Can Trump’s Religious Freedom Ambassador Actually Succeed? – Foreign Policy (blog)

If confirmed by the Senate to serve as the next U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom, Kansas Governor Sam Brownback will face a daunting trifecta of challenges: Recent data from Pew Research Center reveals that religious persecution is on the rise, Americas image is in decline, and global majorities view President Donald Trump as arrogant, dangerous, and intolerant.

When it comes to religious tolerance, a skeptical world doesnt believe America practices what it preaches.

Unsurprisingly, at the release of the State Departments annual report on religion freedom last week, journalists peppered a senior State Department official with questions about how high-minded rhetoric on the importance of religious freedom abroad squares with Trumps promise to prioritize Christian refugees, his efforts to enact a so-called Muslim ban, silence in response to increased attacks against American Muslims, conflicting views on Russia, and enhanced security cooperation with religiously repressive Saudi Arabia.

And yet, despite the presidents many blunders on religion-related issues, there are signs of a more conventional and constructive focus on religious freedom at the State Department. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson appeared at the religious freedom report rollout and gave solid remarks, offering solidarity with a wide range of persecuted groups notably including Turkish Alevis, Chinese Uighurs, Pakistani Ahmadiyya, Saudi Shia, and other minority Muslim communities. The administration has retained Knox Thames, the special advisor for religious minorities in the Middle East and South/Central Asia. And most significantly, the administration has nominated a highly qualified, highly respected religious freedom ambassador.

During his many years in Congress, in the House and then Senate, Brownback was a well-known champion of religious freedom and myriad humanitarian causes. His nomination has been praised by a wide spectrum of religious leaders and religious freedom advocates including some who have been intensely critical of Trump.

The Trump administration is also to be commended for the relative speed of the Brownback nomination. Whereas President George W. Bush took eight months to nominate his religious freedom envoy and Barack Obama took 17, Trumps selection took just six months.

But many things Trump has said and done in the early months of his young presidency will complicate Brownbacks already difficult job. If the religious freedom report press conference was any indication, he is likely to be dogged by questions about the administrations credibility on religious freedom issues.

Here, I put forward five concrete recommendations for addressing specific challenges Brownback will face as Trumps religious freedom ambassador.

1. Emphasize early and often that religious freedom is a universal principle, not identity politics. Everyone from atheists to Zoroastrians is entitled to the same protection to peacefully practice and promote their beliefs.

Thankfully, Brownback has a strong track record of upholding the universality of religious liberty, as does the State Department office he will lead. Brownback should forcefully resist any pressure to prioritize Christians or to give short shrift to other groups.

2. Especially reassure and defend vulnerable Muslims. Muslims are the primary victims of terrorism, they suffer severe repression in places like China and Myanmar, and they face far greater social hostility than socially conservative Christians in Europe and North America.

From candidate Trumps call for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States to his insistence on using the unhelpful phrase radical Islamic terrorism to his refusal to host the traditional White House iftar, this administration has severely strained Americas relationship with the worlds 1.6 billion Muslims.

Brownback can help to repair some of the damage by meeting regularly with Muslim groups, speaking at their conferences, visiting their holy sites, calling out governments that mistreat their Muslim populations, condemning acts of terror targeting Muslims, and being forthright about Americas own struggle with Islamophobia.

3. Communicate the value of religious liberty in language that appeals across the ideological and theological spectrum. At home and abroad, the very term religious freedom is increasingly viewed as a partisan, sectarian rallying cry as a front for a Christian nationalist agenda.

Brownback need not drop the phrase religious freedom entirely it will be in his official title after all but he can help to broaden the lingo of the movement he will serve. In Europe and in multilateral settings, the standard phrase is freedom of religion or belief, which more explicitly expands the concept and the cause to include people with nonreligious beliefs. Other terms like belief rights, soul liberty, and freedom of conscience get at more or less the same thing in less politicized ways.

Framing the issue around social inclusion, minority rights, and protection of sacred sites can also help to open productive conversations on the importance of respecting religious pluralism.

4. Champion democracy and the full range of human rights. Rarely does a government make isolated progress on one discreet human right, such as religious freedom. All rights are interconnected, mutually reinforcing elements of good governance. The rising tide of liberal democracy lifts the boats of all human rights.

Thus, the apparent lack of emphasis on democracy and human rights in America First foreign policy is worrisome for U.S. religious freedom diplomacy. Brownback will be more effective in advancing religious freedom if he is surrounded by a strong and collegial team of senior and mid-level officials advocating human rights and democracy. He can use his position to press the administration to fill and empower other vital human rights positions, most critically the assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights, and labor, and the special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism.

5. Defend and collaborate with the State Departments Office of Religion and Global Affairs. Just as religious freedom is only one of many human rights, its also just one of many issues at the intersection of faith and foreign affairs. Thats why in 2013, after several years of internal and external lobbying, the State Department created an office devoted to it.

Now, under the Trump administration, there are concerns that the office could be bureaucratically sidelined. If it is, the State Department would lose an important mechanism for analyzing and advising on global religiopolitical dynamics and for equipping the U.S. diplomatic corps to more effectively engage faith-based communities on a broad range of shared goals, from promoting peace to combating corruption.

Religious freedom is just one small part of American foreign policy, but given Brownbacks political prominence and religious freedoms significance to Trumps constituency, Brownback will likely become a major force in Trumps diplomacy. His task will be to make American religious freedom advocacy credible again.

Photo credit: ALEX WONG/Getty Images

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Can Trump's Religious Freedom Ambassador Actually Succeed? - Foreign Policy (blog)

China’s bid to block my journal’s articles is a new attack on academic freedom – The Guardian

The furore that followed CUPs compliance with an instruction from a Chinese import agency made one thing very clear. Academic freedom remains the absolute core concern. Photograph: Antonio Olmos for the Observer

The international furore that followed Cambridge University Presss compliance with an instruction from a Chinese import agency to block individual articles from China Quarterly made one thing very clear. Academic freedom remains the absolute core concern of scholars all over the world.

This morning I met CUP officials and conveyed the message in forthright terms: the 315 articles that the academic publisher had removed from its internet portals in China should be re-posted as soon as possible and made available free of charge. At no point did China Quarterly, which I edit, consent to removal of the articles and we are delighted at CUPs reversal of thedecision.

The ideological constraints on academic freedom under Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang appear to be policy-driven

As a researcher of labour relations in China for 20 years, I have grown accustomed to the shifting boundaries of what is and is not possible. The first decade of Chinas going out this century was marked by an increase in public engagement and an expansion of research. Partnerships between Chinese and international universities were forged. The opportunities for creating new knowledge, a lofty-sounding but nevertheless key goal of academic research, blossomed.

For sure, Chinese partners still faced constraints. And non-Chinese academics researching sensitive areas such as Xinjiang and Tibet, human rights, or the tragic end to the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 had visas denied and fieldwork hampered or blocked.

But these were nevertheless exciting times to be an academic working on China. They were accompanied by an equally important expansion in environmental movements, labour campaigns and gender equality, and the appearance of a courageous cohort of lawyers prepared to work on human rights cases.

An important outcome of the increased opportunities for academic exchanges was access to information. The numbers of non-Chinese able to access and read Chinese-language materials increased. The numbers of Chinese able to access non-Chinese materials inevitably, and unfortunately, it is mainly in English has exploded. This has had a positive impact on Chinese scholarship published in both languages.

China Quarterly has been run from Soas, University of London, for more than 50 years, and I have been fortunate to come into contact with some of the worlds leading academics working on China. In the first years of the new millennium the internet emerged as a powerful research tool, and authoritarian government in China was reconfiguring itself as pragmatic, innovative and open to non-Communist party voices. But this scholarship is now under threat.

The previous era of relative openness was qualified by targeted repression of those who crossed party-defined boundaries, such as Liu Xiaobo, who died in prison earlier this year. He was sentenced for his part in the pro-democracy manifesto Charter 08.

The now re-posted articles had gone through a rigorous double-blind peer-review process and represent some of the best contributions to new knowledge on China. Some of the authors are globally renowned scholars, others are early-career academics. Access to such research has hugely enriched Chinese scholarship, just as scholarship outside China has been hugely enriched by the response of Chinas academic community to this work.

This attempt to deny access might just might be the result of over-reach by Chinese censorship bodies such as the recently created General Administration of Press and Publication. But I fear it is the outcome of a much stronger shade of authoritarian government that excludes voices from outside the party-led system. The evidence of new regulatory, and apparently ideological, constraints on academic freedom and public engagement in China that have emerged since 2012 under the leadership of Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang suggest that the parlous state of affairs with regard to academic freedom is policy-driven. What is unprecedented is that itsreach has now stretched to international institutions such as Cambridge University Press.

The key criteria for publication in our journal will not change academic rigour and contribution to new knowledge. The topics we publish will not take into account the political sensitivities of any government. And as editor, I will work harder than ever to disseminate our articles as widely as possible.

Tim Pringle is a senior lecturer in development studies at Soas, University of London, and editor of China Quarterly

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China's bid to block my journal's articles is a new attack on academic freedom - The Guardian

Robert Pattinson: Revelling in the freedom of chaos – CBS News

ROBERT PATTINSON cut his teeth, as it were, on the "Twilight" series of vampire films. These days he's deep into a very different sort of role, and trading questions-and-answers with Michelle Miller:

If you had to fall in love with a vampire, you could do worse than the one played by Robert Pattinson, as Edward Cullen in the mega-hit "Twilight" series.

Pattinson fought, kissed, and glowered his way to superstardom. And like so many teen idols before him, he's been trying to shake that image ever since.

"It's not like, 'Oh, I'll come down from an ivory tower to be ' I mean, these movies are hard for me to get. Literally, I'm just as much trying to convince people, like, every single time. And it's not like I'm, like, Leo [diCaprio] or something!"

"So it's tough for you?" Miller asked.

"The only thing that being famous really helps in is getting financing if your movies make a lot of money," he said. "And, like, the movies I do are weird, and they don't make a lot of money a lot of the time!"

Perhaps that's why on a Thursday afternoon in August, Miller met up with the now-31-year-actor at, of all places, a jail in Queens, New York, where he went to do research for his new film, "Good Time." "I tried to get permission to stay overnight for a few days. But yeah, the prison's commissioner was saying it's too dangerous, even if you're in protective custody." he said.

Robert Pattinson with correspondent Michelle Miller.

CBS News

If he's all but unrecognizable in the role, that's by design.

"I think so much of life people are trying to put you in a box and define you all the time," he told Miller. "And it's just exciting to have a job where you're allowed to consistently break the walls of the box around you."

Robert Pattinson in the Safdie Brothers' "Good Time."

A24

That desire to break free is one reason he reached out to brothers Josh and Benny Safdie (directors of "Heaven Knows What"), hoping to work with them. "My initial thought was, 'He's not right for this other project we're trying to do," Josh told Miller.

Despite their initial misgivings, they discovered -- as millions of fans have there's just something about Pattinson. So they put their other projects on hold, and wrote this film especially for him.

"I was very aware of what Rob was doing with his career choices," said Josh Safdie. "I thought that his conviction, as an actor's purpose, wasn't a commercial one, in a weird way."

Benny Safdie said Pattinson was searching for something: "He was after a greater purpose."

When Miller sat down with Pattinson on the set of the film, he admitted he's still a little ambivalent about his success as an actor: "My main thing, which is what I've always had the fear of since I started acting, is that everyone's just going to see through it and just see, 'You're just some kid from London!'" he laughed. "So you always think, people are just going to see though whatever character you make."

Left: Robert Pattinson with Guy Pearce in "The Rover." Center: "The Childhood of a Leader." Right: "The Lost City of Z."

A24/IFC Films/Bleecker Street

Born in London, Robert Douglas Thomas Pattinson is the youngest of three children. His father, Richard, imported vintage cars. His mother, Clare, worked for a modeling agency.

He started acting by accident: "One of the plays one year, all the tall people left [the company], and I was the only one tall enough to, like, play this role! And then [I] ended up getting an agent from that. And it kind of spiraled."

"You were lucky," said Miller.

"Very, very, very lucky! And then you have to kind spend the rest of the your life sort of trying to come to terms with why you were lucky! But I still haven't really figured that out yet!"

"But you know what luck is -- when preparation meets opportunity."

"Yeah. I feel like I had it the other way 'round though! I had the opportunity and then kind of built up to, you know, just sort of worked for itafterthe opportunity."

Case in point: After his breakthrough role as the handsome yet doomed Cedric Diggory in 2005's "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," Pattinson says he struggled to find work.

"I'd been living off Harry Potter money for ages," he said. "I'd blown all of that! And then I didn't realize you had to pay taxes at the time. So I was completely broke and then got a big tax bill. I loved my agent in America, and so I came over and tried to get a job."

The job he got in the "Twilight" series was the role of a lifetime. The result: fame, fortune, and the neverending glare of the spotlight.

His on-screen chemistry turned into an off-screen romance, and subsequent breakup, with co-star Kristen Stewart in 2013 -- every twist and turn played out in the tabloids. (Even the future president weighed in with, what else, a tweet.)

And that media attention hasn't let up on his latest relationship, with British pop star FKA Twigs (a.k.a. Tahliah Debrett Barnett) -- despite efforts to keep his personal life off-limits.

"I'm quite an open person," he said. "I don't want to be one of those people who's just like, 'Oh, no comment,' 'cause I just think you just look like an idiot if you're in it. But then the annoying thing happens as well, then you answer in these kind of vague ways which kind of create these weird conspiracy theorists."

"You think people put that much thought into it?" Miller asked.

"The average person would never be aware of it," Pattinson said. "But it's, like, literally, if you come into contact with me, you will touch this demon. I don't know how to deal with it. And so I thought in a way to kind of stop feeding it, you just try and say 'I don't wanna talk about it.' And also, it kind of makes you feel like that's the only way you can get some kind of strength."

It doesn't hurt that he took roles in a string of smaller independent films that offered a break from the blockbuster limelight. These days, Pattinson says he gets a kick out of just walking down the street without being mobbed by fans. "You realize what makes you comfortable or uncomfortable, and you just kind of stay out of the places that make you uncomfortable."

By all measures, Robert Pattinson -- a little older, a litter wiser -- is exactly where he wants to be:

"And if someone says, like, 'I like you 'cause you did this thing,' well, then it's like, 'Well, I wanna do the opposite thing.' I want to be able to have the freedom to do something else, mainly 'cause I feel like I don't fully know myself yet.

"And I so I don't want someone to say, 'Well, this is who you are. Well, if you don't know yourself, we'll tell you who you are.' Like, I want to kind of remain in that chaos a little bit."

To watch a trailer for "Good Time" click on the video player below.

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Robert Pattinson: Revelling in the freedom of chaos - CBS News

Freedom Town Column: Coloring book featuring local artist nearly sold out – Conway Daily Sun

The art work of Freedoms professional and amateur artists, as well as that of local children that was put into a coloring book by the Freedom Village Store, is almost sold out. There are 23 left. The store will not be doing another production run so if you have not gotten your copy, you better do it soon, before they are all sold out!

South Eaton Meetinghouse will be hosting a special program featuring Maestro George Wiese and friends Tuesday, Aug. 22, at 6 p.m. This skilled graduate of the Juilliard School of Music will entertain and delight you with the history and nuances of the beautiful rebuilt Woods & Co. reed organ at the meetinghouse, and will play a wide array if music created and adapted for reed organ. There is suggested donation of $10. The South Eaton Meeting House is located on the corner of Towle Hill and Burnham Roads. For more information, go to southeatonmeetinghouse.com or email semh1844@outlook.com.

Camp Huckins Family Weekend is being held on Sept. 8-10. This is a getaway weekend at Camp Huckins with a special rate for Freedom families. Call now to reserve your space as there are only a few cabins left. Families stay together in one cabin and participate in camp activities. Meals included two cookouts and other meals will be served at the Camp Huckins Dining Hall. One family member must be a resident of Freedom to receive special sliding fee scale (family of four) additional family members $10. Tier one is $50, tier 2 is $75 and tier 3 is $125. Choose the tier that best suits your family. To register, call the Camp Huckins office at (603) 539-4710.

Ernie has started raising turkeys for Thanksgiving. If you are interested in getting one, you should contact Ernie now at ernieday@roadrunner.com or call him at (603) 539 3604. He has a very limited supply.

Your local Kennett High football player has Gold Cards for sale. The cost is $20 and the cards give discounts at Dunkin Donuts, Burger King, McDonalds, Elvio's, Subway, Beef and Ski, Wicked Fresh, Jalisco's, D'Angelo's, Shalimar, Friendly's, Flatbread, Black Cap, Applebee's, Ben and Jerry's, Almost There Tavern, Horsefeathers, Starbucks, the Met, Seadogs, McGrath's, Twombly's Market, Dairy Queen and Margarita Grill. The cards can be used over and over and over again and last for one year. Don't forget to pick up one, or several. They are only available for a short time.

Lisa Wheeler can be contacted at wheelersinfreedom@roadrunner.com.

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Freedom Town Column: Coloring book featuring local artist nearly sold out - Conway Daily Sun

Aligning American Foreign Policy to Protect Religious Freedom – Human Rights First (blog)

On TuesdaySecretary of State Rex Tillerson delivered a speech to mark the release of the State Departments annual International Religious Freedom Report. Human Rights Firsts Rob Berschinski spoke to NPRs All Things Considered about Tillersons remarks.

The report, which documents developments in religious freedom in every nation around the world, is an important human rights monitoring tool, and is used throughout the U.S. government to inform policy, conduct diplomacy, and allocate aid. Secretary Tillersons remarks affirmed its value as both a resource for decision makers and as a platform to all those worldwide seeking to live their lives peacefully in accordance with their conscience.

That Tillerson took time to make remarks on the report is a good step after his conspicuous absence at the release of the State Departments annual report on human rights conditions around the world. He noted that U.S support for religious freedom is both a moral imperative and part of a strategy to make the world more stable, economically vibrant, and peaceful.

Unfortunately, Tillerson did not highlight several areas covered in the report: growing antisemitism, Islamophobia, and extremism in Europe. With the release of the report in the immediate aftermath of this weeks white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where Jews were targeted by neo-Nazis and the KKK, the omission of antisemitism was all the more striking.

Also missing from his remarks was any mention of refugee protectiona lifeline for persecuted religious minorities. While the Secretary rightly assailed ISIS for its multiple crimes against minority religious communitiesincluding genocide of Yazidis, Christians and Shiite Muslimsand criticized Bahrain, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia for violating the rights of religious minorities these statements lack credibility in light of the Trump administrations policies regarding U.S. resettlement of refugees from the Middle East and North Africa.

Where religious freedom is not protected, Tillerson said, we know that instability, human rights abuses, and violent extremism have a greater opportunity to take root. Those fine words should be coupled with a commitment to help those fleeing religious persecution. As the report points out, the United States has historically been a leader on refugee resettlement. Today, a strong effort to help refugees would not only relieve suffering; it would serve U.S. foreign policy interests by securing the stability of frontline states hosting the overwhelming majority of the worlds 22.5 million refugees.

Six-months after President Trumps January 27 travel ban executive order, U.S. refugee resettlement has declined by over 50 percent, with the resettlement of Syrian refugees declining by 80 percent and Muslim refugees by 76 percent. To proclaim the importance of protecting religious minorities while denying them the ability to seek asylum is a glaring contradiction and a failure of American leadership.

Human Rights First recommends the following steps to align American foreign policy with the responsibility to protect religious freedom and to prioritize areas of urgent concern:

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Aligning American Foreign Policy to Protect Religious Freedom - Human Rights First (blog)

David Harsanyi: Pro-choicers should explain why eugenics is acceptable – The Union Leader

By DAVID HARSANYI August 20. 2017 11:12PM Due to the rise of prenatal screening tests in Europe and the United States, the number of babies born with Down syndrome has begun to diminish significantly. And no one, as CBS News puts it, is eradicating Down syndrome births quite like Iceland.

The word eradication typically implies an ailment is being cured or beaten by some technological advancement. Not so in this case. Nearly 100 percent of women who receive positive test results for Down syndrome in that small nation end up eradicating their pregnancy. Iceland averages only one or two Down syndrome children per year. This seems mostly a result of parents receiving inaccurate test results.

Its just a matter of time until the rest of the world catches up. In the United States, an estimated 67 percent of women who find out their child will be born with Down syndrome opt to have an abortion. In the United Kingdom, its 90 percent. More and more women are taking these prenatal tests, and the tests are becoming increasingly accurate.

For now, however, Iceland has completed one of the most successful eugenics programs in the contemporary world. If you think thats overstated, consider that eugenics the word itself derived from the Greek word meaning well-born is the effort to control breeding to increase desirable heritable characteristics within a population. This can be done through positive selection, as in breeding the right kinds of people with each other, or negative selection, which is stopping the wrong kinds of people from having children.

The latter was the hallmark of the progressive movement of the 1900s. It was the rationalization behind the coerced sterilization of thousands of the mentally ill, poor and minorities here in America. It is why Nazis required doctors to register all newborns born with Down syndrome, and why the first to be gassed were children under 3 years old with serious hereditary diseases like Down syndrome.

Down syndrome usually isnt hereditary. Most children born with it have moderate cognitive or intellectual disabilities, and many live full lives. But for many, these children are considered undesirable inconvenient, really.

If Icelands policy reflects a relatively heavy-handed genetic counseling, as geneticist Kari Stefansson admits, then what will it mean when we have the science to extrapolate and pinpoint other problematic traits? How about children with congenital heart defects or cleft palates or sickle-cell disease or autism? Eradication?

One day, a DNA test will be able to tell us virtually anything we want to know, including our tendencies. So heres the best way to frame eradication policies in terms more people might care about: Iceland has made great strides in eradicating gay births or Iceland has made great strides in eradicating low-IQ births or Iceland has made great strides in eradicating the birth of those who lean toward obesity or Iceland has made great strides in eradicating the birth of mixed-race babies. Feel free to insert the facet of humankind that gets you most upset.

How about Iceland has made great strides in eradicating female births? If your circumstance or inconvenience were a justifiable reason to eradicate a pregnancy, why wouldnt a sex-selective abortion be OK? Does the act of abortion transform into something less moral if we feel differently about it? Does the act change because it targets a group of people that we feel is being victimized? What is the ethical difference between a sex-selective abortion and plain-old abortion of a female?

One imagines that most women in Iceland who were carrying a baby with a genetic disorder did not opt to have an abortion because they harbor hate or revulsion toward children with Down syndrome. I assume they had other reasons, including the desire to give birth to a healthy child and avoid the complications that the alternative would pose.

A number of U.S. states have passed or want to pass laws that would ban abortions sought due to fetal genetic abnormalities, such as Down syndrome, or because of the race, sex or ethnicity of the fetus. One such U.S. House bill failed in 2012. Most Democrats involved claimed to be against sex-selective abortion, but not one gave a reason why. Thats probably because once you admit that these theoretical choices equate to real-life consequences like eugenics, you are conceding that these are lives were talking about, not blobs. In America, such talk is still frowned upon.

At one hospital in Iceland, Helga Sol Olafsdottir counsels women who have a pregnancy with a chromosomal abnormality, explains the CBS article. She says: We dont look at abortion as a murder. We look at it as a thing that we ended. A thing? Using an ambiguous noun is a cowardly way to avoid the set of moral questions that pop up when you have to define that thing. And science is making it increasingly difficult to circumvent that debate.

David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist. Follow him on Twitter @davidharsanyi.

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David Harsanyi: Pro-choicers should explain why eugenics is acceptable - The Union Leader

CBS News Asks: Is Eugenics Right For You? – The Daily Caller

Last night, CBS News took a break from hyperventilating about the looming Nazi menace to spend a few minutes exploring the benefits of eugenics.

And heres how CBS frames it:

Should the rest of the world follow suit? I thought we answered that question in 1945.

As a lot of people have pointed out, this isnt eliminating Down Syndrome. Its killing people who have an unpreventable genetic abnormality. Its eugenics.

If youre an abortion enthusiast oh, sorry, if you support abortion rights you have no problem with this. You believe that some lives matter more than others. You believe that the difference between a fetus and a baby is up to the mother. You might even believe that its okay to kill a baby because it doesnt have a future because youre killing it.

You believe that a person with problems you dont have, and that youd rather not deal with, isnt really a person.

So why not? After all, youre only ending a pregnancy with an abnormality. Its not as if were talking about a human being.

If you want more liberty and lower taxes and the freedom to say so, youre a Nazi. But not if you want to wipe out the untermenschen to bring about a glorious, genetically perfect future. Thats where we are now.

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CBS News Asks: Is Eugenics Right For You? - The Daily Caller

Brian Mark Weber: The ‘Brave New World’ of Down Syndrome … – Patriot Post

Brian Mark Weber Aug. 18, 2017

In the novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, readers are presented with a dystopian vision of the future in which the whole process of conception and birth is delegated to the scientific community. Parents have no emotional connection to their children, and motherhood itself is considered embarrassing and obscene.

The novel, written in 1931, seemed far-fetched at the time. Yet it wasnt long after Huxley penned his dark and frightening tale that science and politics began to consider the implications, and the possibilities, of playing God with human reproduction in order to bring about desired results.

Columnist David Harsanyi writes, [Negative selection eugenics] was the rationalization behind the coerced sterilization of thousands of mentally ill, poor, and minorities here in America. It is why real-life Nazis required doctors to register all newborns born with Down syndrome. And the first humans they gassed were children under three years old with serious hereditary diseases like Down syndrome.

But why wait? Aborting unborn children with Down syndrome is gaining acceptance once again, and the latest wave of news is from Iceland. Yet the childs suffering or the elimination of a human life doesnt seem to be part of the conversation, nor does the post-abortion health of the mother.

Whats interesting is that, according to Kevin Burke in the Washington Examiner, About 80 percent of parents facing the same diagnosis, who were provided with the option of perinatal hospice care for the child and family, chose to carry their disabled child to term. Apparently, most parents planning to abort their children dont receive this advice.

Burke adds, Those who advocate for routine screening to detect fetal disabilities also fail to advise parents of the potential for serious post-abortion reactions. The fallout from this loss can place a tremendous strain on couples as they struggle with the shock and pain that can follow the abortion. Some abortion advocates may concede that some women suffer symptoms of depression and grief immediately after termination of disabled babies, but they see this as a short-term condition. Research, however, confirms that women often suffer symptoms of emotional trauma and complicated grief years after such procedures.

Sadly, and just like the people in Brave New World, Icelanders no longer seem to value human life. Parents who fail to think of their unborn child as human are less likely to keep their child when the options are presented to them.

As Helga Sol Olafsdottir, a counselor at Landspitali University Hospital, helpfully explains, We dont look at abortion as a murder. We look at it as a thing that we ended. We ended a possible life that may have had a huge complication preventing suffering for the child and for the family.

A thing? If children are considered things, then it cant be long before countries like Iceland start passing their own version of Nazi Germanys Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring.

How far away is it when people like Princeton University professor Elizabeth Harman say, Some early fetuses will die in early pregnancy due to abortion or miscarriage. And in my view that is a very different kind of entity. Thats something that doesnt have a future as a person and it doesnt have moral status.

While those on the Left may rush to defend a program that frees parents from the burden of raising a disabled child, they should seriously think about the implications of going down this path.

The situation is not much better in the United States, where nearly two-thirds of American women whose prenatal screening tests reveal Down syndrome choose to have an abortion. Fortunately, theres still some resistance at the political level.

Harsanyi notes, A number of U.S. states have passed or want to pass laws that would ban abortions sought due to fetal genetic abnormalities, such as Down syndrome, or because of the race, sex, or ethnicity of a fetus. Such a U.S. House bill failed in 2012. Most Democrats involved claimed to be against sex-selective abortion, but not one gave a reason why. Probably because once you admit that these theoretical choices equate to real-life consequences, like eugenics, you are conceding that these are lives were talking about, not blobs.

And what if science develops to the point where we can identify other traits in humanity that parents may find undesirable: a genetic heart condition or a low IQ or, where it would really hit home for leftists, homosexuality? Gender-based abortions of girls are already the norm in Communist China. When society reaches the point where only desirable children are allowed to enter this world, are we still a civilization? And if a free society lacks the moral compass to speak out against this practice, how can we oppose another government that one day might decide that Jews, Africans or Christians are a problem?

These are the questions that should be asked before science allows us to discover even more undesirable traits in unborn children, and before the political class yields to social and cultural decay. Lets face it: Were living in a Brave New World today. But unlike the society in Huxleys novel, we must summon the courage and decency to end the ghastly practice of eugenics.

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Brian Mark Weber: The 'Brave New World' of Down Syndrome ... - Patriot Post

New Food Truck Aims to Save Maui’s Ecosystem – Maui Now

Sunny Savage, wild foods activist and author of Wild Food Plants of Hawaii, will launch her mobile food truck, Savage Kitchen Maui, on Aug. 24, 2017.

Sunny Savages food truck will serve up wild, invasive plants which threaten Mauis ecosystems. PC: Cadence Feeley

With nearly 80% of Hawaiis endangered plants threatened by invasive plant species, Savage sees eating the invasives as a way to turn a liability into an asset.

The food truck will serve up wild, invasive plants which threaten Mauis ecosystems. Savage says she hopes to educate customers on how to eat and enjoy the abundance of wild foods that grow on Maui, and is focusing on five different edible invasives.

Wild foods are a gateway into connecting deeply with the land and with ourselves. In addition to serving up exceptionally nutritious and delicious gourmet wild foods, Savage Kitchen Maui is an outreach tool, where I can introduce people to these unique flavors and create awareness around haole koa, strawberry guava, Java plum, spiny amaranth and kahili ginger, she said. That will hopefully lead to more people harvesting these invasives for their own tables, while learning the importance of not spreading them further.

In 2001, the Hawaii legislature identified invasive species as the number one threat to Hawaiis environment, economy, and to the health and wellness of Hawaiis people.

Savage Kitchen Maui is working on an app that will assist in identifying, mapping, harvesting, and preparing the five highlighted edible invasives. I want to empower people with a tool that will assist them in incorporating these wild edible invasives into their daily life. These plants are gatekeepers to sharing information about how to survive climate change, how to protect ourselves from disease, and how to heal.

Dishes at the food truck will include Tempeh Kering made with wild haole koa seeds, Crispy Egg bowl with wild kahili ginger onion jam, and a savory pastry filled with wild spiny amaranth greens and Java plum chutney. Wild flavored kombucha and other drinks will be available as well.

The food truck and mobile app was funded in part through community crowd-sourcing, where Savage raised over $30,000 to transform her vision into a reality.

The food truck will be open every Thursday and Friday to start and will be at different locations around Maui. Details on where to locate the food truck and its hours of operation can be found on Twitter @savagekitchenhi, the Savage Kitchen Maui Facebook page, and here.

The mobile app will launch later this fall in the Apple iTunes store and Android Google Play.

Savage has spent 20 years working with wild plants around the world and formerly hosted the television series Hot on the Trail with Sunny Savage. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in Dietetics and Master of Science degree in Nutrition Education.

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New Food Truck Aims to Save Maui's Ecosystem - Maui Now

How hurricanes affect the ecosystem | | shorenewstoday.com – Shore News Today

Hurricanes and other strong storms can have a profound impact on communities. Power outages, flooding and interruption of communication systems can interrupt everyday life. But storms and natural disasters can wreak havoc on animals, ecosystems and coastal habitats.

Although parts of the world have been subjected to hurricanes, typhoons, tornadoes and other storms for millenia, experts at the United States Department of the Interior and the U.S. Geological Survey say that today's storms may be more detrimental to animal life and ecosystems than ever before. That's because periodic disturbances on plants and animals that result from storms are compounded by consistent environmental changes brought on by human development and industry. Animals that could once bounce back from a weather event may find it harder to rebound because their habitats have already been weakened by human interference.

In 1998, Hurricane Georges was the most destructive hurricane to strike the island of Puerto Rico since 1932. Georges further stressed the habitat of rare species such as the sea turtle and the highly endangered Puerto Rican parrot, cutting the parrot population in half. Conservation specialists estimate there are fewer than 50 of these parrots currently living in the wild and roughly 140 in captivity.

Thousands of animals live in coastal regions. In addition to high, damaging winds taking down trees and defoliating forest canopies, wind can cause powerful storm surges that displace sand. Ultimately, entire coastal landscapes may be reshaped or reduced.

Information from the University of Rhode Island estimates that hurricanes such as Ivan, Katrina, Rita, Gustav and Ike have changed shoreline positions of about 328 feet (100 meters) in certain areas. Northeastern coastal areas in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut have been entirely reshaped in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. Wildlife that may have been living in the dunes or coastal channels of areas impacted by hurricanes and other storms may have been obliterated or forced to relocate to other, less tolerable locations. Barrier islands, important for protecting areas of the coast, shift or erode, taking out forests that are resting places for migratory birds. Should a storm take place during a period of mating or egg-laying, entire generations of animal life can be wiped out.

Coastal areas are not the only places impacted by such storms. During Hurricane Sandy, seawater breached many areas that had never before seen such a surge in water levels. Saltwater intrusion can change other wetland ecosystems, making them inhabitable for some organisms not acclimated to salty conditions. Displaced sand can end up suffocating insects and other animals in areas where it has been dumped, and may impede the growth of grasses and other plants that feed a wide variety of animals.

Hurricanes can affect marine life as well. Hurricanes can destroy oyster beds and crab habitats and displace fish that feed many other large marine creatures. Flood waters can transport sewage and untreated chemicals from land into the water, harming marine life as a result. Fish and crustaceans may be tossed on shore, where they are unable to return to the safety of the water. Furthermore, discharge of boat fuel and oil from wrecked vessels can infiltrate marine ecosystems, further damaging delicate species.

Hurricanes can cause structural changes, interruption of food sources and destruction of homes while slowing down communication methods. But hurricanes affect the animals that live in and around storm-ravaged areas as well.

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How hurricanes affect the ecosystem | | shorenewstoday.com - Shore News Today

‘CEOs must be able to manage ecosystem’ – Economic Times

MUMBAI: Managing relations with founders and key stakeholders has emerged as a vital lesson for CEOs from the Infosys saga. Industry leaders and HR experts said transformation of an enterprise such as Infosys, which is steeped in legacy, especially with an outsider CEO, was not possible without a clear alignment with the company's founders. At the same time, experts said promoters, too, need to change their outlook and not confuse the values of an organisation with personal lifestyles.

"To me, this is an organisation culture crisis," said Harsh Goenka, chairman of RPG Enterprises. "Mr Narayana Murthy, by far one of India Inc's most respected leaders, is known to lead a frugal life. Simplicity is in the DNA of many promoters who have built their organisations from scratch. On the other hand, Dr Vishal Sikka, an exemplary global CEO, is a professional who wanted to steer Infosys the way he deemed right and with the board's approval. What emerges from this as well as the Tata-Mistry episode, which is equally painful, is changing relationship dynamics between founders and key stakeholders in today's day and age."

According to K Sudarshan, managing partner of EMA Partners India, there is a fundamental disconnect between the CEO and the key founder. "A transformation is not possible in this environment. How much ever Sikka can do, you cannot wish away the fact that the company was built the way it was.

The founders have their eyes and ears in the organisation and any CEO would be under scrutiny till such time there is mutual trust. At the same time, it is critical for the business to set up a CEO for success, else even the best of them will fail," said Sudarshan.

The lesson is critical as the next CEO, too, would require support from all key stakeholders to make an impact. Ronesh Puri, managing director of Executive Access, said, "One can draw a lot of parallels between what happened at the Tatas and now at Infosys. The promoters are highly accomplished people with a great track record and an awesome reputation, so there is bound to be a lot of emotion at play. Any CEO who tries to change the ecosystem and values of an organisation without proper buy-in from key promoters will not succeed. Nobody gets a blank cheque in today's world."

Several promoter-driven companies today have professional CEOs and the reason they run like well-oiled machines has a lot to do with clarity on individual roles, mutual respect and a good rapport between the CEO and the founder as also the board and the founder. Infosys appears to have failed on many of these counts, except that Sikka had strong support from the board.

Harsh Mariwala, chairman of Marico, said, "The issue is complicated due to strained relations between the board of directors and founders. There has to be total clarity and alignment on the role between the board and the founders. It's not the job of the CEO to manage relations with each founder."

But never mind the relationship between the board and the founders, hiring experts said exceptional ecosystem management skills would be the main criteria of hiring CEOs going forward. "Organisations, when they look for a CEO, should first gauge the ability of a person to wield exceptional ecosystem management skills which can be challenging. The other aspects are not as important. Therefore, it is not merely business. High EQ and promoter/stakeholder management are very important. This criteria does not always get the attention it deserves as companies get too hallowed by a person's reputation and personal achievements," said Puri.

A CEO, who did not wish to be quoted, said in today's networked world, managing relationships is critical for any leader and s/he needs to invest time for this.

"A lot of senior managers today don't want to be a CEO," said Puri. "They believe it's a thankless job, with everything under a microscope and expectations too high and at times with too many pulls and pressures."

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'CEOs must be able to manage ecosystem' - Economic Times

Building a successful start-up ecosystem – ACS (registration)

When it comes to start-up success, Aussie tech wizards are increasingly making their mark both at home and abroad as they chase their dreams over the rainbow. And just like in the song, many are finding that, with the right support, the dreams that you dare to dream really do come true.

Of course, Dorothys trek along the yellow brick road has many parallels with the start-up journey, not least of which is the importance of banding together with other like-minded souls in pursuit of your dreams.

If youre a start-up, or aspire to be, its a great time to be in Australia as our start-up eco-system continues to evolve to meet the needs of a growing and diverse start-up community.

The rise of co-working spaces, incubators, and accelerator programs designed to support the transition from nascent idea through to a successful business is being enhanced by increased focus and funding, from both government and private sector entities.

To clarify, incubators are mostly co-working facilities that seek to provide affordable and supportive environments in which founders can launch and grow an early stage start-up, while accelerators offer short-term (typically 2-6 months) programs aimed at delivering rapid growth and scale. There are no rules for what different environments provide, and facilities vary significantly depending on who is involved, the linkages to tertiary and research institutions, funding access, and so on.

The announcement last month of a $35 million investment from the NSW Government to create an 11-storey start-up hub in central Sydney will bring together key players including Stone & Chalk, Fishburners, Tankstream Labs and The Studio, providing facilities and resources for thousands of start-ups.

This followed the announcement of $1.4 million in federal grants for four innovation incubators in Brisbane, Sydney, Newcastle and Adelaide under the Federal Governments $23 million Incubator Support Initiative. The Victorian Government is also developing the Goodshed at Docklands with partners Data 61.

The American example

I was recently in San Francisco and took the opportunity with senior ACS colleagues to investigate the different options available to support start-ups in the US. We visited the Austrade Landing Pad along with several other leading incubator and accelerator facilities including Rocketspace, Founderspace, Parisoma, Alchemist Accelerator and Impact Hub. We also saw BeSpoke a Westfield-operated incubator that targets retail-focused start-ups and offers co-working, demo and event spaces converging retail and technology.

Some co-working spaces are little more than shared real estate with concierge services and regular events to encourage collaboration between different tenants, while others offer a high level of engagement, tailored support and structured programs to move start-ups through defined growth stages.

A sign of growing maturity in the Australian market is greater involvement by corporations in helping to fund incubators or even in some cases establishing their own. Citibank Australia operates a fintech accelerator program while Telstra launched its Gurrowa Innovation Lab in Melbourne two years ago with a strong focus on mobile technology.

ACS Vice-President Yohan Ramasundara is currently on a three-month secondment to Austrade in San Francisco through his employers talent management program. Ramasundara is actively engaged with the innovation and start-up communities and the Australian Landing Pad, while contributing to and learning about Silicon Valleys start-up eco-system.

He said the biggest differences hes noticed between Australia and Silicon Valley are the lack of venture capital funding available in Australia, (an issue also tabled publicly last week by Blackbird Ventures partner, Rick Baker) and our risk-averse culture.

Silicon Valley culture encourages fast failure while its not preferred, they see having a failure under your belt and recovering from it as a positive learning opportunity. The risk appetite is much greater over here and that leads to a more open approach to sharing information and talking freely about business ideas. An idea without execution is not worth much at all. Stakeholders in the eco-system collaborate while competing, he said.

With so many people in a concentrated space all working on start-ups and collaborations, and the easy access to researchers, mentors and investors, theres lots of cross-pollination happening here that Australia really hasnt been able to replicate yet.

Ramasundara welcomed the recent announcements of start-up hubs in Sydney and Melbourne as steps in the right direction, saying its critical to create an environment where founders can readily access a range of professional services and support along with acceleration programs, R&D expertise, investors, mentors, potential partners and collaborators.

Experience counts

One of the key ingredients for a successful start-up eco-system is the ready access to experienced entrepreneurs and professionals to mentor local start-ups through the challenges of seeking funding and scaling their business.

A highlight of my recent visit to San Francisco was speaking with Kevin Jones, who co-founded the Impact Hub for start-ups that want to make a positive change in the world. With eight start-ups under his belt, seven of them successful, Jones has a wealth of experience to offer conscious entrepreneurs operating out of the Impact Hub in San Franciscos Mission community.

Co-working spaces, incubators and accelerators and corporate-funded programs can be good options for some start-ups, however founders should do their research before making a commitment. Some companies are using their incubators to gain early access to technologies that will give them a competitive differentiator with large equity stakes in high potential start-ups.

A critical next step in the development of Australias start-up eco-system will be a clear process to measure the effectiveness of different options and programs to help identify which approaches are delivering the best outcomes to maximise success.

Our future competitiveness in the global economy depends on it.

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Building a successful start-up ecosystem - ACS (registration)

Leaders: Memphis Startup Ecosystem Needs More Funding to Grow – Memphis Daily News

VOL. 132 | NO. 165 | Monday, August 21, 2017

Memphis entrepreneurScott Vogel, whos also executive director of Regional One Healths Center for Innovation, was the keynote speaker at the The Daily News latest seminar.(Daily News/Houston Cofield)

In the days following Memphis latest startup Demo Day event, after new startup funding announcements, after former U.S. chief technology officer Megan Smith even gave Memphis startup community a shoutout on Bloomberg TV, it might seem like the startup scene here is having a moment.

Key stakeholders in the ecosystem, though, say there are still a few things holding back even more progress - impediments, even, to more startups getting launched, getting funded and having enough resources to stay in business. Or, at least, to stay in Memphis.

Funding and engineering talent were some of those factors mentioned at the top of the list during The Daily News latest seminar, this time focused on startups and innovation. Keynoted by Scott Vogel, a serial entrepreneur in Memphis whos also executive director of Regional One Healths Center for Innovation, there was plenty to praise.

But leaders like him and Andre Fowlkes - president of the Start Co. organization, which runs a collection of local startup accelerator programs - also pointed out that theres still lots more startup and innovation potential for Memphis to tap into. But doing so is not free.

Vogel, for example, suggested during a panel discussion that Memphis needs something like an angel-plus fund, a pool of capital that can be used to help seed more startup enterprises.

We have to be deliberate about how we build this ecosystem so that talent doesnt run away, Fowlkes said. I think at the end of the day, were going to need a significant shift, whether it comes in the form of angel investment or a $50 million to $150 million fund that can really support a lot of the work thats taking place.

To be sure, that work is bearing fruit. Last weeks Demo Day - the culminating event for Start Co.s accelerators, at which teams pitch potential investors - is evidence alone of that. More than 400 business leaders, including entrepreneurs, mentors and investors, attended the event, at which each founder had three minutes to pitch their businesses in the hopes of winning follow-on funding.

Two teams scored six-figure funding awards.

Vogel, meanwhile, is trying to tap into the nimbleness and innovative potential of the startup world to bring value to the entity he leads within Regional One. It exists, because hospitals have to be so focused on the day-to-day, on regulations, that it doesn't leave much time to devote to new ideas and ways to do things better.

He has big ambitions for it, like hospital employees helping develop ideas that can radically change health care. And even developing revenue streams that can be used to fund a portfolio of startups.

Change is always hard for people in certain industries, said seminar panelist Jessica Buffington, the CEO and co-founder of FrontDoor. Her startup bills itself as a kind of Uber for real estate - a nationwide listing service with a network of agents who agree to sell homes for a flat fee instead of a commission.

This is why, Fowlkes said, it's so important to grow a startup ecosystem in Memphis. Change sometimes comes from outside the corporate world, from small players not afraid to try new things.

Years ago, when we first got into this (at Start Co.), ideas were quite honestly laughed out of the room, he said. A community like Memphis, which has traditionally been more of a brick and mortar-type town, a manufacturing town, tax incentives being the main way we recruit economic development here - when you start talking about diversifying economic development, with technology innovations, etcetera, a lot of people get a little nervous. Because they worry about where the capitals going to come from to do that. Will that capital be taken from efforts already in existence, versus saying to themselves maybe this can recruit outside capital.

Startup leaders here, nevertheless, are pressing forward. And their efforts are being noticed. Smith, for example, was the U.S. CTO during the Obama administration and used what's happening in Memphis to praise the wonderful entrepreneurs around the country during her Bloomberg interview in recent days.

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Leaders: Memphis Startup Ecosystem Needs More Funding to Grow - Memphis Daily News

These Drones Designed to Plant Mangrove Trees and Help Restore an Ecosystem – Inside Unmanned Systems

If you do aerial spreading you just spread seeds wherever maybe they hit a rock, maybe they hit a swamp, and theyre not going to survive. Photo: BioCarbon Engineering

Mangroves are a group oftrees and shrubsthat live in thecoastal intertidal zone, and mangrove forests only grow at tropical and subtropical latitudes near the equator because they cannot withstand freezing temperatures.

For about five years now, a group of villagers in the delta of the Irrawaddy River in Myanmar (also known as Burma) has painstakingly planted 2.7 million mangrove trees with the hopes of beginning to restore an ecosystem that has been disappearing for decades. But this work is rather laborious, and the local nonprofit guiding the work wants to cover a much larger area so theyre to turning drones to help with their large-scale tree-planting project.

The drones, from the startupBioCarbon Engineering, can plant as many as 100,000 trees in a single day, leaving the local community to focus on taking care of the young trees that have already started to grow, according to the company, which has offices in Oxford, U.K., Sydney, Australia and Dublin, Ireland. In September, the company will begin a drone-planting program in the area along withWorldview International Foundation, the nonprofit guiding local tree-planting projects. To date, the organization has worked with villagers to plant an area of 750 hectares, about twice the size of Central Park. The drones will help cover another 250 hectares with 1million additional trees. Ultimately, the nonprofit hopes to use drones to help plant 1billion trees in an even larger area.

The technology will come together in stages. As a first step, mapping drones fly more than 300 feet over the land, collecting detailed data about the topography and soil quality. An algorithm uses that data to choose the best locations to plant trees, and the best species to plant. Next, asecond group of drones, flying low over the ground, automatically follows the map to plant seeds in custom, nutrient-filled seed pods designed by plant scientists to support each species. Each of the drones can carry a mix of different species simultaneously. The drones fire the pods quickly enough to penetrate the soil, states BioCarbon Engineering.

The company has a video, Changing the world One billion trees at a time from zee on Vimeo, that is available at https://vimeo.com/126378542

The process targets locations for planting a seed within centimeters. We can modify what to plant, and where, so you have the highest chance of survival, says Irina Fedorenko, cofounder of BioCarbon Engineering. If you do aerial spreading you just spread seeds wherever maybe they hit arock, maybe they hit aswamp, and theyre not going to survive. But we can basically control for that.

With todays technology, its possible for a single drone pilot to oversee six of the drones simultaneously, reaching the maximum of 100,000 plantings in a day. Drone regulations in some countries, however, do require a pilot for every drone, making the process slightly slower. The drones are at least 10times faster than humans planting trees by hand, while the process can cost half as much.

The startup began developing the technology in 2015 and says that they have successfully tested the process on test plots in the U.K. and in Australia, where they used a seed-spreading drone to plant trees at an abandoned coal mine.

Drones are being used to plant trees in Myanmar. Photo: BioCarbon Engineering.

In the U.K., where the test plots have been in place for more than a year, the trees are showing good rates of survival. [Survival rates are] definitely much better than spreading from a helicopter, which many people use, says Fedorenko. In some species, its comparable with hand planting. In Myanmar, the technology will be tweaked to best handle local conditions. Mangrove trees grow in brackish water along coastlines, so the drones will have to successfully shoot the seed pods underwater.

Members of the local community will be paid to collect seeds and load the seed pods for planting, and, more importantly, take care of the trees as they grow. Planting trees on its own is not actually that hard, she says. The crucial part of the ecosystem restoration

project is not actually planting trees, its the post-planting monitoring and management. Mangroves play several roles in the area. The roots filter the water and create a tangled, protected network where fish can live. As the trees have been cut down to make way for rice or shrimp farming or used for fuel 75% of the local mangrove cover was lost by the 1990s the local fishing industry has seen fish stocks plummet.

In the past villages have spent years replanting mangroves along the Irrawaddy River. With drones, their work will now go much faster.

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These Drones Designed to Plant Mangrove Trees and Help Restore an Ecosystem - Inside Unmanned Systems

Going native helps ecosystem and animals | News, Sports, Jobs … – Evening Observer

The sky swings gently above me as I rest in the hammock my kids bought me on a long ago Fathers Day. The tree that is shading me swings back and forth as well, coming in and out of focus with the swaying of the hammock. This is one of the best places to spend time on these hot days, in a hammock with a cold drink and a few minutes of quiet.

The tree above me is a Red Maple. From where I lay, holes in the leaf appear and disappear as dots of blue sky shining through. The tree was carefully chosen to grow fast and shade my children as they grew and, surprisingly, the hammock swaying gently under me. It was also chosen to be eaten by insects.

That may seem like a weird choice to some people, but this choice was based on a book that changed how I looked at landscaping right when I had land to scape. The book was Bringing Nature Home, by Douglas Tallamy.

The core of the book is simple. Animals eat bugs. Many bugs eat plants. If plants from other continents are planted, few native bugs eat them. This means fewer bugs, but also fewer other animals. It takes 6,000 to 9,000 insects, mostly caterpillars, to raise one family of chickadees.

Think about that for a second. Young chickadees leave the nest at around two weeks old. That means that the parents have to find 400 to 600 caterpillars EVERY day. That is a lot of caterpillars to find, especially since the parents rarely travel much more than 50 yards looking for food.

This fact was brought home by Doug Tallamy in person, when he spoke at the Wild America Festival at Panama Rocks a few weeks ago. His program really brought home the value of planting natives. What trees support the caterpillars that feed the birds? Which ones support no insect life?

His book made the concept of my yard evaporate. It is not just a yard now, but one piece of green in a quilted neighborhood of green spaces required by animals to survive. Those animals need native plants to support the insects that they catch to raise their young. Most of these insects are more protein-rich than beef and provide huge amounts of food for birds. This new way of thinking about the yard is called ecosystem gardening.

An ecosystem is a community of interacting organisms and their environment. Ecosystem gardening is using native plants to make the yard one part of the larger habitat throughout the neighborhood.

Which brings us back to the hammock. The Red Maple over the hammock was chosen because it provides a home to insects and provides shade. Native maples can support almost 300 species of caterpillar. A Red Oak in the corner is almost as tall and was planted by my daughter when she was a year and a half old. Native oaks can support over 400 different caterpillars.

Native plantings along the back of the lot have started to go wild and need to be tamed, but there are great plants there for insects to eat. A variety of milkweeds had Monarch eggs on them last night. The Joe Pye Weed has trails through the leaves from insects that ate them. Black Eyed Susans and coneflowers attract birds, bees and insects to eat the flowers, seeds, and leaves. Towering over all of them is Ironweed, an eight-foot-tall plant with bright purple flowers that attracts all kinds of insects.

The yard has some thought behind it. The yard is full of violets for fritillary caterpillars. Virginia Creeper climbs an old metal pole and provides food for several kinds of caterpillars. A row of Spicebush sports snakelike Spicebush Swallowtail caterpillars. The blueberry bushes not only provide yumminess for me, but also insects that eat the leaves.

More and more bird nests are found in my yard each year. At peak nesting time in June, there were Blue Jays, Mourning Doves, robins, Song Sparrows, cardinals and two pairs of chickadees nesting in the yard. Since then, several more robin families, another cardinal family, two more sets of Mourning Doves and two families of House Wrens were also raised there.

My yard doesnt have enough food for all those young. That is literally 35,000 to 50,000 or more caterpillars coming out of the area. My neighborhood is full of big old native trees, from beautiful oaks and Black Walnuts to huge Silver Maples and Black Cherry trees.

Some of the biggest trees have been there the longest, but provide little to no food for the birds. An ancient Norway Maple that may be older than my house towers nearby, but few to no insects dine on the leaves. Bradford Pears are equally unpalatable to local insects. Both are non-natives, but often planted in city and suburban landscapes.

In some ways, planting trees and plants from another country is like filling a salad bar with Poison Ivy. It may look pretty and green, but there is no way that Im filling my plate. Many insects will starve before they recognize those plants as food.

My yard is not a well-manicured paradise. It is a wild ramble of plants, trees, raspberries and wildflowers with overgrown grass in the middle. That, however, has less to do with my plant choices than my personality. It is easy and possible to add a few well-manicured native plants into the landscape and keep a neat aesthetic. It is not hard when planting a new tree to find one that is native to the area and plant it. Some neighborhood trees have been transplanted from the forest or grown by kids from seeds.

Fall is a great time to plant new things in the yard. Trees and shrubs plant well in the fall, as do many seeds and seedlings. Take a few moments, right now, to picture your yard as an animal sees it. Is it a smorgasbord of plants that provide insects with food so the birds love it? Or is it a green desert full of plants that are pretty, but serve little to no purpose for local wildlife? Is there room out there for a few milkweeds or a native oak that can help provide food for nesting birds? If we each plant just a few things, it could make all the difference.

Jeff Tome is a naturalist at the Audubon Community Nature Center.

Audubon Community Nature Center builds and nurtures connections between people and nature. ACNC is located just east of Route 62 between Warren and Jamestown. The trails are open from dawn to dusk as is Liberty, the Bald Eagle. The Nature Center is open from 10 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. daily except Sunday when it opens at 1 p.m. More information can be found online at auduboncnc.org or by calling (716) 569-2345

SILVER CREEK The Anderson-Lee Library in Silver Creek is offering a special program for children entering ...

WESTFIELD Westfield Memorial Hospital Auxiliary is delighted that the Westfield Quilt Guild has again decided ...

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Going native helps ecosystem and animals | News, Sports, Jobs ... - Evening Observer

If these pics of champ Cyborg visiting a children’s hospital don’t warm your heart, nothing else will – MMAjunkie.com

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By: Blue Corner | August 21, 2017 5:45 pm

Before a trip to Anaheim, Calif., brought her the UFCs womens 145-pound title, Cris Cyborg was gifted a symbolic belt by the children of a hospital in her hometown of Curitiba, Brazil.

This Monday, delivering on a promise she made to herself, the champ returned to the hospital with a gift of her own: an actual UFC belt.

These kids are much more than champions they fight every day for their lives, Cyborg said in an official statement sent out by the UFC. And a small gesture like this one makes a huge difference in their lives.I always talk about this, about the importance of fighting for those who cant fight. Its so good to make someone happy because it makes us happy, as well. It was very gratifying to come here today.

For the visit to the hospital, which is an industry leader in cancer treatment, the champ was joined by former PRIDE champ and UFC Hall of Famer Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. According to the official statement, the hospital will keep the belt in its pediatric area.

Cyborg (18-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC) captured the 145-pound title at last months UFC 214, with a third-round TKO over fellow former Invicta FC champion Tonya Evinger (19-6 MMA, 0-1 UFC). Shes currently in her native country for a media tour.

While Cyborg has been campaigning for a meeting with ex-champ Holly Holm, her octagon future is still uncertain.

For more on the upcoming UFC schedule, check out theUFC Rumorssection of the site.

TheBlue CornerisMMAjunkies official blog and is edited byMike Bohn.

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Cris Cyborg, Blue Corner, Featured Videos, News, UFC, Videos

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11m

UFC August 21, 2017 6:30 pm Blue Corner

Dana Whites Contender Series 7 goes down on Tuesday from The Ultimate Fighter Gym in Las Vegas. Watch the weigh-in face-offs.

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UFC August 21, 2017 5:00 pm MMAjunkie Staff

Although its not a UFC event, Saturdays Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor boxing match is getting the fight week Embedded treatment.

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When youre worth $2 billion and just sold the UFC for $4 billion, dropping $70 million on a New York City penthouse may not be a big deal.

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Check out the official event poster for UFC Fight Night 119 in Brazil, featuring Lyoto Machida vs. Derek Brunson in the main event.

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Were days away from boxing going on trial. Saturday in Las Vegas, UFC lightweight champ Conor McGregor will present the prosecutions case.

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The response to Brian Stanns announcement that hes leaving his UFC commentary role showed the 11-time octagon veteran will be missed.

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UFC August 21, 2017 12:35 pm MMAjunkie Staff

The UFC and FOX Sports lost a key member of its broadcast crew today when Brian Stann announced his departure from his commentary position.

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MMAjunkie Radio kicks off today at 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. PT) with guests Frank Trigg and Ricardo Lamas.

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UFC August 21, 2017 11:15 am John Morgan

Count Bellator moneyweight contender Muhammed Lawal among those who believes Conor McGregor has absolutely no chance against Floyd Mayweather.

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UFC August 21, 2017 10:30 am Blue Corner

Saturdays megafight between Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor in Las Vegas may make a case for most celebrity-populated fight ever, too.

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If these pics of champ Cyborg visiting a children's hospital don't warm your heart, nothing else will - MMAjunkie.com

‘Rick and Morty’: What Cybernetic Augmentation Does Rick Have? [PHOTO] – Heavy.com

On Rick and Morty tonight, Rick went through a TSA-like scanner and we learned that he has some pretty crazy cyber augmentation going on. Learn more about what he has in the story below.

Spoilers for Season 3 Episode 5.

Heres a photo of his cybernetic implants:

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It looks like Rick has some pretty serious cybernetic augments going on. We learned in this episode that at least one of them is attached to his hand and is basically just a mini plunger.In case you missed it, you could see the arm implant in the background of his garage in last weeks episode.

And we also learned last week in Vindicators that Ricks skin is laced with a nanofiber defense mesh.

It doesnt look like Rick is acompletecyborg, but he does have cyborg implants. And in case you werent listening closely, you might have incorrectly thought that the synaptic dampener turned off his implants, leaving him docile and dumb-ish. But thats actually not what happened. They left his cybernetic implants alone. The synaptic dampener just blocked his violent tendencies and controversial thoughts for a short period of time.

Its also helpful to remember that Rick isnt technically in the same body that C-137 Rick had from the beginning of the series. He switched bodies multiple times in Episode 1 of Season 3. So if you dont remember him having quite so many implants in previous seasons, thats why. These are the implants in Ricksnewbody.

Did you notice anything else about Ricks cybernetic implants? Let us know in the comments so we can talk about it.

Check out more stories aboutRick and Mortybelow.

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'Rick and Morty': What Cybernetic Augmentation Does Rick Have? [PHOTO] - Heavy.com

Cyborg: Holly Holm will run in the ring, but I will find her – Bloody … – Bloody Elbow

After Cris Cyborg finally won the UFC featherweight title at UFC 214, the next match-up being set-up for her is against former bantamweight champion Holly Holm. Holms striking coach Mike Winkeljohn already made his assessment of the fight, banking on the belief that his fighter would be able to pick Cyborg apart.

From her end, Cyborg is just waiting for Holm to finally agree to the fight. During a recent media scrum, she went on to address Winkeljohns previous claims, pointing out that Holm had already turned her down on a few occasions.

She already (turned me down) three times, Cyborg said. I was supposed to fight her in Curitiba (at UFC 198) and agreed to fight her at 140 pounds, and she didnt want to fight. And then I said, lets fight in Brasilia, and then she said she can fight me if I make 138 pounds, not 140. And then when Megan Anderson pulled out of (UFC 214), I said I would like to fight Holly. And then she said no, and she fights Bethe Correia.

Its easy when the coach says something, she continued. Its better if she says it herself, not her coach. And if she believes (that she can pick me apart), and her coach believes that, then lets do this fight. What are you waiting for?

Cyborg also gave props to Holms striking prowess, but believes it does not pose a danger against her.

She never knocked out one girl with a punch, Cyborg said. Her last fight with Bethe Correia (lasted) three rounds, (and it took) maybe six punches before the referee stopped the fight.

I dont think shes very aggressive. I dont think shes going to be a danger. It would be an exciting fight because I like to fight. Shes gonna run in the ring, but Im gonna find her.

Cyborg has been campaigning for the Holm fight to take place at UFC 219 for the UFCs year-end card in Las Vgeas.

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Cyborg: Holly Holm will run in the ring, but I will find her - Bloody ... - Bloody Elbow

Cornhole finally on California beaches – San Diego Reader

During summer, especially in the Midwest, one can usually find a game of cornhole (tossing a corn-filled sack onto a tilted plank) in progress at the local park. During winter, it is played indoors where there enough room for the 27 feet between player and board. The game has finally found California beaches but with one caveat; its hard to find a beach here that allows drinking beer.

It seems that beer and corhhole, for the adult players anyhow, go hand in hand.

Even at the American Cornhole Championships, players commonly have a beer in one hand.

For the beach-going Californian that would like to play the game as intended and with perfect cornhole balance, there will be adult beverages allowed at the Horseshoe and Cornhole Tournament hosted by the Boys and Girls Club of San Dieguito, which was begun in 2014 as a horseshoe tournament.

Ballast Point and Latitude 33 will provide the suds on the sand at Del Mars Dog Beach, this Saturday, August 26.

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Cornhole finally on California beaches - San Diego Reader

Swimmer, surfers have close call with shark at Nauset Beach – The Boston Globe

A shark took a fatal bite out of a seal off Cape Cods Nauset beach, and the water turned red, while a man swimming nearby and two surfers scrambled for shore.

Pat OBrien was swimming with his 9-year-old daughter when the shark bit the seal 25 feet behind him, he said.

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I was in the water with my daughter, he said. She had just gotten out and I was looking up at her, and she yelled something down to me, but I didnt hear what it was.

When other beachgoers started yelling, Shark! Pat made his way to shore.

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He said he could hear the stricken seal and see its blood in the water near him.

I turned to my left, and I could see it and I could hear it, he said. The seal was making a lot of noise, like it was screaming, Ive never seen so much blood in my life.

The surfers were farther away and didnt think much of the excited crowd on the beach. Pat said they later told him they thought everyone was screaming about the eclipse, which happened about an hour later.

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When Pat was safe on the sand, he saw the injured seal desperately swimming along the shore, trying to escape the shark.

It was headed straight for the surfers.

It looked like the seal was trying to get on the shore, but there were so many people it was afraid, Pat said.

The surfers, two teenage boys, eventually realized there was a shark in the water and jumped off their boards, trying to swim to shore.

Pat said he saw one of the surfers was still attached to his board by an ankle strap, which was slowing him down and tiring him out.

When the surfers started calling for help, Pat and another beachgoer got back in the water and pulled the boys to safety.

Ill never forget the look on his face, Pat said of the boy he helped to shore.

I heard yelling and screeching and thought the world was over, said Samuel Scholonger, 16, of Brooklyn, New York, who was vacationing on Cape Cod with his friend and surfing for the first time.

Pats sister, Meg OBrien, also witnessed the incident, and said although the seal made it away from the shark and the crowd, it bled to death on the shore a little further down the beach.

She took video that showed the seal in the water, leaking blood, and the surfers scrambling to get out.

Nauset Beach was closed indefinitely after the incident, according to Orleans police dispatcher Hannah Green.

A shark was also located by a spotter plane in Truro, resulting in closures at Ballston Beach, Longnook Beach, Coast Guard Beach, and Head of the Meadow Beach, said Damion Clements, the interim recreation and beach director for the town of Truro.

The beaches all closed at different times, but the shark was spotted off the coast of Ballston Beach at 11:27 a.m., Clements said. All the Truro beaches have reopened for swimming.

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Swimmer, surfers have close call with shark at Nauset Beach - The Boston Globe