Hands-On With Valve’s Knuckles Prototype Controllers – UploadVR

Editors Note: Valve has started shipping the prototypeKnuckles controllersto select VR developers in limited quantities. UploadVR hasnt gotten its hands on a pair just yet, so weve reached out to the development community to see what they think. This article is a contribution from Denny Unger, Co-Founder, CEO, and Creative Director of Cloudhead Games, the studio behind The Gallery: Episode 1 The Call of the Starseed and Episode 2 Heart of the Emberstone.

User interfaces in virtual reality start with your hands. We know that now with the Oculus Touch and the HTC Vive, but even when VR was simply a screen strapped to your head many felt that hands were the future. We began to develop The Gallery on the first Oculus devkit with the Razer Hydra (a Sixense technology) to deliver surrogate hand tracking and body presence back in 2013. And when Valve invited Cloudhead and the first wave of developers to see what would eventually be known as the Vive, Valve showed a commitment to that same vision. Now Valve has invited us and a new wave of developers to begin working with their latest prototypethe SteamVR Knuckles, a wearable VR controller that tracks not just your hand, but each finger too.

Back in 2014, we didnt realize exactly how accurate SteamVR tracking wasthe whole notion of roomscale VR was almost incomprehensible. Up until that point, there was still some motion latency in VR, so you never felt completely attached to the actions in your hands. But once the SteamVR Lighthouses started tracking objects in a 3D space, it was a deep and immediate connection of, Holy crap, thats actually my hand in VR.

Our goal then was to deliver an experience where the player doesnt have to think about the controller, and has only natural, gestural interactions. We wanted to demonstrate why this kind of inputyour hands themselveswas meaningful. When we received our first Vive devkit (wired at the time) we were taping them to our hands in order to feel more immersed, and we even spoke to Valve about crude ways they could strap the controller on.

Those early Vive prototypes already showed an incredible level of fidelity, capable of measuring the tiniest fraction of a movement. Its like the Moores Law of motion control; each incremental improvement in tracking brings with it new possibilities. So as soon as you have that kind of fidelity with your hands in VR, you need your fingers to be more purely represented. And thats what the Oculus Touch started to do by bringing capacitive, gestural input to the controller.

Where Touch differs from what the Knuckles offer, however, is that youre still pushing a binary button in the end; Touch feels more grounded in traditional gamepad design. Specifically, you always feel like youre holding something with buttonsand that works perfectly for gun games and sword games. But the Knuckles take that further by removing the abstractions of first-gen VR inputs. Even though it looks like a more complicated device, its actually a much simpler one.

With the Knuckles, youre not holding a controller; it simply straps to your hand and rests in your palm. If you relax your hand into a natural flex, the controller stays put and keeps tracking your fingers. If you reach out to grab an object in VR, your hand wraps around the base of the controller, giving a tangible feeling of grabbing something. That physicality is something you dont get from data gloves, or vision based inputs without any device, and that feeling can then be fine-tuned with haptic feedback. Plus, youre not passing around a sweaty data glove between your friends.

When reaching out to an object with the Knuckles, Im not thinking about the controller Im holding in my hand, because Im not holding one. Im not thinking about how to use my fingers either, because theyre not assigned to a button press. Im not even thinking about my hand, and thats where the magic comes inIm just thinking about grabbing the object, as I would in real life. That entire grasping motion is represented in VR, whether I pinch with two fingers, scoop with my hand, or close my fist around it. The Knuckles track your fingers by the distance they are from the base of the controller (your palm), and represent that movement in VR. Its second nature.

As developers, when we receive prototype hardware like the SteamVR Knuckles, it makes us want to push the capabilities. In the past, thats meant radically rethinking our stack of interactions and locomotion systemsvirtually redesigning the game. Weve written about what these kinds of changes have meant for The Gallery in the past, but the long story short is that new controllers like the Knuckles arent just affecting the complexity of interactions. We now have new possibilities for game mechanics and design that havent and couldnt have been done before. Its to be seen how these controllers will impact Heart of the Emberstone in September, but theyll be a core focus in designing Episode 3.

Think of an interface-heavy app like Tilt Brush. Dials can be intuitive, but using your fingers is organic. Theres a possibility for gestural movements to call functions and navigate dense data; there could be an entire language built out of using your hands to manipulate paint brushes and pencils and sizes and colors. Once you take the mental load of an interface off the playeronce they stop thinking about the controlleryou can leverage that partition into experiential design and organic controls.

The kind of technology that the SteamVR Knuckles offer is not just impactful to the future of input in gaming, but also the future of output. I can go to a social VR space and point to something, or offer a peace sign, or tell somebody to hang loose without having to think about it. The controller doesnt guess your gesture, or snap to a new position, it represents your fingers based on the distance it calculates. The more natural and intuitive the interface, the less we think about hardware. And the less we fixate on hardware, the more present we can be in VR.

Prior to the Knuckles, hardware developers were looking for something that would be more broadly accepted by the general public. Something that resembled a Wiimote, like the Vive wands, or something that when put together resembled a gamepad, like the Touch controllers, meant that VR input was familiar. Strapping an alien device to your hand in first-gen VR would have been too much too fast. But I think it took the evolution of those two controllers to get VR to the point where the public could be comfortable with the idea of a controller strapped to your hand.

There are so many moments in life in which using your hands is a vital part of the experience. There are implications for education and communicationwith audiences who dont generally understand videogame controllersbecause the SteamVR Knuckles open the door to that broader audience. These are pick-up-and-play controllers where you dont have to think about the input, you just reach out and interact in virtual space.

User interface in virtual reality starts with your hands. And once users are empowered in that way, and dont have to be told how to use the technology, the next generation of virtual reality is here.

This is a guest post not produced by the UploadVR staff. Its a contribution submitted by Denny Unger, theCo-Founder, CEO, and Creative Director of Cloudhead Games.No compensation was exchanged for the creation of this content.

Tagged with: Knuckles, prototype, valve

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Hands-On With Valve's Knuckles Prototype Controllers - UploadVR

New Open-Source Platform Maps the Provenances of Artworks – Hyperallergic

Screenshot of Mapping Paintings, showing the migration of Frida Kahlos Dos Mujeres (Salvadora y Herminia) (1928) (screenshot via mapping paintings.org)

Before arriving at its current home, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Titians famed Europa hopped around Europe, switching owners for nearly 300 years. It traveled through the United Kingdom, passing through the hands of earls, lords, and art dealers; it spent some time in Paris, owned at one point by the Duc dOrleans; and, prior to that, it belonged to the Spanish Royal Collection in Madrid. In short, its provenance is complicated.

Thanks to a new website, however, tracing such complex migrations of paintings is about to get easier. Launched by Boston University professor Jodi Cranston, Mapping Paintingsis an open-source, searchable platform for compiling provenance data for individual artworks (not just paintings, despite its name), from owners to past locations to details of sales or transactions. It allows you to select artworks of interest and visualize their records across time and space, as plotted on a map. The map for Europa, for instance, begins in Venice, where Titian worked on the piece between 1560 and 1562, before it moved to Madrid to enter the collection of King Philip II. Each known address that was once home to the painting is marked and numbered sequentially, so you can easily follow its path from Europe to America.

Cranston created the platform because she hadnt seen anything similar available to art historians, her target user base. It emerged from her first project, Mapping Titian, which focused only on the Italian painters works. One particularly neat feature of Mapping Paintings is that it lets you filter through its database and overlay the paths of selected artworks on one map. So you can compare how different pieces by the same artist have traveled or where artworks currently owned by the same museum came from.

I think that its important to visualize this information, Cranston told Hyperallergic. Provenance information is in printed catalogues and on some museum websites, but visualizing the movement of these artworks allows users to recognize their objecthood and also not to get bogged down in concerns about authenticity and pedigree that often come with provenance information. Sometimes seeing that an artwork went somewhere unexpected is more impactful than reading it in a long list of text.

Besides contributing new individual entries to the database, users can also publish what the site deems a project a custom-made map tracking the movement of any number of artworks whose images you upload and whose provenances you enter yourself. All projects are sent to an administrator for review; only those that are accepted as accurate will be added to the online library.

Currently, the vast majority of works on Mapping Paintings which is funded by Boston University and the Kress Foundation arrive from its Titian-centric forebear, with Cranston drawing data from catalogues and museum websites. Works from the Kress Collection, which contains over 3,000 works of European art, will join the platform next, with the upload possibly completed by early fall. While Cranston created the website primarily with academics and curators in mind, she also hopes members of the general public will explore its records, which reveal information that museums dont often highlight.

I think that many visitors to museums dont realize that these artworks had interesting lives before they arrived on the museum walls, and its neat to think about what these artworks witnessed and who else saw them, Cranston said. It deepens the viewing experience and brings history to life.

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New Open-Source Platform Maps the Provenances of Artworks - Hyperallergic

AAFP Tool Can Connect GME Programs, Save Family Medicine Slots – AAFP News

The AAFP has created a new tool, dubbed the Family Medicine Residency Explorer,(www.healthlandscape.org) that is designed to help family medicine residency programs accredited by the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) succeed in the move to a single graduate medical education (GME) accreditation system.

Why is this important?

Because the clock is ticking on the consolidation process: Programs currently accredited solely by the AOA have until June 30, 2020, to meet accreditation standards of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and, thus, retain their status as accredited residency programs.

The urgency of the situation is outlined in statistics gathered by family physician Julie Petersen, D.O., a health policy fellow at the Washington-based Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care.

The work done by Petersen and her fellow researchers at the Graham Center -- David Grolling, M.P.S.; Graham Center Medical Director Winston Liaw, M.D., M.P.H.; and Graham Center Director Andrew Bazemore, M.D., M.P.H. -- is titled "Osteopathic Family Medicine Medical Education Status During the Single Accreditation System Transition" and is scheduled to be published in the near future.

Data that Petersen gathered from an area of the AOA website that lists residency program opportunities(opportunities.osteopathic.org) revealed that 91 percent of AOA-accredited programs had not yet received ACGME accreditation.

Put another way, based on numbers recorded as of April 11, as many as 623 family medicine residency slots per year are at risk of being lost because of the single accreditation system process at the very time when the primary care workforce pipeline needs to be brimming with recruits.

And the numbers put rural America at particular risk. Petersen found that 31 rural programs -- 91 percent of the total number of rural programs -- had not yet made the transition.

"The medical community overall has a lot to gain by expanding access to rural and community- based GME, an area in which AOA programs excel," said Petersen in an interview with AAFP News.

She pointed out that the AOA has had great success at creating the GME infrastructure the primary care world has been trying to establish for decades.

According to an AOA report,(www.osteopathic.org) about 56 percent of osteopathic physicians work in a primary care specialty, and about 16 percent of osteopathic family medicine residency programs are located in rural areas, Petersen noted.

Abundant evidence shows that many programs in the AOA community have begun the transition process, she said. However, "The majority of these AOA programs have not yet achieved ACGME accreditation, and so we as a community need to be vigilant and aware of this transition as it happens.

"We want to make sure programs aren't slipping through the cracks, and we should pay special attention to those small and rural programs that are the most vulnerable and that have the fewest resources to ensure they are successful in this transition," she added.

Stan Kozakowski, M.D., director of the AAFP Division of Medical Education, said the immediate challenge facing the AOA-only accredited programs right now is that programs must achieve "pre-accreditation" status with the ACGME if they are to participate in the 2018 AOA residency matching program.

"In plain English, that means AOA programs must only have applied and sent in their application by Dec. 31, 2017," Kozakowski told AAFP News.

Once that step is accomplished, the bigger problem is obtaining full ACGME accreditation.

"We know that some of the AOA-only accredited programs will experience challenges in receiving full ACGME accreditation because they must, as all programs do in the ACGME system, meet a set of institutional requirements, as well as program- or specialty-specific requirements," said Kozakowski.

He added that two of the most common requirements that have been problematic for the AOA programs was having family medicine faculty to role-model maternity care and inpatient pediatric care.

"Those are two big stumbling blocks for these programs," said Kozakowski.

And that's where the Family Medicine Residency Explorer tool comes in.

"I had this idea of the residency mapper about a year ago," he explained. "My thought was to find a way to create conversations between programs that are exploring or engaged in the accreditation process with currently accredited programs as a means of sparking creative thinking about how people could share resources."

For example, an ACGME program director could use the mapper to find nearby osteopathic programs and reach out to offer assistance. Perhaps the D.O. residents could travel to the ACGME-accredited host institution to fulfill the maternity care requirement or engage in inpatient pediatrics taught by family physicians.

"The tool is very simple in the sense that we're trying to provide programs with a means of connecting with their neighbors and potential partners to at least discuss ideas that might help programs to move forward or share resources," said Kozakowski.

Primary care is faced with an undeniable risk for losing GME positions, and the mapper is a free tool everyone can access, he noted.

"Look, workforce is everybody's business," Kozakowski said. "We all have to step up, because this affects our collective future.

"Wouldn't it be fantastic if every family medicine program director in the country went into the tool, searched by their location, put in a certain radius and said 'Who's around me, and who can I help, or who do I need help from?'" he asked. "That's my dream."

Related AAFP News Coverage 2017 Osteopathic Match Results D.O. Physicians' Passion for Family Medicine Continues (2/7/2017)

Allopathic, Osteopathic Medical Communities Announce Transition to Unified GME Accreditation (2/28/2014)

Fresh Perspectives: Accreditation Merger Creates Unified Standard, Preserves D.O.s' Identity (3/20/2014)

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AAFP Tool Can Connect GME Programs, Save Family Medicine Slots - AAFP News

Sidney Health Center announces new family medicine physician – Sidney Herald Leader

Sidney Health Center is pleased to announce the successful recruit of Lisa Rosa-R, M.D. Dr. Rosa-R joins the medical staff as a family medicine physician.

Dr. Rosa-R, who is American Board Certified in family medicine, provides a wide range of primary care services to people of all ages.

Her scope of practice includes diagnosing and treating illnesses, managing chronic conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes and asthma as well as providing preventive care such as routine checkups, health-risk assessments and screening tests for men, women and children.

Dr. Rosa-R has 30 years of experience in the medical field working as a family physician in the state of Georgia. The last 10 years she has incorporated integrative medicine into her scope of practice. Integrative medicine emphasizes the integration of complementary and alternative medicine approaches with conventional medicine.

Dr. Rosa-R graduated with a bachelor of science in mathematics from the University of Western Australia in Perth, Australia. She went onto become a Doctor of Medicine and Surgery at the University of Seville in Seville, Spain and then completed her residency in family practice at Saint Mary Hospital in Hoboken, N.J. as well as completing a Fellowship in Family Medicine at Bronx-Lebanon Albert Einstein College of New York, NY.

Dr. Rose-R is fluent in English and Spanish. To schedule an appointment with Dr. Rosa-R, please call her office at 406-488-2231 at the Sidney Health Center Clinic, Suite #110.

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Sidney Health Center announces new family medicine physician - Sidney Herald Leader

Annual Land of Medicine Buddha Festival welcomes all cultures – Santa Cruz Sentinel

SOQUEL >> There was a traffic jam on the one-way road winding up the mountain to Land of Medicine Buddha on Saturday, when the sacred hillside hosted its annual multicultural festival.

Inside a temple atop the hill, a golden Buddha statue sat in a stoic pose as a woman knelt to pray on a red carpet. Outside the shrine, hundreds watched a Buddhist perform the Deer Dance, an offering to Buddha and to the suffering of sentient beings, said Tsering Gurung, who was born in Nepal and grew up practicing Tibetan Buddhism.

Gurung said happiness is a difficult sensation to attain without achieving peace of mind. He said the teachings of Buddhism provide a guide to pursuing such peace.

Whatever we do in Buddhism is to serve sentient beings, Gurung said. They all want to be happy. They dont want to suffer. We, as human beings, have the ability to do that. The animals do not.

As backdrop to the annual Medicine Buddha Festival, a 25-foot medicine Buddha in deep blue known as lapis lazuli adorned the large painting known as a thangka. At booths, food and spiritual goods were sold. Healing services also were offered.

Land of Medicine Buddha Executive Director Denice Macy said the large table below the painting held many water bowls signifying sublime nectar.

All of these water bowls are offerings, Macy said. This is really offered as a cultural fair. It provides a place for the Tibetans to keep their culture alive.

Two busloads of people of Vietnamese heritage attended the event.

A Chinese and Burmese woman who declined to be named, gazed up at the golden Buddha inside the shrine. In her third year at the event. She said she is mesmerized by the sacred mountain near Santa Cruz. She said there is nothing else like it in California.

Lamas Dagri Rinpoche and Geshe Ngawang Dakpa watched the dances and renditions as the events guests of honor.

The Land of Medicine Buddha, at 5800 Prescott Road, is open 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday to Friday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. The enclave is a active Buddhist community.

Down the hill from the festival, the large Mahabodhi Stupa a large replica of the monument marking the site where Shakyamuni Buddha reached enlightenment under the bodhi tree in northeastern India remains under construction.

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The community welcomes donations and involvement.

To gain happiness, we have so many methods to learn, Gurung said.

For information, visit landofmedicinebuddha.org/.

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Annual Land of Medicine Buddha Festival welcomes all cultures - Santa Cruz Sentinel

NYU’s School of Medicine reviewing offers for Sterling Forest site – Times Herald-Record

Daniel Axelrod Times Herald-Record @dan_axelrod

TUXEDO NYUs School of Medicine is close to selling the 87,000-square-foot Sterling Forest research center where its Department of Environmental Medicine has operated for decades.

NYUs leaders declined to provide a statement about the sale, but they confirmed public information about it, said how long NYU had been there and explained what will happen to the sites researchers.

Just two months after marketing the complex, university staff are conducting due diligence reviews of prospective buyers after receiving multiple offers on the seven-acre complex, which is listed at $3.91 million.

For more than two decades, NYU medical school researchers have conducted important research at the site, including testing vaccines for AIDS, hepatitis and other deadly diseases.

But with the facility aging, NYU is selling it and merging its local medical research center into properties closer to its main campus in Manhattan, instead of reusing the complex for other educational purposes.

The sites two-story, stone, 1920s-era East Building is the complexs oldest structure, said broker Robert Scherreik, executive managing director for the Newburgh-based Hudson Valley office of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company.

The East Building began as an elementary school. Later owners of the site, which sits 33 miles from New York City, added the West Building (1962) and the South Building (1972), which have steel frames and brick-and-stone exteriors.

Theyre extremely well-built structures, with very good bones and an absolutely beautiful location in the midst of New Yorks Sterling Forest State Park, and theyre near population centers in northern New Jersey, Rockland County and New York City, Scherreik said.

The buildings have been renovated and improved a number of times over the years, including with energy-efficient windows and HVAC systems, and theyd be perfect for educational or office space, Scherreik said.

They do, however, need to be substantially renovated to meet needs other than those of a research lab, he said.

Despite NYU's positive research contributions, the lab may be best known locally for what university officials did with the chimps housed there after closing its Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates in 1995.

NYU leaders ignored a public outcry against transferring the center, and roughly 100 of its chimps, to the New Mexico-based lab of Fred Coulston, a notorious toxicologist cited by federal agencies for viciously abusing and killing primates.

Subsequent investigations by federal agencies and the Times Herald-Record revealed that Coulston spent years torturing and killing the NYU chimps until the feds ordered that he transfer 51 of the NYU survivors to sanctuaries.

Another roughly 100 LEMSIP chimps would have faced the same fate were it not for NYU veterinarian C. James Mahoney, who smuggled them out of the Tuxedo facility and found them homes.

daxelrod@th-record.com

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NYU's School of Medicine reviewing offers for Sterling Forest site - Times Herald-Record

Medical school researchers find why prostate cancer could be more aggressive in black men – GW Hatchet (subscription)

Medical school researchers found that prostate cancer tumors in black men have a genetic variation that may make them more aggressive and resistant to drug treatments.

Researchers said the study, which was published Friday in the journal Nature Communications may help explain why black men are diagnosed with prostate cancer at higher rates and often have a worse prognosis than white men, according to a release.

Norman Lee, professor of pharmacology and physiology said he started the project to study disparities in prostate cancer from a genetic perspective.

Why is it that the African American population has a higher incidence of prostate cancer and a worse prognosis compared to those of European American descent? Lee said in a release. In trying to understand the genetic basis, we found that part of it may have to do with differential RNA splicing.

Lee and his team found that tumors present in black men varied from those found in whites because the tumors generate different proteins. These proteins can make the tumors more aggressive, according to the release.

The team also found that these types of proteins can lead to drug resistance.

We found that the protein isoforms expressed in African-Americans with prostate cancer do not always respond to targeted therapies, whereas these drugs were found to be effective in European Americans with prostate cancer and do end up killing off the cancer, Lee said in the release. This is a mechanism for drug resistance.

Lee said future research should examine the impact of genetic variations in other types of cancer to gain insight into why certain cancer treatments may be ineffective.

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Medical school researchers find why prostate cancer could be more aggressive in black men - GW Hatchet (subscription)

Religious liberty should unite us, not divide us – National Catholic Reporter (blog)

A flurry of Supreme Court cases is putting religious liberty debates and state-church conflicts in the spotlight. In recent days, the court ruled that hospital systems with church affiliations are exempted from some provisions of federal pension law. The court also found that Trinity Lutheran Church in Missouri is eligible for a state grant to resurface its playground despite the state constitutions ban on government funding of churches. In the fall, the justices will hear an appeal from a Colorado baker who violated a state anti-discrimination law for refusing to prepare a cake for a same-sex wedding. And the court will also make a final decision on President Trumps ban on refugees traveling from some Muslim-majority countries.

Religious liberty is a foundational principle of a democratic society. Sadly, what could unite left and right is increasingly the latest battle in the culture wars. Finding a better path forward requires seeking common ground and rejecting false choices. We can affirm respect for religious conscience while also striving to protect the human rights of all people. Religious appeals were once used to justify slavery and baptize racial discrimination.

Some Christians today seek to deny gay, lesbian and transgender people basic rights in the name of religion. Discrimination under the guise of faith does a disservice to upholding authentic religious freedom. At the same time, some on the left who would reduce religious liberty to the sphere of private worship and limit the role of faith in the public square are also mistaken. Individual believers and religious institutions have served the common good and animated social justice movements since the founding of our nation. Liberal intolerance and animus toward the rights and responsibilities of faithful citizens and religious institutions are also an affront to democratic virtues and values.

Language and framing matters. Some Christians including President Donald Trump embrace an overheated rhetoric of persecution by claiming that people of faith are under attack. This siege mentality breeds a hunkered-down posture that does not reflect the liberating spirit of the gospel. It also does not reflect reality. Christians in the Middle East and other volatile areas are confronted with violent persecution. In contrast, the myriad legal and policy debates that arise in the United States over religious liberty questions concern the balancing of social goods in a pluralistic society. These challenges are significant and often complex, but they do not constitute an existential or apocalyptic threat to fundamental freedoms.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is right to speak up in defense of religious liberty, but often inflames the debate. The conferences annual Fortnight for Freedom campaign, which culminates on July 4, began in large part as a response to the Affordable Care Acts contraception coverage requirements. While reasonable people including religious liberty attorneys disagree over whether exemptions provided to religious institutions are expansive enough, bishops framed the fight with breathless historical allusions. Less than a year before the 2012 presidential election, the Fortnight campaign kicked off when the liturgical calendar honored St. Thomas More and St. John Fischer, who suffered political persecution because of their faith and were executed by King Henry VIII. Evoking these Christian martyrs, the bishops argued that religious liberty was under attack and warned Catholics to be on guard. The diocese of Brooklyn, New York featured a front-page image of the Blessed Mother wrapped in the American flag.

Bishop Daniel Jenky of Peoria, Illinois, even made comparisons between President Barack Obama and some of the worse dictators of the 20th century. Hitler and Stalin, at their better moments, would just barely tolerate some churches remaining open, but would not tolerate any competition with the state in education, social services, and health care, the bishop said. In clear violation of our First Amendment rights, Barack Obama with his radical, pro-abortion and extreme secularist agenda now seems intent on following a similar path. At risk of stating the painfully obvious, this kind of offensive, false and reckless language poisons the well in ways that make it impossible to find common ground.

Some Catholic bishops deserve credit. In Georgia, many religious leaders spoke out against that states efforts to roll back civil rights under religious liberty legislation, and the states Catholic bishops were clear in their opposition. While we and the other Catholic bishops in the United States support the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the bishops wrote, we do not support any implementation of RFRA in a way that will discriminate against any individual. Republican Gov. Nathan Deal, a conservative Southern Baptist, vetoed the proposed legislation and argued Jesus would not support the bills intent.

In other cases, Catholic schools and universities have also damaged the cause of religious liberty. Adjunct professors often make poverty wages and lack health insurance benefits. Unionization efforts have been forcefully resisted by some Catholic university leaders who claim religious liberty exemptions. In National Catholic Reporter last year, Gerald Beyer, an associate professor of Christian ethics at Villanova University and Donald Carroll, president of the Law Offices of Carroll & Scully Inc., argued in an extensive essay that blocking adjunct unions fails both legal and moral tests. When a Catholic university abridges the right to unionize of its adjunct faculty, it violates its own traditions teaching, they wrote.

If any religious group faces persecution in the United States today, it is our Muslim brothers and sisters who are demonized in the media and the halls of power. Catholics faced bigotry and vile stereotypes as late as John F. Kennedys 1960 presidential campaign. Given our history, Catholics have a particular responsibility to challenge Islamophobia, which is a well-funded industry of pseudo-academics and activists who have been emboldened since Donald Trumps election. The Bridge Initiative at Georgetown University has detailed how much work needs to be done. Only 14 percent of Catholics have a favorable impression of Muslims. Perhaps most troubling, according to the research, is that Catholics who read, watch, or listen to Catholic media have more unfavorable views of Muslims than those who dont. What San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy has called the scourge of anti-Islamic prejudice requires more attention from our Catholic leaders. We are witnessing in the United States a new nativism, which the American Catholic community must reject and label for the religious bigotry which it is, Bishop McElroy said in a speech at the first national Catholic-Muslim dialogue. The urgency to act is clear.

Its time to rescue religious liberty from the culture wars, reject false choices and put renewed energy into protecting Muslims who are living under a cloud of suspicion. In the end, this effort shouldn't be about serving liberal or conservative agendas, but defending core American values.

[John Gehring is Catholic program director at Faith in Public Life, and author of The Francis Effect: A Radical Popes Challenge to the American Catholic Church.]

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Religious liberty should unite us, not divide us - National Catholic Reporter (blog)

Thomas Lucente: Fourth of July holiday a reminder of liberty lost – Lima Ohio

The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.

John Adams in a July 3, 1776, letter to his wife, Abigail Adams

Another Independence Day has arrived and, like most anniversaries, it is a natural time to take stock. The review is not good. The American experiment in self-government has largely disappeared. The America my children will inherit is bleak from a classical liberal perspective.

I fear my generation will be the last to enjoy the blessings of a free nation. Upon further consideration, though, that is not exactly accurate. The American experiment has been dying for decades. President Abraham Lincoln delivered the first blow followed by President Theodore Roosevelt and President Woodrow Wilson with President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivering the coup de grce. All under the false guise of progressivism, which is just a code word for authoritarian statism.

Despite Adams exuberance, Independence Day is no longer a day to be celebrated. It is just a sad reminder of what we as a people have so callously squandered.

The Founders gave us the greatest of gifts, an island of liberty in a world of monarchs. There were, of course, problems with the implementation slavery and other inequalities that seemed so normal in an 18th century world but the perfect framework was there.

A government was established that allowed the people to govern themselves while still protecting the rights of the individual. Americans understood that the proper role of government was to protect individual rights and nothing more.

But to the leftists that was not good enough. With visions of statism dancing in their misguided heads, they set about to destroy American and fundamentally transform it into a government paradise where the people do not govern themselves but are told by the elite what is best for them. Using bizarre interpretations of the Constitution they have essentially rendered our founding charter pointless.

In 1860, the Democratic Party was the party of slavery. That has not changed. They have merely expanded their scope from a race-based servitude to the enslavement of all people to the whims of the state. This is not hyperbole. Either you have a right to your own life, liberty and property or you are property.

Just look at the goals of the leftists. Everything they advocate for involves the use of government force.

Take health care for just one example.

Leftists think it is OK to take at the point of a government gun that for which one worked hard to earn and give it to someone else who did nothing to earn it.

Yes, I get it. They think they are doing good. They think they are helping people, but that belief demonstrates a profound lack of a fundamental understanding of many things, the least of which are basic economics and the concept of liberty.

Take that leftist idiot in Arkansas who destroyed a Ten Commandments monument Wednesday just hours after it was erected while shouting, Freedom.

The monument was paid for by private funds. All he did was destroy personal property. That is not freedom. You dont have a right to be free from someone elses public display of religion.

But the left has shown it has no tolerance for opposing viewpoints and things such as religious liberty. To your typical leftist, religious liberty means telling people of faith to shut up and keep it indoors.

Yet, they have no trouble FORCING the baker to make a cake for a same-sex couple or FORCING the doctor to provide health care or FORCING the hardworking middle class to pay for the looters and moochers or FORCING Christians to pay for abortions or FORCING others to pay for birth control and on and on and on.

The leftist story arc is one of forcing others to do their bidding.

That is not the promise of America. That is not why millions of Americans in the last two centuries have taken the oath to defend our borders and our way of life.

The Founders did not intend for us to supplant a tyrannical monarchy with the tyranny of the majority.

As Adams wrote later in the same letter quoted above, I am well aware of the Toil and Blood and Treasure, that it will cost Us to maintain this Declaration, and support and defend these States. Yet through all the Gloom I can see the Rays of ravishing Light and Glory. I can see that the End is more than worth all the Means. And that Posterity will tryumph in that Days Transaction, even altho We should rue it, which I trust in God We shall not.

How would this man and his colleagues judge us today?

Not very well, I daresay. Indeed, I am embarrassed for us and thankful there were no time machines in 1776.

As a people we should resolve to take a few moments and consider what we should value as a society and then strive to get the American freedom train back on track. Give it a hard thought this weekend as you enjoy your fireworks, barbecues and beer because our current course is a one-way ticket to totalitarianism.

http://limaohio.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/web1_LUCENTE-Thomas-Web-.jpg

Thomas J. Lucente Jr. is an attorney with the Hearn Law Office in Wapakoneta (419-738-8171) and night editor of The Lima News. Reach him by telephone at 567-242-0398, by email at [emailprotected], or on Twitter @ThomasLucente.

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Thomas Lucente: Fourth of July holiday a reminder of liberty lost - Lima Ohio

Liberty continue road trip at Dream (Jul 1, 2017) – FOXSports.com

The New York Liberty are in the midst of the toughest stretch of their schedule. And its taking a toll.

The Liberty, losers of three of four, will try to turn things around against the Atlanta Dream on Sunday at McCamish Pavilion in Atlanta. Its the second of a four-game road trip for New York, which will head west to take on Seattle and Phoenix next week.

Its a long road trip, Liberty coach Bill Laimbeer told the teams website. But sometimes that can be a positive. It gives the chance for players to bond on the road and a good comraderie can develop.

The Dream just returned from a difficult road trip of their own and were hoping to turn things around at home. But theyve dropped back-to-back home games and have lost six of seven overall.

Atlanta gave up an 18-2 run to open the third quarter in Fridays 85-76 loss to the defending champion Los Angeles Sparks.

One thing I tell my team is you cant give up these home games, Dream coach Michael Cooper said after the loss to the Sparks. Its tough playing on the road, weve already experienced that. But home court, youve got to take care of that and make those changes out there on the road. But well get better.

Like the Dream, New York struggled coming out of halftime in its most recent game, a 67-54 loss at the Washington Mystics. The Liberty scored just seven points in the third quarter against the Mystics and committed 19 turnovers.

On the road you have to more focus, Laimbeer said. You cant turn the ball over; you cant make as many mistakes.

The Liberty pounded the Dream on the backboards in a 76-61 win on June 7. Tina Charles dominated with 18 points and 15 rebounds, and Kiah Stokes pulled down a career-high 17 boards against Atlanta. New York outrebounded the Dream 48-35 and pestered Atlanta into 27.6 percent shooting.

The Liberty are leading the WNBA in rebounding this season and have won five of the last six meetings with the Dream.

Tiffany Hayes leads Atlanta in scoring, averaging 17.4 points per game. Rookie guard Brittney Sykes has been a spark plug and got the start against Los Angeles on Friday.

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Liberty continue road trip at Dream (Jul 1, 2017) - FOXSports.com

Libertarian Party is trending upwards in Nebraska – 1011Now – 1011now

LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) - When you think politics, the parties that typically come to mind are republicans and democrats, but a third party is growing across Nebraska: The Libertarian Party.

One Nebraska senator describes the Libertarian ideals as promoting as little government interference in everyday life as possible, lower taxes, and a free market.

"I vote for the people who I think are going to do the job, I want them to act on their values," said Trevor Reilly.

Reilly is the chair for the Lancaster County Libertarian Party, but just a few years ago he was in the marines and a registered Republican, then he decided he wanted a change.

"Being a prior Republican I didn't agree with a lot of it, I didn't agree with the Trump media going on, so when I found the Libertarian party, I jumped into the campaign," said Reilly.

Trevor's not the only high ranking Libertarian who is a former member of the Grand Old Party.

Senator Laura Ebke is the only Libertarian senator in the unicameral, and said the political shift is becoming more and more apparent.

"I think that what we are finding is that people, especially young folks, are more and more turned off by the partisan rancor that goes on," said Senator Ebke.

Right now there are less than 13,000 registered Libertarians, but Senator Ebke believes this is only the start.

"I'd like to see it be a competitive party I think that a long ways coming, but I think we can become an influential party," said Senator Ebke.

The latest registered voter numbers show the Libertarian party is growing at a faster rate than the two major parties.

These numbers from the Nebraska Secretary of State show the percentages of registered Libertarians in Nebraska are just a little more than 1% of the almost 1.2 million Nebraska voters, but it's trending upwards.

Party members understand they are still a very small percentage, but there are plans to grow.

"Starting to run people for local elections, city county offices, school board and things like that, so I think that's a win and that's a way you build a party," said Senator Ebke.

And there are now specific benchmarks Libertarians want to hit by the next presidential election.

"Right now the state party's goal is to actually get 50,000 registered Libertarian voters by 2020," said Reilly.

"If we get to 50,000 that's big, for Nebraska, that's a significant amount of the voting population, and we can make a difference in a lot of elections then," said Senator Ebke.

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Libertarian Party is trending upwards in Nebraska - 1011Now - 1011now

Solomon Islands police say they’re ready to take over – Newshub

A Solomon Islands police officer who was shot twice during the country's crisis says he's confident local police now have the training and respect to take over from foreign security forces.

After 14 years, the international rescue operation, known as RAMSI, has finished - meaning local police are once again taking charge of crime-fighting operations.

Back in 2003, corruption within the Solomon Islands police force was one of the biggest contributors to a complete breakdown of law and order.

While the local police force is now considered more professional that it once was, they still face big challenges in terms of tackling crime, with soaring rates of domestic violence and youth crime.

Up to 68 percent of women aged between 15 and 49 report routine abuse at the hands of their partners. It's a statistic New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister Paula Bennett says is "horrific", and she says it shows that the Solomon Islands is in need of a culture change.

Supt Solomon Sisima told Newshub a lot has changed in 14 years, and local police are now more professional than ever.

"We are different, we are more up-front. Community is working closely with us. They are beginning to get trust - continually building trust with us, and we are continuing to build trust with the community."

Supt Sisima clearly remembers the terror from the inter-tribal fighting which began in 1998.He was trying to locate and rescue an Australian citizen during the height of the tensions when he was shot by rebels from the Guadalcanal Liberation Army.

"I was shot twice on my shoulder here, and my right shoulder is still broken.

"I was shot in an ambush - my vehicle was torn apart by bullets and I was just lucky that I escaped."

The effects of the conflict are still being felt today, especially among the country's youth.

During the crisis, schools were shut down depriving thousands of children from getting an education. Even now, many young people are not in school and 60 percent are unemployed.

"We have a lot of problems with the youth",says Andrew Mua, Honiara City Mayor. "With the unemployment, the rate so high.We have gangs within the cities - they brought in a lot of drugs, stealing."

Improving the plight of children has been a key focus for New Zealand's aid programme. About $100 million has been spent on improving education.

During her visit, Ms Bennett announced $6 million would be donated to help revamp a multi-purpose sports hall in the capital Honiara. She says it's hoped the new facility will help engage young minds and steer them away from crime.

She also attended a special ceremony at the country's stadium to mark the official end of the RAMSI intervention. Plauqes were presented to pacific leaders, acknowledging their country's participation in the mission.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare thanked the taxpayers of Australia and New Zealand, and also apologised for the billions of dollars spent over 14 years to help restore peace and stability in the country.

"We thank you from the bottom of our hearts - this is a gesture we will not forget."

Sandra Maezama, who was watching the closing ceremony, said while it was time for the Solomon Islands to take charge of its own future, most felt uneasy about the international intervention coming to an end.

"We'll feel empty - maybe some of us will feel insecure, but if the local police are doing their job thenwe are okay."

While the official RAMSI programme is over, eight New Zealand police officers will remain in the country to provide continued guidance to local police.

Insp Paris Razos will lead the new Solomon Islands support programme. He told Newshub the small team will stay in the country for another four years.

"The focus of the new programme will be to support the Royal Solomon Islands police force to embed and to enhance their crime prevention strategy."

Insp Razos says the presence of New Zealand police will ensure the quality and reliability of policing is of a standard the Solomon Islands can be proud of.

Newshub.

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Solomon Islands police say they're ready to take over - Newshub

British woman dies in Canary Islands after being found with severe injuries at her home – Metro

A British woman has died in the Canary Islands after she was found with multiple injuries at her home (Picture: Getty)

A British woman has died in the Canary Islands after she was found with multiple injuries at her home.

The woman, who has only been identified as a 47-year-old woman named Donna C, lived in an apartment block in Gran Canaria with her partner, who is also British.

An 84-year-old man, believed to be her partner, was arrested in connection with her death after it was reported she had received several blows during the suspected domestic violence incident.

Police were called to the scene immediately and found a British man sitting on the settee watching TV whilst the woman was found bleeding in the bath, according to Spanish newspaper La Provincia.

The man reportedly resisted arrest and assaulted at least one police officer in the process.

The victim was rushed to a health centre in Arguinegun and then on to the University Hospital of Gran Canaria where doctors were unable to save her life when she went into cardiac arrest.

According to reports, there were no previous allegations or background of violence between the couple in Spain.

The man has now been placed in the hands of the courts in SanBartolom de Tirajana and is expected to make an appearance either today or tomorrow.

Depending on the outcome of the autopsy, which is due to be carried out, he could be charged with gender violence or homicide as well as resisting arrest.

MORE: Government watching Kensington council closely after calls for it to be taken over

MORE: Teen raped by friend while she slept just days after grandmothers funeral

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British woman dies in Canary Islands after being found with severe injuries at her home - Metro

Love Island’s Craig Lawson tells his kids he’s on the show in heartbreaking clip posted by his mum – Metro

Craig Lawson has appeared in a clip telling his kids of his whereabouts (Picture: ITV/Facebook)

Craig Lawsons mum has shared a clip online of the Love Island contestant telling his kids hes arrived at the ITV2 villa.

The contestant was previously branded an absolute joke by his ex-fiancee Sian Dilley, claiming he didnt tell his children that he was heading into the ITV2 dating show.

While Craigs sister has since hit back at the claims saying hes an amazing father, now his mother has shared a clip seemingly telling his kids of his whereabouts.

Sue Bird posted the heartbreaking footage on Facebook, with the caption: Daddy we really love the video we are so proud of you Dya know what I mean xx.

In the video, Craig says: Alright boys. If youre watching this then obviously youve seen Im on Love Island now.

I wanted to tell you before but I couldnt, everything had to be kept really quiet. I just want you to know that I really wanted to tell you.

I love you. Im doing this for us so that we have a better future. I hope youre proud of me.

I hope you see it laugh, see me having fun and I hope you enjoy it and Ill see you when I get back. Love you.

Craigs ex previously stated: The bloke is an absolute joke. Hes left 3 children behind all who were excited at the thought of spending time with their daddy this weekend and he didnt even have the decency to tell them what he was doing and that he wont be seeing them.

He is dead to me and he is dead to my son. He has not even had the decency to contact me regarding this and regarding arrangements for my son.

Love Island continues on ITV2 at 9pm.

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Love Island's Craig Lawson tells his kids he's on the show in heartbreaking clip posted by his mum - Metro

The Caribbean Islands Are Looking to Climate-Proof Their Tourism Industry – The Wire

Environment According to tourism officials, the Caribbean tourism industry faces significant future threats related to both competitiveness and climate change impacts.

CTO Secretary-General Hugh Riley (left) and CDB President Dr. Warren Smith share a light moment during the signing of a partnership agreement at CDB headquarters. Credit: Desmond Brown/IPS

Bridgetown, Barbados:The tourism industry is the key economic driver and largest provider of jobs in the Caribbean after the public sector. Caribbean tourism broke new ground in 2016, surpassing 29 million arrivals for the first time and once again growing faster than the global average.

Visitor expenditures also hit a new high, growing by an estimated 3.5% to reach35.5 billion dollars. And the the outlook for 2017 remains rosy, with expected increases of 2.5 and 3.5% in long-stay arrivals and between 1.5% and 2.5% in cruise passenger arrivals.

But tourism officials say Caribbean islands are significantly affected by drastic changes in weather conditions and they fear climate change could have a devastating impact on the industry.

They note that the Caribbean tourism sector faces significant future threats related to both competitiveness and climate change impacts. And for a region so heavily dependent on coastal- and marine-related tourism attractions, adaptation and resilience are critical issues facing Caribbean tourism.

The impact of more severe hurricanes and the destruction of our most valued tourism assets, our beaches and coral reefs, and the damage to our infrastructure threaten to reverse the developmental gains that we have made, Dominican Senator Francine Baron said.

Our efforts to attain the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations cannot be achieved without dealing with the causes of climate change.

Baron, who serves as Dominicas Minister of Foreign Affairs, made the comments as she addressed a forum on the issue of climate change at the general assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS) held in Mexico recently.

In the face of these threats, the Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), the Caribbeans tourism development agency, has received a much-needed boost with a 460,000-euro grant from the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) to implement a project to increase the Caribbean tourism sectors resilience to natural hazards and climate related risks.

Global climate change and its impacts, including the increasing frequency and severity of extreme weather events, pose a significant risk to the Caribbean region and threaten the sustainability of Caribbean tourism, the CTOs Secretary General Hugh Riley said.

The CTO is pleased to have the support of the CDB to implement this project which will contribute to enhancing the resiliency, sustainability and competitiveness of the regions tourism sector. Mainstreaming climate change adaptation (CCA) and disaster risk management (DRM) strategies in tourism development and planning is our duty to our member countries.

The CDB/CTO partnership was formalized at a signing ceremony held on June 22 at CDBs headquarters in Barbados.

Speaking at the event, CDB President Dr. Warren Smith noted that the tourism sector makes an enormous contribution to the regions socioeconomic development.

Tourism generates high levels of employment, foreign direct investment and foreign exchange for our borrowing member countries and, given its multi-sectoral nature, it is a very effective tool for promoting sustainable development and poverty reduction, Dr. Smith said.

However, maintaining this critical role calls for adequate safeguards to be erected against the enormous threats that climate change and natural hazards pose to the sustainability of our region.

Funding is being provided under the African Caribbean Pacific-European Union-Caribbean Development Bank-Natural Disaster Risk Management in CARIFORUM Countries programme, which aims to reduce vulnerability to long-term impacts of natural hazards, including the potential impacts of climate change, thereby achieving national and regional sustainable development and poverty reduction goals in those countries.

During the 19-month project implementation period, the CTO will support the regions tourism entities with policy formulation, the promotion of best practices in disaster risk management and climate change adaptation, and the development of tools to enhance the tourism sectors knowledge and awareness of disaster risk reduction strategies and the potential impacts of climate variability and climate change (CVC).

A training component will also be included to strengthen the ability of public and private sector tourism stakeholders to undertake adequate mitigation and adaptation actions to CVC. The CTO secretariat will also benefit from institutional strengthening to help provide technical assistance and ongoing support for tourism-related climate services.

The project is in keeping with 2017 as the International Year of Sustainable Tourism for Development, which has been designated by the United Nations General Assembly.

At the CDBs Annual Board of Directors meeting held in Turks and Caicos Islands last month, Governors noted the acute environmental vulnerability of the Region and urged CDB to continue to play an important role in helping its Borrowing Member Countries (BMCs) build resilience.

Smith said CDBs commitment to this role was evidenced during the meeting, at which CDB signed an agreement with the European Investment Bank (EIB) for the second Climate Action Line of Credit (CALC).

This will facilitate increased climate proofing of critical infrastructure in the Caribbean. The Line of Credit for Euro 100 million is the largest single loan made by EIB in our region. We are very encouraged by the strong statement of confidence in CDB that this line represents, he said.

Eligible investments under the Climate Action Framework Loan II include climate change mitigation, adaptation and resilience projects in renewable energy, energy efficiency, road transport, water infrastructure and community-level physical and social infrastructurethat reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve resilience to the impacts of climate change.

We are delighted to be signing this new climate action loan with CDB, which is the result of a fruitful partnership that lasts for almost four decades, to support new projects in the Caribbean, said Pim Van Ballekom, EIB Vice President.

This partnership is currently supporting CDBs efforts to mainstream climate action to help its borrowing member countries (BMCs), which are all considered Small Island Developing States, to adequately tackle risks related to climate change. Caribbean countries face economic and social challenges which must be addressed whilst ensuring resilience to climate change, he added.

To date, CDB has committed the total resources under the ongoing Climate Action Line of Credit (50 million euro), for nine projects. This co-financing is associated with total project financing of approximately 191 million dollars (from CDB loans/grants, EIB CALC, counterpart and other sources of financing).

(IPS)

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The Caribbean Islands Are Looking to Climate-Proof Their Tourism Industry - The Wire

Orphan Black recap: ‘Let the Children and Childbearers Toil’ – EW.com (blog)

Science has always been one of the core components of Orphan Black, but so has power who has it, who loses it, and what those people do to wield or gain it. Now, with P.T. Westmoreland in the picture and Rachel by his side, were seeing more of those inner workings than ever before. Were also getting revelations about those early attempts to push the boundaries of human evolution yep, that thing in the woods was an experiment gone awry and the splintering effect it had on the top of the Neolution pyramid.

So while Ss plans uncovered a wealth of information (and a familiar face or two), Kira also did some experimenting of her own in hopes of learning more about her special abilities. In honor of these revelations, this week well run the clones through our trusted Orphan Black Clone Status Hyper-Sequence Generator Calcutron and export them by whos discovered the most this week. Please enjoy the data set below. (#Science!)

Sarah Much to Sarahs displeasure, Kira wont tell her much about her meetings with Rachel but Sarah does uncover a nasty cut on Kiras arm, which she thinks Rachel inflicted until her daughter admits she did it herself to see how fast she could heal. Unable to provide the answers she seeks and with three days until she has to go back to Dyad, S asks Felix to take Kira while she takes Sarah on a recon mission she has a lead that may help them get some leverage.

Their mark is a Dr. Elizabeth Perkins, who, S tells Sarah, could have a key to P.T. Westmoreland but they need her wallet. Ss intel (the woman likes to drink and has a rough relationship with her own daughter) gives them the perfect setup: They stage a fight, and Sarah throws a drink at S and grabs Dr. Perkins wallet as Perkins makes sure S is all right and then invites her to sit down for another drink.Turns out, Dr. Perkins is a psychologist studying, in her words, how PTSD co-occurs with major depressive disorders, and shes in town for some case studies. One person shes supposed to meet is an Alex Ripley, who is supposedly a high-level Neolution defector who may be being held against her will at a nearby mental health facility. S and Sarah are going to go in as Dr. Perkins and her assistant to check it out. (Sarah, meanwhile, realizes theres no way Ss usual methods would have known about the Neo. She wont say where her intel came from, but Im pretty sure we already know remember when Delphine stopped by her door?)

Once the bespectacled Mrs. S and Sarah-posing-as-a-bumbling-assistant con their way into visitors passes, they sneak into an unauthorized ward and find Alex Ripley, who is actually (drumroll please) season 3 baddie Virginia Coady. Oh hey, blast from the Orphan Black past!Shes initially very drugged up and unable to speak, but Sarah still calls her a genocidal bitch by way of greeting and gives her a slap across the face courtesy of Helena once she comes to. Virginias surprised when they ask about P.T., but after S hints they may be able to help her escape if she talks, she says an old friend had her locked away someone who shared her goal of controlling human genetics but didnt always get it right.

RELATED VIDEO: Orphan Black cast teases season 5

That old friend, it turns out, is Susan Duncan, and here we get a wealth of backstory on their early attempts at Neolution-inspired human experimentation. Susan and P.T. recruited Virginia to their cause when she was young, and before they found Kendall Malone or started human cloning projects, someone else was their first human subject. He was P.T. Westmorelands original obsession, but too many mistakes were made on this child who possessed a unique genome. Their science wasnt as refined then, and he began growing tumors and suffering brain damage Susan wanted to stop their experiments, but Virginia disagreed, and, in her words, they created a monster. Susan never forgave her for it, and they split assets in the friend/science divorce: Virginia took Castor, Susan kept Leda, and P.T. kept them apart.

But before she can tell them anything more, the doctor whom the real Elizabeth Perkins had supposedly been there to visit interrupts the intel party. Seeking a means of escape and knowing shell soon be drugged into submission again, Virginia attacks Sarah and steals her visitors pass (which contains a key card), and when the orderlies and doctor restrain her, S and Sarah use the commotion as a means to sneak away. This definitely doesnt seem like the last well see of her.

Cosima They dont explicitly say it, but its pretty obvious the thing Sarah glimpsed in the woods during her little vacation on Evil Mystery Island is the now-grown boy from Susan Duncan, Virginia Coady, and P.T. Westmorelands early days of human experiments and via Cosima, we get out first real (albeit brief) glimpse of him.

After Charlotte and Aisha hear him and spot whats presumably one of his teeth in the woods while going to look for a missing pig from the Revival menagerie, Cosima confronts Mud asking for answers. She already suspects that whatever took a bite out of Daisy the Pig has something to do with Westmoreland. Were on the Island of Doctor Moreau here, she says. Whatever weird s is happening, its coming from the big house. All Mud will say is its not his fault(probably talking about the man in the woods, but possibly Westmoreland), and she warns Cosima to stay out of the woods.

Later that night, Cosima follows Mud as she makes her way in the dark up toward Westmorelands house. Inside, P.T. is hooked up to some sort of IV treatment (is that a dialysis machine? Science people, drop some knowledge in the comments if you know!), and Cosimas snooping brings her down into the basement, where she finds not just old medical equipment but photos of painful-looking experiments/procedures and, more disconcertingly, a cell with chains and blood on the walls. When Mud finds her down there, Cosima demands to know what they did to the man in the woods, but Mud just begs her to get out and frantically sends her out a side door. Still not deterred, Cosima stays close enough to the house to see Mud bring a blanket out to the man and try to talk to him, but he only appears for long enough to growl and bare his teeth before taking her gift and running back into the shadows. (Recap continues on page 2)

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Orphan Black recap: 'Let the Children and Childbearers Toil' - EW.com (blog)

Senate asks for CBO score on Cruz’s healthcare proposal – The Hill

Senate Republicans are asking the Congressional Budget Office to analyze a healthcare billthat includes changes proposed by Sen. Ted CruzTed CruzSenate asks for CBO score on Cruzs healthcare proposal The party of Lincoln has no soul the GOP and its toxic healthcare bill GOP scrambles to win centrist votes on ObamaCare repeal MORE (R-Texas), Axios reported Saturday.

They are also asking the independent scorekeeper to come out with an estimate on a healthcare bill without the proposed changes, in an effort to better understand the potential effects of Cruz's plan.

Cruz, who has said that he cannot vote for the Senate Republicans' healthcare bill in its current form, proposed an amendment to the measure this week that would allow health insurers to sell plans that do not meet the standards required by the Affordable Care Act.

Under that provision, insurance companies would still be required to sell at least one plan that meets the ACA's standards.

The plan could win support by some conservatives in the Senate, like Sens. Rand PaulRand PaulSenate asks for CBO score on Cruzs healthcare proposal Sunday shows preview: Trump clashes with media as health push delayed Surprise war vote points to shift in GOP MORE (R-Kent.) and Mike LeeMike LeeSenate asks for CBO score on Cruzs healthcare proposal Sunday shows preview: Trump clashes with media as health push delayed The party of Lincoln has no soul the GOP and its toxic healthcare bill MORE (R-Utah), who say the current Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) does not do enough to repeal ObamaCare or lower insurance premiums.

By requiring insurers to offer at least one plan in each market that meets ObamaCare's regulatory standards, Cruz's plan could appease moderate Republicans, who have called for the Senate bill to maintain the ACA's rule prohibiting insurers from denying coverage to people with preexisting conditions.

The CBO released its assessment of the BCRA on Monday, estimating thatthe measure would trim the federal deficit by $321 billion, but would also increase the number of uninsured people by 22 million over the next decade.

Updated at 8:50 p.m.

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Senate asks for CBO score on Cruz's healthcare proposal - The Hill

Health care cuts: Rural hospitals ‘hanging on by their fingernails … – CNN

Raju pleaded with the hospital's owner to keep it open a few more days.

Ultimately, the hospital closed that Friday, leaving the rural town without a hospital for miles. Raju, who had been the hospital's chief of staff, is now the only doctor left in the town a two-hour drive south of Atlanta.

"I was very devastated when the hospital was closed," Raju said. "I was so attached to it. I practiced there for 33 years."

Raju knew that Richland's Stewart-Webster Hospital was "financially strained." Even for those patients covered by Medicaid, low reimbursement rates did not make a big enough dent. But Raju did not turn away any patients, even if they couldn't pay, he said.

Rural hospitals take a financial hit when they provide care to uninsured patients who can't afford it, said Elehwany. By insuring poorer patients, the Affordable Care Act hoped to remedy that. Despite its positive impacts, she said, it wasn't the magic bullet rural communities had hoped for.

"We strongly support the goals of the ACA," Elehwany said. "Everybody admits there's a few problems with the ACA, and unfortunately ... they seem to be magnified in rural America."

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican from West Virginia, came out against the Senate health care bill this week for these reasons.

The Senate bill could cut revenues to rural providers by $1.3 billion each year, according to the Chartis Center and its partner iVantage Health Analytics. Roughly 34,000 jobs are also at risk, according to the analysis.

Raju, who sees 20 to 25 patients a day in his office, is not optimistic that hospital doors will reopen in Richland.

"I'm very doubtful it's going to happen, but we're not going to give up. We'll keep trying," he said.

That leaves his patients in what is known as a "medical desert." A long drive to the nearest hospital -- 45 minutes or more -- could be the difference between life and death, he said.

"Time is essential," he said. "We're going to lose some patients on the way because they cannot get the care in a reasonable amount of time."

But that doesn't deter Raju, who has been a staple in Richland for nearly four decades.

"I grew up in a rural area in India, and I always liked the small town," he said. "I've been here too long. I just can't go."

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Health care cuts: Rural hospitals 'hanging on by their fingernails ... - CNN

Health care and health insurance are not the same thing – the fundamental disconnect in health care reform – Fox News

Politicians from both sides of the aisle continue to show a troubling disconnect from basic principles in their approach to health care reform. Among their many debates about changing health care, the single most essential reform reducing the cost of health care itself - is typically underemphasized or even entirely absent from the discussion. Yet that is the fundamental avenue to broader access to care, lower insurance premiums, and ultimately better health.

Instead, legislators continue to erroneously focus on increasing the percentage of people with health insurance. But the disregarded reality is that health insurance premiums are only a secondary manifestation of other factors, chiefly the cost of medical care and to a lesser extent the regulatory environment for insurance.

In a misguided attempt to insure more people at all cost, the Affordable Care Act (aka ObamaCare) doles out over $1 trillion of tax revenues to subsidize premiums and adds numerous regulations and taxes, many of which counterproductively increase premiums. At this point, there should be no need to debate the harmful impacts of this approach insurance premiums skyrocket; insurers withdraw from the marketplace; and for those with coverage, doctor and hospital choices narrow dramatically.

What is baffling is that todays Republican-dominated House and Senate both continue to focus on making insurance more affordable, mainly through cash to consumers in refundable tax credits. By ignoring the root problem, such policies artificially prop up insurance premiums for coverage that often minimizes out-of-pocket payment. This shields medical care providers from competing on price. While emerging GOP proposals rightfully strip back some of the ACAs harmful regulations and taxes, far more emphasis is urgently needed on reducing medical care costs, the core cause underlying high insurance costs.

It is also particularly disturbing that our own elected leaders ignore what we all should have already learned from those countries boasting about a fully insured population under socialized medicine. In those countries with government insurance for all, epitomized by the shameful NHS of the United Kingdom, their insured patients have far worse access to care for even the sickest patients. There are unconscionable delays for those needing urgent treatment for already diagnosed cancer (17% wait more than two months) and already recommended brain surgery (17% wait more than 18 weeks); delayed access to important medications; and factually worse outcomes from serious diseases like cancer, heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, and diabetes compared to Americans pre-ObamaCare. Indeed, having insurance is not at all synonymous with having access to quality medical care.

Lowering the cost of medical care itself, though, is fraught with peril. It must be achieved without harming patients. That means without jeopardizing quality, restricting access, or inhibiting critical innovation of American medical care that - based on peer-reviewed data throughout the leading medical journals (see, for example, reviews such as In Excellent Health ) - is the standard of excellence for the world.

We first must create an environment where consumers care about prices and receive benefit from seeking value. But is it even realistic to suggest that people could shop for medical care and seek value, as Americans do for virtually every other good and service?

Some medical care, including emergency care, obviously does not lend itself to price consideration. But emergency care represents only six percent of health care expenditures.

Among privately insured adults under age 65, almost 60 percent of all health expenditures is for elective outpatient care; only 20 percent is spent on inpatient care and 21 percent on medications. Likewise, 60 percent of Medicaid money is spent for outpatient care. Even in the elderly, almost 40 percent of expenses are for outpatient care. Of the top one percent of spenders, the group responsible for more than 25 percent of all health spending at an average of $100,000 per person per year, a full 45 percent of care is also outpatient. Outpatient health care services dominate Americas health spending, and these are amenable to value-based decisions.

To fully leverage consumer power on health care prices, consumers must have an expanded role in directly paying for their care. Higher deductible insurance plans (HDHPs) are vehicles to position patients as direct payers for a higher proportion of their medical care. These plans are most effective when combined with large health savings accounts. When people have a reason to shop for value - when they have growing savings to protect in HSAs - the cost of care comes down without harmful impact on health. When paired with HSAs, spending of those with HDHPs decreased at least 15% annually in a March 2015 study. More than one-third of the savings by enrollees in such coverage reflected value-based decision-making by consumers. Cheaper, limited mandate, high deductible coverage; markedly expanded HSAs; and targeted tax incentives to expand their use are key to reducing medical care prices.

Leveraging the power of seniors, the biggest users of health care, is also important. The expected tripling of health expenses for a 65-year-old by 2030 projected by HealthView makes HSAs even more relevant, particularly since todays seniors with their longer lifespan need to save money for decades, not years, of future health care.

In addition, reforms must eliminate the artificial constraints on the supply of medical care. Although less publicized, almost two-thirds of the 2025 projected doctor shortage of 124,000 will be in specialists, not primary care. Medical school graduation numbers have stagnated for almost 40 years. Severe protectionist residency training program restrictions have been in place for decades. And archaic non-reciprocal licensing by states unnecessarily limits specialist patient care, especially as telemedicine proliferates. These anti-consumer practices need to be open to public scrutiny and abolished.

Primary care specifically could be far less costly with immediate modernization. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants can provide the vast majority of routine primary care, including flu shots, blood pressure monitoring, and prescription renewals. In a 2011 review, 88 percent of visits to retail clinics involved relatively simple care, 3040 percent cheaper than at physician offices and about 80 percentcheaper than at emergency departments. These clinics can potentially save hundreds of millions of dollars per year with high patient satisfaction. We need to simplify credentialing requirements for such clinics, and states should remove outmoded scope-of-practice limits on nurse practitioners and physician assistants.

The primary goal of health reform should be to reduce the costs of medical care, not to increase the number of insurance holders. Beyond regulatory reform and tax repeal, specific mechanisms to reduce the prices of health care without harming access, quality, or innovation have been proven effective, and they should be the focus of health care reform. Everything else follows.

Scott W. Atlas is the David and Joan Traitel Senior Fellow at Stanfords Hoover Institution and the author of Restoring Quality Health Care: A Six Point Plan for Comprehensive Reform at Lower Cost.

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Health care and health insurance are not the same thing - the fundamental disconnect in health care reform - Fox News

McConnell: Senate will stick with working on health care bill – USA TODAY

USA Today Network Morgan Watkins, The (Louisville) Courier-Journal Published 10:36 p.m. ET June 30, 2017 | Updated 10:40 p.m. ET June 30, 2017

Sen. Mitch McConnell slams the Democrats' efforts to preserve Obamacare during the Hardin County GOP's Lincoln Day Dinner. Sam Upshaw Jr./Courier-Journal/USA TODAY Network

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks during a fundraising event at the State Theater in Elizabethtown, Ky on Friday evening. June 30, 2017(Photo: Alton Strupp/CJ)

LOUISVILLE Although his conservative comrades in the Senate are still butting heads over a controversial health care bill, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky was optimistic about the potential for compromise Friday evening.

President Trump tweeted Friday that congressional Republicans should consider repealing the Affordable Care Act popularly known as Obamacare first and then work on a replacement. Kentucky's other Republican senator, Rand Paul, has expressed support for that idea.

But McConnell told reporters Friday that he and his colleagues in the Senate will stick to working on their current health care bill, which would repeal and replace the ACA simultaneously.

Speaking to a friendly crowd in Elizabethtown during a fundraiser for the Republican Party of Hardin County, McConnell compared his current predicament to holding a Rubiks cube.

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The Senate majority leader said hes trying to figure out how to twist the dials to get enough votes to pass this proposal, which is expected to slash hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicaid over time and reduce some of the taxes paid by wealthy Americans.

Rolling back the ACA was a signature issue for Republicans during last year's election, and some conservative lawmakers have suggested shortening or eliminating Congresss recess in August so theyll have more time to work on that as well as other priorities.

McConnell didnt offer a definitive opinion about that idea Friday evening. Instead, he said, Well see what we need to do.

During his speech to a roomful of Hardin County Republicans on Friday, McConnell said he is confident that comprehensive tax reform another key goal for the GOP will happen.

Despite the deep divisions between Republicans and Democrats, McConnell said he sees infrastructure as an area where their interests may intersect. But Democrats aren't interested in comprehensive tax reform, he said. Instead, they'd prefer "raising taxes on people who are productive."

Sen. Mitch McConnell said wrestling with an Obamacare repeal is like working with a Rubik's Cube during the Hardin County GOP's Lincoln Day Dinner. Sam Upshaw Jr./Courier-Journal/USA TODAY Network

America is a land of second opportunities, he said. There are only two ways to fail in this country: Give up or die.

Do we want it to be a country in which risk-taking is applauded and failure is possible? Yes, he said. Failure has to be possible or you cant have success.

As McConnell spoke at the Historic State Theater in Elizabethtown on Friday evening, a small but passionate group of people concerned about the future of health care in America gathered across the street.

Approximately 85 people stoodtogether, chanting and waving anti-McConnell signs as passers-by occasionally honked their horns in solidarity or yelled "Trump" as they drove by.

Abbey Sorrells, 22,of Elizabethtown, who works at a rape crisis center, said she came to the rally with some friends who are part of a group called the Heartland Progressive Alliance.

Healthcare not Wealthcare, read the sign she carried.

I just feel like the health care bills really for the 1%, she said.

Audrey Morrison, 68, of Louisville drove down to Elizabethtown to join her daughter, who interns for Planned Parenthood.

I hope that we persist, she said, because the Republican plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act isnt a done deal yet.

Morrison said she didnt expectthe rally to change McConnells mind.

I think hes been bought and sold. I dont think anythings going to make a difference to him, she said.

However, she still hopes Kentucky voters, whove repeatedly elected McConnell to the Senate for the past 30 years, will finally turn against him and call for change.

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