Born this way: Evolution has hardwired us to be lazy – Scroll.in

If you have to force yourself up off your couch to try to get in some physical activity, rest assured, you are not the only one in this situation. For decades, communication campaigns have encouraged us to exercise, yet an estimated 30% of adults arent active enough. And this inaction is constantly increasing everywhere on the planet.

France is no exception to this rule. If doing more physical activity is classed in the top five good resolutions for the New Year, 75% French people are not sufficiently active. And yet according to the World Health Organization, each year 3.2 million deaths can be attributed to this lack of physical activity that is one death every 10 seconds.

This observation raises the question: why are we incapable of being physically active even when we want to?

To understand this battle between our positive intentions and our contradictory impulses, scientific theories such as dual process models have been developed. In these models, the mechanisms that explain our behaviour are divided into two categories: the rational mechanisms, managed by the reflective system, and the emotional mechanisms, managed by the impulsive system. The latter organises the automatic and instinctive part of our behaviours. It can facilitate or, on the contrary, prevent the reflective system from putting our intentions into place.

This second instance has been clearly illustrated in a study we have conducted. Its goal was to understand the conditions of efficacy of the messages promoting physical activity. In other words, we wanted to find out if reason can win out over our impulses when it comes to motivating ourselves to be more physically active.

First, participants had to attend a presentation outlining the recommendations in regards to physical activity that is beneficial to their health 30 minutes of daily exercise, spread out in sessions of 10 minutes minimum. To measure their impulsive tendency to approach sedentary behaviours, they were asked to perform an experimental task, the manikin game.

This game consists in moving around an avatar on a computer screen using a keyboard. In one of the conditions of the experiment, the participant has to move the avatar as fast as possible toward images representing physical activity walking, biking, swimming and move it away from images representing a sedentary activity television, hammocks, escalators. In the other condition, it is the opposite: the avatar has to be moved toward images evoking sedentary activities and moved away from the exercise images. The faster the participant is to approach sedentary images versus moving away from them, the more their impulsive tendency toward a sedentary lifestyle is considered to be high.

After this task, participants were given an accelerometer destined to record their daily physical activity and were sent on their way home. A week later, the debriefing took place.

First, results revealed that participants who received the message promoting physical activity expressed an increased intention to exercise. Thus, well-formulated health messages prove to be effective in triggering an intention. However, having the intention of exercising does not mean that we will actually do it, and all participants did not succeed in converting their intentions into behaviours.

Only those with a low impulsive tendency to approach sedentary behaviours were successful. Conversely, participants with a high tendency were not able to transform their intention into action. In other words, the conscious intention of being active lost the battle against the automatic tendency to seek sedentary behaviours.

Why are these sedentary behaviours attractive when they are harmful to our health?

If this attraction toward sedentarity seems paradoxical today, it is logical when examined in the light of evolution. Indeed, when it was difficult to gain access to food, sedentary behaviours allowed for the saving of energy that was crucial for survival.

This tendency to minimise unnecessary effort could explain the current pandemic of physical inactivity since the genes allowing individuals to survive are more likely to be present in the next generation.

In a recent study, we aimed to assess if our automatic attraction toward sedentary behaviours is engraved in our brains. The participants in this study also had to play the manikin game, but this time, electrodes were measuring their brain activity.

The results of this experiment show that to get away from sedentary images, our brain has to deploy a greater amount of resources than to get away from physical activity images. In daily life, getting away from the omnipresent opportunities to be sedentary in our modern environment escalators, elevators, cars would therefore require us to beat this sedentary attraction that is ingrained in our brains.

Nevertheless, it should not be believed that we have solely evolved to minimise unnecessary effort. We have also evolved to be physically active. Nearly two million years ago, when our ancestors were adapting to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, physical activity became an integral part of their daily life they travelled, on average, 14 km per day.

Natural selection thus favours individuals that are able to amass a large quantity of physical activity in an energy-saving way. These individuals were the ones whose physical activity was associated with the secretion of pain relieving, anxiolytic, or even mood-enhancing hormones.

The good news is that these hormonal processes are always present within us and they are only waiting for one thing: to be solicited. The first step toward an active lifestyle is to become aware of this force that is driving us to minimise effort. This awareness allows us to resist the countless sedentary opportunities that surround us.

Moreover, much like our ancestors, the majority of us engage in a physical activity only when it is fun or necessary, so the best way to promote physical activity is to make it pleasant. It is therefore necessary to restructure our environment to favour it, especially during our daily commute.

Public policy should, for example, develop safe and well-maintained infrastructures and open public spaces, in order to favour access to places that are suitable for walking, biking and other physical activities. New buildings architectures should also encourage our physical activity during the day by prioritising access to the stairs or standing desks.

It is then up to us to know how to take advantage of these opportunities to reduce our tendency to be sedentaryCome on, lets get on our trainers!

Boris Cheval, PhD, Neuropsychology of physical activity, University of Geneva. Matthieu Boisgontier, PhD, Neuroscience and Kinesiology, University of British Columbia. Philippe Sarrazin, University Professor, University of Grenoble.

This article first appeared on The Conversation.

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Born this way: Evolution has hardwired us to be lazy - Scroll.in

How Spies In Disguise Evolved Developing Its Key Theme About Teamwork – CinemaBlend

Its easy to imagine the profession of spy coming part and parcel with the development of a few issues regarding interpersonal relationships. If you spend a large part of your life lying to people, it becomes natural to wonder just how many people are lying right back. Trust becomes a luxury, and teamwork becomes a challenge. Its clear-cut character study material and a compelling notion to explore in a story and its also the core of the new animated action film Spies In Disguise.

Like any film, the new release went through a great deal of evolution as it made its way through the production schedule, but as I recently learned sitting down with directors Nick Bruno and Troy Quane, as well as star Masi Oka, the core theme of the project was always what guided them as new decisions were being made. You can watch the group discuss all this and more by clicking play on the video below.

As explained by Nick Bruno, it was the concept of teamwork being at odds with the world of espionage that was a part of Spies In Disguise from the very beginning partially inspired by current events and a lack of cooperation that we see in everyday life. So as the film was evolving, the theme was always kept in the back of mind, and it was not only reflected in the story being told, but also apparently the behind-the-scenes making of the movie. Said Bruno,

In the film, Will Smith voices Lance Sterling, the greatest spy in the world who is both excessively egotistical and only works alone. This attitude becomes a bit problematic, however, when an accident involving some new gear transforms Lance Sterling into a pigeon. Upon learning about a danger that threatens the entire world, he must work with the nerdy, awkward Walter Beckett (Tom Holland) to try and both become human again and save the day.

Discussing the specific evolution of the feature, Troy Quane noted that there were set pieces in Spies In Disguise that were designed and then dismissed, and that not everything involved in the making of the film was totally organized. But that wasnt accidental. Describing it as controlled chaos, the filmmakers wanted to establish a creative atmosphere that let good ideas be replaced by great ideas. Quane explained,

It was certainly an atmosphere that was appreciated by Masi Oka, who voices a character named Kimura in Spies In Disguise. The actor truly had a blast being in the recording booth trying out a wide variety of alts for his dialogue, and would have been happy to do more had he been given the opportunity. Said Oka,

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How Spies In Disguise Evolved Developing Its Key Theme About Teamwork - CinemaBlend

It is now the era to evolve mutually as the bacteria do – The European Sting

(Credit: Unsplash)

This article was exclusively written forThe European Sting by Ms. Alikya Chipurupalli, a 3rd year medical student studying her undergraduate from European University, Georgia. She is affiliated to the International Federation of Medical Students Associations (IFMSA), cordial partner of The Sting. The opinions expressed in this piece belongstrictly to the writer and do not necessarily reflect IFMSAs view on the topic, nor The European Stings one.

Anti-Microbial Resistance is an emerging, worldwide, devastating issue which if paid no heed could lead to a situation where even the most curable infections could become life threatening. According to the recent estimates, WHO declares that Drug resistant microbes now account for 700000 deaths annually which when not acted upon timely could increase to 10 million deaths each year. There should be a joint venture from health care workers and the consumer themselves to be able to solve this problem.

The necessity of knowing the consequences of this threat to humanity will only lead to education of the public. Pharmacists can play an influential role in this endeavor as we all are aware of the over use of over the counter medications. It is also important that the pharmacists are well qualified and aware of ongoing scenario.

But there might be a possibility that even if our educated consumers act responsibly, evolution might be in favor of the super- bugs. In this case, we health professionals need to evolve our strategies as well. The key is to develop novel diagnostics methods and stop prescribing wide spectrum antibiotics. By using the molecular techniques, as it is the genes where we all differ, the main causative agent should be targeted. Treatment should be more specific and definite not making the other strains and species of microbes aware about our ammunition. A well-defined treatment for the particular agent would only work when the diagnosis made penetrates the root of the condition.

Diamonds cut Diamonds is a famous quote which means that there must be some species similar existing in nature which would be able to terminate another ones life. Based on this the first ever antibiotic was developed from a Penicillium mold, then why cannot we accept the bacteriophages. Phage therapy can kill the deadliest bacteria Acinetobacter Baumanii. The phages are narrow spectrum organisms and this is a great advantage as we should not look for a temporary solution by applying wide spectrum treatment making the simplest bacteria resistant 100 years after again. Clinical trials for the efficacy of phages should be initiated at a larger level. So since its a time consuming process to isolate and determine phages which are effective against the particular bacterial strain, why not try genetically engineered phages. Combination and integration of Molecular Science and living organisms would be an innovative way to give a start.

Equally involved should be the Agricultural and Livestock members to limit and maintain the use of antibiotics. Proper training in administering the dose is essential. Therefore, Anti- Microbial resistance is a definitive issue, but we need to help our bodies in a natural yet smart way and hence bring it to a stop.

About the author

Alikya Chipurupalli is a 3rd year medical student, studying her undergraduate from European University, Georgia. She is a member of GMSA. Her active participation in many of the scientific conferences and events has given her opportunities to write about a variety of issues. She, being a student, takes AMR as a serious global threat and wantsher ideas to be shared with the audience.

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It is now the era to evolve mutually as the bacteria do - The European Sting

Virginia’s 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution, Concludes Commemorative Year Showcasing 400 Years Of Virginia History And Its Indelible Impact On…

The 2019 Commemoration has generated tangible results and laid the foundation for a legacy that will last well-beyond the commemorative year. More than 2 Million individuals participated in 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution events, exhibitions and programs. A full economic impact study is currently underway and final results will be released in Q1 2020. With a focus on employing technology to reach new and younger audiences the 2019 Commemoration generated more than 36 Million social media impressions and secured more than 23 Billion traditional earned media impressions that fueled awareness among Virginia and national audiences. The Commemoration's educational programming reached more than 14,000 Virginia students and educators.

More than $100 Million in combined economic impact is attributed to Commemoration and visitor spending since July 2016, and cumulative jobs supported by the Commemoration are projected to exceed 1,000. The 2019 Commemoration received a total of $23.3 million from state appropriations since fiscal year 2016 and leveraged public funding to secure an additional $4.3 million from more than 40 private donors to support the five-year commemoration cycle of planning, promotion and execution.

"It has truly been an honor to serve as the Executive Director of Virginia's 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution. I am so very proud, and appreciative, of our talented staff and dedicated team of advisors, sponsors, partners and volunteers who worked tirelessly to plan and execute a year-long commemoration of national and international significance," said Kathy Spangler, Executive Director, 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution. "The entire Commonwealth of Virginia can be proud of the results the 2019 Commemoration achieved. Our 20+ signature events, legacy projects, education initiatives and statewide community programs brought 400 years of Virginia history to life with inclusive and authentic storytelling that catalyzed important conversations about democracy, diversity and opportunity, and facilitated the growth and development of partner institutions that will have a lasting legacy for years to come."

If you missed the 2019 Commemorative year events, you can still engage in American Evolution legacy projects, which include: the Virginia History Trails, Virginia Women's Monument, Pocahontas Reframed Storytellers Film Festival, Dance Theater of Harlem's Passage, Virginia to America videos series, educational resourcesand the Fort Monroe Visitor and Education Center.

The 2019 Commemoration showcased pivotal 1619 Virginia events that set America on a course towards the ideals of democracy, diversity and opportunity. These 1619 Virginia events include the first representative legislative assembly, the arrival of the first Africans to English North America, the recruitment of English women in significant numbers, the first official English Thanksgiving, and the entrepreneurial and innovative spirit of the Virginia Colony.

For more information about American Evolution, visit: https://www.americanevolution2019.com/and check out the 2019 Commemoration blogfor powerful insights and anecdotes from participants and partners discussing the lasting impact of the 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution.

About the 2019 CommemorationThe 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution highlights events that occurred in Virginia in 1619 that continue to influence America today. Featured programs, events and legacy projects will position Virginia as a leader in education, tourism and economic development. American Evolution commemorates the ongoing journey toward the key ideals of democracy, diversity and opportunity. Dominion Energy is an American Evolution Founding Partner and Altria Group and TowneBank are Virginia Colony Partners.

SOURCE Virginia's 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution

http://www.americanevolution2019.com

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Virginia's 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution, Concludes Commemorative Year Showcasing 400 Years Of Virginia History And Its Indelible Impact On...

The S Corporation: The Evolution Of Self-Employment Taxes And The Reasonable Salary by Caroline Montgomery | Sponsored Insights – Greater Wilmington…

This Insights article was contributed by Richard Pasquantonio, CPA/CFF, CFE, CDFA (NC License Number 33577), an associate at Adam Shay CPA, PLLC.

S corporation (S Corp) taxation is a popular election for many business owners that originally form an association (corporation) or limited liability company (LLC). Some major advantages of S Corp status are:

Under the Eisenhower administration, Congress enacted legislation creating subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code which adopted a simplified domestic entity classification to face the crippling tax situation for small business owners in America. Soon after Congress's action, the issue of self-employment taxes was raised, and the Treasury made taxpayers aware via Revenue Ruling 59-221 that the amounts of its income which are required to be passed-through to each shareholder's gross income do not constitute net earnings from self- employment for Self-Employment Contributions Act purposes (SE Tax). This constituted a windfall to taxpayers and contributed to the popularity and growth of the S corporations use by small business owners. This prompted S corporation owners to classify all of this newly founded pass-through income as dividends but the government did not like that either, and about 15 years later, the Treasury clarified their position in Revenue Ruling 77-44. There, they stated that to the extent that an S Corps' owners perform services for the company then the company is required to pay the owner a reasonable salary for those services. Additionally, the reasonable salary issubject to the SE Tax. Unfortunately, the government gave little guidance for taxpayers and practitioners on how to determine the reasonableness of an owner's salary. Instead, the government left it for the courts to decide....and after another 40 years!!...it appears that they did.

Post Rev. Rul. 77-44, the IRS responded aggressively to S Corps who failed to pay any salary to their owners. As a result, the case law became clear that in these circumstances any and all distributions that were paid to owners would be reclassified as wages and subjected to SE Tax. Because of the devastating results of these enforcement effort, CPAs and tax professionals quickly responded by advising clients to pay a salary. However, the pubic was still left to their own devices in determining if the amounts were reasonable. Some taxpayers and tax professionals were overly conservative and others overly aggressive. As a result there has always been a great disparity in salaries between taxpayers, even ones operating in the same industry in the same regions of the country, and this disparity has not gone unnoticed by the Treasury Department.

In 2005, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA)issued a report examining the payroll tax advantage that S corporations enjoyed over sole proprietorships. The report, which analyzed S corporation tax returns filed in 2000, revealed the following:

Following the 2005 TIGTA report, a case against an accounting firm, JD & Associateswas heard by the tax court - it did not end well for the taxpayer. In JD & Associates,Jeffrey Dahl was the sole shareholder of an accounting firm taxed as an S corporation. Dahl was a CPA with over 20 years of experience. He was responsible for making the firms hiring decisions, paying its bills, maintaining its books and records, preparing its tax returns, and preparing and reviewing tax returns for the firms clients. The courts in JD increased the salary almost 300 percent in each of the years under consideration.

In 2009, a U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report to the Senate Committee on Financeechoed the concerns expressed in the TIGTA findings. The GAO report noted that in 2003 and 2004 combined, S corporations had underreported their shareholder compensation by $24.6 billion, with corporations with fewer than three shareholders responsible for nearly all the underreporting.

CONVINCED YET??Following the 2009 report to the Senate Finance Committee, a case against another CPA, Davis Watson was heard by the tax court - it too, did not end well for the taxpayer.

DO YOU THINK THAT THE GOVERNMENT WAS SENDING A CLEAR MESSAGE TO THE BUSINESS COMMUNITY BY TAKING ACTION AGAINST ACCOUNTANTS AND CPAS? I do.

DO YOU THINK THAT THEY LOOKED AT THE ACCOUNTANT'S CLIENTS AFTERWORD? Better believe they did.

SO HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?Whereas JD & AssociatesandWatsonaffirmed that the IRS had the authority to reclassify distributions as wages, it still left practitioners and taxpayers largely on their own in determining a reasonable amount of salary to pay.

EnterSean MCalary LTD, INC.First, let me say, this also did not end well for the taxpayer. However, in this 2013 case against a realtor in southern California, the Tax Court finally provided some bright lines and insights for taxpayers and practitioners to better support decisions related to setting S Corp salaries. The case highlights the factors that the court will weigh in making its reasonable salary determination, including:

Caroline Montgomery, CPA (NC License Number 39017), MSA, is tax manager and partner of Adam Shay CPA, PLLC. The most rewarding part of what she does is helping business owners and individuals achieve their goals, all while working with a dynamic team that is growing quickly. The firm focuses on a proactive approach by encouraging clients to minimize taxes via income tax planning and projections, or by focusing on other areas of their business as part of the firm's Virtual CFO services. The firm also offers tax preparation, fraud and forensic accounting and tax issue resolution services. She moved to Wilmington in 2014 and started at the firm in 2015. Caroline graduated with her her undergraduate and graduate degree in 2010 from East Carolina University. She is actively involved with NourishNC as their Treasurer and enjoys volunteering with various organizations throughout New Hanover County. In her free time, Caroline enjoys spending time with her husband, Mike, and dog, Mason, as well as travelling and going to the beach.

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The S Corporation: The Evolution Of Self-Employment Taxes And The Reasonable Salary by Caroline Montgomery | Sponsored Insights - Greater Wilmington...

Nanodiamond Market Growth Analysis By Manufacturers, Regions, Type And Application, Forecast Analysis – Industry Mirror

NanodiamondMarket: Nano-sized Diamond for Lubricating and Abrasion & Coating Applications

Is something restraining your companys growth in the Nanodiamond Market? Ask for thereport brochurehere

Rise in Demand from Biomedical Industry to Drive Market

Mechanical Applications to Offer Attractive Opportunities

Stuck in a neck-to-neck competition with other brands? Request acustom reporton competition on Nanodiamond Market here

Rise in Consumption of Substitute Nanomaterials to Hamper Market

Asia Pacific Projected to Hold Significant Share of Global Nanodiamond Market

Key Players in Market

The global nanodiamond market is moderately concentrated, with the top manufacturers accounting for major share. Prominent players operating in the global nanodiamond market seek to enter into partnerships for the development of nanodiamond applications and commercialization of its technology.

Key players operating in the nanodiamond market include:

Global Nanodiamond Market: Research Scope

Global Nanodiamond Market, by Application

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Nanodiamond Market Growth Analysis By Manufacturers, Regions, Type And Application, Forecast Analysis - Industry Mirror

Thanks for the judges, Harry Reid, and other commentary – New York Post

Conservative: Thanks for the Judges, Harry!

With Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnells help, President Trump has appointed federal judges at about twice the rate of his three predecessors, notes The Washington Examiners editorial board. But Trump should be thanking McConnells predecessor, former Democratic Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada. In 2013, with President Barack Obama in the White House and Democrats controlling the Senate, Reid made the fateful and short-sighted decision to change Senate rules so that a bare majority was enough to confirm a judge, instead of 60 votes, as before. During his campaign, Trump regularly and energetically promised to appoint well-credentialed conservatives with excellent character and scholarship to judgeships a promise he has kept, much to his credit.

Culture critic: From Woodstock to Populism

Middle class in Britain was once defined by a safe, lifelong career, allegiance to the Conservative Party and defending tradition but now, Jonathan Rutherford sighs at The New Statesman, it has lost its role and the authority invested in it and has been overtaken by a new middle class fraction forged in the cultural revolution and university expansion of the 1960s. The Woodstock generation went into politics, eschewing traditionally left-wing populist economic democracy in favor of a libertarian identity politics of gender, race and sexuality. Left-wing parties became parties of the new liberal middle class, increasingly contemptuous of lives and experience of mainstream working-class voters. Yet working-class voters pushed back and voted for Brexit and their historic class enemy: the Tories. Back in 1969, no one could have believed it would turn out like this, but liberal elites have only themselves to blame.

Foreign desk: Hurrah for the US-UK Marriage

Among elite opinion-makers, Brexit is destined to turn Britain into an isolated backwater. Not so, says Brandon J. Weichert at American Greatness. The island nation had extraordinary power on its own, and subordinating British national sovereignty to the supranational government in Brussels was always a mistake. Now that its almost out, Britain should forge a stronger relationship with the United States, an Anglo-American marriage that would ensure that Brexit is meaningful and real and not at all damaging to Britain. The good news is that President Trump has already promised a new free-trade agreement with London which will allow Britain to shake off the sclerotic superstate that is the European Union.

Libertarian: A Year of Peak Entitlement

If you listen to many politicians and pundits, you would think the United States is doing terribly while the government isnt spending a dime yet the truth is the exact opposite, argues Reasons Veronique de Rugy. Among other things, the economy is entering its 11th year of expansion, while poverty is at an all-time low, and the unemployment rate hasnt been so low since 1969. Meanwhile, the government is racking up gargantuan budget deficits, largely because both political parties are spending on a whim and condemning our free-market economy the very system that has produced the wealth that everyone takes for granted. The problem, she insists, isnt that free markets dont work, but that we may have reached peak entitlement mentality.

Urban beat: Calis Homelessness Hopelessness

Despite Californias homelessness crisis, Sacramento and city halls across the Golden State are mired in the we-need-more-money mindset a mindset, sighs Issues and Insights editorial board, that has never worked. In fact, despite all the spending, and the pleas and plans for additional money, homelessness has spiked 30% since 2017 in San Francisco, 16% in Los Angeles and a whopping 43% in San Jose. As a result, nearly half of the nations homeless who sleep on the streets today do so in California. Instead of feeding government bureaucracies with taxpayers money, government officials should follow the example of San Diego, where the city took a tough-love approach that rejected widespread street camping and watched its homeless population fall. The shift in thinking and in acting is paying off.

Compiled by Karl Salzmann

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Thanks for the judges, Harry Reid, and other commentary - New York Post

Libertarianism and Abortion: A Debate – Reason

While a pregnant woman should be legally required to help the fetus survive outside of her body whenever that is possible, she should retain the legal right to evict the fetus at any time during her pregnancy.

That was the resolution of a public debate hosted by the Soho Forum in New York City on December 8, 2019. It featured Walter Block arguing for the resolution and Kerry Baldwin arguing against it. Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein moderated.

It was an Oxford-style debate. That means the audience votes on the resolution at the beginning and end of the event, and the side that gains the most groundmostly by picking up votes from the "undecided" categoryis victorious. Block prevailed by convincing 13.85 percent of audience members to change their minds. Baldwin was not far behind, picking up 12.31 percent of the audience.

Block is the Harold E. Wirth Eminent Scholar Endowed Chair and Professor of Economics at Loyola University New Orleans, and a prolific author on Austrian economics and libertarian theory. He's the author of Defending the Undefendable I and II, among many other books.

Kerry Baldwin is an independent researcher and writer with a B.A. in Philosophy from Arizona State University. Her work can be found at MereLiberty.com and at the Libertarian Christian Institute.

The Soho Forum, which is sponsored by the Reason Foundation, is a monthly debate series at the SubCulture Theater in Manhattan's East Village.

Produced by John Osterhoudt.Photo credit: Brett Raney.

Filaments by Scott Buckley https://soundcloud.com/scottbuckley Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported CC BY 3.0

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Libertarianism and Abortion: A Debate - Reason

Bob Gibbs now unopposed in 2020; other candidates removed from ballot – Massillon Independent

The Stark County Board of Elections denied to certify two candidates in the race the 7th Congressional District due to petition signature issues.

CANTON U.S. Rep. Bob Gibbs, R-Lakeville, is now the only candidate for Congress to represent the 7th Congressional District on the March 17 primary ballot.

On Monday morning, the Stark County Board of Elections certified a ballot that didnt include the names of the Democratic and Libertarian candidates for Congress representing the 7th. The board staff said they had failed to submit enough valid signatures.

However, a Knox County elections official said her office mistakenly designated 10 signatures submitted by a Libertarian candidate as invalid.

Brandon Lape, 38, of Danville, filed a formal request Monday afternoon asking the Stark County Board of Elections to reverse its decision to kick him off the ballot.

Three candidates met Wednesdays filing deadline to seek their partys nomination to be congressman for the 7th District, which includes most of Stark County.

They were Gibbs, Lape and Democrat Patrick Pikus, of Plain Township, who also ran in 2018.

Gibbs and Pikus, as members of major parties, had to submit 50 valid petition signatures by registered voters in their party who lived in the congressional district.

Lape, 38, as a member of a minor party, had to submit 25 valid petition signatures.

Pikus submitted the minimum of 50 but board staff found nine signatures to be invalid.

Pikus, 54, a business manager for the Timken Co., said he accepted responsibility for "rookie mistake. ... I thought I had 50 good ones."

He said he had been reluctant to run again, but when he saw that no other Democrat was apparently interested in running, he started collecting signatures and "took them at their word that they were registered (to vote)."

"Nobody is at fault besides me for not double checking," he said, adding that he would review his options.

Because all of the people who signed Lapes petition lived in Ashland and Knox counties, the Ashland and Knox county boards of election verified the signatures. Stark County, as the most populous county in the 7th District, decides whose candidacies to certify.

Elections staff in Ashland and Knox counties initially invalidated 23 of 42 petition signatures submitted by Lape, leaving him with only 19, six short of the minimum. They found two signatures were by people not registered to vote, two were not registered to vote from the addresses provided and one signature was invalid because it was by the petition circulator. They found 18 were signed by voters who had voted in a recent Republican or Democratic primary, which made them ineligible to sign Lapes petition.

But Kim Horn, the director of the Knox County Board of Elections, said hours later her office mistakenly concluded that 10 of candidate Lapes signatures were invalid. Horn said her offices voter registration database wrongly designated several voters as Republican or Democratic voters when they hadnt voted in a Republican or Democratic primary since 2016.

By law, a person ceases to be affiliated with a political party if they dont vote in that partys primary for at least two calendar years.

Regine Johnson, the Stark County Board of Elections deputy director, said the board would choose whether to hold the hearing of reconsideration. If it takes place, it would likely happen by Jan. 13.

Stark County Commissioner Janet Weir Creighton, a Republican whos not up for re-election in 2020, said in an interview about the petition process this month that she always advises candidates to get more signatures than the minimum. And to have an official at party headquarters check the signatures against the rolls of registered voters.

"If youre required to get 50 good signatures, you dont get 50. You get more than what you need," she said. "If you cant follow these rules then I question why youre running for office. ... I would be sick if it cost my candidacy because of an error."

Creighton added the earlier petition filing deadline made it harder to get signatures as people were more focused on the holidays.

Write-in candidates have until Jan. 6 to file for the March 17 primary. They have to fill out a form but do not have to submit signatures. They are not listed on the ballot. In the Democratic primary for 7th Congressional District congressman, which now has no candidates, the write-in candidate who has at least 50 voters write in their name on the ballot and wins a plurality of the write-in vote would then become the Democratic candidate. That persons name would be listed on the ballot in November along with Gibbs name, said Travis Secrest, an administrative assistant for the Stark County Board of Elections

Non-partisan candidates who wish to run for Congress and be listed on the November ballot have until March 16 to file, said Secrest. They must submit at least 2,616 valid signatures by any registered voters in the district.

Candidates denied a place on the ballot due to signature issues are not eligible to run as write-in candidates or non-partisan candidates.

The Board also chose to leave off the ballot liquor options for Aldi Ohio in the Canton 6-C precinct and the Palace Theatre in Canton 2-B due to both entities submitting an insufficient number of valid petition signatures.

In addition, the Board also declined to certify three candidates seeking party committee positions due to an insufficient number of valid signatures. That included Patrick J. Glasgow, who was seeking to be the male member on the Libertarian Party State Central Committee for the 7th Congressional District. Glasgow would have been unopposed. And also denied a spot on the primary ballot were Gloria Ann Jeter of precinct Canton 6-C and Patrick Hoch of Canton 7-F for Stark County Democratic Party Central Committee.

Patrick Dorosky is now the only candidate for the Canton 6-C Stark County Democratic Party Central Committeeman. No one else sought the Canton 7-F seat. Eligible write-in candidates may seek the spot or if no one does Stark County Democratic Party

Chairman Samuel J. Ferruccio, whos also the chairman of the Stark County Board of Elections, can appoint any Democratic registered voter in Canton 7-F to fill the seat.

Reach Repository writer Robert Wang at (330) 580-8327 or robert.wang@cantonrep.com. Twitter: @rwangREP.

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Bob Gibbs now unopposed in 2020; other candidates removed from ballot - Massillon Independent

Flashpoint: Holcomb and cell phones: The inch that becomes a mile – Terre Haute Tribune Star

Back in the dark ages when mandatory seat belt use was relatively new in Indiana, I had a colleague who liked to say that she never nagged people about buckling up when they were riding with her. In fact, she never mentioned it to her passengers.

Why? she was inevitably asked.

Natural selection was her answer.

I like to use that story as a good analogy for what I consider proper government. She gives people the information needed to make good choices, sometimes offers incentives for making good choices and can even provide the mechanisms to make good choices easier. But if people insist on making poor choices anyway, well, thats on them.

Of course, our government driver (to continue the analogy) seldom stops when she should. She employs various coercive tactics to get those passengers in line. (Yes, I am being deliberate in the choice of pronoun; were talking about the nanny state, after all.)

Such as, buckle up or this car isnt moving. Or, if you dont buckle up, I will harangue you mercilessly for the whole trip. Or, the penalty for not buckling up, payable at the end of the journey, will be a hefty fee that I will send collectors out to get from your childrens children into the 10th generation.

In my experience, people who advocate for government solutions, and even bigger and more expensive government when those solutions fail to materialize, seldom have to justify themselves. They are merely following the spirit of the age, no explanations required.

But those of us who advocate government restraint or, heaven forbid, limited government, are always put on the defensive. We are either insensitive to human misery to the point of heartlessness or hopelessly ignorant of the need for immediate action to avert imminent disaster.

In all the response I get to these columns (thank you very much), by far the most common form of criticism is from readers who misinterpret, either carelessly or deliberately, the libertarian thrust of my government critiques.

I always mean, in those pieces, the least government necessary, which, believe it or not, was a founding principle of this country. They always insist I really meant, no government at all, then proceed to deliver the Gotcha! they think I deserve.

What about the fire department when your house is burning down, they will ask, or the police department when youre robbed? What about that pothole you want filled in?

Arent those all socialism, you self-serving hypocrite?

Actually, no, theyre not. They are legitimate government functions.

My favorite Gotcha! showing up in my email with tiresome regularity is, So, I guess youve refused your Social Security payments, huh?

No, I have not. Had I the opportunity to opt out and use the money for my own retirement investments, I would have done so. But participation was mandatory. To whom am I trying to prove what if I dont take money out of the system I was forced to put money into?

The tenet of libertarianism people seem to have the most trouble grasping, though it really should be the easiest, is that government legitimately tries to keep us from hurting each other but risks overstepping its bounds when it tries to keep us from hurting ourselves. Autonomy should be sacred.

So, I find myself having to explain that, no, I do not object to Gov. Eric Holcombs proposal to ban Hoosier motorists from using their cell phones while driving unless theyre hands-free.

There are rules for the road that are open to challenge on libertarian grounds. There is no reason to require me to use seat belts when driving or wear a helmet when riding a motorcycle except to keep me from behaving stupidly.

But there are also rules that protect me from others stupid behavior, such as the one against driving while drunk.

Mandating hands-free-only cell phone use falls into the latter category. I am the one you might run into while youre fiddling with that stupid phone.

See? Simple.

Of course, there are a couple of potholes in the road an earnest libertarian should be aware of whenever he gives in and acknowledges that, yes, OK, fine, government should do this.

One is the maxim that by the time government acts, government action is usually beside the point. Most cellphones today have Bluetooth, and most new cars have systems that sync to it, so its likely that the moment you get behind the wheel your phone automatically become hands-free.

The other is that when government is given the legitimate inch, it will go the illegitimate mile. Setting reasonable speed limits is a legitimate function, but it requires local knowledge of local conditions. But few were shocked to see a national 55 mph limit that, for a time, was the most ignored law in America.

If Holcomb gets his way with cellphones, all sorts of distracted driving will be on the endangered list, everything from playing the radio to scarfing down those fries you got from the drive-through. Then dont be surprised if there are hefty fines for talking to your in-car companions and there are calls for hands-free nose-picking.

Government will always always, always, always go too far.

I know you might not believe that. But the evidence is plentiful if you choose to ignore it, thats on you.

I respect your autonomy.

And, you know. Natural selection.

Leo Morris is a columnist for Indiana Policy Review, a magazine published by the conservative think tank Indiana Policy Review Foundation, which is headquartered in Fort Wayne. Contact him at leoedits@yahoo.com.

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Flashpoint: Holcomb and cell phones: The inch that becomes a mile - Terre Haute Tribune Star

Best UK wine retailers: The local, national and online retailers of the year – decanter.com

The Decanter Retailer Awardsaims to offer wine drinkers in the UK an indispensable guide to the best wine shops and wine lists on the high street. The below winners have been awarded based on innovation, drive, creativity, energy, evangelism and even hedonism.

Decanter Retailer Awards 2019 judge Laura Clay best said it:

I knew British wine retailers were special, I just hadnt realised quite how special. Wine drinkers of the UK have never had it so good.

Wine merchants no longer just buy wine and hope to sell it. They train their staff so that they are qualified to help their customers; they run courses and tastings; they offer in-store tastings to encourage their customers to try something new; they deliver actually and physically but they also deliver knowledge, inspiration and a great deal of joy.

The best supermarkets that sell wine know they need to stock more than the big brands from the main regions and countries. They need to offer diversity along with value. The Decanter winners do this really well.

Weve highlighted this years top specialist retailers. Now its time to take a look at the best local, regional, national and online wine retailers of the year.

How the winners were chosen:Results were determined by our expert judging panelwho made their way through over one hundred entries,assessing, visiting, tasting, scoring and re-scoring before narrowing down entries to support, award and encourage those doing a brilliant job.

Enthusiasm and energy characterise this Hampton Hill wine shop, which runs buzzy events, works with the local butcher and deli, supports local charities and aims to make people welcome in a community-focused neighbourhood shop. A list topping 1,100 bins and advice from well-qualified staff help to create a wonderful wine experience for anyone shopping here.

Runner-up:Uncorked

A phoenix-like recovery after a 2018 fire in The Good Wine Shops Kew site was attributed to strong community foundations. This may be down to an enviable customer loyalty rewards programme, an enticing range and a new on-premise wine service. Theres a sincerity and genuine love of wine here, said one judge. Uncorked continues to improve its already outstanding wine list.

Runner-up:Lea & Sandeman

Last years winner Lea & Sandeman purveyors of a herculean list, 90% sourced directly from producers, with more events than ever were just pipped to the post by Vagabond. As the impressive expansion of Vagabond continues, its deliberately pared-back list, colour-coded wine-style stations and hybrid wine bar-cum-shop model all help encourage and empower wine lovers to be adventurous in an interactive and fun way.

Runner-up:Justerini & Brooks

Both Goedhuis and Justerini reported strong numbers for their Burgundy campaigns, the latters mouthwatering list and excellent service being commendable. Goedhuis won through not just on the basis of sound business basics (sensible storage policy, fair pricing, and a superb list that continues to grow and improve) but also a notably proactive and personal approach to the whole en primeur experience.

Runner-up:WoodWinters Wines & Whiskies

Loki has transformed the Birmingham wine scene and just never stands still, in the words of one judge. The original city-centre shop and bar has been upgraded, a new store opened and customer engagement improved, including successful events. Loki is now a leading British wine retailer. The WoodWinters list remains strong and the three stores are laudably community minded.

Runner-up:Lockett Bros

A fiercely competitive field saw the approachable charms and fairly priced, well-sourced range of Lancashires The Whalley Wine Shop win through as the UKs best local wine shop. Meanwhile Lockett Bros in North Berwick majors on an easygoing attitude and a newly reconfigured shop that offers cosy tasting areas and a cheese deli counter. Well worth a detour, commented one judge.

Runner-up:Lay & Wheeler

Online retail becomes more competitive by the day and wine is no exception. For a traditional mail-order merchant, The Wine Society has innovated and adapted in impressive fashion. Fully 72% of its sales are now online and its user-friendly website is rich in content, with fair prices allied to a truly outstanding list and nationwide tasting events. Lay & Wheelers majestic list, meanwhile, finds a fitting home on its engaging site.

Runner-up:The Tapas Room

Established in Cowbridge, Wales in 2017, Noble Grape is a welcome addition to the UK wine scene with a well-chosen list, personal MW service and a can-do attitude. The emphasis, according to owner Richard Ballantyne MW, is on authenticity of style and sustainability. Also open since 2017, The Tapas Room is an impressively accessible and unpretentious place to celebrate Spain in London through tapas and wine.

Runner-up:Honest Grapes

Plenty of diversity in this category a joy to judge. As runner-up, Honest Grapes is a wine merchant and club with bags of character and a dynamic feel, thats well worth getting to know. The Vinoteca wine club is a spin-off from its London wine bars and shops. The smallish list is brilliantly chosen; subscriptions are fairly priced and deliver a real sense of discovery; and food matching is a particular (if unsurprising) fort.

Runner-up:Booths

A leader among the supermarkets in terms of quality and diversity of wine range, backed up by informative staff, website and literature plus a popular Drinks Festival, Waitrose won a well-deserved second win in a row as this years Best Supermarket of the Year.

Runner-up:Tanners Wines

How to select a wine gift? Cambridge Wine Merchants helpful flow-chart choosing system starts with: How much do you like the recipient? The personal touch and sense of humour, allied to a fine wine range, engaging events and well-diversified activities and portfolio, combine to make CWM very special. Runner-up Tanners remains an outstanding wine retailer with an encouraging focus on innovation.

Runner-up:The Whisky Exchange

As well as its digital wizardry, fine wine company Cru impressed the judges with a clear and engaging sustainability initiative aimed at reducing carbon emissions (for example, by offering clients different shipping choices based on emissions calculations) and offsetting. The Whisky Exchange has had an exciting year, with a successful debut Champagne Show signalling its fruitful diversification.

Several exciting names from very different ends of the wine spectrum were in the mix for this award. Waitrose ultimately earned the accolade through bravery, creativity and laudable commitment to the wine cause. As one judge said: The pressures on them are different to many other wine retailers. And, while some large retailers batten down the hatches, Waitrose has steadily emerged as a mainstream standard-bearer for wine (and other causes, including sustainability). The safe option? Hardly.

Best UK wine retailers: The specialists

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Best UK wine retailers: The local, national and online retailers of the year - decanter.com

The Many Faces of the Occult – The Atlantic

Iqbal Ahmeds film explores a rapidly-growing sector of spirituality.

The demographic trends tell an incontrovertible story: The American church is in decline. In 2018 and 2019, 65 percent of Americans identified as Christiansdown 12 percent from the previous decade. While Christianitys numbers and influence are waning, other demographics are gaining ground; by 2051, if current trends continue, religiously unaffiliated Americans, so-called religious nones, could constitute as large a percentage of the population as Protestants.

Occultism is also on the rise. In 2014, the Pew Research Center found that 0.4 percent of Americans, or about 1 million to 1.5 million people, identify as Wicca or Paganpotentially outnumbering the 1.4 million mainline members of the Presbyterian Church. By 2050, the number of practicing pagans in America is projected to triple to 6.6 million, or 1.5 percent of the population.

To tell the story of the dramatic rise of neo-paganism in America, though, you quickly run into a roadblock. No two pagans seem to agree on the same definition of paganism, Iqbal Ahmed, who spent two years researching a large community of pagans in Southern California for his short documentary Pagans, told me. Because of this confusion, Ahmed said, its no wonder that relatively informed laypeople might have still have misconceptions about paganism.

In fact, Ahmed came to the world of paganism with his own set of preconceived notions. Paganism conjured images of 80s films about satanic cults, he said. I envisioned blood rituals, pentagrams, and hedonism. Pagans, which is featured on The Atlantic today, aims to dispel some of this haze. By focusing on an intimate community of pagans who live within 200 miles of one another and often worship together, Ahmeds film showcases paganisms diversity of people and beliefs. I found pagans of every ilk, Ahmed said. Among his films subjects are teachers, social workers, and PTA members who engage in various pre-Christian practices steeped in ceremony and superstition.

Paganism is an umbrella term. It comes from the Latin paganus, which refers to those who lived in rural areas. As Christianity spread within the Roman empire, it was mostly practiced in the cities; in the country, people who believed in the old ways came to be known as pagans. Paganism, the catchall term, came to encompass many different cultures, including Greco-Roman, Celtic, Germanic, and Slavic tribes.

According to the Pagan Federation, modern pagans can be defined as followers of a polytheistic or pantheistic nature-worshipping religion. While many meaningful distinctions can be drawn between its sub-sects, such as Wicca, witchcraft, Druidry, and Christo-Paganism, many pagans share core religious tenets. The most important principles are the responsibility for ones own beliefs and the freedom to choose ones own deity (and relationship to it). This is often expressed as Do what you will, as long as it harms none. Most pagans also revere nature, which they view as a manifestation of the divinenot as the fallen creation, as is the view of dualism.

Paganism, by its very nature, is free and often somewhat amorphous, said Ahmed. There was never any judgment within the community. It was very much live-and-let-live. Although Ahmed never met a typical pagan, he did notice some commonalities among the people he encountered in the pagan community. For one, many members of the community were disillusioned by institutionalized Judeo-Christian belief systems. They found formal religion restrictive and had negative experiences with the Christian church in their past, Ahmed said. All of the pagans that Ahmed met valued an la carte version of spirituality. They picked and followed specific aspects that worked for them, he said. The real breakdown of beliefs was really unlimited.

Ahmed quickly realized that the freedom and multiplicity of belief systems did not undermine the serious nature of these alternative spiritual practices. All of the pagans I met came very seriously to paganism itself, he said. No one casually appropriated these beliefs. Most became pagans due to a deep and underlying need to find a value system that more closely approximated their own previously unarticulated beliefs.

There was a sweet sincerity to what I saw, he added. There was a genuine spiritual connection throughout.

Of the eight major holidays that most pagans observe, Ahmed was able to attend ceremonies for four: Yule (winter solstice), Beltane (festival of the fire), Litha (summer solstice), and Samhain (the witchs new year). Each holiday celebration that I saw had very specific rituals, whether through chanting, singing, processions, or other actions, Ahmed said. Most people who identify as pagans participate in some combination of these events, though many likely perform them privately.

Pagans is a mesmerizing portrait of a little-known subculture. Ahmeds respect and fascination for the subject are evident in the films cinematic imagery and attention to deep personal detailan aspect of the film that was hard-won as Ahmed worked to gain the trust of wary participants over the course of years.

Everything surprised me about this worldthe people, the ceremonies, the humor, the authenticity, the search for personal truth, Ahmed said.

We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to letters@theatlantic.com.

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The Many Faces of the Occult - The Atlantic

Must I Give Gifts Every Night of Chanukah? – Chabad.org

Iheard that what makes Chanukah different and special is that you get gifts foreight nights. Is that true? Am I really obligated to give a gift everynight?

Actually, there is no obligation to give giftsat all. The mitzvah of Chanukah is to light the menorah each night. We do thisto commemorate the miraculous victory of the Maccabees over the Greek-Syrianarmies, as well as celebrate the great miracle that Gd performed for the Jewswhen they rededicated the Holy Temple. There was only one flask of pure oliveoil to be found, and miraculously the oil burned for eight days. Click here tolearn how to light the menorah.

But yes, in additionto the mitzvah of lighting the menorah, there is a custom to give Chanukah gelt, a gift of money, especially tochildren. Now, should this money be dispensed only once during the holiday, oron a daily basis?

For the most part,the widespread tradition was to give Chanukah gelt once during Chanukah. However, the Lubavitcher Rebbe proposedthat Chanukah gelt be given to thechildren every night of Chanukah, even if the gifts are small. Heres why:

An underlying themeof Chanukah (and Chanukah gelt) isJewish education.

One of the reasonswhy the small band of Maccabees rose up against the mighty Greek-Syrian forcesis that the Greeks were determined to stamp outJudaism by prohibiting the teaching of Torah to the children and forcingHellenism upon the Jewish population. Once the Maccabees were victorious anddefeated the Greeks, it was necessary to renew and redouble the efforts inJewish education. In fact, theHebrew word Chanukah shares the sameroot as chinuch, education.

One of thecomponents of education is providing pupils, especially those who are lessinclined, with rewards and incentives for their learning. Thus, duringChanukah, it is customary to give Chanukah geltto children as an incentive to increase in their Judaism and Torah study.

However, theconnection between education, Chanukah and Chanukah gelt goes much deeper.

When the Greeksoccupied Israel and entered the Holy Temple, part of their intention was toeradicate the concept of holiness and spirituality and place the emphasis onmateriality and hedonism. So rather than simply destroy the holy oil, theydefiled it, symbolizing their attempt to infuse Greek ideals into thelivesand very possessionsof the Jewish people.

Therefore,Chanukah represents our rejection of materiality for its own sake. The best wayto highlight the victory of the Maccabees and how the Jewish ideals triumphedis to impart the lesson that our material possessions, and especially our extraluxuries, are meant to be infused with a higher spiritual purpose.

Thus, when wegive Chanukah gelt, we both celebrateChanukah and teach the recipients to channel their material possessions towardspiritual ends. This is accomplished by teaching them the importance of givingat least 10% (maaser) of the money tocharity,as well as using the remainder for wholesome purposes.

Based on theabove, the Lubavitcher Rebbe emphasized that especially inthese times, when the challenges of education and materialism is so great, thisimportant lesson of Chanukah should not be limited to just one night but ratherevery night (except for Shabbat, when it can be given either before or afterShabbat). However, since the prevalent custom was to only give Chanukah gelt once, usually on the fourth orfifth night, and since if one gets the same reward repetitively it loses itseducational value, the Rebbe proposed giving a larger amount on the fourth orfifth night.

Since givinggifts every night is a means to educate our children, and part of the educationinvolves teaching children about giving a portion to charity, it isntnecessary that the gifts be large, but they should seemingly be actual monetary gifts.

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Must I Give Gifts Every Night of Chanukah? - Chabad.org

Vogue Editors Pick Their Best Movies of the Decade – Vogue

It's crazy to think that Black Swan came out in 2010, because it's legendary and iconic in my booksas though it's been around for decades. I still think it's one of Natalie Portman's best performances to date. And I die for Winona Ryder's role as a jealous, jaded ballerina (performance of the decade). Christian Allaire, fashion and style writer

For sheer cinematic virtuosity, I don't think anything in the last ten years can touch Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)the ultimate embodiment of Hitchcock's sentiment that a movie should be intelligible to the audience with the sound turned off. There were times while watching it when I literally couldn't believe what I was seeing, such was the gleeful intensity of the spectacleand the fact that director George Miller didn't gather an armful of Oscars for this totemic achievement only shows the Academy's raging bias against genre films, even when masterfully executed. Corey Seymour, senior features editor

The Souvenir (2019), Joanna Hoggs ruminative and largely autobiographical fourth feature film, tells two distinct, but not unrelated stories. Ones about a young woman in a harrowing on-again, off-again relationship with a dashing heroin addict; the others about that same young woman, a film student, discovering her voice as an artista journey that I found so deeply and personally moving, I spent the 20-minute walk from the theatre to my apartment absolutely dizzy with emotion. This was, for me, a decade rich with discoveryI turned 16 in 2010and Hogg spoke to that weird/banal, exciting/scary experience of figuring out what matters to you (and what you deserve) with a quiet (but no less powerful) authority. Marley Marius, features assistant

The German movie Hell (2011). I just love the apocalypse.Liana Satenstein, senior fashion news writer

For me, almost nine years later, it's still Nicolas Winding Refns style-over-substance Los Angeles noir-romance Drive. Isnt Drive crazily, gratuitously violent? Isnt Ryan Gosling as a taciturn stunt driver-hero little more than an emo, alpha-male clich? Is Carey Mulligan the least convincing working-class-L.A.-mom-with-a-convict-husband youve ever seen? Am I still in love with her? And with this ludicrously cool one-last-job-gone-wrong neon-lit thriller? Yes, yes, yes. Taylor Antrim, executive editor

I'm cheating: I'm picking four. I know that's not the point, but there are a few vectors of the decade in film that felt significant to me. First of all, Melancholia (2011) reflects the only part of the coming apocalypse I can feel smug about: having known it was coming all along, and submitting wearily to its companions, hedonism and emptiness. Watching Kirsten Dunst clomp around in a wedding dress as everyone else pretends everything is normal is the only fitting parallel to the hectic nature of our current moment. Then, there's Magic Mike: XXL (2015); much has been made of the current lustful moment, when women are more vocal about desire than they ever have been, and I believe MMXXL was what flipped the switch and permitted us to reveal the lust-addled natures we've nursed all along. On a completely different note, To All the Boys I've Loved Before soothed my eternal teen soul perfectly; as we've inched towards chaos, we've reached for simpler, lovelier things, like romantic comedies and Noah Centineo. Finally, The Farewell honors the kind of modest, tortuous, but quotidian fables we tell just to get by, and it broke my heart. Oh, wait, one more: Call Me By Your Name. Do I dare to eat a peach? Estelle Tang, senior culture editor*

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Vogue Editors Pick Their Best Movies of the Decade - Vogue

Una Mullally: With the end of Le Galaxie, the glow has gone out of Irish music – The Irish Times

Hello friends, its time to say goodbye. Weve completed LE GALAXIE. Its been a true pleasure to spend the last decade with you all. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts! Lots of love. Gotta go x.

Last week, the Irish band Le Galaxie signed off with a tweet accompanied by a snippet of their 2012 track Gotta Go from their EP Fade 2 Forever. The announcement was uncharacteristically low-key, especially coming from a band that used to end its live shows with the theme from Jurassic Park. It is the end of an era, not just for a band, but for the time they existed in.

On Friday night, the promising young Irish rock band Otherkin played their final show in Dublin.

The unfortunate reality is that life in a band these days is one of extreme highs and extreme lows, the band wrote in a statement explaining their end. Theres the elation after an amazing gig to the pressure of mounting bills, the pride of releasing music that youve laboured over for months to the deflation of struggling ticket sales. Its all in there and a band needs a lot of fuel in its tank to get through it. Some bands have more fuel than others and unfortunately, the day arrived where our fuel ran out.

Bands break up for all sorts of reasons. The band dynamic is a complex, intense, demanding, multi-way relationship placed under the constant strains of creative processes, creative differences, confined spaces, disconnection from place, family, partners and friends, poverty, clashing egos, the discombobulating stress of touring, exploitation, and the often destructive attempts at balancing the adrenaline high of live performance with the ensuing comedown.

The financial margins at most levels bar the top tiers of the modern music industry range from precarious to impossible. The creative, personal and financial investment not to mention time that is required to craft a song or an album is huge, and radically off-balance with the audiences consumption habits. Hunter S Thompsons assertion The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. Theres also a negative side remains true to some ways. Frame the darkness within the industry as something you can navigate, survive and excel in, and the rewards are there, if you can cope with them.

Le Galaxie emerged from the much more earnest 66e, and their debut album, Laserdisc Nights II, was released in 2011, in the depths of the recession. Before and after that, their live shows acted as a pressure valve for a generation under incredible strain. While going away drinks formed a considerable part of the social lives of people in their 20s and 30s, whose peer groups were disappearing to London, Canada, Australia, and Berlin, Le Galaxies gigs were an exercise in pausing reality. The misery and dourness of the recession created an undercurrent of hedonism and desire for relief and release. On Monday you lost your job, and on Saturday you were catching Le Galaxies glowsticks flung from a suitcase into the crowd.

My friends and I went to Le Galaxie shows to forget what was happening around us. I couldnt begin to count the number of people I danced with at their shows who no longer live here. Their festival shows were famous for guaranteeing a good time. But strip away the high-octane stage performances and concert in-jokes of waving signs declaring TUNE along with those glowsticks, and youre left with the music. With their subsequent albums, Le Club and Pleasure, Le Galaxie reached for and achieved something many artists spend a lifetime attempting: they found their own voice, their own sound, their own aesthetic, their own tone. Like most contemporary art, it was deeply and delightfully referential, and it was also sophisticated, fun, serious, and really quite brilliant. They will always be another band that could and should have been huge, but stars tend to scatter as much as they align.

The queer community, especially, responded to Le Galaxies sweaty group hug. In them, we found kindred spirits as a community well used to working out our tensions and relieving the daily grind on dancefloors. The band threw themselves into the marriage equality movement, including playing an epic fundraising party at the Academy in Dublin called Love System, more than a year before the referendum.

Le Galaxie often said that their band would not exist without Fight Like Apes, the groundbreaking and stage-trashing band led by the artist MayKay, which turned the Irish music scene on its head. It made sense then, that in their orbit of guest vocalists (such as the brilliant Elaine Mai), that MayKay eventually became a fully fledged member of the band, as Le Galaxie doubled down on magnetic front-leadership.

In some ways, bands are an exercise in hope. They are an exercise in living differently. Anyone can get a job. It takes a much more ambitious, enlivened and resilient spirit to be an artist. To live an artistic and genuinely creative (not faux-creative as in the advertising and tech industries endless attempts at kidnapping the word) life is often seen by those unfamiliar with such pursuits as juvenile, trivial, mockable, reckless. Thats probably because leading an artistic life is also a threat. It threatens conventions, capitalism and conservatism. It prioritises expression over economics, and creativity over capital. Bands, and the eras within which they exist, end, but the art is the real residue, along with the glorious attempt to create it.

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Una Mullally: With the end of Le Galaxie, the glow has gone out of Irish music - The Irish Times

Book Review: Stoned by Jo Wood captures a unique time and a side to the Stones that’s rarely seen – the AU review

Stoned, is a collection of images that have never been seen before by the general public. Consisting of over five hundred photographs, notes, artwork, newspaper clippings and other ephemera put together by Jo Wood documenting life behind the scenes of The Rolling Stones.

Photographer and hoarder (thankfully) Jo Wood has kept thousands of polaroids and rolls of film. These, coupled with personal anecdotes, make up the bulk of the book, and show just how much shes loved her life with husband Ronnie, and life on the road. It makes making life with a rockstar seem almost perfect.

But Stoned isnt just about her time touring with her ex-husbands band. Rather, it takes us through her full-on life from early teens, to meeting Ronnie, as well as the good, bad, and oodles of luggage that comes with touring. Life has definitely been hectic for the Wood family and never appears to be dull.

The book brings together an amazing collection of photographs detailing life on and off the road. Its not just photos of the band in action, but also a snapshot of the period. Its an insight into not only the immediate members of The Stones, but also the girlfriends, children, parents and pets too.

To an extent the book also shows how the industry has changed. Certainly, touring life in the 1970s and 1980s was very different from todays touring. These days the tours are much more organised. By the 1990s the shows became a production with handbooks given out to all staff.

Each chapter begins with an anecdote or story, followed by the photographs. The main bulk is from the 1980s. After that there arent as many photos or discussion. This is perhaps due to Jo and Ronnies separation, which isnt really mentioned, or perhaps its being kept for a follow-up. This means it goes from hedonism and partying practically straight to the end of the book. Its a bit of an abrupt end.Ultimately though, this book captures a unique time and a side to the Stones thats rarely seen.

Jo Woods Stoned: Photographs & Treasures from life with the Rolling Stonesis available now through Hachette Australia.

I'm mad about going to great gigs, travelling around Australia and reading a good book. I adore animals, catching up with friends and family and I think Australia is the best country on earth!

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Book Review: Stoned by Jo Wood captures a unique time and a side to the Stones that's rarely seen - the AU review

Integrity in our polity – The Nation Newspaper

By Abdulwarees Solanke

Every responsible government acts in the interest of the public, as whatever a government chooses to do or not to do is the open definition of public policy.

Today, we blame our government and the leadership for every ill that plagues our land, expecting it to act with dispatch in public interest. Yet, if the government must act with the urgency and intensity we expect, it must necessarily abridge the diverse and often conflicting vested interests that have limited our ability to reach our full national potentials.

Therefore, it most step not only on the mighty cancerous toes causing extreme pains in our body polity, but also crush the feeble viral fingers of susceptible criminal toddlers.

The problem with our nation is the erosion of a national culture built on integrity, defined as an unimpaired character that stands public scrutiny demonstrated by a well-ordered private and public life devoid moral or material corruptibility.

When integrity is asphyxiated in any polity, the essence of public service is lost as hedonism and pursuit of vested interests take over the instinct of virtually every stakeholder.

We all lament that our constitution is deficient in certain areas and advocate that our nation must be guided by the rule of law. Yet we are not united around the core value of integrity that needs to be addressed for the protection of our collective national interest.

We all cry for national rebirth or reform without appreciating the depth integrity deficit in our national polity.

There are three dimensions to the compromise of this core value in Nigeria: Abdication of public service, professionalization and desecration of politics and celebration of corruption. The sin of abdication of public service is a product of desecration of the noble art of politics and condoning of corruption in public and private life in the country.

In 1925, Mahatma Gandhi, the man Indians deify as father of the nation illustrated these vices as politics without principle, wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity and worship without sacrifice.

Our nation rates very high in all these disturbing indices, needing serious and collective intervention. In discreet and practical terms, our government must make fundamental decisions that would produce radical changes in our culture of disdain. There is optimism that the various reform initiatives of the government will manifestly address these issues.

At the street level however, the understanding of reform is withdrawal of rights and privileges and curtailment of freedoms.

Therefore, it induces trepidation and rejection. Yes, reform may seem punitive (and of cause would block some vested interests), its longer term goals and objectives are to ensure equilibrium in the society by expanding access to national wealth, ensuring provision of public goods and services and guaranteeing protection of life and properties of all citizens.

The kind of urgency we want the government to address as indeed the accumulated challenges demands the initiation and pursuit of radical reform policies that must definitely inconvenience many interest groups in implementation.

They will manifest in rigid state control, seeming over-regulation of public life with strong monitoring, compliance and deterrence strategies of enforcement that look punitive in outlook.

But we cannot in a world of democracy and human rights afford official high-handedness and return to a police-state. Without being overly prescriptive, what our nation needs in this difficult moment is the regulation our public life in a manner that does not cause extreme dislocation, nor induce shock and glut.

Since our first sin in Nigeria is the abdication of public service, we need a restoration of pride in public service through consolidation and alignment of the public sector with recognition, empowerment and reward of bureaucrats and technocrats who are invaluable to national growth and development but have suffered a high degree of de-motivation and insecurity in the recent past.

The pursuit of our national reform project must be real and tangible in its criminalization of corruption in all its ramifications.

It must of cause seek to de-professionalize political offices, but ensure that only citizens with impeccable record in public and private sector management are attracted into politics to continue to serve with integrity.

The seed of our national reform should be sown in benchmarking our national core value on this vital index of good governance. Our reform agenda should the capable of exorcising the nation of the cardinal sins illustrated by Mahatma Gandhi.

In assuming public office and conducting public affairs, we must adhere to the seven principles of public life known as the Nolan Principles: These are selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership.

Reforming Nigeria is a hydra-headed challenge, demanding a 360 Degree attention to reach our Canaan. We must acknowledge and respect the genuine agitations of many Nigerians on the future of our country. But such agitations and expressions will be meaningless without addressing the fundamental issue of evolving a national culture built on integrity.

This should be our beacon as we engage ourselves in the subject of national rebirth or reform. Its gonna be Not business as usual. The critical and urgent nature of the reform agenda however demands a correct appreciation of the mass media in Nigeria as providing public service.

The existence of trust between the government and the press or the fourth estate of the realm, and its involvement at every phase of the policy process will smoothen our ride along the difficult path of reform and inspire our preparedness for change. After all, Allah does not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.

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Integrity in our polity - The Nation Newspaper

The Spaceship of the Imagination Makes Spirits Bright – Nashville Scene

Personally, I identify with the Grinch. And yet, I find these waning weeks of December particularly festive if for no other reason than they signal that the whole crass consumerist schmegegge of Christmas is on its way out. In spite of all that, local seasonal synth ensemble The Spaceship of the Imaginations annual untraditional take on the Christmas pageant was an apt reminder theres an undeniable joy lurking beneath the hype. This years cast and crew offered quite possibly the most lit time to be had inside a church outside of Kanye Wests Sunday Service.

Though the synth-band-turned-performance-troupe doesnt have an affiliation with Trinity United Methodist Church, this is the third year that the sanctuary (through its Trinity Community Commons program) has hosted local piano man, keyboard wiz and SOTI orchestrator Matt Rowland and his Carl Sagan-inspired group. This years production, whose opening night I saw Thursday, marks the 11th year Rowland has convened his group. Hes assembled an increasingly more elaborate cast of familiar faces from the various local arts and music scenes. They pooled their talents for yet another absurdist, slightly psychedelic and wholly entertaining original stage production.

I unfortunately missed last years epic multimedia showcase Krampus Gone Wild which I understand included multiple green-screen sequences. This year, the technology was dialed way back, but the production (with a cast and crew of 28) wasnt poorer for it. Many of the players doubled as puppeteers something Werner Herzog might be proud of expanding the cast to something like 35 characters as the black-clad crew of stagehands hustled diligently between scenes to swap out sets. For the first time, the vast majority of the music was original compositions. There were literally no dull moments in this impressive three-hour opus (complete with intermission, of course).

Jessica Claus, Frosty the Snowman and Aurora the Polar BearPhoto: Laura E. Partain

This years show, Ms. Claus Saves Christmas, picks up after Krampus Gone Wild. As the show opens, we find Santas former wife Jessica Claus (ace singer Keshia Bailey), still recovering from their split and trying to put her life back together in her hometown of Paducah, Ky., aka The Pitiful Pad or The Dirty Ducah, after 150-odd years at the North Pole. Meanwhile, the half-goat, half-demon European folk legend Krampus (Seth Pomeroy, a pillar of Nashvilles stand-up and sketch comedy scene) had indeed gone wild, abandoning the now-canceled Christmas holiday in favor of an eternal summer of reckless hedonism.

The world mourns the loss, while Krampus, conspiring with his sidekick and hype-man Elfy and a couple of suits from Coca-Cola, embarks on a rap career. (The beats are genuinely dope, while Krampus bars are good-bad on an MST3K level and delivered with pitch-perfect swaggering gusto.) Soon, its clear that it will be up to Ms. C. and a lovable, ragtag group of North Pole loyalists a pair of reindeer, a couple gung-ho elves, a polar bear, an adorable snow couple to get Christmas back on track.

Was the production flawless? Nah. Acting styles meshed with mixed success, lines were flubbed, marks were missed and character was often broken by fits of laughter. But when a cast is having this much fun onstage, the spirit is infectious, which is ultimately the point. Rowland and his electro quartet laid an increasingly mean and funky flavor on traditional holiday tunes, and the show culminated in a candle-lit, audience-participatory chorus of Silent Night.

As a curmudgeonly holiday hater, I felt a little tricked as I found myself holding a tiny flame inside a church while swaying to a classic carol. However, with my face still sore from laughing through most of the last few hours, how could I gripe in the wake of this inspiringly DIY spectacle and wholly Nashville tradition? The Spaceship of the Imagination has landed on a universal translation of the holiday spirit. They continue to subvert any superficial or moral objections with an undeniably fun and impressive expression of goodwill.

You've got two more chances to see the show, tonight and Saturday. Tickets are $20 and available in advance. Below, check out photos from opening night by Laura E. Partain.

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The Spaceship of the Imagination Makes Spirits Bright - Nashville Scene

Kaboom! The Biggest Space Bloopers of 2019 – Space.com

Spaceflight is hard, and sometimes things don't go to plan. But by looking at past missions and learning from their mistakes, we can make future missions all the better. The year 2019 had a few major "lessons learned" for entities all around the world.

From difficulties landing on the moon, to a few rocket explosions, engineers definitely had some new things to think about for the next time.

Related: The Greatest Spaceflight Moments of 2019

Iran experienced its fair share of rocket failures in 2019. In January, the third stage of a rocket called Simorgh did not reach its "necessary speed" to successfully heft the Payam satellite into its planned orbit, Telecommunications Minister Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi told AP News.

In February, satellite images from company DigitalGlobe showed an Iranian satellite called Doosti ("Friendship" in Persian) likely launched, but multiple sources suggested it did not make it safely to orbit. Then in August, more satellite imagery from Planet showed a rocket that had apparently exploded on the pad, in footage that was first shared exclusively with NPR.

This nation had an extraordinarily productive late 2019, when (among many other milestones) it successfully launched two rockets in three hours from different launch sites and two rockets in six hours from the same launch area. But there were some mistakes along the way.

Chinese private company OneSpace had a launch failure in March 2019 that was later attributed to a gyroscope issue. In May, a Long March 4C rocket from the Chinese government failed during launch, due to an issue with the rocket's third stage. An August launch of a Long March 3B rocket appeared to go well at first, but then its main payload the Chinasat 18 satellite failed to communicate with Earth.

In April of this year, Israel aimed for the moon with a novel lander called Beresheet built by the private group SpaceIL. The probe, which launched Feb. 21 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, was poised to become the first privately built moon lander to softly set down on the lunar surface. But when it arrived at the moon on April 11, something went wrong.

Instead of landing safely on the moon's Sea of Serenity, Beresheet missed its landing burn and crashed into the lunar surface instead. Despite the failure, SpaceIL has vowed to build a new Beresheet and return to the moon in the mid-2020s.

An engine test of SpaceX's Crew Dragon, which will eventually bring astronauts to the International Space Station, did not go to plan on April 20. Local media reports and images showed a huge plume of smoke emanating from the test site.

"Earlier today, SpaceX conducted a series of engine tests on a Crew Dragon test vehicle on our test stand at Landing Zone 1 in Cape Canaveral, Florida," a company spokesperson told Space.com in a statement. "The initial tests completed successfully, but the final test resulted in an anomaly on the test stand." A leaky valve and faulty component were later found to be the causes of the fire.

SpaceX has since fixed the problem and performed a series of successful ground tests of Crew Dragon's abort system. The company will launch an uncrewed In-Flight Abort test flight no earlier than Jan. 11, and aims to begin flying people to the space station in 2020.

French company Arianespace experienced a major anomaly in July when its Vega rocket, carrying the United Arab Emirates' FalconEye1 satellite, failed to get the rocket or the satellite safely into space. In September, the European Space Agency said that the Z23 motor which powers the second stage of the rocket was the cause.

"The commission identified the anomaly's most likely cause as a thermo-structural failure in the forward dome area of the Z23 motor," ESA wrote In a statement. Vega will most likely return to flight in 2020 once corrective action is taken to stop the failure from happening again, the agency added.

On Sept. 6, the India Chandrayaan-2 moon lander Vikram made a descent to the moon then stopped communicating with Earth.

The Indian Space Research Organisation spent more than two months trying to find the little lander, before determining that it had indeed crashed on the surface. The suspected cause is an issue with the braking thrusters, which were supposed to slow down Vikram during its last few feet before soft-landing. Vikram instead "hard landed" within view of its landing site.

The InSight Mars lander experienced a number of issues trying to get its drill deep enough into the Martian surface to look at heat flow on the Red Planet.

During several attempts, the "mole" got stuck because the regolith (soil) was harder than expected. At one point, the mole even popped out of the hole. Engineers eventually hit upon the idea of using a robotic arm to pin the drill against the soil during penetration.

As of late December, the mole is moving under the surface again.

An Exos Aerospace suborbital sounding rocket (which flies into the upper atmosphere) failed during a launch attempt on Oct. 26. The Suborbital Autonomous Rocket with GuidancE (SARGE) rocket's mission ended after the launch attempt at Spaceport America in New Mexico.

The problem was later traced to the failure of a part underneath the nose cone; the nose cone fell back into the rocket and the rocket's trajectory veered beyond recovery.

Starship Mk1 had an anomaly in November, blowing its top during a cryogenic pressure test at SpaceX's facilities near the South Texas village of Boca Chica.

SpaceX plans to move to more advanced prototypes of Starship rather than repairing and retesting this particular one, CEO Elon Musk said in a tweet. These prototypes are forming part of the testing program for Starship, which is expected to bring astronauts into deep space (including Mars) in the coming years.

SpaceX was already building a second Starship prototype, the Mk2, in Florida. After the Mk1 anomaly, the company decided to put its resources behind the construction of a third new prototype, the Mk3, at its Boca Chica test site.

Like SpaceX, Boeing has a NASA contract to fly eventually fly astronauts on trips to the International Space Station. To do that, Boeing has built a new space capsule, called the CST-100 Starliner, which is designed to launch into orbit on an Atlas V rocket, dock itself at the station and return to Earth to make a land-based landing with parachutes and airbags.

On Dec. 20, Boeing launched the first Starliner test flight to the International Space Station, but the uncrewed mission never made it to its destination. A mission clock error caused the Starliner to think it was in a later part of its mission, leading the spacecraft to use propellant it vitally needed for the trip to the station. In the end, Starliner's clock error and a communications issue forced Boeing to abandon hopes of reaching the space station. The planned eight-day mission was cut to just three, with Starliner returning to Earth and landing successfully.

While Starliner successfully launched and landed, its failure to reach the space station has NASA and Boeing discussing whether another uncrewed test flight will be required before astronauts can start flying on the spacecraft in 2020.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Kaboom! The Biggest Space Bloopers of 2019 - Space.com

‘I Can’t Wait to Try It Out’: Starliner’s 1st Riders Welcome Capsule Back to Earth – Space.com

Perhaps nobody was more excited to see Boeing's first Starliner spacecraft touch down safely yesterday (Dec. 22) than Mike Fincke, Nicole Mann and Chris Ferguson.

Those three astronauts will fly the first crewed Starliner mission, a demonstration flight to the International Space Station (ISS) that's targeted to launch sometime next year. And yesterday morning's landing at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, which wrapped up Starliner's two-day, uncrewed Orbital Flight Test (OFT), brought that upcoming trip a little closer.

"Three parachutes, six airbags and a beautiful soft landing," Fincke said yesterday from White Sands, where he, fellow NASA astronaut Mann and Boeing's Ferguson had gathered to watch the touchdown. "I can't wait to try it out."

Related: Boeing's 1st Starliner Flight Test in Photos

OFT launched early Friday morning (Dec. 20) on a planned eight-day mission that was supposed to feature a docking with the ISS. But Starliner suffered an error with its onboard timing system, which manifested soon after liftoff. As a result, the capsule was not able to perform the engine burn required to send it on its way to the orbiting lab.

Launch and landing went well, however, and the reusable capsule was able to notch a number of other milestones during its 48 hours in space, noted Ferguson, a former NASA astronaut himself.

"Awesome conclusion to the first Starliner mission. Landed within a few hundred meters of target. Systems checked out very well. No dock.... but many flight test objectives complete. This was a great @BoeingSpace day!" he said via Twitter yesterday.

During a press conference held Friday shortly after launch, both Fincke and Mann said the timing anomaly didn't worry them. The issue wasn't a dangerous one, the astronauts said. And they added that, had crewmembers been aboard, they could have troubleshot the timing issue and gotten Starliner on the proper path to the ISS manually.

"We are looking forward to flying on Starliner," Mann said Friday. "We don't have any safety concerns."

NASA's Commercial Crew Program has funded the development of both Starliner and SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule, in an effort to return an orbital human spaceflight capability to American soil. Since NASA's space shuttle fleet was retired in July 2011, the nation has been dependent on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get its astronauts to and from the orbiting lab.

Crew Dragon aced its version of OFT, a six-day uncrewed mission called Demo-1, this past March. SpaceX is now prepping for a critical in-flight test of the capsule's emergency escape system on Jan. 11. A crewed test flight to the ISS would then follow for the California-based company.

It's unclear when Starliner will be cleared to carry Fincke, Mann and Ferguson up on their demo mission, which is called Crew Flight Test (CFT). It will take a while for the NASA and Boeing teams to go through all the data from OFT, at which point a decision will be made whether to go ahead with CFT or launch another uncrewed mission that actually makes it to the ISS.

And whenever CFT gets off the ground, this particular Starliner won't be involved. The newly returned capsule will be prepped for Boeing's first contracted, operational mission. That flight will be commanded by NASA astronaut Suni Williams, who revealed yesterday that the flight-proven Starliner now has a name: "Calypso."

Mike Wall's book about the search for alien life, "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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'I Can't Wait to Try It Out': Starliner's 1st Riders Welcome Capsule Back to Earth - Space.com