By Steve FlairtyNKyTribune Columnist

Science and technology. . .in the Bluegrass State??

Over the years, Kentucky hasnt always been given credit for its part in the furtherance of science and technology in the U.S., but after I did a little research this week, I discovered that the state has some real credibility in the area. There are a goodly number of people born in Kentucky who have been, or are, important participants in the fields as scientists or inventors.

Dr. Lee Todd (Photo from University of Kentucky)

For sure, my research is quite limited, especially regarding women excelling in this area. I would love to hear from my readers offering an expanded list.

Ive had the joyful experience to cross paths a few times with Dr. Lee Todd, Jr., former University of Kentucky president, born in the small town of Earlington, in Hopkins County. Hes a real gentleman, humble and a good listener, and hes a tireless promoter of sci/tech as a way to move the state forward economically and lift its peoples quality of life. Ill mention only a few of his accomplishments here.While a masters and doctoral student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), he received six patents for high resolution display technology. Under his leadership as UK president, the university was awarded a 25-million-dollar grant from the National Science Foundation to improve math and science education in eastern Kentucky. Check out his initiatives; there are plenty more.

Dr. Phillip Sharp was born in Falmouth, the county seat of Pendleton County. Interestingly, he worked the family tobacco fields while growing up there. In 1993, he became the co-winner, with Richard Roberts, of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in the field of RNA splicing. I previously profiled him in this KyForward column.

Isaac Chuang (Photo from MIT)

Awarded a degree in astronomy and astrophysics from Harvard, Louisville-born James Gilbert Baker (1914-2005) became a nationally known optical systems expert. He developed the Baker-Schmidt telescope and helped develop the Baker-Nunn camera, a series of twelve satellite tracking cameras. He also designed most of the lenses and cameras for Americas iconic U-2 spy plane.

Isaac Chuang is a native of Corbin and is recognized today as a pioneer in NMR quantum computing and has authored a primary reference book, along with Michael Neilsen, in the field of quantum information.

The president and chief executive officer of TWX Technologies, Rex Geveden, was born in western Kentucky, in Mayfield. Among many other high-profile positions, he formerly served as chief engineer at NASA.

Garrett A. Morgan (1877-1963), an African American, was born in Claysville, near Paris. His parents had been slaves. He became a well-known inventor, with his two most noted inventions being a three-position traffic signal and a smoke hood, which came before the gas mask. He pioneered some hair care products, too, and started a company with that line of products.

Garrett Morgon (Photo courtesy of Kentucky Monthly)

Besides Phillip Sharp, Kentucky had another winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945), Lexington, won it in 1933 for his work in finding how the role that the chromosome plays in heredity. Interestingly, his first degree came in 1886 from the State College of Kentucky (later became UK), and he was valedictorian of the class. See https://www.bluegrasstrust.org/dr-thomas-hunt-morgan-house for a modern day tribute to Morgan.

A couple Kentuckians won the highest of rewards in the field of chemistry. William Lipscomb was born in Cleveland, Ohio, but his family moved to Lexington when he was a child. Lipscomb was the 1976 Nobel Prize in Chemistry recipient, specializing in nuclear magnetic resonance, theoretical chemistry, boron chemistry, and biochemistry. The other Kentuckian, Robert H. Grubbs, hails proudly from Marshall County (midway between Possum Trot and Calvert City.) His mother was a schoolteacher and his father a diesel mechanic. Grubbs was the co-recipient of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in olefin metathesis. Along with many other recognitions, in 2017 he was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society.

J. Richard Gott is a professor of astrophysical sciences and gravitational physics at Princeton University. Born in Louisville, he is known for his work in time travel and the Doomsday argument.

NASAs first Mars program director, G. Scott Hubbard, is a Lexington native. He received NASAs highest honor, the Distinguished Service Medal, and is the founder of the agencys Astrobiology Institute. Terrence W. Wilcutt, from Russellville and a Western Kentucky University graduate, is a U.S. Marine Corp officer and astronaut, a veteran of four Space Shuttle missions. He also has received a number of awards from NASA, including the Exceptional Service, Outstanding Leadership, and Distinguished Service medals.

The first industrial robot, named Unimate, was invented by George Devol (1912-2011), who was born in Louisville. He also created a company called United Cinephone and became known for his accomplishments as Grandfather of Robotics.

Though his accomplishments regarding the mobile radio transmitter-receiver were limited, Murray-born Nathan Stubblefield (1868-1928) proved a real player in inventing useful products. He patented a lamp lighter and electric battery, along with improvements in the invention of the telephone.

George M. Whitesides, another scientist from Louisville, is another nationally noted chemist. He is best known for his work in the areas of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, organometallic chemistry, molecular self-assembly, soft lithography, microfabrication, microfluidics, and nanotechnology. He attained the highest Hirsh index rating of all living chemists in 2011.

And whether one considers it for good or bad consequences, U.S. army officer John T. Thompson, from Newport, invented the Thompson submachine gun (often referred to as the Tommy Gun). I previously profiled him in this column Kentucky by Heart: Inventor of submachine gun was NKy native; finding strength in challenging times KyForward.com.

Science and technology in the Bluegrass?? Yep, we have game, and have for quite a few years.

Sources: Wikipedia; The Kentucky Encyclopedia

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Kentucky by Heart: Many Kentuckians have made their mark in fields of science and technology - User-generated content

Trump supporters take to sea, land and air for Labor Day weekend – The Trib

What began as a group of hundreds of boaters in June showing support for President Donald Trump has now grown to a larger expression for the Labor Day weekend that plans to incorporate not just the water but the land and the sky, as well.

A grassroots gathering Saturday called Land, Sea and Air for Donald Trump, will involve a flotilla through the lakes, a motorcade through Marshall County, and even an airplane banner, helicopter and skydivers overhead.

Its kind of a way to get out of the house and show support for the president and the conservative values he offers, said Keith Travis, who is events coordinator for the Marshall County GOP, which is helping to organize the event.

Scott Brown was the initial organizer of a large flotilla in June travel along Kentucky Lake with Trump campaign flags flying.

Ive lived here all my life and have never seen that many watercraft together at one time, Travis said.

Brown was planning another similar effort for the Labor Day weekend and asked local Republican Party members if they could help organize a complimentary event.

We talked about doing a motorcade, then it grew from the sea and land to now we have a plane that will fly over the flotilla and motorcade with a big Trump banner, Travis said.

That then expanded to include skydivers with Trump flags for a grand finale Saturday afternoon.

It grew into a much larger operation, he added. It seemed like every day theres another component. Weve had lots of volunteers and people interested.

The schedule will begin at 8 a.m. with boats leaving Kenlake Marina and heading to the Moors Marina. At 8:30, the motorcade will gather at the Land portions staging area at South Marshall Elementary School and leave at 9:15 a.m. and travel through Benton and Draffenville to arrive at Kentucky Dam beach in time for the flotilla and airplane banner, which is sponsored by Dean Owen CPA.

At 10 a.m., the boats will form their own water parade and travel from Moors Resort to the beach area at the dam, then on to Lighthouse Landing, Hu-Bs in Kuttawa, the rock quarry, and end at Smith Bay at approximately 2 p.m. for an after party.

People are encouraged to pack the shore to watch the boat parade and plane banner and watch the helicopter and skydivers, sponsored by Mitchells Towing and Roadside Assistance, splash down around Smith Bay at around 2:30 p.m.

Travis noted that the Marshall County School District and marinas are not affiliated or sponsors of the event.

The event will also feature a DJ who will be at South Marshall Elementary to help organize, make announcements and play music until the motorcade gets underway. They will then take the sound system to Kentucky Dam to provide music when the motorcade parade and flotilla arrive.

News of the event has attracted some interest from outside the Land Between the Lakes area. Travis said he had heard from a man in Elizabethtown who planned to bring his pontoon boat to Kentucky Lake to take part in the event. Another person has a restored M151A2 Jeep that will lead the motorcade with perhaps four or five other Army Jeeps.

Fire trucks, motorcycles, you name it, he said. Itll be a non-conventional motorcade, but that kind of speaks to the broad appeal the president has in Kentucky.

Travis said participants can even wait until later in the evening for fireworks displays.

Both he and Brown emphasized that safety for such an event is a top priority and that Marshall Countys emergency management and rescue squads will use Saturday as a training day and be available should anything be required.

Brown said boats will need to obey boating laws, allow proper distancing and safe navigation to adhere to all idle zones or no boat areas.

Organizers are also asking people to abide by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines related to COVID-19.

Its just a voluntary gathering of people who share conservative values, Travis added.

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Trump supporters take to sea, land and air for Labor Day weekend - The Trib

Momentous Progress of Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Market Forecast Period 2020-2028| Leading Players CHT Group(ACC Silicones),…

Due to the pandemic, we have included a special section on the Impact of COVID 19 on the Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Market which would mention How the Covid-19 is affecting the Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Industry, Market Trends and Potential Opportunities in the COVID-19 Landscape, Covid-19 Impact on Key Regions and Proposal for Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Players to Combat Covid-19 Impact.

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Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease used to mounting studs of transistors, diodes and silicone rectify to deliver effective heat seal and to increase conductivity at heat sink junctions.

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The research report analyzes the Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Market in a comprehensive manner by clarifying the important features of the market that are anticipated to have a quantifiable impact on its evolving views over the forecast period. It also presents qualitative and quantitative data relating to the factors on the markets future growth. The research methodologies help organizations in clearly evaluating the most crucial stakes in the market that need to the measured for effective decision making.

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Chapter 6. Market Players profiles and sales data

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Momentous Progress of Thermally Conductive Silicone Grease Market Forecast Period 2020-2028| Leading Players CHT Group(ACC Silicones),...

Make the Most of Your Attic Space with These Organization Tips – MSN Money

Provided by Martha Stewart Living Getty / Delpixart

When you think of storage, your mind may automatically go to exterior areas like sheds and garages. But there's a good chance you have another storage space a little closer to (or should we say above) your home: Yes, we're talking about your attic. So often, attics seem inaccessible for storage purposes. Between the heat and the limited clearance caused by a sloped roof, they are often misused or forgotten altogether, but it doesn't have to be that way.Here, organization professionals Ashley Murphy and Marissa Hagmeyer, the co-founders ofNEAT Method, explain how you can make the most of your attic.

Related: Your Ultimate Spring-Cleaning Checklist

You'll want to make sure your attic is sealed before you start putting any items up there, so close any openings and repair any cracks that might allow unwanted visitors to enter before prepping the space. Next, Murphy says you'll need to work on your surface area: "The most important first step is to create as much flat surface as possible, which may require laying down some large boards." After that, she suggests adding as much adjustable shelving as possible to maximize storage. "There are a number of industrial shelving brands (like Uline and InterMetro) that offer shorter heights to accommodate varying sized ceilings," she explains, which will make it easy to find something that meets your space's unique needs.

After you've set up your shelving, adding transparent storage bins is the next step, according to Hagmeyer. "Matching storage bins will create visual order which encourages everyone to keep the space organized," she says, adding that transparent, labeled boxes will make it that much easier to quickly locate what you need in a pinch.

Take advantage of any unused areas that are tucked into the peaks of your attic by hanging less frequently used items. Hooks, suspended shelving, and even the existing beams can all help you take advantage of these underutilized spaces. Just remember that the items you put up there will be a little harder to reach, so these shouldn't be the things you frequently search for, like sporting equipment or holiday decorations.

If you're using your attic for the majority of your storage, consider consulting an insulation expert to see if there's a way to increase ventilation, suggests Murphy. "Otherwise, be very thoughtful with what you're placing there," she says, "especially if you live in an area that experiences extreme heat and/or cold." Items like electronics, wood furniture, some fabrics, and candles can be adversely affected by high temperatures and uncontrolled humidity. For good measure, invest in some weather-tight storage bins. "They have an incredibly tight seal and help keep moisture, dust, insects, and rodents away," Murphy says.

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Make the Most of Your Attic Space with These Organization Tips - MSN Money

Keep on top of the garden for a while yet – Southern Star Newspaper

Enthusiasmfor gardening can wane a little at the end of the summer. It seems easier to ignore long grass, or a few weeds, once autumn arrives and the burst of summer glory starts to fade. But try to keep the garden in good shape for as long as you can its faster to collect leaves from short grass, and weeds will still scatter seeds if you leave them to grow too big. A quick tidy up can lift spirits too. If you clear dead flower stems from borders, and yellowing foliage from vegetables that are finished cropping, then you will be able to appreciate the plants that are left.

Sweet Peas

Keep picking bunches to bring into the house and cut off any flowers that have faded and started to set seed. Pick off the seed pods if things go that far the idea is to keep plants flowering for as long as you can. This may seem like a lot of work if you have a large frame covered in sprawling sweet pea plants, but even if you pick some, this will help some plants to continue to flower for as long as the season allows.

Another option for extending the flowering season is to sow seed at different times. Autumn sowings give the earliest flowers. Early spring sowings arent too far behind and if you wait until April or May you should get a good lot of autumn blooms.

Clear the stems onto the compost heap when flowering is finished, or when plants look too tatty to provide pleasure. Save seed from any fat pods if you want, but be prepared for some plants grown from the seed to be different to the parent plant.

Why bother to string onions?

You can pack onions into net bags or spread them out on the floor of a shed. If onions are perfectly grown and dried, this will work as well as any other storage solution. On the other hand, strings of onions do look lovely hung up in the kitchen and it is easy to see at a glance if any bulb has started to rot and needs to be removed.

If bulbs have fat necks that are hard to dry out, then twisting these around strings can help the process along. Constricting the necks in this way, and then hanging the string in a dry kitchen, helps to seal and dry the necks so the onions dont deteriorate too fast.

Hang onion strings in a cool dry shed or leave them in the house. Strings of onions may start to sprout green shoots in the spring, but this usually happens later than for loose onions.

In the pumpkin patch

I love growing pumpkins and this year a large patch of my garden is overrun with the plants. Most I planted out where I wanted them to go and one or two are self-seeded from plants grown last year. The self-seeders were possibly from compost at the edge of the bin, that didnt reach a reliable heat.

One or two viable seeds must have remained to grow on when the compost was used in the garden. The self-seeders seem to be doing well and swelling fruits.

A lot comes down to variety when growing pumpkins. Some varieties reliably swell two or three pumpkins per plant while others struggle to grow one. This year two varieties have set lots of fruit. These are Small Sugar and Jack of all Trades. Both start out green and turn orange as they ripen and both store well for a few months. It is worth putting fruits onto a slate or piece of wood to raise them up off the soil and reduce rot in wet weather.

The variety Uchiki Kuri is one of my favourites, but this year plants have set fewer, later fruits and those that have set are smaller than usual. This is a delicious nutty tasting pumpkin that stores very well, but we all have to accept that in any given year some varieties do better than others. Any gardener should try one or two new things each year, but be slow to relinquish the reliable performers.

Autumn planting onions and garlic

Look out for these and buy them when you see them. Stocks sell out fairly fast and you want to get sound and good quality onion sets and garlic bulbs, even though you may not plant them for another few weeks. Autumn planting leads to early crops and plants can be lifted before white rot strikes. You can bridge the gap between stored onions running out and spring planted sets being ready to use.

Autumn onions dont grow well for everyone small plants dont like sodden ground or too much wind rock. Autumn garlic is usually hardy and reliable.

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Keep on top of the garden for a while yet - Southern Star Newspaper

The Newest Hair Innovations That Recreate The Salon Experience At Home – Forbes

Hairdresser combs the hair of a woman. Portrait of beautiful young woman getting haircut. Care for ... [+] long smooth hair

The salons and spas are among the last to reopen following the Coronavirus lockdowns around the world. In Manila, regulars of these establishments have had to forego their usual cuts, treatments, blowouts and color touchups for at least six months. Regardless of location, we also saw our friends and family from all over the world growing out their locks, embracing their silver strands and even the unruly takeover of the frizz.

More than making one look and feel good, salons are places that allow us to take a few minutes off from the hectic world. It is a safe space for indulging in me-time. If you havent yet been to your salon since the quarantine, try to recall that brand new feeling you get after a trim or color treatment. Better yet, ask yourself when was the last time a blowout made you feel like a million bucks.

Fortunately, there are those who have all found innovative ways to keep hair in shape without the salon. Some have contacted their trusted stylists for private home service, still practicing safety protocols like wearing protective gear. There are also generous experts who have turned to social media to share with us ways to cut, style and color our locks at home. YouTube, for one, has been a rich source of information for mere mortals like myself who can barely uses a blowdryer let alone a pair of shearing scissors. Ive had some success in trimming my layers, although not without the help of products that help enhance bounce and body.

Touching up the roots is a little tricky especially for those wearing several tones or balayage hair. Shampoos, masks and conditioners formulated to help maintain these are nothing short of a heaven sent. During this chapter where weve all become our own stylists, Ive gone through about three different hair shades, none of which, comes close to the one my colorist magically does.

As we wait for the day when we can safely sit in our favorite salon and spend time with our beloved stylists, these hair essentials can help you bring that feel-good salon experience into the comforts of your home.

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The usual nourishing and repair treatments at the salon are not within access just yet and so Ive been pampering hair with U OIL. This weightless formula made of Argan helps to repair, seal and protect hair from blow drying, curling or ironing. I love that is leaves a subtle fragrance on hair while keeping it smooth and bouncy. If, like me, you are not a fan of blow drying your hair on the daily, simply spritz on wet hair and air dry for a soft, bouncy finish. If you are also looking to give your locks the rest it needs, UNITEs RE:UNITE TREATMENT MASK will dramatically restore damaged or fatigued hair. It is ideal for address locks that are brittle or prone to breaking and comes highly recommended for individuals while chemically-treated hair.

UNITE RE:UNITE TREATMENT MASK

ACT + ACRE was founded by haircare thought leader and stylist to celebrities (Harry Styles, Kendall Jenner, Bella Hadid, to name a few) Helen Reavey. The new brand promises to help consumers achieve the healthiest hair yet. At the onset of brand development, Reavey felt strongly against creating a dry shampoo for the simple reason that it is said to be the one of the most damaging products on hair. She shares, The path to our Plant Based Dry Shampoo was not a straight line. In fact, dry shampoo is the one hair product I never wanted to create. Its commonly made of chalky powders and alcohol to quickly soak up moisture, aerosols for easy spray application and artificial fragrances to mask odor. The hair expert adds that these quick fixes tend to clog follicles, resulting in dandruff and dermatitis.

ACT + ACRE PLANT BASED DRY SHAMPOO

ACT + ACRES PLANT BASED DRY SHAMPOO is a game changer in that it does the job of addressing greasy, one-day old hair while still keeping with the promise of nurturing healthy hair. It uses Fulvic Acid as a base ingredient, which is a nourishing organic compound found soil. Reavey explains: We found out that Fulvic Acid could be harvested to do the same thing for the scalp as it does for plants. Rice and tapioca powders were added to the mix as transparent, plant-based absorbing agents. The formula is easily absorbed so that it leaves a light and clean feel on strands and scalp. After a few sprays and combing from roots to tips, hair looks and feels fresh as if straight out of a thorough washing. The product does not feel sticky nor does it create unwanted clumps on hair as most dry shampoos do.

MORROCANOIL is a beauty brand that aims to create an entire universe of products for hair and body made of the key ingredient: Morrocan or Argan Oil. It has recently launched to the VOLUMIZING MIST which promises spritz life back into fine, dull hair. It is formulated with rice amino acids and dead sea salt which fortifies strands while helping to create volume and bounce. Mist formulation is weightless, but brings fullness to your locks by up to 50% percent without the sticky, tacky feeling. This product is ideal for those with fine to medium hair and stays on for up to 72 hours. To use, simply mist over clean, towel dried hair from roots to tips and style or blow dry.

MORROCANOIL VOLUMIZING MIST

HAIRSTORY is the enfant terrible the haircare world. Since its launch, the company has proven time and again that the old rules dont apply. Theyve spoken truth and challenged traditional shampoo myths, compelling many to rethink everything they know about haircare. So when a daring brand like HAIRSTORY speaks, its definitely a good idea to listen up.

HAIRSTORY HAIR BALM

The company very recently introduced it newest innovation: HAIR BALM otherwise known as magic in a bottle. A hybrid between a leave in conditioner, curl cream and anti frizz formula, this miracle styling product works well with all hair types. It enhances curls, soothes frizz and can even help to sculpt or hold hair. Simply work the balm between hands and comb through locks. Add more product as needed. Apply on dry hair to address frizz, flyways and to create definition. For curls, work onto strands while wet for a smoother and softer finish.

ESALON is a heaven sent for those who quarantine life bane is finding the perfect hair color. The label is committed to bringing expertly customized colors to your home, working with a team of colorists to create the best color formulations just for you. ESALON declares: This isnt just algorithm doing all the work. This is actual peopleraw, human talent. Our expert team of radical colorists come from top schools and salons around the country Instead of hand mixing dye and eye balling tones, theyre trained to create color virtually.

ESALON CUSTOM HAIR COLOR SET

The CUSTOM HAIR COLOR SET is personalized in every sense of the word. E-SALON emphasizes, This is not just another company claiming custom. We actually take an empty bottle, put your name on it and fill it from scratch. Everything from your tone, warmth and density and texture to the amount of time you process before rinsing, and even the way you apply itits all literally made just for you. Each set comes with your custom color, developer, non latex gloves, tint brush, shampoo and conditioner pockets, stain guard and remover, personalized instructions as well as access to your own colorist.

MON SHAMPOOING is a one of the newest customized haircare labels from Paris that has already been hailed by experts as revolutionary. The brands main concept is to combine its proprietary natural SLS/PARABEN/SILICONE free Keratin Shampoo and Conditioner with a customized vial of essential oil boosters based on hair type. This results in hair that is healthy, lustrous, vibrant and full of life.

MON SHAMPOOING KERATIN SHAMPOO AND CONDITIONER INFUSED WITH CUSTOMIZED ESSENTIAL OILS

There is a essential oil vial for every hair type of condition:

MATRIX TOTAL RESULTS has supported me through every hair color change. Back when I had ash brown locks, the KEEP ME VIVID COLLECTION was helped to maintain color vibrancy and shine. This system works with with brunettes, blondes, reds, coppers and deep brown tones. After coloring, spritz on the LAMINATION SPRAY to seal in the color. You may also incorporate this product into your weekly hair routine. The COLOR VELVETIZER is another amazing product from the range that protects colored hair from heat and UV.

MATRIX TOTAL RESULTS KEEP ME VIVID LAMINATION SPARY

MATRIX TOTAL RESULTS KEEP ME VIVID COLOR VELVETIZER

My latest hair color (mis)adventure left me with uneven layers and deep dark locks in shade Dark Chesnut. While I can do little about the bad cut, the DARK ENVY COLLECTION can ensureS that my accidental raven hair does not turn red or burnt orange over time. This is usually the case for dark hair thats faded. The DARK ENVY RED NEUTRALIZATION HAIR MASK is a color depositing mask that neutralizes red undertones while deeply nourishing hair. It leaves a cool, glossy finish that makes locks snap ready all day, everyday. Enhanced intensity and depth has allowed me to grow to love this new hair tone.

MATRIX TOTAL RESULTS DARK ENVY RED NEUTRALIZATION MASK

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The Newest Hair Innovations That Recreate The Salon Experience At Home - Forbes

What happened to the war on drugs? | Letters To The Editor – Uniontown Herald Standard

August 31 was designated as International Overdose Awareness Day, which raises awareness to the use of illegal drugs and the destructive effects on the user and his/her family and friends. Thousands of people die each year from overdoses, and education and awareness to prevent these deaths are key to stopping the spread. Addiction, of any form, is a compulsive disease resulting in the user being unable to stop, and the results are devastating.

I recently read where the legalization of recreational marijuana is again on the agenda for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Why would our state consider legalizing a controlled substance? Experts have continually spoken that marijuana is a gateway drug. Is it for increased revenue for the state? That seems unlikely. Our tolls, registration fees and gas taxes have continually increased, but our roads and bridges are still not repaired. Additional money for our schools? That is also doubtful. Tuition at our state-owned colleges and universities have increased each year. Who are the owners of the marijuana growing and distribution companies and who profits from the sale? Are they concerned about your children, or is this just another big business venture?

Without supporting or condemning any political party, where is the good judgement and common sense that our state should possess? What happened to the war on drugs, and why arent we supporting programs to eliminate the sale and distribution? Why arent we funding programs to help those who dont have the ability to get into rehab centers, and programs to teach our youth to resist these temptations? Once we open this door, it will never close.

To anyone who has lost a loved one to this disease, I understand. To the families of those in active addiction, please seek help. Al-Anon and Nar-Anon are good programs to join. You will hear countless stories of others who have been in similar situations, and you will realize you are not alone. To those of you who are struggling with recovery, please seek help. There are 12 step programs, such as Alcoholic Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous as well as counseling available. Get into a program!

Finally, I ask everyone to remember and pray for those struggling and educate yourself against the demons of addiction. There is strength in unity.

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What happened to the war on drugs? | Letters To The Editor - Uniontown Herald Standard

Focus on the family: How the War on Drugs destroyed America’s foster care system – Leafly

For those who have no experience with child protective services, the state foster system often brings to mind thoughts of wrongs righted, children saved, and love persevering.

Unfortunately, thats too often not the case.

A recent report reveals how the state foster system acts as a secondary criminal justice system, one that targets cannabis consumersand even medical marijuana patients.

A recent report reveals how the state foster system acts as a secondary criminal justice systemand uses drug allegations, including cannabis use, as a pretext to rip children away from their parents.

The 174-page report, How the Foster System Has Become Ground Zero for the U.S. Drug War, was produced by a coalition of social justice organizations, including the Movement for Family Power, the NYU Family Defense Clinic, and the Drug Policy Alliance.

Recent years have seen infamous examples of children forcibly removed from their homes due to a parents use of medical marijuana:

Those cases arent glitches in the system. They are examples of the system functioning as its meant towhich is to say, case workers are instructed to tear families apart over the slightest whiff of cannabis, even in legal states.

Todays foster system dates back to 1935, when its forerunner was established at the federal level to identify and respond to families living in poverty who were determined to be undeserving of cash assistance.

Our dedication to the idea of bootstrapping has resulted in millions of children being ripped away from parents who may have needed just a little help.

This basic premise still exists to this day. The problem lies in determining which families are undeserving of state or federal aid. Those judgments functionally criminalize poverty. They shift the blame for problematic family conditions away from systemic issues of oppression and onto the individual.

Our collective dedication to the idea of bootstrapping has resulted in millions of children being ripped away from parents who may have needed just a little help.

Children removed from their families and placed into foster or adoptive care often face worse outcomes than children from similar circumstances who remain with their families.

In one survey of nearly 6,000 people incarcerated in the Kansas prison system, 20% had spent time in a state foster system as children. Children who grow up within the foster system are much more likely to be scrutinized by that same system when they themselves become parents.

Instead of helping provide aid to struggling families, the foster system punishes them. Just like the carceral system, the punishment dealt out by the foster system comes with its own traumas and contributes to the cycle of children forced into that system.

The arrival of crack cocaine in the 1980s, and the hysteria surrounding it, spurred politicians into a frenzy of legislation, passing ever-more draconian sentencing laws that disproportionately affected people of color. That era also affected the child welfare system: Child removals more than doubled.

Over time, the federal government has granted more and more power and funding to state-based foster care systems to remove children from families deemed unfit in the eyes of case workers. That pattern intensified during the War on Drugs, aided by Congress passage of the Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA) in 1997.

AFSA created monetary incentives for state foster care agencies to fast-track the permanent removal of children from their families. AFSAs policies mean that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services now sends state agencies a benefit of $4,000 to $10,000 for each child adopted out of the foster system.

The enormous costs associated with this bill are covered, in part, by funding originally designated for Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), a program whose aim is to alleviate the worst impacts of poverty on children.

Because of AFSA, the United States now has the dubious honor of having the highest number of legal orphans in the world.

When it comes to legal cannabis use, many adult consumers and medical marijuana patients are hesitant to reveal their use to their own doctors. That reticence isnt without good reason. Federal and state laws, passed in the name of child protection, have criminalized the doctor-patient privilege of privacy.

How exactly? Heres how the dots connect.

Federal and state laws, passed in the name of child protection, have criminalized the doctor-patient privilege of privacy.

States interested in receiving federal funds provided through the Child Abuse Prevention Treatment Act (CAPTA) amendments of 2003, 2010, and 2016 can get that money only if they create a reporting system for medical professionals to utilize when faced with an infant impacted by substance abuse. That medical provider must also notify a local child protective services (CPS) agency, and ensure that the agency establish a plan of safe care for the infant and mother.

That safeguard has effectively put millions of pregnant people and mothers at risk of being reported to CPS for cannabis use that is perfectly legal. Women of color and those struggling economically are far more likely to be reported and thereby taken into a system that may monitor them for years thereafter.

CAPTAs passage resulted in a slew of punitive state-level policies related to parental drug use, and functionally made reporting to child protective services the nations primary response to substance use during pregnancy, according to the Ground Zero report.

The problematic nature of those laws hasnt gone unnoticed. The Family First Act of 2018, passed by Congress two years ago, appears on its surface to remediate some of the harms of the foster system. It legislated the reallocation of funds previously used to rehome foster children towards programs to treat substance abuse, mental health services, and parenting classes.

Some question, though, whether the foster system should be the vehicle through which these services are provided. Given its historically punitive behavior towards parents, the foster system is often viewed with suspicion and mistrust by the communities who stand to benefit from the Family First Act.

On its face, the foster system is meant to protect children from negligent or abusive parents. But the ability to assess a parents ability to raise children has never been standardized. What may be a perfectly normal act of parenting in the eyes of one case worker or agency may be, to a social worker in a different state, cause for removal of children from the home.

Goals follow money. Funding for separating children from families is three times higher than funding for keeping them together.

Furthermore, the system has evolved with the nearly-exclusive focus of separating children from their families. The goal is not to repair families and support struggling parents. The goal is to post positive numbers of children savedthat is, taken from their parents and placed in the state foster care system.

As in any business, goals follow the money. And in the foster system, funding for separating children from their families is three times higher than funding for keeping families together.

One quote stands out in the Ground Zero report: A drug test is not a test for addiction and certainly not a parenting test. So said a nationally renowned OBGYN and addiction medicine specialist interviewed by the reports authors. The fact that the doctor did not feel comfortable or safe enough to attach their name to the quote speaks volumes about how risky it still is to talk bluntly and honestly about drug use.

Once a family comes into contact with the child protective services system, state investigators have nearly unassailable power when it comes to determining if a parent is fit to raise children.

In New York City, 25% of child removals involve allegations of parental drug use.

That power has resulted in a system where, according to the report issued earlier this year, the most consistent variable used to determine child maltreatment was [the investigators] opinion about the presence of maltreatment. When faced with a system whose punitive actions are nearly entirely subjective, how are determinations about parenting made? Too often it comes down to the use of certain categories of drugs.

In New York City, 25% of child removals involve allegations of parental drug use. Although data is hard to come by for foster systems nationally, some studies estimate that over 80% of all foster system cases involve caretaker drug use allegations at some point in the life of the case. Drug use has allowed the foster system a false sense of certainty in their evaluations of parental fitnessso much so that it has become almost weaponized.

Historically, leaders of the War on Drugs often justified their actions by claiming they were protecting children from harm by their drug-addled parents. But, as with most things, the real story is far more complex. Because of the legislation passed to support the foster system nationally, and the corresponding legislation at state and local levels, drug use is equated to drug abuse in nearly all foster system cases.

Think about how the issue of drug use/abuse is racialized. In the contemporary cannabis community, there is a growing movement of mostly white, female parents fighting for the right to enjoy cannabis while raising children. And why not? Its legal in many states, and has been proven to be far safer than alcohol.

But speaking publicly about cannabis use, for women who arent white and economically well off, risks the destruction of their entire family.

If those same mothers were Black and poor, they would face the real risk of permanently losing custody of their children. The report details the story of one mom whose blood was drawn for testing as she was giving birth. When the test turned up evidence of cannabis use within the past few weeks, state workers removed the newborn from the mothers care. It took her two years to contest the removal of her daughter and eventually regain custody.

The criminal justice system has established clear standards for what kind of drug testing is allowed in court. Those same standards dont apply to the foster system.

The most common drug test used within the foster system is, in fact, so inaccurate that it is not allowed to support legal action without confirmatory testing. But within the foster system its enough to start a case file and initiate a years-long battle for parents facing the loss of their children.

Drug treatment programs required by the foster system are functionally more akin to surveillance programs than anything else. Parents are forced, in most cases on their own dime, to attend these programs without any clear indication of what it means to graduate from them. In many cases, the foster system forces parents to remain in these time-intensive programs with little more reason than a suspicion that they are unfit parents.

Hospitals that serve low-income populations regularly engage in drug testing of pregnant women and newborns without their consent.

Then theres the problem of consent. Hospitals that serve predominantly low-income populations regularly engage in drug testing of pregnant women and newborns without their consent. If they find evidence of drug use, those test results are reported to child protective services and can result in immediate removal of the newborn. These are the same drug tests that are not accurate enough to be used in court.

The focus on drug use within the foster system all revolves around the idea that all drug use indicates drug abuse.

The medical world has a clear definition of what constitutes a substance use disorder. As defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders(DSM5), substance use must negatively interfere with the users life or the lives of the people around them in order to qualify as a disorder. A simple drug test cannot show that negative effect.

The cause of the struggle for many families is poverty, not drug use.

Despite the foster systems insistence on equating drug use with unfit parenting, studies have found no correlation between parental drug use and child maltreatment. Instead, research has shown a strong correlation between maltreatment and environmental factors associated with poverty such as lack of access to health care and housing.

Poverty is cause of the struggle for many families, not drug use. But the foster system doesnt address poverty. Instead, it uses evidence of drug consumption as a cheap, nonsensical, and counterproductive way to cast moral blame upon parents, and set in motion the violent process of state removal of children from the family home.

The authors of the Ground Zero report have constructed a framework for reimagining the foster system. They offer an action list for each group of stakeholders, as outlined below.

Zoe Sigman serves as Broccoli Magazines science editor, previously served as the program director for Project CBD, and has testified about CBD and cannabis regulation before the FDA. She thinks science is magic made real, and loves breaking the technical jargon down so anyone can understand it. IG: @zoe_sigman

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Focus on the family: How the War on Drugs destroyed America's foster care system - Leafly

Captain America Made a BIZARRE Sacrifice In the War on Drugs – CBR – Comic Book Resources

This is "Look Back," a feature that I plan to do for at least all of 2020 and possibly beyond that (and possibly forget about in a week, who knows?). The concept is that every week (I'll probably be skipping the four fifth weeks in the year, but maybe not) of a month, I will spotlight a single issue of a comic book that came out in the past and talk about that issue (often in terms of a larger scale, like the series overall, etc.). Each week will be a look at a comic book from a different year that came out the same month X amount of years ago. The first week of the month looks at a book that came out this month ten years ago. The second week looks at a book that came out this month 25 years ago. The third week looks at a book that came out this month 50 years ago. The fourth week looks at a book that came out this month 75 years ago. The occasional fifth week looks at books from 20/30/40/60/70/80 years ago.

Today, as a special fifth week (every time a month has five weekends in it, we do an extra one based on either 20, 30, 40, 60, 70 or 80 years ago!), we go back to August 1990 to see the conclusion of the Captain America "Streets of Poison" storyline, where Captain America makes a bold sacrifice to say "no" to drugs.

The concept of the "Streets of Poison" storyline by Mark Gruenwald, Ron Lim and Danny Bulanadi, is that there is a new drug on the streets called Ice that both the Kingpin and the Red Skull want to sell. So they try to fight against each other through their intermediaries, Crossbones and Bullseye (we got to see Captain America take on Bullseye and Daredevil take on Crossbones). However, during one of the fights, Captain America was accidentally exposed to Ice and the drug combined with the Super Soldier Serum in Captain America's blood that gave him his super powers and it caused Captain America to basically go insane.

He was erratic and his friends Black Widow and Diamondback had to team up to take Cap down and bring him back to Avengers headquarters where Hank Pym was forced to remove all of Captain America's blood and replace it with normal blood while Hank will weed the Ice out of his Super Soldier Serum-enhanced blood.

Meanwhile, Kingpin and Red Skull decide to end things between each other by having a one-on-one fight with each other...in their underwear, because, well, why not?

While they are fighting, Captain America recovers from the procedure and is now in his right mind. However, while Hank is weeding out the Ice from his blood, Cap is just a normal, very athletic and trained person. He feels like he has to head to the stadium where the fight is taking place and do what he can to stop the bad guys. However, as soon as he gets there, he encounters Crossbones, who had managed to do well against in fights while Cap still had his Super Soldier Serum!

You see, early in the storyline, the reason why Captain America (who is not exactly plugged into "the street") discovered that Ice was around is because one of the Avengers' support staff was hooked on Ice. Cap helped him beat it, but he then asked Cap, "But what about the Super Soldier Serum? Don't you owe your powers to a DRUG?" And Cap is all, like, "Oh man, I guess he's right. Am I better than the people who do drugs like steroids?" It is a very silly concept, as, well, come the heck on. It is like saying "I won't use Penicillin - it's a DRUG!" It is way too silly.

However, whatever, Cap proves to himself that he doesn't need the Super Soldier Serum to defeat Crossbones, even though Cap had to exert himself unlike he normally would (and he kind of sort of cheats to win the fight. Not CHEAT, exactly, but it is not like Cap beats him in a straight fight)...

Kingpin defeats the Red Skull and the Skull hilariously is, like, "Ah, whatever, who cares?" It is too funny of a solution to the whole SEVEN-ISSUE arc. Ron Lim and Danny Bulanadi do a good job on art, or as well as you can when you're drawing Red Skull and Kingpin in their underwear fighting each other.

Anyhow, Hank Pym shows up at the Stadium with Cap's other friends, as they're all worried about him. Hank lets Cap know that he has successfully gotten rid of the Ice in Cap's blood and he can restore the Super Soldier Serum in Cap to give him his enhanced abilities back. Cap then tell him no, as the Super Soldier Serum is a drug and if Cap can't say "No" to drugs, then who can?

Of course, that makes no sense and his powers come back in the next issue (and they were confirmed to have never actually gone anywhere in another six issues or so), but in the moment, at least, it was a big dramatic sacrifice by Cap that was very timely for the 1990s. It was very silly, but very timely, at least! You could tell that obviously Mark Gruenwald's heart was in the right place with the story. he meant well, it just, you know, was kind of silly.

If you folks have any suggestions for September (or any other later months) 2010, 1995, 1970 and 1945 comic books for me to spotlight, drop me a line at brianc@cbr.com! Here is the guide, though, for the cover dates of books so that you can make suggestions for books that actually came out in the correct month. Generally speaking, the traditional amount of time between the cover date and the release date of a comic book throughout most of comic history has been two months (it was three months at times, but not during the times we're discussing here). So the comic books will have a cover date that is two months ahead of the actual release date (so October for a book that came out in August). Obviously, it is easier to tell when a book from 10 years ago was released, since there was internet coverage of books back then.

Atari Force: DC May Have Resurrected Its WEIRDEST Video Game Super-Team

CBR Senior Writer Brian Cronin has been writing professionally about comic books for over a dozen years now at CBR (primarily with his Comics Should Be Good series of columns, including Comic Book Legends Revealed). He has written two books about comics for Penguin-Random House Was Superman a Spy? And Other Comic Book Legends Revealed and Why Does Batman Carry Shark Repellent? And Other Amazing Comic Book Trivia! and one book, 100 Things X-Men Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die, from Triumph Books. His writing has been featured at ESPN.com, the Los Angeles Times, About.com, the Huffington Post and Gizmodo. He features legends about entertainment and sports at his website, Legends Revealed.Follow him on Twitter at @Brian_Cronin and feel free to e-mail him suggestions for stories about comic books that you'd like to see featured at brianc@cbr.com!

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Captain America Made a BIZARRE Sacrifice In the War on Drugs - CBR - Comic Book Resources

Elections in Sri Lanka, freedom of speech debates in India, war on drugs in Bangladesh and more – Himal Southasian

Starting this month, we are happy to announce that Southasiasphere, our analysis of regional affairs will be a monthly podcast featuring Himal editors! If youre a member, youll automatically receive links to the new episodes in your inbox. If youre not yet a member, you can still get it for free (for the time being..) by signing up here.

In this first audio episode of the roundup, we talk about elections in Sri Lanka, freedom of speech debates in India, war on drugs in Bangladesh and more.

***

This is an unedited transcription from the podcast. Please listen to the corresponding audio before quoting from it.

Shubhanga Pandey: Welcome to Southasiasphere, our monthly round up of news events in Southasia that have made headlines and havent made headlines. If youve been following Southasiasphere for some time, you might have seen it in the form of a newsletter before. But starting this month we are going to be doing a podcast. And this is the first episode of the Southasiasphere podcast. Im Shubhanga, and Im joined by Amita and Raisa. Hi guys.

Raisa Wickrematunge: Hi

Amita Arudpragasam: Hi

SP: So in this episode of Southasiasphere we are going to be talking about a few big stories that affected Southasia: the elections in Sri Lanka, the freedom of speech debate in India, the war on drugs in Bangladesh, among a few other things.

AA: Yeah Shubhanga, so thanks for the introduction. Its been a really eventful month for Southasia as we held in the region our first post covid-19 election in Sri Lanka on August 5th to elect, 225 members to Sri Lankas parliament. The Rajapaksa family and their party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna or SLPP won more seats than when Mahinda Rajapaksa went to the polls in 2010 soon after Sri Lankas civil war ended with a, you know, complete military victory for the government. This was when Mahinda was assumed to be at the height of his popularity. And now thats been surpassed. So with close allies the SLPP secured 150 seats in parliament which is a 2/3rds majority and, you know, that grants SLPP the power to amend the Constitution. Sri Lankas government is likely to interpret this as a mandate to consolidate Sinhala Buddhism in the otherwise ethnically diverse country that is, you know, clearly symbolized by Mahinda Rajapaksa taking oaths at a Buddhist Temple like his brother did on becoming President in November last year. Its also, you know, the parliamentary elections has also resulted in the empowerment of Sinhala Buddhist ultranationalists including with the parliamentary seat this election for a party associated with anti-Muslim hate speech. Given, you know, the Rajapaksa side of governance the next few years are likely to see some significant human rights violations especially for minority communities as Gotabaya Rajapaksa noted in his throne speech, national security will be a top priority for the government and that often translates to no dissent tolerated. Already in the last 6 months, weve seen a rapid increase in militarization, the arrest without charge of a prominent human rights lawyer, the intimidation of journalists and activists representing the relatives of the forcibly disappeared. This election also notably saw a fragmentation of Tamil politics, we had the predominant Tamil party, the Tamil National Alliance losing about 40% of its parliamentary presence and its also seen a shift away from Sri Lankas grand old parties I really hate using that term its something an old British colonial administrator would use probably, kind of associated with the US Republican party, and, you know, suggest that theres something kind of ungrand about modernity and evolved values.

RW: Yeah, and Im not sure that its exactly a move away from the establishment if you interpret grand old party to mean establishment, because if you look at the heads of the new parties, the SLPP is headed by Gotabaya Rajapaksa who was well known as the former Defense Secretary and the SJB which forms the main opposition party with Sajith Premadasa whos also not a newcomer, you know then this isnt really a move away from the establishment and even the policies that they put forward or discussed arent really anything new.

AA: Right so I think even though theres this kind of rhetoric of a shift away from some of these old establishment politics, a lot has actually remained the same. I think, this election you know, to sum up will actually kind of weaken constitutional safeguards for Sri Lankan democracy including the separation of powers and the independent oversight bodies that were introduced in 2015 because you know as Gotabaya Rajapaksa mentioned in his throne speech, the SLPP plans to eliminate, the 19th amendment and you know it will possibly also result in greater centralization of power via the proposed elimination of the 13th amendment which guarantees devolution to the provinces. And you know we may even see a new constitution in Sri Lanka which will consolidate Sinhala Buddhist ethnocracy in the country and perhaps even the Rajapaksa dynastic project.

SP: Right, which kind of brings us to the next big elections in Southasia thats the Myanmar elections on November 8th. Could you give us updates on that, Amita?

AA: Yeah, I mean with 2 months to go the National League for Democracy, the NLD is predicted to hold on to its electoral successes and you know while Aung San Suu Kyi remains extremely popular with her base, and the country has made several reforms in the last few years, some analysts think there hasnt been enough change in Myanmar and Suu Kyis relationship with ethnic groups have actually deteriorated in the years, you know, analysts have suggested that Myanmars elections wont be free and fair, because you know we have thousands of displaced civilians, 200 000 from Rakhine alone, across a nation that might not be able to vote in areas of social unrest. The Election Commission has also barred three more Rohingya candidates from running for office because apparently their parents were not citizens when they were born. But on the outcomes and conduct of the Myanmar elections well have to wait and see. But you know relatedly on the subject of elections, weve also seen calls for internal elections, to elect a new leader for Indias congress, after senior leaders over 20 expressed their grievances with the interim nature of the partys leadership in a letter to Sonia Gandhi. Shes you know like, the longest serving Congress President and the Congress is actually another grand old party with a 130 year old history.

SP: Right, so coming to India I think we can enter the second big topic of this podcast which is free speech debates thats going on in India. The debate began with the withdrawal by Bloomsbury, a publisher, of a book on Delhi riots, so you know everyone saw those kind of social-media criticism of their decision to publish a book that seems to be both misinformed and kind of riddled with misleading and dubiously sourced information about the February Delhi riots, and actually based on a report produced by a pro-BJP and a pro-Citizenship Amendment Act group. So anyway that was, you know the book seemed like a strange thing for them to publish. And there was a book launch that was happening which invited Kapil Mishra, whos a BJP politician, whos seen as someone that incited the entire violence. So you know it seemed like a strange thing for them to do.

Now they did say that the book launch was not part of their plan, and that their logo had been used, but still they were publishing the book, so after a sustained, kind of social-media criticism of that this has led to Bloomsbury withdrawing the publishing of the book much to the ire of rightwing commentators, who were now seeing this as a curtailment of free speech. Interestingly the book has been picked up by a pro-Hindutva publisher, but all of a sudden theres this big debate, and I dont know how valid the debate is on this being an attack on free speech and that the liberal left is being hypocritical.

RW: Yeah, I find it quite interesting that this story of this book is being discussed in the context of freedom of expression because in my view, this is a reaction to public outcry which I feel should kind of be contrasted with actual instances where the state is intervening to restrict free speech and we have a high profile instance of that before the Supreme Court right now with the case of Prashant Bhushan.

SP: Right, which again explains why this whole thing is a false analogy, that supposedly the liberal left have this outcry when their people are stopped from speaking, but it ignores the fact that Prashant Bushan being found guilty of contempt of court for a few tweets was the state you know the judiciary acting on that. Even with non-state actors you saw the attack on Caravan reporters by mobs in Delhi. I mean those are genuine attacks on free expression because it either uses the state instrument or theres physical violence, which seems very much different from the case of that book being withdrawn, because thats the kind of social sanctioning.

And I feel in some ways the Indian right is deploying the same categories and terms of the cancel culture which has kind of become big in the US, particularly since the rise of Trump, and you know all of a sudden, social boycotts of all kinds become the same as the state or mobs attacking someone.

RW: Yeah, its kind of interesting how these false analogies are being created. Another story thats kind of really made headlines was this story in the Wall Street Journal which actually found that there were these instances of hate speech which were identified by Facebook and which were being spread by the BJP, which were not removed and this story actually lifted the veil of secrecy that surrounds like some of the inner operations of Facebook, and it kind of identified Ankhi Das who is their policy person kind of showing that she had apparently explicitly said that these posts should not be removed because to do so would be to threaten the market opportunity that they would have in India, so thats been an interesting story.

SP: Yeah and I feel it sometimes even muddles the actual debate on free speech and hate speech and you know how companies like Facebook maintain their own standards. I mean, in this case it was clearly a failure to stand by their own standards. Interestingly, she has a history of also making Islamophobic comments, and we know what the result of allowing these kind of hate speech on platforms like Facebook have been, looking at what happened in Myanmar and Sri Lanka. So it also makes one question how serious platforms like Facebook are when it comes to basically standing you know by their own standards.

RW: Yeah thats right, to add to that, theres also been some writing that Ive seen which has actually talked about, how maybe we shouldnt get too distracted by the personalities, including Ankhi Das, and focus like you said on the issues, on the fact that these platforms need to be standing by the commitments that they make or making some kind of an effort on freedom of speech and just not allowing hate speech to proliferate but we are going to move on now to drugs, and specifically a particular case in Bangladesh, which was actually the killing of this retired military officer, Major Sinha Rashed Khan and this case has actually forced security forces to confront their culture of extrajudicial executions. So the details of this case will be chillingly familiar to those who have been following Bangladesh politics and these kinds of cases. So he was shot dead at a checkpoint in Coxs Bazar where he was actually shooting a documentary. According to the police he refused to stop and they had then fired in self defense. And afterwards they recovered, they said recreational drugs and alcohol from Sinha. Now following this and following some outcry, 7 police personnel who are among the accused have been placed in remand, and there have been several residents who were witnesses who were also placed in remand. Now I said that this kind of shooting is familiar to those who have been following incidents in Bangladesh, thats because it has very chilling similarities to these incidents which are kind of euphemistically called crossfire killings.

SP: The word crossfire killings sounds dangerously close to whats called encounter killings or encounters mostly in India, Pakistan, sometimes Nepal also. It just shows how creative states can get when it comes to hiding certain kinds of extrajudicial actions.

RW: Yeah I agree and I mean you can even draw parallels with Sri Lanka, theres been again a long history of prisoners either being taken to the scene of a crime and then reports that theyve tried to escape and then in Sri Lanka whats often said is again this term self-defence either tried to escape or attack them, so similarities across the region to these incidents, but when we look at Bangladesh in particular, according to rights body Ain O Salish Kendra thereve been around 2700 people who have been killed in this so called crossfire or gunfight since 2004 and thats when the Rapid Action Battalion was formed. Now, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has given the RAB a mandate to crackdown on drugs, and theyve called, shes gone so far as to call drug peddlers a menace to society, but now with the killing of Major Sinha theres been this increased scrutiny and especially because the victim is a former bodyguard of the Prime Minister herself. So shes actually told Rasheds mother that a proper probe would be carried out. So this story has crossborder resonance with Sri Lanka where former President Maithripala Sirisena pushed for the death penalty for drug traffickers and the current President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has also appointed a military led task force and their primary mandate is actually to liberate society from the drug menace. So since this task force has been formed and indeed since Gotabaya has been appointed President, thereve been these reports of drugs and firearms being seized along with reports of increased crackdowns, but theres also been these reports of apprehending a number of really unusual accomplices so most recently there was a cat who was found smuggling 2 grams of heroin, 2 SIM cards and a memory chip into Welikada prison and the cat was detained in early August, and interestingly this cat then made a break for freedom, and was then subsequently found again on the prison premises and this story made headlines, around the world. There was also actually an eagle who was suspected to be used by underworld Kingpin Angoda Lokka for his drug trafficking ring and this eagle was also seized by the police at the end of July actually and it was found on a poultry farm in Meegoda and two suspects who were involved in this ring were arrested. Now Angoda Lokka has actually been in the news recently as well, he goes by two other aliases which is Pradeep Singh and Maddumage Lasantha Chandana Perera. He was recently found dead in India seemingly due to a heart attack but he was wanted in connection with several crimes in Sri Lanka including murder, illegal sand mining, land reclamation, extortion, drug smuggling, so thats been an interesting story that weve been following.

AA: And I guess thats a nice transition or segue into the issue of transitional justice in the continent. So August 30th was the International Day of Disappearances, but unfortunately across the region families of the disappeared are still waiting for answers with several stalled or flawed or in some cases nonexistent transitional justice projects. In Sri Lanka its quite obvious in hindsight now, that 2015s political shift was not really consolidated by the kind of accountability or change in political culture thats necessary for a genuine political transition, so despite pledges by the previous government to implement a meaningful transitional justice project, nothing substantial has actually happened and in Nepal you have victims of the ten year long Maos insurgency who are gradually losing hope of getting justice just like in Sri Lanka. 9 years after the comprehensive peace agreement was signed and you know the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and Commissioner of Investigation on Enforced Disappeared Persons was formed in 2015, these victims are still waiting for answers. And like in Sri Lanka the Transitional Justice project in Nepal is suspected to be a type of undue international intervention largely because there is a lot of foreign interest and human rights groups have that kind of association in Nepal and you know across the region, but you know if youre interested in regional transitional justice efforts be sure to catch our piece this week on the transitional justice process in the Maldives as well.

SP: Now a very short quick update on Covid-19, weve been seeing cases really pick up particularly in Nepal and India continues to see more and more infections. Very interestingly a lot of countries around the region appear to be using the blood plasma therapy, to try to treat Covid patients, and so youre seeing this in Pakistan, you know cities around Pakistan, Afghanistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal and its not clear if the governments have kind of made it part of their public health effort but clearly organizations, different hospitals and clinics have started doing it, and thats an interesting trend.

RW: Yeah, and just to end on a bit of a positive note, the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment in India has constituted the National Counsel for Transgender Persons which would you know work with states to ensure that transgender welfare boards are set up in all states and that the essential needs of the community like housing, food, healthcare and education are met.

SP: So thats the end of Episode 1 of Southasiasphere, our new podcast on Southasian affairs. So subscribe to us and visit our website for more. Bye.

RW: Bye

AA: Bye

***

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The rest is here:

Elections in Sri Lanka, freedom of speech debates in India, war on drugs in Bangladesh and more - Himal Southasian

Could Indian Economy Get A New High By Removing Ban On Cannabis? – The Quint

Criminalisation of Cannabis Use Disregards Racist Origins Of USs War On Drugs

As India succumbed to international pressure, it was forced to disregard the racist origins of the USs war on drugs. The US war on drugs started off as a patently racist propaganda against the African-American and the Hispanic population. Harry Anslinger, called the architect of the modern war on drugs, argued that cannabis leads to insanity, criminality and death.

This racial bias in drug regulation has resulted in a disproportionate number of arrests of African Americans for cannabis consumption, which has become central to major policy reform in the US.

Economic Impact Of Indias Cannabis Law

Despite the historical use of cannabis as a fibre, India contributes a mere 0.001 percent to the world market for hemp products, which is pegged at USD 4.7 billion today.

The prohibitionist environment created by the NDPS (Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act, 1985, prevents India from effectively contributing to the world hemp market. As the world cannabis market is estimated to go up to USD 15.8 billion by 2027, restrictive policies in India continue to act as barriers to economic gains.

Continue reading here:

Could Indian Economy Get A New High By Removing Ban On Cannabis? - The Quint