Urbanites flock to outdoor yoga to release stress – Japan Today

Practicing yoga in parks, stadiums and other outdoor facilities is a popular way to release stress in Tokyo and other major Japanese cities.

One Friday evening at Tokyo's Jingu Stadium, some 1,000 people took part in a session of "night yoga," an event held a few times a month.

"Control your breathing, release the tension in your mind and body," instructor Arisa Takada, 24, said through a microphone to participants gathering in the home field of the Yakult Swallows professional baseball team.

Guided by her voice, and while listening to therapeutic music, people filling the outfield area moved like waves in the stadium lights.

The program, sponsored by companies, is free of charge and requires no reservation or yoga experience. Some participants were in yoga gear and some others were in T-shirts and short pants.

The most relaxing moment seemed to come when they lay flat on their back on the lawn in a pose called Shavasana, looking up at the night sky while the lights and the music went out.

"It was great. I felt like I connected to the universe," said a woman in her 30s after joining the event with her colleague.

The atmosphere of the stadium creates a "hideaway from the city because the stands seal you from the outside," instructor Takada said. "You have a feeling of unity with others."

"Jingu Stadium Night Yoga" has been organized by a sporting event management company since last year to help promote the local area.

Some local businesspeople have worried about a stagnant feeling in the area since the National Stadium, the main venue for the 1964 Olympics, was demolished in 2015 to build a new facility for the 2020 Olympics.

The organizers plan to hold 10 yoga sessions between May and September, inviting instructors including Ken Harakuma, a well-known yoga practitioner.

The event has been popular from the beginning with the number of participants at a single session peaking at some 1,300.

The participants are mostly women in their 30s to 50s who join after work, but there are also men and older people.

A photo session to help them upload their photos of the event on social media is also popular, organizers say.

There are a number of other outdoor yoga events.

The PARK YOGA website posts such events held in places such as Shinjuku Gyoen park in Tokyo, Yamashita Park in Yokohama, Nakanoshima Park in Osaka and Ohori Park in Fukuoka.

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Urbanites flock to outdoor yoga to release stress - Japan Today

Robotics making an impact in medicine – WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) When you think of robots many think of science fiction but this morning Dr. Matthew Lopresti stopped by our studio to talk about the strides robotics are making in the medical field.

Some questions Dr. Lopresti answers in the above video are:

1) Theres been an uptick with automation/robotics in the medical field and this is expected to continue. Why?

2) The pictures shown are robotics that aid in hair transplantation. What exactly does this do?

3) As a surgeon, what do you look for when something comes into the market? Does it replace the surgeon or how much should it aid?

4) How does the patient benefit exactly?

For more information on Dr. Lopresti head to HairDr.com

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Robotics making an impact in medicine - WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

New precision medicine approach could save patients grappling with life-threatening intestinal infections – Augusta Free Press

Patients in long-term care facilities face an elevated risk of C. difficile infection, a life-threatening disease that could be managed more effectively with a precision medicine treatment plan.

To discover new treatments for this life-threatening intestinal condition, researchers at theBiocomplexity Institute of Virginia Techhave employed a combination of algorithms, simulations, and machine learning. These novel research techniques allowed scientiststo make significant progress toward new precision medicine treatment options for patients suffering fromC. difficileinfections (CDI).

TheNutritional Immunology and Molecular Medicine Laboratory(NIMML), a leading lab at the Biocomplexity Institute, has developed a computational pipeline to test and predict the efficacy of existing and novel treatments for infectious and immune-mediated diseases. The pipeline incorporates mechanistic ordinary differential equation-based models with stochastic simulation and advanced machine-learning methods.

Researchers built upon an existinginteraction modelto develop the pipeline, which can now translate preclinical results in animal models to clinical outcomes, identify effective treatments, examine dosage effects, and predict patient reactions to combination therapies. The research study, recently published inArtificial Intelligence in Medicine,illustrates the development of a computational pipeline to test and predict the efficacy of existing and novel treatments for CDI.

The convergence of advanced data analytics, modeling, and artificial intelligence systems with high resolution, large-scale patient data creates an opportunity to fundamentally transform how medicine will be practiced, said Josep Bassaganya-Riera, director of NIMML and CEO ofBioTherapeutics, Inc. In this study and in our continuing efforts, we aim to be a leader in this developing field of precision, personalized medicine in infectious and autoimmune diseases.

Modeling systems, such as this one, have the potential to revolutionize the design of treatment regimes away from the one-size-fits-all therapeutic approaches into a golden age of personalized disease treatment. Integration of patient characteristics from large-scale electronic health records can create virtual avatars to test new therapies and for predictive analytics to identify new molecular biomarkers capable of accurately predicting a patients response to treatment.

The ability to predict progression of disease and response to treatment is of particular importance in CDI. The majority of health care costs and mortality resulting from CDI are caused by high rates of recurrence that can exceed 50 percent of patients, depending on the treatment.

Antibiotics are currently the standard form of treatment for CDI, which run the risk of perpetuating drug-resistant bacterial strains, ultimately worsening the disease. Virginia Tech researchers say their new study points to a promising alternative treatment for CDI: a protein called lanthionine synthetase c-like or LANCL2.

Our modeling shows that we do not need to remove the pathogen nor directly influence inflammation in the case of CDI to have an effective treatment, said Andrew Leber, scientific director at BioTherapeutics. Simply restoring immune tolerance in the gut through an LANCL2, or similar immunoregulatory pathway, or boosting the gut microbiome to allow it to naturally outcompete pathogenicC. difficilestrains is effective in the absence of antibiotics.

This study serves as a critical first step toward demonstrating the feasibility of constructing precision medicine tools that can optimize treatment design on a patient-by-patient basis. The application of these methods to personalized treatment of human diseases can potentially minimize undesirable side effects and maximize efficacy of treatment in response toC. difficileand other infectious and immune mediated diseases.

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New precision medicine approach could save patients grappling with life-threatening intestinal infections - Augusta Free Press

Medical school without the ‘sage on a stage’ – The Washington Post – Washington Post

When the University of Vermont's medical school opens for the year in the summer of 2019, it will be missing something that all but one of its peer institutions have: lectures.

The Larner College of Medicine is scheduled to become the first U.S. medical school to eliminate lectures from its curriculum two years from now, putting it at the leading edge of a trend that could change the way the next generation of physicians learn their profession. (The medical school at Case Western Reserve University also has a no-lecture curriculum, established when the school opened in 2004.)

As anyone who has fallen asleep during a three-hour lecture class can attest, taking notes from a sage on a stage isn't as effective as other ways to absorb information, and research confirms this. The main reason for the traditional method seems to be, well, tradition; medical professors and other teachers have been doing it this way for centuries.

Retention after a lecture is maybe 10 percent, said Charles G. Prober, senior associate dean for medical education at the Stanford University School of Medicine. If thats accurate, if its even in the ballpark of accurate, thats a problem.

[First year doctors will be allowed to work 24-hour shifts]

Instead, medical schools across the country are experimenting with various forms of active learning" dividing students into small groups and having them solve problems or answer questions. In addition to improving retention, the approach more closely mimics the way work is accomplished in the real world.

It creates a stickier learning environment where the information stays with you better and you have a better depth of understanding, said William Jeffries, senior associate dean for medical education at Vermont's Larner College of Medicine, who is leading the effort.

The trend at medical schools is just part of a reform movement in the teaching of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) that emphasizes active learning instead of lecturing. Research supports the approach. When a team of researchers analyzed 225 studies that compared active learning and lectures in these fields, they found that test scores improved about 6 percent for students in active learning classes and that students in lecture classes were about 1.5 times more likely to fail than their counterparts in active learning classes.

[Heart doctors are listening for clues to the future of their stethoscopes]

Their 2014 analysis, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also found that active learning is effective in all class sizes, though best in smaller groups.

The Larner school has moved most quickly toward the new approach, funded by a $66 million gift from Robert Larner, who graduated from the medical school in 1942. The money will be used to build facilities more suitable for small group instruction and train faculty in the new approach, Jeffries said.

Under the Larner model, students do their homework the night before class, rather than after it. They study the material in texts and online before a class, then take a short quiz to gauge how well they've learned it. After that, they break up into groups of six and attempt to solve a medical problem, then discuss their conclusions, led by a professor who acts as both a facilitator and an instructor, Jeffries said.

You're expected to learn the information prior to attending [a class]," he said. You do your homework first. Then you come and work, usually in groups, to solve a problem based on that knowledge.

The role change is not easy and sometimes it shows. Collin York, who will graduate from the school in 2020, said he strongly favors active learning. But the main complaint I have is when active learning sessions arent run particularly well, the atmosphere becomes a little chaotic. Classes can get noisy, and students' attention shifts quickly from problem to problem. Instructors sometimes struggle to maintain control, he said.

If the class is run well, you genuinely do not have to revisit that material, he said.

York said he also feels a responsibility to learn material before each class so he won't let his classmates down when it's time for problem solving. The real meat of these sessions, if you ask me, is really in the reasoning through different answers, he said.

With so much material including recordings of lectures now online, medical students are making the transition easier, Prober said.

When you go into a lecture in medical schools across the nation, you will find a minority of students actually present, he said. Medical students are adults. One generally believes that adults try to make decisions that are in their best interests. They have seemingly made the decision that it is not in the lectures.

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Medical school without the 'sage on a stage' - The Washington Post - Washington Post

Students begin class at new metro Phoenix medical school – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Associated Press July 27, 2017 - 2:35 PM

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. Fifty students in Arizona took the first steps of a four-year journey to becoming medical doctors.

The Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, also called Mayo Med School, began instruction last week at its metro Phoenix campus in Scottsdale. Its inaugural class includes 10 students who from Arizona or with ties to the state.

Mayo Med School Interim Dean Dr. Michele Halyard told the school's inaugural class her stress-reliever as a student doctor came in the form of exercising regularly and eating a healthy diet.

Halyard said those habits will help the students cope with the grind and workload of medical school. Halyard described the students' coming weeks and months as "like drinking from a fire hose," and a "quantum leap up from undergrad," The Arizona Republic (http://bit.ly/2eQMwrw ) reported Wednesday.

The first years of medical school are dominated by science-related coursework that covers topics such as anatomy, biochemistry, cell biology, immunology, microbiology, pathology, pharmacology and therapeutics.

Students also complete a basic doctoring class that teaches them how to take a patient's history and conduct a physical exam. Students will simultaneously complete an Arizona State University and Mayo Clinic certificate program in the science of healthcare delivery.

A decade ago, there were no medical schools in Phoenix, the nation's fifth-largest city. Mayo Med School joins four other schools that have changed that.

The University of Arizona College of Medicine at the Phoenix Biomedical Campus in downtown Phoenix was the first to open in the area in 2007.

The University of Arizona College of Medicine now has independently accredited medical schools in Phoenix and Tucson. The Phoenix medical school graduates about 80 doctors each year.

Creighton University also opened a medical school site in Phoenix, training third- and fourth-year students at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center. Midwestern University in Glendale and A.T. Still University in Mesa run osteopathic medical schools.

The Mayo Clinic School of Medicine is an accredited medical school. It also has campuses in Minnesota and Florida.

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Students begin class at new metro Phoenix medical school - Minneapolis Star Tribune

NC is home to the most affordable medical school in the country, study says – News & Observer


News & Observer
NC is home to the most affordable medical school in the country, study says
News & Observer
A recent report by Student Loan Hero named the East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine the most affordable of 110 U.S. medical schools. The schools were surveyed based on annual tuition costs, average debt at graduation and percentage of ...

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NC is home to the most affordable medical school in the country, study says - News & Observer

Have you seen this man? Suspect sought in Liberty robbery – Asheboro Courier Tribune

By Judi Brinegar jbrinegar@courier-tribune.com Twitter: @JudiBrinegarCT

LIBERTY An unidentified suspect in an armed robbery overnight in Liberty is being sought by police.

At approximately 3:30 a.m. Saturday morning, Liberty Police responded to an armed robbery that occurred at the Circle K/Kangaroo convenience store, which is located at 127 E. Swannanoa Ave. in Liberty.

According to a post on the Liberty Police Departments Facebook page, the suspect was described as a black male, wearing a black hoodie and gray sweatpants. The suspect was also wearing white socks on his left hand, with his right hand uncovered.

According to the post, Thankfully, no one was hurt, but the suspect did get away for now. We know these photos are not clear enough for an identification, but if anyone saw a person dressed like this around town last night, contact us! Any information helps.

No other information was available from the police department.

If you can identify this person, or have any information about this incident, please call the Liberty Police Department at 336-622-2323 or 911 outside of business hours.

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Have you seen this man? Suspect sought in Liberty robbery - Asheboro Courier Tribune

Could you soon take pedestrian bridge from Liberty Center to VOA Park? – Hamilton Journal News

LIBERTY TWP.

Butler Countys two largest townships are looking into ways they can make their commercial areas more pedestrian friendly.

Trustees from Liberty and West Chester townships met recently to talk about a walkability study Liberty Twp. commissioned to see the feasibility of building pedestrian bridges and other amenities so people can walk from places like mega mixed use Liberty Center to Voice of America MetroPark.

Liberty Twp. trustees are hoping their neighbors will want to partner with them on parts of the plan.

Liberty Twp. Trustee Tom Farrell says these modes of transportation are not an amenity, but a necessity to remain competitive.

People just dont want to have to get in their cars to go anywhere and do anything, Farrell said. We have to recognize this trend and move forward.

He told the group in order to stay competitive in a market that caters to Millennials they need to provide ways for residents and employees to get around on foot.

The fact is Millennials and Baby Boomers alike want these walkable communities and they are moving toward it, Farrell said. If we dont create that were going to lose residents, employers, employees. But because of our uniqueness I think we have an opportunity to be the poster child for this walkable community because we have assets that most communities dont have.

West Chester Trustee George Langs initial reaction was not favorable.

I dont agree with the assertion this is a necessity for us for the future, Lang said. I think it would be a nice amenity Im very leery of it as a project of this enormity, maybe if you wanted to pick one little spot and experiment with it and see what happens. I think our taxpayers and our businesses would object to this.

The two most expensive options are to construct a pedestrian bridge over Interstate 75 from Liberty Center to Cox Road and another bridge from Yankee Road to Liberty Center, over Ohio 129. Those two projects would cost more than $3 million each, according to the study.

Most of the plan involves new pathways and connecting broken sidewalks and generally sprucing up several areas of the township. The price tags on most of those are under $100,000.

Liberty Twp. Trustee Board President Christine Matacic said the question now is should they take this to the next level to see if the private businesses in both townships are willing to partner on funding it.

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Could you soon take pedestrian bridge from Liberty Center to VOA Park? - Hamilton Journal News

Starz, Lionsgate & Liberty Global Team On Spy Thriller ‘The Rook’ With Stephenie Meyer, Stephen Garrett TCA – Deadline

Lionsgate and Liberty Global are partnering to produce supernatural spy thriller, The Rook, which will air on Starz in the U.S., and across Liberty Globals international platforms. Twilight creator Stephenie Meyer and The Night Managers Stephen Garrett are exec producing. This is Starzs first series order from Lionsgate TV since Lionsgate acquired the pay cable network last year. Starz president and CEO Chris Albrecht made the announcement at TCA today.

Lionsgate

The London-set series centers on a young woman pursued by shadowy paranormal adversaries while grappling with extraordinary abilities of her own. After waking in a park with total amnesia and surrounded by dead bodies, all wearing latex gloves she must fight to uncover her past, and resume her position at the head of Britains most secret (supernatural) service before the traitors who stole her memory can finish what they started.

Based on the novel by Daniel OMalley, its adapted and co-produced by playwrights and screenwriters Sam Holcroft (Rules for Living) and Al Muriel (Precious & Rich).

The Rook was originally set up at Hulu, but the new configuration appears to be a more strategic fit for the partners. Until the Lionsgate-Starz acquisition at the end of last year,Starz was controlled by Liberty Medias John Malone, whos also a Lionsgate investor and sits on its board.

The Rook will begin broadcast next year via Starz in the U.S. and on Libertys platforms in Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean. Lionsgate is handling worldwide distribution.

Meyer is currently producing fantasy feature Down A Dark Hall under her Fickle Fish banner for Lionsgate. Producing partner Meghan Hibbett is also an exec producer on The Rook.

Garrett is coming off of last years Emmy, Golden Globe and BAFTA-winning spy mini, The Night Manager. Hell act as showrunning exec producer on The Rook via his Character 7 label.

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Starz, Lionsgate & Liberty Global Team On Spy Thriller 'The Rook' With Stephenie Meyer, Stephen Garrett TCA - Deadline

Olympian Ben Blankenship defends title at Liberty Mile – Tribune-Review

Updated 18 hours ago

Not even Mother Nature could slow the top runners in the world Friday night in Pittsburgh at the sixth annual GNC Live Well Liberty Mile.

The race was organized by Pittsburgh Three Rivers Marathon, Inc. (P3R), a nonprofit organization that also manages the Pittsburgh Marathon.

The race, held in the Cultural District, featured more than 1,000 participants, with the oldest being 75 years old and the youngest at 3.

The event featured five races, highlighted by the American Development Pro Men and Women races.

The 2016 champions were present to defend their titles, but only Ben Blankenship on the men's side was able to do so.

Blankenship, a 2016 Olympian, was the first to cross the finish line in 4 minutes, 4.60 seconds, beating Kyle Merber (4:05.39) by less than a second.

I love competing and love competing in the road mile, Blankenship said. The aspect of being shoulder-to-shoulder says how competitive it is and that you are running against the man right next to you. These are some of the most fun races I do all year.

Blankenship had the advantage of knowing the course and how to pace himself as the defending champion.

I had an understanding of what to do on this course, Blankenship said. Road miles can always be deceiving. You have to be so aware to guys to your left and right. The final stretch can be deceiving with how close or far you are to the finish line.

For the women, two-time national champion Emily Lipari from Villanova picked up her first road mile win in Pittsburgh with a time of 4:34.77. Lipari improved on her finishes the last three years in this race after placing fourth in 2015 and second last year.

It feels really exciting, Lipari said. This race has always been good for me, and I love this crowd. I know so many people who are from Pittsburgh that come out to cheer me on. It has always been special for me, and I am excited about the progress I have been making.

Lipari also is just the third female winner in the event's history, joining Heather Kampf and Gabriele Grunewald. Kampf was the two-time defending champion and also won the event in 2012 and '13.

For their first-place finishes, Blankenship and Lipari earned a prize of $5,000 from GNC. In all, GNC awarded $30,000 in prize money to the top five finishers in each race.

The event wasn't held for just the professionals. The locals of Pittsburgh also had an opportunity to showcase their talents in the mile run, with three separate waves. The first wave included, One For Fun presented by Fleet Feet Sports Pittsburgh, Pup Trot presented by Humane Animal Rescue, and Kids of STEEL. Following that was the Masters wave presented by UPMC Health Plan and the Unstoppable wave presented by Fleet Feet Sports Pittsburgh.

Drew Karpen is a freelance writer.

To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Dick's Sporting Goods Pittsburgh Marathon, registration for next year's 26.2-mile run will open on Tuesday with the lowest ...

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Olympian Ben Blankenship defends title at Liberty Mile - Tribune-Review

Liberty add Kassanavoid, nose guard – Salina Journal

Bob Davidson @rjdshocker77

Joe Kassanavoid had come to the conclusion his football career was likely over.

Kassanavoid returned to the Salina Liberty early last season to try and help the teams struggling offense. The Liberty was 0-3 when he joined the squad, but nothing much changed.

For me being on the team, nothing seemed to get any better, said Kassanavoid, who played wide receiver. I thought maybe footballs over for me, its not getting any better. I felt like if I stayed at home and hung out with my kids Id have just as much fun.

So Kassanavoid departed and went back home to Liberty, Mo. The Liberty team never got untracked, finishing the season with a 1-11 record after going 2-10 in their first season in 2016, during which Kassanavoid also played.

Kassanavoid, though, is back again for the 2018 season. The team announced his signing along with defensive/offensive lineman Jamar Seard during the Salina Liberty Charity Golf Tournament on Saturday at Great Life Golf & Fitness.

Kassanavoids change of heart came after a meeting with new Salina coach Heron ONeal.

He actually drove from Salina to Kansas City to buy me a steak dinner and talk about the possibilities of me coming back, Kassanavoid said. He wants me on the team. For him doing that said a lot to me and meant a lot to me. I made up my right there Salina really wants me back.

Ricky (chief operating officer Bertz) is doing a great job and getting everybody pumped up and ready for the new season. Im blessed that they want me to play for them.

Playing for ONeal was a big part of his decision.

I knew him through (Liberty rival) Dodge City, Kassanavoind said. Hes one of the best coaches in the league. ... He knows the indoor game more than most of the head coaches out there.

Kassanavoid, who played at Kansas State during the 2008 and 2009 seasons, is the football equivalent of utility player in baseball. At 6-foot-6, 225 pounds hes listed as a wide receiver, but also has played quarterback, linebacker and defensive end during his indoor career, which includesthree seasons with the Wichita Wild/Wichita Force, from 2010-13.

Kassanavoid will play wide out for the Liberty.

My position's mainly a field-position receiver," he said. "Catch the ball five yards, a hitch route, get another five yards, fight for more yardage, get a first down, be a big goal line target for the quarterback. Being a big target and athletic body and someone who can play multiple positions is definitely somebody you want on your arena football team.

ONeal plans to take advantage of Kassanavoids size.

Hes a matchup nightmare, he said. His size and physical play are going to be used in many different ways. He will be utilized and utilized a lot.

The 6-3, 310 pound Seard was a second team all-Champions Indoor Football selection while playing for Dodge City this past season. He started 13 games and had 23 tackles, seven for loss, and three sacks while playing nose guard. He also played 13 games in the offensive line.

In my opinion Seard is the best nose guard in the league, said ONeal, who was Dodge Citys defensive coordinator in 2017. Hes the best two-way lineman I have ever coached in my 13 years of indoor football.

Bertz has been busy revamping the Liberty since his hiring in mid-April. He hired ONeal away from Dodge City, which folded earlier this month, and has added six new players for 2018.

I know it sounds very cliche-ish for people, but the separations in the preparation and there will be no one more prepared for the 2018 season than the Salina Liberty, Bertz said. What were doing from a business standpoint, from a football standpoint and even things yet to come all demonstrate that were serious about this and were committed to that.

Bertz said theres still much to do.

While other organizations might be taking a break, we have a lot of ground to catch up on what was done previously and were putting the work to not only catch up, but hopefully go past them on that, he said. We have high aspirations for the 2018 season and were putting in the work every single day to make sure we meet those goals.

#####Golden Football program

Bertz also announced a community initiative that will involve youth and the Salina police and fire departments.

The Golden Football program will reward children who display outstanding leadership and citizenship. Theyll receive youth-sized golden footballs from police and fire department officials that can be redeemed at the Liberty offices in exchange for a free pass to a 2018 game.

The programs sponsored by First Bank Kansas.

We recognized this would be a great opportunity for our department to continue to integrate ourselves into the community in a very exciting and rewarding way, police chief Brad Nelson said in a news release.

The Liberty also will have Hometown Heros Night during a 2018 home game. Liberty players will wear limited edition jerseys that will be auctioned off after the game with proceeds going to the police and fire departments.

This Golden Football program we have gives us a chance to recognize some people who are making a difference out there in the community off the football field, Bertz said. Were recognizing them off the football field and were going to give them some accolades on the football field during a game in 2018.

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Liberty add Kassanavoid, nose guard - Salina Journal

Newly minted Libertarian feels GOP strayed from small government values – Lincoln Journal Star

A day after the Fourth of July, Trevor Reilly sat at Granite City Food & Brewery crafting plans.

He was looking to make a name for the small, fringe party he adopted after feeling the GOP had turned its back on him.

The Lancaster Libertarian party, which Reilly heads, has started to meet theremonthly since January, looking for ways to grow a party seemingly overlooked in last year's election.

Reilly, a libertarian neophyte and newly ordained political activist, didn't see last year's presidential election as a two-dimensional, "pick-the-lesser-of-the-two-evils" fight between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Instead, Reilly, a 25-year-old University of Nebraska-Lincoln student and Afghanistan veteran, took a third route campaigning for libertarian candidate Gary Johnson.

"It's like being part of the 'Bad News Bears,'" he said. "You're the underdog."

Being the underdog was a change of pace for Reilly.

Ever since he was eligible to vote, he had always been a staunch Republican, a direct outcome of growing up in a conservative household.

But as the election cycle picked up, Reilly saw himself drawn to the TV more and more watching everything from "Morning Joe" on MSNBC to Fox News.

That's how he found out about the Libertarian Party, eventually deciding to switch affiliations after he said the GOP abandoned the values he held dear like smaller government and fewer taxes.

"More Republicans were straying away from the values, like smaller government, that they used to hold," he said. "This year's election was just a culmination of that."

Reilly has been the head of the Lancaster Libertarian Party since October,spearheading activism previously unseen in the party in Lincoln.

From June 25 to July 2, the party held Freedom Week, devoted to discussing and highlighting libertarian ideals.

Such as smaller government, less taxation, legalization of more recreational drugs, and less bureaucratic meddling in people's lives.

In short, fiscally conservative but socially liberal, Reilly said.

The week culminated in the Rally for Liberty on the north steps of the Capitol, in which around 60 people gathered to discuss and celebrate the libertarian platform.

It's a platform that it is not totally new to Nebraska politics.

In June 2016, state Sen. Laura Ebke of District 32 pulled the same switch as Reilly, ditching the Republican Party for the Libertarians, citing frustration with Republican partisanship.

Reilly plans to organize more rallies not marches, he said to get the libertarian message out.

"Marches don't work to the same extent; they can devolve," he said. "Rallies stay centered on the message."

Concerning the latest uptick in activism in Lincoln and around the country, Reilly said he sees it as reaction to Trump just as the tea party reacted to Obama.

"It's just a side trying to get back at the other side," he said.

As far as his own future is concerned once he graduates?

"Who knows," Reilly said. "I might even run for office someday."

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Newly minted Libertarian feels GOP strayed from small government values - Lincoln Journal Star

Why the Banda Islands Were Once More Valuable Than Manhattan … – NBCNews.com

Nutmeg dries in a street in the Banda Islands. Ian Williams / for NBC News

The massacre is illustrated in gory detail in paintings in a tiny museum in Banda Neira, the main town.

Banda nutmeg is still regarded as the finest in the world, but the spice is now grown in several other countries. And the trade in Indonesia is controlled by powerful traders from elsewhere in the country. The U.S. is the biggest importer of spices, including nutmeg, and customized spice mixes have become fashionable among celebrity Manhattan chefs and top-end restaurants the haunts of New Yorks own aristocracy.

We really have to take back control of our own nutmeg, create our own brand, said Alwi.

Today, the Bandas' most prized asset is their underwater environment, including the worlds fastest growing and most resilient reef. It sprung to life on the lava flow from a 1988 volcanic eruption and both delights and puzzles marine biologists.

Ive seen nothing like it. Its really quite unique, said Mareike Huhn, scientific coordinator for Luminocean, a conservation group, who has been studying Bandas reefs for five years.

The Banda Islands once attracted celebrity visitors, including Mick Jagger, and Princess Diana, whose portrait hangs in the lobby of a weathered waterfront hotel. But the tourist business was abruptly shut down at the turn of the century by violence on neighboring Ambon, which spilled onto the islands.

Boats are now the most reliable way to get there, the fastest taking six hours from Ambon. But like the flights, they too can be unpredictable.

A canon remains in the old 17th century Fort Belgica in Banda Neira. Ian Williams / for NBC News

There are plans to expand the airport, which holds the promise of development. But Alwi and Huhn are afraid an uncontrolled influx of tourists a feature of modern globalization could damage the Banda Islands most valuable asset: the environment. A group of Russian spear-fishing tourists were recently run out of town. And illegal Chinese shark finning is threatening a seasonal gathering of hammerheads.

We have to have a conservation plan, Alwi said.

Not for the first time, the tiny Banda Islands are trying to navigate the difficult seas of globalization looking for development without destroying what is special about the islands, and hoping for a little help from Manhattan, that other and much richer island for which they were traded three and half centuries ago.

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Why the Banda Islands Were Once More Valuable Than Manhattan ... - NBCNews.com

Panorama 2017 Friday pics (Spoon, MGMT, Future Islands, Tyler the Creator, more) – Brooklyn Vegan (blog)

NYC festival Panorama began on Friday (7/28) with Frank Ocean and Solange co-headlining. The Randalls Island fest was plagued with some bad luck when the Parlor domes floor collapsed during Isaiah Rashads set, and the stage was closed and evacuated for the rest of the day, forcing Cherry Glazerr, Breakbot, and DJ Shadow to cancel their sets. (Breakbots set was rescheduled for Saturday.) Other than that, the day went off without a hitch and there was tons of cool stuff to see.

With The Parlor closed, that left just the Pavilion tent and the main Panorama stage, which had absolutely no overlaps with each other. There was also The Point, an outdoor dance floor with nonstop music all day located by the main entrance, and the interactive/tech dome The Lab, which had crazy lines all day. Friday also had a Frank Ocean pop-up shop, which also had crazy lines. Panorama also really goes above and beyond with food and drinks, including a lot of different local food vendors and a gigantic craft beer selection.

I bounced around a lot on Friday and didnt get a chance to see too many full sets besides Frank and Solange, but some highlights included Future Islands on the main stage. Their big, anthemic sound works great on an outdoor stage, and Sam T Herrings famous dance moves were fun to watch as always especially projected onto a huge screen. Spoon had a good crowd at the Pavilion tent, and they sounded as crisp and tight as ever. Tyler, the Creator (who, like Frank Ocean, had long lines for his merch all day) had the Pavilion tent overflowing like crazy. He didnt have the stage packed with Odd Future members like the early days, but it definitely got a little rowdy in that tent like those classic OFWGKTA shows. Tyler is coming off releasing his best album in a while, and played a handful of songs off that album live for the first time.

One set I did see all of was MGMT. I still think they dont get enough credit for how good of a psychedelic rock band they are (their crowds usually just want to hear the three hits and psych nerds often seem deterred from digging in), and their Panorama set was very psychedelic. The visuals on screen were super trippy and the band could really lock into a jam. The Congratulations songs, deep cuts, and the new song they played (Me & Michael) were both far-out and very tight, and even the hits gave MGMT a chance to let their freak flags fly. They took Kids into the kind of lengthy hypnotic jam that really makes you forget where you are, and they did a little experimenting with Electric Feel too.

Review, setlists, and videos for Frank Ocean and Solange are HERE. Pictures of day one are in the gallery above.

The fest continues today (7/29) with Tame Impala, Alt-J, Vince Staples, Belle & Sebastian, and more; and Sunday (7/30) with Nine Inch Nails, A Tribe Called Quest, and more. You can still buy tickets. If youre going, check out the set times. If youre not, stream the fest live.

photos by Toby Tenenbaum for Randalls Island and aLIVE Coverage, Chris Lazzaro, Doug Van Sant, and Julian Bajsel, courtesy of Panorama Music Festival

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Panorama 2017 Friday pics (Spoon, MGMT, Future Islands, Tyler the Creator, more) - Brooklyn Vegan (blog)

Generators Arrive as 10000 Tourists Evacuate North Carolina Islands – TIME

Passengers ride the ferry back from Ocracoke to Hatteras, N.C. on July, 28, 2017. A man-made power outage forced 10,000 tourists to flee two North Carolina islands and turned summer vacation into a messy nightmare for many.Ethan HymanAP

A man-made power outage not an approaching hurricane forced 10,000 tourists to flee two North Carolina islands and turned summer vacation into a messy nightmare for many.

Cars lined up Friday to get on ferries, the only way off Ocracoke Island, after a mandatory evacuation order was announced. Gas stations ran perilously low on fuel and ice, and business owners complained about losing a chunk of their most lucrative time of year due to a construction crew accidentally severing a main transmission line. Without power, air conditioners went silent and ceiling fans stopped humming as extremely humid temperatures reached 80 degrees (26 Celsius).

"We were really disappointed. You're used to things like this happening from Mother Nature on Ocracoke, but not from human error," said Kivi Leroux Miller, who awoke in a hot rental house Thursday morning.

The Lexington, North Carolina, resident had to cut short her yearly vacation with her husband and two children, and they were among the last cars on a packed ferry Friday morning.

"There was definitely this sort of sadness with everyone having to leave," she said.

Ocracoke and Hatteras Islands went dark on Thursday when a construction company building a new bridge between islands drove a steel casing into an underground transmission line. The company, PCL Construction, was digging at the site Friday to determine the extent of the damage. Officials said it could be days or weeks before it's fixed. A better forecast wasn't expected for another day or so.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper declared a state of emergency as generators were sent to the islands for the residents who stayed behind. Officials urged people to use power only for fans and refrigerators.

"The situation is stabilizing today thanks to the use of additional portable generators," Cooper said. "Public safety services have power as do water and sewer. I ask residents and visitors to be patient as everyone works towards restoring the power and getting conditions back to normal."

The islands, which have about 5,000 permanent residents, rely heavily on the summer tourist season for their local economies.

But emergency officials were forced to issue a mandatory evacuation of visitors to Ocracoke Island on Thursday afternoon, with exemptions for some including those who could prove residency. A similar order was forcing visitors to Hatteras Island, south of Oregon Inlet, to be out as of 6 a.m. Saturday. In announcing the Hatteras evacuation, authorities cited safety issues and growing concern about how long repairs to the transmission line would take.

"In a seasonal community like Ocracoke, there's three to five months out of the year when most businesses are closed," said Jason Wells, owner of Jason's Restaurant on Ocracoke Island. "So when you take this hit in July and factor in that you're only open eight months out of the year, it's big. It's a lot more than people even realize."

Wells said his restaurant, closed by the outage, is missing out on between $5,000 and $6,000 a day in sales. His 25 workers typically make between $75 and $250 a day.

While Howard's Pub nearby was serving a full menu on generator power, owner Ann Warner said business had plummeted as tourists streamed off the island. Her restaurant would usually be packed for Friday lunch.

"This is a man-made disaster, and, yes, people are very upset," she said.

Tourist Stacy Huggins awoke Thursday in a hot hotel room with no air conditioning, noticed his phone wasn't charging and realized the power was out. On Friday, he sat at a dock awaiting the next ferry off Ocracoke Island to help him make his way back to his home in Virginia.

"The island now looks like it looks in November or February," he said. "To see it take place over the course of a few hours instead of a few weeks is pretty remarkable."

Rob Temple, a boat captain on Ocracoke Island, had a large group booked for Thursday night, but only a handful of people showed up after the power outage. Still, he took it in stride Friday as he waited in a line of cars for a ferry off the island to take his daughter to a movie in Nags Head.

"We get hurricanes sometimes in the middle of the season and you have to be prepared for this," he said.

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Generators Arrive as 10000 Tourists Evacuate North Carolina Islands - TIME

Trump threatens to end insurance payments if no healthcare bill – Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump threatened on Saturday to end government payments to health insurers if Congress does not pass a healthcare bill.

In a Twitter message on Saturday, Trump said "if a new HealthCare Bill is not approved quickly, BAILOUTS for Insurance Companies and BAILOUTS for Members of Congress will end very soon!"

Trump's comment came after Senate Republicans failed to repeal parts of the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama's signature healthcare bill, on Friday.

The first part of Trump's tweet appeared to be referring to the approximately $8 billion in cost-sharing reduction subsidies paid by the federal government to insurers to lower the price of health coverage for low-income individuals.

The second part of the tweet appeared to be a threat to end the employer contribution for members of Congress and their staffs who were moved from the normal federal employee healthcare benefits program onto the Obamacare insurance exchanges as part of the 2010 healthcare law.

The Obama administration had ruled that these contributions could continue, flowing through the District of Columbia insurance exchange.

Many insurers have been waiting for an answer from Trump or lawmakers on whether they will continue to fund the annual government subsidies. Without assurances, many insurers plan to raise rates an additional 20 percent by an Aug. 16 deadline for premium prices.

With Republican efforts to dismantle Obamacare in disarray, hundreds of U.S. counties are at risk of losing access to private health coverage in 2018 as insurers consider pulling out of those markets.

In response, Trump on Friday again suggested that his administration would let the Obamacare program implode. He has weakened enforcement of the laws requirement for individuals to buy insurance, threatened to cut off funding and sought to change plan benefits through regulations.

Meanwhile, some congressional Republicans were still trying to find a way forward on healthcare reform.

Senator Lindsey Graham said in a statement issued late on Friday that he and two other Republican senators, Dean Heller and Bill Cassidy, met with Trump after the defeat to discuss Graham's proposal to take tax money raised by Obamacare and send it back to the states in the form of healthcare block grants.

Graham said the move would end Democrats' drive for a national single-payer healthcare system by putting states in charge.

"President Trump was optimistic about the Graham-Cassidy-Heller proposal," Graham added. "I will continue to work with President Trump and his team to move the idea forward."

Additional reporting by David Lawder in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis

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Trump threatens to end insurance payments if no healthcare bill - Reuters

GOP fears political fallout after health care ‘epic fail’ – ABC News

Weary Republicans in Washington may be ready to move on from health care, but conservatives across the United States are warning the GOP-led Congress not to abandon its pledge to repeal the Obama-era health law or risk a political nightmare in next year's elections.

The Senate's failure this past week to pass repeal legislation has outraged the Republican base and triggered a new wave of fear. The stunning collapse has exposed a party so paralyzed by ideological division that it could not deliver on its top campaign pledge.

After devoting months to the debate and seven years to promising to kill the Affordable Care Act, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., simply said: "It's time to move on."

But that's simply not an option for a conservative base energized by its opposition to the health law. Local party leaders, activists and political operatives are predicting payback for Republicans lawmakers if they don't revive the fight.

"This is an epic fail for Republicans," said Tim Phillips, president of Americans For Prosperity, the political arm of the conservative Koch Brothers' network. "Their failure to keep their promise will hurt them. It will."

To the American Conservative Union, the three Republican senators who blocked the stripped-down repeal bill that failed in the wee hours Friday are "sellouts." A Trump-sanctioned super political action committee did not rule out running ads against uncooperative Republicans, which it did recently against Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev.

There are limited options for directly punishing the renegade senators John McCain of Arizona, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine. None of the three is up for re-election next fall. McCain, whose dramatic "no" vote killed the bill, is serving his last term in office, has brain cancer and is hardly moved by electoral threats.

Still, broad disillusionment among conservative voters could have an impact beyond just a few senators. Primary election challenges or a low turnout could mean trouble for all Republicans. Democrats need to flip 24 seats to take control of the House of Representatives, a shift that would dramatically re-shape the last two years of Trump's first term.

"If you look at competitive districts, swing districts, or districts where Republicans could face primary challenges, this is something that will be a potent electoral issue," Republican pollster Chris Wilson said of his party's health care failure. "I don't think this is something voters are going to forget."

One such challenger has emerged. Conservative activist Shak Hill, a former Air Force pilot, plans to run against second-term GOP Rep. Barbara Comstock in a competitive northern Virginia district.

Hill told The Associated Press that Comstock, who voted against a GOP House health care repeal bill in May, "has failed the moral test of her time in Congress."

The leaders of other groups, such as Women Vote Trump, have begun to court primary challengers to punish those members of Congress deemed insufficiently committed to President Donald Trump's agenda.

"I expect that we will get involved in primaries," said the group's co-founder, Amy Kremer. "You cannot continue to elect the same people over and over again and expect different results."

On Capitol Hill, some Republicans insist their health care overhaul could be saved in the short term. Yet party leaders backed by outside groups are signaling that they would probably move on to taxes. Republicans hoped the issue would bring some party unity, even as realists in Washington view the a tax overhaul something that hasn't happened in more than 30 years as one of the most complex legislative projects possible.

The Trump administration has become engulfed in internal drama over personnel and personalities. Trump on Friday ousted his chief of staff, Reince Priebus, and replacing him with Home Security Secretary John Kelly. The president did not appear to share conservatives' outrage about the Senate's vote, but repeated his promises to remake the health system.

"You can't have everything," Trump said, adding: "We'll get it done. We're going to get it."

Around the country, Republican voters continue to support efforts to repeal former President Barack Obama's health law, even if there is little agreement on an alternative.

A CNN poll released last week found that 83 percent of Republicans favor some form of repeal, while only 11 percent of Republicans want the party to abandon the repeal effort. Among all adults, 52 percent of voters favor some sort of repeal, with 34 percent favored repeal only if replacement could be enacted at the same time.

"The political pressure on something like this is real," said GOP strategist Mike Shields. "I don't think this is over."

Like others Republican operatives, Shields said the party's ability to enact the rest of Trump's agenda taxes, infrastructure and the border wall could help "mitigate how upset people will be" about health care.

"If this is part of a general trend," he said of the GOP's governing struggles, "I think that can be pretty disastrous for 2018."

Republicans will be held responsible for any negative economic fallout from the current health system's failure, said Paul Shumaker, a North Carolina Republican pollster and senior adviser to Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C.

As early as October, voters are likely to see increased costs as insurance companies notify people about their new rates. By next October, it will be too late to unlink Republicans from the problem, Shumaker said.

For now at least, many Trump supporters blame the Republican Party's problems on its leaders in Congress.

"They certainly didn't have their house in order," said Larry Wood of Waynesboro, Virginia, who voted for Trump only after supporting Ohio Gov. John Kasich in the 2016 GOP primary. The 69-year-old retired homebuilder says the failure falls at the feet of Congress.

Trump seems content to let the current system collapse.

"As I said from the beginning, let ObamaCare implode, then deal. Watch!" he said in a tweet.

Beaumont reported from Des Moines, Iowa. Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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GOP fears political fallout after health care 'epic fail' - ABC News

How Schumer Held Democrats Together Through a Health Care Maelstrom – New York Times

Now that Democrats have defeated a major plank of the Republican agenda, the question is whether that success will drive President Trump and the Republican leadership to the negotiating table and whether Mr. Schumer can keep Democrats who are up for election in red states in line and safe from defeat next year.

While Republicans have spent the last six months enmeshed in internal squabbling, Mr. Schumer has largely made sure Democrats stood on the sidelines. Mr. McConnell cut out Democrats on Day 1 of this Congress, using every method to bypass them on deregulation votes, cabinet confirmations, a tax overhaul and health care policy.

That has had a big impact, said Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California. If you leave out a whole political party, she said, and then you chasten them for not helping, well, that unites that party.

Yet Democrats give Mr. Schumer song-belting, frequently badgering, endlessly frenzied credit for his tireless attention to senators from every faction, and for quiet outreach to Republicans who he thinks could be partners down the line.

He has worked carefully far more than Mr. Reid, many Democrats agreed to be almost relentlessly inclusive, talking with them at all hours of the day, over every manner of Chinese noodle, on even tiny subjects, to make them feel included in strategy. Recently, as he sat in a dentists chair waiting for a root canal, he dialed up Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut to talk about a coming judiciary hearing concerning Donald Trump Jr.

I think he makes it look easier than it is, Mr. Blumenthal said about Mr. Schumer.

Mr. Trumps election stunned him.

Mr. Schumers original plan after the election was to find a way to work with his fellow New Yorker on issues where he thought they might align, such as an infrastructure bill.

I take whats given me, Mr. Schumer, 66, said in a (shoeless) interview in his Capitol Hill office right off the Senate floor, one festooned with portraits of his idols (Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson), maps of New York and mildly goofy photos with other Democrats.

Fleeting dreams of using Mr. Trumps populism to triangulate against a Republican-controlled Congress dissolved, he said, when Mr. Trump instead decided to move right away to repealing the Affordable Care Act. So Mr. Schumer turned to an opposition agenda, doing everything within his limited powers to slow, block or obviate Mr. Trumps agenda.

Were in the minority, so were not making policy, Mr. Schumer said. We have to know when to dance and when to fight. The Trump administration has made it harder to dance.

For the fight, Mr. Schumer held together his disparate group of red state moderates, left-wing resistance fighters, hard-core policy wonks and everything in between, forming a partisan blast wall against Republican efforts to repeal the health care law, in part via maddening delays of basic Senate business.

Mr. Schumers schmoozing abilities have been important. He knows who I am, said Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, who is among the partys moderates in a state Mr. Trump won handily and who has largely opposed Mr. Trumps agenda.

I tell him when I think he is moving too far to the left, Mr. Manchin said, as when Mr. Schumer pushed to filibuster to block Mr. Trumps nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. There were no conversations with Harry.

It was not an article of faith that Mr. Schumer could do what he has done. With several Democrats up for re-election next year in states Mr. Trump won, both Republicans and Democrats assumed that those vulnerable lawmakers would be tempted to try to help unravel the health care law, vote for large tax cuts and the like.

He makes it clear to people that the opposition is about Medicaid cuts for the middle class and working class, not just the poor, Mr. Blumenthal said, explaining the rationale for fighting the health care law repeal. Its about opioid treatments, not just reproductive rights.

Mr. Schumers central weapon is procedural tricks to slow Mr. Trumps nominees, something that infuriates Mr. McConnell. I dont like it, and we are not going to do it as a practice, Mr. Schumer said, but when youre choosing a cabinet nominee, especially a controversial one, it makes sense.

All told, he said, his relationship with Mr. McConnell is an improvement over Mr. McConnells with Mr. Reid. Mr. Schumer has repeatedly told Mr. McConnell that Democrats would ease up on their obstruction once health care was behind them.

Ive known Chuck a long time, and he represents his state and his caucus well, Mr. McConnell said in an email before the health care vote. And while New York and Kentucky are very different places, we respect and work well with each other even if we are trying to achieve very different goals. The Senate as an institution functions through cooperation and constant conversations with the other side of the aisle.

Mr. Schumer committed one slight toward Mr. McConnell that baffled even his closest allies, voting against letting Mr. McConnells wife, Elaine Chao, become secretary of transportation.

She would not commit to spending money on transportation, Mr. Schumer said, even though most other Democrats gave her the nod. The move frosted Mr. McConnell, several Republicans said.

Mr. Schumer has watched Republicans struggle with moving from, in Speaker Paul Ryans words, an opposition party to a proposition party a major reason that Mr. Schumer and other Democrats recently rolled out a new economic message and policy platform for Senate and House Democrats.

He has recognized Democrats need a positive agenda, said Jim Manley, a former aide to Mr. Reid. And has begun putting that face before his caucus and the public.

Mr. Schumer seems to approach this with his usual blithesome manner, singing show tunes and the Shirelles as he races from phone call to meeting, sliding away from potential pests, a cellphone pressed to his face.

I love every single member of my caucus, he said. Oddly, this is likely true.

Get politics and Washington news updates via Facebook, Twitter and in the Morning Briefing newsletter.

A version of this article appears in print on July 30, 2017, on Page A15 of the New York edition with the headline: Schumer, With Songs And Persistence, Keeps The Democrats Together.

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How Schumer Held Democrats Together Through a Health Care Maelstrom - New York Times

Protesters in LA and across the country rally to protect healthcare from future threats – Los Angeles Times

While the Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act suffered a major blow this week, supporters of the law forged ahead Saturday with rallies nationwide including one in Los Angeles protesting any further attempts to undermine the existing healthcare system.

The Our Lives on the Line day of action has been planned since June, touted as a show of force against repeal efforts. Our Lives on the Line is a coalition of progressive and healthcare organizations.

Early Friday, three Republican senators defied their party leaders in voting to defeat the so-called skinny repeal of the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said the skinny bill would have left 16 million more Americans uninsured, and caused insurance premiums to soar.

On Saturday, around 100 people gathered near City Hall in downtown L.A., holding signs that read, "Healthcare is a human right" and "Keep your tiny hands away! ACA is here to stay!," sometimes using the signs to shield themselves from an unforgiving sun.

Mike Stutz, who joined three others in dressing up as a zombie, held a sign that read: GOP Healthcare Horror! Their bad ideas just won't die!

"As these zombies warn us, we cannot rest," said L.A. City Councilman Mike Bonin. "Like the evil, knife-wielding slasher in a horror movie, they are coming back. They are coming back for your healthcare, they are coming back for my healthcare they are coming back because they have a deadly determination to strip millions of people of what keeps them healthy and what keeps them alive."

On Saturday morning, President Trump tweeted this warning: If a new HealthCare Bill is not approved quickly, BAILOUTS for Insurance Companies and BAILOUTS for Members of Congress will end very soon!

The resounding message throughout the rally was that the battle isn't over, with speakers encouraging attendees to keep up the fight.

In the crowd was Rachel Rosen and her 7-year-old daughter Orly, dressed in a doctor's costume. Mother and daughter listened as elected officials, activists, patients and medical professionals took the stage.

"Donald Trump is playing with our healthcare," Orly said, not looking up from the toys in her hand. "We want him to stop."

"I don't think they're going to give up too easily because the Republicans have been committed for years to ending Obamacare," Rosen said.

Speakers offered praise for the three GOP senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine and John McCain of Arizona who voted no on repeal, as well as ordinary voters who pressured their elected officials.

No matter how much credit we give them, this victory belongs to all of you. For everyone who made calls, marched, told their stories or were just plain loud, thank you so much, said new Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Los Angeles). "This defeat is a major victory for working-class families in this country.

The rally kicked off a Drive for Our Lives national bus tour, which will run through Congress August recess. The tour, will travel to more than 18 states and spread of Americans whose healthcare coverage would have been threatened under the repeal bill.

Thank you for everything you're going to continue to do tomorrow and the day after and in the weeks and months to come to make sure they do not take away our healthcare and to make sure we get universal healthcare for everyone, Bonin told attendees. Lets stay engaged, lets stay part of the fight.

brittny.mejia@latimes.com

Twitter: @Brittny_Mejia

UPDATES:

2:25 p.m.: This article was updated with details from the rally.

This article was originally published at 11:05 a.m.

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Protesters in LA and across the country rally to protect healthcare from future threats - Los Angeles Times

The irony Healthcare could mean Democrats take the House – The Hill (blog)

The chickens have come home to roost. As the White House continues its spiral into disarrayand the dust settles over the GOP's failed effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Republicans in the House of Representatives are desperately trying to close their grip on an increasingly slippery argument for why they should be allowed to keep their seats after 2018.

In a May press conference, Speaker Paul RyanPaul RyanDems pivot to offering ObamaCare improvements The irony Healthcare could mean Democrats take the House These 5 House Republicans are ripping their Senate colleagues over healthcare MORE predicted that House Republicans seeking reelection will be judged on one question in 2018: Did we make peoples lives better? Hes right about that.

Even before the widespread engagement that started with the Womens March in January, Democrats were already heading into the 2018 midterm elections with momentum on their side.

Our organization, EMILYs List is seeing an unprecedented surge in the number of women interested in running for office, with over 16,000 women contacting us since Election Day and signing up to run for office themselves at the federal, state and local levels many of them motivated by the healthcare debate. (To put this number in context, thats more women than we have trained in our entire 32-year history).

Across the board, women running for office in 2018 are bringing a diverse range of perspectives on key issues like healthcare and economic security and experiences that are truly representative of the people theyll serve. Rising stars like Danica Roem, who is running to be the first transgender woman ever elected to the Virginia General Assembly, and Stacey Abrams, who is running to be our countrys first African American woman governor, are driving real solutions for American families.

In previous midterm elections, parties in power have lost an average of 28 House seats.

In 2018, Democrats only need to flip 24 to take back the House and 23 of the competitive districts at play this cycle are districts Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonTimeline: How the Trump and Sessions relationship deteriorated Sunday Show Preview: Washington recovers from healthcare fallout in the Senate The irony Healthcare could mean Democrats take the House MORE won in 2016.

So when it comes to House recruitment, I am encouraged by the great strength of EMILYs List candidates like Iowa legislator Abby Finkenauer, who is poised, at 28, to become the youngest woman ever elected to Congress when she takes back Iowas 1st Congressional District. Newcomers like Chrissy Houlahan, a business leader and veteran, who is running for Pennsylvanias 6th Congressional District, and pediatrician Mai Khanh Tran who is running for Californias 39thCongressional District, are the Democrats who will hold the GOP accountable and part of the 24 seats that will decide the majority for 2019.

This is significant and the implications for our country moving toward the 2018 election cycle are profound. As decades of research on women voters and our experience recruiting, training and raising money for women to run for office have shown, when women are in office, we get better policies for women and their families. When our government looks more like the people it is working to serve, our communities, our economy and our country thrive.

And now, many polls show that healthcare is top of mind for large numbers of Americans, especially women. This is not a surprise since our economic security is directly linked to our healthcare.

Can we afford it if my mom is ill? What will we do if I am injured and cant work? Will we lose our home if someone in our family gets sick? These are real questions that women and families are asking and theyre questions Republicans in Congress have failed to answer.

All of the GOPs proposals threaten access to reproductivehealth services and would deprive millions of Americans of health insurance. The bill that passed the House allows states to deny pre-existing conditions defined as everything from pregnancy to sexual assault.

This past week, Senate Republicans attempted to pass a dangerous skinny repeal of the Affordable Care Act in the dark of night. Thankfully, three Republicansenators found the courage to join their Democratic colleaguesincluding every single EMILY's List woman to protect access to healthcare.

Women are fired up and we are making our voices heard. The majority of calls to Congress during the healthcare debate have been made by women. Women have been demanding answers from their Republican representatives about why they are voting to defund Planned Parenthood or roll back Medicaid.

As I noted, more women than ever before are standing up to put their names on the ballot. Women voters have been reminding their elected leaders of a simple truth that Republicans in Washington and in states across the country have forgotten: You work for us. More women than men are registered to vote and women are more likely than men to vote on Election Day.

Republicans in Congress should take note: Women your biggest employer are watching each vote you take that hurts women and families, each town hall meeting youre absent from and each phone call you ignore now were running against you.

Between strong, energized women candidates and outraged women voters, the Democratic majority is in sight for 2018. The fallout from Republicans in the Senate trying to pass their cruel healthcare bill this past week and continued failed leadership on the part of the GOP might just be the catalyst to seal the deal.

Stephanie Schriock is president ofEMILY'sList, the nations largest resource for women in politics. The organization recruits and trains candidates and turns out women voters.EMILY'sList has helped elect 116 women to the House, 23 to the Senate, 12 governors and over 800 to state and local office.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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The irony Healthcare could mean Democrats take the House - The Hill (blog)