President Trump Is Returning to Iowa, Where He May Find Remorseful Independent Voters – TIME

(DES MOINES, Iowa) Iowa independents who helped Donald Trump win the presidency see last year's tough-talking candidate as a thin-skinned chief executive and wish he'd show more grace.

Unaffiliated voters make up the largest percentage of the electorate in the Midwest state that backed Trump in 2016, after lifting Democrat Barack Obama to the White House in party caucuses and two straight elections. Ahead of Trump's visit to Iowa on Wednesday several independents who voted for Trump expressed frustration with the President.

It's not just his famous tweetstorms. It's what they represent: a president distracted by investigations into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and a court battle over his executive order barring refugees from majority-Muslim countries at the expense of tangible health care legislation and new tax policy.

"He's so sidetracked," said Chris Hungerford, a 47-year-old home-business owner from Marshalltown. "He gets off track on things he should just let go."

And when he does spout off, he appears to lack constraint, said Scott Scherer, a 48-year-old chiropractor from Guttenberg, in northeast Iowa.

"Engage your brain before you engage your mouth," Scherer advised, especially on matters pertaining to investigations. "Shut up. Just shut up, and let the investigation run its course."

Scherer said he would vote again for Trump, but pauses a long time before declining to answer when asked if he approves of the job the president is doing.

Cody Marsh isn't sure about voting for Trump a second time. The 32-year-old power-line technician from Tabor, in western Iowa, says, "It's 50-50."

"People don't take him seriously," he said.

Unaffiliated, or "no party" voters as they are known in Iowa, make up 36 percent of the electorate, compared with 33 percent who register Republican and 31 percent registered Democrat. Self-identified independents in Iowa voted for Trump over Democrat Hillary Clinton by a 13-percentage-point margin last year, according to exit polls conducted for the Associated Press and television networks

They helped him capture 51.8 percent of the overall vote against Clinton.

Nationally, exit polls showed independents tilted toward Trump over Clinton by about a 4-percentage-point margin in November, but an AP-NORC poll conducted in June found that about two-thirds of them disapprove of how he's handling his job as president.

In North Carolina, Republican pollster Paul Shumaker says he has seen internal polling that has warning signs for his state, where Trump prevailed last year. Independent voters are becoming frustrated with Trump, especially for failing so far to deliver on long-promised household economic issues such as health care, said Shumaker, an adviser to Republican Sen. Richard Burr.

Inaction on health care and any notable decline in the economy will hurt Trump's ability to improve his numbers with independents, with broad implications for the midterm elections next year, Shumaker said. At stake in 2018 will be majority control of the House. A favorable map and more Democrats up for re-election make the GOP more likely to add to its numbers in the Senate.

"How the president and members of Congress move forward and address the kitchen-table issues facing the American voters will determine the outcome of the 2018 elections," he said.

In Iowa on Wednesday, Trump will be rallying his Republican base in Cedar Rapids.

Earlier this month, Vice President Mike Pence attended Republican Sen. Joni Ernst's annual fundraiser, where he talked about job growth and low unemployment since the start of the year, although economists see much of it as a continuation of Obama policies.

Trump has only been in office five months.

It's a message the Republican establishment is clinging to, especially those looking ahead to 2018.

Gov. Kim Reynolds, installed last month to succeed new U.S. Ambassador to China Terry Branstad, said last week of Iowa voters: "I think they are confident that President Trump and this administration are doing the job that they said that they would do, going out there and making America great again."

But Trump has to worry about people like Richard Sternberg, a 68-year-old retired high school guidance counselor from Roland, in central Iowa, who voted for Trump. But is Sternberg satisfied? "Not completely."

He is bothered by Trump's proposed cut to vocational education, an economic lift for some in rural areas.

"We, especially in Iowa, need those two-year technically trained people," Sternberg said.

More broadly, Trump needs to act more "presidential," he said.

"Trump speaks before he thinks," Sternberg said. "He doesn't seem to realize what the president says in the form of direct communication or Twitter carries great weight and can be misconstrued if not carefully crafted."

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President Trump Is Returning to Iowa, Where He May Find Remorseful Independent Voters - TIME

Trump spikes the ball after Georgia election win – Politico

Rattled by Donald Trumps tumultuous first five months in office, the Republican Party breathed a collective sigh of relief Tuesday after a much-needed special election victory in Georgia. The White House also exhaled: After Republican Karen Handel was declared the victor in a race billed as a referendum on the new president, Trump fired off a series of celebratory tweets.

Well, the Special Elections are over and those that want to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN are 5 and O! All the Fake News, all the money spent = 0, wrote Trump.

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In the run-up to the Georgia race, Republicans worried that a loss could be the harbinger of a 2018 train-wreck. There were fears that a Handel loss could ripple across the political landscape, spurring GOP retirements, dampening candidate recruitment, and turbo-charging Democrats looking to bounce back following the soul-crushing 2016 election.

The contest, the most expensive House race ever, was viewed by many as the first major strength test of the Democratic resistance to Trump. In the final days before the election, several White House aides said they didnt know if Handel would be able to fend off Jon Ossoff, a 30-year-old filmmaker and former congressional aide who became a cause celebre among liberals nationwide.

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But she did, and the presidents supporters viewed the outcome as proof that Trump continues to connect with voters.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, an informal Trump adviser and a past occupant of the Georgia seat, contended that the handful of special elections this year revealed that voters were tuning out the Russia scandal that has consumed Washington. He argued that the political establishment, much as it did during the 2016 campaign, continued to underestimate the connection many Americans felt with the president.

He may be resonating with people in a way that some dont get, Gingrich said. Maybe theres a whole new conversation taking place in a way that none of us understand.

It would be a mistake to say Republicans are in the clear. With Trump confronting an expanding federal probe into his 2016 campaigns ties to Russia, party strategists concede they are still facing serious headwinds in their efforts to retain the House majority in 2018.

And Tuesdays results werent entirely rosy. Handels win disguised the fact that the party only narrowly held onto a Republican-oriented Georgia seat, and barely won another race Tuesday for a conservative South Carolina seat that few thought would be competitive. Both outcomes could easily be interpreted as warning signs for the GOP.

Still, given the national spotlight on Georgia, Republicans breathed easier after the race was called for Handel.

The Democrats threw the kitchen sink at this deal and theyve come up empty again. They havent won an election all year, and they probably wont until November in New Jersey, said Scott Reed, the chief political strategist at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which spent more than $1 million on ads boosting Handel.

On Tuesday evening, Trump, who previously traveled to Georgia to appear with the Republican candidate, weighed in with four tweets highlighting Handels performance and one congratulating Ralph Norman in South Carolina. A text message sent to Trump supporters noted that Democrats lose again (0-4). Total disarray. The MAGA Mandate is stronger than ever.

Handels win could have immediate implications for her party, possibly helping to dissuade veteran lawmakers some of whom have been spooked by Trumps underwater approval ratings - from foregoing reelection bids. Hoping to nudge along Republican retirements, Democrats have been recruiting challengers to longtime GOP House members like California Reps. Ed Royce and Dana Rohrabacher and New Jersey Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen, who havent faced serious challenges in recent years but are likely to in 2018. The approach is similar to the one Republicans used with success in 2010, the year the GOP recaptured the House majority.

The Georgia outcome could also give a boost to Republican recruiting, which stalled as the political environment worsened for the party. Several blue-chip GOP recruits, including Wisconsin Rep. Sean Duffy and Indiana Rep. Susan Brooks, had announced they would not be running for Senate choosing to run for reelection to safe House seats rather than pursue Senate seats in an uncertain environment. Now, as Republicans try to convince other House members to run for Senate, including Fred Upton in Michigan and Luke Messer in Indiana, the Georgia outcome could offer reassurance.

For Republicans confronting the hurdle of running in areas where Trump is unpopular, Handels campaign seemed to offer a template for how to run. In a suburban Atlanta district filled with upper income and highly educated voters, Handel managed to win over Republican voters who had cooled on Trump. In days leading up to the election, one GOP poll found that Trumps approval rating in the district had plummeted to 45 percent.

Handel maneuvered carefully, declaring her support for the president without fully embracing him. She had Trump and Vice President Mike Pence to the district, but chose to hold private fundraisers with them rather than public rallies. On the trail, Handel said that she wouldnt be an extension of the White House.

Rather than talking about Trump, Handel focused her fire on Ossoff, casting him as a liberal and tying him to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a reviled figure in conservative districts like the one he was running in.

But the biggest source of relief for Republicans was the revelation that the partys base hasnt abandoned the president.

While Trump has failed to follow through on many of his big-ticket campaign promises, polling continues to show that most bedrock Republicans approve of the job he is doing. That dynamic played out in Georgia where, confronting a mammoth Democratic turnout operation and an energized liberal base, GOP voters turned out in droves.

Whats still unclear is whether the Georgia win will encourage GOP lawmakers to get behind Trumps troubled legislative agenda. The president has vowed to pass health care and tax reform and an infrastructure package yet all three face high hurdles on Capitol Hill.

As they digested Tuesdays results, Republicans cautioned that electoral peril still lies ahead they pointed out that special elections like the one in Georgia are often poor indicators of the political environment.

In the leadup to the 2010 election, for example, Republicans fell short in a special election for an upstate New York congressional seat the party had held since Reconstruction. At the time, operatives and analysts duly issued doomsday predictions. When the midterms arrived, Republicans captured 63 seats and the House majority.

Republicans continue to see plenty of reason for concern. They note that historical trends arent favorable, either. During a closed-door meeting with lawmakers last week, House Speaker Paul Ryan reminded the GOP conference that midterms are traditionally unkind for the party in power during a presidents first term.

I dont care who the Republican president is, we know the history of midterm elections, said Vin Weber, a former GOP congressman and longtime party strategist. Regardless of the president, were going to see a substantially more energized Democratic base next year. The question is, do we lose the majority or come close to losing the majority?

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Trump spikes the ball after Georgia election win - Politico

President Trump Expected to Reveal This Week If Secret Comey Tapes Exist – Fortune

President Donald Trump is expected to make an announcement in the coming days on whether any recordings exist of his private conversations with former FBI Director James Comey, potentially bringing to an end one of the central mysteries of the ongoing probe that has consumed his White House .

White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Tuesday that he expects an announcement "this week" on the possibility of tapes. The president fired Comey in May and then tweeted that the lawman, who was overseeing the investigation into possible contacts between Trump's campaign and Russian officials, "better hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press."

Trump and his aides have since then steadfastly refused to clarify that extraordinary if ambiguous warning. The president last month told reporters that "I'll tell you about that maybe sometime in the near future" but offered no hints as to whether the tapes exists, except saying that some journalists would "be very disappointed" to find out the answer.

The House intelligence committee has asked White House counsel Don McGahn to provide an answer to the question about tapes by Friday. Under a post-Watergate law, the Presidential Records Act, recordings made by presidents belong to the people and can eventually be made public. Destroying them would be a crime.

Comey testified before the Senate that Trump asked for his loyalty and asked for him to drop the probe into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. Some have raised the possibility that Trump's request constituted obstruction of justice, but the president has yet to produce the tapes that could theoretically clear his name.

The investigation was originally launched to look into Russia's meddling in the 2016 election. Trump has at times cast doubt on that conclusion, and Spicer said Tuesday that he has yet to discuss with the president whether he believes that Moscow was behind the election interference.

"I have not sat down and talked to him about that specific thing," Spicer said.

America's top intelligence officials have concluded that Russia undoubtedly interfered in America's 2016 presidential campaign. Characterizing it as the "high-confidence judgment of the entire intelligence community," Comey testified that there is no doubt that the Russians meddled "with "purpose," ''sophistication" and technology. Trump, meanwhile, has dismissed investigations into the meddling and potential collusion with his campaign associates as a "witch hunt."

Robert Mueller, the special counsel now overseeing the investigation, met Tuesday with the leaders of the House Intelligence committee. Reps. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, and Adam Schiff, D-Calif., issued a brief statement confirming the meeting but providing no details about their discussion.

Mueller is slated to meet Wednesday with top members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, including the chairman, GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, and the top Democrat, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California. He'll also meet with Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I.

One reason for the Capitol Hill meetings is to ensure there is no conflict between Mueller's probe and the work of the congressional committees.

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President Trump Expected to Reveal This Week If Secret Comey Tapes Exist - Fortune

James Corden Sends 297 Copies Of ‘Philadelphia’ To Donald Trump – HuffPost

James Cordenblasted President Donald TrumpTuesday for ignoring the HIV/AIDS crisis but hes come up with a humorous solution to educate him.

Following a report that six members of thePresidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDSresigned in protestagainst Trumps lack of policies to fight the epidemic, Corden urged Trump to readjust his attitude.

Corden became serious as he pointed out that nearly 60 percent of the more than 1.1 million people in the U.S. who live with HIV and AIDS are unable to access lifesaving medications, and questioned whether the president cared.

Then The Late Late Show host changed gears, surmising that this was perhaps because Trump has never seen the acclaimed 1993 AIDS drama Philadelphiastarring Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington. The film enlightened Corden, and he thinks it could have the same effect on the president.

So Cordens staff, at first rebuffed by the White House, sent 297 copies of Philadelphia to Trumps Mar-a-Lagoin Florida.

We hope that if Trump watches Philadelphia, hell understand two things: One, Tom Hanks definitely deserved that Oscar, Corden said. And number two, we hope that hell realize that HIV and AIDS is something that you or any president of the United States or any world leader for that matter can never afford to ignore.

Watch the segment above and hope that Trump takes the time to watch this memorable character below.

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James Corden Sends 297 Copies Of 'Philadelphia' To Donald Trump - HuffPost

Qatar et al.: Donald Trump as a Saudi lobbyist – Salon

Donald Trump is stooping to new lows. He evidently has no reservations about making himself, the sitting U.S. President, into the Saudis chief global lobbyist.

That Trump bought the Saudi line about the Qataris funding terrorism is very telling.

Both countries, respectively, support Wahhabist or Salafist insurgencies in various places, but that is not what the Saudis find objectionable.

The Saudis try to distract from their own actions

There is no question about the Saudis longstanding willingness to fund and arm specific terrorist groups as needed, mainly to advance allied autocracies and send young hotheads abroad, often to the West.

The Qataris pursue a different approach in the terrorism financing business.

They tend to make longer-term investments in other religious or ideological factions. And yes, these do pose an existential threat to Saudi interests.

For that reason, it is fully comprehensible why the Saudis would want to direct attention to Qatar.

What is not comprehensible is that President Trump has fallen for that very transparent act of distraction.

Trump worries about regime change too

At the same time, it is important to recognize that to be horrified by regime change is something that Donald Trump immediately gets and a fear he instinctively shars with the Saudis. No wonder he regards them as soulmates.

As is the case with the Saudi monarchy itself, Trumps entire political being is based on the conviction that anybody who dares stand in his way in any fashion is guilty of lse majest, if not worse.

That is why he had no qualms about taking sides in the bataille royale.

Europe as collateral damage: So what?

Trump also had no problems with the fact that the fallout of an actual Saudi-Qatar war is bound to go far beyond the Gulf region and the wider Middle East. It would definitely, quite literally, hit European capitals and cities.

As Mr. Trump has made plain in his pompous appearance at NATO headquarters, he is not one to worry much about the U.S.s NATO allies.

In his disturbed mind, he might even think that the Europeans who still owe him billions of dollars basically deserve a hit. So why worry? Any avenue taken to make them come to their senses is welcome.

The fallout from absolving the Saudis

Trumps sycophantic support notwithstanding, the real damage of his words is not just that Trump absolves the Saudis of any of their own responsibility for terror.

What is widely overlooked in that regard is that Trumps full-scale blessing has effectively killed the however hesitant move toward domestic reform in Saudi Arabia.

Given the deteriorating economic regime, the Saudi royals were getting ready to reform themselves, not least because, under President Obama, they no longer had reflexive U.S. backing.

Now that the Saudis arent just back in favor in Washington, but get to run Trumps table, who in Riyadh is to worry about reforms other than cosmetic ones?

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Qatar et al.: Donald Trump as a Saudi lobbyist - Salon

The Donald Trump hiring crisis means America’s got no talent – USA TODAY

Brian Klaas, Opinion contributor 3:18 a.m. ET June 21, 2017

President Trump in the Cabinet Room on June 13, 2017.(Photo: Susan Walsh, AP)

The United States government is suffering from a new phenomenon: the Trump Brain Drain. For the first time in memory, the American government is havingdifficulty recruitingthe best and the brightest at thehighest levelsof power.

Qualified public servants areturning downplum government jobs because they don't want to be exposed to the risks of serving in President Trump'sWhite House. West Wing power-brokers are lawyering up (even Trumps lawyer hashireda lawyer). A special counsel is reportedly investigating the president himself for possibly obstructing justice.

The reputational risk of working for Trumps administration is enormous, and it's not just because of the endless spiralingscandals. There's alsothe now routineTrumpian ritual of sacrificing his staff on his altar of self-sabotage.We all know the drill: Sean Spicer or Sarah Huckabee Sanders or another sacrificial lamb offers up a flimsy lie to protect Trump. (He fired Comey because he was toohard on HillaryClinton!) Trump repays the favor by contradicting his staff almost immediately on Twitter or TV. (I fired him because of the Russia thing.)

Yet working for this president has become a bewildering exercise in trying to figure out whats worse: paying exorbitant legal fees, being tossed under the proverbial bus by your boss, orrisking becoming a national punchline (we almost feel sorry for you, Sean). The loyalty that Trump infamously demands from subordinates is clearly not a two-way street.

At least there are job perks. Build your CV with the unique experience of being subpoenaed by Congress. Practice your leader worship skills as youre forced to proclaimyour fawning admiration for Trump during a public Cabinet meeting. And if those dont entice you, who wouldnt jump at the chance to work for a beleaguered president withrecord low approval ratings, a hot temper, and a stalled legislative agenda?

The United States is less safe and government is less effective when top talent must think twice about serving the president.

It's a witch hunt for Trump, whos acting like a witch

Conservatives should love the Trump presidency, but he makes it hard

Less than five months into the Trump presidency, there is a record number of vacancies. Of 558 key presidential appointments requiring Senate confirmation, only43 have beenfilled(less than 8% of the total). And before you echo the frequently tweeted but incorrect Trump accusation that this is due to Democrat "OBSTRUCTIONISTS, remember that405of the 558 positionsdont even have a nominee yet. This snails pace of selecting peoplewhich involves getting them to agree to serveis unprecedented in modern history.

When the post of FBI director opened up (through, shall we say, questionable means), at least fivededicated public servants publicly withdrew from consideration.Several seasoned veterans pulled themselves out of therunningto replace Michael Flynn as national security adviser. EvenKellyanne Conways husbandwithdrewfrom consideration for a powerful Justice Department role (perhaps he had learned some alternative factslife inside the Trump administration from a well-placed counselor?).

The Trump Brain Drain is sapping talent beyond the White House, too. Six cyber security executives toldReutersthat Trumps caustic attacks on intelligence agencies had provoked a marked surge in skilled hackers and cyber talent leaving government agencies to pursue careers in the private sector.Even lawyers, who used to flock to Trump like moths to a litigious orange flame, are now staying away. Four different law firmsdeclinedto represent Trump not only because they feared that Trump wont listen to their legal advice but also because working with Trump wouldkill recruitmentfor their firms the trickle-down economics of the Trump Brain Drain in action.

Of course, there are many, many excellent and experienced public servants in the Trump administration (Defense Secretary James Mattis, National Security AdviserH.R. McMasterand Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao spring to mind). But Trumps top day-to-day advisers are no dream team. We must call an unqualified spade an unqualified spade.

POLICING THE USA:Alook atrace, justice, media

Donald Trump's business ties explain a lot of his dictator worship

There's hardly anyone on Trump's senior staff who hasushered abill through Congress. White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, the former Republican Party chairman, has never held elective officeand came to his job withvirtually no experienceat the federal level. Two of Trumps top advisers now some of the most influential people in the world arewoefully unqualified relatives. And former Breitbart chief Steve Bannon has as much business being in the Oval Office as Russian ambassadorSergey Kislyak, yet here we are.

It gets worse. You could start a joke by saying A neurosurgeon and a wedding planner walked into a bar but there's a real-world punchline. Last week, Trumpappointedhis familyswedding planner to run federal housingin New York. Her boss, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, is an impressive neurosurgeon, but its hard to see how operating on brains is a relevant qualification for his post.

In other words, Trumps hiring decisions are compounding the recruitment brain drain because many people he selects are unprepared for their roles. Unless he changes his ways, his presidency will continue to languish from the one-two punch of his own incompetence and the governments inability to recruit top talent.

Brian Klaas is a fellow in comparative politics at the London School of Economics and Political Science and author ofThe Despot's Accomplice: How the West is Aiding and Abetting the Decline of Democracy. Follow him on Twitter@brianklaas.

You can readdiverse opinions from ourBoard of Contributorsand other writers ontheOpinion front page,on Twitter@USATOpinionand in our dailyOpinion newsletter.To submit a letter, comment or column, check oursubmission guidelines.

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The Donald Trump hiring crisis means America's got no talent - USA TODAY

Medical bankruptcies – WEAR

(WEAR)

This number might surprise you: Personal bankruptcy filings are down 50-percent over the past six years. Some of that decline is due to the Affordable Care Act. Consumer Reports is out with a new analysis that looks at how the ACA may have helped millions of Americans from taking the extreme step of filing for bankruptcy.

Courts never ask people why they are filing, but many bankruptcy and legal experts Consumer Reports spoke with agree on this: Medical bills had been a leading cause of personal bankruptcy before health insurance expanded under the ACA. Medical bills are often unexpected and large and unavoidable, so people who dont have insurance can run up massive debt in a relatively short period of time.

Since 2010, personal bankruptcy filings have dropped by about 50%. Experts say some of that is due to an improved economy and laws passed in 2005 that make it harder to declare bankruptcy. But nearly all the experts CR interviewed also point to expanded health insurance as a major driver of the decline.

CRs reporting found that the ACAs provisions for mandatory coverage of pre-existing conditions and against annual and lifetime payout caps has helped consumers especially Americans with serious medical issues avoid bankruptcy.

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Medical bankruptcies - WEAR

These 14 Stores May Be on the Brink of Bankruptcy | NBC Southern … – NBC Southern California

Fourteen retailers are on the brink of bankruptcy, according to a recent report from Moodys Investor Service, putting thousands at risk of losing their jobs.

As more people turn to online shopping, traditional brick-and-mortar retailers are at risk of having to close their doors. While 1.5 million jobs have been created in retail since 2010, most of these are on the web, according to the National Retail Federation.

"We believe the kind of competitive challenges that have weighed on the recent earnings performance of the bigger retailers such as Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy, and Target will have potentially devastating ripple effects for the smaller, more challenged retailers the next several quarters," the Moody's report stated. "That doesn't mean all of retail is under siege, however. Distressed issuers make up around 15 percent of the 148 rated issuers in our industry group. In other words, the majority of the industry remains fundamentally healthy.

Take a look at these stores that could be on the brink of bankruptcy.

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These 14 Stores May Be on the Brink of Bankruptcy | NBC Southern ... - NBC Southern California

5 Questions: Treatment options exist for mesothelioma – Las Vegas Review-Journal

We asked Dr. Raja Flores, an expert in the study and treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma, about this aggressive form of lung cancer. Flores is based at Mt. Sinai in New York City and over the years has published information for mesothelioma patients and caregivers at the Mesothelioma Cancer Alliance mesothelioma.com the national online resource center focused on raising awareness of the dangers of asbestos and information on related cancers.

Review-Journal: What is mesothelioma and what causes it?

Flores: Mesothelioma is a rare, aggressive disease that affects the linings of the lungs and abdomen. The vast majority of mesothelioma cases are caused by exposure to asbestos and can take anywhere from 20 to 50 years to show symptoms. After rigid asbestos fibers are inhaled, they can get stuck in the the lining of the lung, where inflammation and tumors can develop.

What percentage of people who are diagnosed with mesothelioma die from it?

I dont like to use percentages because those figures are for comparing patient populations. The percentages of people who are diagnosed vary depending on what studies you look at. Unfortunately, a majority of mesothelioma patients will die of their disease. However, there are many treatment options to improve and extend the length of ones life. Each patient should be looked at as an individual with different prognostic factors that will influence his or her survival.

What treatment options are available?

Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for mesothelioma, followed by chemotherapy or radiation or both depending on the intraoperative findings. Palliative treatment is recommended to ease symptoms and improve ones quality of life. New experimental treatments like immunotherapy and clinical trials are being worked on every day in hopes of finding a cure.

What resources are available for patients and caregivers in Las Vegas?

Las Vegas has a great cancer center (Nevada Comprehensive Cancer Center) with one of the best medical oncologists for mesothelioma, Dr. Nicholas Vogelzang. Also, patients are encouraged to travel to other mesothelioma specialists in New York or Boston for second opinions. Each individual is unique, and the best options are different for each person.

What suggestions do you have for people who might have had asbestos exposure in the past?

My suggestion would be to obtain a low dose screening CT scan to look for obvious signs of asbestos exposure in the lungs. Exposure to asbestos not only causes mesothelioma, but asbestos-related lung cancer and progressive asbestosis fibrosis that can lead to these illnesses mentioned and serious health concerns.

If you are a medical professional who would like to be considered for this feature, send your name, a brief explanation of your expertise and your contact information to health@reviewjournal.com.

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5 Questions: Treatment options exist for mesothelioma - Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nurse Explains Mesothelioma Staging – MesotheliomaHelp.org (blog)

Staging of a persons cancer is done for many different reasons. According to the American Cancer Society, staging is defined as: The process of finding out how much cancer is in the persons body and where it is located. Its how the doctor determines the stage of a persons cancer. For mesothelioma, there have been various different staging systems put in place over the years at different institutions. This sometimes leads to confusion regarding the language, a patients prognosis, and for scientists hoping to speak a common language when collaborating.

Most cancers are staged using the TNM classification system. T stands for the primary tumor, N stands for the lymph nodes- whether the cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes, M stands for metastasis, whether the cancer has spread to distant parts of the body. Each of these three classifications- T, N, M is then broken down with more descriptive information. Once the extent of the T, N, M classifications have been determined, they are then assigned an overall stage. There are also other factors that affect the stage, including the grade- how the cells look under the microscope, cell type, location, and tumor marker levels. Once cancer is staged it always remains the same. If you are diagnosed with Stage 2 cancer, it will always be referred to as Stage 2 even if it goes into remission, or metastasizes to other organs.

For many years, mesothelioma experts did not have a defined staging system exclusively to describe mesothelioma. A mesothelioma expert once said mesothelioma is so rare just having the diagnosis of mesothelioma, at an earlier point in time, would have gottenyou into a mesothelioma clinical trial.

As testimony to progress, a group led by Dr. Valerie Rusch of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, in conjunction with the International Mesothelioma Interest Group, and other organizations has defined a new staging system for pleural mesothelioma. The importance of mesothelioma staging system is uniformity in describing the disease. The effect of various treatment options can be studied and perfected for the different types of pleural mesothelioma.

More evidence that the treatment of mesothelioma is being advanced on many fronts and further work towards a potential cure!

If you have questions about your mesothelioma treatment or any aspect of your mesothelioma care, please email me at LHyde-Barrett@mesotheliomahelp.net.

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Nurse Explains Mesothelioma Staging - MesotheliomaHelp.org (blog)

Mesothelioma Compensation Center Now Urges an Electric Utility Worker or Electrician with Mesothelioma to Aim High … – PR Newswire (press release)

NEW YORK, June 21, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --The Mesothelioma Compensation Center is now urging an electrical worker or any electrician who has recently been diagnosed with mesothelioma to call anytime at 800-714-0303 for access to two or three of the nation's most skilled, experienced, and capable mesothelioma attorneys. The group's number one goal for people with mesothelioma is to get the best possible financial compensation. This might explain why they are so passionate about a person with mesothelioma hiring the absolute top mesothelioma attorneys in the nation. http://MesotheliomaCompensationCenter.Com

An electrician or electrical worker could have had exposure to asbestos by having contact with the following products:

The Mesothelioma Compensation Center says, "The reason the financial compensation for an electrical worker or electrician can be so significant is because prior to 1980 the individual most likely had non-stop exposure to asbestos. The only work groups that could have had equal or more exposure to asbestos would be a US Navy Veteran, shipyard worker, plumber, insulator, or welder.

"If we had one vital tip for an electrical worker or electrician with mesothelioma it would be call us at 800-714-0303 to ensure you have the nation's top mesothelioma attorneys working on your financial claim.

"We recommend the nation's most skilled and qualified mesothelioma attorneys because these experts produce the best financial compensation results for their clients nationwide. We want people with mesothelioma to get the best compensation, but to do so they will need to team up with the nation's top mesothelioma attorneys as we would like to discuss." http://MesotheliomaCompensationCenter.Com

For a listing of most major electrical utility companies in the United States please refer to the following website: http://www.bestenergynews.com/solar/utility_co/utility_companies.php.

The Mesothelioma Compensation Center specializes in assisting specific types of people who have been diagnosed with mesothelioma. The Center's top priority is assisting US Navy Veterans, shipyard workers, oil refinery workers, public-utility workers, chemical plant workers, manufacturing workers,power plant workers,plumbers, welders,electricians, millwrights, pipefitters, boiler technicians, machinists, nuclear power plant workers, hydro-electric workers or oil and gas field production workers who have been diagnosed with this rare cancer caused by asbestos exposure. In most instances a diagnosed person with mesothelioma was exposed to asbestos in the 1950's, 1960's, 1970's, or 1980's. http://MesotheliomaCompensationCenter.Com

According to the CDC the states indicated with the highest incidence of mesotheliomainclude Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland,New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia,Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Louisiana, Washington, and Oregon. However, an electrician or electric utility worker with mesothelioma could live in any state including California, New York, Florida,Texas,Illinois,Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia,Alabama, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada,Utah, Arizona, Idaho, or Alaska.

The average age for a diagnosed victim of mesothelioma is about72 years old. This year between 2500, and 3000 US citizens will be diagnosed with mesothelioma. US Navy Veterans comprise about one-third of all people who will be diagnosed with mesothelioma each year in the United States.

The Mesothelioma Compensation Center says, "Before you hire a law firm to advance a mesothelioma compensation claim for yourself or a family member please call us anytime at 800-714-0303 to ensure you are talking directly to the nation's very best mesothelioma attorneys." http://MesotheliomaCompensationCenter.Com

For more information about mesothelioma please refer to the National Institutes of Health's web site related to this rare form of cancer: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mesothelioma.html

Contact: Michael Thomas 8007140303 163147@email4pr.com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mesothelioma-compensation-center-now-urges-an-electric-utility-worker-or-electrician-with-mesothelioma-to-aim-high-for-compensation-and-to-call-about-specific-lawyers-to-help-300477338.html

SOURCE Mesothelioma Compensation Center

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Mesothelioma Compensation Center Now Urges an Electric Utility Worker or Electrician with Mesothelioma to Aim High ... - PR Newswire (press release)

Can a Breath Test Diagnose Mesothelioma in the Early Stages? – Asbestos.com

Much of mesothelioma research centers on identifying new and noninvasive biomarkers for earlier detection of the asbestos-related cancer.

Progress has been made in finding biomarkers in blood and pleural effusions, but researchers in Belgium now believe the next breakthrough in early diagnosis for mesothelioma cancer may be a breath test.

Researchers at Ghent University Hospital and Antwerp University Hospital recently highlighted the potential of breath analysis, called breathomics, as a noninvasive screening tool for malignant pleural mesothelioma. The Oncotarget medical journal published the study in May.

Breath tests or electronic noses are not a new innovation, but the science behind them especially as an early detection device for cancer is improving.

The tool uses spectrometric, chromatographic and sensor techniques to identify organic molecules in breath as biomarkers. There are still challenges, including improving effectiveness and ease-of-use, lowering test-related costs and shortening the time for achieving an analytical result.

There is also a need for more clinical studies with larger patient cohorts.

But breath tests seem to be the most promising avenue for early detection. Current mesothelioma screening tools generally detect the cancer in advance stages.

We believe a breathomics-based biomarker approach should be further explored to improve the follow-up and management of asbestos exposed individuals, lead researcher Sabrina Lagniau wrote in the study. We aim to develop breath analysis as a point-of-care biomarker test that meets these requirements.

Mesothelioma, much like other cancers, is best treated in the early stage.

But the rarity of the cancer, along with symptoms that mirror less serious conditions, makes early detection difficult. Most diagnoses occur after symptoms become severe, when the cancer has progressed so much that treatments usually focus on improving a patients quality of life rather than substantially extending it.

In the recent study, Lagniau and her team highlight shortcomings of blood and fluid based biomarkers.

Studies addressing the accuracy in mesothelioma patients versus healthy controls are redundant, as are studies restricted to pleural effusions, as the latter are obtained in patients who have already a high likelihood of [malignant pleural mesothelioma], Lagniau wrote.

Lagniaus team believes the focus should turn to people with a history of asbestos exposure with no signs of asbestos-related health conditions.

High-risk individuals can be monitored with breathomics, and if they are later diagnosed with mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, researchers can better determine the biological changes that occurred.

While this wont prevent the development of mesothelioma, it could potentially lead to detection before symptoms appear, when the cancer is localized and more life-extending treatment options are possible.

It could revolutionize the diagnostic process, which now relies on imaging tests and biopsies.

Cancer is a disease that affects people in every layer of society and we, scientists, have the obligation to use our knowledge on human health in exploring new ways to improve cancer management, Lagniau wrote. Therefore, future studies should focus on the at-risk population, consisting of people being [occupationally] exposed to asbestos with a latency time of at least 20 years after exposure.

There is still no gold standard for breath analysis in regard to early detection of malignancies.

Currently, the best option is gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), known for its high sensitivity and ability to identify and quantify individual compounds.

But downsides of GC-MS, as Lagniau points out, include its relative cost, requirement for expert operation and the amount of time it takes to get a result.

Other breath analysis tools such as electronic noses (e-noses) or selected ion flow tube mass spectrometry allow for real-time results, but also come with shortcomings, including decreased sensitivity.

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) may be used as a potential diagnostic biomarker to screen mesothelioma and other cancers. The Belgian research team believes if cancer-specific VOCs can be identified, e-noses can be refined to detect them.

With this strategy, the specificity of an e-nose will be higher than that of the standard, more complex technologies, Lagniau wrote.

There is still plenty of work to be done, but Lagniau feels research is moving in the right direction.

Research that focuses on breath biomarkers in [malignant pleural mesothelioma] is in its early days, but the few studies that have been performed show promising results.

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Can a Breath Test Diagnose Mesothelioma in the Early Stages? - Asbestos.com

The Turkish Gandhi’s long march – Washington Post

By Can Dundar By Can Dundar June 21 at 12:01 AM

Can Dundar is the former editor in chief of the leading Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet. He is now living in exile.

When Kemal Kilicdaroglu was elected as head of Turkeys leading opposition party in 2010, he quickly earned the nickname of Gandhi. The moniker had more to do with his faint physical resemblance to the Indian independence leader than with any similarities in revolutionary credentials or background.

Kilicdaroglu, who long headed Turkeys Social Security Agency, is a career civil servant who only entered politics after retirement. As leader of the Republican Peoples Party (CHP), he has proved to be more of a bureaucrat than a rabble-rouser. Critics assail him for his passivity and his failure to capitalize on the mood of the streets. With Kilicdaroglu as party chief, the social-democratic CHP has not managed to rise above 25 percent of the vote. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan always seems to succeed in keeping the opposition on its back foot.

But now the CHP leaders patience appears to have run out. On June 14, his deputy, Enis Berberoglu, was sentenced to 25 years in jail on espionage charges. Kilicdaroglu responded rather unexpectedly. He announced that he and his supporters were embarking on a protest march from Ankara to Istanbul, a distance of 280 miles. The whole trip will take just under a month.

Berberoglu, a journalist by profession, has long been a target of Erdogans ire. A few years ago, the authorities went after Berberoglu for allegedly providing me and my newspaper with footage documenting the covert shipment of weapons to radical Islamist rebels in Syria by the Turkish National Intelligence Agency. I was sentenced to five years and 10 months for publishing this footage in Cumhuriyet, where I was editor in chief. (I was released based on a ruling of the Constitutional Court and later left the country.)

It is the Turkish equivalent of Americas Iran-Contra Affair. And just like Ronald Reagan back in the 1980s, Erdogan initially denied having anything to do with illegal arms sales, though he soon had little choice but to tacitly acknowledge the veracity of the report. But the resemblance ends there. In the United States, the main perpetrators ultimately faced criminal responsibility. In Turkey, it was the people who exposed the scandal who ended up going to jail.

For Kilicdaroglu, Berberoglus arrest was a turning point. He could either stay silent and wait for his turn to be arrested or he could take to the streets and join the active opposition. He chose the latter. Democracy is slipping away, he declared. This is the last straw! Accompanied by a large crowd, he set off on the long walk to Istanbul on June 15.

Building on the Gandhi analogy, some are already comparing Kilicdaroglus protest with the Indian leaders famous Salt March of 1930, when he and his followers walked 240 miles to the sea coast to protest the British colonial monopoly on the production and sale of salt. Kilicdaroglu and the crowd with him are expected to walk five to six hours a day for the next 28 days, ending their march at the prison where Berberoglu is being held.

According to official figures, the government has investigated 150,000 people since last July, when an attempted coup touched off an extraordinary wave of repression. By now, 50,000 Turks have been arrested, and 70,000 civil servants have been sacked. Almost all have been accused of terrorism or complicity with the coup plotters, but its clear that their real crime has simply been opposition to the government. Erdogan has even referred to the coup as a blessing from God that gave him the chance to punish all his opponents.

Fully half of Turks belong to this opposition, as shown by the constitutional referendum earlier this year. Erdogan staged the vote in order to obtain approval for a raft of changes that would vastly expand his powers as president. Yet 50 percent of those who went to the polls ultimately said no.

Nonetheless, that has merely led Erdogan to intensify the crackdown. He has accelerated the wave of arrests, announced the extension of emergency measures and moved to silence the last voices of opposition in the media.

Now everyone is waiting to see how Erdogan will react. So far hes restricted himself to vague threats of a crackdown on the march. Youth groups that sometimes act as unofficial paramilitaries have vowed to block the marchers when they enter Istanbul.

Gandhis Salt March led in the short term to the arrest of 60,000 participants, though the British were later forced to release them all. In Turkey, the number of prisoners has doubled in the past five years. Now there are 200,000 of them, and all 372 prisons in the country are filled to capacity. Rather than slowing down, the government is busily building new jails.

Well soon see whether Kilicdaroglus march, which is supported by the other leftist parties, will trigger a new wave of arrests or succeed in imposing limits on the governments campaign of oppression.

As such, this new protest will not only test Erdogans power, but it will also define the political future of his main rival.

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The Turkish Gandhi's long march - Washington Post

NUDE SUMMER OF LOVE CONTINUES – Bay Area Indymedia

Nude Summer of Love Parade took place on May 20 and will continue this Sunday, June 25th at the Gay Pride Parade. We had 60 nude participants and the Dutch Public Broadcast TV filmed the parade for a documentary about the Summer of Love that will air in Holland this summer. We will continue the celebration of the hippie revolution and body freedom at the Gay Pride Parade this Sunday. Video 7 min

Body Freedom Lovers will continue the Nude Summer of Love celebration this Sunday, June 25th as a contingent at the Gay Pride Parade.

More details about the upcoming Gay Pride contingent:

NUDE SUMMER OF LOVE CONTINGENT AT PRIDE PARADE – SUNDAY, JUNE 25TH, 2017

On this 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love we are proud to march nude in the Gay Pride Parade as the Body Freedom Lovers. We proudly celebrate our bodies as well as the spirit of the 60s that brought us profound spiritual awakenings as well as sexual liberation and body freedom. Just as the gay/bisexual/transgender folks fight for their freedom of choice to do what they please with their own bodies so do we join the same fight to do what we please with our bodies. Not only do we have the right to make love to our lovers in any way we want, we also have the right to dress or undress the way we want. We have no reason to be ashamed of our God-given bodies, just as we have no reason to be ashamed of our God-given desires. We all have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Thats why we demand that the government keep its laws off our bodies! We demand the repeal of the nudity ban that criminalizes the human body in its most natural form. The nudity ban is not only unconstitutional for it violates our freedom of expression, not only does it go against the Declaration of Independence for it deprives us of liberty in our pursuit of happiness. The nudity ban goes against the most basic common sense and against nature, our very own human nature.

We will march in solidarity with those who have fought and who continue fighting for our freedom to be ourselves, our freedom to love ourselves and to love others in the ways we choose without being subjected to government tyranny.

The Summer of Love continues as we continue to celebrate love and freedom, as we continue to protest against government oppression, as we stand up for our basic right to be human.

SPEECH AT NUDE SUMMER OF LOVE PARADE BY GYPSY TAUB:

https://vimeo.com/221857048

Dear body freedom lovers,

our Nude Parade is dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love!

The hippie movement was born here, in San Francisco. It sent such powerful ripples of love throughout our whole planet that it changed the world forever.

It brought us a spiritual awakening of unprecedented proportions, which in turn lead to a powerful peace movement, sexual liberation, body freedom, womens rights, civil rights, animal rights, environmental protections and other grass roots movements on all fronts of human existence.

It brought us spiritual and emotional liberation through music, theater, dance and other forms of art. It brought us a much stronger and more real sense of community, communion with nature, unity of the heart and spirit that brought together nations across the world. We were invited to think and feel globally, to wake up from the nightmare of corporate greed and exploitation, to heal our emotional wounds and to find our true core of power in order to create a brilliant future that will unfold throughout generations to come.

The Summer of Love began in the 60s but it never ended. It continues to transform humanity in new ways that keep evolving and seducing more and more people into love, compassion and world peace.

Powerful sacred plant healers such as marijuana, magic mushrooms, peyote, ayahuasca and sacred plant derivatives such as LSD, DMT and MDMA (ecstasy) played a huge role in our expansion of consciousness and our emotional healing.

So who are the hippies and what is the hippie movement really about?

There is no one answer to this question, neither is it humanly possible to truly understand it.

The only thing I can do is share my personal experience.

I was introduced to the Grateful Dead scene about 25 years ago. My life was never the same again. It was my childhood dream come true. It was a mystical adventure with beautiful loving people, it was a journey of discovery, an irresistible invitation to follow your bliss, an inspiration to begin again, to truly live life to the fullest. It was a breath of fresh air, a storm of freedom and liberation, a waterfall of passion, an ocean of love.

Enchanted by the beautiful music, seduced by the warm smiles, the loving hugs and the endless words of affection, I felt like a baby cradled in the arms of the Goddess who always guided me when I felt lost, who gave me hope when I felt despair, who healed my wounds when I was in pain.

I didnt know where my hippie adventure was going to lead me, I just followed with all my heart. It kept growing and changing, opening more and more new doors. Just when I thought I had an idea of what it was all about, it showed me more, as the horizons became greater and greater until I realized that the journey was endless.

How can I possibly put into words? It is impossible. Words but barely scratch the surface.

The hippie movement is about choosing love over fear, its an endless adventure of self-discovery and personal as well as global healing, healing that just gets deeper and deeper as it transforms your life over and over again, as it makes your soul blossom, your spirit soar, as your hopes and dreams manifest. The world pauses in awe of its own beauty, as the song of the Universe seduces us all into a blissful passionate dance, a life changing love making ceremony as our hearts beat to its drum in unison. Although there is a lot of pain and fear in this world it is important to remember that it is the darkest before the dawn. Our world is in a spiritual transition of unprecedented proportions. The pain that we feel is the birthing pain as we give birth to a new world, a new humanity, a new future.

We are honored to be part of this movement. We celebrate the spark of consciousness that spread like wild fire and woke us up. The world will never be the same. We will never be the same. Lets shed our clothes. lets shed our inhibitions, our self-doubt and self-hate. Lets wake up to the love, to the flame that burns so hot within our hearts. Lets show the world that we as the human race have nothing to be ashamed of and nothing to fear. Lets spread freedom and personal liberation! Lets demonstrate that we are not afraid to be vulnerable, that we are not afraid to be free.

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NUDE SUMMER OF LOVE CONTINUES - Bay Area Indymedia

In UN speech, Hiroji Yamashiro calls out Japanese government human rights violations in Okinawa – Ryukyushimpo

Okinawa Peace Movement Center Director Hiroji Yamashiro waiting to make his statement before the U.S. Human Rights Council shortly after 5 p.m. on June 15 (shortly after 12 a.m. on June 16 JST) in Geneva, Switzerland

June 16, 2017 Ryukyu Shimpo Ryota Shimabukuro reports from Geneva

On the afternoon of June 15 (around midnight JST), Okinawa Peace Movement Center Director Hiroji Yamashiro gave a statement before the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland. Mr. Yamashiro was arrested while engaging in protest against the construction of helipads in the U.S. militarys Northern Training Area in Okinawa and held in detention for five months before being released on bail. Mr. Yamashiro stated, I was forced to confess and give up the protest activity. This is a clear human rights violation by the authorities.

He then stated, However, I and Okinawan people will never bow to oppression. I demand the government of Japan to stop human rights violations and respect the Okinawan peoples will against the [new military base construction].

Mr. Yamashiro was invited to give a statement by the U.N. NGO International Movement Against All Forms of Discrimination (IMADR). Yamashiro stated, In the protest, I was arrested for a minor offense followed by two retroactive arrests. I was detained for five months. I was not allowed to see anyone except lawyers, not even my family.

He additionally explained that Citizens are protestingthe government of Japan dispatched large police forces in Okinawa to oppress and violently remove those people, referring to the protests against the helipad construction.

Regarding Mr. Hirojis detainment, a report submitted to the U.N. Human Rights Council by U.N. Special Rapporteur David Kaye on June 12 referred to the construction of a new base in Henoko, Nago and the construction of helipads in the Northern Training Area and indicated that disproportionate penalties were imposed.

Mr. Yamashiro also participated in a symposium held at the United Nations building in Geneva on June 16.

(English translation by T&CT and Sandi Aritza)

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In UN speech, Hiroji Yamashiro calls out Japanese government human rights violations in Okinawa - Ryukyushimpo

‘Lack of support’ for gambling addicts in Wales – BBC News


BBC News
'Lack of support' for gambling addicts in Wales
BBC News
Gambling addiction has become a "public health problem" in Wales, according to the organiser of a conference being held to help tackle the issue. The Beat the Odds initiative will bring together specialists, politicians and addicts in Cardiff on Wednesday.
Gambling addict: 'No rehab for me because I'm a woman'BBC News
Welsh Government Does Not Support Adequately Players with Problem Gambling BehaviourCasino Guardian

all 4 news articles »

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'Lack of support' for gambling addicts in Wales - BBC News

Ban on new video gambling licenses extended – IllinoisHomePage.net

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) -- City leaders say they're going to hold their cards for a while before choosing whether to allow more gambling.

If you're looking to open a new video gambling parlor, you can't do it in Champaign. A few months ago, the city council voted to stop issuing new licenses for places to have video machines. On Tuesday night, they decided to extend that ban.

The majority of the city council voted in favor of extending the new license ban, but for different reasons. Still, most of them were asking the same question: Does the city really need more of those places?

Jim's Place, Lacey's Place, Boochie's Place, and Joobie's. Whatever the owner decides to call them, they're here to stay.

But if you're going to play, you've got to pay.

"14 million dollars was lost on video gambling machines in the City of Champaign last year," said council member Greg Stock, "14 million dollars."

"This gaming thing..it's just not doing something to our community that is great," said council member Clarissa Fourman, "The amount of gaming cafes-- it's a lot."

Illinois Gaming Board records show there are almost 60 places to play in Champaign. Those popped up between the time it was legalized in 2012, and when the city imposed the moratorium this past February. That was set to expire in a few weeks, so the council had a decision to make.

"Even though we like to think that we can make these decisions better than the average American, it's not our job to make these decisions on behalf of the citizens of Champaign," said council member Tom Bruno.

Leaders don't seem to have a solid consensus on whether these places are good or bad, or whether the results they produce can be ugly. City staff members say the community doesn't seem to mind.

"We have not heard a lot of negative feedback about the moratorium," says deputy liquor commissioner Matt Roeschley, "Maybe somewhat surprisingly, but there hasn't been a lot of community input on that."

Mayor Deb Feinen says the freeze is only so they have time to come up with a policy on what (if anything) should be done.

"All we're doing is having a moratorium so we don't have an increase of this type of business while we decide whether or not we're going to regulate or what the appropriate regulation is," said Feinen.

The license moratorium has now been extended until January. The city will use the time to decide whether a policy change is needed.

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Ban on new video gambling licenses extended - IllinoisHomePage.net

Expanded gambling is a safe bet for Pennsylvania legislators … – PGH City Paper

Ill admit it. I feel a bit hypocritical when I write about the problems with expanded gambling in Pennsylvania. Why? Because I freaking love to gamble.

Ive played poker since I was 9 years old; I love the game. I play fantasy sports baseball and football and at one time I even played fantasy golf. Las Vegas is absolutely one of my most favorite places on this planet, and an annual trip there is something I look forward to.

However, I have a different feeling when it comes to expanded gambling in states like Pennsylvania. Places where casinos are located near residential neighborhoods. Places where the dreams of striking it rich can be played out 10 minutes from your house. Places where its too easy to spend your paycheck on the dream of big bucks. Its become too easy to lose your money, and thats what I have a problem with.

And now, facing a nearly $3 billion budget shortfall, our state legislators are about to make it even easier to lose your cash in the name of revenue generation. Expanded-gambling bills have already passed in the state house and the senate. The bills would allow you to play casino games like poker, blackjack and slots, lottery games and fantasy sports from the comfort of your home. Additionally, one version of the bill would allow bars and restaurants to install their own video-gambling terminals like slots and video poker, and would permit gambling at airports. If this gambling bill passes, you wont have to make the onerous three-minute trip to the North Side to gamble. Christ, you wont have to even put on pants in order to lose your shirt.

None of these gambling options are good, but the worst in my experience are the terminals in bars and restaurants. Increased access is the obvious problem, but in places like West Virginia, expanded gambling like this over the years hasnt just resulted in a casino on every corner; its resulted in several on every block. I wrote about this issue in my very first City Paper cover story, in 2005. Slot machines were put into every business imaginable, from car washes to ice-cream shops.

During that time, I met a Weirton, W.Va., activist named Jody Kraina. She was fighting for reforms to the states gambling laws. She got nowhere fast. But she knew what she was talking about.

Look at Pennsylvania, says Kraina, spokesperson for Weirton-based RAGE (Residents Against Gambling Establishments). Theyre sitting where West Virginia sat years ago, allowing slots to help save racetracks. But they need to look very closely at where we are now. Once you allow those things in here, its Katie bar the door.

It took 12 years, but her premonition came true. Also, I wonder whether Kraina even realized the heights that expanded and online gambling would reach in cash-strapped states. Gambling halls in Pennsylvania once seemed like they would never materialize, but in 2004 in-state gambling was approved. Also since then, a lot of legislators have changed their tunes on gambling. Even Self-Righteous Mike Turzai is coming around, and he was staunchly against the first round of gambling legalization. Maybe hes had an honest change of heart or maybe his former chief of staff Krystjan Callahan, who is now a lobbyist for the gambling industry, has. Do with that information what you will.

But the reality is, the state needs revenue from somewhere, and Republicans are against raising traditional taxes to take the burden off Pennsylvanias hard-working families. Instead, theyre going to impose huge taxes on expanded gambling, and charge the suppliers of that service. Except theyre not.

Researchers at the University of Buffalo have done extensive research on the impact that gambling has on lower-income individuals. They began studying the issue when the Buffalo Creek Casino was being planned for construction in an area with high poverty rates. Among the findings: Populations already facing high poverty rates and inequalities, such as African Americans, have higher rates of problem gambling. A 1994 study of Wisconsin gamblers found that 53.7 percent of casino gamblers had an income below $30,000 per year, with 37 percent below $20,000 per year and 13.7 percent below $10,000 per year.

So what does that mean? It means, in essence, that expanded gambling is a tax. Its a tax on our poorest citizens. But this isnt the kind of tax that is likely to keep Pennsylvanias long-time legislators from getting re-elected. Its not a larger sales tax or an income tax, so most people arent going to make this an issue come election time. Expanded gambling is a safe bet for our state legislators; theyre essentially playing with what is known in casino parlance as house money. Its the rest of us who are going to crap out.

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Expanded gambling is a safe bet for Pennsylvania legislators ... - PGH City Paper

Erie City Council seeks gambling funds promise – GoErie.com

Pending state legislation carves out $500,000 annually for the city of Erie from county gambling revenues to fund emergency services and infrastructure projects.

Pending state legislation that would give Erie County government sole authorization over the distribution of the multimillion-dollar local share of gambling money alsocarves out $500,000 annually for the city of Erie to fund emergency services and infrastructure projects.

Erie City Council is poised to ask State Sen. Dan Laughlin to make sure that yearly funding becomes a reality.

City Council on Wednesday night could waive agenda rules and vote on a resolution urging Laughlin, of Millcreek Township, R-49th Dist., and the Pennsylvania Senate "to retain the $500,000 for city capital projects or emergency services in the gaming legislation," according to Councilman Bob Merski, who plans to sponsor the resolution.

Merski said council members want members of the state Senate to make sure the money earmarked for the city remains in the final version of the bill.House Bill 271 was approved by the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on June 7 by a 102-89 vote.

The bill currently sits in a state Senate committee.

"As goes the city, so goes the region, so it makes sense to support capital projects and emergency services in the city," Merski said. "The region's lead assets are all in the city, and this is recognition that city taxpayers have been carrying the weight of these expenses for the whole region.

City Council meets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Bagnoni Council Chambers at City Hall, 626 State St.

Kevin Flowers can be reached at 870-1693 or by email. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/ETNflowers.

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Erie City Council seeks gambling funds promise - GoErie.com

Champaign council extends video-gambling moratorium till Jan. 23 – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

CHAMPAIGN There won't be any new video-gambling terminals in Champaign for the rest of 2017 after the city council voted Tuesday to extend a moratorium on video gambling until Jan. 23.

The temporary moratorium on installing and operating the terminals in newly licensed liquor-serving establishments was passed Feb. 21. It was first extended April 11 and would have expired July 18.

Video gambling is regulated in Champaign through liquor licenses instead of a specific video-gambling license, which Urbana uses.

Mayor Deb Feinen reiterated Tuesday that the moratorium's purpose is to allow time to discuss and analyze additional regulations on video gambling that aren't used by Champaign now.

Out of the 60 licensed video-gambling locations in Champaign, according to Illinois Gaming Board data, 28 are bars/restaurants, 17 are gaming-specific cafes/parlors and the rest are bingo halls/fraternal establishments, gas stations, bowling alleys, music venues, hotels or veterans' establishments.

"In a strip mall, there are two (gambling) cafes right next to each other," said council member Clarissa Nickerson Fourman. "This gaming thing is just not doing something great for our community, but I don't want to get rid of all of it."

City attorney Fred Stavins noted how the city previously limited places that sell alcohol with adult entertainment, which Fourman said is a similar situation.

Only council member Tom Bruno voted in opposition, which he has done on this issue before.

"Is it our place to say 'Now we have enough video-gaming outlets'?" Bruno asked. "We're stepping in to say 'We know better than you,' but if that's the only test, we ought to say 'You can't sell cigarettes or unhealthy food.'"

Council member Greg Stock said video gambling and other businesses like those offering payday and title loans are becoming predatory. He noted that he's only received positive feedback on the moratorium.

"Most of these gambling cafes we're talking about aren't locally owned," Stock said. "$14 million was lost from Champaign gambling last year, and most of that money didn't stay in the community."

Deputy City Manager Matt Roeschley said there will be a council meeting this fall to go over possible regulation methods.

If the council picks a method around then, he said there will be enough time to prepare it before the moratorium expires.

"I think council was pretty clear that the majority is interested in regulating video gaming in some way which we don't do now," Roeschley said, noting special concern over the gambling parlors/cafes.

"We are currently at cap," Feinen said. "If a bar or tavern owner wanted to come to Champaign, there is not a (liquor) license to be had ... so maybe we should have a gaming license."

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Champaign council extends video-gambling moratorium till Jan. 23 - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette