Can Psychedelics Be Therapy? Allow Research to Find Out – New York Times

More common are studies of the use of psychedelics to treat abuse or addiction to other substances. A 2012 meta-analysis of studies exploring LSDs potential to treat alcoholism looked at six randomized controlled trials. They included more than 500 patients, with follow-up of three to 12 months. The interventions usually involved one dose of LSD, given in a supervised setting, coupled with therapy. Alcohol use and misuse were significantly reduced in the LSD group for six months; differences seemed to disappear by one year. Similar studies using psilocybin have also shown promising results.

There was an open label study meaning theres no placebo or attempt to mask treatment information of three doses of psilocybin as part of a tobacco cessation program. It found that 12 of 15 participants (who had smoked an average of more than 30 years) remained abstinent six months after the program began and 16 weeks after their last treatment. Thats a much higher rate than seen in traditional programs to help people quit smoking.

Other uses might exist as well. Researchers examined the potential for MDMA in the treatment of chronic and treatment-resistant post-traumatic stress disorder. At two months after therapy, more than 80 percent of those in the treatment group saw a clinical improvement versus only 25 percent of those in the placebo group. These researchers later followed up with participants in the study, and found that the beneficial effects lasted for at least four years, even with no further treatment with psychedelics. Similar studies have also seen improvements in symptom scores.

As with marijuana, though, studies like these are the exception, not the rule. It is very, very difficult to do research on psychedelic compounds because they, like pot, are classified as Schedule I controlled substances, meaning they have a very high potential for misuse and no accepted uses. Schedule II drugs also have a high potential for abuse, but are considered to have potential benefits. These include OxyContin, fentanyl, Percocet and even opium.

To engage in research in Schedule I drugs, scientists have to get approval from the Drug Enforcement Administration. To obtain a license, research labs must have inspections to prove that they are capable of storing the drugs and protecting them from misuse. In Britain, the added costs of licensing and security can cost a lab about 5,000 a year, or nearly $6,500. Unfortunately, the costs in the United States are not as well documented.

Because of this, much of the research on these drugs is old; a lot of it took place before the United States and other countries categorized these drugs in the 1960s. What research has occurred since has often taken place in countries that are more permissive in their experiments.

Given the potential dangers inherent in these drugs, its important to stress that research would need to be closely monitored. Although the drugs are relatively safe compared with substances like heroin or cocaine, and arent nearly as addicting, they still pose psychological and physical risks.

People with a family or personal history of psychotic or psychiatric disorders should be particularly wary, and perhaps be excluded from trials. Research requires safety monitoring, careful planning and significant support throughout. We need to watch carefully for adverse outcomes, both expected and unexpected. We need to make sure protocols are transparent and reproducible.

We also need to acknowledge that we need more research before anyone attempts to use these drugs as medicine. Theyre typically coupled with professional therapy in studies, and we still arent sure there are benefits.

But it may be time to time to reconsider our current classification of controlled substances. Clearly we must continue to be vigilant about whether drugs pose physical harm to patients. But we could assess drugs using additional measurements, including the potential for dependence; social costs through damaged family and social life; and financial costs through health care, social care and the need for police involvement.

Using these metrics, its hard to argue that alcohol and tobacco should be legal for adults while marijuana and psychedelics should be considered so dangerous theyre hard to study. Likewise, opioids are considered widely acceptable in practice, yet appear to do far more harm.

With the potential to help curb more serious addictions and ease the symptoms of mental illnesses, it seems odd to continue to make it nearly impossible to research the therapeutic potential of psychedelics.

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Can Psychedelics Be Therapy? Allow Research to Find Out - New York Times

RA Reviews: Trance Wax – Trance Wax Two on Trance Wax (Single) – Resident Advisor

Trance Wax - Trance Wax Two The first Trance Wax, an anonymous vinyl-only release, quickly burrowed its way into record bags. It had a simple but effective concept: take a rinsed-out trance anthem from the '90s or early '00s, slow it down and slap a breakbeat on it. You get trance's epic euphoria without the dated qualities that turn modern listeners off. Somewhere between Shed and Evian Christ, that first Trance Wax EP had a slow-burning rise to fame, culminating in a new live set from Ejeca, the producer behind it. The second EP shows that there's life left in the formula, even if it doesn't reach the dizzying heights of its predecessor.

An intense track like Mauro Picotto's "Lizard"which Ejeca edits on the A1could be hard to swallow. But he wisely homes in on its feel-good breakdown while slipping in a Shed-style breakbeat. On "Trance 6," a rework of Freefall's "Skydive (I Feel Wonderful)," Ejeca tiptoes around the cheesy vocal, instead fixing on a buoyant arpeggio. It turns the original on its head while keeping its bubbly disposition intact, and the heart-in-mouth breakdown is the icing on the cake.

Ejeca's version of Yves Deruyter's "Back To Earth" is the most radical Trance Wax transformation yet. He splits the difference between trance and contemporary techno, shifting the original's throbbing drive into a droning, bass-heavy stomper. That leaves "Trance 8," taking on Moby's "Go"which, strictly speaking, isn't even trancefor the record's least imaginative effort. But throughout the rest of Trance Wax, Ejeca makes an odd side project feel like much more than the sum of its parts.

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RA Reviews: Trance Wax - Trance Wax Two on Trance Wax (Single) - Resident Advisor

Playable Classes In Cyberpunk 2077: Journalist And Executive – Gameranx (blog)

July 16, 2017

Expect the unexpected with CyberPunk 2077s classes.

Jordan Coetsee / Updates / CD Projekt RED, Cyberpunk 2077, PC, PS4, Xbox One /

CyberPunk 2077 has been one of those extremely hushed down games, giving fans nothing to go by, but a mere trailer which released a couple years back. Now in an interview with Game Reactor, Mike Pondsmith (creatorof the tabletop game based on CyberPunk 2077 and consultant to developers) let slip a little bit of information on what to expect from the anticipated title.

Alongside other mysterious classes, Journalist and Executive will be two of the playable classes players can expect in the upcoming RPG.

Theyre all going to be there, but I can tell youre going to find some surprises about how weve done it and I think youre really going to like it, he said. Theres a lot of subtlety going on there. Adam (Kiciski, CD Projekt REDs President and co-CEO) and I spent literally like a whole week messing with the ways of implementing that, so you get the most feel for your character.

So there you have it, if this is anything to go by, players will likely be able to expect more unconventional classes different from usual RPGs inCyberPunk 2077.

Excited to play it? Lets hope the developers release some more information regarding this elusive title soon for now, all we can do is wait.

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Playable Classes In Cyberpunk 2077: Journalist And Executive - Gameranx (blog)

The Treatment That Finally Lifted My Depression After Everything Else Failed – Reader’s Digest

Courtesy Nathalie DeGravelFour years ago, Nathalie DeGravel, 48, finally recognized something was horribly wrong with her brain. A human resources coordinator at the time, and living in Los Angeles, she knew that the episodes of rage and crying she battled frequently were much worse than the typical emotions everyone experiences. But her trips to a psychiatrist and prescription medications couldnt put a dent in the vicious depression she was suffering. Her despair at finding a solution led her to an unconventional new treatmentwhich ended up saving her life.

Born in Paris, France, DeGravel had always been content with the pleasant life she built in the United States: A husband and two children she enjoyed immensely, a satisfying career, with occasional trips to visit family in Paris. When her symptoms of depression began, they were mild, almost unnoticeable. Over time, however, the mental illness grew in severity to the point she couldnt even recognize herself, or the life she had worked so hard to build.

It started with anxiety a few years back, and I would experience rage as well, says DeGravel. I shouted and hit objects. At one point, I even emptied the trash can on my husbands head. Her feelings eventually caused her to withdraw from those she loved most, creating a sense of confusion and anger that radiated through her family. I would isolate myself and leave the house for the entire day, not saying where I was. I wouldnt respond to the phone when I was actually just in a parking lot, listening to music or sleeping in my car, she recalls. Simple tasks such as showering and taking care of her family became overwhelming. I cried all the time for no reason, DeGravel says. I was lethargic, I would sleep or stay in bed all day long without eating. I progressively became overwhelmed by daily tasks even though I wasnt working and my youngest child is in high school. Cooking, housekeeping, and grocery shopping would provoke panic attacks. Heres what not to say to someone whos depressed.

As DeGravels life began to spiral out of control, her loved ones became tangled in the web of her illness. My husband had to do his own therapy to understand what happened to me and to cope with the changes at home. He was frustrated, angry, and resentful. Our relationship in general was in constant conflict, and we didnt have fun together anymore, she explains. (Dealing with a depressed spouse can be extremely tricky.)

DeGravel found herself focusing solely on doing the unthinkableending her own life. She recalls, I would think all day and night about how I could kill myself so that it looked like an accident: My husband could get the life insurance money, and my kids would not feel guilty, because it wouldnt be their fault. Her career suffered the strain of her illness as well: She ultimately walked away from her job while she struggled to survive each and every day. When I was working I was unable to concentrate, couldnt remember what I read or the instructions I was given. Id miss deadlines, and fall asleep during meetings and at my desk, she said. During her worst moments, she wondered why her life had taken such a tragic turn. The first thing I always asked myself was Why? Why me? I used to be strong, independent, able to control my emotions, and able to know what I wanted, she says. I moved from France to the US and found a job quickly, visited my family regularly, was in good health. I had good friends, I bought a house. I was known for my character: strong, but generous and fair. In short, I was not a weak person, and I accomplished a lot in life. So why me?

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Desperate to regain control over her life, DeGravel sought out the help of a psychiatrist. But repeated attempts at traditional therapy and medication did nothing to ease her symptoms. DeGravel knew she had to think outside the box. I was online when I saw an advertisement for transcranial magnetic stimulation. I had never heard about it and I was desperate for any solution. I talked to my psychiatrist about it, and he enrolled me in the program at UCLA, she recalls.

Cultura/ShutterstockTranscranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a recently developed therapy in which magnetic pulses are beamed deep into mood centers in the brain; while no one is sure exactly why the treatment works, the increased neural activity over timeTMS is done several times a week for four to six weeksseems to rewire the brain, easing depressive symptoms and thoughts. Ian Cook, MD, director of the UCLA Depression Research and Clinic Program where DeGravel received treatment, told the UCLA News Room, We are actually changing how the brain circuits are arranged, how they talk to each other. The brain is an amazingly changeable organ, and we hope this technology will have use, not just in depression, but for other conditions as well. The development of the new therapy to treat stubborn depression is an encouraging sign for the 30 percent of people whose symptoms are treatment resistant to other therapies. (TMS is just one of several promising advances in depression treatment.)

The FDA-approved treatment requires patients to visit a TMS center. The doctor positions an electromagnetic coil against the patients scalp, and then administers magnetic pulses for 30 to 40 minutes. For the most part, the non-invasive treatment is painless, though some patients experience temporary pain at the site or mild headaches. DeGravels experience with the treatment was positive: After about 5 weeks I noticed the treatment had an impact on my symptoms. I felt almost normal. I had control of my emotions, I was socializing again, I wasnt crying, and I had no suicidal thoughts. Physically, the procedure was relatively easy to tolerate. She recalls, When the set-up is finalized the sessions last only about 40 minutes. Its noisy, but I wear earplugs, and it feels like I have a woodpecker on my head. Some people watch TV during the sessions, but I prefer to check my emails or Facebook. The new therapy has had such a profound impact on her life that DeGravel hopes others suffering from the same debilitating symptoms will consider the treatment. I encourage anyone with depression to give TMS a try. I was in their shoes a few months back, and I only regret one thingnot knowing about it earlier! TMS is an option for patients who, like DeGravel, have failed to find relief with counseling and drug therapy.

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The Treatment That Finally Lifted My Depression After Everything Else Failed - Reader's Digest

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Biomimetic Underwater Robot Program

We are developing neurotechnology based on the neurophysiology and behavior of animal models. We developed two classes of biomimetic autonomous underwater vehicles (see above). The first is an 8-legged ambulatory vehicle that is based on the lobster and is intended for autonomous remote-sensing operations in rivers and/or the littoral zone ocean bottom with robust adaptations to irregular bottom contours, current and surge. The second vehicle is an undulatory system that is based on the lamprey and is intended for remote sensing operations in the water column with robust depth/altitude control and high maneuverability. These vehicles are based on a common biomimetic control, actuator and sensor architecture that features highly modularized components and low cost per vehicle. Operating in concert, they can conduct autonomous investigation of both the bottom and water column of the littoral zone or rivers. These systems represent a new class of autonomous underwater vehicles that may be adapted to operations in a variety of habitat

We are collaborating with investigators at The University of California, The University of Alabama and Newcastle University to apply principles of synthetic biology to the integration of a hybrid microbot. The aim of this research is to construct Cyberplasm, a micro-scale robot integrating microelectronics with cells in which sensor and actuator genes have been inserted and expressed. This will be accomplished using a combination of cellular device integration, advanced microelectronics and biomimicry; an approach that mimics animal models; in the latter we will imitate some of the behavior of the marine animal the sea lamprey. Synthetic muscle will generate undulatory movements to propel the robot through the water. Synthetic sensors derived from yeast cells will be reporting signals from the immediate environment. These signals will be processed by an electronic nervous system. The electronic brain will, in turn, generate signals to drive the muscle cells that will use glucose for energy. All electronic components will be powered by a microbial fuel cell integrated into the robot body.

This research aims to harness the power of synthetic biology at the cellular level by integrating specific gene parts into bacteria, yeast and mammalian cells to carry out device like functions. Moreover this approach will allow the cells/bacteria to be simplified so that the input/output (I/O) requirements of device integration can be addressed. In particular we plan to use visual receptors to couple electronics to both sensation and actuation through light signals. In addition synthetic biology will be carried out at the systems level by interfacing multiple cellular /bacterial devices together, connecting to an electronic brain and in effect creating a multi-cellular biohybrid micro-robot. Motile function will be achieved by engineering muscle cells to have the minimal cellular machinery required for excitation/contraction coupling and contractile function. The muscle will be powered by mitochondrial conversion of glucose to ATP, an energetic currency in biological cells, hence combining power generation with actuation.

We are also developing neuronal circuit based controllers for both robots and neurorehabilitative devices. These controllers are based on

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Comparing Uroplasty (UPI) and Stryker Corporation (NYSE:SYK) – The Cerbat Gem


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Comparing Uroplasty (UPI) and Stryker Corporation (NYSE:SYK)
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Comparing Uroplasty (UPI) and Stryker Corporation (NYSE:SYK) - The Cerbat Gem

The Easily Triggered Right and the Untruths of Political Correctness – Paste Magazine

Words cant hurt you (unless you let them), snowflake. Grow up! Im a Trump deplorable.

So read the sign held aloft by seemingly kind middle-aged woman at a recent free speech rally held by various alt-right goofballs in Portland, OR. I asked the smiling woman if she felt there was any irony inherent in chastising a group of people for being hurt by mere words while at the same time mentioning something a failed presidential candidate said nine months ago. She did not.

And so goes the ongoing saga of political correctness. To most of the Left, it means considering whether or not your words and actions might needlessly hurt someone while adding nothing to the world. To the citizens on the Right, it is a hard-to-define all-encompassing term that triggers vitriolic eye rolls from coast-to-coastto Republican politicians its become one of the most valuable weapons in their rhetorical arsenals.

After the civil rights movement, authors like Allan Bloom (whose work was funded by the Koch family) began to speak out against what they saw as left-wing intellectual college professors seeking to change sacred academic traditions in order to brainwash the next generation into a life of horrid liberalism. These claims were erroneous at best. At worst, they were an attempt to preserve racist traditions that have nothing to do with academia. However, to a large segment of the population that was increasingly frightened and confused by the changing reality of their country and world, a seed of blame was planted that is still bearing GOP fruit today.

The biggest legacy of this political smokescreen wasnt changing syllabi on college campuses, it was the Rights ability to successfully forge an alliance between the white working class and Republican politicians with corporate interestsan alliance that very rarely benefits the voters. Citing political correctness, the Right was (and is) able to deflect blame for what the white working class saw as a changing Americas myriad ills. According to the Right, it wasnt lowering taxes, valuing corporations over people, cutting social and educational programs, or outsourcing jobs overseas to increase corporate profits that were changing the American landscapeit was the seemingly sudden concern for non-white and other marginalized Americans that was at the heart of the issue.

Political correctness was ultimately how the GOP drove a wedge between Democrats and the working class people they claimed to represent. They pushed forth the idea of shadowy liberal elites wanting to control the common mans thoughts and speech. Those looking for an explanation as to how the white working class can time and again vote against their own interests need to look no further than the rise of antipathy toward political correctness for their answer.

Being anti-PC has also given a paper thin veil underneath which racist views can be espoused freely while disguised as something else. Take, for instance, the resistance to the emergence of the term African-American as commonplace in the 1990swhat possible reason other than racism could there be for resisting such a change? The message is clear: know your place in this society and you dont ever try and change it (boy).

To illustrate the many fallacies of political correctness, Id like to highlight some of the many triggers that set the ever delicate snowflakes on the Right into an uproar whenever they are uttered. Perhaps, one fine day we can move forward to a more relevant and productive version of political discourse that is totally devoid of even a mention of political correctness, but Im not going to hold my breath.

Jesus H. Christ and the war being waged over his birthday

The neocon idea of a war on Christmas first began some years ago amongst Fox News types like John Gibson, who wrote an entire book on the subject in which he claimed that literally any sign of Christmas in public can now lead to complaints, litigation, angry protests, threats, and bruised feelings. Literally any sign? Apparently, Mr. Gibson has never been in an American city in the month of December, as nearly all have massive Christmas trees erected in public spaces and whose lighting is often a much-ballyhooed event. I guess Mr. Gibson has also never walked through basically any store in December and been forced to suffer through wave after wave of atrocious Christmas music. Just last week, Donald Trump proclaimed in a speech that Were going to start saying Merry Christmas in this country again, although I cannot for the life of me remember a time when wishing others a Merry Christmas was outlawed in America.

Its this sort of half-thoughtfull of sound and fury but signifying absolutely nothingthat the anti-PC movement is based around.

It appears simply acknowledging that non-Christian religions are practiced in our diverse society is enough to trigger highly pious individuals on the Right into nonsensical fits of anger and cries of persecution. However, a Christian who has never asked God for forgiveness and behaves as Mr. Trump does is apparently fine. Literally every single American president has identified as Christian. All of them. Somehow, I think JCs birthday is going to be OK.

Mocking safe spaces as you exist in one

As I stood on the vastly outnumbered alt-right side of the aforementioned free speech rally interviewing people (aka getting called a fake news fag), my attempts at conversation were punctuated with angry bursts of shouting at the hundreds of gathered antifa across the street. Come over here and say that, you pussies! shouted a man in an American flag shirt, clearly pleased with himself, towards the writhing black-clad mass across the street.

Confused, I engaged him.

Couldnt you go over there? Well yeah. Well then, whats stopping you Captain America? Go teach those pussies a lesson, my dude!

He did not. Suddenly, the gentleman appeared very peaceful. This fellow, like most far-Right warriors, was incredibly tough when surrounded on all sides and protected by 100+ members of law enforcement in riot gear. Law enforcement thats creating for them a space a space in which they can feel safe can you see where Im headed here?

As for symbolic safe spaces: if youre not a member of a marginalized community, you shouldnt be speaking on them. Straight white dudes like myself, for instancethe entirety of America is our safe space. The goal of idealized safe spaces is like the idealized goal of world peace: it will never 100% happen, but thats no reason to stop striving towards those honorable goals.

The utter and complete veneration of badges and those who wear them

Law enforcement has an incredibly difficult, often thankless, always underpaid job. Many of them go into the high-risk line of work with only the pure and hopeful intention of helping their communities. Many save lives and mentor young people. Others are scared weaklings lured by the intoxicating feeling of power over others who have no business driving a cab, much less a cop car. Some are horrific people, some are saints whose work should be highlighted and honored. Such is human naturethe light and the darkand to act as though law enforcement is infallible simply because they wear a badge is not only ignorant and irresponsible but detrimental to society as a whole.

Blue lives do indeed matterso much so that American law enforcement get to kill with almost total impunity. In most cases, all a police officer has to prove in order to be justified when using deadly force is that they feared for their livesno matter if that fear is illogical or based on something like racism. That is wrong. Full stop.

There is simply no way to reasonably debate the fact that law enforcement in this country requires sweeping reform, better vetting and needs to be held to a higher standard. (Hey, perhaps instead of building a wall, those billions could go to police forces?) Admitting this fact does not make you a cop hating piece of garbage, it makes you a mature adult.

Being triggered by feminism/scared of women

Housewives Matter! Down with feminism! read another sign at the Pro-Trump free speech rally. Confused, I pointed out to the man with the sign that feminism was about affording women the opportunity to be whatever they wantedhousewife includedand had zero to do with disparaging housewifery in general. The gentleman seemed to consider this for a moment, took note of my press pass and then responded incredibly wisely by calling me a fake news fag and smiling, apparently secure in the knowledge that he had forever established his intellectual superiority over me.

At a Republican debate last year, Megyn Kelly asked our soon-to-be Commander in Tweet about his treatment of the fairer sex, saying, Youve called women you dont like fat pigs, dogs, slobs, and disgusting animals. You once told a contestant on Celebrity Apprentice it would be a pretty picture to see her on her knees

I think the big problem this country has is being politically correct, Trump said to applause from the Republican audience. Ive been challenged by so many people, I dont frankly have time for total political correctness. And to be honest with you, this country doesnt have time either.

Horrific, appalling sexism aside, consider for a moment that Mr. Trump said the big problem facing the US is being politically correct and that this odd statement was greeted with applause, not confused murmurs. That there were women (mostly older and white) in the audience applauding such a statement says a great deal about the demonization of anything deemed PC.

To reiterate: feminism is about having the ability to choose to be an astronaut, bus driver, housewifewhatever a woman may pleasewithout limit. Traditionally, many, many doors have been closed to females in cultures all around the world and all throughout history. Feminism is an effort to change that and right the scales. Its actually pretty simple.

Antifas Mask Wearing

This goes for a lot of people on the Left too. You have not made a tremendous point when you tell a protester in black bloc garb that, if they were tough, theyd take off their masks. You sound like an ass. Why wont they take off their masks? They are committing crimes. Tear gas is terrible to breathe in. Thats why they are wearing masks. Do you also wonder why bank robbers wear masks?

Their movement, love it or loathe it, is about making change as a united groupnot dressing up like Captain America, or a fucking Spartan, and hoping to squeeze a modicum of selfish attention out of an otherwise pathetically unremarkable life. Criticize and debate their extreme tactics all day, but please stop polluting the world with your half-thoughts that you think are intellectual triumphs. People that ask Antifa why they are wearing masks are like strangers forcing their unsolicited opinions about the weather onto you: they are insufferable.

Freedom of the press / Saying fake news and elitist media

The 260-pound hateful apricot/manatee hybrid we have for a president says a lot of dangerous, stupid things, but his insistence that anyone who disagrees with him in the press is espousing fake news is amongst the most absurd and dangerous. Our government and society rest on a system wherein the differing branches of government check and balance each other and the press holds them all accountable and reports back to the public. A free press is a cornerstone of our democracy, and only someone with something to hide would impede this process to the level Donald Trumphas. Noted painter George W. Bush and his sidekickThe Penguin came close to the levels of journalistic impediment Trump has sunk toand they started a war for profit, for Gods sake.

When CNN retracted a story recently, Donald Trumpwho probably hadnt been that excited since the last Miss Tween New Jersey pageant (Really fabulous tweens. Great tweens, the best. Everyone says so. I met my next wife tonight.)gleefully exclaimed his vindication: here it was, proof of fake news! Except thats not at all what it was. As most logical adults could tell you, journalists are held to higher professional standards than, say, a racist real estate mogul. Journalists are under a gigantic microscope and are charged with delivering the truth, and/or their opinions on that truth. The smallest mistake or misquote can cost us dearly, as it did for both CNN and the journalists who resigned. No matter how intensely you vet your stories and comb over your thoughts, around half of America will take up a vehement dislike to you instantly. For example, Id say with confidence that most of the people reading this have never received very detailed and specific threats on their life as I have for simply doing my job. Id also be willing to wager that no one reading this has ever received a message on a dating app in which a woman threatened them with penis removal because of something they did at work (alas, the young woman in question and I did not find love). These are the kinds of charming things we journos get to live with in the age of the Internet.

CNN displayed the kind of honor that is the foundation of journalism when they retracted that story. Its what all honorable humans, journalists or no, do when faced with the revelation theyve made an errorthey dont double down on the mistake and shout (or tweet) redfaced about the supposed conspiratorial injustices facing them, or blame those who exposed the mistake. Thats what children, criminals, sociopaths, and, sadly, our president does. Case in point: the Central Park Five case. When the men in question were exonerated for the horrific crime after losing a great chunk of their lives to prison, did Donald Trump apologize for taking out a full page ad in the New York Timesexclaiming that New York State should bring back the death penalty? No, no he did not.

And as far as journalists being elitist, my God, what ignorance. The average salary for a member of the elitist media is around $40,000 (many of us make far less than that). For perspective, the average starting salary for a coal miner is $60k-70kare they also elites? Sean Hannitys salary for 2015 was $29 million. $29 million. Donald Trumps salary for that year was well we dont know because the man refuses to release his tax returns.

So by the Rights logic, I, a man who can give you detailed directions to the nearest plasma donation center, am an elitist, but a man tied with freaking Rihanna and just above Bon Jovion the Forbes highest paid celebrities list isnt; and neither is a man born into untold riches who uses a literal golden toilet for his micropenis is not. Got it.

Calling something a free speech rally doesnt make it a free speech rally

In their ongoing campaign to paint the Leftthose vocally resisting the Trump regimes fascist policies and whose demands for diversity are such a horrific blight upon American societyin a negative light, the Right has begun holding shit-starting rallies under the guise of free speech. Case in point: the rally Ive referenced in this piece. The alt-right flew a bunch of pathetic racist LARPer celebrities of theirs to Portland, OR (and this after all that talk of paid protesters on the Left) simply to disrupt the city and disturb its mostly liberal population. The Right refers to these gatherings as free speech rallies because they can then paint anyone who opposes what theyre as an enemy of free speech. Its reductive, nonsensical and childishand its one of the Rights favorite weapons in turning the fascism argument around on the Left.

A dog turd between two hamburger buns doesnt suddenly become a tasty 4th of July treatits still dog shit. Like most of what the alt-right does.

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The Easily Triggered Right and the Untruths of Political Correctness - Paste Magazine

Don’t Let Political Correctness Obstruct the Fight Against Extremism – The National Interest Online

All terrorist threats must be dealt with, but should they all be dealt with in the same way? This dilemma gets to the heart of creating an effective Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) policy.

The Department of Homeland Security defines CVE as the proactive actions to counter efforts by extremists to recruit, radicalize, and mobilize followers to violence. Yet there was never complete clarity over its purpose.

Was CVE intended primarily as a soft-power complement to law enforcement, military and intelligence-gathering operations against violent Islamist groups such as ISIS and Al Qaeda? Or is CVEs main focus on challenging all forms of radical ideologiesfrom Islamists to black separatists, eco-terrorists, white supremacists and the Far Right?

Many of Americas allies across Europe take a more inclusive approach. There is a logic to thisyou dont have to look hard to see there is a problem beyond ISIS-inspired terrorism. In the UK, for example, a far-right terrorist murdered the Labour MP, Jo Cox, last year, and Muslims were targeted in the attack near Finsbury Park Mosque this June. In 2011, mass murderer Anders Breivik struck in Norway, and five years later, Germany saw Ali David Sonboly, seemingly inspired by Breivik, carry out a mass shooting of his own.

In the wake of these kinds of attacks, there is an obvious compulsion to treat the threat from the Far Right as analogous to that of Islamist terrorism. Indeed, the pressure Prime Minister Theresa May and the police were under on this front after the Finsbury Park Mosque attack was palpable. To not do so, the argument goes, is essentially to ignore certain forms of hatred and validate the views of those who regard programs such as CVE as Islamophobic witch hunts.

There is no doubt that law-enforcement officials regularly have to deal with the threat posed by white supremacists. Unlike Islamists, however, such actors are not part of a global movement with a coherent aim and end goal in mind. White supremacism is, by and large, a bankrupt, unpopular and discredited ideology in a way that Islamism, unfortunately, is not. Just look at the support that still exists for the Muslim Brotherhood in the Middle East; while even the British Foreign & Commonwealth Office contends that certain brands of Islamism subscribe to democratic principles and liberal values. You could not imagine it saying anything similar about any kind of white-supremacist movement.

Governments are currently so keen to make sure CVE is done in a manner as politically correct as possible they only seem to feel comfortable addressing a dangerous ideology that exists within ethnic-minority communities by also focusing on another that exists within the ethnic majority. That is hardly intellectually satisfactory, regardless of the politics around it.

Those interested in crafting effective CVE policy must also consider where the governments role in such initiatives ends. Jamie Bartlett wrestles with these kinds of issues in his new book, Radicals Chasing Utopia.

Bartlett spent time among militant environmentalists, trans-humanists, psychedelic societies and anti-Islam groups. One chapter deals with Prevent (the UKs equivalent to CVE). He argues that radicalisation, in all sorts of unpredictable directions, is on the rise, yet posits a scenario in which public servants are told to watch out for the signs of psychedelic radicalisation and in which children are taught about the dangerous recruitment techniques of transhumanists. Even if Bartletts scenario plays out, some will be relaxed with this. Others will believe that government will be going too far in attempting to control which ideas are and are not acceptable.

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Don't Let Political Correctness Obstruct the Fight Against Extremism - The National Interest Online

How does cloning work, anyway? Your guide to real-world replication – Digital Trends

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Its common knowledge that cloning has broken the bonds of sci-fi, and that labs around the world are experimenting with cloning techniques. But how exactly does cloning work, and why havent we heard more about it? More specifically, why havent clone armies overrun us yet? Heres how researchers clone living organisms, and why it remains a complicated process.

Cloning isnt a very scientific word, so its no surprise that there are several different techniques that you could call cloning. That includes the common gene cloning, where biological materials are reproduced and used for medical techniques or even meeting demand for red meat as well as therapeutic cloning, which involves swapping nucleus DNA between eggs for a shortened development process.

But for the real, thats what I meant style of cloning, we need to talk about somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). This is the type of cloning that takes the DNA of an adult specimen and reproduces it, so that an embryo with that same DNA is created. Its the sort of science that inspired stormtroopers and dinosaurs in our favorite movies, and its probably exactly what you were thinking of. So lets talk about how somatic cell nuclear transfer works.

First, scientists need healthy, durable cells from a donor a.k.a. the organism they aimto clone. There are different kinds of cells in the average sexual organism, but somatic cells are the neutral type of cell that just hangs out doing its job with the typical two complete sets of chromosomes.

Somatic cells cant be found among red blood cells, but white blood cells are somatic and a common source for DNA products. Skin cells and the traditional cheek-swab also work, but the cells have to be healthy and undamaged. Thats why it is usually impractical to try to clone ancient frozen or trapped animals: Their cells are almost always heavily damaged.

While one part of the scientific cloning team is working on extracting a plentiful supply of somatic cells from the donor, another part is working to prepare a viable egg cell. It doesnt necessarily have to be an egg cell from the same species, but for greater chances of success, the closer the better.

When scientists find the right undamaged egg cells, they carefully extract the nucleus of the cell. The nucleus is what holds the single set of chromosomes that contributes to reproduction. But for cloning, they dont want that DNA they want an intact, empty shell that can house an embryo. So the nucleus and all its DNA is removed, while the rest of the egg is delicately preserved.

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Remember, because somatic cells are complete, adult cells not used for reproduction, they have the full dual set of chromosomes, already present and ready for action. However, scientists need to get this DNA into the egg cell and prepared to grow into a new organism. So they again, very carefully remove the nucleus and insert it into the waiting, empty egg cell.

The goal is to combine them into a single cell again, which is not easy. Current successful techniques use a very light, directed flow of electricity so that the nucleus and egg cell bind together, and hopefully agree to their new living arrangement.

Now we have a cloned egg, ready to start growing! But, while the egg does have two sets of chromosomes and, in theory, everything it needs to grow into a copy of the donor organism, it hasnt actually been fertilized and it cant be fertilized without ruining the cloning process.

So scientists try to convince the egg that its fertilized and should start growing. This is another area where there is a lot of experimentation with new techniques: Usually, the egg is subjected to chemical cocktails designed to trigger the growth process, often while being zapped with more electricity (sometimes science really is like the movies).

When the cell starts to divide, scientists move quickly onto the next stage, keeping the egg in similar conditions to the real reproductive process. If the egg starts to develop into an embryo that appears healthy, they typically implant that embryo into a living female organism to gestate. This is better for the egg and much less expensive than trying to grown an embryo externally in a lab.

Closeup of the researched embryos

As you probably noticed, theres a certain amount of uncertainty and delicate work involved in all the previous steps. Even small amounts of cell damage can be disastrous, and theres no guarantee a doctored egg will develop correctly either inside or outside the carrying organism. In other words, viability is a major issue. There are a lot of failed attempts and embryos that just dont develop correctly (often going awry when the embryo is only a small collection of cells), so it takes massive resources, plenty of time, and hundreds of attempts to create a successful clone. Successful live births are a rarity.

Even then, the process is not usually kind to the successful clones. They tend to suffer from shortened lifespans and other problems summed up by what you could call DNA whiplash. However, these problems have diminished as technology has advanced.

Juan Grtner/123RF

The first true cloningusing SCNT occurredin 1996 after 276 attempts: The famous Dolly the sheep. This was quickly followed by cloned calves in Japan, and then a number of other animals were added to the list, including cats, dogs, rabbits, rats, horses, and even a rhesus monkey.

Except for rumors, there is no evidence that a human has ever been cloned primates are especially difficult to clone, and humans are the most difficult of all because of the complex way that our cells divide. Reports of human clones have either been debunked or dropped due to lack of evidence.

Full cloning like this also has relatively little value to the scientific community thus far. Gene cloning is far more advantageous when it comes to healthcare and profit, and much easier to accomplish. True cloning with SCNT has become something of a sideshow as a result: Today, most interest in the process focuses on the applications of stem cells from successful embryos, but that also remains an expensive, controversial process for now.

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How does cloning work, anyway? Your guide to real-world replication - Digital Trends

Nigerian held for cloning of debit cards – Times of India

Pune: The cyber crime cell of the Pune police on Sunday arrested Nigerian national Ifeanyi Mike Mbaeze (34) for allegedly installing skimmer (machine) at isolated ATMs in Pune for stealing debit card data. Mbaeze from Sangvi is the third suspect arrested in card-cloning case. Police had earlier arrested his accomplices, Ogbehase Fortune (42) from Pimple Gurav and Bashar Dakingari Usman (26) from Pirangut, on July 11 and 12. Mbaeze had come to India on a business visa in 2015. Before coming to Pune, he was staying in Mumbai. The cell inspector Manisha Zende said, "The involvement of Mbaeze had come to light during the interrogation of his two accomplices. We have recovered three cellphones and Rs 8,000 from him." She said, "We suspect Mbaeze for using skimmer for copying data of debit cards from ATMs. Mbaeze claimed that he was a garments dealer, but failed to furnish evidence." We have invoked charges of conspiracy under section 120 (b) of the IPC on the three suspects, she added.

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Nigerian held for cloning of debit cards - Times of India

LOOK: 3-year-old slugger gives the bat flip its next evolution: The bat throw – CBSSports.com

Have you ever seen a player get plunked in coach pitch? Keep watching 3-year-old baseball player Christopher Perez and you might. The young lefty has already channeled the spirit of Jose Bautista in his game, but he did him one better. Perez eschewed the lame bat flip and took it to the next, throwing his bat at the first base dugout.

Christopher is the son of Brewers' utility player Hernan Perez. His Instagram account has over 1,200 followers, and within it fans can find shots of the Brewers clubhouse and pictures of Chris with his family. If all goes well for the little guy, he'll have 90 mph fastballs coming for the small of his back in no time.

In addition to the bat flip, Perez has also mastered the lesser known hat toss, which honestly might go over even worse for him. That is, assuming that he never nails one of his teammates that isn't paying attention in the dugout. THAT would be truly disrespectful.

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LOOK: 3-year-old slugger gives the bat flip its next evolution: The bat throw - CBSSports.com

Here’s the evolution of Donald Trump’s Russia defense – Salon

President Donald Trump, his White House and the team of surrogates and pro-Trump media members have gone to great pains to try and keep up with the drips coming out thatare backing up the theory that the Trump campaign metwith Russian sources to, at the very least, get information about Hillary Clinton as part of a disinformation campaign.

On Monday, Trump defended son Donald Trump Jr. from reports that he met with Russian sources in order to find out what information they had on Clinton, saying that most politicians would have gone to a meeting like the one his son attended. Notably, the presidentseemed to imply that his son was a politician.

This defense of his son is a drastic shift from his previous line. As the New York Times put it just last week: The original statement, drafted aboard Air Force One by advisers and then approved by Mr. Trump, said only that the Russian lawyer had discussed adoption policy during the meeting, without mentioning that the meeting had been offered as a chance to provide information about Mrs. Clintons dealings with Russia. It was also a seismic shift from his position since at least January thatwas that there was absolutely no connection with any Russians whatsoever.

Meanwhile, former Trump campaign director Michael Caputo went from no contact to so what? in two days, which should qualify as a record somewhere.

I had no contact with Russians and I never heard of anyone in the Trump campaign talking with Russians, he said Friday after meeting with the House Intelligence Committee. On Monday, Caputo reiteratedhis points from Friday, saying that talk of collusion was a fishing expedition. But Caputoalso triedto deflect from the allegations, saying, we both get involved in foreignelections in our own way to try and tilt them in our favor.

And, when it comes to pro-Trump media, Fox News Jeanine Pirro, who praised Trump forstanding up to fake news hogwash, isalso trying to change her story. In May, she told Fox &Friends that Trump has got to understand he is in treacherous waters now. Youre talking about every step as potentially being evidence to impeach him in some way.

But this weekend, Pirro defended the president in a different way.

There is no law that says a campaign cannot accept information from a foreign government, Pirro said, ignoring that there is a law the Federal Election Campaign Act which prevents foreign nationals from contributing, donating or spending funds in connection with any federal, state, or local election in the United States, either directly or indirectly, and barsAmericans from solicit[ing], receiv[ing] or accept[ing] contributions or donations from them.

When Trump was interviewed by Pirro in May, he told the Fox News host, There is no collusion. We had nothing to do with Russia. One would think that Pirro would have been slightly upset that something he told her to her face would later turn out to be completely false. But, two months after he told Pirro something completely untrue, the former prosecutor laid out the line of defense that Trump himself would take Monday:Any politician who cared about getting elected would do exactly what the Trump campaign did.

As someone whos run for office five times, if the devil called me and said he wanted to set up a meeting to give me opposition research on my opponent Id be on the first trolley to hell to get it. And any politician who tells you otherwise is a bald-faced liar.

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Here's the evolution of Donald Trump's Russia defense - Salon

Auburn University scientists make breakthrough discovery on the evolution of the innate immune system – Opelika Auburn News

The laboratory of Kenneth Halanych, the Schneller endowed chair in the Department of Biological Sciences at Auburn University, has made a discovery that could have widespread implications for how scientists study the function of the human immune system. Led by doctoral student Michael Tassia, the teams research revealed that humans and their closest invertebrate relatives share core components of their innate immune systems, components that date back more than 500 million years.

Humans belong to a group called deuterostomes that include vertebrate animals as well as invertebrate animals like sea stars, sea urchins, sea squirts and acorn worms, said Tassia.

All of these groups had gill slits, much like fish, early in their history, added Halanych.

Tassia and the team in the Halanych lab studied genetic datasets of more than 40 different deuterostome species including human and invertebrate. The research showed evidence that humans and other deuterostomes share a common evolutionary history of their innate immune systems.

Humans and other vertebrates possess two types of immune systems innate and adaptive, said Tassia. The adaptive immune system is the one we are more familiar with. It contains components such as antibodies that allow for immunological memory, which is why immunizations are an effective tool against diseases and pathogens. Whereas, the adaptive immune system must learn to recognize a pathogen, the innate immune system is prepared from the get-go.

The innate immune system relies on a suite of molecules called pattern-recognition receptors, which, over long periods of evolution, have adapted to recognize common molecular patterns associated with bacteria, fungi and viruses. So, if bacteria like E. coli get into somewhere they shouldnt, such as a really nasty paper cut, cells in your body sporting these pattern-recognition receptors are ready to mount a rapid immune response, causing inflammation, recruiting more immune cells and destroying those bacteria.

Tassia explained that the adaptive immune system is exclusive to vertebrates. Components of the innate immune system, on the other hand, predate vertebrates and are present in groups as old as jellies, whose last common ancestor with vertebrates existed more than 500 million years ago. As a result, he began his work by comparing the most well-known pattern-recognition receptors, Toll-like receptors, or TLRs, from more than 40 different invertebrate and vertebrate species.

In our research, we looked at the much bigger system, starting with the diversity of TLRs in each of our species and continuing further by examining whether all the other important components required for the system to work are present across deuterostomes, said Tassia. Our findings indicate that nearly all the components are present across all the major deuterostome groups, suggesting their innate immune system was present in the last common ancestor more than 500 million years ago and was expanded upon in vertebrates and other groups.

Our study also used phylogenetic methods to evaluate the similarity of TLRs between major animal lineages. Interestingly, we were able to identify a group of TLRs very closely related to a mammalian TLR that is critical for recognizing viruses, suggesting this particular method for antiviral defense may be more evolutionarily ancient than previously expected and could predate the origin of vertebrates.

The realization that the innate immune system of vertebrates and their close invertebrate relatives is similar opens the door to developing more controllable laboratory experiments to understand immune system evolution.

Often the generation time and ability to keep invertebrates in the laboratory can make them logistically favorable for studying vertebrate systems, said Halanych.

The research findings are the result of years of study, beginning with Halanychs dissertation and long-standing interest in the evolution of hemichordates and echinoderms marine invertebrates and continuing with the work of doctoral students in the Halanych lab, as well as publicly available information from the National Institutes of Health. Tassia gathered several terabytes of genetic data from the previous research efforts and spent approximately two years developing a bioinformatic, computational framework that allowed him to confidently identify and perform analysis on specific genes.

This work is a great example of how bioinformatics tools can help answer important questions of organismal biology, said Halanych. The Tassia et al. paper has helped push the laboratory and Auburn University further into the forefront of marine invertebrate genomics.

Candis Birchfield is an employee of Auburn University.

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Auburn University scientists make breakthrough discovery on the evolution of the innate immune system - Opelika Auburn News

Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 multiplayer beta begins this week – Polygon

Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 will stage an online multiplayer beta for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One beginning this week and running until the end of the month, Konami has announced.

The beta will kick off at 4 a.m. ET on Thursday, July 20 and go to midnight, July 30. The beta will offer quickmatch and 3-vs.-3 online co-operative play.

Players will be offered their choice of the Brazilian or French national teams, playing at the Neu Sonne Arena. Other options include day or night play in good or rainy weather.

PlayStation 4 users will not need PlayStation Plus to participate. On Xbox One, an Xbox Live Gold subscription is required.

Adam Bhatti, the global product manager for Pro Evolution Soccer, said there will be a demo closer to PES 2018's launch. The beta is "not to sell the game," and is meant to test the online code.

Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 launches Sept. 12, 2017 on PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Windows PC, Xbox 360 and Xbox One.

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Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 multiplayer beta begins this week - Polygon

Climatic stability resulted in the evolution of more bird species – Phys.Org

July 17, 2017 Credit: Umea University

More species of birds have accumulated in genera inhabiting climatically stable areas. This is shown by a new study from Ume University.

"The explanation may be that a stable climate makes it more likely that diverging lineages persist without going extinct or merging until speciation is completed, and stability reduces the risk for extinction in response to climatic upheavals, says Roland Jansson, researcher from Ume University who led the study."

How life has evolved from simple origins into millions of species is a central question in biology that remains unsolved. Advances in genomics and bioinformatics mean we now know a lot about the relationships among species and their origins, but surprisingly little is known about which environmental conditions that allows species to multiply.

In a project about how climate changes in the past affects the evolution of biodiversity, researchers tried to fill this knowledge gap. They studied bird genera endemic (unique to) to North and South America and asked which geographic and climatic factors could explain why more species have accumulated in species-rich genera compared to their more species-poor sister genera.

The results showed that genera occupying areas that had been more climatically stable during the last millions of years had diversified into more species than their closest sister genera inhabiting more climatically variable areas. The previously popular hypothesis that climate change during this time period would promote speciation was refuted, at least for birds.

The question what this means for biodiversity in the future considering climate change is however not easy to answer. On one hand, areas of high climatic stability are predicted to warm less than the global average. On the other hand, species from climatically stable areas may be less tolerant to new climatic conditions.

"Climate change has been a feature of Earth's entire history, and has beenboth rapid and large in the past. But the climate change occurring now will make the climate warmer than in millions of years, and be beyond what many species have experienced, says Roland Jansson."

Another complicating factor making present climate change different from events in the past is that most ecosystems are now dominated by human use, making it harder for species to adjust their geographic ranges in response to the changing climate.

The paper is published in the scientific journal Ecology Letters.

Explore further: Impact of climate change on mammals and birds 'greatly under-estimated'

More information: Genoveva Rodrguez-Castaeda et al. How bird clades diversify in response to climatic and geographic factors, Ecology Letters (2017). DOI: 10.1111/ele.12809

Journal reference: Ecology Letters

Provided by: Umea University

An international study published today involving University of Queensland research has found large numbers of threatened species have already been impacted by climate change.

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Predicting how species will respond to climate change is a critical part of efforts to prevent widespread climate-driven extinction, or to predict its consequences for ecosystems.

Scientists at the University of Washington have discovered a simple way to raise the accuracy of diagnostic tests for medicine and common assays for laboratory research. By adding polydopaminea material that was first ...

The red algae called Porphyra and its ancestors have thrived for millions of years in the harsh habitat of the intertidal zoneexposed to fluctuating temperatures, high UV radiation, severe salt stress, and desiccation.

Invasive plant species can be a source of valuable ecosystem functions where native coastal habitats such as salt marshes and oyster reefs have severely declined, a new study by scientists at Duke University and the University ...

Large tubeworms living in the cold depths of the Gulf of Mexico may be among the longest living animals in the world. This is revealed in a study in Springer's journal The Science of Nature. According to lead author Alanna ...

Bacteria passed straight to children have more healthcare benefits than if they are transmitted via the surrounding environment, new Oxford University research reveals.

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Climatic stability resulted in the evolution of more bird species - Phys.Org

Global Trade’s Evolution May Check Trump’s Protectionism – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Global Trade's Evolution May Check Trump's Protectionism
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
President Donald Trump has looked to make protectionism respectable again, citing Abraham Lincoln's embrace of tariffs, pulling the U.S. out of a Pacific trade pact and preparing tariffs on steel imports. But changes in the international economy and ...

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Global Trade's Evolution May Check Trump's Protectionism - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Texas tea party: the birth and evolution of a movement – Houston Chronicle

Senator Konni Burton (R-Colleyville) watches nominees get approval despite her vote of no on the UT Board of Regents before the Senate for confirmation on March 11, 2015.

Senator Konni Burton (R-Colleyville) watches nominees get approval...

AUSTIN - Nine years ago, fresh off a term as a Smith County commissioner in northeast Texas, JoAnn Fleming drove to Dallas for a "boot camp" with other like-minded conservatives.

It wasn't on the radar of the public or most of the Texas political establishment. But many now consider it a key event in the birth of the tea party movement.

The goal was to examine how government works - and how they could force changes to make officials more accountable.

Also on the agenda: how to get their point across, voter to voter.

"Konni Burton was there, as were a lot of other people whose names would become familiar to a lot of Texans in the years to come," Fleming said, referring to the Republican who went on to become a state senator from Colleyville. "I had thought that once I was through with elected office, I'd take two years off to become a normal person again. Obviously, I didn't."

Within weeks, she said, the tea party movement in Texas was born.

It was a seed that quickly blossomed on the national stage with calls from grass-roots activists to cut federal spending, taxes and the size of government, and reduce the federal deficit. The movement burgeoned just as Democrat Barack Obama was moving into the White House.

Back in Texas, the tea party emerged as a decentralized movement that slowly expanded its focus to state government in Austin, even as a few Texas elected officials including then-Gov. Rick Perry joined their ranks to help bash federal overreach and the wasteful bureaucracy in D.C.

Now, with Republicans firmly in charge in both capitals, Texas' tea party activists are shifting their focus to the next phase in their evolution: as a political movement that is now an established insider power player at the Capitol, despite its historic outsider bravado.

Tea party caucuses have grown ranks in both the state House and Senate - the Freedom and Liberty caucuses, they are called - and Burton is now a senator in the chamber where staunch GOP conservatives are in charge, starting with the presiding officer, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick.

'Coalition approach'

The next step for the tea party will be played out front and center in the special legislative session that begins Tuesday. Gov. Greg Abbott, who formally announced his re-election bid Friday, has set a 20-issue agenda - much of it tailor-made for tea party regulars - that will pit the strongly conservative Senate against the more moderate House over controversial issues such as the bathroom bill, property-tax reforms, school-choice for special-needs children and how to better finance public schools.

"We are moving from solely a tea party effort to a coalition approach because we have common ground with a lot of other organizations on other issues," said Fleming, who is executive director of Grassroots America - We The People, a tea party group. "People in the tea party movement have been asking for some time how we can get help to effect change, and the answer is that it takes time to build trust and build coalitions. That's where we are now."

To read this article in one of Houston's most-spoken languages, click on the button below.

In recent months, even during the regular legislative session that ended in May, tea party groups from around Texas partnered with local pro-business groups, toll-road opponents, medical organizations, mainstream Republican groups and immigration-reform organizations, to push for the passage or defeat of legislation, both in Austin and in Washington. With the special session just days away from its start, the coalition supporting passage of many - if not all - of Abbott's agenda has grown to more than 60 groups.

'Natural progression'

At a June 26 summit meeting in Dallas, 121 leaders representing 59 organizations met to discuss the special session - including members of the State Republican Executive Committee, GOP county chairs and conservative organizations - and plan their lobbying strategy.

That promises to put additional pressure on the Texas House, where Speaker Joe Straus has publicly compared some of the items to horse manure and suggested that a number may not get approval in the House. Ten of the 20 bills were approved by the Senate during the regular legislative session, and Patrick predicted on Thursday that the rest will easily pass his chamber - likely very soon after the 30-day special session begins.

"This is no longer solely a tea party effort," said Del Carothers, a Georgetown rancher who has been active with several Texas tea party groups since 2011.

"We have grown way past where we started out. Once you get a civics lesson on how our government actually operates, you know it has to change to be responsive to the people. And you know that if you really care about citizen-driven government and freedom, which is what the Founding Fathers intended, you have to be involved and make that happen," he said.

"If you sit around on your ass, government will run your life and they'll waste your money."

Mark Jones, a Rice University political scientist who has studied the rise of the tea party as a political force, said the increasing clout of the activists should come as no surprise in Red State Texas.

"The tea party movement had been building for some time, and it took off in Texas when Gov. Perry gave his Tax Day speech in 2009 and went from being a pragmatic centrist to straddling the tea party line," he said. "The next natural progression is for these groups to start exerting their influence in who is elected and to expand their clout by building coalitions with other groups. That's what's happening now."

In Texas, where many legislative seats are filled by the candidate who wins the Republican primary, tea party candidates often win. Perhaps their biggest surprise was the 2013 election of Ted Cruz over Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst for a U.S. Senate seat.

"In the special session, where all the items are of a conservative nature, the hiding places will be gone for Republicans who want to say they're conservative but not vote that way," said Dale Huls, with the Clear Lake Tea Party near Houston. "The best vote some of them can make may be the one not taken, especially in the House, because if they vote against our issues we're going to be watching everything they're doing.

"This is put up or shut up time."

For Republicans who refuse to support the tea party agenda, Huls and other activists said the coalition of groups wants them censured by the Republican Party of Texas. Even before the special session begins, a deeply divided Republican Party of Bexar County passed a resolution on Monday calling for "a change in leadership in the Texas House" - a surprising move considering that Speaker Straus, a target of tea party anger on many issues, is from San Antonio.

'Everybody can win'

Despite the predictions that the tea party influence could push much of Abbott's more controversial agenda items, including the bathroom and property-tax reform bills, to pass during the special session, when they failed during the regular session, House leaders privately say they think that is unlikely. That's because most of the controversial bills will simply not have enough support from Republicans and Democrats to pass in as strident a form as the Senate wants, said one House committee chairman.

"The agenda for the special session is part of an election campaign," said longtime Austin political consultant Bill Miller. "It's set up perfectly so that if not everything the tea party wants is passed, the governor can say well I tried. Re-elect me, and we'll get it done next year. Dan Patrick can say the Senate passed everything, and Joe Straus can say it was the will of the House, and the Senate and the House are much different chambers.

"Everybody can win."

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Texas tea party: the birth and evolution of a movement - Houston Chronicle

Evolution of the Emoji – The Horn

They infest our inboxes. Theyve been merchandised into pillows and clothes. Theyre even used to order food straight to your door. They are EVERYWHERE.

Its nearly impossible to pick up a phone or get through the day without running into emoji. Where did these familiar little cartoons come from anyway?

In honor of World Emoji Day (July 17th), heres a little information about a language we can all understand.

It all began in Japan with Shigetaka Kurita, the acclaimed Father of Emoji. Kurita drew inspiration from working at DoCoMo when a new version of a pager was released. The new pager was intended more for business use than casual conversation, including the decision to drop the heart symbol that many teens used regularly. After seeing how crucial symbols were to texting, Kurita got to work on developing the first set of 176 black and white emoji.

The name itself stems from the Japanese word for pictograph, with the Japanese e (picture) and moji (character). Colored emoji began to surface around 1999 with the yellow faces that are still largely used to this day. This also marks the expansion into other countries, popping up on social channels and lifting off in mobile markets with the introduction of the iPhone.

So, why July 17th for World Emoji Day? Apple announced the iCal calendar app on this date back in 2002, leading several fans to label this day as International Emoji Calendar Day. This happens to be the only marked date illustrated in Apple emoji.

Its clear that these little symbols have had quite the impact on the way we communicate. With a growing 2,666 documented emojis and more to come soon, theres no telling if the emoji train will ever slow down.

Photos courtesy of Pinterest, DHgate and ABC.

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Evolution of the Emoji - The Horn

Does Darwinism Lead to Infanticide Acceptance? – National Review

The evolutionary biologist, Jerry Coyne,writes a blog entitled, Why Evolution is True.

One would think that by choosing that title, Coyneshould restrict his discussions to questions of science that touch on questions and explanations abouthow and why life changes over time.

But Coyneas many Darwinists dotakes the question beyond science, and extrapolates evolutionary theoryinto questions of morality, philosophy, and ethics.

And now, he is promoting the propriety of infanticide. From, Should One be Allowed to EuthanizeSeverely Deformed or Doomed Newborns?:

If you are allowed to abort a fetus that has a severe genetic defect, microcephaly, spina bifida, or so on, then why arent you able to euthanize that same fetus just after its born?

I see no substantive difference that would make the former act moral and the latter immoral.

After all, newborn babies arent aware of death, arent nearly as sentient as an older child or adult, and have no rational faculties to make judgments (and if theres severe mental disability, would never develop such faculties). It makes little sense to keep alive a suffering child who is doomed to die or suffer life in a vegetative or horribly painful state.

Coyne makes the boringly predictable claim that since we euthanize our sick pets, we should also kill seriously ill and disabled babies. He then explains why he thinks the reasons we resist that meme are wrong, and indeed, irrational.From his blog:

The reason we dont allow euthanasia of newborns is because humans are seen as special, and I think this comes from religionin particular, the view that humans, unlike animals, are endowed with a soul.

Its the same mindset that, in many places, wont allow abortion of fetuses that have severe deformities. When religion vanishes, as it will, so will much of the opposition to both adult and newborn euthanasia.

Well, no. As I have written repeatedly, human exceptionalism can include religious views, but it definitely does not require them. As Coynes advocacy proves, once we reject human exceptionalism, universal human rights becomes unsustainable, and we move toward the manufacture ofkillable and exploitablecastes of people, determined by the moral views of those with the power to decide.

Moreover, some of the most vociferous opponents of infanticide are disability rights activistswho are generally secular in outlook, liberal politically, and not pro-life on abortion. But they see the euthanasia and infanticide agendas as targeting people with disabilities. The advocacy of Coyne, Peter Singer (see below), and others of their materialistic ilkproves they are correct.

Besides, if allowable abortion is the lodestar, then any baby could be killed. At the very least, the killable categories of infants would include babies with Down syndrome, dwarfism, and even, cleft palateall reasons given forlate term abortion.

Adding heft to that argument, Coyne cites the advocacy ofSinger to validate his own position. Singerbelieves all babies are killable as so-called human non-persons, and moreover, he has infamously used Down babies and newborns with hemophilia as examples of acceptable infanticide subjects.

Coyneconcludes with the believe thatcontemporary times will be looked down upon as brutal for not allowing infanticide:

In the future well look back on our present society and say, How brutal not to have been allowed to do that.

Coynes odious advocacyis the logical outcome ofaccepting the following premises:

Many scientists bemoan the fact that so many people refuse to accept evolution as a fact. Without getting into that controversy, perhaps they would be better off ruing the fact that ever since Darwin published The Origin of Species,so many of the promoters of that view also couple it with anti-humanism and a moral philosophy that was judged a crime against humanity at Nuremberg.

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Does Darwinism Lead to Infanticide Acceptance? - National Review

Afghan girls robotics team competes after visa obstacles – ABC News

Their team shirts didn't say "Afghanistan" and their name badges were handwritten, not typed, suggesting the last-minute nature of their entry into the United States. But the Afghan girls competing Monday in an international robotics competition in Washington were clearly excited to be representing their nation.

The team of six teenage girls was twice rejected for U.S. visas before President Donald Trump intervened at the last minute. They arrived in Washington from their hometown of Herat, Afghanistan, early Saturday, and their ball-sorting robot competed in its first round Monday morning.

"We were so interested, because we find a big chance to show the talent and ability of Afghans, show that Afghan women can make robots, too," said Rodaba Noori, one of the team members. She acknowledged, though, that the team "hadn't long, or enough time to get ready for competition."

The girls' struggle to overcome war, hardship and U.S. bureaucracy on their journey to the U.S. capital has made their team stand out among more than 150 competing in the FIRST Global Challenge, a robotics competition designed to encourage youths to pursue careers in math and science.

The U.S. won't say why the girls were rejected for visas, citing confidentiality rules. But Afghan Ambassador Hamdullah Mohib said that based on discussions with U.S. officials, it appears the girls, who are 14 to 16 years old, were turned away due to concerns they would not return to Afghanistan.

Speaking with the assistance of a translator who summarized their remarks, 14-year-old team member Fatemah Qaderyan, said that she was "grateful" to be able to compete. Her teammate, 15-year-old Lida Azizi, said she was a little "nervous" but also excited to be playing and "proud."

Though there was a crush of media attention, the girls looked much like other competitors, wearing jeans along with white headscarfs. Their microwave-sized robot, like that of other teams, displayed their country's black, red and green flag.

"I'm so happy they can play," said their mentor Alireza Mehraban, a software engineer. He added: "They are so happy to be here."

While teams had up to four months to build their robots, the Afghan team built theirs in two weeks before it had to be shipped to reach the competition in time, Mehraban said. He said the girls had a day to test the robot in Afghanistan before it needed to be mailed.

On Monday, they were making adjustments and practicing in between rounds. When a chain seemed to come loose on a part of the robot that moves up and down, a competition judge recommended a larger part, and another team provided one.

Like others in the competition, the girls' robot can pick up and distinguish between blue and orange balls. To score points, teams deposit the blue balls, which represent water, and the orange balls, which represent pollutants, into different locations. The teams play in alliances of three nations, with two alliances competing head to head. The three-robot alliance that scores the most points in a game wins.

Mehraban, the team's mentor, said their robot managed to score one or two points in the first game. The team has two more games to play Monday and three games Tuesday.

Associated Press reporter Josh Lederman and Associated Press video journalist Noreen Nasir contributed to this report.

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Afghan girls robotics team competes after visa obstacles - ABC News