Judge Gorsuch’s First Amendment jurisprudence – SCOTUSblog (blog)

Apart from the establishment clause, the Supreme Court has for the last decade taken a strong view of the First Amendments protections. Judge Neil Gorsuchs decisions on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit align with that trend. In many ways, Gorsuchs opinions in this area are similar to those of the late Justice Antonin Scalia with the possible exception that Gorsuch has been more willing to find not only that the First Amendment has been violated, but also that defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity in those cases. It is unclear whether Gorsuch will continue that trend if he is confirmed, because cases in front of the Supreme Court tend to be closer than cases in the courts of appeals, and so qualified immunity is typically easier to get. I focus on cases in which Gorsuch has written a majority opinion, concurrence, or dissent, without regard to whether the decisions in question were precedential, on the theory that Gorsuchs writings will provide the greatest insight into his mindset.

Freedom of speech, the press and assembly

With few exceptions, Gorsuch has been willing to find in favor of First Amendment plaintiffs and against defendants attempting to assert immunity against a First Amendment claim.

In Walton v. Powell, in 2016, Gorsuch wrote a unanimous opinion affirming a district courts decision to allow a government employees Section1983 claim alleging that she was fired for her political affiliation to proceed. The court held that the McDonnell-Douglas burden-shifting framework does not apply to First Amendment retaliation claims, which are governed by a more plaintiff-friendly standard. It then applied that standard to uphold the employees claim, and deny the defendants qualified immunity defense.

In 2007, in Casey v. West Las Vegas Independent School District, Gorsuch wrote an opinion finding that a school district superintendents statements to her own school board were not protected citizen speech, but her statements to the state attorney general were. The court further held that qualified immunity was not available because it had been long established that when public employees speak to outside authorities on matters of public concern for reasons that are not job-related, their speech is protected.

In Rounds v. Clements, in 2012, Gorsuch wrote an opinion holding that a state prisoners First Amendment retaliation claim, which sought prospective relief, did not run afoul of the Eleventh Amendment. The prisoner, an electrician by trade, alleged that he suffered retaliation because he had reported to prison superiors that other prison officials were asking him to perform shoddy electrical work. The court held that the prisoner stated a claim, and that the claim fell under the Ex Parte Young exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity insofar as the electrician sought to be restored to his former status as a privileged prisoner.

In a notable 2016 dissent in A.M. v. Holmes, Gorsuch argued that a New Mexico statute prohibiting disruption in school did not apply to a seventh-grader who had pretended to burp in class. Distinguishing classroom antics from actions that substantially interfere with the actual functioning of the school, Gorsuch argued that the statute had been interpreted more narrowly than its text suggests, and disagreed with the majoritys decision to read it more broadly. The dissent did not rely on the First Amendment, but it suggests that Gorsuch may be willing to protect a substantial amount of on-campus speech.

Although these decisions all strongly suggest that Gorsuch will happily allow free speech claims to move forward, there are some open questions about how protective he will be of speech at the margins.

In Mink v. Knox, in 2010, Gorsuch wrote a concurrence in a case allowing a Section1983 claim against a deputy district attorney who had pursued a criminal libel charge against the publisher of an Internet-based journal. The court held, and Gorsuch agreed, that because the journal was engaged in parody, the speech was protected even as it related to matters of private concern. Gorsuch wrote separately to argue that the result was compelled by circuit precedent, chiding his colleagues for going further to defend that precedent. Although he did not tip his hand, the separate opinion suggests that Gorsuch may be more willing than some of his colleagues to permit libel claims against a parody.

In 2016, in Alvarez v. Grosso, Judge Gorsuch wrote an unpublished opinion holding that civilians had no right to attend military court-martial proceedings. The court held that commanders have wide discretion to bar civilians from the base, and that civilians have no constitutionally protected right to speak on military bases or to observe court martial trials.

The First Amendment and campaign finance

In Riddle v. Hickenlooper, in 2014, the 10th Circuit struck down a Colorado statute that effectively limited individual campaign contributions to write-in candidates to $200 while permitting donors to give up to $400 to candidates who ran in primaries. The statute had been challenged principally on equal protection grounds, but the First Amendment status of campaign contributions was also front and center. In a concurring opinion, Judge Gorsuch argued that the act of contributing to political campaigns implicates a basic constitutional freedom, one lying at the foundation of a free society and enjoying a significant relationship to the right to speak and associateboth expressly protected First Amendment activities. That language may suggest that Gorsuch is broadly sympathetic to the idea that money in politics is just another form of expression, and would be skeptical of campaign finance limits. On the other hand, Gorsuch cautioned against adopting a level of scrutiny for campaign contribution cases, noting that it wasnt necessary to do so in order to resolve the case, and that the Supreme Courts decisions had been unclear about what level of scrutiny applies.

The petitions clause

In 2007, in Van Deelen v. Johnson, Gorsuch wrote an opinion reversing a grant of summary judgment to county officials who had allegedly retaliated against a taxpayer who had filed appeals and lawsuits to challenge property tax assessments. Defending the right to petition the government for redress of grievances, Gorsuch wrote that [w]hen public officials feel free to wield the powers of their office as weapons against those who question their decisions, they do damage not merely to the citizen in their sights but also to the First Amendment liberties and the promise of equal treatment essential to the continuity of our democratic enterprise. Good luck, President Trump.

The religion clauses

In American Atheists, Inc. v. Davenport, in 2010, a 10th Circuit panel had held that 13 12-foot crosses erected on public land to memorialize deceased Utah highway patrol officers ran afoul of the establishment clause because a reasonable observer would regard those memorials as endorsing Christianity. Rehearing en banc was denied, and Gorsuch dissented from that denial. In the dissent, Gorsuch argued both that the 10th Circuit had strayed from the Supreme Courts precedents, which had not recently applied the reasonable observer test to public displays, and that the 10th Circuit had applied the test in an expansive way by treating the reasonable observer as somebody who is biased, replete with foibles, and prone to mistake. The dissent sends a very clear signal that Gorsuch is on board with the more conservative understanding of the establishment clause embraced by the late Justice Antonin Scalia.

Gorsuchs views on free exercise issues are less clear because, to the best of my knowledge, he has not written an opinion in a case in which a constitutional free exercise challenge was brought unaccompanied by a statutory challenge under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) or Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA). In 2013, he wrote a concurring opinion in Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. v. Sebelius, arguing that the individual owners of the Hobby Lobby stores (the Green family) were entitled to relief under RFRA. Gorsuch explained that because the Greens are the human actors who must compel the corporations to comply with the [Affordable Care Acts contraception] mandate, their own personal religious beliefs were burdened by the mandate. In the process, Gorsuch argued:

No doubt, the Greens religious convictions are contestable. Some may even find the Greens beliefs offensive. But no one disputes that they are sincerely held religious beliefs. This isnt the case, say, of a wily businessman seeking to use an insincere claim of faith as cover to avoid a financially burdensome regulation. See United States v. Quaintance, 608 F.3d 717 (10th Cir.2010) (an example of just that). And to know this much is to know the terms of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act apply. The Act doesnt just apply to protect popular religious beliefs: it does perhaps its most important work in protecting unpopular religious beliefs, vindicating this nations long-held aspiration to serve as a refuge of religious tolerance.

Although this case arose under RFRA, and not the First Amendment, Gorsuch nevertheless signaled that he might take a very strong view of free exercise principles, consistent with the Supreme Court majority that affirmed the 10th Circuits decision in Hobby Lobby.

On the other hand, in 2014, in Ali v. Wingert, Judge Gorsuch wrote an opinion denying relief to a prison inmate who wanted to use only his newly adopted Muslim name on mail envelopes, instead of using both his Muslim name and his former name. The claims were brought under RLUIPA and also the First Amendments free exercise clause. Rejecting the RLUIPA claim, Judge Gorsuch acknowledged that if a prisoners sincerely held religious beliefs forbade any mention of a former name, then there might be a substantial burden on the inmate, but found that the facts in the complaint did not make such an allegation. Federal courts certainly are not arbiters of religious scripture or dogma, but to establish a RLUIPA claim they do require from the claimant some well-pleaded facts suggesting a substantial burden on a sincere religious exercise. The First Amendment free exercise claim failed for the same reason.

Also, in Abdulhaseeb v. Calbone, in 2010, Gorsuch wrote a concurring opinion in a RLUIPA case where the inmate alleged that a halal diet was not available. Gorsuch acknowledged that the law does not permit an institution to force an inmate to choose between violating his religious beliefs and starving to death. But he made it clear that he would not go further to hold that RLUIPA prohibits the prison from taking action that requires a prisoner to occasionally miss a normal meal because he refuses to eat the food, or that the statute requires any other accommodation for religious diet other than accommodating major religious holidays and the need to eat enough to live.

Posted in Nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, A close look at Judge Neil Gorsuchs jurisprudence, Featured

Recommended Citation: Tejinder Singh, Judge Gorsuchs First Amendment jurisprudence, SCOTUSblog (Mar. 7, 2017, 11:16 AM), http://www.scotusblog.com/2017/03/judge-gorsuchs-first-amendment-jurisprudence/

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Daily Press a finalist for national First Amendment honor – Daily Press

The Daily Press was named a finalist Tuesday in the annual Scripps Howard Awards.

The entry, which detailed years of reporting, utilizing and defending access to public information, was honored in the category of Distinguished Service to First Amendment. The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette-Mail won the category, and the Dallas Morning News was honored alongside the Daily Press as a finalist.

"The mission of a news organization is simple: We are the community's watchdog. We don't work for the government. We work for the people," said Marisa Porto, publisher and editor-in-chief of the Daily Press Media Group. "We keep an eye on what local government is doing and how it is spending taxpayer dollars. That is our responsibility, and we take it seriously at the Daily Press.

"I couldn't be more proud of this team and the work it does every day."

The Daily Press entry included stories in which the reporting hinged on documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. Those stories included an attempt to gain access to a compiled database of court records, and investigation into how money was used in an undercover police operation, and an examination of a private loan guarantee made by the local airport commission.

The 375-page entry encompassed more than four years of reporting and included dozens of stories and editorials in which access to public information was essential.

"Recognizing the best journalism in the country is a fundamental mission of Scripps Howard Foundation," said Liz Carter, president and CEO of the foundation, in a news release.

"We commend the work these journalists did in 2016 and the impact their words, videos and interactive elements will continue to have across our communities."

The Scripps Howard Awards have been handed out for 64 years and honor excellence in journalism. The awards ceremony will be held April 12 in Cincinnati.

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Daily Press a finalist for national First Amendment honor - Daily Press

What our First Amendment freedoms are for – News – DesertDispatch … – Desert Dispatch

By Richard Reeb

Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Surely, the freedom guarantees of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution are a timely topic given the lengths to which boorish behavior is being taken by some, while claiming legal protection. Could angry and unreasoning mobs really be what the Founders had in mind when they penned those immortal words?

The key word in the First Amendment is peaceably. As the Constitution establishes a government for the United States of America, it places all discussion within that framework. That is, public oral, written or electronic communications must serve the purposes and follow the procedures laid down by our supreme law and cannot justifiably be in conflict with them.

Put another way, public discussion is justified so long as it is about how, not whether, to achieve our goals as a nation. Speech or publication that aims to undermine or overthrow our form of government is rightly denominated as unconstitutional and certainly seditious.

Our ancestors revolted against a despotic government, engaging in illegal and violent means, including prolonged warfare, to end British imperial authority in the 13 American colonies. But the sequel was the establishment of republican governments in all of them and, ultimately an effective federal government.

The American Revolution was legitimate only to the extent it brought self-government to the North American continent, but not to institutionalize revolution. To forestall that possibility, frequent elections of the peoples representatives were adopted to secure the consent of the governed.

The most severe test of our constitutional framework came in 1860 when seven, ultimately 11, Southern states attempted to secede from the federal union. When rebel forces fired on Fort Sumpter in 1861, the situation changed from one of extreme agitation to full-scale war. Fortunately, that rebellion was crushed. But unless the nation learns the appropriate lessons from the Civil War, we will not have benefited.

Before the conflict began, mostly Southern politicians were not only declaring a right to block the enforcement of federal law and even the Constitution, but asserting that the Declaration of Independence was based on a self-evident lie. In their defense of chattel slavery, they struck at the central idea of the American Republic that held that all human beings are equally endowed by God with the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. They even said that such a proposition was unscientific, arguing that the emerging idea of the survival of the fittest applied not just to species but to the races of mankind as well.

Slaverys apologists argued that Caucasians had established their superiority and consequent right to rule over inferior races. Accordingly, the Confederate Constitution distinguished itself from the U.S. Constitution by inserting the word slave without apology and avoided the latters more ambiguous word person.

A comprehensive account of our nations greatest crisis is possible only if we recall that open rebellion was preceded by seditious and even heretical speech. If one denies, as Confederates did, the truth of the proposition that all men are created equal, it is just a matter of time and opportunity before our form of government is at risk.

It is striking that the angry left in America, while professing dedication to equality, denies that our ancestors or their descendants shared that dedication. The claim is that the very existence of slavery proved their hypocrisy, if not their evil intentions for persons of African descent.

The steady progress of justice that ended both slavery and compulsory racial segregation gives the lie to that claim. Of course, if the left is wrong in its diagnosis, America deserves not only the benefit of the doubt but our peoples full dedication. Mimicking their Confederate mentors, todays progressive left is arguing that America is based on a lie. Because its minions believe that lie, they feel free to reject any and all authority that stands in their way.

It never made sense to hold that those who speak or write about our Constitution with contempt are entitled to the full protection secured by the First Amendment. The germ of rebellion against it lies with the heresy that acts of the freely chosen representatives of the people can be defied at will.

We should certainly hear the arguments of the Republics critics if we are to know what they are about, but we are not obliged to be shouted down, driven from our public (and even private) places or put in fear of our lives. The First Amendment, properly understood, absolutely favors peaceable speech. The alternative is mob rule.

Richard Reeb taught political science, philosophy and journalism at Barstow Community College from 1970 to 2003. He is the author of "Taking Journalism Seriously: 'Objectivity' as a Partisan Cause" (University Press of America, 1999). He can be contacted at rhreeb@verizon.net

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What our First Amendment freedoms are for - News - DesertDispatch ... - Desert Dispatch

Firefox 52 Brings New ESR Version, Security Upgrades, And WebAssembly Support – Tom’s Hardware

Mozilla released version 52 of Firefox, which brings new security features, as well as support for WebAssembly, a low-level programming language for the web. The new version of Firefox also coincides with a new Firefox Extended Support Release (ESR), which means the Tor Browser will soon benefit from all the security features that have been added to Firefox over the past year, including the browsers new sandboxing architecture.

Firefox 52 brought quite a few new features, especially in the security department.

WebAssembly

One of the most important features added to Firefox 52 is support for WebAssembly, a low-level programming language that can make web apps run at near-native speed.

This will make WebAssembly especially more useful for browser games, advanced web apps, and software libraries. Mozilla has been one of the primary developers of the language, as it wanted to offer a standardized alternative to Googles Native Client API, which boasts similar performance. The organization seems to have succeeded in that goal, as WebAssembly should soon be adopted by all the major browsers.

Strict Secure Cookies

Firefox 52 also supports Strict Secure Cookies, a policy that forbids HTTP websites from setting cookies with the secure attribute.

(Non-) Security Warnings

Google and Mozilla have promised for many months a new This connection is not secure warning that will appear in login boxes on pages that use HTTP, rather than HTTPS.

Both Google and Mozilla will progressively ramp up their warnings until all HTTP web pages are greeted by big red notifications that they are not secure. However, for now, the two companies are only warning about pages that require passwords or credit card information.

An Untrusted Connection error will also appear when Firefox 52 users visit a website whose certificate is chained to a root certificate that still uses the SHA-1 algorithm (such as those imported by the user). All the major browser vendors have had plans to deprecate SHA-1 for a couple of years now. With Google researchers proving that a collision attack on SHA-1 is now practical, there are even more reasons to avoid connections based on SHA-1 algorithms. However, for now, Mozilla will still allow users to bypass this warning.

Improved Multi-process, Sync Support

The multi-process architecture has also been enabled for Windows users that use touchscreen devices. The browser also got an enhanced sync feature to enable users to send and open tabs from one device to another.

Dropping NPAPI, Battery Status API Support

Support for the Netscape Plugin API (NPAPI) has been removed for virtually all plugins with the exception of Flash. Mozilla also removed support for the Battery Status API, which could have been used by some services to fingerprint users, thus significantly reducing privacy on the web.

Along with the regular release of Firefox 52, Mozilla also announced a new Firefox ESR, which has caught up with the features of the latest mainstream version of Firefox.

The ESR version is a release of Firefox that only receives security patches for almost a year (seven Firefox releases, to be exact). That means it falls behind in supporting new features as they appear in the regular versions of Firefox. This is usually a good thing for enterprise users, but also for certain organizations such as the Tor Project, which build the Tor Browser on top of Firefox ESR.

New features tend to introduce new bugs and it also takes time to validate them and to make sure they dont break anything. Therefore, something like Firefox ESR is more appealing to the Tor Project. However, sometimes staying almost a year behind is not that good, especially when the main browser introduces significant security improvements.

One of the major security improvements weve seen last year in Firefox is the switch to a better sandboxing architecture, which separates the UI and the content in a different process. That should make it harder for JavaScript exploits that may live inside a web page to make modifications to the browser itself.

As Firefox has kept seeing more and more exploits against it due to the fact that it doesnt have as good of a sandboxing architecture as Chrome does, the Tor Project has started to build its own sandboxing. However, the hardened version of the Tor Browser is only available on Linux for now, and its still in the alpha stage. The Tor browser should still benefit from Mozillas own sandboxing, especially on Windows.

This year, Firefox should continue to receive security upgrades, but it wont be until Firefox 59 (the next ESR version) that the Tor Browser will be able to implement them as well.

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Firefox 52 Brings New ESR Version, Security Upgrades, And WebAssembly Support - Tom's Hardware

Cryptocurrency Enthusiast Succesfully Mines Bitcoin on a 1985 NES Console – The Merkle

People have tried to mine bitcoin on a wide variety of devices in the past. Due to the evolution of mining hardware, most of the older devices have become obsolete for this type of purpose. That hasnt kept users from getting creative, though, as one person has successfully created mining software for a 1985 NES. Quite an intriguing project, although it wont make anyone rich overnight.

Although it may sound unlikely to mine bitcoin on a NES gaming system, it is certainly possible to do so. What started out as an offhanded challenge quickly turned into an intriguing project for the person who developed RetroMiner. Not everyone may see the benefit of this project, though, as it is unlikely the NES is even capable of mining bitcoin at any more than laughable speeds.

Most people do not understand the concept of bitcoin mining. Since it takes dedicated expensive hardware to perform this process efficiently these days, mining bitcoin makes little sense. Showcasing how this process works on a device most people are comfortable with, however, may sway a few peoples minds in the process. Then again, it is unlikely anyone will try to mimic mining bitcoin on a 1985 NES, though.

To put this into perspective, mining bitcoin on an 8-bit game console involves a lot more work than one would assume. Bitcoin mining is a very resource-intensive process and the 1985 NES is not a top-notch machine by any means. For its time, it was revolutionary in every way possible, but things have evolved a lot over the past 32 years. Then again, it is nifty to see someone actively mine bitcoin on such a device, albeit it may not generate any coins in the process.

The NES is not equipped to communicate with the live bitcoin network, or performing SHA-256 hashing. Communication with the bitcoin network proved to be pretty easy to implement once a custom bitcoind version was compiled. Keep in mind this involves using a Raspberry Pi as a proprietary device, though. More detailed instructions on the software involved can be found on the Retrominer website

SHA-256 hashing requires multiple 32-bit operations to take place. The NES, however, can only perform 8-bit tasks, which seemingly makes it incompatible. However, it was possible to create an open implementation of SHA256 that works just fine with 8-bit hardware. The custom ROM including the SHA256 algorithm is sent to the NES through the Raspberry Pi, though. However, in the end, the 8-bit game console is more than capable of doing its job, albeit no one should expect any miracles.

Interestingly enough, the person responsible for the Retrominer project feels there is still a lot of room for future improvements. At the same time, none of these improvements will turn 32-year-old hardware into a money making machine by any means. Eventually, the goal is to move more parts of the mining process to the NES, rather than passing through a Raspberry Pi first. All things considered, this is quite an amazing project, that goes to show old game consoles can be repurposed for other tasks with a bit of tinkering.

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Cryptocurrency Enthusiast Succesfully Mines Bitcoin on a 1985 NES Console - The Merkle

Top 5 Cryptocurrencies That Can’t be Mined – The Merkle

Everyone involved in the cryptocurrency ecosystem is well aware of how bitcoin uses a proof-of-work algorithm. New coins are generated through the mining process, which becomes more difficult over time. However, not all cryptocurrencies in existence can be mined. Below are some of the more popular altcoins that offer no mining incentive, yet are still quite valuable.

The Ripple network works in a rather different manner compared to Bitcoin or even Ethereum. Positioning itself as the global settlement network, Ripple is not your average cryptocurrency by any means. Obtaining Ripple can only be done by buying the currency from various exchanges, as there is no option to generate XRP by mining. A total of 100 billion XRP has been created once the project launched. A few coins are destroyed every time a transaction takes place.

NXT is a popular altcoin that cannot be mined in the traditional sense. It is possible for users to forge new coins, but it doesnt require dedicated hardware to do so. Instead, users need to leave their wallet open assuming it contains a balance and they will earn small amounts of interest in the process. NXT runs a proof-of-stake algorithm, which makes mining in the traditional way obsolete.

Mining WAVES is entirely out of the question as well, since the project makes use of a delegated and leased proof-of-stake algorithm. The entire supply of WAVES tokens was premined, although users will be able to mine tokens in the future using a computer or mobile device. However, the entire token supply will never surpass the 100 million mark. All of the available tokens were issued during the WAVES pre-sale and the teams bounty program.

When Factom was first launched, there was a lot of excitement regarding this project. Considering how the project runs on top of the bitcoin blockchain, it cannot be labeled as an altcoin per se. Factom is something entirely different, although the projects currency called factoids cant be mined directly. One could call this system proof of usage, as users who hold factoids can convert them into Entry Credits to be used within applications using the Factom blockchain.

The network does not support mining, as a Factoid Software Sale was organized once the project was announced. Investors who bought Factoids can either sell them on an exchangeor keep them as a tool to buy Entry Credits. It is also possible to earn Factoids, by sharing computing power and resources with the network. It is quite an intriguing project that anchors data into the bitcoin blockchain. In fact, Bitcoins proof-of-work algorithm ensures all of the data processed by Factom is safe from tampering.

MaidSafe is another one of these projects that does not allow users to mine the native currency. All of the available tokens were issued two years ago, and no more tokens will be generated moving forward. This also makes it somewhat impossible to generate Safecoin right now, although it will be possible to mine the currency in the future. Investors hold 10% of the total supply, with 90% waiting to be rewarded to miners providing resources to secure the system. However, Safecoin is not mined with graphic cards, but rather by users dedicating hard drive space to the project.

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Top 5 Cryptocurrencies That Can't be Mined - The Merkle

Investors Who Missed Bitcoin Rally Go for Dash, Ether, Monero – Bloomberg

With bitcoin on a tear, Mira Kwon decided theres more money to be made elsewhere. A little over a month ago, the University of Maryland economics graduate began pouring more than $2,000 into a different crypto-currency called dash.

Bitcoin is expensive, Kwon, a mother, investor, Korean interpreter and U.S. Army veteran, said in a telephone interview. I think dash has a bigger growth rate.

So far, its worked. Dash has risen to $46 from $15.20 when Kwon started, according to prices at CoinMarketCap. With a market value of $326 million, dash has become the third-largest crypto-currency, behind bitcoin and ether. Other digital currencies are on the move, too, including monero and zcash, to name some of the 700-plus out there. Investors who feel they missed out on bitcoin are seeking a different path to crypto-riches.

They think theyve missed most of the move, so they are starting to look at other coins that could be their ticket, said Adam Wyatt, chief operating officer of the crypto-currency researcher BullBear Analytics.

Trading crypto-currencies is speculative. Characteristics that may give each version value include a restricted supply, the willingness of merchants to accept it as terms of trade, technical features and ultimately the faith investors put in it.

Chris Burniske, an analyst at Ark Investment Management LLC, sees signs that some investors are cashing out of bitcoin and putting funds into so-called alt coins, varieties that havent gone up as much. His company operates an exchange traded fund with 5 percent of its assets in blockchain -- the database technology underlying bitcoin -- and peer-to-peer computing.

Bitcoin fell 0.5 percent to 1,239.35 Tuesday in New York. Its up 30 percent this year.

Others are trying to hedge as bitcoin approaches possible speed bumps: The first bitcoin-based exchange-traded fund is expected to be rejected or approved by U.S. regulators by March 11, and the price has risen in anticipation of new investor interest in the digital currency. A decision -- one way or the other -- could lead to more volatility.

With a rejection, probably the entire crypto-currency market as a whole could drop, said Alex Sunnarborg, an analyst at researcher CoinDesk, said in an interview.

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Another issue facing bitcoin is network speed, which has been sluggish.At high congestion times, bitcoin transactions have taken hours to clear. While thats faster than a traditional cross-border money transfer through a bank, its too slow for some users. Bitcoin developers are having trouble agreeing on ways to scale up the network, and the deadlock is pushing some investors to look at the alternative coins.

This creates tension and uncertainty, said Leah Stephens, a Kansas City-area writer who has investments in crypto-currencies such as steem, dash, monero and bitcoin. Many traders are hedging in alt coins because of these reasons.

Other coins have features that bitcoin lacks: Dash transactions are confirmed much faster, so it may be better for payments, Kwon said. Many of the coins that are on a tear -- such as dash, monero and zcash -- offer extra privacy protection.

What I think you are seeing is dash emerging as a true challenger to bitcoin in the market, said Ryan Taylor, director of finance at the team that developed dash. We are doing it by adding features customers really like. What you are seeing is recognition on the part of the users.

Smaller markets also present major disadvantages: The currencies tend to be less liquid, and more volatile. Large holdings of dash, for example, are concentrated in several thousand hands, Burniske said.

Not that thats deterring investors like Kwon, who are partial to crypto-currencies because they reduce dependence on money regulated by central banks.

We need some alternative currency other than fiat currency, and bitcoin is too slow and expensive, Kwon said.

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Investors Who Missed Bitcoin Rally Go for Dash, Ether, Monero - Bloomberg

Major Chinese Exchanges Announce Extended Bitcoin Withdrawal Delays – The Merkle

It is not surprising various Chinese bitcoin exchanges make a joint statement at this crucial time in cryptocurrency history. Albeit most platformsalready had their withdrawals suspended for quite some time, it looks like that period will be extended. OKCoin, BTCC, and Huobi all made similar statements as part of a coordinated PR campaign to let the public know about this withdrawal delay extension.

About a month ago, the PBoC sat down with various Chinese bitcoin exchange owners to discuss their guidelines regarding AML. At that time, it was decided nearly all exchanges would delay bitcoin withdrawals for a month until the companies could get everything sorted out. That decision is anything but a popular one, yet people understood the reasoning behind it. Ever since that time, no one has made a big fuss about these withdrawal delays, which is somewhat surprising.

Fast forward to today, and an update regarding the withdrawal delays has been provided by these Chinese exchanges. Unfortunately, the news is not all that positive, as it appears further delays are in order. OKCoin, BTCC, and Huobi have all announced they will delay the withdrawals once again, as they need to make some more changes based on feedback provided by the regulatory authorities. This is not entirely unexpected given yesterdays PBoC statement.

Since none of the Chinese bitcoin trading platforms want to violate national anti-money laundering laws and regulations, the companies will make additional changes. OKCoin, BTCC, and Huobi all wantto conduct their business in accordance with national regulation, which means they will have their work cut out for them. All internal systems of these three exchanges will be upgraded further in the coming weeks to ensure they are fully compliant with the law.

It is important to note these extended withdrawal delays are not a form of punishment handed down by the PBoC by any means. The central bank of China has indicated they have concerns regarding AML precautions taken by some exchanges, yet they will not put any company out of business for doing so. Instead, these trading platforms will need to implement some changes that will allow them to conduct their business in a proper manner moving forward.

While some people will see this news as a reason to sell off their bitcoin, the impact of this withdrawal delay extension will be minimal. It only affects Chinese exchanges on the .cn domain name, rather than the likes of huobi.com and OKCoin.com. Moreover, users will not lose any funds during this process, as they can still convert bitcoin to CNY if they feel the need to do so. That being said, the sell off when the first withdrawal delays were announced was rather minimal, thus this situation should be no different by any means.

All affected Chinese exchanges will do their best to ensure services are restored as quickly as possible. Once regulatory approval has been granted, bitcoin withdrawals will be made available once again. All things considered, the news will cause some minor annoyances, but will not diminish the demand for bitcoin in China by any means. It is normal the government wants to ensure bitcoin is not used for money laundering and funding terrorist activities. In the long run, this delay will give bitcoin more legitimacy in China, which can only be a positive thing.

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Major Chinese Exchanges Announce Extended Bitcoin Withdrawal Delays - The Merkle

Bitcoin Price Technical Analysis for 03/08/2017 Support at $1100? – newsBTC

Bitcoin price is in the middle of a pullback from its longer-term climb but might be ready to resume the uptrend if support holds.

Bitcoin Price Key Highlights

Bitcoin price is in the middle of a pullback from its longer-term climb but might be ready to resume the uptrend if support holds.

Technical Indicators Signals

The 100 SMA is above the longer-term 200 SMA so the path of least resistance is still to the upside. In addition, the 100 SMA is holding as dynamic support at the moment and might be enough to keep losses in check. A continued pullback, however, could last until the $1100 channel support closer to the 200 SMA dynamic inflection point.

If bitcoin price continues to slide below that level, a longer-term downtrend could be in the cards. Stochastic is on the move down to show that sellers are on top of their game at the moment while RSI is also heading south so price action could follow suit.

Once both oscillators hit the oversold areas and turn higher, buyers could return and push price back up to the channel resistance at $1250 and beyond. The gap between the moving averages is widening to suggest strengthening bullish momentum.

Market Events

The US dollar is strongly supported these days, thanks to expectations of a March Fed rate hike and overall risk aversion. This has weighed on higher-yielding assets like commodities and bitcoin. Still, an event risk for this behavior is the NFP report due on Friday since it could make or break tightening speculations.

Analysts are expecting to see a 188K rise in hiring, slower than the earlier 227K pickup. Another factor worth watching is the average earnings index as this would be considered a leading indicator of spending and inflation. The COIN ETF approval by the SEC is also another catalyst for bitcoin volatility this week.

Charts from SimpleFX

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Bitcoin Price Technical Analysis for 03/08/2017 Support at $1100? - newsBTC

Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 Released: What’s New? – Bitcoin Magazine

Today marks the official release of Bitcoin Core 0.14.0, the fourteenth generation of Bitcoins original software client launched by Satoshi Nakamoto eight years ago. Overseen by Bitcoin Core lead maintainer Wladimir van der Laan, this latest major release was developed by nearly 100 contributors over a six-month period.

Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 features a significant list of improvements. Compared to some previous releases, however, most of these concern internals of the software: performance improvements that take place under the hood but may not be very noticeable for everyday users.

That said, here are some of the more notable changes.

Assumevalid Blocks

Whenever a new node bootstraps on the network, it syncs the entire blockchain. It downloads and verifies all blocks that were ever mined, and verifies all transactions in all of these blocks. Unfortunately, this can take quite some time. Even new, high-end laptops often require more than a full day to catch up. For older or lower-grade machines, it takes even longer.

Assumevalid significantly speeds up this process. In essence, Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 nodes assume that all transactions up to a certain block are valid. While a syncing node still verifies the proof of work for all blocks, and records the entire transaction history, it no longer checks signatures and similar data for each individual transaction.

The assumption as to which block is valid is configurable. By default, its block 453354 for Bitcoin Core 0.14.0. But users who do want to fully verify every single transaction, even those dating years back, still can.

Its also worth noting that, as opposed to a checkpointing system that establishes that a specific block must be part of the blockchain, the assumed valid block is not necessarily binding. A Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 node will readily switch to an alternative blockchain without the assumed valid block, if that alternative blockchain is longer.

Improved Fee Estimation

As Bitcoin blocks have been filling up, particularly over the last year, not all transactions sent over the network fit into the very next block. As a result, miners usually prioritize transactions that include the most fees. Transactions that include more fees have a higher chance of being included in the very next block or shortly thereafter. Transactions that include lower fees are outbid and take longer to confirm.

Of course, not everyone needs their transactions to confirm as quickly. Users who send bitcoins to an exchange because of rapid price movements may be in a rush to have their transactions confirmed. Meanwhile, users who move bitcoins between their own wallets may be more patient.

Since Bitcoin Core 0.10.0, users have been able to adjust their fees accordingly. They can manually include higher fees if they are in more of a rush, and lower fees if they are not. Bitcoin Core 0.11.0 and 0.12.0 both refined the fee estimation software, and Bitcoin 0.14.0 now includes another set of improvements, which in particular makes the algorithm more robust in edge case situations.

Additionally, the default confirmation target was decreased from 25 blocks to 6 blocks; most transactions made from Bitcoin Core should confirm within an hour even if the user doesnt touch the fee settings.

Opt-In Replace-by-Fee for Sending

In addition to the improved fee estimation, Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 users have another option to speed up their transactions.

First introduced a year ago with the release of Bitcoin Core 0.12.0, Bitcoin transactions can be marked with a replace-by-fee flag. Senders of a transaction can replace their initial transaction with a newer transaction that includes a higher fee. This allows them to skip the line and have their transaction confirmed faster.

Up until this point, Bitcoin Core only included opt-in replace-by-fee in the node behavior: it accepted and forwarded transactions with replace-by-fee flags (instead of rejecting them as double-spends). But Bitcoin Core users could not utilize opt-in replace-by-fee to bump their own fees; so far only users of wallets like Electrum or GreenAddress could.

Now, opt-in replace-by-fee has been added as a remote procedure call (RPC) option in Bitcoin Core 0.14.0. This means that users working from the command line, or on applications built on Bitcoin Core, can utilize replace-by-fee, too.

Manual Pruning

Bitcoins blockchain isover 100 gigabytes in size and at its current rate is growing about 50 gigabytes each year. All that data needs to be stored, which can present a significant burden for users running a full node.

Thats why Bitcoin Core 0.11.0 introduced blockchain pruning. Users can get rid of older blocks once they are verified, so running a full node doesnt require as much disk space.

But up till now, users could only prune starting from a fixed number of blocks. With pruning set at 1000 blocks, for example, Bitcoin Core kept exactly the latest 1000 blocks. Whenever a new block was added, the oldest block was discarded, to keep the total at 1000.

Unfortunately, this meant that certain applications relying on Bitcoin Core couldnt really utilize pruning. For example, a payment processing application for merchants that want to accept bitcoin but prefer not to rely on external services like BitPay or Coinbase may in some cases need to figure out whether a valid payment was made in an older block. If that block is already pruned, the application cant do its job.

Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 therefore allows for more specific pruning. Instead of keeping a set number of blocks, users can prune the blockchain starting from a specific point in time, a specific block height, and keep all blocks that were created since.

Combined with another new feature called importmulti, Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 can import and timestamp addresses, for example, from the aforementioned payment processing application. Using the timestamps to establish when a specific address was created, Bitcoin Core knows from which point in time blocks are relevant for the application and wont prune these blocks.

Block Relay Improvements

Whenever a new block is mined, it is transmitted over Bitcoins peer-to-peer network, until each node received it. Unfortunately, latency on this network can benefit pooled mining as well as geographic clusters of miners, incentivizing a more centralized mining topology.

Increasing block propagation speed has therefore been a central point of focus for the Bitcoin Core development team for some years now, and Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 includes another batch of improvements.

Perhaps most important, Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 nodes forward blocks to their peers sooner. Where nodes would previously verify a block in its entirety before sending it to connected nodes, Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 starts the forwarding process as soon as the proof of work checks out.

While many miners today do use alternative relay networks as well, increasing speed on Bitcoins peer-to-peer network reduces the reliance on these networks and even benefits these relay networks where they connect to the peer-to-peer network.

And

As mentioned, the improvements listed above are really only the tip of the iceberg. Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 includes a list of additional performance improvements, varying from low-level RPC changes, to changes in the graphical user interface (GUI), and anything in between. For a full overview of all improvements, see the Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 release notes.

You can download Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 from bitcoincore.org or bitcoin.org.

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Bitcoin Core 0.14.0 Released: What's New? - Bitcoin Magazine

Don’t Weigh Bitcoin’s Price Against Gold’s | Seeking Alpha – Seeking Alpha

On Thursday Bitcoin gained parity with gold for the first time, only to surpass it shortly after. The cryptocurrency reached a high of $1281.21 by 1 p.m. EST on the BTCUSD exchange, according to MarketWatch. The mainstream media is likely to hype the story, inspiring many to sing the praises of Bitcoin as a better investment than gold or other precious metals.

But before you trade your gold coins or silver bullion for Bitcoin, remember that cryptocurrencies have little in common to precious metals when it comes to value and volatility. Goldmoney contributor, Stefan Weiler, explains the problems of comparing precious metals vs cryptocurrencies.

Real vs. Abstract Units

The main value difference is that gold and silver have the advantage of being real, physically measureable natural elements as opposed to abstract, man-made currencies, which includes fiat currencies. Consequently, gold and silver have mass and weight measureable to determine their units (grams, troy oz, etc.). Bitcoin doesn't have this characteristic. Weiler makes the point that an "abstraction can only be measured in units of itself." So "weighing" Bitcoin's value against gold is literally impossible.

Weiler articulates the problem with a strict comparison of units between Bitcoin and gold: "when comparing units of gold to units of Bitcoin, one must first define what unit it is measured against. Is it gramskilogramsor tonnes? Or are we measuring it in the rather obscure measure of troy ounce?"

Weiler uses the market capitalization of two companies (Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Seaboard Corp (NYSEMKT:SEB)) as an analogy to illustrate how unit size/amount can misrepresent prices:

Comparing the price of 1 Bitcoin vs 1 troy ounce of gold is a little bit like comparing the shares of Seaboard Corp. (USD 4,179 per share) to those of Apple Inc. (USD 116 per share) and concluding that Seaboard Corp is worth 35 times as much.

Considering only the price of both companies' stocks, rather than including the issued stocks (i.e. units) when measuring overall value leads to a misrepresentation of value. Weiler argues a similar distortion occurs when comparing gold and Bitcoin.

Downside Volatility Risk

Cryptocurrency proponents see it as the medium of exchange and store of value for the future. However, there are problems with Bitcoin's volatility when measuring just the downside deviations as opposed to the standard deviation. The approach "provides a better idea of the risks" of Bitcoin for becoming as widely adopted as money, Weiler states.

In his analysis, Weiler determines that "Bitcoin's volatility significantly exceeds that of both gold and currency," adding that "at times, Bitcoin's volatility declines for a short period and can even approach the volatilities of gold and currency, but tends to shoot up violently shortly thereafter."

Such volatility makes it hard for merchants who may want to exchange Bitcoin for currency after a transaction. The downtime for exchange can take an hour, exposing retailers to this downside risk in the interim.

Even given how impressively Bitcoin has performed given its short existence, it still has serious limitations with respect to utility and as a store of wealth when compared to gold and precious metals. Keep this in mind before giving in to the temptation to trade in your gold coins for Bitcoins.

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Don't Weigh Bitcoin's Price Against Gold's | Seeking Alpha - Seeking Alpha

Blue Comets baseball team bests Spartans – Asheboro Courier Tribune

Dennis Garcia

ASHEBORO Starting the season with three nonleague wins is nice. Starting the league season with a win is even better. After the Asheboro High School varsity baseball team spotted Central Davidson three runs in the top of the first inning, the Blue Comets came storming back to record an 11-4 victory in the Mid-Piedmont Conference opener for both teams Tuesday afternoon at McCrary Park. The win lifts AHS to 4-0 on the season heading into Friday afternoons MPC game at Southern Guilford. Our goal was to be 1-0, AHS first-year head coach Brett Hoogkamp said. We struggled early. We hadnt been in that situation before, so it was good for our guys to see that they could come back. We had some guys step up who have been struggling at the plate. The Blue Comets, who registered just three hits in a win over Ragsdale Saturday, recorded 12 hits in the game. Garrett Foland, Levi Kinney, Tristan Marsh, Trevor Marsh and Parker Clayton had two hits each with Kinney and Foland recording three RBIs. Trevor Marsh knocked in a pair. Tristan really didnt have his best stuff, but he battled and gave us four innings, Hookgamp said of Tristan Marsh, the Blue Comets starting hurler. Marsh worked four innings for the win, giving up three runs in the top of the first inning and then working out of trouble in the third and fourth innings. Clayton Parker worked 1 1/3 innings, while Trevor Marsh pitched 2/3 of an inning and Nick Bailes hurled the seventh.

The Spartans took a quick lead in the first inning as a double and two walks loaded the bases with two away. Lucas Thompson drove a shot to center that turned into a three-run double as the Spartans grabbed the early advantage. Asheboro fought back with a pair of runs in the bottom of the first as Austin Curry walked, Clayton doubled and Curry scored on a wild pitch. A single by Tristan Marsh plated Clayton and made it 3-2, but three straight batters fanned to end the inning. A two-run double by Foland plated Trevor Marsh and Kinney in the third and RBI triples from Clayton and Trevor Marsh made it 6-3 after four innings. Central Davidson certainly had its chances, but Tristan Marsh stranded one runner in the second, two in the third and two in the fourth, while Clayton stranded the bases loaded in the fifth. Central Davidson also stranded two in the sixth and two in the seventh for 13 in the contest. Our defense played pretty well behind our pitchers, Hoogkamp said. AHS broke it open in the bottom of the sixth as Trevor Marsh knocked in one with a shot, Kinney drove in three with a double and Foland added a RBI double. AHS had seven extra-base hits.

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Blue Comets baseball team bests Spartans - Asheboro Courier Tribune

Hoover puts forth valiant effort, but Solon’s final push nets Comets a 66-60 win – Canton Repository

Makenna Drabick scores 22 points, grabs 12 rebounds and Maddie Blyer adds 16 points, but Solon makes free throws, big plays at crunch time for 66-60 victory

CANTON Hoover's heart was every bit as huge as the body of Solon's 6-2 Valencia Myers. The smaller Vikings wore their hearts on their sleeves, outplaying the longer Comets on the glass to the tune that they had more offensive rebounds than Solon had total boards.

But the basketball bounces cruelly, and it went the Comets' way when it mattered most.

Reserve forward Rian Dortch scored 10 points, four on offensive putbacks including the backbreaker with 25 seconds left, and Solon went 6 of 7 at the foul line in the final 2:09 to end Hoover's season with a 66-60 victory.

Dee Bekelja scored 10 of her game-high 29 points in the fourth quarter to send Solon into Friday's final against McKinley. The Comets know they were lucky to get there.

Makenna Drabick scored 22 points, 20 in the second half, and grabbed a dozen rebounds to power the smaller Vikings. She was joined on the boards by Annie Roshak and Alexis Green with six apiece, and guard Maddie Blyer grabbed five despite playing on an injured ankle the final 11 minutes of her career.

Hoover outrebounded Solon 33-17, with 18 of them of the offensive variety. That kept the Vikings in the game, and Solon coach Trish Kruse frantically pacing the sidelines. Drabick's huge 13-point third quarter included four of her eight offensive rebounds in the game.

"Drabick was killing us on the boards, so was No. 44 (Roshak)," said Kruse. "Hoover just works so hard on the offensive end of the floor crashing the boards, so we had to rebound.

"They just work extremely hard. We didn't match that the first half, they were definitely the more physical team."

It was easy to see it was a game that was going down to the wire. Hoover steadied itself after falling behind 6-0 and ran off 12 points to shock the Comets. They weren't going away either, and that's why the game had 16 lead changes and was tied 46-46 going to the fourth quarter.

The Vikings just couldn't make enough plays in the last quarter. Their only lead came on two Blyer free throws to start the fourth quarter. After that Hoover went 3 for 7 at the line and made two critical turnovers in the final 4:06.

Yet the Vikings were right there until the end.

Drabick's final putback cut Solon's lead to 58-56 with 2:36 to play. Comets guard Mariah Madkins then stuck a knife into Hoover's hopes by swishing four straight free throws despite not attempting a shot previous to that.

"She's a great foul shooter," Kruse said. "She's just so confident."

But Myers had fouled out with eight points and six rebounds with 1:56 to play. Madkins' last two freebies made it 62-57 but Blyer answered just like she did against GlenOak, firing in a 3-pointer from the wing to make it 62-60 with a minute to play.

Then came Dortch. When Bejelka missed the front of a 1-and-1, Alexis Stover went over the top of Hoover's girls and tapped it to Dortch, who laid it in to all but end the game.

"She went 0-for-5 last week (against Twinsburg) on her offensive putbacks," Kruse said of Dortch, "but tonight she had four of five huge putbacks for us."

And that's the way the ball bounces, said Hoover head coach Abbey Allerding.

"I could not have asked for anything from our kids," she said after Hoover finished 21-5. "They just battle with such heart. I'm just so proud of the way they went at it.

"It was a valiant effort by Makenna, and our whole team."

Hoover was hurt by turning the ball over 22 times. Those turnovers, some missed easy shots and a rebound that got away will not ruin what this team did, Allerdering said.

"I just feel so blessed to be a part of this," she said. "I feel like there was no quit in them. God had His hand on this team this year. To see them do what they did is incredible. I'm just so thankful I got to be a part of it."

Reach Jim at 330-580-8336 or

jim.thomas@cantonrep.com

On Twitter: jthomasREP

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Hoover puts forth valiant effort, but Solon's final push nets Comets a 66-60 win - Canton Repository

Comet diehards take it in stride: ‘This ain’t life and death’ | News … – The Independent

MOREHEAD Mickey Grills doesn't how many West Carter boys basketball games he's seen, except that it's a lot.

Baxter Stevens won't let any injury keep him from watching his beloved Comets. His cousin Zach Stevens is alongside.

And Chris Perry did what he usually does just about everything short of washing the uniforms or selling sodas.

Grills, the Stevenses and Perry were among the loud crowd at Tuesday's 16th Region championship game against Elliott County West Carter's first since 1985 where they've nearly always been for decades.

You want a really, really devoted fan? Grills is your man he's missed just one West Carter basketball game since 1982 he was absent when his mother, Edith Grills, passed away in February 1995 and he's seen 310 straight football games since 1987 and counting.

Is Grills, 64, a jump-to-the-ceiling excitable fan?

Not as much as I used to be, he says. You get a little older.

Grills is part of Olive Hill High School's last class in 1971, and he saw numerous contests in the 1960s. He has no particular favorite memory.

I've just always been a Comet, Grills said. Win or lose, they're all good.

Stevens completed his 34th year compiling basketball statistics (he does the same thing for the Comets football team). He watched his uncle, the late Delmane Barker, who played basketball for Olive Hill's 1959 team.

Ask why he started crunching numbers for West Carter. He says it was a simple motive at least if you're in high school.

When I was in school, I was bored and too ugly to do anything, Stevens said. Girls wouldn't go out with me. I needed acceptance.

If there was an Ironman Award at West Carter, Bax seems a cinch winner because nothing keeps him from John Hop Brown Court or any other gym where the Comets are playing.

Not complications from diabetes, which cost him his left foot last year. Not from injuring his right foot about a month ago in the Kings Daughters Medical Center parking lot.

Tuesday, Baxter wore a large gray boot covering his right foot. As is his nature, he downplays what happened he said his big toe remained in place, while the other four moved right and were fractured.

I stepped over a speed bump and rolled my ankle, Stevens said.

By day, Baxter Stevens is a high school teacher's aide, where he works with students who have behavioral issues. He's also as large a fountain of wisdom and dispenser of advice as you'll find anywhere in Carter County.

I joke all the time, Baxter says. I tell 'em, if I knew I was gonna live this long, I would've taken better care of myself. Life's lesson's, I guess you could call it.

A minuscule controversy: are Zach and Baxter Stevens first or second cousins? Neither was completely sure, though they eventually settled on the latter.

All the kids think he's my dad, says Zach, Baxter's spotter and sometime computer operator, so we'll go with that.

Perry, the manager at Carter Caves State Resort Park, drives the bus, gives one-on-one advice, provides breakfast and whatever else needs doing. He couldn't be happier or more grateful.

West Carter's head coach Jeremy Webb, with Chris Perry, and Baxter Stevens on the Comets bench before their 16th Region Championship game in Morehead, Tuesday. KEVIN GOLDY | THE DAILY INDEPENDENT

It's not often that you find a place that will allow somebody to just come in and do what I do and not say a word to me and know that I've got the best interest of the kids at heart in everything I do, Perry said.

The Stevenses sat next to West Carter's bench on press row Tuesday. Grills was in the stands, and Perry was at the far end of the bench next to the water cooler. They watched Elliott County take a 22-11 lead after one quarter and saw the Comets pull to 34-29 at halftime.

Zach Stevens thought West Carter was in good shape because it was a two-possession contest. Baxter wasn't nervous either he kept things in perspective.

This ain't life and death, Baxter said. It's a basketball game. Elliott's one of the best team's in the state, and we're with them.

West Carter Comet's super fan Mickey Grills claps for his team during their 16th Region Championship agaisnt Elliott County. KEVIN GOLDY | THE INDEPENDENT

One of the youngest Comet fans, meanwhile, was anxious. Decked out in her maroon and white cheerleading outfit, 7-year-old Camryn Varney reached for her mom's, Sarah Varney, right arm.

I'm scared we're not gonna win, Camryn said.

It would be wrong to forget one of West Carter's most fervent fans Mayor Kenny Fankell, 57, who passed away Feb. 22.

Oh, my gosh, West Carter cheerleading coach Jeff Huffman said. He was such a huge Comet fan. He would've been here clapping his hands for both our community and our school. He knew it would be a great thing for both.

Neither of the Stevenses nor Perry showed any emotion during the game, but West Carter trainer Meredith Calhoun did late in the fourth quarter. First, she shook Baxter's wheelchair, then leaped to her feet, put her hands behind her head and threw up her hands in celebration when the Comets took a 61-60 lead.

While the trophies were being handed out after Elliott County's 77-71 overtime win, Baxter Stevens packed up his computer, cords and printer. He couldn't and didn't fault West Carter's effort.

Neither did Grills.

Life goes on, he said. They had a good season. I'll watch some baseball and wait on football.

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Comet diehards take it in stride: 'This ain't life and death' | News ... - The Independent

Learn about world travel group March 19 in Albany – Statesman Journal

Van Nichols, left, and Chris Duval invite others to join them for the Friendship Force 40th anniversary celebration at the Albany Public Library on Sunday, March 19, 2017.(Photo: ANNA REED / Statesman Journal)Buy Photo

Do you dream of world travel? If so,Chris DuvalandVan Nicholshave an opportunity for you with The Friendship Force International Club of the Mid-Willamette Valley.

We are an international group of people who travel, primarily through homestays, not just to see the sights but to get to know the people and culture, Chris said.

Van has travelled to 24 countries including national and international locations and even taken four of his grandchild on the adventures, too.

Its been really amazing for them, he said.

The club, which is a nonprofit organization focused on promoting understanding, cultural education and citizen diplomacy, will celebrate its 40th anniversary with an open house 2 p.m. Sunday, March 19, at Albany Public Library, 2450 14th Ave. SE, and the public is welcome to join.

Some of our members will talk about what Friendship Force has meant to them, Chris said. Its a prime time to ask questions about what we do.

The celebration will also feature a slideshow of photos from past adventure and the group will share information about the journeys planned for 2017, plus there will be cake and refreshments served.

For information, call Chris at 971-218-0361 or go tofforegon.org.

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Learn about world travel group March 19 in Albany - Statesman Journal

Trump signs new travel ban directive – BBC News


Politico
Trump signs new travel ban directive
BBC News
President Donald Trump has signed a new executive order placing a 90-day ban on people from six mainly Muslim nations. Iraq - which was covered in the previous seven-nation order - has been removed from the new one after agreeing to additional visa ...
How Trump's new travel ban targets the whole worldPolitico
What the New Travel Ban Means for Refugees Around the WorldPacific Standard
5 differences in Trump's new travel banUSA TODAY
Washington Post -WJLA -U.S. News & World Report -The White House
all 2,339 news articles »

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Trump signs new travel ban directive - BBC News

This Couple Sold Their Home to Travel the World With Their Toddler – Travel+Leisure

When husband and wife Terry and Jennifer Constant realized their daily jobs were keeping them from getting to watch their newborn son grow, they decided to quit their jobs, sell their house, buy a motorhome, and travel the world together.

The trio has been journeying through Spain's "snow cap mountains, forests, secret beaches, and incredibly cosmopolitan cities" since January, all within their roughly 20-foot-long motorhome.

Terry and Jennifer had both been avid backpackers back in university together, spending three years traveling the world, and decided that this would not only help them avoid high nursery fees, but it would be the best way to get to spend time with their son.

I had to pay for someone else to look after my son, while I continued to stare out of the window at work wishing the day away until I could pick up my little boy, in order to basically just put him to bed on a daily basis, Jennifer told Travel + Leisure.

I just thought there must be more to life than this, she added.

Thats why the duo decided to sell their four-bedroom home in England and swap it for a motorhome instead, taking their 15-month-old toddler to see stunning locations around the globe.

Theres nothing like the feeling of packing up your life, clearing out the unnecessary, and starting a new chapter, Terry wrote on their blog, Travel As They Grow. The world is out there for us to see, and what better way to watch our little one grown up?"

But taking on a nomadic lifestyle with a toddler is no easy feat, which is why the family has some tips on making the experience smoother.

They recommend planning only one major activity or city visit per day and driving no longer than two hours at a time, since you want to ensure your baby has enough time to rest.

They also suggest bringing a highchair for dinners and for playtime activities and using websites like Search For Sites to make finding free overnight camping a breeze.

Finally, you'll want make sure you have enough water in the tank of your motorhome, as you dont want to run out mid-shower.

To ensure Ethan is able to play and interact with other children, the couple has also been volunteering throughout their travels.

They are currently planning to head to Portugal before touring through more of Europe in the summer and heading to Africa in the fall.

"Life is so precious and time is worth so much more than money," Jennifer said. "Watching your baby grow up in a relaxed environment, traveling the globe, is one of the best preschool educations you can offer."

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This Couple Sold Their Home to Travel the World With Their Toddler - Travel+Leisure

Why I Travel: Padma Lakshmi – Cond Nast Traveler

What was your first trip?

My first trip was when I went in 1974 from my grandparents' home in New Delhi to be reunited with my mother in New York City . I flew from Delhi to Cairo to Rome to London, and finally to JFK where my mother stood waiting on a chilly Halloween night. I shall never forget that night, but every trip has been an adventure.

Where in the world did you have your favorite meal?

My favorite meal ever would have to be in the backwaters of Kerala on a house boat. My daughter and I traveled there last year and had a sublime time on this vintage Chinese fishing clipper. There were so many little dishes of vegetable curries, seafood preparations, pickles, and soupy lentils served over puffy Keralan brown rice. I didn't know where to begin or end, and of course I wound up eating too much. Each dish was different from the last and they were all placed in little mounds on this beautiful green banana leaf. As we slurped the food with our hands we tried desperately not to rip the banana leaf so as not to lose a single drop of anything.

Whats it like having your daughter travel with you?

Its great. She has been traveling with me since she was six weeks old and she is a good little traveler. She keeps herself busy and she doesnt fussa lot of times when we are getting off the plane people will realize there was a child sitting behind them or in front of them and are shocked. She has more stamps on her passport than anyone else. Like I said, we just got back from India and she wanted to stay another month. She didnt want to come home so. She is a happy little traveler. She is a good gypsy. ... I hope that all of this travel makes her into a more broad-minded human being as an adult.

What else has travel taught you?

I hope that travel has made me a more broad-minded person and to see the beauty and benefits that you can take from different cultures. From a very pragmatic point of view, travel has taught me how to cook and to be knowledgeable about my career in food . I have learned more about people by studying what different cultures eat through my documentaries, my writing, and just common daily exchanges with folks all over the world.

What does travel mean to you?

Travel to me means freedom, escape, the extinguishing of ignorance and prejudice, and the exchange not only of cultures and language but ideas. And hopefully greater understanding among people in different parts of the world. It is the single most important thing that I think a young person should do before they are 25. Earlier in fact. I am sure that the vast amount of miles I covered before the age of 17, crossing different continents, better prepared me for the life I have now.

Why do you travel?

I travel because a life without travel is uninteresting, perhaps even unacceptable to me. I travel whenever possible and now I make sure my daughter travels with me as often as possible, too. I travel to see the world but I also travel to see more of myself.

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Why I Travel: Padma Lakshmi - Cond Nast Traveler

Why I Travel: Niki Caro – Cond Nast Traveler

Notions of "home" and "away" get blurry when you're a citizen of the world. So what does it mean to travel? For Niki Caro, Kiwi writer and the director of The Zookeeper's Wife, it's all about leaving home, especially when you're from the edge of the world.

Where were you born? Wellington, New Zealand.

Where are your parents from/wheres your family from? How did they meet? My parents are from New Zealand . My mother was a space waitress (airline hostess) and my father was an intrepid traveler. They met in the air.

Where did you grow up? In New Zealand.

Where do you live now? How did you end up here? In Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles , up a crazy mountain, with deer and coyotes in the yard, but still only five minutes from Sunset Boulevard.

What do you think of as "home"? The wild and isolated Kare Kare Beach in New Zealand . Its the beach where Jane Campion shot The Piano . Also the place where I bought my first house. The day we moved in, I knew I had found my home, my place in the world.

How has travel defined your life? Coming from New Zealand means you are right on the very edge of the earth. The need to travel is instinctive.

Why do you travel? Why will you never stop traveling? I travel because the world is fascinating, and its a pleasure and privilege to get all over it.

Why is choosing to travel important in 2017? Because the world is changing. Because we need to bear witness. Because to travel is to recognize that we are all different, and thats an important and amazing thing.

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Why I Travel: Niki Caro - Cond Nast Traveler

Could This Transhumanist Be the next Governor of California? – Big Think

Its a good time to be a transhumanist politician. As faith in the political establishment declines, new technologies, from gene editing to artificial intelligence, are transforming our lives faster than ever. The transhumanist author and politician Zoltan Istvan agrees. He thinks the time is ripe for pro-science and technology governance, and for leaders who will embrace the technologies that could fundamentally transform our conceptions of what it means to be human.

Istvan is a maverick who appears to thrive in an 'outsider' role. He self-published a sci-fi novel, The Transhumanist Wager, in 2013, which became a surprise bestseller on Amazon. In 2016, he made an unlikely run for US president as the leader of the Transhumanist Party. Now, hes making a bid for Governor of California in the 2018 election under a Libertarian Party ticket.

As a libertarian, Istvan believes in promoting maximum freedom and personal accountability, a sentiment that gels well with his championing of human enhancement technologiesand robot and cyborg rights.

Like all transhumanists, Istvan believes in using science and technology to enhance human capabilities and transcend current biological limits. He wants to be smarter, live longer, and eventually merge with advanced technologies to become a posthuman beingone that is impervious, or at least resilient, to aging, and most mortal risks.

jason-silva-on-transhumanism

All Aboard the Immortality Bus

The primary role of transhumanist politicians and parties at present is not to win elections, but to spread awareness and garner political clout. Istvan acknowledges this, and he plays the role well.

When running for president in 2016, he drove around the country in a coffin-shaped Immortality Bus spreading the word that death should be conquered. He got a lot of media attention and helped to generate awareness about transhumanist ideas and technologies. He also seemed to be the only candidate actively desiring to be superseded. Eventually, Istvan hopes that an artificial intelligence will become president, as he thinks it will do a better job.

In 2017, the political newcomer set his sights on a smaller goal: California. He also made the pragmatic decision to switch to the Libertarian Party, which has a larger support base than his own Transhumanist Party. But Istvan hasnt abandoned transhumanism. Many transhumanists are libertarians, or have libertarian sympathies, and Istvan believes that he can promote libertarian and transhumanist interests in tandem.

Henotably opposes federal regulations that could hamper the development of advanced technologies, like artificial intelligence and gene editing, which have many marketable applications, from driverless cars, to the broad and growing field of personalized medicine. These industries are big in California, and Istvan believes they will be instrumental in promoting economic growth.

But what if robots end up taking all the jobs? As a left-leaning libertarian, Istvan thinks that some form of basic income will eventually be necessary to solve this problem.

The gubernatorial candidate is also a passionate defender of the joint transhumanist-libertarian view that the individual should have the right to choose what they do with their own body. The principle ofmorphological freedom,as its called in transhumanist circles, includes basic forms of DIY biohacking (Istvan has an RFID chip implanted in his wrist, which opens his front door)and extends to much more ambitious forms of body modification, like gene therapy, and other biomedical interventions that could stop or reverse aging, enhance physical and cognitive prowess, and even delay death.

Like many transhumanists, Istvan is also adamant that the government needs to classify aging as a disease. He views the fight against aging and death as a (trans)human rights issue, a stance he explained in a 2017 interview:

My entire goal, and one of the things I'm standing behind is that we all have a universal right to indefinite lifespans. That's something I can promise you in the 21st century will become one of the most important civil and ideological rights of humanity. That everybody has a right to live indefinitely.

Who Wants to Live Forever?

Apparently, quite a few people. Billions of dollars are being spent by tech corporations and entrepreneurs to unlock the secrets of human biology, reverse aging, and cure disease. Googles Calico Labs, a $1.5 billion initiative,focus purely on anti-aging and life-extension research, and Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan havepledged $3 billionto cure all diseases by the end of the century.

PayPal co-founder and prominent libertarian transhumanist Peter Thiel is another keen investor in life-extension initiatives. He famously expressed interest in"parabiosis"an experimental procedure in which individuals over 35 receive blood transfusions from those under 25 in the hope of experiencing regenerative effects. Thiel hassaid of death:

You can accept it, you can deny it or you can fight it. I think our society is dominated by people who are into denial or acceptance, and I prefer to fight it.

Oracle founder Larry Ellison has also donated in excess of $430million to anti-aging research, and is similarly outspoken about the tragedy of death:

Death has never made any sense to me Death makes me angry. Premature death makes me angrier still.

But the question remains, is life-extension actually possible? Biogerontologist and co-founder of the Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senesence (SENS) Foundation, Aubrey de Grey, thinks so.

aubrey-de-greys-plan-to-stop-aging

De Grey believes that aging, and age-related diseases should be thought of as the various types of molecular and cellular damage that the body does to itself as a side effect of its normal metabolic operation. De Greys research focuses on figuring out how to repair that damage and prevent it from developing into a pathology of old age.

Other scientists, like the theoretical physicist Michio Kaku, and the Harvard geneticist George Church are also optimistic that cheap genomic sequencing, gene-editing techniques like CRISPR-Cas9, and the explosion of genetic and lifestyle data will help us to unlock and reverse the biological mechanisms of aging in the near future.

Is Life Extension Ethical?

Of course there aremanywho think that living indefinitely is infeasible, or just plain wrong. Like the Jewish historian Hava Tirosh-Samuelson, whobelieves that death gives life meaning and that without it we would be less human. She also wonders: What will people live for, if they live indefinitely? and notes that in the Jewish tradition:

The ideal of indefinite postponement of death is the highest form of human hubris, one more example of human rebellion against God who created humans as finite beings whose life narrative has a beginning, a middle, and an end.

Other common concernsare population growth, resource scarcity, the fear that the old will refuse to make way for the young, and the worry that only the rich will benefit.

In a more philosophical vein, the American astronomerSeth Shostakhas mused that if we radically extend our lives but remain biological we could become ultra risk averse and avoid doing everyday things like getting into a car. With so much potential ahead of us, even a small probability of dying would seem unacceptable.

Yet when it comes to upgrading the human condition, Istvan thinks we should go for broke. When asked what he thought about a posthuman future he declared:

Oh I'm totally embracing it! I have called for the end of humanity as we know it. The reality is that I think the human body is frail. I don't want to say the human body is evil, but I don't like it. I'm not a fan of the human body. I think it's something that is designed to be replaced and replaced as quickly as possible.

He makes a bold statement. And, like any politician, he argues (in line with Aubrey de Grey) that it will be good for the economy.

the-economics-of-immortality

But just how open minded is California? It's previously embracedthe Governator, butifIstvan were elected it could end up with a real-life cyborga human who gets upgraded to be more like a machine. For his part, Zoltan Istvan thinks that this is exactly what California, and humanity, needs.

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Could This Transhumanist Be the next Governor of California? - Big Think