Writing the human genome – The Biological SCENE

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In brief

Synthetic biologists have been creating the genomes of organisms such as viruses and bacteria for the past 15 years. They aim to use these designer genetic codes to make cells capable of producing novel therapeutics and fuels. Now, some of these scientists have set their sights on synthesizing the human genomea vastly more complex genetic blueprint. Read on to learn about this initiative, called Genome Project-write, and the challenges researchers will faceboth technical and ethicalto achieve success.

Nineteenth-century novels are typically fodder for literature conferences, not scientific gatherings. Still, at a high-profile meeting of about 200 synthetic biologists in May, one presenter highlighted Mary Shelleys gothic masterpiece Frankenstein, which turns 200 next year.

Frankensteins monster, after all, is what many people think of when the possibility of human genetic engineering is raised, said University of Pennsylvania ethicist and historian Jonathan Moreno. The initiative being discussed at the New York City meetingGenome Project-write (GP-write)has been dogged by worries over creating unnatural beings. True, part of GP-write aims to synthesize from scratch all 23 chromosomes of the human genome and insert them into cells in the lab. But proponents of the project say theyre focused on decreasing the cost of synthesizing and assembling large amounts of DNA rather than on creating designer babies.

The overall project is still under development, and the projects members have not yet agreed on a specific road map for moving forward. Its also unclear where funding will come from.

What the members of GP-write do agree on is that creating a human genome from scratch is a tremendous scientific and engineering challenge that will hinge on developing new methods for synthesizing and delivering DNA. They will also need to get better at designing large groups of genes that work together in a predictable way, not to mention making sure that even larger assembliesgenomescan function.

GP-write consortium members argue that these challenges are the very thing that should move scientists to pick up the DNA pen and turn from sequence readers to writers. They believe writing the entire human genome is the only way to truly understand how it works. Many researchers quoted Richard Feynman during the meeting in May. The statement What I cannot create, I do not understand was found on the famed physicists California Institute of Technology blackboard after his death. I want to know the rules that make a genome tick, said Jef Boeke, one of GP-writes four coleaders, at the meeting.

To that end, Boeke and other GP-write supporters say the initiative will spur the development of new technologies for designing genomes with software and for synthesizing DNA. In turn, being better at designing and assembling genomes will yield synthetic cells capable of producing valuable fuels and drugs more efficiently. And turning to human genome synthesis will enable new cell therapies and other medical advances.

In 2010, researchers at the Venter Institute, including Gibson, demonstrated that a bacterial cell controlled by a synthetic genome was able to reproduce. Colonies formed by it and its sibling resembled a pair of blue eyes.

Credit: Science

Genome writers have already synthesized a few complete genomes, all of them much less complex than the human genome. For instance, in 2002, researchers chemically synthesized a DNA-based equivalent of the poliovirus RNA genome, which is only about 7,500 bases long. They then showed that this DNA copy could be transcribed by RNA polymerase to recapitulate the viral genome, which replicated itselfa demonstration of synthesizing what the authors called a chemical [C332,652H492,388N98,245O131,196P7,501S2,340] with a life cycle (Science 2002, DOI: 10.1126/science.1072266).

After tinkering with a handful of other viral genomes, in 2010, researchers advanced to bacteria, painstakingly assembling a Mycoplasma genome just over about a million bases in length and then transplanting it into a host cell.

Last year, researchers upped the ante further, publishing the design for an aggressively edited Escherichia coli genome measuring 3.97 million bases long (Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf3639). GP-write coleader George Church and coworkers at Harvard used DNA-editing softwarea kind of Google Docs for writing genomesto make radical systematic changes. The so-called rE.coli-57 sequence, which the team is currently synthesizing, lacks seven codons (the three-base DNA words that code for particular amino acids) compared with the normal E. coli genome. The researchers replaced all 62,214 instances of those codons with DNA base synonyms to eliminate redundancy in the code.

Status report International teams of researchers have already synthesized six of yeast's 16 chromosomes, redesigning the organism's genome as part of the Sc2.0 project.

Bacterial genomes are no-frills compared with those of creatures in our domain, the eukaryotes. Bacterial genomes typically take the form of a single circular piece of DNA that floats freely around the cell. Eukaryotic cells, from yeast to plants to insects to people, confine their larger genomes within a cells nucleus and organize them in multiple bundles called chromosomes. An ongoing collaboration is now bringing genome synthesis to the eukaryote realm: Researchers are building a fully synthetic yeast genome, containing 17 chromosomes that range from about 1,800 to about 1.5 million bases long. Overall, the genome will contain more than 11 million bases.

The synthetic genomes and chromosomes already constructed by scientists are by no means simple, but to synthesize the human genome, scientists will have to address a whole other level of complexity. Our genome is made up of more than 3 billion bases across 23 paired chromosomes. The smallest human chromosome is number 21, at 46.7 million baseslarger than the smallest yeast chromosome. The largest, number 1, has nearly 249 million. Making a human genome will mean making much more DNA and solving a larger puzzle in terms of assembly and transfer into cells.

Today, genome-writing technology is in what Boeke, also the director for the Institute of Systems Genetics at New York University School of Medicine, calls the Gutenberg phase. (Johannes Gutenberg introduced the printing press in Europe in the 1400s.) Its still early days.

DNA synthesis companies routinely create fragments that are 100 bases long and then use enzymes to stitch them together to make sequences up to a few thousand bases long, about the size of a gene. Customers can put in orders for small bits of DNA, longer strands called oligos, and whole geneswhatever they needand companies will fabricate and mail the genetic material.

Although the technology that makes this mail-order system possible is impressive, its not prolific enough to make a human genome in a reasonable amount of time. Estimates vary on how long it would take to stitch together a more than 3 billion-base human genome and how much it would cost with todays methods. But the ballpark answer is about a decade and hundreds of millions of dollars.

Synthesis companies could help bring those figures down by moving past their current 100-base limit and creating longer DNA fragments. Some researchers and companies are moving in that direction. For example, synthesis firm Molecular Assemblies is developing an enzymatic process to write long stretches of DNA with fewer errors.

Synthesis speeds and prices have been improving rapidly, and researchers expect they will continue to do so. From my point of view, building DNA is no longer the bottleneck, says Daniel G. Gibson, vice president of DNA technology at Synthetic Genomics and an associate professor at the J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI). Some way or another, if we need to build larger pieces of DNA, well do that.

Gibson isnt involved with GP-write. But his research showcases what is possible with todays toolseven if they are equivalent to Gutenbergs movable type. He has been responsible for a few of synthetic biologys milestones, including the development of one of the most commonly used genome-assembly techniques.

The Gibson method uses chemical means to join DNA fragments, yielding pieces thousands of bases long. For two fragments to connect, one must end with a 20- to 40-base sequence thats identical to the start of the next fragment. These overlapping DNA fragments can be mixed with a solution of three enzymesan exonuclease, a DNA polymerase, and a DNA ligasethat trim the 5 end of each fragment, overlap the pieces, and seal them together.

To make the first synthetic bacterial genome in 2008, that of Mycoplasma genitalium, Gibson and his colleagues at JCVI, where he was a postdoc at the time, started with his eponymous in vitro method. They synthesized more than 100 fragments of synthetic DNA, each about 5,000 bases long, and then harnessed the prodigious DNA-processing properties of yeast, introducing these large DNA pieces to yeast three or four at a time. The yeast used its own cellular machinery to bring the pieces together into larger sequences, eventually producing the entire Mycoplasma genome.

Next, the team had to figure out how to transplant this synthetic genome into a bacterial cell to create what the researchers called the first synthetic cell. The process is involved and requires getting the bacterial genome out of the yeast, then storing the huge, fragile piece of circular DNA in a protective agarose gel before melting it and mixing it with another species of Mycoplasma. As the bacterial cells fuse, some of them take in the synthetic genomes floating in solution. Then they divide to create three daughter cells, two containing the native genomes, and one containing the synthetic genome: the synthetic cell.

When Gibsons group at JCVI started building the synthetic cell in 2004, we didnt know what the limitations were, he says. So the scientists were cautious about overwhelming the yeast with too many DNA fragments, or pieces that were too long. Today, Gibson says he can bring together about 25 overlapping DNA fragments that are about 25,000 bases long, rather than three or four 5,000-base segments at a time.

Gibson expects that existing DNA synthesis and assembly methods havent yet been pushed to their limits. Yeast might be able to assemble millions of bases, not just hundreds of thousands, he says. Still, Gibson believes it would be a stretch to make a human genome with this technique.

One of the most ambitious projects in genome writing so far centers on that master DNA assembler, yeast. As part of the project, called Sc2.0 (a riff on the funguss scientific name, Saccharomyces cerevisiae), an international group of scientists is redesigning and building yeast one synthetic chromosome at a time. The yeast genome is far simpler than ours. But like us, yeasts are eukaryotes and have multiple chromosomes within their nuclei.

Synthetic biologists arent interested in rebuilding existing genomes by rote; they want to make changes so they can probe how genomes work and make them easier to build and reengineer for practical use. The main lesson learned from Sc2.0 so far, project scientists say, is how much the yeast chromosomes can be altered in the writing, with no apparent ill effects. Indeed, the Sc2.0 sequence is not a direct copy of the original. The synthetic genome has been reduced by about 8%. Overall, the research group will make 1.1 million bases worth of insertions, deletions, and changes to the yeast genome (Science 2017, DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf4557).

So far, says Boeke, whos also coleader of Sc2.0, teams have finished or almost finished the first draft of the organisms 16 chromosomes. Theyre also working on a neochromosome, one not found in normal yeast. In this chromosome, the designers have relocated all DNA coding for transfer RNA, which plays a critical role in protein assembly. The Sc2.0 group isolated these sequences because scientists predicted they would cause structural instability in the synthetic chromosomes, says Joel Bader, a computational biologist at Johns Hopkins University who leads the projects software and design efforts.

The team is making yeast cells with a new chromosome one at a time. The ultimate goal is to create a yeast cell that contains no native chromosomes and all 17 synthetic ones. To get there, the scientists are taking a relatively old-fashioned approach: breeding. So far, theyve made a yeast cell with three synthetic chromosomes and are continuing to breed it with strains containing the remaining ones. Once a new chromosome is in place, it requires some patching up because of recombination with the native chromosomes. Its a process, but it doesnt look like there are any significant barriers, Bader says. He estimates it will take another two to three years to produce cells with the entire Sc2.0 genome.

So far, even with these significant changes to the chromosomes, the yeast lives at no apparent disadvantage compared with yeast that has its original chromosomes. Its surprising how much you can torture the genome with no effect, Boeke says.

Boeke and Bader have founded a start-up company called Neochromosome that will eventually use Sc2.0 strains to produce large protein drugs, chemical precursors, and other biomolecules that are currently impossible to make in yeast or E. coli because the genetic pathways used to create them are too complex. With synthetic chromosomes well be able to make these large supportive pathways in yeast, Bader predicts.

Whether existing genome-engineering methods like those used in Sc2.0 will translate to humans is an open question.

Bader believes that yeast, so willing to take up and assemble large amounts of DNA, might serve as future human-chromosome producers, assembling genetic material that could then be transferred to other organisms, perhaps human cells. Transplanting large human chromosomes would be tricky, Synthetic Genomics Gibson says. First, the recipient cell must be prepped by somehow removing its native chromosome. Gibson expects physically moving the synthetic chromosome would also be difficult: Stretches of DNA larger than about 50,000 bases are fragile. You have to be very gentle so the chromosome doesnt breakonce its broken, its not going to be useful, he says. Some researchers are working on more direct methods for cell-to-cell DNA transfer, such as getting cells to fuse with one another.

Once the scientists solve the delivery challenge, the next question is whether the transplanted chromosome will function. Our genomes are patterned with methyl groups that silence regions of the genome and are wrapped around histone proteins that pack the long strands into a three-dimensional order in cells nuclei. If the synthetic chromosome doesnt have the appropriate methylation patterns, the right structure, it might not be recognized by the cell, Gibson says.

Biologists might sidestep these epigenetic and other issues by doing large-scale DNA assembly in human cells from the get-go. Ron Weiss, a synthetic biologist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is pushing the upper limits on this sort of approach. He has designed methods for inserting large amounts of DNA directly into human cells. Weiss endows human cells with large circuits, which are packages of engineered DNA containing groups of genes and regulatory machinery that will change a cells behavior.

In 2014, Weiss developed a landing pad method to insert about 64,000-base stretches of DNA into human and other mammalian cells. First, researchers use gene editing to create the landing pad, which is a set of markers at a designated spot on a particular chromosome where an enzyme called a recombinase will insert the synthetic genetic material. Then they string together the genes for a given pathway, along with their regulatory elements, add a matching recombinase site, and fashion this strand into a circular piece of DNA called a plasmid. The target cells are then incubated with the plasmid, take it up, and incorporate it at the landing site (Nucleic Acids Res. 2014, DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku1082).

This works, but its tedious. It takes about two weeks to generate these cell lines if youre doing well, and the payload only goes into a few of the cells, Weiss explains. Since his initial publication, he says, his team has been able to generate cells with three landing pads; that means they could incorporate a genetic circuit thats about 200,000 bases long.

Weiss doesnt see simple scale-up of the landing pad method as the way forward, though, even setting aside the tedium. He doesnt think the supersized circuits would even function in a human cell because he doesnt yet know how to design them.

The limiting factor in the size of the circuit is not the construction of DNA, but the design, Weiss says. Instead of working completely by trial and error, bioengineers use computer models to predict how synthetic circuits or genetic edits will work in living cells of any species. But the larger the synthetic element, the harder it is to know whether it will work in a real cell. And the more radical the deletion, the harder it is to foresee whether it will have unintended consequences and kill the cell. Researchers also have a hard time predicting the degree to which cells will express the genes in a complex synthetic circuita lot, a little, or not at all. Gene regulation in humans is not fully understood, and rewriting on the scale done in the yeast chromosome would have far less predictable outcomes.

Besides being willing to take up and incorporate DNA, yeast is relatively simple. Upstream from a yeast gene, biologists can easily find the promoter sequence that turns it on. In contrast, human genes are often regulated by elements found in distant regions of the genome. That means working out how to control large pathways is more difficult, and theres a greater risk that changing the genetic sequencesuch as deleting what looks like repetitive nonsensewill have unintended, currently unpredictable, consequences.

Gibson notes that even in the minimal cell, the organism with the simplest known genome on the planet, biologists dont know what one-third of the genes do. Moving from the simplest organism to humans is a leap into the unknown. One design flaw can change how the cell behaves or even whether the cells are viable, Gibson says. We dont have the design knowledge.

Many scientists believe this uncertainty about design is all the more reason to try writing human and other large genomes. People are entranced with the perfect, Harvards Church says. But engineering and medicine are about the pretty good. I learn much more by trying to make something than by observing it.

Others arent sure that the move from writing the yeast genome to writing the human genome is necessary, or ethical. When the project to write the human genome was made public in May 2016, the founders called it Human Genome Project-write. They held the first organizational meeting behind closed doors, with no journalists present. A backlash ensued.

In the magazine Cosmos, Stanford University bioengineer Drew Endy and Northwestern University ethicist Laurie Zoloth in May 2016 warned of unintended consequences of large-scale changes to the genome and of alienating the public, potentially putting at risk funding for the synthetic biology field at large. They wrote that the synthesis of less controversial and more immediately useful genomes along with greatly improved sub-genomic synthesis capacities should be pursued instead.

GP-write members seem to have taken such criticisms to heart, or come to a similar conclusion on their own. By this Mays conference, human was dropped from the projects name. Leaders emphasized that the human genome would be a subproject proceeding on a conservative timescale and that ethicists would be involved at every step along the way. We want to separate the overarching goal of technology development from the hot-button issue of human genome writing, Boeke explains.

Bringing the public on board with this kind of project can be difficult, says Alta Charo, a professor of law and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, who is not involved with GP-write. Charo cochaired a National Academy of Sciences study on the ethics and governance of human gene editing, which was published in February.

She says the likelihood of positive outcomes, such as new therapies or advances in basic science, must be weighed against potential unintended consequences or unforeseen uses of genome writing. People see their basic values at stake in human genetic engineering. If scientists achieve their goalsmaking larger scale genetic engineering routine and more useful, and bringing it to the human genomemajor changes are possible to what Charo calls the fabric of our culture and society. People will have to decide whether they feel optimistic about that or not. (Charo does.)

Given humans cautiousness, Charo imagines in early times we might have decided against creating fire, saying, Lets live without that; we dont need to create this thing that might destroy us. People often see genetic engineering in extreme terms, as a fire that might illuminate human biology and light the way to new technologies, or one that will destroy us.

Charo says the GP-write plan to keep ethicists involved going forward is the right approach and that its difficult to make an ethical or legal call on the project until its leaders put forward a road map.

The group will announce a specific road map sometime this year, but it doesnt want to be restrictive ahead of time. You know when youre done reading something, Boeke said at the meeting in May. But writing has an artistic side to it, he added. You never know when youre done.

Katherine Bourzac is a freelance science writer based in San Francisco.

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Writing the human genome - The Biological SCENE

Stanford’s Final Exams Pose Question About the Ethics of Genetic Engineering – Futurism

In BriefThe age of gene editing and creation will be upon us in thenext few decades, with the first lifeform having already beenprinted. Stanford University questions the ethics of prospectivestudents by asking a question we should all be thinking about. Stanfords Moral Pickle

When bioengineering students sit down to take their final exams for Stanford University,they are faced with a moral dilemma, as well as a series of grueling technical questions that are designed to sort the intellectual wheat from the less competent chaff:

If you and your future partner are planning to have kids, would you start saving money for college tuition, or for printing the genome of your offspring?

The question is a follow up to At what point will the cost of printing DNA to create a human equal the cost of teaching a student in Stanford? Both questions refer to the very real possibility that it may soon be in the realm of affordability to print off whatever stretch of DNA you so desire, using genetic sequencing and a machine capable of synthesizing the four building blocks of DNA A, C, G, and T into whatever order you desire.

The answer to the time question, by the way, is 19 years, given that the cost of tuition at Stanford remains at $50,000 and the price of genetic printing continues the 200-fold decrease that has occurred over the last 14 years. Precursory work has already been performed; a team lead by Craig Venter created the simplest life form ever known last year.

Stanfords moral question, though, is a little trickier. The question is part of a larger conundrum concerning humans interfering with their own biology; since the technology is developing so quickly, the issue is no longer whether we can or cant,but whether we should or shouldnt. The debate has two prongs: gene editing and life printing.

With the explosion of CRISPR technology many studies are due to start this year the ability to edit our genetic makeup will arrive soon. But how much should we manipulate our own genes? Should the technology be a reparative one, reserved for making sick humans healthy again, or should it be used to augment our current physical restrictions, making us bigger, faster, stronger, and smarter?

The question of printing life is similar in some respects; rather than altering organisms to have the desired genetic characteristics, we could print and culture them instead billions have already been invested. However, there is theadditional issue of playing God by sidestepping the methods of our reproduction that have existed since the beginning of life. Even if the ethical issue of creation was answered adequately, there are the further questions ofwho has the right to design life, what the regulations would be, and the potential restrictions on the technology based on cost; if its too pricey, gene editing could be reserved only for the rich.

It is vital to discuss the ethics of gene editing in order to ensure that the technology is not abused in the future. Stanfords question is praiseworthy because it makes todays students, who will most likely be spearheading the technologys developments, think about the consequences of their work.

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Stanford's Final Exams Pose Question About the Ethics of Genetic Engineering - Futurism

The UN Passes the First-Ever Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapons Worldwide – Futurism

A Timely Move

On Friday, the United Nations passed the first-ever treaty imposinga total nuclear weapons ban. With North Korea openly continuing totest its arsenal of intercontinental ballistic missiles, each capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, the decision couldnt be more timely. In a press briefing Thursday, U.N. conference president Elayne Whyte Gomezsaid thatwe are on the verge of adopting the treaty on the prohibition of nuclear weapons.Click to View Full Infographic

This will be a historic moment and it will be the first multilateral nuclear disarmament treaty to be concluded in more than 20 years, Gomez added, according to Time. The world has been waiting for this legal norm for 70 years.

The decision to pass this treaty is a historic one:the U.N. recently reopened discussions of a global nuclear ban back in March, after more than 2,500 scientists from 70 countries signed a petition in favor of total nuclear disarmament.

I am really confident that the final draft has captured the aspirations of the overwhelming majority of those participating in the conference, including civil society, Gomez said, referring to the final review of the draft last Wednesday. After Fridaysvote to formally adopt it, the draft is now a 10-page documentcalled the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

More than 120 countries are ready to adopt the treaty despite a boycott from countries that are supposedly armed with nuclear weapons: theUnited States, Russia, Britain, France, China, India, Pakistan, and, as we already know,North Korea. These countries have proposed strengthening the almost 50-year old Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty that gives only the five original nuclear powers the U.S., Russia, Britain, France and China the right to keep their destructive arsenal.

The voting results, however, seemed to be more encouraging: 122 member states voted in favor of negotiating a legally-binding instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons. Of the nine supposed nuclear-armed nations, only North Korea didnt participate in the voting. Eightnationsvoted yes, the Netherlands voted against the decision, while Singapore abstained.Still, the U.S., Britain, and France released a joint statementafter the treaty was adopted, stating We do not intend to sign, ratify or ever become party to it.The three nations explained that a purported ban on nuclear weapons that does not address the security concerns that continue to make nuclear deterrence necessary cannot result in the elimination of a single nuclear weapon and will not enhance any countrys security, nor international peace and security.

Would the U.N.s historic treaty be a wasted effort? As the executive director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons Beatrice Fihn said, If the world comes together in support of a nuclear ban, then nuclear weapons countries will likely follow suit, even if it doesnt happen right away.

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The UN Passes the First-Ever Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapons Worldwide - Futurism

Conservatives claim to love freedom but the historical record, and the evidence, suggest otherwise – Salon

For decades now certainly since Ronald Reagan, if not before conventional wisdomhas held that conservatives and Republicans care more about freedom, while liberals and Democrats care more about equality.A slightly more sophisticated version holds that the distinction is between negative liberty (freedom from) and positive liberty (freedom to), a distinction usually attributed toIsaiah Berlins1958 essay Two Concepts of Liberty,though itsactually found in Eric Fromms 1941 book Escape From Freedom, as highlighted by Conor Lynchhere at Salon back in February a point well return to below.

Butfindings ina newNPR/PBS Marist pollneatly refutebothversions of the claim.The pollasked ifwe have gone too far in expanding or restricting freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom to protest the government and the right to vote. On all four questions which hinge on questions of government restriction and thus negative liberty conservatives and Republicanswere more likely to say freedoms had been expanded too far, compared toliberalsandDemocrats. And on all issues except religious freedom, conservatives andRepublicanswere significantlymorelikely to say rights had been expanded too far, rather than restricted too much.

Lets start with the three most clear-cut questions:

The pattern here is unmistakable. While the numbers are almost all pluralities, with large numbers taking middle positions,Republicans and conservatives are consistentlymuchmore likely to think that rights have been expanded toofar, while Democrats are much liberals are more likely to think they have been restricted too harshly. On these three key issues, conservatives display much greater antipathy to freedom than Democrats/liberals do. Whats more, itsnegativefreedom a supposed conservative value that they object to. They want more restrictions placed on people. They want to place more power in the hands of the state to control the press, to stifle citizens criticism and to limit voting.

There should be nothing surprising in any of this. Conservatives everywhere around the globetend to share these same tendencies. But with such basic freedoms enshrined in our First Amendment, American conservatives have long been forced to express themselves in morecircuitous, devious, or deceptive ways. Until the passage of the 14thAmendment, for example, state governments were not limited by such guarantees of freedom, and state-sanctioned churches were once commonplace. And of course, states had complete control of who would be allowed to vote a right contested repeatedly throughout our history.

The NPR/PBS poll results on freedom of religionactually illustrate the broader pattern of how American conservatives work around the basic liberal thrust of the Constitution.As mainstream acceptance of same-sex marriage began to seem inevitable, the religious right poured enormous energy into a bold attempt to redefine the battlefield in a never-ending culture war. This was analyzed in depth in in a January 2016 report,When Exemption is the Rule: The Religious Freedom Strategy of the Christian Right,by Frederick Clarkson, whichI wrote about herewhen it came out. The strategy today of cloaking discrimination in the garb of religious liberty has been tried before, as Clarkson noted:

As recently as the 1980s, Christian Right activists defended racial segregation by claiming that restrictions on their ability to discriminate violated their First Amendment right to religious freedom.

Instead of African Americans being discriminated against by Bob Jones [University], the university argued it was the party being discriminated against in being prevented from executing its First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court disagreed.

The fact that the religious right has been much more successful this time around(most notably in theHobby Lobbycase)has everything to do with political power having reshaped the courts, and nothing to do with the actual meaning of religious liberty. As I notedin my previous article, the worst violations of religious liberty actually came from the anti-gay religious right itself from a 2012 constitutional amendment in North Carolina, which criminalized the performance of gay marriage. The law was successfully challenged by the United Church of Christ in 2014.

In fact, the preface to Clarksons report was written by theUCCs general minister and president, the Rev. John C.Dorhauer. The North Carolina law made it clear that genuine religious liberty was thelastthing the religious right was interested in. Still, its a powerful propaganda tool, as reflected in the NPR/PBS poll, in which religion was the only issue where the Republican/conservative response at least gave the appearance of favoring freedom although not as strongly as the Democratic/liberal response.

Democrats thought religious freedom had been restricted rather than expanded too far, by 27 percent to 9 percent, while Republicans thought the same by 34 to 17 percent. So Republicans were more likely to endorse bothviews, but were almost twice as likely as Democrats to say that religious freedom had been expanded too far.

Taken all together, the four NPR/PBS freedomquestions and the responses tell us everything we need to know about how Republicans and conservatives really feel about freedom. The only area inwhich their anti-freedom bias is muffled is precisely the area in which that freedom has been vigorously redefined around the right toinfringeonthe rights ofothers.

Conventional wisdom aside, this poll shouldnt be the least bit surprising. Since the 1970s, theGeneral Social Surveyhas asked questions about whether unpopular views should be heard for instance, those of atheists, communists, socialists, homosexuals, racists and advocates of military rule. Questions are posed in three different forms about allowing someone to speak, allowing a book to remain in the library or allowing someone to teach in a college or university. As one might expect, liberals have consistentlybeen more tolerant than conservatives of all the usual suspects but theyve also been more tolerant of racists and militarists, too. Conservatives, in contrast, areconsistentlymore willing to restrict others rights.

The truth is, conservatives love totalkabout liberty, but theyve always had peculiar ways of defining it.Religious liberty is just one example of a broader strategy.AsI wrote back in 2012:

Both Ron Paul and his son, Rand, oppose the 1964 Civil Rights Act, because it outlaws private acts of discrimination. This is an infringement of liberty, they argue. And theyre right: just like laws against murder, it infringes the liberty of bullies. And thats precisely what justice is: the triumph of right over might.

I went on to note that in June 2004, Rep. Ron Paul was the sole voice in Congress to oppose a commemoration ofthe 40th anniversary of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. On the House floor, he said:

the Civil Rights Act of 1964 did not improve race relations or enhance freedom. Instead, the forced integration dictated by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 increased racial tensions while diminishing individual liberty.

Two years later,as I notedhere,Rand Paul tried to rewrite his own history before an audience at the historically black Howard University in Washington. Ive never been against the Civil Rights Act. Ever, he said. I have been concerned about the ramifications of the Civil Rights Act beyond race but Ive never come out in opposition. Rachel Maddow then refreshed his memory with a tape of his 2010 appearance on her show,reminding us of what hed actually said.

But its not just thePaulsandlibertarians. Freedom is such acentralAmerican value, its not surprising that conservatives, like everyone else, would seek to lay claim to it. On the level of elite discourse, they have received sporadic hints of support from political scientists. From the 1950s onward, various researchers have proposed different ways of structuring political beliefs, using more than just one dimension.Hans Eysencks1956 book Sense and Nonsense in Psychologywas one early example, positing one dimension called Radicalismand another called Tender-Mindedess (T-factor).One of Eysencks more technical critics, Milton Rokeach, went on to develop his own two-factor theory based on equality and freedom, in the 1973 book The Nature of Human Values.But his viewsand findingsdidnt match what American conservatives wish to claim.

Rokeach and histeamused content analysis ontexts using frequency counts covering more than a dozen values. They drew on various socialists, plusAdolf Hitler(representing fascism), BarryGoldwater (representing capitalism) and Lenin (representing communism), with the following results:

Socialists: Freedom ranked 1st, Equality ranked 2nd

Hitler/fascism: Freedom ranked 16th, Equality ranked 17th

Goldwater/capitalism Freedom ranked 1st, Equality ranked 16th

Lenin/communism Freedom ranked 17th, Equality ranked 1st

Of course, American liberals are watered-down socialists at best, leaving no difference at all between them and Goldwater in terms of freedom, only in terms of equality. Whats more, during the decade afterRokeachsbook appeared, Goldwater responded to the rise of the religious right with a distinct chill. In todays environment, 30 years after that, the former Arizona senator would no longer represent a typical conservative .

What has kept the conservative claim to care about freedom alive is less on the level of political philosophy, and more on the level of political trench warfare and the propaganda that supports it.In 2012, I wrote about the ways that Planned Parenthood and the NRA representedtwo contrasting models of freedom, which play key roles in Americas decades-long culture wars. The NRA constantly uses the language of freedom, far more prolifically than Planned Parenthood does.

Yet a careful examination of the underlying history and facts shows a much stronger case for Planned Parenthoods model, reflected for example in the quantities of lies used both to promote the NRA and to attack Planned Parenthood.Virtually no one wants to take guns away from ordinary law-abiding Americans, for example, even though the NRA frequently makes such claims, while opposing common-sense measures thatits own membership strongly supports. At the same time, Planned Parenthoods enemies want to shut it down completely. Its not just abortions they oppose, but everything Planned Parenthood does toempowerwomen to have control over their own bodies. What could be more fundamental to the idea of liberty than that?

As I wrote at the time, Its not just that conservatives are opposed towomens freedom, they genuinely cant even conceive of it. Women are non-persons. They have nothing to do with discussions of freedom unless, of course, they want to buy a gun.

In short,thislatestNPR/PBS poll resultsimply underscoreswhat we already know: Liberals and Democrats actually care about freedom substantially more than conservatives and Republicans do.When it comes down to the most basic forms of freedom Americans have long recognized,conservatives may talk a good game, butthat talk is largely BS.

But is there something more than BS going on here?As I mentioned at the beginning, the notion of positivevs. negative freedom is usually traced back toIsaiah Berlin, but Fromms earlier work sheds a different light on things. As Conor Lynch wrote in February:

Fromm posits that industrialization and the rise of liberalismresulted in the complete emergence of the individual (i.e., individuation), along with newfound freedom, butalso upended primary ties that hadonce provided men and women with security and a feeling of belonging and of being rooted somewhere.

Lynchgoes on to quoteFromm:

If the economic, social and political conditions on which the whole process of human individuation depends, do not offer a basis for the realization of individuality while at the same time people have lost those ties which gave them security, this lag makes freedom an unbearable burden. It becomes identical with doubt, with a kind of life which lacks meaning and direction. Powerful tendencies arise to escape from this kind of freedom into submission or some kind of relationship to man and the world which promises relief from uncertainty, even if it deprives the individual of his freedom.

And that, in the end, is where the hunger for lies and propaganda comes from, which is why simply refuting it is never enough. One must find ways to alleviate the craving for it as well.

This is also whypositive liberty for the individual is never enough, even for those who dont suffer directly the way that Fromm describes. As traditional foundations for security erode, new ones must be created in their place, through the collective exercise of positive liberty. Following a strong authoritarian leader, and imbuing him with perceived infallibility, is one way toreplace those lost foundations.But society as a whole can create other, betteroptions: new frameworksofshared meaning that draw on the past critically, bringing new concerns into focus along with the old.

This is precisely what social movements like Black Lives Matter have done, at their best. Their political work necessarily derives from a much longer time-frame of historical consciousness and forward-looking aspiration. It is profoundly difficult to translate the significance of such efforts into snapshot public opinion polls. Their most important work is not altering how people respond to polling questions. Its altering how people question the world as they encounter it, discoveringnewquestions that need asking to form the shape of freedomin a worldnot previously imagined.

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Conservatives claim to love freedom but the historical record, and the evidence, suggest otherwise - Salon

Freedom about ability to do what is right – The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Celebrating freedom and our nations long history of living that freedom, gives me pause to reflect on what it is to be free. In the Christian tradition, freedom is an essential factor. God created us free and called us throughout history to work for the freedom of others as well. But freedom is not license.

As a member of the flower-child generation I was raised with the old song Freedom isnt free. I didnt really understand that as a youth, but with time and the study of Catholic doctrine, I began to understand that freedom is a response to the loving gifts of God. A responsibility comes with such freedom, not to do whatever you want, but to work toward what is good for you and those around you. Freedom is about our future together. It is about caring for the least among us without prejudice. It is about living with an openness to others in need and a fierce love for family that calls us to sacrifice.

I am well aware that sacrifice is not politically correct these days. We are in a society that centers on the needs and wants of the individual first, and almost exclusively. But the Lord calls us to be relational beings. From the very beginning we are created to be with one another and to help one another. So our freedom is part of the package that calls us to move forward together, not alone.

Freedom likewise gives us a whole new perspective. In freedom we can see a future filled with hope and promise. Our forefathers were willing to give their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor for the work of freedom. We in the religious traditions, see freedom as the gift of courage to live without reservations, the will of God as we know it from scripture and teaching. It is the strength to persevere in times of trouble and pushback. (cf the martyrs!) It is based on the innate yearning of the human person for truth. We cannot find truth if we are not free to pursue it. And, we cannot pursue it far, if we dont cooperation with one another in living that freedom which makes the effort possible.

So freedom is about the ability to choose what is right. What is right comes from God and we are given the intelligence and capacity to act freely. We believe, in my tradition, that we are not hindered by outside forces, inner compulsions, social pressures, or genetic makeup. We are not determined by all these forces albeit these forces can limit our freedom. Nonetheless, we are created free and called to exercise that freedom as best we can. We have the freedom to see beyond them, to the true vision of what God wants for us, i.e. happiness.

Happiness, of course, is not just feeling good and being pleased with our surroundings. Happiness is a fulfillment in life that comes with living in joy, loving passionately and giving ourselves to a larger picture. Giving ourselves to God.

So in this time of remembering our freedoms given by our national Constitution and the dream begun long ago (241 years), let us join our forefathers in seeking the freedom that allows us to become all that we have been called to be in the image of God.

Father Leo Proxell was ordained in 1977 and currently serves as Pastor at Bozemans Holy Rosary Catholic Church. He loves to sing and travels extensively. He also loves to laugh, tell jokes and great stories. He says that humor is a great road to the goodness of God.

Originally posted here:

Freedom about ability to do what is right - The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Hundreds gather to help restore vandalized Colorado Freedom … – Fox News

AURORA, Colo Robert and Jean Terry stood looking up at the Colorado Freedom Memorial under a row of names. Your brother was 14th I see him, they said pointing above on the wall.

The Terrys came to visit and remember her brother Raymond Stolte who was killed in WWII.

The Freedom Memorial is dedicated to all from Colorado who died while defending freedom.

But July 3rd,someone vandalized itcausing at least $55,000 in damage.

Stolte's name is just one panel over from the glass that someone smashed the day before Independence Day.

"It's hard to understand the mindset of someone that would damage something like this, Robert Terry said. You know it's just beyond my comprehension.

Some of their friends are also among six thousand names of those who died from Colorado.

More than half of whom never made it back home but were buried overseas.

"They were headed back to the fire base when the IED went off under his vehicle, said John Harris whose son Blake was killed in Iraq 10 years ago and now appears on the memorial.

"I think it's an affront to every family member that has a name on the memorial."

"Their kids are on this memorial, saidColorado Freedom Memorialfounder Rick Crandall. So whoever breaks it you broke a piece of glass you broke the heart of families whose hearts have been broken enough already. I mean this is beyond sick to me."

Read more from FOX 31 Denver.

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Hundreds gather to help restore vandalized Colorado Freedom ... - Fox News

All-Star break comes just in time for struggling Freedom, losers of five straight on the road – User-generated content (press release) (registration)

The Florence Freedom, presented by Titan Mechanical Solutions, took a tight pitching duel into extra innings on Sunday afternoon and fell to the Lake Erie Crushers, 3-2, on an eleventh-inning walk-off sacrifice fly at Sprenger Stadium.

With the score tied at 1-1 entering the eleventh, Daniel Fraga began the inning on second base under the International Tiebreaker Rule. Taylor Oldham grounded out to short, advancing Fraga to third, before Andre Mercurio plated the go-ahead run for the Freedom (32-19) with a flyout to center.

But with Keivan Berges (1-1) taking over on the mound in the bottom half, tiebreaker runner Jordan Dean advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt and scored the tying run for the Crushers (23-27) on a Sean Hurley single. Another single and an intentional walk loaded the bases, and Connor Oliver delivered a sacrifice fly to right field, scoring Hurley and handing Florence its fifth straight loss and a series sweep.

Starting pitchers Jordan Kraus and Steve Hagen battled, with Kraus pitching nine innings and striking out seven, while Hagen went seven innings for Lake Erie and fanned six. Each hurler held the opposition to a single run on four hits, with Kraus surrendering a Hurley RBI-double in the first inning and Hagen allowing a game-tying solo home run to Fraga in the third.

Kraus nine-inning performance was his second of the season but resulted in the right-handers first no-decision of the year. Kraus left the would-be go-ahead run stranded in each of his final three innings to keep the game tied, as the Freedom offense managed just one hit after the Fraga homer.

Manny Arciniega (1-0) earned the win in relief, pitching the final three innings and holding Florence to one hit.

The Frontier League all-star break begins Monday, with the 2017 Frontier League All-Star Game scheduled for 7:00 p.m. at Slammers Stadium in Joliet, Illinois. Eight players will represent the Freedom in the game. The regular season resumes Friday, when the Freedom open a three-game series at home against the Normal CornBelters. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. at UC Health Stadium.

The Florence Freedom are members of the independent Frontier League and play all home games at UC Health Stadium located at 7950 Freedom Way in Florence, KY.The Freedom can be found online at FlorenceFreedom.com, or by phone at 859-594-4487.

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All-Star break comes just in time for struggling Freedom, losers of five straight on the road - User-generated content (press release) (registration)

A State of Freedom by Neel Mukherjee review a Booker contender … – The Guardian

Neel Mukherjee: knows how to let a storyline simmer. Photograph: Murdo Macleod for the Guardian

Neel Mukherjees bleak and beautifully written third novel offers five loosely connected scenes from modern India. The extraordinary middle segment somehow gets us rooting for an abusive father who leaves his impoverished village to chance it as a beggar in the company of a bear cub that he reckons he can make dance. Less well developed are episodes involving an exploited construction worker and the homecoming of a Kolkata-born lecturer from the US. Mukherjee sometimes uses death as a short cut to emotional impact but he also knows how to let a storyline simmer, as when a London publisher, visiting his parents in Bombay, defies etiquette to pry into the lives of their cooks. Evoking VS Naipauls Booker-winning In a Free State (a probable structural model), Mukherjees title hints at the company hes aiming for; I wouldnt bet against him being in the running for this years prize.

A State of Freedom by Neel Mukherjee is published by Chatto & Windus (16.99). To order a copy for 12.74 go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of 1.99

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A State of Freedom by Neel Mukherjee review a Booker contender ... - The Guardian

Local woman hopes to bring freedom to others – Piqua Daily Call

Anthony Weber | Troy Daily News Stephanie Milas of Tipp City answers questions with festival-goers, including Megan Runkle of New Carlisle at her Simply Serendipity Designs jewelry booth during the Troy Strawberry Festival recently in downtown Troy.

TIPP CITY Now that shes achieved her goal of raising funds for a new wheelchair accessible van, Stephanie Milas plans to pay it forward and help others do the same.

It took about three years and putting her masters degree studies on hold but Milas, a Tipp City resident, finally raised the $50,000 needed for a new van.

Shes currently planning her annual Wheels for Freedom 5K Run, Walk and Roll event for next month, funds from which will go towards helping others fund their wheels. Milas was also spotted at the Troy Strawberry Festival last month selling her jewelry designs, which will also help her to pay for a service dog.

Im very determined and I dont give up, Milas said.

Milas was born with spinal muscle atrophy, a rare form of muscular dystrophy that has left her unable to walk or breathe on her own. Although doctors warned her parents that she likely wouldnt live past the age of 2, Milas is determined to defy expectations and work to fulfill her goals.

Milas has earned two bachelors degrees in accounting and finance, and has resumed her pursuit of a masters in business at Wright State University.

Since the success of her wheelchair accessible van fundraiser, Milas said she has been asked by others for advice on how to manage their own fundraising campaigns.

She said she hopes to combine her business and finance knowledge with her personal experience and grow Wheels for Freedom from an annual event into a non-profit.

Milas is also raising money for a service dog, which can cost upwards of $10,000. She is working with Wagmor Service Dogs of Tipp City, which is training a standard poodle to provide her with the assistance she needs.

The dog will be trained to get help, open and close doors, turn lights on and off, and even help Milas adjust her blankets, she said.

On Aug. 26, the Wheels For Freedom 5K Run, Walk, or Roll, will kick off at 8:30 a.m. in Helke Park, Vandalia. Registration is $20 for adults, $15 for students, or $100 for groups of six runners.

Those who register online by July 31 at https://www.eventbrite.com and type in the events name, will receive a free T-shirt.

Milas can also be found at other local events, including the Vandalia Farmers Market on Fridays from 4-8 p.m. at Seger Park through the end of August.

http://www.dailycall.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/web1_NextDoor-1.jpg

Anthony Weber | Troy Daily News Stephanie Milas of Tipp City answers questions with festival-goers, including Megan Runkle of New Carlisle at her Simply Serendipity Designs jewelry booth during the Troy Strawberry Festival recently in downtown Troy.

http://www.dailycall.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/web1_170603aw_Stephanie.jpgAnthony Weber | Troy Daily News Stephanie Milas of Tipp City answers questions with festival-goers, including Megan Runkle of New Carlisle at her Simply Serendipity Designs jewelry booth during the Troy Strawberry Festival recently in downtown Troy.

Reach Cecilia Fox at cfox@troydailynews.com.

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Local woman hopes to bring freedom to others - Piqua Daily Call

This building on the Freedom Trail turns 300 next year but some think it’s just a Chipotle – The Boston Globe

David L. Ryan/Globe Staff

The Old Corner Bookstore, Bostons oldest commercial building, now houses a Chipotle Mexican Grill outlet.

Tourists have been known to almost miss it. And it would be hard to fault them its hiding in plain sight.

The Old Corner Bookstore, an iconic landmark along the Freedom Trail that once helped the citys literary scene flourish, is now home to a Chipotle Mexican Grill, where long lunch lines snake out the door.

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But Historic Boston Inc., a nonprofit group whose goal is to identify and redevelop historic sites throughout the city, hopes to change that. The group wants to bring greater awareness to the centuries-old structure downtown, and highlight the many successes of Bostons oldest commercial building.

With the bookstore buildings 300th anniversary fast approaching next year, members from Historic Boston and its Council of Advisors a mix of former board members, donors, and advocates met recently to discuss ways to re-envision the property.

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One thing we have been contemplating for a while now is the future of the bookstore, and how we should be thinking about it, said Kathy Kottaridis, executive director of Historic Boston.

Built in 1718, the Old Corner Bookstore sits at the corner of Washington and School streets. Its part of a cluster of properties owned by the group and has had an array of occupants over the years, ranging from a publishing company to a shop and office space leased by The Boston Globe.

During a panel discussion at its June 21 meeting, attendees heard ideas about how Historic Boston could better present the building to the public in terms of preservation, so its place in Bostons history is not forgotten, even as it retains its current tenants.

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Because the building lacks obvious signage, it can leave people who are exploring the Freedom Trail struggling to understand its age and deep associations with Bostons literary pre-eminence, according to a recap of the groups meeting.

There is one small interpretive sign on the side of the building, and its so small that you could easily pass it by, and maybe even not see it from a distance, Kottaridis said. And if you happen to go by it, you may not register that its the Old Corner Bookstore.

Kottaridis said at one point it was obvious that the Old Corner Bookstore was a bookstore.

But as its use shifted over time to adapt to the downtown community, thats changed.

If you say Old Corner Bookstore, a younger group will look at you like, Wheres that?, Kottaridis said. But if you say Chipotle, they know right away.

David L. Ryan/Globe Staff

The Old Corner Bookstore.

The goal is to keep its modernized uses while also recalling the past.

At the meeting, the group also kicked around the idea of hosting a sound and light show on the building or above it on surrounding buildings next year for the tricentennial celebration. They also mulled temporary or changing thematic wall murals on adjacent buildings.

Additionally, people suggested the upper floors could have literary uses, perhaps creating live-work spaces for a community of burgeoning writers, according to the groups website.

Kottaridis stressed that the meeting was preliminary, and nothing is set in stone.

A lot of really good ideas emerged out of the discussion, she said.

Long before it was a Chipotle restaurant, the Old Corner Bookstore was home to the publishing company Ticknor & Fields; a mens clothing store; and a 1950s pizza joint with a snazzy sign, according to Globe archives.

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This building on the Freedom Trail turns 300 next year but some think it's just a Chipotle - The Boston Globe

Author under scrutiny for long-ago ties to eugenics – vtdigger.org

Dorothy Canfield Fisher. Photo courtesy of Manchester Historical Society

(This story is by Cherise Madigan, of the Bennington Banner, in which it first appeared.)

Dorothy Canfield Fisher was a prolific local writer, and her namesake rests at various institutions in Arlington today including Fisher Elementary School. In 1957 a Vermont childrens literacy program was established in the authors honor, and the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Book Award has recognized outstanding childrens writers over the last 60 years.

Fishers reputation has been questioned in recent weeks, as Essex educator and artist Judy Dow has led the fight for the removal of Fishers name from the award. Dow, who has both French Canadian and Abenaki roots, claims that Fisher not only stereotyped French Canadians and Native Americans in her extensive works, but played an active role in the eugenics movement.

In an address to the Vermont Department of Libraries in April, Dow presented evidence of Fishers ties to Vermonts eugenics movement and argued for the removal of Fishers name from the award.

The reason I started this was because our children are our most precious gift, said Dow. To name an award for a childrens book after someone who was a eugenicist is so wrong.

Now, the decision rests with State Librarian Scott Murphy, who will hear a recommendation from the Board of Libraries on July 11 and make a final decision thereafter.

Its a touchy situation and its really hard to look at these issues with our current morals and values and to judge history based on that, said Murphy. Im trying to get as much input as I possibly can from citizens before I make any decision. I have to be very careful to make sure we are taking the proper steps for Vermont.

The allegations of Fishers eugenicist entanglements stand in stark contrast to the authors identity as an accomplished writer and social activist, promoting adult education programs and prison reform alongside her organization of World War I relief efforts. Fisher was honored as one of the 10 most influential women in the United States by former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, a trailblazer in her own right.

Though Fisher made valuable contributions to society and literature, her ties to Vermonts eugenics movement raise questions. While some argue that her involvement was tangential, others claim Fisher was more deeply involved.

The Vermont eugenics movement, led by University of Vermont professor Henry F. Perkins, insisted upon the reality of a racial hierarchy in which degenerate classes of people including Vermonts French Canadian population, native peoples including the Abenaki, and African-Americans were doomed by heredity. These degenerates, Perkins insisted, posed a threat to Vermonts way of life and cultural identity in an era when a declining population and economic stagnation topped the list of challenges faced by the state.

She was a progressive, but it was the progressive party that was running the eugenics program, said Dow. She was a product of the time, and the product of the time was eugenics.

The eugenics movement resulted in the creation of the Vermont Eugenics Survey, running from 1925 to 1936, as well as the formation of the affiliated Vermont Commission on Country Life.

The VCCL was created by Perkins in 1928 to provide a comprehensive survey of the rural regions of the state, with the Eugenics Survey at its center and core. Fisher was among the more than 70 individuals recruited to contribute to chapters of the organizations 1931 publication, Rural Vermont: A Program for the Future. In this survey, contributors were charged with answering the question, What is happening to the old Vermont Stock?

Fisher was most heavily involved in VCCLs Committee on Tradition and Ideals, focusing heavily on increasing the number of tourists and second home owners in Vermont. In 1932, just one year after a sterilization law sponsored by Perkins and the Eugenics Survey was passed by Vermonts Legislature (through which at least 250 feeble minded Vermonters were sterilized between 1933 and 1960, according to the Department of Health), Fisher accepted a position on the commissions executive committee.

It is not surprising that a writer from an earlier time might have beliefs and opinions that we now condemn, said state Rep. Cynthia Browning, D-Arlington. This is not just evidence of prejudice: The possible connection to the eugenics movement that had unjust and tragic consequences is of concern.

Many of Fishers writings contain problematic racial stereotypes that may have been a byproduct of her era, though many of Dows critics argue that authors should not be judged by their fictitious works. It is not certain that all of Fishers representations are pure works of fiction, however.

Dorothy Canfield Fishers book Bonfire was based on a study the Eugenics Survey of Vermont did on Sandgate, said Dow. You can go through the report and pull out the names, and match the names used in Bonfire to the names in the report.

A 1928 study by the Vermont Eugenics Survey titled Key Families in Rural Vermont Towns, featured Sandgate as an example of rural degeneracy. Indeed, many of the names mentioned in the Town Gossip section of the report can be found in Fishers novel Bonfire, which is set in a fictionalized Vermont town entrenched in poverty and populated primarily by French Canadians and French Indians. In Bonfire, residents of this community are depicted as primitive, and irresponsible sub-normals. At one point, a character is described as half-hound, half-hunter, all Injun.

Outside of her fictional works, Fisher was the author of a state tourism pamphlet produced by the VCCL which aimed to recruit superior, interesting families of cultivation and good breeding. Additionally, in a 1941 commencement address, Fisher praised the residents of Manchester for taking in the nomadic Icy Palmer, a Tuscarora Indian abandoned at a local sugarhouse in 1924. Though her intentions seem valiant, Fisher denies in the address that Vermont was home to any measure of ugly racial hatred and oppression, while insisting that no Native American populations ever found a true home in the state.

I am, of course, deeply disturbed by the allegations concerning Dorothy Canfield Fisher. We always hope that those we honor have an honorable past, but almost always they do not, said Melissa Klick, a native Vermonter with both French Canadian and Abenaki heritage, and the owner of the Icy Palmer Candle Co. Icy Palmers funeral was not allowed to be held in a church, and she bowed to white people as they passed; she was assisted but not socially accepted by the Manchester community.

While a heated debate rages on whether Fishers name should remain on the book award, Murphy will ultimately rely on the feedback of Vermonts residents and libraries to decide the issue.

The whole point of this award is childrens literacy, and if this name is going to deny a certain group of people that involvement, then thats significant. Theres somebody thats feeling pain, and Im cognizant of that, said Murphy. On the opposite side is the idea that judging history by todays point of view can be dangerous, and can sometimes do more harm than good.

Regardless, Fishers complex history has opened the door for a meaningful dialogue on Vermonts troubling history with eugenics.

I feel we must use historiography to keep examining our past to improve our understanding of the future, said Klik. Lets move forward to make sure that the ignorance that shaped Canfields prejudices no longer has a place in Vermont, nor any other corner of America.

We change everything thats outdated as time goes on, so why wouldnt we change this if its offensive? said Dow. Its time that the oppressor listens to the stories of those that were oppressed, and thats a good start.

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Author under scrutiny for long-ago ties to eugenics - vtdigger.org

No lifeguards on half of England’s bathing beaches – BBC News


BBC News
No lifeguards on half of England's bathing beaches
BBC News
The National Water Safety Forum said it was "impractical" for every beach to be covered. The absence of lifeguards was raised as a concern after the deaths of seven men at Camber Sands in 2016 but an inquest concluded they may have drowned anyway.

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No lifeguards on half of England's bathing beaches - BBC News

Uber business booming at Delaware beaches – Baltimore Sun

DEWEY BEACH, Del. (AP) Derek Rowe has been driving for Uber for just six weeks, and in that short period, he has encountered a fistfight in his car, had an enthralling conversation with a disabled war vet and was asked to help spy on a man's girlfriend.

But business is booming at the beaches so far this season, making it all worth it.

This is my 191st trip in about six weeks, he said. I made a little over $2,000.

He wouldn't trade those experiences and money for a regular summer job while he's studying for the New York Bar exam and to become an NFL agent.

So after a long day of hitting the books, he gets in the car.

Around dinnertime and at night, I'll do a few hours driving, Rowe said. It helps pay the bills and save up a few extra bucks for when I hopefully pass the exams and help me get started on my next career. It's been a good experience so far, for sure.

Rowe is registered in Pennsylvania, which allows him to drive in New Jersey, Ohio and Delaware.

The Harrisburg, Pennsylvania native is a graduate of Bucknell and Duke Law. He is one of many people who use their own vehicles to earn money on a flexible schedule by working for the ride-sharing service.

As summer kicks into high gear in July, visitors pouring into the beaches are embracing ride-sharing services as a transportation option. The relatively inexpensive transport is preferable to walking in the hot sun, waiting for a bus, fighting heavy traffic and using expensive and hard-to-find parking.

I think that Uber is actually the greatest invention of the 21st century, said Long Island, New York native Nick Massimo. I'm not kidding.

Flexibility is a selling point, attracting drivers for these services at an astonishing rate. Unlike cab drivers, many of whom work full-time, Transportation Network Carrier drivers mainly made up of Uber and Lyft for now work when they want.

They're legally subcontractors, not employees. There are no supervisors, no bosses, and drivers can operate as much or as little as they wish.

But it doesn't quite mean the services are running wild without authority, despite some concern from legislators around the country.

The services use GPS to track each ride, said Uber spokesman Craig Ewer, and they also monitor drivers' speed and braking habits. Drivers who aren't meeting standards can have their driver accounts suspended.

Because TNCs are relatively new, they fall outside existing regulation applied to older forms of transportation. Taxi owners have complained across the country that they are under tougher restrictions than TNCs, which further hurts their ability to compete.

Part of Uber's success, in particular, is due to its ability to convince state governments that a uniform set of statewide regulations is more amenable to them than a patchwork of widely-varied local and municipal ordinances, Ewer said.

The company achieves this through dialogue and educational outreach to legislators.

It worked for them in Delaware and 39 other states, Ewer said. Former Gov. Jack Markell signed Senate Bill 262 into law in August 2016. The new law establishes clear regulations for TNCs and places DelDOT in charge of overseeing compliance. It also instructs DelDOT to meet with transportation stakeholders to find ways to level the playing field with TNCs, indicating that legislators are aware things aren't yet quite even.

Dewey Beach Mayor Dale Cooke and Rehoboth Beach Commissioner Paul Kuhns said that at this point they are not even sure how Uber and others are impacting local transportation services, trusting state officials to regulate as needed.

Carol Everhart, executive director of the Rehoboth-Dewey Chamber of Commerce, said she hasn't heard any complaints from transportation companies. She has not used TNCs but she has heard that many people, visitors and residents alike, consider them a convenient alternative to hunting for a parking space, always scarce in Rehoboth and Dewey at the height of the summer season.

She isn't taking sides in the issue, and welcomes any service that mitigates the limited parking issue.

There is still little clarity on the impact that services like Uber have had in Delaware.

According to a memo to the General Assembly from DelDOT Secretary Jennifer Cohan dated May 30, the Delaware Transit Corporation Office of Public Carrier Regulation held a meeting with public transportation carriers on Feb. 1. Out of that meeting, Cohan said that taxi companies are still paying substantially more than TNCs per vehicle for insurance, fees and background checks.

Cohan noted that TNCs use third-party background services while Delaware uses state and federal agencies that are more effective.

But Ewer said Uber isn't in competition with other transportation carriers. He said there is room for everyone in the transportation pie, and that different types of services shouldn't necessarily be regulated identically.

He thinks older regulations should be revisited to consider new technologies and the needs of users and drivers.

But one Dewey Beach taxi driver said he is feeling the grind.

It's running taxi businesses into the ground, said Aviy, a manager/driver for Dewey Beach Taxi, who refused to give his last name.

You come to Dewey Beach and all you see is Ubers parked outside just waiting for the people, he said.

While it's unclear what exactly the future holds for services like Uber and Lyft, beachgoers are certainly hopping in the back seat.

Jessica Zweigbaum and Massimo, who are in their 20s and from Long Island, New York, are new converts.

We love it, yeah, Zweigbaum said.

Uber drivers are all cool, they're all nice, they all speak English, Massimo said recently in Dewey Beach. It's their car, so they take care of it, so it's very good. Very, very convenient. I never used it until we were on vacation here for our senior trip for our school, and this is the first time I ever used it.

We rented out a house a couple miles away, and whenever we come (to the Rehoboth Beach Boardwalk) or to go eat anywhere, we take an Uber now.

But people used to other forms of public transport might be a harder sell.

Teresa and Brian Dunbar, who are in their 40s and from Gainesville, Virginia, have used Uber occasionally after Brian found himself in a bind.

I left my car key on the train one day, Brian said.

He still uses taxis to get to and from airports, but says he now prefers Uber.

More convenient, better experience, he said.

At least for Rowe, it is all about giving his passengers that kind of experience. When he picks them up in his late model Acura, he offers amenities.

I always have a phone charger, especially down here at the beach, he said. You get people who go out in groups of four, and somebody always needs one. It helps the ratings.

He also carries bottled water and an auxiliary cable so that riders can play their own music through the car speakers if they want.

Watching the ratings is key with Uber, where passengers and drivers rate each other on a five-star system, plus extra points given to drivers for things like music, conversation, snacks or extra assistance.

When they request you, they see your rating and sometimes when riders are 50-50 about canceling a ride or waiting it out, if the driver has a good rating they'll stick around, Rowe said. That stuff's pretty important. It's like anything in life whoever you're serving or working for, you try to take care of their needs and make it as pleasant for them as possible.

Not every ride has been pleasant for Rowe, including the one that ended in a fistfight and the one where he was asked to help spy on a man's possibly unfaithful girlfriend.

But overall, Rowe wouldn't trade it for another job right now.

I started doing it and realized I enjoyed it more than I thought I would, just talking to different people, Rowe said. You kind of hear about all the negative stuff going on in the world, but it always seems like everyone I talk to, we tend to have a good conversation, and you meet people from all over the place at different points in their life; it's kind of nice. I've definitely enjoyed doing it.

Twitter: @seanjwelsh

Email: sjwelsh@baltsun.com

Excerpt from:

Uber business booming at Delaware beaches - Baltimore Sun

Taking your dog on vacation? Here are the North Carolina beaches where they’re welcome – News & Observer


News & Observer
Taking your dog on vacation? Here are the North Carolina beaches where they're welcome
News & Observer
Many beaches have strict leash laws (like those common inland) and require you to clean up after your pet (again, the same as inland), so don't be inconsiderate: pack a leash and some bags. Some places allow dogs off-leash, while others require leashed ...

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Taking your dog on vacation? Here are the North Carolina beaches where they're welcome - News & Observer

Oxnard residents are fighting slag heaps, power plants and oil fields that mar the town’s beaches – Los Angeles Times

Ventura Countys largest city is a coastal town where miles of power plants, vast tracts of farmland and private oil and gas holdings limit access to the shore.

At Ormond Beach, 750,000 cubic yards of contaminated slag from a former metal recycling plant occupy part of the wetlands. The federal Superfund site stands between the sand and families who live just a few blocks away.

At the north end of the city, McGrath State Beach has been closed to the public since 2014, and an electrical generating station one of three gas-fired plants on the Oxnard coast is a towering eyesore and a source of air pollution above the shoreline. A fourth is planned.

Many residents of this predominantly Latino city with a population of 205,000 say they are fed up with the degradation. Their growing dissatisfaction with the condition of large sections of beach has coalesced into an effort to deindustrialize and restore the shoreline of this city that is framed by Ventura and Camarillo and wraps around the town of Port Hueneme.

We just want to stop the abuse and get our coast back, said Mayor Pro Tem Carmen Ramirez. Its clear who gets stuck with all the dirty stuff. What other city has three power plants and a Superfund site on the beach? The people of Oxnard have paid their dues.

Since the mid-2000s, activists, community groups and elected officials have defeated an offshore liquefied natural gas facility and successfully pushed the federal government to declare the Ormond Beach mess a Superfund site.

The City Council passed a moratorium to stop new power plant construction on the beach, and municipal officials are revising Oxnards key planning documents to eliminate industrial uses on the coast in the future.

More recently, community groups and city leaders have joined with environmentalists and alternative energy advocates, such as hedge-fund billionaire Tom Steyer, to block construction of the Puente Power Project, a new gas-fired electrical generating station at Mandalay Beach.

Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times

Irma J. Lopez, left, and her husband, Manuel M. Lopez, have been fighting since 1977 to deindustrialize the Oxnard coastline.

Irma J. Lopez, left, and her husband, Manuel M. Lopez, have been fighting since 1977 to deindustrialize the Oxnard coastline. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

A lot of decisions were made many, many years ago, and what was deemed OK then is not OK today, said Manuel Manny Lopez, 90, a retired optometrist and longtime Oxnard councilman turned environmental activist. We used to think the beach was a good place for industry. But people are more sophisticated now. There is more public support for these places.

The increasing activism and changing attitudes about the Oxnard coast also reflect a growing movement concerned that low-income, minority communities across the nation often bear a disproportionate amount of harmful pollution from industrial development.

The population of Oxnard is about 75% Latino, 7.5% Asian, 2.4% African American and 1% Pacific Islander. The per capita income is less than $20,000 a year, and nearly half of all adults have less than a high school education.

The city ranks in the top 20% of the most environmentally burdened communities in the state, with some parts ranking within the top 10%, according to the California Environmental Protection Agency.

Statistics from the California Department of Public Health further indicate that Oxnard, which is known for its agricultural production, has more students attending school near the highest levels of toxic pesticide use in the state.

Reclaiming the coast is an environmental justice issue in terms of exposure to pollutants and getting access to a beautiful natural resource, said Maricela Morales, executive director of the Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy. People here are exposed to dust and pesticides from farming as well as emissions from power plants and other industrial sources.

Allegations of unfair treatment of the areas poor residents and people of color have been raised in the ongoing controversy over whether to build the $250-million Puente Power Project, a replacement for two aging and obsolete generating stations located on 36 acres in the coastal dunes and wetlands of Mandalay Beach.

Southern California Edison owns the site, and Houston-based NRG Energy would build, own and operate the plant, which is unaffected by the citys moratorium. The old units and stacks would be removed if Puente goes into operation in the next few years.

The natural gas plant is designed to provide extra electricity if needed during peak demand times, such as cold snaps and heat waves.

NRG Energy and its supporters say the new facility would provide a reliable and efficient source of power with lower emissions than the old plants. According to NRG, Puente could start up in 10 minutes compared with as long as 18 hours for the old units.

Nancy Lindholm, president and chief executive of the Oxnard Chamber of Commerce, said the organization supports pristine beaches and renewable energy sources, but there are no practical alternatives yet to the Puente plant.

In the meantime, we have got to have electricity, Lindholm said. Will it be an environmental justice issue if we have no power for an extended period of time?

The opponents, including community groups, environmental organizations and elected officials, contend there is excess electrical generating capacity in the state today and that alternative energy sources, such as wind and solar power, can be employed instead of Puente.

They point out that the state has set a goal to have renewable energy sources produce half of Californias electricity by 2030.

As the debate unfolded, the California Coastal Commission recommended that NRG Energy consider locations away from the beach and wetlands on- or off-site. If there are no feasible spots, the planning agency advised NRG to protect the generating station from sea level rise, create ways to access the beach and preserve plant and animal habitat.

In March, the Sierra Club, Communities for a Better Environment and the Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy filed an appeal in state court, alleging that the California Public Utilities Commission in its earlier approval of the Puente project did not ensure that Edison complied with state requirements to protect against the disparate treatment of low-income minority neighborhoods that are overburdened with environmental effects.

The utilities commission has claimed that Edisons solicitation and procurement of the Puente power plant met all legal requirements and that consideration of disparate treatment of people in surrounding areas was not required in this situation.

Last month, the California Energy Commission, which is considering the Puente project for approval, ordered a study of alternative energy sources over the objections of NRG Energy. Company officials contend that no additional feasible and cost-effective options have been identified.

Meanwhile, Oxnard city officials, the State Coastal Conservancy and the Nature Conservancy are stepping up plans to restore the Ormond Beach wetlands south of Port Hueneme.

Over many decades, the wetlands have been drained and filled to accommodate a naval air station, farms, marinas, a city dump, a power plant and a metal recycling company that became a federal Superfund site.

Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times

The Ormond Beach generating station is visible behind the former Halaco Engineering Company site that is now a Superfund site at the Ormond Beach wetlands in Oxnard.

The Ormond Beach generating station is visible behind the former Halaco Engineering Company site that is now a Superfund site at the Ormond Beach wetlands in Oxnard. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

During the 1990s, environmental groups started working with city officials, area residents and landowners at Ormond to eliminate lots on the beach and consider how to restore the wetlands.

They completed a feasibility study in 2009, but work proceeded slowly. The first public meeting to discuss ideas and potential plans was held June 20 of this year.

We are just getting started, said Christopher Kroll, a Coastal Conservancy official who manages the restoration project. The feasibility study is now outdated. It does not account for climate change and sea level rise. We need to rethink where we are going.

Of the wetlands original 1,100 acres, about 250 remain, including intact dunes and marshes. They are home to about 200 migratory birds and six endangered and threatened species.

The remaining wetlands, however, continue to be degraded by human use, the dumping of refuse, contaminated runoff and abnormally high levels of salinity due to a lack of flushing by the ocean.

My family never said Lets go to the wetlands, recalled Elma del Aquila, 18, a recent graduate of Channel Islands High School in Oxnard and an opponent of the Puente project. Ive seen dead chickens dumped at Ormond, trash and tires. It almost makes you feel guilty as a human being when people do this.

A major hurdle for the restoration project is the Superfund site. From 1964 to 2004, the now-defunct Halaco Engineering Co. operated a smelting plant on 37 acres to recover valuable metals for recycling.

More than 750,000 cubic yards of slag remain on-site either buried or in giant unlined settling ponds. Some of the waste has contaminated the groundwater and sediment in the Ormond wetland.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency officials say they are exploring whether the leftover slag can be used and preparing a clean-up plan that is scheduled for public comment in 2018.

Large tracts of agricultural land and another electrical power plant operated by NRG block most public access to Ormond Beach and the wetlands. Only two roads connect inland streets to pathways leading to the beach, and theres a two-mile gap between them.

But one of them, Perkins Road, may be more of a deterrent to the sand than an attractive portal. As it nears Ormond, there is a municipal sewage treatment plant, a water purification facility, a manufacturer of paper products and finally the abandoned Halaco site, where homeless people have set up encampments and graffiti mars a several hundred yards-long block wall.

Neighborhoods here are cut off from the coast by industrial properties, said Lucas Zucker, a spokesman for the Central Coast Alliance. There are kids who live just a few blocks away and have never been to the beach.

Its easier to get to the stretches of Oxnard beach just north of Point Hueneme, on either side of the Channel Islands Harbor. But access gets tricky again above Mandalay State Beach, with only one unmarked route providing a way to reach a long swath of sandy beach and dunes south of the Santa Clara River.

Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times

A homeless encampment has taken over the former Halaco Engineering Co. property, now a Superfund site in Oxnard.

A homeless encampment has taken over the former Halaco Engineering Co. property, now a Superfund site in Oxnard. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

McGrath State Beach, which authorities closed three years ago after the river repeatedly flooded, still allows no public access. The once popular park is one of the best bird-watching areas in California with lush riverbanks and sand dunes along the shore.

Danita Rodriguez, a state park superintendent for the region, said plans to restore and reopen the facility are at a very early stage.

On the municipal level, Oxnard officials are updating the citys general plan and coastal program the main planning document to guide future land uses and development along the coast. Local coastal programs are required by the Coastal Act of 1976 and approved by the Coastal Commission.

Carmen Ramirez, the mayor pro tem, said the update will consider zoning changes, locating future industrial uses inland and addressing potential sea level rise. In 2016, amid the Puente controversy, the City Council amended its general plan to prohibit new power plants from being built in environmentally sensitive areas of the coast.

The Coastal Commission provided the city with a $150,000 grant to help pay for the local coastal program work. NRG Energy, however, asked the commission to withdraw the grant, saying Oxnard was misusing the money by proposing changes to its local coastal program that would hamper operations at its Ormond Beach and Mandalay power plants as well as efforts to build the Puente project.

The company called the amendments a targeted attack on NRG.

Commission officials responded that the grant was not being misappropriated because the money was allocated to work on methods to deal with sea level rise.

City officials predict that the overall effort to reclaim Oxnards industrialized coastline and improve public access will take decades.

When completed, they say, the result will probably be more attractive beaches and more visitors. Property values could increase as well as rents and home prices in the coastal areas. More affluent residents might move in and drive out lower-income residents, many of whom have lived there for generations.

Once we get it all cleaned up, we will likely have a gentrification fight, said Morales, director of the Central Coastal Alliance. That is something we dont want.

dan.weikel@latimes.com

Follow me on Twitter @LADeadline16

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Oxnard residents are fighting slag heaps, power plants and oil fields that mar the town's beaches - Los Angeles Times

Astronomers Directly Image Super-Jupiter around HIP 65426 – Sci-News.com

Using an adaptive optics system and coronagraphic facility at ESOs Very Large Telescope, an international team of astronomers has discovered and directly imaged a warm super-Jupiter exoplanet around the young star HIP 65426.

An artists rendering of a super-Jupiter exoplanet. Image credit: NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center / S. Wiessinger.

The new world, dubbed HIP 65426b, is about 6 to 12 times more massive than Jupiter and has a radius of approximately 1.5 Jupiter radii.

As a giant planet larger than Jupiter, its classified as a super-Jupiter.

HIP 65426b orbits the A2-type star HIP 65426, which is almost 3,000 degrees Kelvin hotter and twice as massive as the Sun.

Also known as HD 116434, the star lies 363 light-years away in the constellation Centaurus.

The massive planet orbits HIP 65426 in about 600 years and is 92 AU (astronomical units) from the star, which is three times further than Neptunes distance from the Sun.

It has an estimated temperature of 1,300-1,600 degrees Kelvin and is much hotter than Jupiter.

Given its physical and spectral properties, HIP 65426b occupies a rather unique placement in terms of age, mass and spectral-type among the currently known imaged planets, the astronomers said.

It represents a particularly interesting case to study the presence of clouds as a function of particle size, composition, and location in the atmosphere, to search for signatures of non-equilibrium chemistry, and finally to test the theory of planet formation and evolution.

HIP 65426b was discovered with the Spectro-Polarimetric High-Contrast Exoplanet Research (SPHERE) instrument at ESOs Very Large Telescope in Chile, which took the direct image of the planet.

Direct images of exoplanets are still very rare, but they contain a wealth of information about planets such as HIP 65426b, said team member Dr. Thomas Henning, of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany.

The analysis of the direct light of the planet allows us to constrain the composition of the planets atmosphere with great confidence.

The SPHERE observations indicate the presence of water vapor and reddish clouds, similar to Jupiters.

The photo of the super-Jupiter HIP 65426b (lower left). Image credit: ESO / SPHERE Consortium / G. Chauvin et al.

Dr. Henning and colleagues estimate the planetary system is only 14 million years old.

We would expect a planetary system this young to still have a disk of dust, which could show up in observations, said team member Dr. Gael Chauvin, from the Universities of Grenoble and Chile.

HIP 65426 does not have such a disk known for the moment a first indication that this system doesnt quite fit our classical models of planetary formation.

Using ESOs HARPS instrument, we realized that HIP 65426 was a young star and was turning very fast on itself, about 150 times faster than the Sun two elements that raise the question of the formation of the planet, the scientists said.

The team is offering two scenarios to explain the formation of HIP 65426b.

Initially, HIP 65426b would have formed much closer to the star, and at least one other massive body would have formed as well. At some point, HIP 65426b and that other body would have come close enough for HIP 65426b to be catapulted outwards (up to its current great distance) and the other body moving inwards and merging with the star (causing the stars rapid rotation). The planets traversing the system could also have destabilized the disk, explaining why it did not survive long enough to be observed, they said.

An alternative explanation would involve particular dynamics of the protoplanetary disk, with both the star and the planet forming by collapse at the same time by fragmentation which would still require an explanation for why the disk was so short-lived to have vanished by now.

A research paper reporting this discovery will be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. The paper is also publicly available at arXiv.org.

_____

G. Chauvin et al. 2017. Discovery of a warm, dusty giant planet around HIP 65426. A&A, in press; arXiv: 1707.01413

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Astronomers Directly Image Super-Jupiter around HIP 65426 - Sci-News.com

How China Emerged as the World Leader in Artificial Intelligence Research – eMarketer

Melanie Cook Head of Strategy and Business Consultancy, Southeast Asia SapientRazorfish

Of the countries in Asia-Pacific, China is taking the lead in artificial intelligence (AI) research. Its even eclipsing the US on an international level, according to Melanie Cook, head of strategy and business consultancy for Southeast Asia at digital agency SapientRazorfish. eMarketers David Green spoke with Cook about the growing importance of AI for businesses in the region and how China pulled ahead of the pack.

eMarketer: Artificial intelligence is a broad notion. What is considered AI, and what are some examples?

Melanie Cook: AI includes machine learning, algorithm and data analysis. Theres definitely a sliding scale of AI-ness, but its now all been clumped together.

For example, IBM calls [question-answering computer system] Watson a platform of services, not AI, because Watson will help churn through all of the dark data you havethe data that has been collecting and collecting, but because of its complexity and its sheer volume, its dark. IBM was born out of the human-computer interaction school of thought, as opposed to the AI school.

Interestingly, IBM recently featured Watson in a campaign where it helps a fashion designer create a clothing line in Australia. Watson analyzed trends from over the past 10 to 20 years as well as social data and what people and experts were talking about, and then wrapped it all up into a foresight package for the designer, who then created her next collection. Its a human giving Watson a task and then interpreting what Watson has given back rather than just allowing Watson to design the clothing.

eMarketer: How do you explain the value of artificial intelligence to your clients?

Cook: There are predictive experiences that absolutely need AI. Say youre in customer service. Someone calls and if youre linked to their Netflix or you know they have kids, for example, you can have a more well-rounded conversation with them.

AI and automation make the human more intelligent so they can have more relevant conversations with the customer.

AI and automation make the human more intelligent so they can have more relevant conversations with the customer, and eventually have a positive impact on the business. Our consultancy ensures that AI and data analysis as a whole are seen as augmentative to the people within the organization were working with.

eMarketer: What progress in AI has been made in Asia-Pacific compared with the rest of the world?

Cook: [President] Trump is pulling back on government-funded AI research. He has proposed a meager $175 million towards AI research in the US, leaving the rest of the research to be done by private institutions like Google, Amazon, Apple, Boston Dynamics, etc.

China is leading in Asia-Pacific when it comes to AI research. In China, the private and public sectors are basically one, and theyre spending billions on AI as China grapples with an aging population. Given that there are far fewer economically active people, theyre looking to automate because they realize those people need to generate higher income per capita. They will automate away cheap labor and release these economically active kids who will look after their elders so that they can command a higher salary.

In China, the private and public sectors are basically one, and theyre spending billions on AI as China grapples with an aging population.

eMarketer: What about in Singapore, where youre based?

Cook: Technology adoption rates are much slower in Singapore purely because we have less than 10% of the population of the US, let alone India or China. Singapore is also quite a risk-averse cultureAI isnt an imperative for a market this small.

A lot of big businesses in the region are still suffering from an inability to disrupt themselves and change. Change agents tend to be ones that are first concentrating on the market, and when the market is small, that means the change agent is small as well.

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How China Emerged as the World Leader in Artificial Intelligence Research - eMarketer

Get smart: How artificial intelligence is changing our lives – CNBC.com – CNBC

Artificial intelligence, or AI, is a real and growing part of our lives.

From voice-controlled assistants to online ordering to self driving cars in development, AI is the brains behind computer software. As it improves computers, making them faster and smarter, is this technology a threat?

"I wouldn't see it as a threat, necessarily," Recode reporter April Glaser told CNBC's "On the Money" in an interview. laser covers robots, drones and other smart machines for the technology news website.

"But artificial intelligence programs do know more than you or I do, particularly when it comes to specific areas."

One example is in medicine, where AI technology is helping doctors recognize cancerous tumors.

"If something has artificial intelligence in it that means it has software in it that allows the computer program to do something on its own without a human pressing a button the entire time."

Glaser said using AI, companies are "able to anticipate behavior by drawing on your past behavior. They require a tremendous amount of data that they process, these software algorithms, in order to determine what you might want next."

She added that "there are all sorts of ways these predictive algorithms can and have already creeped into our lives."

While shopping on Amazon, the site might suggest you may want a flashlight to go with that tent you've bought. On Netflix, it knows what movies you might enjoy.

"So if you typically go for romantic comedies, then it's going to suggest romantic comedy next based on your behavior," she told CNBC.

Computers continue to improve because, Glaser said, "they are getting smarter because the more data that you feed it the more refined the results will become."

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Get smart: How artificial intelligence is changing our lives - CNBC.com - CNBC

Is artificial intelligence fuelling natural stupidity? – The Hindu


The Hindu
Is artificial intelligence fuelling natural stupidity?
The Hindu
Artificial intelligence was a footnote. Albert Einstein's wry remark, Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity, was invoked sometimes to prove a point. However, the march of technology with its myriad participatory platforms, aided ...

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Is artificial intelligence fuelling natural stupidity? - The Hindu

Kiwi startup Soul Machines reveals latest artificial intelligence creation, Rachel – Newshub

A Kiwi company developing artificial intelligence has delivered its latest digital human, called Rachel.

Rachel can see, hear and respond to you.

She is an avatar created by two-time Oscar winner Mark Sagar, who worked on the blockbuster movie of the same name.

Mr Sagar, of Auckland-based company Soul Machines, says his aim is to make man socialise with machine, by putting a human face on artificial intelligence.

"So what we are doing with Soul Machines is trying to build the central nervous system for humanising this kind of computer," he says.

A favourite theme of Hollywood, the interaction between human and computer is already here in much simpler forms, from Siri on your iPhone to virtual assistants in your home.

China's third-largest technology company Baidu has just announced artificial intelligence is its major focus, including driverless cars.

Soul Machines' goal is just as complex - emotions. The startup's prototype was Baby X, which gets upset and needs reassurance when Mr Sagar hides, and can also recognise pictures.

The technology's advancing so quickly, a later version helps people in Australia with disabilities.

And the version after that is so detailed it has a warning on its Youtube video - this is not real.

Newshub.

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Kiwi startup Soul Machines reveals latest artificial intelligence creation, Rachel - Newshub