Fordham Won’t Pull the Plug on Pro-Euthanasia Efforts – National Catholic Register (blog)

Keating Hall at Fordham University (Doug Olson, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Panoramio and Wikimedia Commons)

Blogs | Jun. 21, 2017

Intentional euthanasia, whatever its forms or motives, is murder. It is gravely contrary to the dignity of the human person and to the respect due to the living God, his Creator. (CCC 2324)

Why is a supposedly Catholic university pushing assisted suicide? That's what some are asking Fordham University in New York. Last week I joined agroup opposed to assisted suicide outside the school. Assisted suicide/euthanasia has become a very hot debate in New York State (the so called Medical Aid in Dying Act) yet few really understand what legalization would actually mean.

According to its web site, Fordham has hosted at least four workshopsfor student creditin collaboration with the pro-euthanasia group End of Life Choices New York(EOLCNY) in justthe past year:

1.Being Mortal Documentary and Discussion(September 6, 2016) by EOLCNY and Fordham University, School of Social Work

2.How to Die in Oregon:Screening and discussion of NY Medical Aid in Dying Act (October 18, 2016) by Department of Sociology and Anthropology/Compassion & ChoicesLaurie Leonard, LMSW, Executive Director,EOLCNY

3. Choice in Dying: Current Legal, Policy and Ethical Issues(February 25, 2017) Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service

4.Palliative Art: Using the Arts to Improve Care at the End of Life(June 7, 2017) by EOLCNYFordham University, School of Social Work

EOLCNY is backing the Medical Aid in Dying Act currently being pushed in New York. The law allows terminally ill patients to request medication from a doctor to kill themselves. EOLCNY is a previous affiliate of Compassion & Choices (formerly the Hemlock Society). EOLCNY became independent of Compassion & Choices that same year courtesy of a $300,000 grant from the billionaire globalist George Soross Open Society Foundations.

The group'smission states clearly, We advocate to legalize medical aid in dying in New York through litigation or by legislation. EOLCNY has initiated a lawsuit which is currently making its way through the system. We seek a ruling to clarify that a mentally competent, terminally ill patient has the right to obtain medicine by prescription that he or she could ingest to achieve a peaceful death.

David Leven, executive director emeritus and senior consultant for EOCNY, and a regular guest lecturer for Fordham Graduate School of Social Service, gave the Fordham presentation in February. He's said publicly that neither the Catholic Church for any other religious group has a say in end-of-life issues, dismissing the voice of the disabilities rights community as well.

It's disturbing that a Catholic university hasn't offered a single presentation or workshop on theCatholic perspective on assisted suicide. In fact, the NY Alliance Against Assisted Suicide has offered to present, with no response. Calls to the university for comment were not returned.

Outside the university, we had dozens of interactions with students, faculty, and administrators of Fordham. Most had no idea how one-sided the euthanasia issue is being presented to students. We encountered many peopleon the street who say they support the legalization of assisted suicidebut have no idea what is actually in the Bill says and what the real-life ramifications are. Some were truly shocked to learn the facts.

I didn't either until I was clued in. It's not as simple an issue as assisted suicide advocates would have us believe.

Did you know the family of the person seeking to end his life does not have to be notified? One pro-euthanasia person I spoke to found that very surprising. She said she strongly supports assisted suicide laws so that people can check out when they want to. Actually, she didn't believe me that the family wouldn't be notified. But it's true. The pending New York law does not require the immediate family who very well might want to discuss such a drasticfataldecision with the personbe informed.

Did you know that doctors cannot opt out of participating inan intentional deathassisted suicide? Legalization requires them to either provide the lethal dose or refer to a doctor who will do so. What about their freedom of conscience? And what about a physician who knows he can cure the patient but is denied the opportunity to use his medical skills and curative treatment (along with the patient who is similarly denied such treatment)? One student I spoke to who is from Oregon described what a disaster legalization has been for his state.

Did you know the law doesn't allow for protecting a patient from any financial pressures from someone else that they end their life now? A Fordham law student I spoke with said, That's insane. Someone who'sgetting an inheritance might be urging assisted suicide, and if the pressured person is disabled, has a mental health issue, or is on medication, they could be especially vulnerable to such pressure.

Did you know that the death certificate for a person who dies by assisted suicide/euthanasia reads 'terminal illness' rather than assisted suicide? This only helps someone with murderous intentions, someone who could benefit from the person's death, as there would be no legal way to prosecute. One woman on her lunch breakhad no idea legalization would actually protect a potential murderer from 'getting away with murder.' This woman stood and chatted with us for a while, signed our petition against legalization, and helped us hand out brochures with the factsall on her way tonoonMass.

Did you know that most disability groups oppose legalizing assisted suicide/euthanasia, understanding that it discriminates against the disabled in encouraging them toend their lives? They resent being viewed only as a financial burden and not as individual people with innate dignity. A young guy passing our group in his electric wheelchair stopped to read our signs and our brochure andmade this crucial point to us.

Assisted suicide poses a threat to those with disabilities or who are in vulnerable circumstances. When assisted suicide becomes an option, pressure can be placed on these individuals to take that option. Research shows that most people who say they want to die by assisted suicide would not want to if they had sufficient love and support around them. Prescription requests from terminally ill individuals for suicide drugs are often based on fear and depression. Most cases of depression among terminally ill people can be successfully treated. Yet primary care physicians are generally not experts in diagnosing depression. Nothing in the Oregon or Washington assisted suicide laws compel doctors to refer patients for evaluation by a psychologist or psychiatrist to screen for depression or mental illness.

If assisted suicide is made legal, it quickly becomes just another form of treatment and as such, will always be the cheapest option. In an already cost-conscious healthcare environment, this is a serious concern. Oregonian Barbara Wagner was denied coverage of her cancer treatment but received a letter from the Oregon Health Plan that stated the plan would cover assisted suicide. Another Oregon resident, Randy Stroup, received an identical letter, telling him that the Oregon Health Plan would cover the cost of his assisted suicide, but would not pay for medical treatment for his prostate cancer.

One would think that even asecularuniversity would offer at leastone opposing viewto fourpresentations all with the same agenda.

There are hundredsof groups that are sincerely opposed to assisted suicide legalization, including the group I protested with, NY Alliance Against Assisted Suicide,doctors and nurses groups, pro-life groupsand disability groups, including the poignantlynamed, Not Dead Yet. Other groups that have been suggested to Fordham to present the authentic Catholic view include the Human Life Alliance and Catholic Hospice.

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Fordham Won't Pull the Plug on Pro-Euthanasia Efforts - National Catholic Register (blog)

Animal shelter holds town hall to reduce euthanasia | SavannahNow – Savannah Morning News

Calling all pet lovers.

The Effingham County animal shelter is holding a town hall meeting to discuss the possibility of working with two nonprofit groups to lower euthanasia rates.

The meeting will be at 6 p.m. Monday, June 26, in the large conference room of the county Administration Building, at 601 N. Laurel St., Springfield.

Target Zero works on best practices to help shelters lower euthanasia rates and Fix Georgia Pets helps find grants to make spay and neuter affordable.

Effingham shelter director Lorna Shelton said the groups can help with trap-neuter-release programs for cats that live on their own in the community.

Shelton has been working to try to reduce euthanasia rates at the Effingham shelter. She said she hopes people will read about the two groups on the web and come to the meeting.

This is the time for citizens to educate themselves and ask questions, Shelton said.

Target Zero helps shelters by assessing their needs and giving advice on how to decrease intake and increase live-release rates.

Organizational and fundraising assistance is included.

We serve as the business strategy consultant in all areas of shelter management, with the number one goal being to keep animals out of shelters, the groups website says.

Efforts are made to help pet owners either keep their pets or place them outside the shelter system with foster volunteers. Shelter space should be reserved for those animals with no alternative placement, cruelty/neglect cases, dangerous dogs and injured animals with no identified owner, the group says.

Target Zero helps shelters maintain accurate data. Progress is analyzed monthly.

We define a community as being at zero if it demonstrates the ability to save 90 percent or more of cats and dogs that enter its shelters, the website says.

The remaining 10 percent or less are accounted for by animals which, regardless of medical treatment, will die from illness and/or large dogs with non-rehabilitative aggression issues.

Target Zero operates on donations; no taxpayer money is involved.

For more information go to: http://www.target-zero.org and https://fixgeorgiapets.org.

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Animal shelter holds town hall to reduce euthanasia | SavannahNow - Savannah Morning News

Decriminalise victimless crimes, says Free Market Foundation – Citizen

A strong call has been made to decriminalise victimless crimes to free up law enforcement agencies to focus on situations where peoples rights and property are criminally violated.

The Free Market Foundation (FMF) is also calling for the discretionary powers of government officials that are an incentive for corruption to be restricted. The foundation also lambasted the appointment of judges on the basis they are progressive or advocate social change because that interferes with judicial independence.

The FMF described victimless crimes as those acts or omissions criminalised by government despite there being no complainant. It said victimless crimes included prostitution, some traffic offences, dealing in drugs and contravening exchange regulations. The organisation asked for those crimes to be abolished.

These are distinguished from victimisation crimes, where an individuals rights are criminally violated.

According to the FMF, pursuing victimless crimes wastes police time and prevents them from fighting real criminals.

Police resources are under pressure. One way to alleviate this is to stop wasting time and resources pursuing value-subjective crimes where no individual rights have been violated and allow the police to focus on real crimes against persons and property, the FMF said.

It believed that some traffic regulations were often arbitrary and sometimes unknown to motorists.Seeking help for drug abuse and prostitution led to innocent citizens being deemed criminals.

The FMF said incentives that lead to corruption, such as discretionary powers by officials, must be stopped by introducing strict criteria in the exercise of that power. It cited rampant abuse of discretionary powers in the granting or withholding of contracts, licences, protection, subsidies and other privileges as the causes of real or suspected corruption.

The only way to get money out of politics is to get politics out of money first, and ensure officials are bound by strict and unambiguous criteria in the exercise of their powers.

The FMF said judges appointments must not be politicised.

This is dangerous and contrary to the rule of law.

An independent judiciary is fundamental to a well-functioning democracy In this instance progressive means the judiciary must favour government action in economic and social affairs rather than emphasising individual rights.

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Decriminalise victimless crimes, says Free Market Foundation - Citizen

Selfie by Will Storr review are the young really so self-obsessed? – The Guardian

Me, myself and I students take selfies. Photograph: Alamy

Self-love is a tricky issue, and the right amount of it has always depended on perspective. I have healthy self-esteem; youre a bit full of yourself; hes a total narcissist. But in a world where you can buy a stick to hold your phone at the approved distance to take a photograph of yourself, has it all gone a bit too far? And if so, how did that happen?

Will Storrs thoughtful and engaging book comes at the idea of the human selfs relationship with itself from many angles. Early on, he stays in a Scottish monastery and decides that spending ones time this way in the hope of heavenly reward constitutes a lifetime of self-obsession, which seems fair enough at least for these monks who dont do anything useful in the community, such as brewing beer.

Then he interviews a former East End villain called John, a bouncer who later found God. Violent aggression such as Johns, it has long been said, is somehow a product of low self-esteem. Instead, psychologists tell Storr that it is commonly a response to threatened egotism. This leads us to the central strand of his book, which is that high self-esteem per se is not actually all that desirable. As one scientist remarks: Actually people with high self-esteem are pretty insufferable. Which is unfortunate if true, because for decades it was official policy to increase it for everyone.

Storrs account begins in the 1960s, with the establishment in California of the Esalen Institute, a site of therapeutic hippy self-discovery founded by devotees of humanistic psychology, which more or less says that peoples hang-ups are caused by not being true to their authentic feelings. Storr visits the institute, which is still going today, and paints a wonderfully funny picture of how he is encouraged to give his grouchiness full reign, replying to a cheery Good morning! from another attendee with the line: Another day in twat paradise. For a time, this is wonderfully liberating. This was the me I feared the most, Storr writes. He was the lonely man, the angry man, the weirdo. He was the cunt. And, in that moment, I had a terrible realisation. I was loving being the cunt. The funny thing is, though, that the fun doesnt last, and it comes as a huge relief for the author to be nice to everyone again.

The young selfie-taking woman is clearly a victim of the culture she has grown up in, and not a horrible egotist

The problem with the idea of being your authentic self, Storr decides, is that you almost certainly dont have a single authentic self. And if it is true, as Aristotle reckoned, that you become what you habitually do, then encouraging people to be assholes is simply going to produce a lot of new assholes. That is what Storr reckons happened when promoting self-esteem got onto the official political agenda in the 1980s and 90s, both in the US and the UK. More self-esteem was said to be the key to improving educational performance and curing all kinds of social ills, from drug and alcohol abuse to welfare dependency and crime. Promoting self-esteem became central to educational policy. But in fact, the only reliable correlation between higher self-esteem and better outcomes is with exam results, and it turns out that as you might expect high self-esteem follows good exam results, rather than causing them.

Storr connects the Esalen Institute to wider socioeconomic shifts through the figure of Alan Greenspan: a devotee of Ayn Rands monstrous libertarianism, he visited Esalen and then became an influential architect of US economic policy. Thus was constructed what the author calls the neoliberal self, which is our modern cultural construction of what a person should ideally be: An extroverted, slim, beautiful, individualistic, optimistic, hard-working, socially aware yet high-self-esteeming global citizen with entrepreneurial guile and a selfie camera. Whats wrong with this? Well, If its true that we hold within us all the power we need to succeed, then it naturally follows that if we fail then its our fault and our fault alone. The neoliberal story of the self and its limitless potential is thoroughly antisocial.

And what about the internet? Storr provides some telling comedy vignettes from his stay in a house full of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. One young man runs an asteroid-mining company that has not, to date, mined any asteroids. Its never been tried, this pure libertarianism that Ayn Rand was promoting, he complains to Storr. What we need is a chance to give it a go. He wants to try it in space that sounds best for everyone.

Storr also interviews a young woman who takes selfies all day and posts them to Instagram with captions such as Hypnotising, mesmerising me. Her family background conforms to the theory Storr promotes that parental overpraise constantly telling a child he or she is wonderfully special and so forth predicts higher scores on tests for narcissism. This leads him to wonder whether all the various developments he has documented have led to the creation of an entire generation of narcissists.

This is tricky terrain. The word narcissist still carries a strong tone of moral disapproval, yet the young selfie-taking woman is evidently a victim of the culture she has grown up in rather than simply a horrible egotist. Storr is sympathetic to her, but its worth pointing out that the suggestion that an entire new generation of young people is selfish in unprecedented ways is the kind of thing that the grumpy middle-aged have been saying since time immemorial. And recently, quite a few of the young seem to have found time away from selfie-taking to vote for decidedly anti-neoliberal policies. So, although Storrs cultural history is fascinating and often persuasive, his diagnosis of where we are now might well be too pessimistic. Of course, I quite fancy myself for saying so.

Selfie: How We Became So Self-Obsessed and What Its Doing to Us by Will Storr (Picador, 18.99). To order a copy for 16.14, go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min. p&p of 1.99.

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Selfie by Will Storr review are the young really so self-obsessed? - The Guardian

Goodbye Reason, Hello Violence – Townhall

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Posted: Jun 21, 2017 7:36 AM

When Richard Spencer, a controversial figure of the Alt-Right, was punched in the face during a television interview earlier this year, the Left cheered the assault, and turned video of the attack into gleeful memes. The only good thing that happened [at Donald Trumps Inauguration] was when suit-owner and neo-Nazi Richard Spencer was socked in the head by the new masked hero of Gotham, wrote Jordan Sargent at Billboard Musics Spin.com. For a movement populated by pacifists and peaceniks, the Lefts justification of the violence against Spencer came surprisingly easy.

Then, last Friday, when two protestors disrupted a disturbing production in Central Park of Shakespeares Julius Caesar in which a Trump look-alike is assassinated, the Right rushed to defend the hecklers actions. Opponents of the play also threatened other producers of Shakespeare summer plays (which were unrelated to the New York production), wishing them the worst possible life, hoped they all get sick and die and that they should be sent to ISIS to be killed with real knives. Apparently, it made no difference to conservative protestors that the offending play, disgusting as it might be, represents speech protected by the Constitution, or that only weeks before those same conservatives were criticizing U.C. Berkeley for shutting down offensive speakers.

Between two sides growing increasingly less rational in responding to all manner of political and social issues, last weeks shooting spree by a single, hate-filled individual against Republican congressmen and staff personnel came not so much as a shock as a sad commentary on the state of politics in America.

Following the attack on Republican members of Congress, pundits and politicians quickly rushed to blame hate and vitriol for the toxic environment in which an individual would be motivated to use violence for political purposes. This was the very same analysis offered to explain the attempted assassination of Democratic Congresswoman Gabby Giffords in 2011.

While there certainly is far too much incivility in todays political discourse, pinning political violence on inflammatory speech misses the forest for the trees. The root problem is not hate, or even emotion, but the abandonment of logic and reason as underpinnings of American society, which leaves only violence to fill the vacuum.

But it goes far deeper than politics. Everywhere you look today, from flying on planes, to ordering coffee, violence has supplanted rational behavior in our interpersonal dealings. A major factor underlying this phenomenon is social media, which inflates the self-importance of its users, and provides them convenient cover from having to actually explain their views on any particular issue. This process is made worse as social media encourages the use of over-the-top rhetoric, with people virtue signaling to others about how much they care, rather than using logical arguments that may be less passionate but more substantive.

Combine this phenomenon with the waning respect for constitutional rule of law, and we are left with groups on both sides of the ideological spectrum who believe their views are correct, their actions are justifiable if not moral, and that nothing else not logic, reason, or even the rule of law should stand in their way of achieving their perception of the public good. It is why Leftist Antifa thugs use fascist tactics to shut down enemies they call fascist. It is why conservatives who decry speech suppression on college campuses defend shutting down public theater performances with which they disagree. And, it is why a man would think a killing spree of congressmen is a reasonable act when letters to the editor failed to elicit the response he desired.

Philosopher and renowned writer Ayn Rand, who witnessed first-hand the brutality of Communism, understood well this terrifying balance between reason and violence. There are only two means by which men can deal with one another, wrote Rand. Guns or logic. Force or persuasion. Those who know that they cannot win by means of logic, have always resorted to guns. We saw her prescient warning come true on a practice ball field in Alexandria just one week ago. There will be more.

Either we seize this moment of recognition, and consciously do all we can to return reason to center stage in Americas culture; or we enter what promises to be a very long, dark night the darkness of which Ronald Reagan spoke in 1964, and at which time he launched the Twentieth Centurys fight for the last best hope of man on earth. Thankfully back then we had Reagan to identify the problem and lead us out of the darkness, at least for a period of time; where might todays Ronald Reagan be found is not at all clear.

Game Over: Handel Beats Ossoff In Georgia Special Election

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Goodbye Reason, Hello Violence - Townhall

Thomas Edison inspires Navicure Chief Growth Officer Kermit Randa – Atlanta Business Chronicle

Thomas Edison inspires Navicure Chief Growth Officer Kermit Randa
Atlanta Business Chronicle
Most influential book: Atlas shrugged. Fantastic book that everyone should read no matter their political perspective. We used it as mandatory reading for new hires at one of my previous companies. I recommend it to people all the time. Favorite ...

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Thomas Edison inspires Navicure Chief Growth Officer Kermit Randa - Atlanta Business Chronicle

Former Abbott and Turnbull adviser Andrew Hirst to lead Liberals – The Guardian

Tony Abbott (right) speaks with his then adviser Andrew Hirst in parliament in 2015. Hirst is to be come the next president of the Liberal party on Friday. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Former political staffer Andrew Hirst appears set to become the new federal director of the Liberal party, and is expected to be anointed to the position at the partys federal executive meeting on Friday.

Liberal sources on Wednesday confirmed Hirst was expected to get the nod to run the partys next federal campaign.

Hirst has been a longtime backroom operative, and has worked for all party leaders since the Howard era, including for both Malcolm Turnbull in opposition, and Tony Abbott in government.

In recent times he has worked for the Liberal partys preferred pollster, Crosby Textor, running the firms Canberra operation.

Andrew Bragg has been acting in the role of party director since the departure earlier this year of Tony Nutt, but some party officials regard him as lacking the requisite hands-on experience in campaigns to head up the federal organisation on a permanent basis.

A critical review of the Liberal partys last federal campaign by former party director and federal minister Andrew Robb has identified a number of problems which culminated in Malcolm Turnbull almost losing the election.

The Robb review found the government was flying blind for key periods after Tony Abbott assumed power in 2013 right through to the 2016 federal election, because the research and data analytics functions were severely under-resourced.

The review found the Liberals were outgunned on the ground by Labor and progressive activist groups, and failed to develop a strategy to neutralise or rebut key attack themes, like the so-called Mediscare campaign.

It also criticised the lack of concrete policy sitting behind the Coalitions jobs and growth campaign slogan, and a lack of attention to defining political opponents, noting that a campaign for re-election needed to be formulated during the whole parliamentary term of government.

Hirst who served in Liberal party HQ during the last federal election will take the reins at a time when the party will be looking to sharpen its field operation, analytics and its digital campaigning.

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Former Abbott and Turnbull adviser Andrew Hirst to lead Liberals - The Guardian

Can Vince Cable help the Liberal Democrats find themselves? – The Guardian

Popular mythology suggests Vince Cable regretted ruling himself out in 2007 on the grounds of age. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian

So Vince Cable has finally done what he kicked himself for years about not doing before, when he first had the chance. He is standing for the Lib Dem leadership.

Popular mythology suggests he enjoyed himself as interim leader after Menzies Campbells resignation in 2007, and regretted ruling himself out on the grounds of age.

He had managed to wound Gordon Browns premiership with a number of well-hewn quips at the dispatch box, thought up in the bath, and believed he could do it.

That was a decade ago, as the banking crisis struck. Ironically, he is now 74, and six years older than Campbell was when he stepped down because commentators were afraid he was too old.

Cable wont have a clear run. Jo Swinson, a former business minister, is believed to have been asked to run as leader by most of the 12-strong parliamentary party. But she ruled herself out on the grounds that she has a young family.

Ed Davey, the former energy secretary, might reasonably be expected to stand. So might Norman Lamb, a highly successful health minister and advocate of mental health services.

Cable has some advantages. He is immediately recognisable, and is one of the handful of politicians recognised primarily by their first name (Ken, Boris). He had a good track record on the financial crash, which he is credited with having foreseen.

Even his faux pas being secretly recorded slagging off the Murdoch press when he was supposed to be in a position of quasi-judicial impartiality seemed to rebound in his favour. He looked not just human, but also concerned.

He is thoughtful and practical and was successful as business secretary, turbo-charging a new generation of apprenticeships and the new Catapult centres, which were designed to enable the UK to innovate, and which provided the bones of a new industrial strategy.

His disadvantage is his deep reserve. He has some charisma, but none of Nick Cleggs bonhomie, which means his success depends on the public projecting their hopes on to him rather than their fears.

The real divisions within the Lib Dems are not well understood by outsiders. The old Orange Book v the Social Liberals debate was more like an insiders-v-outsiders spat in the coalition years.

The Orange Book itself was a call for a balance between different kinds of freedom a much-needed reconsideration of a sort of faux Fabianism, but in practice offering little new. But then neither were the Social Liberals.

The real division, which is only partly a result of the 1988 merger between the Liberal party and the SDP is the divide between Liberals and Social Democrats.

In those days, it was the Liberals who carried the radical torch, the so-called beards and sandals. Last week, the Liberal humorist Jonathan Calder described the men in sandals coming for Tim Farron, like the mythical men in grey suits in the Conservative party.

The truth is that beards and sandals have long since disappeared from Lib Dem conferences and it is sometimes hard to discern a Liberal radicalism that isnt just the usual watered-down Fabianism.

Cable fits awkwardly into this division. He has gone from being the great advocate of conventional trade in the partys policy debate to being an angry campaigner against free market excess.

The great divisions in the party leadership during the coalition years, during which he was urged to challenge Clegg for the leadership, grew out of a disagreement about the correct attitude to banks during the crisis.

As business secretary, Cable was locked in mortal combat with the Treasury, which wanted to minimise the discomfort for conventional banking. There were those, mainly on the SDP wing of the party, where Cable comes from, who felt that the coalition was being too soft on the semi-criminal elements of UK banking.

He was right in that argument, as it turns out. We may have a safer banking system in the UK thanks to the coalition, but we still have a largely dysfunctional one.

In that respect alone, he might deserve the party crown. But whoever wins it has to rise to this intellectual challenge, laid down for the party by the rise of Jeremy Corbyn: what is Liberalism for if it isnt a pale reflection of failed Fabianism?

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Can Vince Cable help the Liberal Democrats find themselves? - The Guardian

Liberal activist who mocked white people on Fox News suspended from teaching – TheBlaze.com

Lisa Durden had a fiery debate with Tucker Carlson defending a gathering of Black Lives Matter devotees that banned white people, but then found that she was suspended from her teaching positionat Essex County College in Newark, New Jersey. Durden blames the controversial appearance for her suspension despite she had been on other Fox News shows previous to that one.

In the combative segment TheBlaze reported previously, Durden mocked white people saying, What I say to that is boo-hoo-hoo, you white people are angry because you couldnt use your white privilege card to get invited to the Black Lives Matters all-black Memorial Day celebration! Wow!

At one point, Carlson cut the microphone to the black activist, who constantly mocked and interrupted him.

When Durden tried to return to Essex County College to teach mass communication and popular culture and two speech courses, she was told to report to Human Resources after canceling her classes.

Durden received a letter from Jeffrey Lee, vice president for academic affairs, saying that she was suspended indefinitely. Although it didnt specifically mention the appearance on the Tucker Carlson show as a reason for the dismissal, Durden says administration officials cited it when speaking to her.

According to Durden, Human Resources officials told her that someone complained that she had associated herself with the college while on the show. She says she never did that on the show, which TheBlaze posted here.

Durden has now lawyered up to challenge the suspension.

Theres got to be some other agenda, her attorneyLeslie Farber,told NJ.com. It seems to me theyre going to make up some reason. Weve got to figure out what that is and why. Is she too outspoken?

They did this to humiliate me, Durden said about the manner in which they suspended her. Essex County College publicly lynched me in front of my students.

Durden also had other appearances on Fox News previous to the Tucker Carlson debate, including Fox and Friends and The Kelly Files with Megyn Kelly.

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Liberal activist who mocked white people on Fox News suspended from teaching - TheBlaze.com

Mecklenburg commissioners approve full CMS bond request. Will voters agree? – Charlotte Observer


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Mecklenburg commissioners approve full CMS bond request. Will voters agree?
Charlotte Observer
County Commissioner Jim Puckett said Tuesday that the county's $1.6 billion budget plan was an example of conservative fiscal management. What we will ... The first CRC is under construction at the Valerie C. Woodard Center on Freedom Drive. It will ...

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Mecklenburg commissioners approve full CMS bond request. Will voters agree? - Charlotte Observer

The Fear and AWE of Techno-Utopia – HuffPost

Technology evolved our species. From simple stone tools to satellites in space and reprogramming our DNA - our tools developed us in exponential ways.

The speed of change is mind blowing. The rate of change that would happen in an age or a lifetime is now happening on a daily basis. We are launching into a future where we can create and manipulate a virtual reality, where augmented humans become super humans and where super AI become our next evolutionary stage.

But what will be the fate of Homo-Sapiens? Where do we find ourselves in this new evolutionary stage?

Is this Techno-Utopia all its cracked up to be? And is it for everyone or just for the very wealthy and privileged, like most of the distributive technologies which have been transforming our reality at light speed.

What happens to us when we have super augmented humans and AIs running around amongst old-fashioned homo sapiens?

Augmented World Expo

In early June 2017, over 4500 participants, 351 speakers, and 212 exhibitors

Met at the Santa Clara convention center in Santa Clara, CA for the 8th Augmented Worlds Expo. The exhibition hall was filled with the latest and greatest Virtual Reality experiences, Augmented Reality technology and other cutting-edge technologies and companies. The event has grown and is becoming global with the Asian Expo coming in July 2017 and the European one in October 2017.

This year, beyond its excellent production quality, great speakers and an overall great experience, I also found an industry and subculture that is coming of age in many ways. It seems that the industry and its contributors and investors are privy to the distribution and transformation they are about to unleash on humanity.

For the first time in history, the difference Tech brought forward in this conference is about to create a superhuman. These technologies will change and augment homo-sapiens and what it means to be human.

To investigate more about the state of augmented humanity, I sat down with Jay Iorio, Director of Innovation of IEEE-SA, part of IEEE - the worlds largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity.

I had a long and profound conversation with Jay, specifically focusing on ethics around the question I raised above: In a world where we have developed machines smarter, faster and more evolved than humans - how do we protect the rights of humanity?

Jay believes we have gotten to a stage where technology cannot escape the moral question. Virtual reality is promising a world without friction, but we grow through friction. With the evolution of smaller and smaller augmentative technology, we are nearing the stage of implants in our eyes and our brains.

As we talked, I thought of this great piece by Keiichi Matsuda HYPER-REALITY

For some, this could be the best thing - always on, always gamified existence. For others, including myself, this proves as a nightmare scenario where you cannot escape and already chaotic existence of urban life. Where the mind, already over saturated and bombarded by constant input, knows no rest.

My conversation with Jay went deeper into the time where we will be in this surreal new world where we are constantly on and cannot escape the digital reality:

IEEE did a Call To Action to try and build these conversations of ethics and free will into the emerging tech of AI[ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE], and AS [AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS], like an engineer building a security system within the platform, she is building.

So how do we start building Ethical interoperability built into the underlying code?

Jay Iorio is part of IEEE collaborative project called:

The General principles of this document, are reminiscent in a way to Asimovs three laws of Robotics:

In their deeper exploration they look into these sections:

In our conversation, Jay and I talked about the idea of ethics being mental or moral externalities (externalities are the consequences of economic activities by unrelated third parties. Pollution is one common externality created as a side product of industry and affects everyone).

As our civilizations become god-like and we obtain superpowers, not all of humanity will continue to move forward, and a lot will be left behind.

Humans are now in control of our evolution - but should we be?

We all need to become futurists, to understand what is coming and thus be able to assess what is happening.

We need to see how we use these technologies for good.

But we also need to remember that we can separate from our bodies and become detached minds - and is that truly where we want to go?

One of my favorite keynotes of the expo was by the brilliant Tish Shute, co-founder of Augmented Worlds Expo and Director of AR/VR at Huawei Technologies . Tish is a synthesist a corporate technology and product strategist, entrepreneur, and innovator. In her talk, Tish brought forward Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella 10 Laws for AI. These 10 laws embody a lot of what is also discussed in the ETHICALLY ALIGNED DESIGN document. These are questions and concepts that need to be raised as we are moving towards hailing a new age of intelligent machines and calling forth the singularity.

Tish brought forward the idea of XR - exponential reality. This definition wants to put together VR [Virtual Reality], MR [Mixed Reality] and AR [Augmented Reality] into a new categorization that looks at exponential humans. It seems that the most quoted person during this three days conference was Yuval Noah Harari:

Tish Shute

Yuvals quote is what it means to live in a world where people have super powers. Its not about upgrading our external tools, thats the old idea of AR - a new UI to the world. Weve moved beyond this. We arrived in times where soon we will have the abilities to upgrade the human body, augment it and the mind and merge it with our tools.

Tish Shute

And this is the three paths it may show. We at the beginning of a new era, as Yuval Calls our next evolutionary phase - Homo Deus - the God-Human.

The thread that was weaved through this event was the fear and awe of these technologies. On one side, the program kept using the tagline Super Powers to change the world but also acknowledging the dangers of these technologies. In his talk, Black Mirror / White Mirror: A Look at our Utopic and Dystopic AR Futures, Super Ventures partner and co-producer of AWE, Tom Emrich looks at both side of this conversation: from Empathy through VR immersive experiences, to super power to the people, which now focuses on helping people with disabilities but will expand to all of us: Gone will be the days where we are limited by the limitations we are born with. The only limitation will be whatever is in our pocket in terms of how much we can spend. Tom also discussed the potential of a quantum jump in spirituality and how the meme in the more spiritual world discusses the paradigm shift in human consciousness at the same time the technologist are hailing a huge shift.

On the contrary, these technologies might bring humanity to live in deep isolation, truth and reality might disintegrated and is the future of AR/VR will be one long digital interaction where we find ourselves isolated, alone and scared.

The big question is where does the Black Mirror, like the dystopian TV show brings forward, starts and where does the White Mirror starts?

My favorite talk of the event was the amazing storyteller and futurist, Jason Silva. Jason is by far, one of the more eloquent thinkers Ive seen in years.

His brand of inspirational videos on youtube, Shots of Awe aligned beautifully with the AWE of Augmented Worlds Expo. He gave an excellent talk about the evolution of humanity and how we are creating our evolutionary children with AI and augmented humans.

He reflected on how humanity has been using instruments to extend our agency, transcend and overcome our limits.

We are Living in the age of exponential change. The rate of change is beyond what our ancestors were used to in a few generations.

We used to live in a world that was linear and local and now we live in a world that global and exponential but our brains and intuition are still wired to think of change in a linear fashion.

Exponential transformation: the phones in our pockets, the tool you take for granted is a million times faster, a million smaller and a thousand times stronger than something that used to be half a building in size 40 years ago. And this is not changing - in 40 years our phones will be the size of a blood cell and will change us from within - all of this is not changing - its getting faster.

All the ways we can Steward the contents of our consciousness

Jason reflects in his talk, how Technology is the embodiment of human creativity in the world.

I got the chance to speak with Jason one on one and asked him about his view of the light and shadow of technology and what his view of technology as a real creator for change.

He reflected how technology could be demonized, not without reason but to keep a positive possibility for the future; positive vision is essential if we are to truly grow as a species.

If there is so much darkness in our collective narratives and all we are showing in our mainstream media is dystopia, his vision is of a techno-utopia where we become more human, more super, more conscious and more feeling. Jason wants to bring forward the meme of the White Mirror, the light to shine our shadows, and the optimism that we can become great evolved humans, who feel, experience and be entranced in states of bliss.

We become the architects of our future and we can envision a great one . One where we dont need to ever get down from our bliss and our highs. But in actuality, what David Pierce called, Paradise Engineering - creating pleasures and paradise beyond anything we can imagine, or as Jason said it in his newest Shots of Awe video - After the ecstasy, more Ecstasy.

In his book, Homo Deus - A brief history of tomorrow, Yuval Noah Harari, who seems to be the prophet du jour of the augmented human and Dataism movement, looks at our species, the Sapiens as it evolves into the new Homo-Deus - the God-Human.

Our species is in crisis. But some believe that a crisis is our birth. But is it a birth of a new species that, like us, Homo-Sapiens, will destroy the less technologically advanced species that came before us, as we did to the Neanderthals. Or will it be a more human than human species, one that is not only highly intelligent but conscious and empathetic beyond our wildest dreams?

One that will engineer paradise, not only for themselves but for all beings sharing this beautiful planet earth.

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The Fear and AWE of Techno-Utopia - HuffPost

The only utopia that ever worked – Idaho State Journal

So just what is a utopia?

Way back in 1516 Englands Sir Thomas More used the word to describe a mythical island with ideal economic and social conditions where everyone was educated, wise, and prosperous. In other words, an ideally perfect political and social society.

In the modern world, Peter Drucker used the word or concept to describe an ideal Christian society.

So, who was Peter Drucker? Many will remember this American management sage, consultant, and educator. He was born in Austria and grew up in a liberal, Lutheran family, later becoming one of the most astute observers of organizational and managerial effectiveness. It was Drucker The Economist magazine described as the king of the management gurus. He was a leader in his field, and he focused on the enormous social benefits that can be achieved by what he referred to as uncompensated, volunteer efforts aimed at helping others.

We were surprised to learn that it was also Peter Drucker who, after his thorough study of its inner workings, boldly declared The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as the only utopia that ever worked. Powerful, statement to be sure.

When interviewed by a Harvard-educated writer, Drucker was asked if it might be best to pencil out the word ever, to avoid stating his case too strongly. The founder of modern management took his pen and wrote ever back into the quote.

Drucker was fascinated with what he saw as the fruits of Mormonism in the multitude of effective service and educational activities successfully performed every day by hundreds of thousands of volunteers in the Church that some have described as a well-oiled machine.

With no paid clergy, its well known that the Mormons do carry out an amazingly rich variety of well-organized and effective educational and humanitarian service programs. This is true for people of all ages throughout the world. Studied simply as a functioning organization, Drucker could not get over the literally billions of dollars that would otherwise go to personnel and administrative costs now handled instead by dedicated volunteers who work daily in the trenches, so to speak.

Starting with six members led by Joseph Smith, Jr. in New York State in 1830, the Church continues to roll on with over 15 million members in 150 countries.

As converts, we are always amazed at the functioning of the priesthood leadership existent in the church to which we now belong. In our lifetime we have seen the amazing functioning of the many thousands of missionaries and volunteers, young and old, respond to acts of God, such as floods and tornados. We have witnessed immense projects in other countries such as the providing of fresh drinking water to people in remote villages, wheelchairs donated by the thousands, amazing educational opportunities made available to those less fortunate, and so much more.

Meanwhile, we always find it interesting to read and listen to others regarding their thoughts about our organization and beliefs -- such as Peter Drucker. We feel these various perspectives can help us make the effort to share especially the positive things about our various religious backgrounds. This, we feel is true -- knowing that so many dedicated churches and organizations do so much wonderful work in the world. It has been our joy to partner with several of these entities both in Africa and Polynesia, so we know whereof we speak.

Dean and Nancy Hoch are local public affairs representatives of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. dean.nancy@gmail.com.

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The only utopia that ever worked - Idaho State Journal

The truth about mayoral control under de Blasio – New York Post

A dose of exaggeration is inevitable and occasionally welcome in politics. But in making his case for keeping control of New York schools, Mayor de Blasio is crossing the line into pulp fiction.

Standing in City Halls glorious rotunda, the mayor warned that any change would invite the return of chaos and corruption. The implied subtext, that he is running a smooth, honest operation, is so obviously untrue that he might well have winked and nodded.

To add irony to insult, he was surrounded by children holding Pass mayoral control signs as he insisted, We dont want our children treated as political pawns.

Hey, pawn, smile for the camera. No, wait, dont smile. Look sad and angry.

So it goes in the cynical swamp known as New York. The mayor who presides over one of the most corrupt and incompetent administrations in memory holds a rally for children that is dominated by union members where he warns that a nonexistent utopia is at risk.

The gathering was such a soulless gesture that even the teachers union, which has benefited the most from de Blasios tenure, skipped it as unnecessary.

Unhelpful would have been more accurate, for the greatest threat to mayoral control is this mayors false claim to have been a wise steward of the power Albany granted. His many failures, and especially his ruthless bid to strangle the charter movement, explain why the state Senate is threatening to let the power expire at the end of the month.

In theory, mayoral control is a no-brainer. In fact, under this mayor, the schools are slipping backward, even as the cost skyrockets.

Failure doesnt come cheap in de Blasios New York. The schools operating budget is $24.3billion, and another $6.5 billion covers pensions and debt service, according to the Department of Education. In addition, there is a $15.5 billion capital plan through fiscal year 2019.

This gusher of city, state and federal money defeats any claim that New York doesnt invest in its children. In fact, it invests like a drunken sailor, with similar results.

Credibility is also a casualty. The mayors team uses every loophole to lower standards, including on discipline, so they can pepper the debate with happy talk about statistical improvement.

And no teacher need fear the ax, even when students graduate without being able to read their diplomas.

The lack of consequences is exactly why then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg succeeded in gaining mayoral control in 2002. If it is now failing, why should it be continued?

After all, the current mayors brand of mayoral control amounts to union control, which takes the city back to the pre-Bloomberg era. Since de Blasio isnt using the power for actual progress, why not take it away?

The answer is the real tragedy: there is no reliable place to put the power. The history of New Yorks school wars illustrates the point.

The turbulence over decentralization, which involved racial politics and rank anti-Semitism, reached its peak under Mayor John V. Lindsay, who was so embattled that he was given no seats on the ruling Board of Education. Eventually, the mayor got two of the seven seats, with the five borough presidents each getting one.

The goal was to keep local control by forcing the mayor to win over at least two borough presidents to get a majority. In reality, the unions controlled most of the borough leaders, so no chancellor could get the job or take action without union approval, which immediately doomed reform.

Mayors Ed Koch, David Dinkins and Rudy Giuliani chafed under the structure because it made them responsible for the budget without the authority to make real change. Going back to a system of fractured power, then, isnt a step forward.

The awful truth is that mayoral control is the best solution, but it wont work as long as the mayors name is de Blasio. The only hope is partial that Albany exercises greater oversight to prevent disaster, which is what Senate leader John Flanagan is offering City Hall.

Flanagan, a Long Island Republican, wants better answers on how the city spends billions of state taxpayer dollars. And he wants de Blasio to get out of the way of adding more charters. Those are reasonable demands, and the mayor is foolish to reject them.

That he does so shows his arrogance, and his hypocrisy in pretending to care about at-risk children. The best charter schools have broken through the barriers of race, class and ZIP code to show that most children can meet high standards.

Yet the mayor resists for one simple reason: As the chief errand boy of the unions, he is sworn to protect them from charter competition. Unions give him money and votes and he lets them run the schools, the results be damned.

Thats the truth, the whole truth, and everything else is fiction.

Another day, another attempted terror attack in Europe. Yesterday, it was Belgium, the day before, it was Paris.

Most intelligence analysts say that the Islamic State is stepping up individual attacks in response to the fact that American and coalition forces are shrinking the territory it controls in Iraq and Syria. The theory is that the barbarians want to inflict civilian casualties in the West to distract attention from their battlefield defeats.

Whatever the truth, the facts compel tighter restrictions on potential jihadists who are already on law enforcements radar.

Unfortunately, a lax approach still dominates. For example, officials admitted that the man who rammed a car filled with guns and gas canisters into a police van on the Champs-Elyses had a gun permit despite being on Frances terror watch list.

Why does that keep happening? Nearly every major attack, including many in the US, involve men suspected of being radicalized, yet they were free to carry out their mayhem.

Numbers are part of the problem, with Great Britain watching some 23,000 people. That takes enormous police power, with much of it certain to be wasted.

But what is the alternative? Public safety must come first or western cities will become full-time war zones.

Stop the presses! Tuesdays New York Times did not have a single front-page story accusing President Trump of doing anything dastardly, despicable or just different.

Even more stunning, there was a David Brooks column inside saying it is striking how little evidence there is that any underlying crime occurred that there was any actual collusion between the Donald Trump campaign and the Russians.

Hmmm. Inquiring minds want to know, whats up, Gray Lady?

Thats going to leave a mark.

A story headlined Skiers Hit the Slopes in Bikini Tops as Californias Endless Winter Endures a Heat Wave contained the not-so-sexy facts: Patrol workers describe dealing with brutal skin abrasions on bare-skinned skiers who fall.

Ouch!

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The truth about mayoral control under de Blasio - New York Post

Terex Trucks teams up with Porter Group to distribute ADTs in Oceania – Materials Handling World Magazine

Terex Trucks has enlisted Porter Group to support and supply its Generation 10 TA400 and TA300 articulated dump trucks in Australia and New Zealand. With new headquarters in Hamilton, New Zealand, Porter Group is expanding its operations with an enlarged fleet of machines to maintain its position as the largest dealer of rental and sales equipment for construction and associated industries in the country. The deal, which enables Terex Trucks to strengthen its footprint in the region, will focus on Porter Groups sales arm, Porter Equipment.

Porter Equipment is delighted to represent Terex Trucks across Australia and New Zealand as we share Terex Trucks commitment to the brands success in the region, says Darren Ralph, general manager for sales and marketing at Porter Group.

Ralph adds: Porter Equipment and Terex Trucks represent a formidable partnership in the supply and distribution of articulated dump trucks. Terex Trucks has a strong pedigree in design and manufacture of robust haulers, and Porter Equipment provides a distribution network in Oceania that dates back over 70 years.

Porter Group was founded in 1945 by Arthur Porter when he began winning civil engineering contracts in New Zealand. He imported equipment and parts, and established the Porter name as a well-known supplier of heavy equipment through sales and rentals.

The company now has almost 40 branches in Oceania and distributes a range of ADTs, excavators, wheel and skid steer loaders, compactors, rock crushers, screens, harvester heads, conveyors, stackers, stock-pilers, shredders, and feller bunchers.

In addition to providing the sale and rental of equipment, Porter Group has subsidiary divisions for the supply of spare parts, servicing and repairs, transport haulage, hire of cranes and access equipment, and financing options. The company serves clients in a variety of industries including construction, quarrying and mining, forestry, recycling and landfill, road-building, and agriculture.

Porter Groups new headquarters is a significant investment that includes workshops and a spare parts depot. The company also has bases in Australia, Papua New Guinea and California in the United States.

In its articulated hauler range, Terex Trucks makes three models, with payloads from 25-38 tonnes, and engine power outputs from 311-444 hp. The off-highway units are robust, reliable and offer flexible transportation of materials for a variety of applications across the harshest of environments.

Of the ADT units to be distributed by Porter Group, the highest specification model is the Gen10 TA400, which was launched in 2016 and the first of a new era of haulers from Terex Trucks. It features magnetic suction filters that reduce the risk of contaminants entering the system, improve the cleanliness of the hydraulic oil, and reduce wear as well as downtime.

Force-cooled multi-disc brakes are supported by an electronically activated exhaust brake and a six-stage modulating transmission retarder, which extend component life. And the powerful drivetrain maintains traction, even in the most difficult terrain, thanks to longitudinal and limited slip transverse differential locks. The engine and drivetrain is well matched, utilising automatic adaptive shifting and a pre-selected two-speed transfer box (drop box), providing good performance and productivity for all haul conditions.

Investments have also been made to enhance operator comfort, ensuring a smooth haul and more productive operation. Anti-vibration mounts for the engine and cabin, as well as cushioned stops on the steering cylinders have been integrated, and the cab features an improved heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system. Additionally, to ensure customers benefit from competitive aftermarket service, Terex Trucks will also provide the newly launched 2 Years / 6,000 hours warranty on all Factory-Approved parts.

Terex Trucks is excited to be part of this new journey of growth by partnering with Porter Group to serve the Australia and New Zealand markets, says Clement Cheong, sales and marketing director for the APAC region at Terex Trucks. Porter Groups latest facility investment for its new headquarters in New Zealand is a testament to the confidence it has in its business. The company is showing its customers that it has a commitment to continue providing the highest level of sales, parts, service, rental and financing solutions to the industry.

Cheong continues: With its extensive network of more than 35 branches in these countries, and its excellent reputation in the market for providing a total solution to its served segments, we are confident that Porter Group will bring the same success story to Terex Trucks.

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Terex Trucks teams up with Porter Group to distribute ADTs in Oceania - Materials Handling World Magazine

Seychelles sees 2017 GDP growth at 4.1 pct – finance minister – Times of India

NAIROBI, June 21 (Reuters) - Seychelles' economy is seen growing at 4.1 percent this year from 4.5 percent in 2016, its finance minister said, while the International Monetary Fund said performance of its tourism sector remained vulnerable to external factors.

The Indian Ocean country of 93,000 people largely depends on tourism for government revenues but has sought to promote itself as a low-tax, financial services hub.

"For 2017 the growth prospects remain favourable...as tourist arrivals continue to rise at a sustained pace, while inflation should remain subdued, on account of the stability of fuel and other commodity prices," Finance Minister Peter Larose said in a letter to the IMF released on Tuesday.

Seychelles' inflation rose to 3.18 percent year-on-year in May from -0.78 percent a month earlier.

IMF said in a separate statement that Seychelles' economy was still vulnerable to external factors that could affect its tourism sector.

"The outlook for tourist arrivals remains highly susceptible to external developments, such as weak growth in advanced and emerging market economies, weakness in the Euro, and geopolitical tensions disrupting the Middle East, Africa, and Europe," it said. (Reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Link:

Seychelles sees 2017 GDP growth at 4.1 pct - finance minister - Times of India

Seychelles as a destination of choice generates interest among travel trade at INDABA Exhibition in Durban – eTurboNews

Seychelles recorded another successful participation at INDABA 2017, as the Seychelles Tourism Board joined local trade partners to promote the destination. The three-day exhibition was held in Durban, South Africa, from May 16-18, 2017.

The INDABA trade fair continues to offer a good platform for the Seychelles Tourism Board to strengthen relationships with the trade and close new deals.

Such opportunities to network with trade partners are especially important now that the Seychelles is doubling its efforts to obtain more visitor arrivals from South Africa, which remains its main market in Africa.

INDABA is one of Africas largest tourism marketing events which provides a meeting place for the continents travel industry. The aim is to showcase the widest variety of Southern Africas best tourism products. Its also the perfect opportunity for tour operators, travel agents, online booking companies, and destination management companies to network with both existing and new clients. The event also attracts widespread media coverage.

The Seychelles Tourism Boards Regional Director for Africa & the Americas, Mr. David Germain, led the countrys delegation at this years event, which also included representatives of Berjaya Beau Vallon Bay Hotel and Air Seychelles.

Miss SeychellesAnother World 2016 Christine Barbier, who also formed part of the delegation, assisted in providing visitors at the stand with information about the destination and its various products.

Commenting on this years exhibition, Mr. Germain said he was impressed with the amount of participants and quality of business which took place at the Seychelles stand.

There is always a need for greater awareness on Seychelles in Africa, and this is one of the reasons why the Seychelles Tourism Board continues to attend the INDABA Exhibition. People want to know more, and we have to be present at key events in Africa to ensure that our presence is felt, he added.

Mr. Germain said he was particularly pleased with this years exhibition, because he felt that the trade in general showed a lot of interest in Seychelles as a destination of choice for their clients, adding that Seychelles is doing extremely well, and actually better than expected as the arrival figures continue to increase, compared to last year.

Figures from the Seychelles National Bureau of Statistics show that visitors from Africa have increased by 11 percent so far in 2017 compared to the same period in 2016.

South Africa has sent 6,017 tourists to the island nation up to June 11 of this year, which represents an increase of 22 percent when compared to last year.

Air Seychelles launched twice-weekly flights to Durban in March of this year. This is the national airlines second destination in South Africa, bringing the total number of non-stop flights between the two countries to seven per week. Air Seychelles also operates five weekly flights to Johannesburg.

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Seychelles as a destination of choice generates interest among travel trade at INDABA Exhibition in Durban - eTurboNews

Preserving a Caribbean spirit, far from home – Albany Times Union

(Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

(Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

(Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

(Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Preserving a Caribbean spirit, far from home

Albany

Their voices are easy on the ears.

As they spoke, their lilting inflections from Jamaica, Barbados, Haiti and Nevis crested and fell like waves on a shore.

But beneath the sunny and melodic sounds, a theme of the disorientation of diaspora emerged.

"For some of us, we call it living at the hyphen," said Wilma Waithe of Albany, a native of Barbados who retired from the state Health Department. "It can be difficult straddling cultures. That's why we like to come together for socializing because it's a relaxed, comfortable atmosphere."

"People from the Caribbean have a much different perspective because of their colonial histories," said Annette Johnson, a state worker born in Canada, whose grandmother was Haitian.

A dozen members of the Capital District of New York Caribbean American Cultural Association sat in a circle at the Albany Public Library at a recent meeting. They spoke about their efforts to build an organization that will forge a sense of community among a group of disparate islanders who sometimes feel disconnected.

The organization was formed two years ago by University at Albany faculty members Marcia Sutherland, associate professor of Africana Studies, and Glyne Griffith, associate professor and chair of English. Both are from Jamaica. They met at the Latham home of Sutherland, the group's president, and now have about 20 members, who range in age from their early 30s to late 60s.

Caribbean barbecue

What: Second annual barbecue of the Capital District of New York Caribbean American Cultural Association

When: Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.

Where: Six Mile Waterworks Park, 138 Fuller Road, Albany. Open to the public.

Contact: Marcia789@aol.com for more information.

Contact Paul Grondahl at grondahlpaul@gmail.com

They talked about growing up under the long shadow cast by British colonial rule a century after the abolition of slavery in the Caribbean, and the ongoing exploitation by sugar cane plantation owners.

"Resistance to colonialism is a central part of the Caribbean psychology," said Sutherland, who presented a research paper on Jamaica's black nationalist leader Marcus Garvey. Members often present talks on political and cultural heroes from their island nations.

Assimilation can be a challenge even after decades, they said, because they don't feel fully connected either to the American black experience or the culture of those who grew up on the African continent.

"I've gradually gotten used to the dual identity," said Patrick Romain, of Colonie, a native of Haiti, who is a counselor with the Educational Opportunity Program, or EOP, at UAlbany. "I go to Haiti and they see me as an American, but people here see me as a Haitian. Since I lived in the U.S. since I was young, I didn't learn much about my Haitian culture until I became an adult."

On Saturday, they will hold their second annual barbecue at Six Mile Waterworks Park in Albany, off Fuller Road. It coincides with Caribbean American Heritage Month. Their goal is to create a welcoming organization that appeals to the several thousand people of Caribbean heritage across the region.

They invite anyone interested in Caribbean culture to join them for a barbecue featuring spicy Jamaican jerk chicken and macaroni and cheese, which is called macaroni pie on Barbados. They'll brew batches of sorrel, made from boiling the dried sorrel flower into a tea. They add grated ginger, pimento berries, spices, sugar, lemon juice and rum. The drink varies among the islands. Some blend the spices with red wine, similar to sangria. There will be dancing to calypso, reggae and other popular Caribbean musical styles.

Getting together is an opportunity to share elements of their cultures, which vary widely from island to island. Growing up in Jamaica, Jacqueline Rowe of Niskayuna, a registered nurse and real estate agent, recalled that she used to boil dried hibiscus flowers in a tea and used it to lighten and color her hair.

"Hey, I need to try that," said Dalmain Duncan, who is from Jamaica, lives in Albany and works for the city water department. He also happens to be bald. Everyone laughed.

Members are beginning a fundraising drive to be able to provide a college scholarship to a high school senior of Caribbean heritage. The group also solicits donations for food baskets that are distributed at Thanksgiving to the less fortunate.

"Being part of this group gives me an opportunity to make a difference and to show young people a sense of cultural pride, no matter which island they come from," said Ainsley Thomas, who grew up in Jamaica and lives in Albany. He is chief diversity officer at Hudson Valley Community College.

Visiting family and friends back in the Caribbean is an eye-opener regarding standards of living. "They truly believe the streets here are paved with gold and you should be able to scoop up millions and bring it home," said Celia Rouse of Albany, a native of Barbados who is a Ph.D. candidate at UAlbany and works there as a STEM instructor.

"We like to socialize together, but we also focus on cultural identity and the history of the Caribbean diaspora. We learn from each other," said Etwin Bowman, of Albany, a native of Barbados who works as a UAlbany administrator and emigrated in 1985. "The hardest part was getting used to how huge America is. We refer to Barbados as just a big rock in the sea."

They take pride in celebrating notable Caribbean natives, such as reggae star Bob Marley and Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, both Jamaicans, and the late Nobel Prize-winning poet Derek Walcott of St. Lucia.

The smash Broadway musical "Hamilton" highlighted the fact that Founding Father Alexander Hamilton was born on the island of Nevis. That thrilled Carol Tyrell, of Albany, who grew up in Nevis and now works for the state Health Department. "It's a very small island in the Leeward Islands. I always call it my paradise. And we have the best mangoes."

Paul Grondahl is the director of the New York State Writers Institute and a former Times Union reporter. He can be reached at grondahlpaul@gmail.com

Original post:

Preserving a Caribbean spirit, far from home - Albany Times Union

Chef’s Table: Couple from the Caribbean brings flavor of native islands to NEPA – Scranton Times-Tribune

In Caribbean culture, food creates distinct connections between people and other cultures.

For Carleen and Garfield Hartman, the Hartman Jerk Center created a space to share their love for their home countries and their native food.

The couple opened the Caribbean restaurant in April with hopes of bringing the flavors of both Jamaica and Guyana to Wilkes-Barre.

We migrated from New York about five years ago, and we noticed there was not much of a variety of our culture around here, Carleen Hartman said.

After serving Caribbean fusion-styled food out of a parking lot in downtown Wilkes-Barre for some time, the couple jumped on the opportunity to open up shop where a sushi restaurant previously stood.

And the restaurant itself embodies the culture of the Caribbean.

Upon walking into the 35-seat restaurant on South Main Street, customers are greeted by a bright yellow welcome mat. Strains of reggae music flow through the eatery and 25 small flags that represent each of the Caribbean nations hang above the countertop. Larger flags from Guyana, Jamaica and the United States are posted on the walls as a nod to the owners countries of origin as well as their current home.

Garfield Hartman cooks each dish for the restaurant, blending his experience cooking in the Army, hints from his grandmother and the influence of flavors he grew up surrounded by.

(Garfield) is Guyanese and Im Jamaican, Carleen Hartman said. The food is a sort of fusion between both. Its authentic Jamaican and Guyanese ... We all (in the Caribbean) eat the same foods. We might call it something different, or cook it in a different way, but its the same food.

Some customer favorites include oxtail and butterbeans and variations of jerk fish, chicken and pork.

We cant have enough oxtail, Carleen Hartman said. Were here working from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., and we constantly have oxtail cooking. People love it because of the flavor and the way its cooked.

Other specialties include a featured soup every Friday, ranging from cow foot and chicken foot to goat head soup. Each Friday, the restaurant also serves national dishes such as ackee and salt fish or callaloo with salt fish, which are served with festival dumplings.

When asked about future goals for the restaurant, Carleen Hartman quickly said she wanted to open two more restaurants one in the Poconos and one in Hazleton. Though, she said they would also like to expand into Scranton as well, due to requests from residents in those regions.

I love meeting different people from the different cultures, she said. When they come in, they first check to see if their flag is up there. And every single flag from inside here, Ive seen someone come in from that place.

The restaurant gained a widespread fanbase through radio ads and word of mouth, she added. One customer, originally from St. Lucia, drove more than two hours to get to the restaurant, tacking on additional time on for getting lost along the way. But when she arrived, the restaurant had every bit of food she was hoping for.

She sat down, ate her food and said it was well worth the drive, that shed definitely be back, Carleen Hartman said with a smile. Those are the things Im happy for. Representing the Caribbean, the language, the culture. People start talking the way they would in their home countries, and they get a taste of home away from home.

Contact the writer: cjacobson@citizensvoice.com; 570-821-2061; @CVcljacobson

Hartman

Jerk Center

Address: 72 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre

Phone: 570-871-3013

Established: April 1

Cusine: Jamaican and Guyanese fusion

Owners: Carleen and Garfield Hartman

Hours: Mondays through Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Sundays,

11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Online: Visit .

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Chef's Table: Couple from the Caribbean brings flavor of native islands to NEPA - Scranton Times-Tribune

1 tropical storm churns in Gulf, 2nd disbands in Caribbean – ABC News

Tropical Storm Cindy formed Tuesday in the Gulf of Mexico, hovering south of Louisiana as it churned tides and spun bands of heavy, potentially flooding rain onto the central and eastern Gulf Coast.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey issued a state of emergency because of the threat of torrential rains and other severe weather, including dangerous high tides and rip currents. Double red flags snapped in the wind on the public beach at Gulf Shores in her state, warning visitors to stay out of the pounding surf.

Workers on Grand Isle, a barrier island community south of New Orleans, worked to reinforce a rock levee protecting the island's vulnerable west side. Officials there decided against calling an evacuation but said in a statement that anyone who wanted to head for the mainland should do so as early as possible because water might eventually cover low-lying parts of the only route off the island.

The Louisiana National Guard dispatched high water vehicles and helicopters into flood-prone areas. The state said the Federal Emergency Management Agency was moving 125,000 meals and 200,000 liters of water into Louisiana.

Gov. John Bel Edwards said the advance notice of the storm gave officials time to put emergency plans in place. Louisiana was slammed with major flooding last summer from an unnamed storm that heavily damaged the Baton Rouge and Lafayette regions.

The third tropical storm of 2017, Cindy was stationary Tuesday afternoon but to resume moving and reach the northern Gulf Coast late Wednesday and rumble inland Thursday over western Louisiana and eastern Texas. Forecasters warned 6 to 9 inches (15-22 cms) of rain and up to 12 inches (30 cms) in spots was the biggest threat in parts of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and the Florida Panhandle.

Already some flooding was reported on Alabama's Dauphin Island and flood control locks and gates were being closed along Louisiana's bayou-marbled coast. Authorities in various coastal Louisiana and Mississippi communities handed out sandbags for areas along rivers and bayous.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Cindy was, on Tuesday afternoon, about 280 miles (450 kilometers) south of Morgan City, Louisiana or about 360 miles (575 kilometers) southeast of Galveston, Texas. It had top sustained winds of 45 mph (75 kph).

A tropical storm warning was in effect from San Luis Pass, Texas, to the Pearl River's mouth along the Louisiana-Mississippi line.

Rain and tides, rather than wind, were considered the main danger from the system.

At a news conference in New Orleans, Mayor Mitch Landrieu urged vigilance as bands of rain from the system swept over the city. Forecasts said the system could dump from a few inches to more than 12 inches (a few centimeters to more than 25 cm), depending on Cindy's development and path. At worst, the storm could flood neighborhoods outside the city's levee system and cause flash flooding even in protected areas.

"This is going to be a very serious event," Landrieu said.

In coastal Louisiana's Terrebonne Parish, Kim Chauvin said the shrimp processing businesses she and her husband run helped put out the word Monday that shrimpers should return to port and unload their catch before flood control structures closed.

"We call them, we text them, we Facebook them, we Twitter, them. Any way we can get to them," she said.

Earl Eues, an emergency official in Terrebonne, said the closing of locks and flood gates began Monday and would be completed Tuesday evening,

Parishes along the coast made sandbags or sand and bags available to people who wanted to protect homes and businesses.

At the Escatawpa Hollow Campground in Alabama, near the Mississippi State line, owner Larry Godfrey was prepared for flooding that would add to the woes of a rainy spring.

"We've had so much rain, we haven't done any business in about eight weeks because of the rain," said Godfrey, whose campground typically hosts swimmers and boaters. He said the Escatawpa River, at 15 feet (4.5 meters), would typically be lower than 3 feet (1 meter) at this time of year.

While the northern Gulf Coast braced for Cindy, the southern Caribbean region was dealing with the aftermath of Tropical Storm Bret, which unleashed heavy flooding, knocked out power and ripped off several roofs in some areas of Trinidad &Tobago. Bret had degenerated into a tropical wave by Tuesday afternoon..

All airports in Trinidad & Tobago reopened later Tuesday, though public schools and many businesses remain closed.

Associated Press reporters Janet McConnaughey in New Orleans; Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Jeff Amy in Jackson, Mississippi; and Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama, contributed to this story.

This version corrects the location of the Escatawpa Hollow Campground in Alabama.

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1 tropical storm churns in Gulf, 2nd disbands in Caribbean - ABC News