‘Is food medicine? The question has never been so current or so contentious’ – The Guardian

Why not eat healthily as a preventative medicine, rather than be forced to swallow drugs as a palliative? Photograph: Issy Croker for the Guardian

Each morning, after a strict overnight fast, Paula Wolfert drinks a cup-and-a-half of hot water with lemon, followed by a bulletproof coffee made from unsalted butter and coconut oil. At 11am, she makes her gritty drink a sludge of greens, nuts, avocado and kefir. Finally, for lunch, she eats something like oven-steamed fish and vegetables. Wolfert eats no bread and hasnt had a dessert in years.

Strangely enough, theres nothing so unusual now about how Wolfert eats. Plenty of twentysomething wellness gurus follow a similar regime, all turmeric shots and energy balls. The difference is that Wolfert is 78 and an American cookbook author famous for her books on Morocco. She was once the queen of rich, meaty tagines and couscous. As she told the BBC Radio 4 Food Programme (in an award-winning episode, Diet and Dementia), Wolfert sacrificed the food she loved when she was diagnosed with dementia in 2012, because she wanted to do anything she could to stop her condition getting worse. As her memory palpably declined, food seemed like one of the few variables she could control. Wolfert feels that following her strict regime has slowed the onset of her dementia symptoms and made her incredibly healthy.

Is food medicine? The question has never been so current or so contentious. Its clearly true that certain patterns of eating can sicken us and unfortunately, these are the patterns of eating that most people in developed countries now follow: low in vegetables and high in sugar, salt, refined oils and carbohydrates. Diet-related ill health, including heart disease and type 2 diabetes, now causes more deaths worldwide than tobacco. Some, therefore, conclude that there must be some specific and magical foods quinoa! Goji berries! that might offer an outright antidote to whatever it is that ails us. Many of the loudest of these voices are quacks or charlatans, or both. There are dark corners of the internet promising that the right diet can cure autism or offer something close to eternal life, coupled with fabulous skin. Some of this woo is exposed in the new book The Angry Chef: Bad Science and the Truth about Healthy Eating by Anthony Warner. The Angry Chef points out that many health-giving diets are anything but, leading to dangerously restrictive regimes that can easily tip over into eating disorders, especially for vulnerable young people.

But it would be wrong to dismiss the idea that food and health are connected, just because of a few OK, a lot of the claims are bogus. At this years Oxford Food Symposium, Canadian hospital chef Joshna Maharaj talked about the craziness of hospitals acting as if there is no connection between a patients health and what he or she eats. Nourishment has long since been abandoned, Maharaj said. In 2011, she took over the catering for a Toronto hospital and was appalled to find that the kitchen used almost no fresh produce and did not even have a fridge in which to store vegetables. Sick people were served meatloaf so processed and oily that Maharaj could not find the adjectives to describe it. She retrained the chefs, found local suppliers and made the radical decision to serve wholesome, appetising food for every meal, such as vibrant dals, soothing congee and sweet, roasted beetroot. It was no surprise to her that patient morale and health substantially improved with the new menus.

The average UK hospital still pays little attention to the powerful link between food and health. Ive spoken to doctors who lament the irony of treating cardiac patients, only to see them heading to the hospital cafe to buy exactly the same fried and sugared junk foods that landed them on the ward in the first place. The health service spends a fortune on nutritional supplements (more than 300m in 2012), many of which could be avoided with better meals.

There are signs that many of us are sick of a medical system in which drugs are used and not very effectively to alleviate the symptoms of a bad diet. Wouldnt it be better to try a way of eating that reduced your chances of getting ill in the first place? Market researchers have identified a trend for pill fatigue among consumers. Many would rather eat things such as yoghurt, green vegetables and nuts as a delicious preventative medicine, rather than be forced to swallow drugs as a palliative. Professor Roy Taylor at Newcastle University is among those suggesting that unlike medication, diet can actually reverse the effects on the body of type 2 diabetes.

Food is not a patentable drug, as Sheila Dillon observed on her radio programme about Paula Wolfert. But as the ancient Greek philosopher and physician Galen wrote in the second century AD: other remedies may be used for this or that, but without food it is impossible to live either in health or in sickness.

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'Is food medicine? The question has never been so current or so contentious' - The Guardian

What it’s like to specialize in emergency medicine: Shadowing Dr. Clem – American Medical Association (blog)

As a medical student, do you ever wonder what its like to specialize in emergency medicine? Meet Kathleen Clem, MD, a featured physician in theAMA WireShadow Me Specialty Series, which offers advice directly from physicians about life in their specialties. Check out her insights to help determine whether a career in emergency medicine might be a good fit for you.

Shadowing Dr. Clem

Specialty:Emergency medicine.

Practice setting:Group practice at a community hospital that has an emergency medicine training program.

Employment type:Employed by a group.

Years in practice:24.

A typical day and week in my practice: It depends on which shift you are working, but in a busy shift, I usually come on and take reports from the doctors who are going off. We review any of the patients who are still in the emergency department and who will need my care. As the other physician is transitioning off, I follow up on those patients.

I like to do what I call front-load, which means I pick up as many patients as I safely can, right at the outset of the shift. That allows me to get patient work-ups started right away. I work to see the people already placed in a room, but that can often be interrupted by an emergency such as a trauma, heart attack or stroke. A patient who is coming in by ambulance in need of immediate evaluation by a physician will be seen soonest. Once I get my patients work-ups started, I go back and check the labs, other tests, and x-rays to give the patients information and a plan. If its a trauma, a heart attack, a stroke or somebody delivering a baby urgently, or another immediate emergency, those patients are going to get my undivided attention until I have dealt with that emergency.

When I come on to my shift, I dont have any clue what Im going to see. The entire shift is going to be a mystery until I get into it. And not knowing whats coming through the door is part of the fun of what I do.

The typical emergency physician will work three to five shifts a week. Five is high, but there are some weeks during which that type of workload is necessary. We try to either group our shifts, so for example work all night shifts, or we do whats called a waterfall. During a waterfall, I would work one shift at 6 a.m., then the next day at 3 a.m., then the next one from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., and then I could do the next one from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., then Id have a day off to reset my clock. A lot of doctors like to have all their shifts at the same time, so that they get into a routine. I like to separate my night shifts out, so Ill do them as a single event.

The most challenging aspects of emergency medicine: People think the most challenging part is the traumas and all of the really sick patients. For me, thats not it. I love challenging cases. Im trained for that and know how to take care of really sick patients. The hardest thing for me is patients with unrealistic expectations. In certain instances, patients think that No matter whats wrong with me Im going to the ER and that doctor should figure it out and provide a cure, or I have this problem I have had for a long time and Im going to go the ER and my problem is going to be fixed right away.

Those kinds of things are difficult. Its also difficult when a patient comes in with the expectation they will be admitted to the hospital and it turns out that its safe for them to have their work-ups doneafter we check for an emergencyas an outpatient. They can be very disappointed and feel that the emergency physician should have the power to admit them. Patients have to meet pre-specified indications to be admitted to the hospital. Its really not entirely up to the emergency physicians to determine if someone will be admitted.

The most rewarding aspects of emergency medicine: I absolutely love to be where patients are when they need help the most. I went to medical school to help people, and theres not a shift that goes by where I cant go back and say, I really helped somebody today. I helped make their life better. To go through an emergency with someone, to be qualified and trained to help them and make the emergency turn out as well as possiblereally is what keeps me going.

Three adjectives to describe the typical emergency medicine: Im better off with phrases, so I would say: You should enjoy working with people from all walks of life; you need to be high energy; and you should be a team player.

How my lifestyle matches, or differs from, what I had envisioned: Its what I expected. I expected to have a schedule that was not routine. I prefer that. My days off will often be in the middle of the week, instead of the weekend. I knew I had signed up to work nights, weekends and holidays the rest of my career. I planned on that and Im happy to serve. The only part I didnt anticipate, and this is true for all specialties, is the amount of time I have to spend on a computer.

Skills every physician in training should have for emergency medicine but wont be tested for on the board exam: To work well, you have to have a high emotional IQ to thrive as an emergency physician. Because, by necessity, you are dealing with people you havent met every shift, and you have to be able to know how to work well with a team that you may or may not have worked with before. So understanding your roles and how to flex and evaluate your team rapidly are keys. You also need to know where to trust others and where to double-check on things.

One question physicians in training should ask themselves before pursuing emergency medicine: How well do you tolerate interruptions? An emergency physician gets interrupted multiple times every hour. If youre annoyed by that, you probably wont be a happy physician. Its necessary for your team to interrupt you. All of them are your partners, your eyes, your ears; they are there to help you provide care. They are giving you feedback on your patients and the timing for that feedback isnt anything that you can necessarily plan.

You might be getting a call from the lab to let you know that your patients cardiac enzyme is positive and the patient is having a heart attack, and at the same time a triage nurse is telling you a stroke just arrived, and at the same time the nurse for room 12 is going to tell you that Ms. Smith is going to leave against medical advice if you dont come see her. I can get all of that information within 30 seconds. But my thought is that this is my team and I am so grateful they are giving me all that information. Its up to me, as the captain of the ship, to decide what I need to respond to first. I start with whatever is life- threatening first and I move through that way.

Books every medical student in emergency medicine should be reading: Tintinalli's Emergency MedicineManual, by Judith Tintinalli, MD; Rosen's Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice, by John Marx, MD, Robert Hockberger, MD, Ron Walls, MD; and Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult, edited by Roger M. Barkin, MD, Jeffrey J. Schaider, MD, Stephen R. Hayden, MD, Richard E. Wolfe, MD, Adam Z. Barkin, MD, Philip Shayne, MD, Peter Rosen, MD

Quick insights I would give students who are considering emergency medicine: Take every rotation that you go through during medical school and act as though you want to practice that specialty. Say to yourself I am going to be a pediatrician or I am going to be a neurologist. The reason I would say that is that in emergency medicine you need to know about the emergencies associated with all specialties. So go to each rotation with gusto and focus on it.

I dont think about what is the most common when a patient comes in. I first think, What is the most dangerous thing that this could be? What is the most life-threatening thing this could be? Only then do I think about what is the most common thing this could be. Most of the rest of medicine looks for a pattern. What does it fit most? And I do that too, but first I think about what is life-threatening. Because Im working in an emergency department, and I have to think about that for every patient I see.

So the patient that comes in with a stroke Im going to do a very brief and focused exam to determine if I think its a stroke or not. Then I would move from there to consult a neurologist and order whatever test. Then you can go back later and do a detailed neurological exam. But I first need to do a very focused exam to determine if it is a stroke. When I call a neurologist in, hes going to do a very detailed exam. It probably will take a good 30 minutes. Thats exactly what they should be doing. But if I took 30 minutes to do that before setting the stroke team into action, my patient could have a completed stroke and never recover. Emergency physicians do focused exams first.

Whats difficult about emergency medicine is that you are making decisions based on limited amounts of information. My colleagues have had the luxury of time. They get more details and have time to look into more questions than we do in the ED. Sometimes they will second-guess whatever decision I made with the limited amount of information that I had. Sometimes they say that in emergency medicine we practice fish bowl medicine because every specialty is watching what we do. I am comfortable with that. An emergency physician has to be an expert on everything for the first five minutes.

Song to describe life in emergency medicine: I like Stayin Alive, by the Bee Gees. That is what I sing in my head while Im doing CPR. Its the right beat.

More about your specialty options

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What it's like to specialize in emergency medicine: Shadowing Dr. Clem - American Medical Association (blog)

‘Origami organs’ could be the future of regenerative medicine – New York Post

Scientists are making use of discarded animal organs by turning them into origami but its more than just an art project.

A team of researchers at Northwestern University created the paper cranes to demonstrate the flexibility and malleability of their latest breakthrough: a tissue paper that has the potential to heal wounds, prevent scarring and help hormone production in cancer patients.

This new class of biomaterials has potential for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine as well as drug discovery and therapeutics, Ramille Shah, one of the team members, told Northwestern.edu. Its versatile and surgically friendly.

The tissue paper is a blend of proteins from animal organs that, when wet, can be folded, rolled, cut, flattened, balled, ripped and even crafted into tiny birds. It can also be frozen for later use, making it even more practical.

In one of the first lab tests, the team successfully grew hormone-secreting follicles in a culture using a paper made from a cow ovary. Their findings were recently published in Advanced Functional Materials.

And as with many scientific discoveries, the team at Northwestern stumbled upon the new material as an accident.

The scientists were researching 3D-printed mice ovaries when one of the team members spilled the hydrogel-based gelatin ink used in creating the ovaries. The ink pooled into a dry sheet that ended up being surprisingly strong.

The light bulb went on in my head, Adam Jakus, another one of the team members, told Northwestern.edu. I knew right then I could make large amounts of bioactive materials from other organs.

Since then, the researchers have been collecting scrap pig and cow organs from a local butcher and using them to further test out the regenerative tissue paper.

Breaking down everything from animal uteruses to kidneys to muscles to hearts, the team extracts the structural proteins which give an organ its form then dries them out and combines it was a polymer, or resin, which generates the thin, paper structure.

The final product is basically a papier-mch-like sheet of proteins that can retain the biochemicals needed to regenerate a sick or injured piece of tissue, like a human liver, or skin laceration.

Though a lot more research is needed, the material could one day be used to accelerate healing after surgery and help treat hormone deficiencies in cancer patients. The researchers also found it can support human stem cell growth.

It is really amazing that meat and animal by-products like a kidney, liver, heart and uterus can be transformed into paper-like biomaterials that can potentially regenerate and restore function to tissues and organs, Jakus said. Ill never look at a steak or pork tenderloin the same way again.

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'Origami organs' could be the future of regenerative medicine - New York Post

Collagen & Gelatin Market for Regenerative Medicine Worth 679.9 and 94.9 Million USD Respectively, by 2022 – Markets Insider

PUNE, India, August 8, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --

According to a new market research report "Collagen & Gelatin Market for Regenerative Medicine(by Source (Bovine, Porcine, Marine), Application (Wound Care, Orthopedic, Cardiovascular)), Value and Volume Analysis - Global Forecast to 2022 ", published by MarketsandMarkets, the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine is projected to grow from USD 420.6 Million in 2017 to USD 679.9 Million by 2022, at a CAGR of 10.1% during the forecast period. The global Gelatin Market for regenerative medicine is projected to grow from USD 65.2 Million in 2017 to USD 94.9 Million by 2022, at a CAGR of 7.8% during the forecast period.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160303/792302 )

Browse 63 Market Data Tables and 48 Figures spread through 179 Pages and in-depth TOC on"Collagen & Gelatin Market"

http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/collagen-gelatin-regenerative-medicine-market-95663122.html

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The bovine collagen segment accounted for the largest share of the market in 2017

By source, the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine has been segmented into bovine collagen, porcine collagen, marine collagen, and other sources. In 2017, the bovine collagen segment is expected to command the largest share of the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine. The large share of this segment is attributed to the lower cost and extensive availability of bovine collagen.

The orthopedic applications accounted for the largest share of the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine in 2017

On the basis of application, the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine has been segmented into orthopedic, wound care, cardiovascular, and other applications. In 2017, the orthopedic applications segment is expected to command the largest share of the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine. The large share of this segment can primarily be attributed to the high prevalence of osteoporosis.

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The orthopedic applications accounted for the largest share of the global Gelatin Market for regenerative medicine in 2017

On the basis of application, the global Gelatin Market for regenerative medicine has been segmented into wound care, orthopedic, cardiovascular & thoracic, and other applications. The wound care segment is expected to command the largest share of the global Gelatin Market for regenerative medicine in 2017. This segment is also projected to register the highest CAGR during the forecast period. Gelatin hydrogels provide a moist environment for healing while protecting the wound, with the additional advantage of being comfortable for patients due to their cooling effect and non-adhesiveness to wound tissue.

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North America dominated the market in 2017

In 2017, North America is expected to account for the largest share of the Collagen Market for regenerative medicine. The high incidence of periodontitis, increasing prevalence of heart diseases and diabetes in the U.S., and growing number of research studies in Canada are the major factors supporting the growth of this market. The Asia-Pacific region is projected to register the highest growth rate during the forecast period.

The major players operating in the global Collagen Market for regenerative medicine include Integra LifeSciences Holding Corporation (U.S.), Collagen Matrix, Inc. (U.S.), Collagen Solutions plc (U.K.), Royal DSM (Netherlands), Vornia Biomaterials, Ltd. (Ireland), SYMATESE (France), and NuCollagen, LLC. (U.S.). The major players operating in the global Gelatin Market for regenerative medicine include GELITA AG (Germany), Nitta Gelatin, Inc. (Japan), and PB Gelatin (Belgium).

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REGENERATIVE MEDICINE MARKET by Therapy (Cell Therapy, Tissue Engineering, Immunotherapy, Gene Therapy), Product (Cell-Based, Acellular), Applications (Orthopedic & Musculoskeletal Disorders, Dermatology, Oncology, Cardiology) - Forecast to 2021

http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/regenerative-medicine-market-65442579.html

BIOMATERIALS MARKET by Type of Materials (Metallic, Ceramic, Polymers, Natural) & Application (Cardiovascular, Orthopedic, Dental, Plastic Surgery, Wound Healing, Neurology, Tissue Engineering, Ophthalmology) - Global Forecast to 2021

http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/biomaterials-393.html

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Collagen & Gelatin Market for Regenerative Medicine Worth 679.9 and 94.9 Million USD Respectively, by 2022 - Markets Insider

Here’s Why Editas Medicine Rose as Much as 15.9% Monday – Motley Fool

What happened

Shares of gene editing leader Editas Medicine (NASDAQ:EDIT) rose nearly 16% Monday on heavy trading volume, most of which occurred shortly after the market opened. The number of shares traded in the first few minutes of trading exceeded the daily average trading volume.

There was no major announcement. Instead, Editas Medicine decided to payoff a promissory note issued to the Broad Institute, the holder of its gene editing patents, by issuing shares of common stock on Friday, Aug. 4 that became the property of the research institution. The maximum conversion price was $21.49 per share, which was significantly higher than the recent stock price, and it appears the shares were sold Monday morning at that higher price. Therefore, the company's stock received a little boost.

Despite the honest explanation with almost no significance to Editas Medicine (it didn't receive proceeds from issuing the shares to the Broad Institute), the gains managed to stick around. As of 3:21 p.m. EDT, the stock had settled to a 10.6% gain.

Image source: Getty Images.

In early March, Editas Medicine granted the Broad Institute and Wageningen University promissory notes worth 800,000 shares of common stock related to licensing fees for specific gene editing patents. The notes were convertible to shares at the company's discretion or after 150 days. Since early August is about 150 days after early March, it appears the latter took place.

It's worth pointing out that the Broad Institute was issued 271,347 shares of common stock a few days ago. That's substantially less than the 800,000 shares spelled out in the March filing. However, it's not easy to tell if the balance was given to others named in the filing or if the research institution negotiated a lower payment from Editas Medicine.

Either way, the fact that the Broad Institute unloaded its shares from the converted promissory note is hardly worrisome. After all, the research institution is simply realizing a licensing fee from Editas Medicine. Monday's pop is nothing more, nothing less.

Sometimes there are simple reasons for major stock movements. That is certainly the case with Editas Medicine stock on Monday. But there's good news for investors hoping that more actionable events were the driver of Monday's pop: The gene editing pioneer announces second-quarter 2017 earnings this Wednesday, Aug. 9. That should provide more timely information for shareholders that cannot get enough updates.

Maxx Chatsko has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Here's Why Editas Medicine Rose as Much as 15.9% Monday - Motley Fool

Ohio State researchers develop regenerative medicine breakthrough – The Ohio State University News (press release)

Researcher Chandan Sen with the nanotechnology-based chip designed to deliver biological "cargo" for cell conversion. Image: The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

*** Video and photos available for download: http://bit.ly/2tyoPdM ***

COLUMBUS, Ohio Researchers at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and Ohio States College of Engineering have developed a new technology, Tissue Nanotransfection (TNT), that can generate any cell type of interest for treatment within the patients own body. This technology may be used to repair injured tissue or restore function of aging tissue, including organs, blood vessels and nerve cells.

Results of the regenerative medicine study published today in the journalNatureNanotechnology.

By using our novel nanochip technology, injured or compromised organs can be replaced. We have shown that skin is a fertile land where we can grow the elements of any organ that is declining, said Dr. Chandan Sen, director of Ohio States Center for Regenerative Medicine & Cell Based Therapies, who co-led the study with L. James Lee, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering with Ohio States College of Engineering in collaboration with Ohio States Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center.

Researchers studied mice and pigs in these experiments. In the study, researchers were able to reprogram skin cells to become vascular cells in badly injured legs that lacked blood flow. Within one week, active blood vessels appeared in the injured leg, and by the second week, the leg was saved. In lab tests, this technology was also shown to reprogram skin cells in the live body into nerve cells that were injected into brain-injured mice to help them recover from stroke.

This is difficult to imagine, but it is achievable, successfully working about 98 percent of the time. With this technology, we can convert skin cells into elements of any organ with just one touch. This process only takes less than a second and is non-invasive, and then you're off. The chip does not stay with you, and the reprogramming of the cell starts. Our technology keeps the cells in the body under immune surveillance, so immune suppression is not necessary, said Sen, who also is executive director of Ohio States Comprehensive Wound Center.

TNT technology has two major components: First is a nanotechnology-based chip designed to deliver cargo to adult cells in the live body. Second is the design of specific biological cargo for cell conversion. This cargo, when delivered using the chip, converts an adult cell from one type to another, said first author Daniel Gallego-Perez, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering and general surgery who also was a postdoctoral researcher in both Sens and Lees laboratories.

TNT doesnt require any laboratory-based procedures and may be implemented at the point of care. The procedure is also non-invasive. The cargo is delivered by zapping the device with a small electrical charge thats barely felt by the patient.

The concept is very simple, Lee said. As a matter of fact, we were even surprised how it worked so well. In my lab, we have ongoing research trying to understand the mechanism and do even better. So, this is the beginning, more to come.

Researchers plan to start clinical trials next year to test this technology in humans, Sen said.

Funding for this research was provided by Ohio States Center for Regenerative Medicine and Cell-Based Therapies, Ohio States Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center and Leslie and Abigail Wexner.

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Ohio State researchers develop regenerative medicine breakthrough - The Ohio State University News (press release)

Bernard P. Lane dies; Stony Brook medical school co-founder was 79 – Newsday

Bernard P. Lane had a full, rich, productive life in teaching, medical research, public service, music and raising a family on Long Island.

Lane, known as Bernie, was a founding faculty member of the medical school at Stony Brook University, his family and associates say, as well as a professor of pathology there who authored or co-authored more than 100 scientific research papers; was a former president of the faculty senate; head of a number of university, state and national medical organizations; an expert trumpet player; and a devoted family man.

Lane, of Setauket, died July 5 at home after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 79.

A native of Brooklyn, Lane received an undergraduate degree from Brown University, a medical degree from New York University and a master of science degree in management from Stony Brook in 1992.

As a professor of pathology, Lane taught at Stony Brook from 1971 until he retired in 2014. Before coming to Stony Brook, he taught for several years at New York University Medical School.

Lane was director of the pathology residence program for 25 years, mentoring scores of pathologists who have gone on to positions in hospitals and academic medical centers both locally and nationally, his wife, Dorothy Lane, associate dean for Continuing Medical Education at Stony Brook, said in a statement. The couple were married 53 years.

He was also director of the Electron Microscopy Laboratory and the founding chairman of the board of directors of the Clinical Management Plan at Stony Brook University Hospital.

Outside of the university on Long Island, Lane was at times president of the Suffolk County Medical Society, the Suffolk County Pathology Society and the Long Island Division of the American Cancer Society.

Nationally, he was chairman of the National Group on Faculty Practice of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

In the early days of the medical school, Lane felt rewarded by the pioneering spirit of these first students . . . and by the successes of the thousands he taught in the decades that followed, his wife said.

In addition to his extensive medical and public service, Lane also had time for his family and for cultural life on Long Island.

Lane greatly enjoyed raising a family on Long Island, spending countless hours at West Meadow Beach [in Stony Brook] and making day trips to South Shore beaches in the summers, his wife wrote. He also regularly attended concerts and theatrical performances at Stony Brook, Bellport and Westbury, she said.

My Dad enjoyed many things in life, recalled his daughter, Erika Neil, of Chantilly, Virginia, in remarks prepared for his funeral service. He was a gifted trumpet player who loved music. I have fond memories of him playing Herb Alpert on the record player, and of him playing trumpet while I accompanied him on the piano.

In addition to his wife and daughter, Lane is survived by two sons: Andrew Lane of Baltimore and Matthew Lane of Los Angeles; and four grandchildren.

A graveside funeral service was held July 7 at Washington Memorial Park Cemetery in Mt. Sinai. In lieu of flowers, his family requested that donations be made either to the Stony Brook Cancer Center or the American Cancer Society.

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Bernard P. Lane dies; Stony Brook medical school co-founder was 79 - Newsday

UCF medical school changes opioid education amid health crisis – WFTV Orlando

by: Jamie Holmes Updated: Aug 8, 2017 - 6:45 PM

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. - In 2015, more than 500 people died in Orlando from prescription drug overdoses, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

Most of those cases started with a visit to a doctor's office and a prescription turned into an addiction.

University of Central Floridas medical school is now changing how it educates its future doctors and it's a plan going nationwide.

Future doctors at the university will not only learn what to do to help a patient, but will also learn what not to give them.

Read: UCF breaks ground on downtown Orlando campus

Dr. Martin Klapheke, the assistant dean of UCFs medical school, said students will learn how to do a little more research on their patients history.

The school has changed its curriculum to add much more focus on opioids.

Future doctors including Christopher Schow will take classes on how to better identify addicts and when to recommend non-narcotic options, such as physical therapy and acupuncture.

And they'll have to study much more of their patient's history.

For Schow, its personal.

The second-year student lost his mother to an Oxycontin overdose when he was 14 years old.

"I want to be a better doctor. I want to lift up the entire profession as much as I can personally, to make us all do better, he said.

And doctors historically are partially to blame.

Read: UCF unveils mural of 2 Knights killed in Pulse nightclub shooting

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, some 75 percent of heroin users got their start because they were first hooked to prescription opioids.

For physicians of previous generations, it was just about stopping the pain.

"I went to med school a long time ago. And back then, I got a lot more training on antibiotics than I did on how to use opioids," said Klapheke.

But for Schow, it will largely be about knowing your patient better so that hell know when to prescribe something that isnt a pill.

Its a lesson he learned before medical school.

"Make sure you're keeping up with them. Know what's going on in their life. If that happened for my mom, she would have gotten help, he said.

At the end of the month, UCF will publish some of its curriculum nationwide for other medical schools to use.

Last year, the assistant dean of the school was in Washington, D.C., working with federal health officials on how to develop a national plan for all medical schools to address the opioid crisis.

2017 Cox Media Group.

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UCF medical school changes opioid education amid health crisis - WFTV Orlando

UNLV medical school graduate students ‘train with the best’ – Las Vegas Review-Journal

The victim, a 20-something-year-old woman, is found outside a bar after being attacked. When she arrives by car at the hospital emergency room, she appears woozy, has very low blood pressure, and her heart and respiratory rates are both well above normal. She could die if her injuries arent diagnosed quickly and accurately.

The good news not just for this victim but for all Nevadans is that this battery case was feigned for the benefit of a class of graduate student-resident physicians attending a UNLV School of Medicine course on trauma assessment.

Their instructor, Dr. Deborah Kuhls, a highly respected trauma surgeon at University Medical Center and a UNLV professor, said she feels privileged to be leading the class.

I had great teachers, and I want to teach what Ive learned to others, she said. I want to pass it on.

While the schools initial freshman class of 60 students has received most of the attention during its brief existence, the nearly 300 graduate medical students attending UNLV are expected to make a more immediate impact on the states shortage of trained physicians. State officials are counting on many of them staying in Nevada, which ranks 48th in the nation per capita for physicians across all specialties and 50th for primary-care physicians.

Training with the best

The doctors who attended the July 30 class at the Clinical Simulation Center of Las Vegas, which sits off Shadow Lane just across from UMC Medical Center and Valley Hospital, are mostly recent medical school graduates from around the country taking graduate courses in emergency medicine and general surgery. They also see patients at UMC during their supervised clinical training.

Dr. Nick Schulack, who attended medical school in Oregon, said he decided to take his three-year graduate emergency medicine training at UNLV because of the clinical training at UMCs trauma center. The center is renowned nationally, with National Trauma Data Bank statistics showing that while many people arrive with less than a 1 percent chance to live, an amazing 96 percent survive.

I want to work with, and be trained by, the best, Schulack said before the class began.

Kuhls began the demonstration by letting the class know that the assault scenarios fictitious hospital has a surgeon, but it isnt like UMC, with its huge trauma center and wide assortment of specialists available 24 hours a day. It sounds more like one of the hospitals found in Nevadas small, rural towns, which have long been difficult to staff.

After she reads off the victims vital signs, student-resident physicians Lian Farino and Schulack volunteer to assess the patient.

Where does it hurt? Farino asks the victim, who appears to be swaying as she stands in front of the room.

There is no answer and soon, Gigi Perez, a young actress wearing makeup to look as if shes been stabbed, appears to faint. Farino and Schulack place her on a table at the head of the class.

Can you wiggle your fingers and toes? Farino asks.

Again, no answer.

A crucial realization

Farino, playing the lead physician, tells Kuhls the patient needs IV fluids and blood and a chest tube insertion to help her breathe. Bleeding must be stopped in the thorax or chest area, where the stab wound was discovered.

After Kuhls reveals that fluid is leaking from the patients nose and ears and she has dilated pupils, Farino says it appears the patient has a brain injury.

Farino declares that once the hospital surgeon stops the bleeding and stabilizes the patient, she must be transported to a hospital with a neurosurgeon to handle a possible brain bleed.

Kuhls is visibly pleased. After class she said that a main point of the dramatization was for the student physician to realize that the patient needed a higher level of care than the scenarios community hospital could provide.

Students were later tested on patient assessment through multiple-choice questions and in simulations similar to what Farino did in front of the class.

That Kuhls became a trauma surgeon, and then a professor at a medical school, wasnt a sure thing. She started as a banker. It wasnt until her 30s, she said, that she re-examined her life and realized that she had always had a passion for helping people overcome life-threatening injuries.

After completing her medical training in Maryland in her 40s, she came to UMC 17 years ago. She began teaching soon after coaching many students from the University of Nevada, Reno, medical school who received their clinical training in Las Vegas.

Since then, she has held patients hearts in her hands as she worked to stop the bleeding from gunshot wounds and horrific accidents.

We cant save everyone

It is very rewarding to save lives, she said. But I also tell students that we have to accept the fact that were human and not God. We have to realize that we can do our best in our hearts we know weve done our best but we cant save everyone. And sometimes we have to tell someone that their loved one has died. We have to convey that information in a very empathetic way. It is not easy.

Dr. Dale Carrison, chief of staff at UMC and chairman of emergency medicine at the medical school, calls Kuhls brilliant in the operating room and in the classroom.

Her passion for her second profession has impressed the graduate students.

Dr. Krystle Tuano, a resident who plans to be a plastic surgeon, said Kuhls taught her that the best doctors dont stop helping patients after acute care is finished.

Shes a great patient advocate, always trying to find resources to help a patient out in the community after leaving the hospital, she said.

Farino, who has worked with Kuhls at UMC, said Kuhls shows that teaching is an art.

She can distill the jargon down from the very high level she practices at to something medical students can understand, he said. That takes a particular skill that not very many people can do. Its something I hope I can do.

Contact Paul Harasim at pharasim@reviewjournal.com or 702 387-5273. Follow Follow @paulharasim on Twitter.

Medical schools graduate programs, fellowships

With the 60 students in the UNLV School of Medicines first class of medical students, there are also nearly 300 young physicians pursing their specialties in graduate medical education through residencies and fellowships at the school.

The 11 residency programs are in emergency medicine; family medicine; family medicine-rural; general surgery; internal medicine; obstetrics and gynecology; orthopedic surgery; otolaryngology; pediatrics; plastic surgery; and psychiatry.

Advanced fellowships are available in acute-care surgery; cardiovascular medicine; colon and rectal surgery; gastroenterology and hepatology; hand and microsurgery; minimally invasive gynecological surgery; pulmonary and critical care medicine; sports medicine; and urgent care.

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UNLV medical school graduate students 'train with the best' - Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kansas’ only medical school receives new 171000-sf building – Building Design + Construction (press release) (registration)

Missouri isnt the only state with a new medical center designed to address the shortage of healthcare professionals, as the University of Kansas Medical Center recently opened the Health Education Building with the same goal in mind.

The Health Education Building is a four-story, 171,000-sf building designed by Co Architects and Helix Architecture that includes high-tech simulation environments and flexible learning studios. Large-scale teaching studios and clinical skills and simulation labs support active, team-based learning.

Photo courtesy of KUMC.

Two 225-person interactive studios are separated by an operable partition that can be removed to create one column-free 11,000-sf event space. The studios and labs float within the outer glass faade of the building to show off the core of the buildings curriculum to the public.

From the outside, the buildings design uses a transparent lantern box design. The ample use of glass allows students to receive natural daylight and provides them with exterior views.

The Health Education Buildings design also called for an on-grade parking lot to be changed into a 22,000-sf green courtyard and a 17,000-sf vegetated roof with access. The irrigation system for these features uses condensate water from the buildings mechanical system.

Photo courtesy of KUMC.

A 250-foot-long glass-enclosed bridge passes through the center of the Health Education Building and connects it to existing buildings on the Kansas City campus. The bridge links the campus into a loop that provides 6,000 sf of lounge, meeting, and student activity space.

The Health Education Building was designed with flexibility in mind and can accommodate a 25% class size increase over its current enrollment.

Photo courtesy of KUMC.

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Kansas' only medical school receives new 171000-sf building - Building Design + Construction (press release) (registration)

Charles scores 26 as Liberty top Fever 81-76 – News & Observer


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Charles scores 26 as Liberty top Fever 81-76
News & Observer
Tina Charles scored 26 points and the New York Liberty overcame Erica Wheeler's 33 points for an 81-76 victory over the Indiana Fever on Tuesday night. Wheeler made two of her seven 3-pointers in the final 20 seconds. Charles answered the first with ...
Liberty's video game stars hold off Indiana Fever | NewsdayNewsday
Liberty return from lengthy trek to face Fever at MSG (Aug 7, 2017 ...FOXSports.com

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Charles scores 26 as Liberty top Fever 81-76 - News & Observer

A painting of Lady Liberty in hijab hangs in congressman’s office … – Washington Post

Each year, scores of high school students across the country compete in the Congressional Art Competition, submitting works of art for a chance tobe featured at the U.S. Capitol.

Now,for thesecond year in a row, a teenagers painting forthe contest has become the center of a political controversy, drawing ire from conservative groups. Thistime around, the artwork stirred complaints even before making it toWashington.

The painting, a finalist in the competition, currently hangs in California, in the Santa Anaoffice of Democratic Rep.J. Luis Correa. It depicts the Statue of Liberty wearing a hijab,holding hertorchacross the left side of her body.

While the painting is simply apiece of art createdby a local female high school student, its symbolism is clearly political. It evokes imagery similar to other works of art that have circulated since President Trumps election, such as thepopular We The People poster of a woman wearing an American flag as a hijab.

But for some conservatives, the painting has no place in the office of a congressman.

Whenlocal activist group We the People Rising saw the painting in Correas office, its membersset out on a campaign to have it removed, calling it a separation of church and state issue.

Early last month, a member of thegroup, which advocates for stricter immigration laws, wrote a letter to Correa requesting that his office take down the painting, sayingit was not appropriate for the public office of a congressman. The group said it receivedguidance from a legal consultant.

Ultimately, to attribute a specific religion to the Statue of Liberty is inaccurate, unprofessional and offensive, wrote Mike McGetrick, an activist in We the People Rising and a resident of Orange, Calif. In addition, the painting displays the torch of the Statue of Liberty, not as the heralded beacon of light, but rather held awkwardly to one side in a perplexing, even disturbing, manner.

Since then, the group has passed out fliers in local neighborhoods, urging constituents to contact the congressman and ask him to remove the painting. Itsays it will organize a protest on Sept. 11 at Correas district office if the painting is not taken down, the Orange County Register reported.

In a videotaped meeting with a representative for Correa, McGetrick called the painting reprehensible and more than a little bit insulting.

The artimplies we welcome Syrian refugees and all that, another group member said.

This week, as news of the painting circulated on social media, other conservative publications and figures joined in the criticism. Sarah Palin,former Alaska governor and 2008 Republicanvice-presidential nominee,shared a linkon Twitterto an article about the painting from the Young Conservatives website, with the message: Statue of Liberty painting found in Congressmans Office, Then America Spots Something Unusual.

But Correa saidthat he will not be taking down the painting. In an interview Tuesday morning with The Washington Post, Correa said the painting isan individual artists expression and is only hanging on the office wall because it was chosen as a finalist for the congressional competition. Policing art, and what is proper, what is not, he said, would violate freedom of speech laws and lead to a very dangerous slippery slope.

My thoughts were, heres probably a young Muslimlady who is trying very hard to be part of America, who is trying very hard to show people that she is an American, given the context that is going on around us in our country, Correa said, speaking by phone from Jerusalem. By me taking it down Im acknowledging that she did something wrong.

After receiving complaints about the painting, the congressmans office reached out to theHouse Office of General Counsel for guidance, said Andrew Scibetta,communications director for Correa. The legal team made clear that there was nothing wrong or in any way malicious in posting this photo, Scibetta told The Post.

Following advice from law enforcement, Correas office declined to identify the paintings artist,to protect her and prevent her from becoming the target of threats.

The students painting came in fourth place among entries in Correas district and is one of several runner-up art pieces displayed on the congressmans wall.Thefirst-place winnerof the Congressional Art Competitionfor Correas district a mural depicting Mexican American World World II veterans is displayed ina tunnel between the Capitol and House office buildings alongside more than 400 other works from other districts that won.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations shared the Orange County Registers story about the painting on Facebook, including the words Islamophobia Watch. In response, a number of people wrotethat the idea behind thenations symbol of freedom was initially conceived as an Egyptian woman and by default in those times a Muslim.

[Americas most famous statue was Muslim before she became Lady Liberty]

Indeed, before French sculptor Frdric Auguste Bartholdi brought his majestic vision for the Statue of Liberty to the United States, hehad conceived an idea for a lighthousethat would stand at the entrance to the Suez Canal. Bartholdi wantedto carve the likeness of an Egyptian peasant woman holding aloft a torch of freedom, according to historian Michael B. Oren. But the Egyptian viceroy could not afford to finance Bartholdis project, The Post reported.

[House battle over controversial student painting spirals out of control]

The California students depiction of Lady Liberty in hijab comes amid a broader national discussionabout the meaning of the famous statue,which many Americans consider a welcoming symbol for immigrants. But that notion was challenged last week by White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, who told CNNs Jim Acosta the monuments poem about the huddled masses is not part of the original Statue of Liberty.

[Give me your tired, your poor: The story of poet and refugee advocate Emma Lazarus]

Since the congressional art contest began in 1982, more than 650,000 high school students have participated, according to the competitions website. But as Scibetta said,it seems that every year theres something that drives people nuts.

Earlier this year, a painting inspired by the 2014 civil unrest in Ferguson, Mo., became the center of a House battle. The painting, created by Missouri teen David Pulphus, was selected as a winner in last years contest and was displayed in the tunnel between the Capitol and the House office buildings. The art work portrayed a horned animalsimilar to a wild boar in a police uniform tangling with a protester depictedas a wolf. Around them,protesters hold signs with words such as, Racism kills.

After it had been displayed for seven months, groups representing law enforcement officers called for its removal because of its perceived negative portrayal of police, The Post reported.Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Wash.), a former sheriff, asked House Speaker Paul D. Ryan to have the painting taken down,citing rules against depicting subjects of contemporary political controversy or a sensationalistic or gruesome nature on the Capitol premises.

Capitol officials ultimately decided the painting violated House rules and removed it.

But the saga didnt end there. The following month, theyoung artist, along withRep. William Lacy Clay (D-Mo.),filed a lawsuit in federal courts saying the paintings removal violated the students right to free speech in bowing to overt political pressure.

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A painting of Lady Liberty in hijab hangs in congressman's office ... - Washington Post

Man dead in shooting on Liberty Road in Baltimore County … – ABC2 News

A 20-year-old man was found dead on the side of Liberty Road in Gwynn Oak early Tuesday morning.

Baltimore County Police said officers discovered Dejuane Malik Beverly, of the 5200 block of Pembroke Avenue, suffering from at least one gunshot wound to the upper body in a grassy area near Tulsa and Liberty Roads.

Police responded to the scene around 1:48 a.m. after receiving a call of shots fired.

Beverly was pronounced dead at the scene.

The suspect remains at large. No motive for the shooting has been determined.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 410-307-2020.

#BCoPD investigating overnight deadly shooting, Tulsa Rd & Liberty Rd. 1 adult male victim. Suspect outstanding. Details to follow. ^jzp

One person dead, off Liberty Heights Road. Medical examiner just arrived. @ABC2NEWS pic.twitter.com/UQQGt6EJWw

Scene clearing up at Liberty Rd and Tulsa Rd in Baltimore County. One person dead, working to find out more. @ABC2NEWS pic.twitter.com/OHOu88G1WP

UPDATE: Balt. Co. Officials- shooting happened at 1:50am, one person dead. @ABC2NEWS pic.twitter.com/TUDcsDm5A2

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Man dead in shooting on Liberty Road in Baltimore County ... - ABC2 News

Why Shares of Liberty Interactive Dropped Today – Motley Fool

What happened

Shares of media conglomerateLiberty Interactive (NASDAQ:QVCA) tumbled on Tuesday following a disappointing second-quarter report. Total revenue slumped due to weak sales from broadcast network QVC, and net income dropped as well. The stock was down about 10% at 11:30 a.m.

Liberty Interactive's QVC Group reported second-quarter revenue of $2.35 billion, down 3.2% year over year and $50 million below analyst expectations. Consolidated revenue from QVC was down 4% year over year, or down 3% adjusted for currency. QVC's U.S. revenue slumped 4%, with a system outage responsible for a 1% negative impact, while QVC's international segment posted revenue growth of 2%, adjusted for currency.

Image source: Getty Images.

QVC will soon be joined by HSN, with Liberty Interactive agreeing in July to buy the 62% of the company that it doesn't currently own. The transaction is expected to close during the fourth quarter of this year, creating a home shopping powerhouse.

Adjusted net income for the QVC Group was $188 million, down 14% year over year. QVC CEO Mike George discussed plans to return the company to growth: "We are executing on a number of strategies that we expect to restore healthy growth, with a particular focus on greater diversity and newness in our assortments. We were delighted with the strong performance of our International segment, which was led byQVC Japan."

In addition to acquiring HSN, Liberty Interactive agreed in April to merge with General Communication. Certain Liberty Ventures assets will be merged with General Communication, forming a new company, GCI Liberty. At the same time, Liberty Interactive will be renamed QVC Group and become an asset-backed stock, comprised of QVC, HSN, and zulily.

After the dust has settled, the new QVC Group will be faced with the challenge of returning to growth at a time when e-commerce's share of total retail sales is increasing. E-commerce will be part of the strategy, but weak sales at QVC during the second quarter gave investors a good reason to be skeptical.

Timothy Green has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends General Communication. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Why Shares of Liberty Interactive Dropped Today - Motley Fool

Lady Liberty and the Pledge: The story behind the words Americans cherish – Charlotte Observer


Charlotte Observer
Lady Liberty and the Pledge: The story behind the words Americans cherish
Charlotte Observer
The Statue of Liberty is a symbol of liberty, and lighting the world. It's a symbol of American liberty lighting the world. The poem that you're referring to, that was added later; is not actually a part of the original Statue of Liberty. Miller's ...
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Haaretz -Washington Post -Poetry Foundation
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Lady Liberty and the Pledge: The story behind the words Americans cherish - Charlotte Observer

Liberty Global plc: The raw numbers – Motley Fool

Video customers are still fleeing Liberty Global, but broadband and voice customers are booming as the company builds out more infrastructure.

Europe's steady economic improvement continues to be a tailwind for Liberty Global plc (NASDAQ:LBTYK) and some of the company's new products are taking hold as well.

As the telecommunications business evolves, Liberty Global is quickly making strategic changes to its business. Here's a look at how the second quarter went and how some of those strategy moves are paying off.

Image source: Getty Images.

Data Source: Liberty Global earnings release. Includes only European operations.

The top-line numbers are helpful, but with a number of distinct businesses making up Liberty Global it's important to understand some of the segment.

Management was happy with performance in Europe and the long-term strategy to offer improved quality video and cellular products with more compelling packages is working. CEO Mike Fries said:

Our next-generation4 video platforms, which include elegant user-interfaces, in-and-out of the home viewing capabilities and robust content line-ups, continue resonating with consumers, as we've added 1 million subscribers across Europe during the last twelve months.

Investments in broadband and cellular networks in Europe are paying off and that momentum will continue throughout the year. What investors will want to watch for is if 4k video is a product customers are willing to trade up for rather than cutting the cable cord altogether. If adoption rates rise, this is a product that could drive growth and stem some of the losses Liberty Global has seen in recent years.

Investors should also look for the spinoff of LiLAC Group later this year, which could free up some capital to pay down debt or buy back shares. And simplifying the corporate structure would be a welcome change as well.

Travis Hoium has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Liberty Global and Liberty LiLAC Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Travis Hoium has been writing for fool.com since July 2010 and covers the solar industry, renewable energy, and gaming stocks among other things.

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Liberty Global plc: The raw numbers - Motley Fool

Defending Jeff Deist From The Politically Correct Libertarians – The Liberty Conservative

Certain quarters of the libertarian universe are in an absolute tizzy because Mises Institute President Jeff Deist invoked blood and soil in a recent speech. In the minds of some PC brain-addled libertarians, this is clearly an indication that the speaker was dog whistling to Nazis. This is both profoundly clueless and shameless PC grandstanding.

Proof that blood and soil can only be some sort of cryptic reference to Nazism is supposedly supplied by a Google search of the term which brings back a lot of links to wrongthink websites. I respect many libertarians. I have many libertarian friends, both real and virtual, but too many modern libertarians inhabit a world that exists only in their heads, and they can be grossly unfamiliar with the intellectual (and real) world outside the echo chamber that is their segment of libertarianism.

Blood and soil is, in fact, a rather mundane formulation that is used to express an undeniable aspect of reality. To deny that attachment to blood and soil is a fundamental aspect of the human condition identifies someone as intellectually unserious, but that is what ideology can do to people. It makes otherwise smart people stupid as they try to force reality to conform to their tidy theories, rather than letting reality inform their theories.

Man has been attached to blood and soil, hearth and home, kith and kin, for the entirety of human history. In fact, much of human history is a tale of blood and soil. Such is certainly hardwired into our DNA, which makes perfect Darwinian sense. Attachment to blood and soil is very logical from a survival standpoint.

For making a statement similar to this during a Facebook debate, I was accused of peddling baseless pseudoscience. Huh? Because other primates do not demonstrate attachment to kin and territory? Because no other mammal does? You cannot penetrate this sort of ideological blindness.

Far from being some exclusively Nazi code, blood and soil have long been invoked within American conservative circles, for example, as part of the long-running debate between paleoconservatives and neoconservatives over the nature of America. Paleocons assert that these United States are a continuation of old Europe in the New World, not some radical new departure or experiment. Neocons on the other hand assert that the U.S. is instead an idea or proposition nation unlike the blood and soil nations of Europe. I certainly side with the paleocons in this debate because an idea nation is an ideological conceit that is inherently leftist. It is also important to note that other countries that claimed to be idea nations were the old Soviet Union and post-Revolution France. Not exactly stellar company.

But even if you concede that the U.S. is an idea nation, the claim is that it is uniquely so. Therefore, by implication, other nations are not and follow the model. Arguably, every nation on earth is a nation founded on blood and soil to a greater or lesser degree, and the degree to which it is lesser is largely dependent on how many differing blood and soil groups it is attempting to make coexist under one national roof. The only nations that are arguably not based on blood and soil are the modern nation states that were artificially cobbled together by others, such as Iraq and the former Yugoslavia, and we saw how well those little experiments worked out. They were led by strongmen and held together by force, but when that fell apart, they naturally separated into their blood and soil constituencies with much messiness. So Iraq is not a natural blood and soil nation, but Kurdistan within Iraq is. So, according to the PC libertarian thought police, is Kurdistan inherently a Nazish country? Are all Kurds therefore Nazis?

I asked one of the Rightthink Enforcement Brigade in my aforementioned debate if he considered a Cherokee Indian Reservation to be a manifestation of blood and soil Nazism? Are the Cherokees who live there therefore Nazis? Needless to say, I didnt get a straight answer. Off course, Nazi-esque Indian Reservations would be a bit of a difficult thing to pull off since the Reservations predate Nazism, but history has never been the righthinkers strong point seeing as how they are peddling a laughingly novel intellectual formulation.

Aside from all of this ridiculous hoopla, I highly recommend that you read the Deist speech. Far from a dog-whistling screed as the PC libertarians have characterize it, it is actually eminently reasonable and a much needed counterbalance to the detached-from-reality brand of libertarianism being peddled by the hypersensitive PC-obsessed new breed.

The speech is very well done, and comes at a very important time as many libertarians are going astray. The Anarchist Notebook calls it probably the most important libertarian speech made in the last decade. What Deist is essentially doing in his speech is defending a concept that, while some will object to the term, used to be called paleolibertarianism. I do not intend to diminish Deists speech in anyway, but what he articulates is not new or groundbreaking. He makes some observations that are really truismsthat people value family, faith, culture, place, and so forthand then makes some arguments that men and women of good will could have an honest debate about, such as the relative role of universalism vs. self-determination.

Early on in his speech, Deist describes and defends orthodox Rothbardian libertarianism. What he defends in theory is a stateless form of libertarianism. It isnt even minarchism that he is defending. He goes on to defend the paleolibertarian belief that the institutions and sentiments that undergird civil society such as family, faith, culture, tradition, attachment to place, etc. are essential components that will hold society together in the theoretical absence of the state, rather than impediments to liberty as many of the new breed libertarians see them. He defends decentralization, secession, and self-determination as political ends that libertarians should strive for rather than the imposition of a universal moral ethic.

Deist concluded his speech with a call to action. In other words, blood and soil and God and nation still matter to people. Libertarians ignore this at the risk of irrelevance, he said. This statement is true on its face. These things do manifestly matter to people and libertarians certainly ignore them at the risk of their own irrelevance, but it is apparently this line more than any other that has the PC libertarian thought police so hysterical.

There is something not normal about a person who can read a defense of the stateless society and decentralization, secession, and self-determination as means of achieving it and immediately think Nazi because of a reference to the obvious reality of blood and soil. This is a sorry attempt by competing power centers in the libertarian orbit to marginalize a mindset that they disagree with at the expense of the greater movement as a whole. Perhaps some of the not-too-bright spear carriers arguing over this really are ideologically brain addled, but I simply cannot believe that people like Steve Horwitz, one of the main ringleaders of the PC jihad, are really that stupid. Theyre not. They are arguing in bad faith by exploiting the reigning PC zeitgeist rather than have an honest debate. Shame on them.

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Defending Jeff Deist From The Politically Correct Libertarians - The Liberty Conservative

The Growing World of Libertarian Transhumanism | The American … – The American Conservative

Transhumanists are curiosity addicts. If its new, different, untouched, or even despised, were probably interested in it. If it involves a revolution or a possible paradigm shift in human experience, you have our full attention. We are obsessed with the mysteries of existence, and we spend our time using the scientific method to explore anything we can find about the evolving universe and our tiny place in it.

Obsessive curiosity is a strange bedfellow. It stems from a profound sense of wanting something better in lifeof not being satisfied. It makes one search, ponder, and strive for just about everything and anything that might improve existence. In the 21st century, that leads one right into transhumanism. Thats where Ive landed right now: A journalist and activist in the transhumanist movement. Im also currently a Libertarian candidate for California Governor. I advocate for science and tech-themed policies that give everyone the opportunity to live indefinitely in perfect health and freedom.

Politics aside, transhumanism is the international movement of using science and technology to radically change the human being and experience. Its primary goal is to deliver and embrace a utopian techno-optimistic worlda world that consists of biohackers, cyborgists, roboticists, life extension advocates, cryonicists, Singularitarians, and other science-devoted people.

Transhumanism was formally started in 1980s by philosophers in California. For decades it remained low key, mostly discussed in science fiction novels and unknown academic conferences. Lately, however, transhumanism seems to be surging in popularity. What once was a smallish band of fringe people discussing how science and technology can solve all humanitys problems has now become a burgeoning social mission of millions around the planet.

At the recent FreedomFest, the worlds largest festival on liberty, transhumanism was a theme explored in numerous panels, including some I had the privilege of being on. Libertarian transhumanism is one of the fastest growing segments of the libertarian movement. A top priority for transhumanists is to have freedom from the government so radical science experiments and research can go on undisturbed and unregulated.

So why are so many people jumping on the transhumanist bandwagon? I think it has to do with the mishmash of tech inundating and dominating our daily lives. Everything from our smartphone addictions to flying at 30,000 feet in jet airplanes to Roombas freaking out our pets in our homes. Nothing is like it was for our forbearers. In fact, little is like it was even a generation ago. And the near future will be many times more dramatic: driverless cars, robotic hearts, virtual reality sex, and telepathy via mind-reading headsets. Each of these technologies is already here, and in some cases being marketed to billions of people. The world is shifting under our feetand libertarian transhumanism is a sure way to navigate the chaos to make sure we arrive at the best future possible.

My interest in transhumanism began over 20 years ago when I was a philosophy and religion student at Columbia University in New York City. We were assigned to read an article on life extension techniques and the strange field of cryonics, where human beings are frozen after theyve died in hopes of reviving them with better medicine in the future. While Id read about these ideas in science fiction before, I didnt realize an entire cottage industry and movement existed in America that is dedicated to warding off death with radical science. It was an epiphany for me, and I knew after finishing that article I was passionately committed to transhumanism and wanted to help it.

However, it wasnt until I was in the Demilitarized Zone of Vietnam, on assignment for National Geographic Channel as a journalist, that I came to dedicate my life to transhumanism. Walking in the jungle, my guide tackled me and I fell to the ground with my camera. A moment later he pointed at the half-hidden landmine I almost stepped on. Id been through dozens of dangerous experiences in the over 100 countries I visited during my twenties and early thirtieshunting down wildlife poachers with WildAid, volcano boarding in the South Pacific, and even facing a pirate attack off Yemen on my small sailboat where I hid my girlfriend in the bilge and begged masked men with AK47s not to shoot me. But this experience in Vietnam was the one that forced a U-turn in my life. Looking at the unexploded landmine, I felt like a philosophical explosive had gone off in my head. It was time to directly dedicate my skills and hours to overcoming biological human death.

I returned home to America immediately and plunged into the field of transhumanism, reading everything I could on the topic, talking with people about it, and preparing a plan to contribute to the movement. I also began by writing my libertarian-minded novel The Transhumanist Wager, which went on to become a bestseller in philosophy on Amazon and helped launched my career as a futurist. Of course, a bestseller in philosophy on Amazon doesnt mean very many sales (theres been about 50,000 downloads to date), but it did mean that transhumanism was starting to appear alongside the ideas of Plato, Marx, Nietzsche, Ayn Rand, Sam Harris, and other philosophers that inspired people to look outside their scope of experience into the unknown.

And transhumanism is the unknown. Bionic arms, brain implants ectogenesis, artificial intelligence, exoskeleton suits, designer babies, gene editing tech. These technologies are no longer part of some Star Trek sequel, but are already here or being worked on. They will change the world and how we see ourselves as human beings. The conundrum facing society is whether were ready for this. Transhumanists say yes. But America may not welcome that.

In fact, the civil rights battle of the century may be looming because of coming transhumanist tech. If conservatives think abortion rights are unethical, how will they feel about scientists who want to genetically combine the best aspects of species, including humans and animals together? And should people be able to marry their sexbots? Will transhumanist Christians try to convert artificial intelligence and lead us to something termed a Jesus Singularity? Should we allow scientists to reverse aging, something researchers have already had success with in mice? Finally, as we become more cyborg-like with artificial hips, cranial implants, and 3D-printed organs, should we rename the human species?

Whether people like it or not, transhumanism has arrived. Not only has it become a leading buzzword for a new generation pondering the significance of merging with machines, but transhumanist-themed columns are appearing in major media. Celebrity conspiracy theorists like Mark Dice and Alex Jones bash it regularly, and even mainstream media heavyweights like John Stossel, Joe Rogan, and Glenn Beck discuss it publicly. Then theres Google hiring famed inventor Ray Kurzweil as lead engineer to work on artificial intelligence, or J. Craig Ventures new San Diego-based genome sequencing start-up (co-founded with Peter Diamandis of the X-Prize Foundation and stem cell pioneer Robert Hariri) which already has 70 million dollars in financing.

Its not just companies either. Recently, the British Parliament approved a procedure to create babies with material from three different parents. Even President Obama, before he left office, jumped in the game by giving DARPA $70 million dollars to develop brain chip technology, part of Americas multi-billion dollar BRAIN Initiative. The future is coming fast, people around the world are realizing, and theres no denying that the transhumanist age fascinates tens of millions of people as they wonder where the species might go and what health benefits it might mean for society.

At the end of the day, transhumanism is still really focused on one thing: satisfying that essential addiction to curiosity. With science, technology, and a liberty-minded outlook as our tools, the species can seek out and even challenge the very nature of its being and place in the universe. That might mean the end of human death by mid-century if governments allow the science and medicine to develop. It will likely mean the transformation of the species from biological entities into something with much more tech built directly into it. Perhaps most important of all, it will mean we will have the chance to grow and evolve with our families, friends, and loved ones for as long as we like, regardless how weird or wild transhumanist existence becomes.

Zoltan Istvan is the author of The Transhumanist Wager, and a Libertarian candidate for Governor in California.

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The Growing World of Libertarian Transhumanism | The American ... - The American Conservative

Libertarian Hyra Cracks 8% in VCU Poll – Bacon’s Rebellion

VCU poll results

The predictable headline of the new Virginia Commonwealth University poll is that Democrat Ralph Northam has a five-point edge, with a five-point margin of error, among likely voters over Republican Ed Gillespie in the gubernatorial race. You can read all about it in the Washington Post article filed this morning.

The more interesting story is how well the Libertarian Party candidate, Cliff Hyra, is faring. Among registered voters, he scored 8%. Among likely voters, he snagged 6%.

Thats in the same ballpark as the 6.5% vote that Robert Sarvis won in the McAuliffe-Cuccinelli match-up four years ago. The difference is that Sarvis was thought to have benefited from a large none of the above sentiment among voters who found Terry McAuliffes wheeler-dealer persona and Ken Cuccinellis strong cultural conservatism to be off-putting. By contrast, the Northam-Gillespie match-up is a battle of the bland. Both candidates are cautious and inoffensive. No one has to hold their nose to vote for them.

If thats the case, how does one explain the strong showing of Hyra, a political novice who is campaigning part-time on a shoe-string budget? Maybe, just maybe, his libertarian principles are resonating with voters. Could Virginia become a three-party state? Its not impossible.

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Libertarian Hyra Cracks 8% in VCU Poll - Bacon's Rebellion

A Libertarian Case Against the Death Penalty – Being Libertarian

There are certain situationswhere results matter more than intentions.

An engineer who builds a bridge, for example, may have intended for it to be successful, but a faulty design would render him liable if someone lost their life while crossing said bridge.

A CEO who intended to make his company richer only to end up declaring bankruptcy is again remembered for his results, not intentions.

The idea that actions are judged by their outcomes and not by their intentions is something that is seen in the real world all the time, and yet people feel anxious and ambivalent in using this as a medium to judge law-makers and politicians.

We then make the mistake of believing that the egregious outcomes of some laws should be excused provided that they were originally written in good faith.

The death penalty is one such law. Although written with seemingly good intentions, it has still brought about more harm than good.

Yes, everyone wants to hang murderers, rapists, pedophiles, and the rest of societys scum as it seems to be the right thing to do and it appears to be with good intentions.

The reason why civilized countries have abolished the death penalty, however, is because they realized that it is actually not as just as the self-righteous claimit to be.

More specifically, the death penalty is not justified because of its high cost for the taxpayer, and its incompatibility with an individuals natural and universally-understood rights. These two affronts to liberty an assault on the taxpayer and an assault on civil liberties is why libertarians are the only ones within the right-wing community to despise capital punishment.

To begin, the death penalty is not justified (i.e. it is not reasonable or fair) because it is both highly inefficient and highly ineffective for the taxpayer. Primarily, the death penalty is ineffective because it neglects to do its job as a punishment in a civilized legal code: deter crime. There is not a single nation-state in the world that has, through implementing capital punishment, achieved a lower crime rate.

In fact, American states that still have the death penalty have, on average, a 25% higher homicide rate than states that do not have such a punishment (Deterrence: States Without the Death Penalty Have Had Consistently Lower Murder Rates).

We see in the above citation that everyoneloses when the death penalty is in effect, and that this punishment only brings about more pain and sorrow for our society, not less. If a penalty only serves to perpetuate a problem that it was meant to solve, then it has no business being included in the criminal code.

On top of not being effective, the death penalty is simply not efficient even if you believe the end goal isnt to deter crime but to instead exact revenge.I say this because the death penalty curses society with an unfair financial burden.

The State of Maryland is just one of many places where the death penalty serves as a colossal waste of tax dollars as the death penalty cases cost 3 times more than the non-death penalty ones.

On top of this, we see a similar complaint with law professor, JeffreyFagan, who estimates that the cost of an individual state execution can range anywhere between $2.5 million and $5 million.

Both Fagan and the State of Maryland teach us that the death penalty is a more expensive alternative than simply incarcerating a violent felon because defense lawyers will seek a lot more appeals for court cases if their client is otherwise faced with certain death.

These appeals combined with the time and money needed to hear and file them all cost the taxpayer extra money.

I think it goes without saying that we, as libertarians, have a very low tolerance for taxation as we can often be heard equating it to theft (which it is), and that is why we can never advocate for a policy that only triples the amount of theft we allow our robbers politicians to get away with.

Furthermore, when the taxpayer is really paying for a system that does not benefit them at all, it is easy to realize that the death penalty really isnt worth paying for.

With regard to the economic argument here, something can also be said about the issue of opportunity costs because the death penalty diverts resources from more effective programs that have actually been proven to reduce crime, i.e. money spent on taking a life (plus the tedious legal work behind it) is money that could have been used on the families of murder to accommodate psychological healing.

The money could have also been used for mental health research that could preclude others from going down a criminal path or even be used to uplift poverty-stricken communities and provide them with the resources and education needed to make crime unnecessary for ones survival.

Moreover, introducing the death penalty would be in violation of ones rights as declared in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

In particular, article 3 of the UDHR states that everyone has the right to life, liberty and the security of the person.

The reason why this creed is so important is because it shows that life is an unalienable right bestowed on to every human being and that taking away this right would not only violate constitutional law, but also natural law.

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are supposed to, in theory, be immune to positive law passed by humans. What this means is that no legislature is supposed to be able to draft a law that strips away any of these rights nor can an independent judiciary order one to surrender them. The state, in theory, is not even supposed to be the one to dispense the right to live but rather, they are obligated to protect and defend it.

A failure to protect and defend this right, even for societys most unwanted, will mean that the state is stooping down to the very murderers that they wish to hang.

Ultimately, the death penalty is not just breaking some abnormal right or privilege it is breaking a universally-understood right. And to violate such a right in its rawest, most natural form is grounds for an outcry from the libertarian community.

In the end, if there is one thing that libertarians will go to war over, it is, as their name implies, liberty. I then assert that the community should continue on with its crusade against things like the death penalty for it violates both the financial liberty of the taxpayer and the natural liberty of the individual.

We must remember that just because it may sound good to finally get revenge on those who have raped, murdered, or committed acts of terrorism against their fellow citizens, the greater injustice will always be allowing that thirst for revenge to trivialize both the taxpayer as well as the sacred possessions of life and liberty for all.

See also:

https://www.amnestyusa.org/issues/death-penalty/death-penalty-facts/death-penalty-and-innocence/

http://facade1.law.columbia.edu/law_school/communications/reports/summer06/capitalpunish

* Christopher X. Henry has just graduated high school and will be attending the University of Toronto to study political science. He wishes to become a lawyer, writer, and politician and has taken up writing as a hobby for both Being Libertarian and his own blog and Facebook page, Freedom Papers.

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A Libertarian Case Against the Death Penalty - Being Libertarian