The End of the Libertarian Dream? – POLITICO Magazine

Justin Amash cant seem to concentrate. His eyes keep drifting toward the TV behind me, mounted on the wall inside his congressional office. The 36-year-old representative from Michigan, who arrived in Washington six years ago as a self-described libertarian Republican, is rattling off a list of concerns about the newly inaugurated president, but he is distracted by C-SPANs programming: Mick Mulvaney, his close friend and colleague from South Carolinaand a similarly libertarian-minded Republicanis getting grilled during his confirmation hearing to become director of the Office of Management and Budget. Arizona Senator John McCain had just finished his inquisition and was particularly harsh, scolding Mulvaney for voting to slash military spending and withdraw American troops from Europe and Afghanistan. It was a tense exchange, and Amash savored every moment of it. The ascent of Mulvaney to such a powerful position in the federal government, libertarians believe, proves that their ideology has invaded and influenced the Republican mainstream in a manner unimaginable a decade ago.

There is, however, a complicating factor: Mulvaneys new boss is President Donald Trump.

Story Continued Below

In campaigning for the presidency, Trump frequently sang from the same hymnal as libertarian primary rival Senator Rand Paul, warning against regime change and nation-building abroad, decrying the allied invasions of Iraq and Libya (never mind that Trump initially supported both), and promising to disengage from a self-immolating Middle East while re-evaluating American involvement in NATO. The election of an ideologically unmoored reality-TV star was startling to many libertarians, but at least it suggested some progress in their struggle with the GOPs interventionist wing. The silver lining is that Trump proved you can win the Republican nomination, and the presidency, by criticizing neoconservative foreign policy, says David Boaz, executive vice president of the libertarian Cato Institute.

I think the McCain-Graham wing of the party is withering, Amash tells me in his office, referring to South Carolinas hawkish senator. It was dominant 10 or 15 years ago on foreign policy matters and surveillance and other things. But today, its a rather weak force compared to a decade ago in D.C. And its almost nonexistent at home.

And yet, Trump also pledged to oversee a massive military buildup. He threatened to bomb the shit out of the Islamic State; suggested killing the families of terrorists; expressed an interest in seizing Iraqs sovereign oil; advocated the return of torture; and, in his inaugural address, declared he would eradicate Islamist terrorism from the face of the Earth. When I mention all this, Amash bursts out laughing. Not exactly a libertarian philosophy, I say. No, he shakes his head. Its not.

There are areas, certainly, in which Trumpism and libertarianism will peacefully co-exist; school choice, as evidenced by Trumps selection of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, is one example. Deregulation is another. But by and large, they cannot be reconciled. Where libertarians champion the flow of people and capital across international borders, Trump aims to slow, or even stop, both. Where libertarians advocate drug legalization and criminal justice reform, Trump and his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, seek a return to law-and-order policies. Where libertarians push to protect the First and Fourth Amendments, Trump pushes back with threats of banning Muslims and expanding the surveillance state. And where Mulvaney has dedicated his career to the argument that dramatic fiscal measures are needed to prevent the United States from going bankrupt, Trump campaigned unambiguously on accumulating debt, increasing spending and not laying a finger on the entitlement programs that make up an ever-growing share of the federal budget.

THE LIBERTARIAN STANDARD-BEARERS: Rep. Justin Amash and Sen. Rand Paul outside the Capitol in 2015. | Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call

Sooner or later, something has to give. Mick knows the numbers. And hes going to get to, at some point, a soul-testing moment, Mark Sanford, his fellow South Carolina representative and a self-identified, lifelong libertarian, tells me. Do I go with, you know, what Donald is saying? Or do I go with what I know to be mathematic reality?

This disconnect captures the sense of uncertainty and conflict that libertarianswhether they are Republicans, Democrats or adherents of the eponymous third partyfeel in the age of Trump. After generations of being relegated to the periphery of American politics, they are seeing some of their most precious ideals accepted and advocated for at the highest levels of government. But in many policy areas, there has never been a president who poses a greater threat to what they hold dearone who is poised, potentially, to reorient the GOP electorate toward a strong, active, centralized and protectionist federal government. The Trump presidency, then, is shaping up to be a defining moment for the libertarian movement.

But it wont come down to intraparty disputes over marijuana, or sentencing reform, or government data collection. Rather, the viability of libertarianismfor the next four or eight years, and potentially much longerwill be determined to an overwhelming extent by the relative stability of international affairs and the level of security Americans feel as a result.

Not long ago, libertarians were having their long-awaited moment, with Rand Paulsupposedly the candidate who could rebrand their once-fringe ideology for a new generation of Americansgracing magazine covers and converting Republicans to a philosophy of laissez-faire at home and restraint abroad. But the reason he isnt president today, his allies say, owes equally to the rise of Trump and that of another disruptive phenomenon.

Two people were Senator Pauls undoing in the presidential race, Chip Englander, his campaign manager, tells me. Donald Trump and Jihadi John.

DEFINING MOMENT: At a 2007 primary debate, Ron Paul argued U.S. interventionism led to 9/11. | Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Libertarians call it the Giuliani moment. It was May 15, 2007, and the former New York mayor stood across from Ron Paul on a debate stage in Columbia, South Carolina. They had nothing in commonpersonalities and ideologies aside, Rudy Giuliani was comfortably leading the GOP presidential field, while Paul was polling in the low single digitsbut they would soon produce an inflection point in the partys modern history, one that triggered a decade of unprecedented progress for libertarians.

As a panel of Fox News moderators mocked his opposition to the Iraq War, Paul argued that American intervention in the Middle East was a major contributing factor to the September 11 attacks. Have you ever read the reasons they attacked us? he asked. They attack us because weve been over there. Giuliani, whose candidacy arose from his heroic handling of 9/11, pounced, calling it an extraordinary statement and asking Paul to withdraw it. The crowd roared with approval, but Paul didnt budge. I believe very sincerely that the CIA is correct when they teach and talk about blowback, he responded.

That statement, better suited to an Ivy League faculty lounge than a Republican debate stage, was the spark that started everything, says A.J. Spiker, the former Iowa GOP chairman who backed Ron Paul and later his son Rand for president. Before long, there was talk of a Ron Paul Revolution, which somehow wasnt an overstatement: As he climbed in the polls and gained name recognition, Paul began raising eye-popping sums of money online with the help of liberty movement groups that had begun forming across the country, with much of their grass-roots energy concentrated on college campuses.

There was, however, an unintended consequence: Pauls popularity served to cement libertarianisms reputation as an exotic strand of internecine opposition rather than a reliable, cooperative piece of the GOP coalition. Even though he emphasized other issues in his campaignmost memorably, auditing the Federal Reserveit was Pauls harsh critique of President George W. Bushs interventionism that defined his candidacy in 2008 and again in 2012, as well as his sons political ambitions, in the eyes of the party elite.

He alienated a lot of Republicans with a very isolationist foreign policy message, says Bob Barr, the former Georgia congressman who abandoned the GOP and became the Libertarian Partys presidential nominee in 2008. Barr, listening to Paul that year, recalls thinking, If libertarians continue to exist on ideological purity in that regard ... it will condemn them to not expanding their influence in the party.

The Republican establishment was banking on exactly that. Having watched with alarm as Pauls 2012 campaign attracted significantly more support than its 2008 iteration, the partys elder statesmen were eager to undermine the movements long-term viability. When I spoke with Karl Rove a month after Election Day 2012, he predicted libertarianism would soon regress to pre-Paul irrelevance. I dont think the antiwar sentiment is durable, Rove told me. The Republican Party is not going to find itself in five or 10 years committed to neo-isolationism.

In the year that followed, Roves prediction looked anything but prescient. In July 2013, Amash sponsored an amendment to restrict the National Security Agencys bulk data collection program; it fell just 12 votes shy of passage in the House, despite fierce opposition from President Barack Obama and the congressional leadership of both parties. That amendment was inspired by blockbuster revelations a month earlier, made by intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, that the governments domestic surveillance practices were illegal. That followed a watershed moment in March 2013, when Rand Paul, then a freshman senator from Kentucky and inheritor of his fathers messianic following, had completed a nearly 13-hour filibuster in opposition to the nomination of John Brennan as Obamas CIA directorand more broadly, to the administrations refusal to rule out drone strikes on American citizens. This momentum was validated by Republican leader Mitch McConnell, a mascot of the Washington establishment, hiring Jesse Benton, the Paul family consigliere, to manage his own 2014 Senate reelection.

With another White House campaign on the horizon, the dreams of a movement rested on the younger Pauls shoulders. Everyone recognized that the disheveled, curmudgeonly 70-something Ron could win hearts and minds but never the presidency. Randmore polished, more nuanced and nearly 30 years youngerwas the libertarians chosen one. (Gary Johnson, the Libertarian Partys 2016 nominee, was never taken as seriously.) Ron had won 21 percent of the vote in Iowa and 23 percent in New Hampshire in the 2012 primary; Rand, in the eyes of his bullish base, had nowhere to go but up.

Sure enough, by July 2014, he sat atop the GOP presidential field in the RealClearPolitics average of national surveys; that same month, NBC News released polls showing him leading in New Hampshire and tied for first place in Iowa. As he prepared to launch his campaign in early 2015, Paul basked in hisand the libertarian movementsascendance, which crescendoed with an August 2014 New York Times Magazine feature, with the headline, Has the Libertarian Moment Finally Arrived? It was met with hosannas inside Pauls political operation.

Twelve days after the Times piece was published, an organization known as the Islamic State, or ISISwhich had announced the formation of a caliphate to govern Muslims worldwide, but globally was not yet a household namereleased a video depicting the beheading of American journalist James Foley. Exactly two weeks later, ISIS published a similar video showing another American journalist, Steven Sotloff, also being beheaded. With the spectacular barbarism piercing Western consciousnessamid wall-to-wall coverage, the executioner was dubbed Jihadi John by media outletsObama delivered a prime-time address on September 10 and pledged to destroy ISIS.

The next month, Time magazine featured Paul on its cover as The Most Interesting Man in Politics. The timing could not have been worse: Having intended to capture Pauls rise, the story marked the onset of his decline. He had already dropped to 12 percent in the RCP national poll average, from 14 percent in July; by Christmas, he was at 9 percent. The crash continued throughout 2015, interrupted by only a fleeting bounce after his April 7 campaign launch. In late July, he was below 6 percent, and by October, one year after Times cover, he hovered at just over 2 percent.

We did a survey in Iowa that fall, and in the survey, Republican caucus-goers were very much opposed to the policies that Senator Paul was waving the flag for: less spying, less drone strikes, less foreign intervention, closing of foreign bases, recalls Vincent Harris, the campaigns chief digital strategist.

Embarrassingly, Pauls numbers plunged so low that Fox Business excluded him from its main debate in January 2016, less than a month before Iowas first-in-the-nation caucuses. (Paul boycotted the undercard debate.) A few weeks later, after winning just 4.5 percent of the vote in Iowa, Paul quit the race.

THE NEW BOSS: Rand Paul with Donald Trump after the president signed a bill undoing a coal rule. | Rex Features/AP

It was a dramatic, if unsurprising, fall from grace. Ron Paul had masterfully exploited the frustrations of a war-weary Republican Party, and though his son was hyped as an objectively superior messenger, everyone understood the foundation of his appeal could crumble with a sudden shift in public opinion. We as libertarians know that at a time of fear, our brand doesnt sell very well, says Jack Hunter, the editor of Rare Politics and co-author of Rand Pauls 2011 book, The Tea Party Goes to Washington. So when we saw beheadings on the news ... we knew it would be problematic.

Polling suggested as much. In November 2013when Rand Paul was riding high43 percent of Republicans said U.S. anti-terrorism policies were going too far in restricting civil liberties, while 41 percent said they werent going far enough to protect the homeland, according to Pew Research. In September 2014during the immediate aftermath of the Foley and Sotloff execution videosthose figures were 24 percent and 64 percent, respectively. The shift in sentiment would only accelerate. A separate poll in September 2014, commissioned by CBS News, found that 39 percent of Americans favored sending U.S. ground troops to Iraq and Syria to fight ISIS, with 55 percent opposed. Five months later, in February 2015, the percentages inverted: 57 percent of Americans wanted U.S. ground troops deployed to battle ISIS, and 37 percent were opposed. (Among Republican voters, it was 72 percent and 27 percent, respectively.)

To remain competitive, Paulwhose candidacy was already suffering from other manifest shortcomings, lack of financial support and personal prickliness chief among themtried to thread an impossible needle: projecting greater toughness to reassure mainstream Republicans, without sounding so muscular as to alienate his base. We accomplished neither, Tony Fabrizio, the Paul campaigns pollster, says. With all respect to Rand I think he wanted to prove he and his father were different. And that created natural tensions. By trying to please both sides, he wound up pleasing neither.

Drew Ivers, who chaired Ron Pauls 2008 and 2012 campaigns in Iowa, shocked his fellow libertarian activists by declining to endorse Rands 2016 bid. I remember him telling me once by phone that he was going to submit a proposal to go to war with ISIS, Ivers tells me. Go to war? Wait a minute. What do you mean, go to war?

I busted his chops about it, Matt Welch, editor at large of Reason, recalls of Pauls proposed declaration of war. And he said to me, Look, I cant win a Republican primary under these conditions if I dont support some kind of confrontation with ISIS.

Paul declined an interview request for this article. His spokesman, Sergio Gor, said in an email, Our focus is on Obamacare repeal and replacement exclusively right now. More accurately, the senators friends and allies say, he simply has no interest in re-litigating his presidential run or participating in a post-mortem of it.

Ironically, there was one Republican in 2016 who outdid Ron Pauls rants against Bushs interventionismand he won the partys nomination. Look at Trump. He went to South Carolina, a military state, and said the Iraq War was a disaster, said 9/11 happened on Bushs watch, shared these borderline conspiracy theories, Welch says. He was stridently antiwar and anti-interventionand he stomped the competition.

Trump had beaten Paul at what was supposed to be his own game.

***

Its the wild card of global affairsand the terrible hand it dealt Pauls 2016 campaignthat distracts from libertarianisms successful infiltration of the domestic policymaking complex. Education, which Republicans nationalized under Bush, is increasingly being handed back to the states. A coalition of liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans has begun challenging the status quo on issues ranging from police militarization to asset forfeiture to sentencing reform. Meanwhile, two of the libertarian communitys other longtime goals, marijuana decriminalization and marriage equality, have been realized in irreversible ways.

And yet, all of this momentum might be rendered insignificant, even irrelevant, if the new Republican president ends up going to war. In fighting for the heart and soul and future of the GOP, libertarians understand their chief strategic priority is holding Trump to his non-interventionist rhetoric. This explains why Paul was willing to support Sessions nomination, despite the new attorney generals sharply divergent views on issues such as drug prosecution and asset forfeiture: Paul, it appears, would rather spend what political capital he has opposing anyone who might inflame Trumps foreign policy. (Do not let Elliott Abrams anywhere near the State Department, the Kentucky senator wrote the week of Sessions confirmation vote, responding to reports that Trump could pick the well-known neoconservative to be deputy to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.)

So far, Paul and his ilk are taking some comfort in the company Trump keeps. The president passed on hiring Abrams. And the principals of Trumps national security teamTillerson, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Homeland Security Secretary John Kellyare regarded as pragmatic realists who will restrain, rather than encourage, the presidents more aggressive instincts.

TRUMPs LIBERTARIAN: Mick Mulvaney is sworn in as director of the Office of Management and Budget. | Ron Sachs/picture-alliance/DPA/AP Images

That said, Trump, who loves to be called a man of action, feels a mandate to escalate various conflicts with Americas enemies. Exit polls on Election Day found that 24 percent of all voters thought the fight against ISIS was going very badly, and Trump won 83 percent of that group. Some in the Pentagon reportedly want to send ground forces into Syria. Trump has already proved unhesitant to deploy American troopsspecial operators at minimumto foreign soil. That he decided to greenlight a tremendously dangerous operation in Yemen almost immediately after taking office shows an appetite for boldness and a willingness to accept collateral damage; a Navy SEAL, as well as several civilians, were killed in the operation.

Its not what President Rand Paul would have done. And yet libertarians, who feared they ultimately would choose between an interventionist Democrat in Hillary Clinton and a neoconservative Republican nominee, still believe, perhaps naively, that this was their next best outcome. Marco Rubio, the hawkish Republican senator from Florida, would have been much worse for us, Amash tells me. I think Rubio would have ushered in a long decline of American foreign policy. Trump is just a shock to the system. Rubio is a younger, more charming John McCain.

In any case, the grass-roots foundation laid by Ron and Rand Paul seems likely to outlast Trump. Young Americans for Liberty, the group that grew out of Rons 2008 campaign, went from 96 chapters nationwide in 2009 to 602 chapters in May 2015, the month after Rands campaign launched. Today, there are 804 chapters. This growth, combined with continuous, non-election-year activismand polling showing that younger voters, both left- and right-leaning, are increasingly libertarian in their views of governmentwards off pessimistic assertions that their moment might have just come and gone.

Look at every single candidate who ran, and look at their infrastructures, Cliff Maloney, president of Young Americans for Liberty, tells me. Do you see people out still knocking doors for Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush or Ben Carson? No. This is going to be a slog. And were going to fight through.

The more important fight will take place on Capitol Hill. With the vast majority of Republicans already capitulating to Trump, libertarian-minded lawmakers are positioned as the most vocal bloc of intraparty opposition. Ron Paul was a lonely voice of dissent in Bushs GOP, and benefited politically when the party faithful eventually came around to some of his arguments. Today, theres a much larger contingent in the Congress oriented toward libertarianismAmash, Sanford, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and others in the House; Rand Paul and Mike Lee in the Senateand it has already shown a willingness to tangle with Trump where others in the party have passed. The aggressiveness with which libertarians check Trumps overreach, at home and abroad, will correlate with the movements credibility, and popularity, if Republican voters turn against the presidents policies.

But what if they dont? Knowing the Libertarian Party just nominated its most experienced presidential ticket ever and won just 3 percent nationally, the grave fear among libertarians is that Trumps actions will represent the very worst of his campaign promisesintervening militarily, adding to the debt, abandoning trade, restricting civil libertiesand that the GOP electorate will love him for it.

If the Republican Party becomes thoroughly Trumpist, Boaz says, theres not much room for libertarians.

Tim Alberta is national political reporter at Politico Magazine.

Read the original here:

The End of the Libertarian Dream? - POLITICO Magazine

Homes For Sale | Isenhour Homes – New Homes in the Triad …

Jump To CITY ADVANCE BERMUDA RUN BOLIVIA BURLINGTON CLEMMONS FAYETTEVILLE GREENSBORO HOLDEN BEACH KERNERSVILLE LEWISVILLE MOCKSVILLE OAK ISLAND OCEAN ISLE BEACH PFAFFTOWN RAEFORD SOUTHPORT ST. JAMES WINSTON-SALEM COLLECTION COASTAL HERITAGE ISLAND LEGACY SIGNATURE SQUARE FOOTAGE 1,000 TO 2,500 SQ. FT. 2,500 TO 5,000 SQ. FT. 5,000 TO 7,500 SQ. FT. BEDROOMS 2 BEDROOMS 3 BEDROOMS 4 BEDROOMS 5 BEDROOMS 6 BEDROOMS FLOORPLAN ARDMORE ARDSLEY ARMSTRONG CLASSIC ARMSTRONG COASTAL CLASSIC ARMSTRONG FRENCH COUNTRY ARMSTRONG TRADITIONAL ASHLAND FRENCH COUNTRY ASHLAND TRADITIONAL ASHLEY FRENCH COUNTRY COASTAL BARRINGTON COASTAL CLASSIC BARRINGTON COASTAL LOW COUNTRY BARRINGTON FRENCH COUNTRY BARRINGTON TRADITIONAL BERKSHIRE A BERKSHIRE COASTAL CLASSIC BERMUDA RUN WEST BRADLEY FRENCH COUNTRY BRUNSWICK I BRUNSWICK II CASWELL I CORTNEY FRENCH COUNTRY CORTNEY TRADITIONAL DUNWOODY CLASSIC DUNWOODY FRENCH COUNTRY DUNWOODY GRAND TRADITIONAL DUNWOODY GRAND TRADITIONAL II DUNWOODY TRADITIONAL ELLINGTON CLASSIC ELLINGTON CLASSIC II CUSTOM ELLINGTON CUSTOM ELLINGTON FRENCH COUNTRY ELLINGTON TRADITIONAL FISHER COASTAL LOW COUNTRY FISHER CUSTOM FISHER TRADITIONAL FISHER TRADITIONAL II GASTON GLADSTONE CRAFTSMAN GLADSTONE FRENCH COUNTRY GLADSTONE TRADITIONAL GLENN COASTAL LOW COUNTRY GLENN FRENCH COUNTRY GLENN TRADITIONAL GREENFIELD CLASSIC GREENFIELD FRENCH COUNTRY GREENFIELD FRENCH COUNTRY II GREENFIELD TRADITIONAL HARBOR WATCH HARTFORD FRENCH COUNTRY HARTFORD TRANSITIONAL HATTERAS COASTAL CLASSIC HATTERAS COASTAL LOW COUNTRY HATTERAS FRENCH COUNTRY HATTERAS FRENCH COUNTRY II HATTERAS TRADITIONAL HOLDEN COTTAGE I HUNTINGTON CLASSIC HUNTINGTON FRENCH COUNTRY HUNTINGTON FRENCH COUNTRY II HUNTINGTON TRADITIONAL JORDAN FRENCH COUNTRY JORDAN TRADITIONAL LANSFORD CRAFTSMAN LELAND CRAFTSMAN LONG BEACH I MADISON MEADOWBROOK FRENCH COUNTRY MEADOWBROOK TRADITIONAL MORRISETTE NORTON I OAK ISLAND I OXFORD CRAFTSMAN OXFORD FRENCH COUNTRY OXFORD TRADITIONAL PENDLETON FRENCH COUNTRY PENDLETON GRAND TRADITIONAL PENDLETON GRAND TRADITIONAL II PENDLETON TRADITIONAL POLLY COTTAGE PORTER SEA WATCH ST. ANDREWS CLASSIC ST. ANDREWS FRENCH COUNTRY ST. ANDREWS GRAND TRADITIONAL ST. ANDREWS TRADITIONAL THOMPSON TRADITIONAL WARWICK WOMBLE YAUPON II LIFESTYLE JUST GETTING STARTED GROWING FAMILY COUNTRY LIVING EASY LIVING GOING COASTAL GOLF COURSE LIVING

Here is the original post:

Homes For Sale | Isenhour Homes - New Homes in the Triad ...

Cyclone threat builds up for Darwin, Tiwi Islands and other Top End areas – The Guardian

A photo taken on the Tiwi Islands, north of Darwin. A cyclone warning has been declared for the Islands and a cyclone watch for Top End communities. Photograph: Helen Davidson for the Guardian

The bureau of meteorology has declared a cyclone warning for the Tiwi Islands and a cyclone watch for Top End communities, including Darwin and out to the Western Australia border.

The alert comes as a tropical low, about 375km northeast of Darwin, accelerates and intensifies towards the Top End coast.

The tropical low, above the warm waters of the Arafura Sea, is producing gusts up to 85km an hour, and is moving south at 12km an hour. The bureau has put the chances of it becoming Cyclone Blanche at more than 50% on Sunday or Monday.

On Saturday morning, a cyclone warning issued when coastal and island areas are likely to experience gale force winds within 24 hours was declared between the Tiwi Islands and Croker Island, just east of the Coburg Peninsula.

A warning to expect those conditions within 24 to 48 hours has been issued for areas from Point Stuart to the WA border, including Darwin and Wadeye.

The system is expected to track in a southwesterly direction and move closer to Darwin on Sunday. It is forecast to be close to tropical cyclone intensity as it approaches the Tiwi Islands on Saturday night with gales of up to 110km an hour.

The low is expected to move towards the south or southwest during the weekend and may form into a tropical cyclone near the Tiwi Islands on Sunday, the bureau said.

The cyclone may intensify further during Sunday night or Monday as it move towards the south or southwest across the Timor Sea. The tropical cyclone may cross the north Kimberley coast later on Monday or early Tuesday.

Darwin is expected to be affected by wild weather from Sunday, and the bureau has urged all residents in the region to make sure they are prepared with up to date cyclone kits and properties cleared of debris and potential wind borne missiles.

A strong wind warning has been issued for the Tiwi and Arafura coasts on Saturday and Darwin harbour on Sunday, and a gale force winds warning for Beagle Bonaparte Coast, North Tiwi Coast, Van Diemen Gulf and Arafura Coast on Sunday.

The Northern Territory and northern WA region have experienced record-breaking rains over the wet season.

The weather system is expected to bring heavy rainfall of 200 to 300mm in some areas, exceeding a wet season total of two metres for the first time in six years, after Cyclone Carlos in 2011.

The Australian cyclone season has had just two named storms: Yvette in December and Alfred last month. Both reached category one strength. Yvette hit the northern WA region and Alfred formed in the Gulf of Carpentaria.

No cyclones affected the Northern Territory last year, but remote communities of Arnhem Land are still rebuilding after the destructive Lam, and then Nathan just weeks later, destroyed hundreds of homes in 2015.

Lam, a category four storm when it made landfall, was the strongest storm to hit the NT since Marcia in 2006, and a state of emergency was declared following the destruction.

Read more here:

Cyclone threat builds up for Darwin, Tiwi Islands and other Top End areas - The Guardian

Galapagos Islands cruise tour: From hell on earth to paradise – Stuff.co.nz

CRAIG PLATT

Last updated05:00, March 5 2017

REUTERS

When first discovered, these islands were considered hell on earth. Centuries later, they're now recognised as a unique paradise.

Looking across the landscape in front of me a black, hot, desolate plain of molten slag it's easy to understand why the first visitors to these islands considered them hell on earth.

It wasn't just the landscape. The animals also looked like the spawn of hell. This was the view of Spain's Fray Tomas de Berlanga, the fourth Bishop of Panama, who arrived in the Galapagos Islands in 1535 after drifting off course en route to Peru.

And compared to the bountiful paradises found elsewhere in the Pacific, surely these remote, uninhabited, harsh islands did seem hellish.

REUTERS

Galapagos Islands has a tough environment that was not seen as attractive to explorers.

More than anything, it is the lack of rainfall here, combined with the burning equatorial sun, that made it such a hard place for humans. In the age of exploration, ships would anchor at islands with the expectation they could find fresh water and replenish their supplies. Not here.

Read more: *Producers of David Attenborough's Planet Earth share their favourite places *Where the iguana chased by snakes in Planet Earth 2 scene happened *TripAdvisornames best beaches in New Zealand

And yet, the Galapagos Islands are a paradise in their own way it just depends on your perspective. Here, dozens of unique species have evolved and flourished because of their isolation and ability to survive in the tough environment.

ISTOCK

Wildlife is the number one reason to visit the Galapagos Islands.

Charles Darwin is considered something of a father figure here, as the man who recognised the significance of the islands, even if his theory of evolution was still just a glimmer in his mind's eye at the time he visited in 1835.

His identification and classification of the many unique animals particularly the finches, which were different from one island to the next put the Galapagos on the map as a place of biological importance.

Darwin's legacy continues to this day: protection of the unique environment has become a serious business here. The Ecuadorian territory has placed limits on the number and size of the cruise ships that can operate here, so planning your trip well in advance is advised.

REUTERS

The Wolf volcano spews smoke and lava on Isabela Island.

The tourist demand isn't surprising because the islands remain a true bucket list-destination.

And as the extraordinaryPlanet Earth 2series from the BBC hits our screens, the Galapagos is a place where you can have your own "Planet Earth"moments. The BBC's footage of an iguana narrowly escaping a onslaught of snakes was filmed here on the island of Fernandina.

My own visit is on board the Ocean Spray, a luxurious catamaran that sleeps up to 16 passengers. The width of the catamaran means the common areas the dining area, the lounge and the rooftop sun deck are particularly spacious. And the cabins are also quite luxurious, and large with their own bathrooms (the shower is one of the largest I've seen at sea). All have private balconies, even my own single-berth room.

REBECCA BOWATER

Male boobies will whistle and do a little dance and spread their wings in the hopes of attracting some female attention.

Day one: Blue feet and red throats

Wildlife is the number one reason to visit the Galapagos Islands and, unlike some other parts of the world where the animals can prove elusive, here visitors will discover it immediately and in abundance.

Before arriving at the aforementioned hellscape of southern Isabela island, we set out from Santa Cruz one of the only islands to be inhabited by humans. Shortly after boarding the Ocean Spray we cruise across to our first island stop, North Seymour Island. From the deck we watch as blue-footed boobies circle and dive for fish, their bodies folding into perfect arrow shapes the instant before they hit the water.

NACHO DOCE

The animals of the Galapagos Islands are unafraid of tourists.

Despite North Seymour's tiny size, the number of animals that live here is staggering. As with all on-shore visits to the Galapagos, we're accompanied by a naturalist to inform us about the island and its animals as well as ensuring we don't stray from the defined path. This is just as well, as the wildlife is so abundant one could easily end up stepping on a poor creature by accident (the animals have no fear whatsoever of humans so won't bother getting out of your way).

North Seymour is home to hundreds of the blue-footed boobiesthe males will whistle and do a little dance, lifting each of their bright blue feet in turn before spreading their wings, in the hopes of attracting some female attention. The island is also a popular nesting spot for frigate birds. The males of this large black species have bright red sacks at their throats, which they inflate into enormous balloons. Again, it's all about getting some female attention.

Day 2: Vast volcanoes

REUTERS

A turtle swims next to a tourist in San Cristobal Island at Galapagos Marine Reserve.

We arrive at Isabela, the largest of the islands by a long way: a vast, volcanic landscape of harsh cliffs and ancient lava flows. We tour by Zodiac in the morning and quickly discover that what appeared to be sheer barren rock from a distance is teeming with life. More boobies, Galapagos doves, and black aquatic iguanas all perch or cling to the rock face. In a sheltered bay a small group of another of the island's' unique species can be found the world's only flightless cormorants. Such is the abundance of food in the water, the birds have never needed to travel far. As a result, their wings have shrunk to become near useless. If anything they have begun to resemble penguins, without yet having the abilities in the water that the latter's flippers provide.

Our second stop is Fernandina, essentially a huge single volcano that resembles Mt Fuji without the snow. Its volcanic landscape is harsh and unforgiving, covered in rocks of cooled lava that makes it impassable to most animals and unwelcoming to plant life. We walk along a designated track, being careful not to step on the island's most abundant residents marine iguanas, which are sunning themselves in large groups on the shore. We also spot several rarer Galapagos snakes, small constrictors that hunt for baby iguanas.

But we leave the island after our guide spots a killer whale cruising the shoreline. Getting in our boats, we follow it, watching it occasionally surface to spout and breathe before it disappears. Shortly after, it resurfaces right on the bow of our dinghy, a hapless sea turtle clenched in its jaws. A few minutes later, we gasp and shout in awe as the whale knocks the turtle 20 metres into the air with incredible force, seemingly in an attempt to crack its hard shell. Or perhaps it's just playing with its food. It's hard to tell. Even our guide has never seen a whale exhibit this type of behaviour.

REUTERS

There are plemnty of turtles and sea lions to be found.

Day 3: Penguins and turtles

We return to Isabela in the morning for a brief hike from Tagus Cove, a small volcanic crater lake that offers beautiful views of the harbour. Further up the hill we can see the tallest point of the islands, Volcan Wolf, a volcano on Isabela, along with the adjacent Volcan Darwin. We then tour the bay in dinghies and see our first Galapagos penguins the most northerly based penguins in the world and the only ones you can find north of the equator. After that, we snorkel the shoreline and see a large number of sea turtles grazing on the seaweed. They are completely unperturbed by our presence. While the sea turtles are not interested, a young sea lion decides to pop in to have a look at our snorkelling group.

After lunch, we head to one of the Galapagos newest beaches, a place called Urvina Bay which did not exist until 1954, where an earthquake forced the land to rise up, creating a new shoreline for this part of Isabela. Here there's a lot more vegetation, but little life. There are a few land iguanas and birds, but the tortoises that are said to live here are likely in higher ground, where there is better eating and cooler air.

REUTERS

Dozens of unique species evolved because of their isolation, including the lumbering giant Galapagos tortoise, the last of which died in 2012.

Day 4: From mangroves to hell on earth

Still circumnavigating Isabela, we find the landscape has completely changed from our last stop. Here it's a mangrove forest, though the water in the channel remains beautifully clear. We see plenty of turtles and sea lions again (one, in a bizarre sight, lazing in the branches of a mangrove tree), but the real attraction this time are the eagle and golden rays. Though small compared to some other ray species, they are both colourful and move beautifully through the water.

After lunch we move further down the coast and the landscape changes again. Gone is the greenery of the mangroves, replaced by black volcanic rock as far as the eye can see. The dark surface reflects the sun's blazing heat back at us as we walk along and the "hell on earth" descriptions come back to my mind. Depressions in the landscape have created small salt-water lakes and here we find one of the Galapagos' rarest inhabitants flamingoes. There is only a small population of the exotic birds to be found in this part of the world, yet they still survive here, dining on the small shrimp that can be found in these pools.

REUTERS

The ruins of a former US World War II era base are seen at Punta Albemarle in Isabela island at Galapagos National Park.

Day 5 and 6: Darwin's legacy

Day five is a full day of sailing and chance to rest. We round the southern coast of Isabela and make our way back to Santa Cruz. While it's a travel day of relaxation on board, I find myself constantly distracted in regular intervals I see a spout out the window and find there's a whale off the starboard side. Later, we even spot a whale shark from the upper deck, recognisable due to its vertical tail fin.

Back at Santa Cruz the next day, we visit the island's town of Puerto Ayora, home to the Charles Darwin Research Station a place where projects are developed to protect the wildlife of the region and also an opportunity to see some of the giant tortoises that are difficult to see in the wild. It was also the home of Lonesome George until 2012, when the 100-year-old tortoise the last of his species finally died.

In the gift shop, T-shirts are emblazoned with a quote attributed to Darwin: "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change."

Strangely enough. given his name is on the centre, the quote was never actually said by Darwin. Instead, it reportedly originated with an American business professor in the 1960s.

Nevertheless, it's distills Darwin's theory nicely into a philosophy we can all adopt, even as we try to keep the Galapagos and its animals from having to change any further to survive.

More informationecuador.travel

Getting thereLATAM flies to Santiago, Chile with connections to the Galapagos via Quito, Ecuador. See latam.com

Cruising thereSouth America Travel Centre arranges high-end cruise trips in the Galapagos Islands. A four-day cruise on board the Ocean Spray luxury catamaran starts from US$3090 (NZ$4320). Seesouthamericatravelcentre.com.au

The writer travelled as a guest of LATAM and the South America Travel Centre.

Traveller.com.au

Read more here:

Galapagos Islands cruise tour: From hell on earth to paradise - Stuff.co.nz

You can now buy THREE private islands with sandy beaches for less than the price of a house in Britain – The Sun

The retreat, in the United States, costs just 140,000

OWNING your own private island may seem like a dream reserved for the rich and famous, but it could be more affordable than you think.

These THREE islands, in the United States, cost less than a small house in Britain making them a reasonable investment, even if you dont have a billionaire salary to match that of Richard Branson.

machomes.com

The patches of land cover 108 acres and can be found in the Potomac River, near Washington and they cost just over 140,000.

Its not cheap but given that the average property in the UK now costs 232,000, and in London the average punter forks out 580,000 its not bad either.

The island even boastssandy beaches which are said to be perfect for camping, boating, fishing and enjoying the wildlife.

machomes.com

Bird fans can chill with ducks, blue heron and Canadian geese in among the willow and sycamore trees.

The islands are now up for sale with Mackintosh Realtors.

Current owner Peter Mertz, 57, who bought the plot of land back in 1987, told the Washington Post:Night time there in the summer is very interesting.

Youre in the middle of a big river and the sounds of wildlife engulf you from all sides, especially the sound of rushing water.

Theres nothing quite like owning your own island. There are only a handful of privately owned islands in the entire Potomac River.

See the rest here:

You can now buy THREE private islands with sandy beaches for less than the price of a house in Britain - The Sun

Tiwi Islands LGBTIQ group joins Sydney Mardi Gras parade for the first time – The Sydney Morning Herald

They may have travelled 4000 kilometres to Sydney, but for the Sistagirls of the Tiwi Islands the journey beganfour generations ago.

For the first time, the LGBTIQ group from the remote islands 80 kilometres north of Darwin will perform in Saturday's Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade.

"I'm excited but nervous", says lead act Shaun Kerinaiua, 24.

While many of the performers in tonight's parade are younger, the Sistagirls' struggle for acceptance by their elders and community started in the 1950s, she says.

"'Sistagirl' is a word that we use for all LGBTIQ people in our community. You could be a gay man, or bisexual or transgender we want to beinclusive," Kerinaiua says.

"There's been about four generations of Sistagirls The first generation faced terrible stigma and discrimination, and had very hurtful experiences but they paved the way for my generation, which has had much more acceptance and community support."

The Sistagirls have waged a long battle to raise awareness about the issues facing indigenous LGBTIQ people and to gain acceptance among their peers. Four suicides in the LGBTIQ community in the eight years to 2008 rocked the tiny islands, shining a light on the bullying, isolation and hardship many Sistagirls suffered.

But in 2008, Tiwi elders held their first ceremony with the Sistagirls, marking a turning point after decades of struggle.

On Saturday, the group will wear both traditional costumes and drag outfits with Tiwi designs hand-printed in rainbow colours to celebrate the intersection of Tiwi culture and queer culture.

"The Tiwi people have a strong culture. Even though we identify as LGBTIQ, we still practice our culture, our language, our kinship and our connection to country that is a must for us," Kerinaiua says.

The group number nearly 30 and hopes its presence in the parade will help to shine a light on the difficulties many people in remote communities face in gaining acceptance of their sexual identity.

"We need to be more aware of people who are struggling with their identity and having a hard time gaining acceptance," Kerinaiua says.

"We didn't want to lose any more girls."

Read this article:

Tiwi Islands LGBTIQ group joins Sydney Mardi Gras parade for the first time - The Sydney Morning Herald

Five Islands return to the Premier Division – Antigua Observer

The Five Islands Football Club is back in the Antigua & Barbuda Football Associations (ABFA) Premier Division after just a season of absence.

The former champions secured the second and final spot available when they hammered demoted West Ham FC 7-0 at the Antigua Recreation Ground (ARG) on Thursday.

The victory lifts Five Islands to 43 points from their quota of 22 matches. They finish five points adrift winners the Swetes FC.

President of the Five Islands FC, Fernando Abraham, although happy with his teams promotion, said the real aim was to win it all.

The whole plan was to win the First Division so I wasnt going there to come second; but I am quite happy I am second so that I can be in the Premier Division without having to play in the Playoffs. But the whole aim was to win the First Division from the start and thats why I brought in those players, he said.

For now however, the former national player said he has encouraged his players and fans to just revel in what they have achieved.

What we need to do is to just enjoy the moment at this time, that we are back in the Premier Division. We will [then] sit down and put our heads together and come up with a plan for the next season. Football is not like before. Football is about money right now and if you dont have money you cant compete, he said.

Thursdays results mean that two other Premier Division teams, All Saints United and Villa Lions, after finishing third and fourth respectively, will face former top flight champions, SAP, in the Playoffs.

The winners of the round-robin affair will take a third and final spot in the Premier Division for the 2017/18 domestic season.

antiguaobserver.com is really happy to provide this forum in which all are encouraged to freely state their opinions without ridiculing anyone or being ridiculed. We've found that happens really easily if each comment is limited to the topic at hand. We will approve any comment that speaks solely to the story to which it is attached and is free from name calling and defamatory statements.

While we will not post comments questioning moderators' judgement, we will take such suggestions into consideration as possible ways to improve the experience of all community members. If you feel your submission has been disallowed unfairly or if a breech slips through our net, please let us know by e-mailing customer_support@antiguaobserver.com.

Read the original:

Five Islands return to the Premier Division - Antigua Observer

How This Pacific Island Switched From Diesel To 100% Renewable Energy – Collective Evolution

We're creating a positive news network. We need your help.

The island of Ta-u in American Samoa has seen its setbacks. Space and resources are limited, making it difficult for human communities to thrive. The island used to rely entirelyon imported diesel fuel for its electricity, but, in an effort to create a more sustainable future, hundreds of residents are participating ina new solar energy project.

One of the five main islands in the South Pacific that make up American Samoa, Tau is very isolated, boasting just under600 residents. The island has historically shipped ineverything they cant grow, including the fuel that powers their electricity system.

I recall a time they werent able to get the boat out here for two months, notes Keith Ahsoon, a local resident whose family owns one of Taus food stores.We rely on that boat for everything, including importing diesel for the generators for all of our electricity.

The generators burn about 300 gallons of fuel per day, which adds up to an estimated 109,500 gallons of diesel annually.

But a new partnership between SolarCity and Tesla is allowing the island to finally break free of their dependence on diesel imports.

Funded by the U.S. Department of Interior and the American Samoa Power Authority (ASPA), the project will be able to supply virtually allof the islands power needs.

The project is not only a breakthrough for the island, but an example of how we may eventually be able to break the globes dependence on fossil fuels entirely with the use of the right clean energy system.

There are islands that have conferences upon conferences where all they talk about is sustainability, explains Danielle Mauga, one of ASPAs engineers. A lot of other islands are working towards the same goal, yet this island has managed to achieve a major milestone by being able to claim energy independence with solar power

The new system provides six megawatt hours of storage, which permits the island to stay powered for three full days without sunlight.And when the sun does shine, the microgrid absorbs enough solar within seven hours of sunlight to fill the Powerpacks to fullcapacity.

Such a system will provide a more consistent power supply that doesnt involve rationingduringoutages a system Tau residents had become used to under the old fuel-based system.

Once diesel gets low, we try to save it by using it only for mornings and afternoons, explains Ahsoon. Its hard to live not knowing whats going to happen. I remember growing up using candlelight.

An even bigger solar farm is now being installed by Tesla and Solar City, offering nearly 55,000 solar panels on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has announced that the companies plan on building hundreds more of these installations.

Living on an island, you experience global warming firsthand,Ahsoon says. Beach erosions and other noticeable changes are a part of life here. Its a serious problem, and this project will hopefully set a good example for everyone else to follow.

Your life path number can tell you A LOT about you.

With the ancient science of Numerology you can find out accurate and revealing information just from your name and birth date.

Get your free numerology reading and learn more about how you can use numerology in your life to find out more about your path and journey. Get Your free reading.

Originally posted here:

How This Pacific Island Switched From Diesel To 100% Renewable Energy - Collective Evolution

Why disrupting health care can be tricky – CNNMoney

Entrepreneurs have seen countless opportunities to introduce more consumer-friendly technology to a stodgy industry.

Oscar, launched in 2014, billed itself as the health care provider for the next generation -- one with all the perks of a tech company. Built on the back of Obamacare, it sells insurance directly to consumers.

Collective Health also launched in 2014, but it focuses on helping employers navigate the health care system.

These two distinct paths could mean very different outcomes under the new administration.

Collective Health anticipates it will be unaffected by any health care policy changes.

"We're largely isolated from [the Affordable Care Act]," cofounder Rajaie Batniji told CNNTech. "Our focus has been on working with employers rather than individuals. That's a market that was there before the ACA and will be there after."

In an announcement this week, Collective Health said it has 15 companies using its platform, including Palantir, eBay (EBAY), Red Bull and Zendesk. Their combined 70,000 employees use Collective Health's platform for all their health care and benefits information. And the market for potential clients is vast.

Collective Health targets companies that self-fund employees' insurance, which means employers take on more risk but also have more control over policies. According to the latest Kaiser/HRET Employer Health Benefits Survey, 61% of covered workers are on insurance plans that are at least partially self-funded by their employers. Traditionally, larger companies with 2,000 or more employees tend to self-fund insurance. But Collective Health wants to get smaller startups to go that route as well.

The idea is that for around $30 to $50 per employee per month, Collective Health can help businesses manage and optimize their benefits. Its latest product launch, CareX, is a play to make those savings even greater.

Related: These low income kids could lose access to quality care

CareX is the company's new data and machine learning feature that can proactively suggest services for individual employees based on their health records.

"It can be so helpful just to connect the dots for people," said cofounder Ali Diab, who started Collective Health after his own frustrating experience dealing with insurance after a medical emergency. "The programs and benefits being surfaced are all ones already within an employee's existing health plan."

The idea is that this ultimately helps businesses: Employees that are proactively getting treatment and care will be healthier over time.

Oscar, on the other hand, is in a precarious position given that its core business is based on selling to individuals. It has faced the same challenges as other insurance providers under the Affordable Care Act. Sicker customers and lower premiums can be offset with a bigger customer base, but Oscar is only operating in a few markets, resulting in multimillion dollar losses.

Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported that Oscar suffered nearly $204 million in losses in 2016, which comes to about $1,400 per customer.

Oscar also faces the same uncertainty about the future of health care once the Republicans "repeal and replace" ACA.

To complicate things further, the startup is cofounded by Joshua Kushner, who is the brother of Trump's son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner.

Oscar did not respond to CNNTech's request for comment.

"It's really, really hard to build insurance companies from scratch," Bob Kocher, MD, a partner at Venrock, told CNNTech. "So much of it relies on having scale."

CNNMoney (New York) First published March 4, 2017: 10:51 AM ET

More here:

Why disrupting health care can be tricky - CNNMoney

What would happen to health care coverage under emerging GOP plan? – CBS News

WASHINGTON-- Health insurance tax credits, mandates, taxation of employer coverage, essential benefits. Mind-numbing health care jargon is flying around again as Republicans move to repeal and replace the Obama-era Affordable Care Act. Its time to start paying attention.

The GOP plan emerging in the House would mean less government, and many fear that will translate to less coverage and a step backward as a nation. Still, there would be new options for middle-class people who buy their own policies but dont now qualify for help under the ACA. Some popular provisions such as allowing young adults to stay on a parental plan remain untouched.

Pocketbook alert: People with job-based coverage should keep an eye on a proposal to tax part of the value of the most generous employer plans.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., told Republican lawmakers at a closed meeting Thursday that leaders would work through the weekend to draft repeal and replace legislation. Expect the bill to change as backers move forward and encounter pushback.

The Senate is seen as a moderating influence. And President Donald Trump, who once promised insurance for everybody, will have to weigh the specifics of what hes lately acknowledged is a complicated issue.

Some questions and answers:

Q: How would the GOP dial back the federal role in health care?

A: The plan would get rid of the Obamacare tax penalties on individuals who remain uninsured. Similar penalties on larger employers that dont offer coverage would be scrapped as well.

Republicans would do away with a requirement that insurers cover 10 categories of essential health benefits, leaving such regulation to the states.

A limit on how much insurers can charge older customers would be eased. Currently older adults can be charged no more than three times what they charge young adults. The new ratio would be 5-to-1.

Medicaid, the federal-state program that currently covers more than 70 million low-income people, would cease to be an open-ended federal entitlement. Though federal funding would be limited, states would get more leeway to run their programs. A richer funding stream for adults newly covered under former President Barack Obamas law would be eliminated.

Medicaid is a very, very significant issue, said Dan Mendelson, president of the consulting firm Avalere Health. That forces states to rethink their programs in a fundamental way.

Q: What could happen if the federal government pulls back funding and cuts down requirements for health insurers?

A: Many fear it would lead to rising numbers of uninsured, higher out-of-pocket costs as benefits get skimpier, and less affordable coverage - especially for older adults who are more prone to health problems.

For example, the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation recently estimated that tax credits for health insurance in the House GOP plan would be smaller on average than what currently subsidized ACA customers are getting. (GOP credits are based on age, not income.)

The study found that lower-income people, older adults, and people living in high-cost areas would get lower subsidies. Im worried that this is going to result in folks losing coverage, said John Meigs, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

But people with solid middle-class incomes and upper earners who currently dont qualify for help would get assistance. Consumers could also contribute more money to tax-sheltered health savings accounts for out-of-pocket costs.

Republicans are hoping their ideas will spur insurers to offer more affordable products tailored to younger people and consumers of modest means.

Republican governors, GOP lawmakers in Congress, and the Trump administration are negotiating over Medicaid, with governors who expanded the program trying to keep more federal dollars for low-income people.

Q: What ACA provisions are Republicans going to keep?

A: Among the ACA provisions that appear to be safe are closing the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap, allowing young adults to stay on parental plans until age 26, a ban on lifetime and annual dollar limits on coverage, and maximum limits on out-of-pocket costs.

People with pre-existing health problems would be protected against being turned down. But theyd have to maintain continuous coverage, and a significant break could lead to a 30 percent penalty on top of their premiums, for up to a year.

Q: What about Republicans taxing employer-provided coverage?

A: According to a draft that leaked, the House plan would tax part of the value of the most generous employer health plans, as if it were income. Affected workers would face higher payroll and income taxes, and their employers would see their share of payroll taxes increase.

Employer groups and labor unions are going all out to kill the idea, fearing that taxation will only increase in the future.

Lawmakers will treat the tax-favored treatment of employer-provided health insurance as another piggy bank, said Neil Trautwein, health care policy chief for the National Retail Federation. Frankly, we have trouble trusting them on this.

Workers most likely to be affected include union members, certain government employees, and people who work for thriving tech companies that provide generous benefits.

Q: Will the Republican plans make health insurance more affordable?

A: Obamas law could not hold down premiums, and whether the GOP can succeed remains to be seen.

As insurance rules are loosened, some consumers should be able to find more affordable coverage tailored to their own particular circumstances. For example, an older married couple might not want a plan that includes maternity coverage.

But people with health problems may not see much relief. And many low-income people may be priced out again.

Link:

What would happen to health care coverage under emerging GOP plan? - CBS News

Military families: Health care issues need immediate attention – Daily Press

When Ally Brown's family moves to a new duty station, she spends the first six months filling out stacks of paperwork to set up health care for her two autistic sons.

Tyrone Parish struggled to get mental health care for a man in his husband's unit who was told he'd have to wait six weeks to speak to a counselor. Parish ended up taking the man to the emergency room to prevent him from hurting himself.

Kathryn Leonard waited weeks to see a primary care manager to get a referral for her daughter to see an endocrinologist. After the referral, her daughter had to wait another four weeks to see the specialist.

These and other spouses of local service members shared their health care and other concerns with Sen. Tim Kaine Friday during a roundtable discussion about issues facing Hampton Roads' military families at Thomas Nelson Community College. The event was one of two public meetings for the senator Friday.

Kaine, D-Va., is co-chairman of the Senate Military Families Caucus, along with Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. The caucus is a bipartisan forum created to address challenges facing military families. Kaine's son is a Marine.

Several people expressed frustration with TRICARE, the health care program of the United States Department of Defense Military Health System. Some families waited two to three hours for prescription refills, had problems setting up care for special-needs children or were upset about what they said was general disorganization when it came to setting up appointments and trying to get referrals.

"The fact that it had to get to the point where a solider had to be taken to the ER so he wouldn't harm himself is unacceptable," Parish said of his recent experience. Others talked about services not covered by TRICARE, including service animals for disabled children and adults with post-traumatic stress disorder.

"If they can pay for a breast pump, they should be able to pay for a service animal," said Tracy Jennings, who is expecting a child soon.

Kaine asked the group if the health care system problems they've experienced were limited to posts in Hampton Roads, but many said they had similar experiences with TRICARE at duty stations across the country and overseas.

Brandi Ogren's husband's medical group helps provide care to local military families. Ogren said medical staffs have shrunk while the number of military personnel, retirees, dependents and some members of the Reserves has grown by leaps and bounds.

"We don't have the doctors. We don't have the nurses. We don't have the specialists needed to address these issues," Ogren said. She suggested more funding be used to bulk up the staffing. Others suggested a more uniform medical records system that did not require service members to have to confirm chronic health conditions at each new duty station.

Kaine said he'd work on breaking down barriers to make the health care system for service members more streamlined and easier for families to manage.

Service members' families also expressed concerns about trying to obtain credentials to work in other states as they moved from duty station to duty station. A pediatric dentist, Chickara Saunders had a difficult time switching her licensing over so she could practice in Virginia after her husband was stationed in Hampton Roads. Parish, who has multiple degrees with a focus on psychology, had trouble finding work in his field because he is not an American citizen.

"After filling out something like 150 job applications, the only work I could find is in retail," Parish said.

After the meeting, Kaine said he hadn't predicted that three-quarters of Friday's discussion would be about health care. "I've got a lot to think about as I leave this one," he said.

Tommisha Wilson said she enjoyed the roundtable discussion and appreciated that Kaine seemed really interested in the group's concerns.

"I think it's great to have an opportunity like this for our voices to be heard," Wilson said. "With everything else that's going on in politics, I'm glad he took the time to talk to us."

Daily Press reporter Dave Ress contributed to this report.

Canty can be reached by phone at 757-247-4832.

Read more here:

Military families: Health care issues need immediate attention - Daily Press

Tennessee’s problems with rural health care linked to poor job prospects, limited education – Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee's problems with rural health care are closely tied to poor economic and educational performance, a group of regional government and health care officials heard Friday.

"By the time someone is 25, you can predict how many more years they will live based on their level of education," Dr. Randy Wykoff, dean of East Tennessee State University's College of Public Health, told attendees at a half-day conference on rural health care organized by the Southeast Tennessee Development District. "There is a 5- to 7-year difference depending on whether they drop out of high school or graduate from college."

Poverty has a similar impact, Wykoff said.

"A poor American is three times more likely to die before age 65 than a rich American," he said.

Wykoff noted that Tennessee ranks in the bottom 10 of all states in most health care rankings, with many more citizens who smoke, abuse drugs or are overweight, and those behaviors are even worse in the Appalachian counties of middle and east Tennessee.

If Tennesseans improved just to the national level of smoking and obesity, the state would save $900 million in health care expenses annually, Wykoff said. "Why should someone born in Appalachia in Tennessee be more likely to die than someone born elsewhere?" he asked.

The challenge is not just to improve health care but also to improve education and economic opportunity, Wykoff said. Whether students graduate from high school, for example, is closely related to their ability to read at the proper grade level, a problem that can start even before elementary school.

Having a well-educated workforce is also critical in convincing companies to move to rural counties, several county officials agreed. And decent access to health care can be the determining factor in whether residents stay or move elsewhere.

Joe Guy, McMinn County sheriff and president of the Tennessee Sheriffs Association, discussed how health care problems affect law enforcement as well as county budgets. Increasingly, he said, sheriff's departments are forced to deal with people with mental health problems, because the state is not spending enough funds on treating them.

"When we pick someone up who is mentally ill and has been committed to Moccasin Bend, they are placed in the back of a sheriff's patrol car and handcuffed," he said. "If we handcuffed a cancer patient and took them to treatment, somebody would lose their mind. And that is after they have sat in the emergency room or in jail for four or five days while waiting for a bed to open up at Moccasin Bend. We are not treating the mentally ill their access to services is not there," he said.

He noted that when someone who is mentally ill or has other medical problems is held at a county jail, taxpayers pick up the tab, adding to the pressure on local government budgets.

The meeting was not all about the problems facing the state. There was also discussion of programs that seem to be working.

Kelly Hill, vice president of GoNoodle, explained her company's success in getting teachers and schoolkids to use videos to exercise in the classroom. The program is free to schools in Tennessee, courtesy of the BlueCross BlueShield Foundation.

Brenda Choate, human resources manager at Cormetech Inc., a Cleveland-based company that makes pollution control equipment, explained her company's wellness program that she said has helped workers lose weight and adopt a more healthy lifestyle. The company offers a $40 reduction in monthly health insurance payments, for example, to employees who earn enough points by exercising or attending health fairs.

Vickie Harden, senior vice president at Volunteer Behavioral Health Care Systems, said she hoped increased use of telemedicine, in which schools or family doctors use a video link to connect doctors who are specialists to those who need them, will allow more efficient use of limited resources. Volunteer, which owns the Joe Johnson Mental Health Center in Chattanooga, has done more than 10,000 telemedicine visits for patients with mental health issues, she said.

Contact staff writer Steve Johnson at 423-757-6673, sjohnson@timesfreepress.com, on Twitter @stevejohnsonTFP, and on Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/noogahealth.

Originally posted here:

Tennessee's problems with rural health care linked to poor job prospects, limited education - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vice President Mike Pence, Paul Ryan push health care overhaul in Janesville – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Vice President Mike Pence appeared in Janesville Friday with House Speaker Paul Ryan to push for a Republican plan to replace Obamacare.(Photo: Rick Wood / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)Buy Photo

JANESVILLE - Vice President Mike Pence spoke here Friday alongside other top Republicans to unite his party around a replacement of Obamacare a challenge that could define the presidency of Donald Trump.

With both conservative and moderate Republicans shaky on the plan, Pence sought to shore up support by headingto the hometown of House Speaker Paul Ryan to visit headquarters for a chain of farm supply stores. It wasa clear signal that the White House wants other Republicans to fall in line behind the House leadership's plans to replace the Affordable Care Act.

Pence held a listening session with local business owners and farmers and thentold hundreds in an invite-only audience that the replacement process would begin in "just a matter of days."

"Let me make you a promise: The Obamacare nightmare is about to end...Obamacare has failed and Obamacare must go," Pence said.

Introducing Pence, Ryan vowed Friday that together the White House and Congress will "tackle our problems before they tackle us."

But not all Republicans agreeon how to do that. Moderate GOP lawmakers are concerned that an Obamacare replacement bill might not cover enough Americans and conservatives say that it would create a new entitlement program by offering tax credits to help the needy afford coverage.

On Thursday and again on Friday, U.S. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) criticizedHouse GOP leadership for not letting him see the bill that Paul calls "Obamacare lite."

To draw attention to that, Paul wheeled a copy machine through the halls of the Capitol and saidhe was looking for the text of the billtactics typically used by politicians againstthe opposing party, not their own.

The further Republicans go in showing open dissent and adopting opposing positions to the House bill, the more difficult compromise could become for the GOP.

Wisconsin Democrats, meanwhile, are seeing a burst of activity following their sweeping defeat last fall.

Mark Fuller, chairman of the Rock County Democratic Party, said local liberals are enthusiastic about working against GOP priorities, including the Obamacare repeal. Fuller said attendance at the county party's monthly meetings in Janesville has increased from about 30 to 50 since Trump's November victory.

"It's really galvanized people and there's a lot of energy," Fuller said. "They want to do things."

Democrats saw similar enthusiasm in the 2011 labor protests against GOP Gov. Scott Walker only to fail to beat him in both the 2012 recall and in 2014. Fuller has no indicationthat 2018 will be different, but he does have a feeling that his party has learned from the string of defeats.

"I think people are more realistic about the work it's going to take," he said. "People have learned that it takes a lot more than just a protest."

Meanwhile, some Republicans are showing more support for the emerging position of Ryan and the White House.

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson appeared withPence,as did U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price.

"Wisconsin cant afford this mess and neither can the rest of the country. Weve got to fix it right now," Price told the audience.

Walker missedthe event because of a trip to Washington, D.C., but has also said favorable things about the House plan.

Pence's visit comes the day after the Indianapolis Star reported that he routinely used a private email account to conduct public business as governor of Indiana, at timesdiscussing sensitive matters and homeland security issues. Republicans have criticized former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for discussing much higher level national security issues through a private email account.

Pence press secretary Marc Lotter said Friday that these personal account emails are being compiled to be released under Indiana's open records law.

In Janesville, Pence toured the headquarters of Blain's Farm and Fleet, which offers everything from tools and animal feed to hunting gear and fishing licenses at 36 stores in Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois. The stores offer a ready made connection to rural life in the Upper Midwest and to the rural voters who were critical to the November victory of Trump and Pence.

Thomas Gibbons, a Twin Lake computer system analyst, said he didn't hear anything new Friday in Pence's speech.

But Gibbons, an early skeptic of Trump during the 2016 GOP primary, said he's already been won over by Trump decisions like the recent immigration order and more military spending that Gibbons said would boost national security.

"I'm really impressed," he said of Trump.

Outside the event that was closed to the public, scores of protesterswaved signs addressing issues ranging fromhealth care to education to the Trump camp's relationship with Russia.

Harry Bennett, 68, of Madison, held a cardboard sign demanding Pence, Ryan and Price reveal their plan to repeal and replace Obamacare.

"I think they would take so much political heat if they throw 20 million off health careat this point," Bennett said of Republicans."I don't envy them, andI don't like Donald Trump, but he's in a hard place right now."

LIVESTREAM REPLAY:Protest outside Paul Ryan and Mike Pence appearance in Janesville

Read or Share this story: https://jsonl.in/2lGSSIG

See the original post:

Vice President Mike Pence, Paul Ryan push health care overhaul in Janesville - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Invitae CEO wants to democratize genetic testing – MedCity News


MedCity News
Invitae CEO wants to democratize genetic testing
MedCity News
We are in the early days of precision medicine but it is on the back of widespread gene testing that promise of this approach of treating diseases stands. And there are plenty of companies offering some kind of gene testing on the tumor DNA ...

View post:

Invitae CEO wants to democratize genetic testing - MedCity News

What Molecular and Genetic Testing Labs Need to Know to Succeed with Commercialization of Their Precision … – DARKDaily.com – Laboratory News

Webinar Wednesday,March22, 2017 at 1:00 PM EDT Gaining Network Status, Demonstrating Clinical Utility, Marketing to Cash Buyers, and Other Essentials

One of healthcares unheralded stories is good news for molecular and genetic testing laboratories, along with hospital/health system labs that already have instruments capable of performing these tests! Day-by-day, ever more physicians begin to include elements of precision medicine in their clinical practice, thus requiring them to use molecular and genetic tests.

Physician demand for these tests is robust and will continue to increase for a powerful reason: patients want the benefits from a diagnostic test that delivers a more accurate diagnosis while pointing the doctor to the right therapy that will benefit the patient while minimizing side effects.

These are just two reasons why it is imperative that every clinical laboratory and pathology group have a strategy for how it will serve precision medicine. Tests in support of precision medicine will be the fastest-growing sector of laboratory medicine for years to come. Thats why labs need a strategy that addresses these elements:

1) Which type of precision medicine tests will the lab emphasize?

2) Can it run these tests on existing lab analyzers, or will it need to acquire new instruments?

3) Are there existing physician-champions of precision medicine in the labs service area who are respected as clinical leaders and willing to share their patient care successes with colleagues?

4) Can the lab profitably collaborate/partner with labs and companies that already have proven assays, robust informatics capabilities, and similar tools needed to provide tests that support precision medicine?

5) Are there payers in the labs regional market that have existing coverage guidelines for the types of precision medicine tests the lab wants to provide? Are the targeted types of precision medicine tests covered by existing managed care contracts?

These important questions about strategy will be among the topics to be covered at what may be the most important webinar about precision medicine lab testing that has yet been delivered to the clinical laboratory industry. The webinar is titled, What Molecular and Genetic Testing Labs Need to Know to Succeed with Commercialization of Their Precision Medicine Products, and takes place Wednesday, March 22, at 1 PM EDT.

Your experts will emphasize the two vital success factors for a labs precision medicine test program. For the clinical and operational issues involved in selecting, performing, reporting, and business development to generate specimen referrals, the speakers are Don Rule, CEO, and Yoav Sibony, Vice President of Sales & Marketing, at Translational Software in Bellevue, WA. Translational Software currently provides a full range of services to more than 80 client labs and health organizations that includes annotating and analyzing molecular and genetic test data, helping labs define genetic panels relevant to the labs clinicians and augmenting existing panels with interpretation, plus other capabilities.

Next, for the important issue of how to get paid for your labs molecular and genetic tests, the speaker is Kyle Fetter, Vice President of Advanced Diagnostics at XIFIN, Inc. in San Diego, CA. XIFIN is one the nations largest providers of revenue cycle management services to clinical laboratories, pathology groups, and molecular/genetic testing companies.

Fetter brings an informed perspective to the topic of helping your lab get paid because XIFIN handles several hundreds of millions of lab test claims for its client labs each year. It has electronic interfaces with every health insurance plan in the United States and thus knows the coverage guidelines and criteria needed for molecular and genetic test claims to be successfully adjudicated and reimbursed to the submitting molecular and genetic testing lab company.

And theres more! Hospital and health system labs are in for a positive surprise. During his presentation, Rule will discuss how existing lab instruments can be used to perform precision medicine testing, thus giving hospital labs a way to generate more specimen referrals while becoming an essential clinical partner with physicians in the inpatient, outreach, and outpatient settings.

Indeed, you and your lab team will be gaining information from three experts with deep experience in the still-young clinical market for precision medicine testing. You will hear up-to-the-minute reports about which areas of precision medicine are growing fastest, including cancer testing and pharmacogenomic testing.

As an added bonus, at the conclusion of the presentation there will be a Q&A period during which youll be able to submit your own specific questions to our expert panel. This segment of the webinar represents particularly high value for you and your lab team!

DATE: Wednesday, March 22, 2017

TIME: 1 PM EDT; 12 Noon CDT; 10 AM PDT

PLACE: Your computer and/or speakerphone

COST:$195 per site (unlimited attendance per site) through 3/10/17, $245 thereafter

TO REGISTER: Click here or call512-264-7103

Youll come away from this webinar with powerful insights about specific types of precision medicine tests that have accepted clinical evidence of utility and are thus becoming a standard of care. These are also the tests for which payers will most readily reimburse when utilized appropriately by physicians.

How to Register:1. Online 2. Call 512-264-7103.

Your orderincludes:

Register todayto take advantage of early-bird savings! For more information, call us at 512-264-7103.

She is a member of DxMA, ASM and AMP and was a Microbiology Supervisor before transitioning to the diagnostic industry.

Read more from the original source:

What Molecular and Genetic Testing Labs Need to Know to Succeed with Commercialization of Their Precision ... - DARKDaily.com - Laboratory News

Terminal cancer patients in complete remission after one gene therapy treatment – Telegraph.co.uk

"The numbers are fantastic," said Dr Fred Locke, a blood cancer expert at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa who co-led the study.

"These are heavily treated patients who have no other options."

The treatment, which has been dubbed 'a living drug' by doctors, works by filtering a patient's blood to remove key immune system cells called T-cells, which are then genetically engineered in the lab to recognise cancer cells.

Cancer cells are very good a evading the immune system, but the new therapy essentially cuts the brakes, allowing immune cells to do their job properly.

Martin Ledwick, Cancer Research UKs head cancer information nurse, said: These results are promising and suggest that one day CAR-T cells could become a treatment option for some patients with certain types of lymphoma.

"But, we need to know more about the side effects of the treatment and long term benefits.

The rest is here:

Terminal cancer patients in complete remission after one gene therapy treatment - Telegraph.co.uk

Possible U | Abeona Therapeutics using gene therapy to see the … – WKYC-TV

Local company trying to save lives of those fighting rare disease

Monica Robins, WKYC 7:08 PM. EST March 03, 2017

(Photo: Monica Robins, WKYC)

CLEVELAND - Earlier this week, AbeonaTherapeutics, a local biotech company, rang the closing bell on the stock market.

Tuesday was Rare Disease Awareness Day and the company was chosen because of its work. They are giving hope to families fighting diseases that have no treatments or cures.

Inside Abeona Therapeutics, scientists don't have to look far for inspiration. They just have to look on the wall, especially in a little corner of the office meant for visiting kids with a deadly rare disease called Sanfilippo.

"They are usually diagnosed between the ages of two and six and that leads to profound neurological and neuromuscular deficits," according to Abeona Theraputics President and CEO Dr. Timothy Miller. "70 percent don't live to 18."

They're working on gene therapy, using a virus to deliver the correct DNA into each cell with a simple injection.

"We are the only trial in the world right now enrolling patients in this type of disease category," says Dr. Miller.

There are 7,000 rare diseases of which 95% have no treatment or cure. While Sanfilippo is their main focus, the science could one day be a breakthrough.

"Gene therapy is all about delivery and trying to demonstrate that these are actual ways to treat some of these diseases, " explains Dr. Miller. "These will be applicable to many other diseases."

And business is booming. Abeonais looking for more employees to fill these desks. And they just look out their window for possible expansion sites to house a 20,000 square foot manufacturing facility.

Says Dr. Miller, "We're helping people see the possible by bringing jobs to Northeast Ohio, and bringing science into clinical projects. We're hoping to be one of the first gene therapy products in the world."

When Abeona went public in 2015, the company grew 500%. This year, they're looking to expand and have openings for highly skilled people with advanced degrees in biology or chemistry for medical manufacturing positions, clinic trial operations, and program management.

They often recruit from across the country so they're helping Northeast Ohio experience the brain gain.

( 2017 WKYC)

See more here:

Possible U | Abeona Therapeutics using gene therapy to see the ... - WKYC-TV

Icahn hires on gene therapy legendand big biotech disruptor … – Endpoints News

Richard Mulligan

Back in 2010, when Carl Icahn was spooking Henri Termeer and the management of Genzyme, the heavyweight activist investor sent over a list of hand-picked names for new board members that could help shake things up at the company at the time it was grappling with some severe manufacturing problems.

One of those names: Richard Mulligan, a legend in the gene therapy field whose Harvard lab in the 80s included pioneers like James Wilson and Olivier Danos. Mulligan and another of Icahns favorites at the time, Alex Denner, had already vaulted on to the board at Biogen in 2009 to push for changes at the top. And they got it, bringing in George Scangos in a management coup in 2010.

Sanofi wound up buying Genzyme for $20 billion in 2011.

Now, Mulligan, a professor emeritus at Harvard and visiting scientist at MIT, is going to work for Icahn full time as a portfolio manager, with a special focus on biotech.Technically, hes working at Icahn Capital, a subsidiary of Icahn Enterprises $IEP, after joining Denner at Sarissa for the past three years.

Now cue the rampant speculation.

Icahn has sent a shock wave through Bristol-Myers Squibb, arriving to take a piece of equity just as rumors were taking hold that the big biotech damaged by a series of setbacks on Opdivo was ripe for a megamerger. Now that one of Icahns favorite disruptors has come on board full time, could a proxy fight over the board and future direction at Bristol-Myers Squibb be far behind?

I dont know, but who can resist talking about it?

In the meantime, look for Icahn to start making waves in biotech again as Mulligan spearheads new plays in the field.

News reports for those who discover, develop, and market drugs. Join 13,500+ biopharma pros who read Endpoints News articles by email every day. Free subscription.

Link:

Icahn hires on gene therapy legendand big biotech disruptor ... - Endpoints News

Charlottesville marks first Liberation and Freedom Day – The Daily Progress

A jubilant procession of a few dozen people marched through University Avenue and West Main Street on Friday evening to commemorate the moment when more than half of the populations of Charlottesville and Albemarle County were freed from slavery.

Carrying a large banner that said Let Freedom Ring and another reading Black Lives Matter, the procession sang freedom songs and lifted other political signs as they moved from the University of Virginia Chapel to the Jefferson School City Center as part of the citys first Liberation and Freedom Day celebration.

Last month, the City Council declared that March 3 would commemorate the historic moment in 1865 when Union military forces arrived in the city and liberated approximately 14,000 African-American slaves.

This is a commemoration of the most important day in Charlottesville history when 52 percent of the population was freed from slavery. said Claire Hitchens, a UVa graduate and singer-songwriter who volunteered to assist in organizing the procession Friday.

Also in attendance was Jane Clarke, the wife of a university professor emeritus, who felt motivated to participate in political rallies focused on social justice due to all the hate crimes and violence that is occurring against minorities.

As for the new holiday, she said: I think its great. We had never heard of this before. I know it was just recently created, but weve lived in Charlottesville for years and weve never heard of the liberation of the slaves.

Although the procession included only about 50 people, the first Liberation and Freedom Day celebration included well over 100 people, as the processional bridged an interfaith service at the UVa Chapel and a program at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center that lasted for more than an hour.

In addition to remarks from local community activists, city officials, historians, as well as musical performances, the event included the recognition of several community members, including Zyhana Bryant, the Charlottesville High School student who called for the removal of the Robert E. Lee statue last year.

Two other community members, Deidra Gilmore and Eddie Harris, also were awarded the inaugural Freedom Fighter award.

During the program, Councilor Wes Bellamy read a statement from Gov. Terry McAuliffe, who recognized the new holiday and offered his regards.

This commemoration reminds members of the Charlottesville community, and all Virginians, of our enduring fight for human rights, the statement said. We have come a long way, but there is still work to be done. I commend your persistent efforts to create a community of inclusion, dignity and equality.

UVa President Teresa A. Sullivan also spoke at the event, recognizing the universitys role in surrendering alongside city officials when the Union forces arrived.

As we look back on that day, Liberation and Freedom Day should be a day of reflection. But it should not be a day of somber reflection. It should be a day of victorious reflection because we are celebrating a moment in the history of our community, and of our nation, when freedom won the battle over bondage, she said.

Linda Perriello, mother of Democratic gubernatorial candidate and Charlottesville native Tom Perriello, also spoke to honor the new holiday and promote her sons campaign.

All of you who marched, all of you who are here, send a message loud and clear: no more. No more to racial injustice and its corollaries of economic injustice, criminal injustice and even environmental injustice, she said.

The idea for the new holiday came as a recommendation from the citys Blue Ribbon Commission on Race, Memorials and Public Spaces, which was convened last year to address calls for the removal of the citys statue of Robert E. Lee.

Its just such an amazing journey that this city has been on, and I feel very proud, said Grace Aheron, a UVa graduate who also helped organize and lead the procession Friday.

It felt good today to celebrate rather than protest something, she said.

To see this day celebrated, not mourned it symbolically begins the retelling of the citys history, said John E. Mason, a UVa professor and member of the commission. Most people here celebrated the day and didnt see it as defeat, he added. That moment was the dawn of freedom.

Although a great deal of controversy has surrounded the commission and the City Councils decision to act on its recommendation to relocate the Lee statue, city officials and community members saw Fridays event as a moment to celebrate a new paradigm in how the city remembers the legacy of the Civil War.

Gary Gallagher, director of UVas John L. Nau III Civil War Center, said most communities throughout the South have only recognized the Confederacys memory of that period and that other strands of history have been glossed over.

Citing the 240 African-Americans from the area whom the Nau center has identified as having fought for the Union, he said he thinks its just as appropriate to commemorate those people just like the community historically has recognized Confederate veterans and ancestors.

One part of the historical memory thats been left out is African American men from Albemarle County who put on blue uniforms. They were absolutely invisible, he said. I think itd be a mighty damn fine idea if we put a monument with their names on it.

See the original post here:

Charlottesville marks first Liberation and Freedom Day - The Daily Progress

UCT defends stance on artistic freedom after Goldblatt pulls out – News24

Cape Town - The University of Cape Town has defended its protection of freedom of artistic expression, after the David Goldblatt Collection chose to move its collection to Yale University in the US.

Goldblatt recently told UCT management that he wants to move his collection from the university after eight years, saying the university could no longer protect freedom of expression, artistic freedom and the rights of artists on the campus, a UCT statement said last week.

The university said it understood Goldblatt's decision.

"The Goldblatt Collection is a South African heritage treasure, it includes 18 archival boxes of photographic prints, transparencies, negatives and digital items representing his oeuvre, including portraiture and his work on various assignments.

"We regret that Mr Goldblatt could not be persuaded out of his view that freedom of expression, artistic freedom and rights of artists were no longer protected at UCT."

UCT will continue to promote, protect, attract and collect artistic collections and work with artists into the future, it said.

"The institution, the UCT libraries, and the faculties working in this field are committed to freedom of expression, artistic freedom and the rights of artists.

"UCT commits itself to intellectual honesty, rigour in debate, openness to alternative ideas and respect for other views, ways of being, beliefs and opinions as stipulated in the universitys statement of values.

"We promote and protect academic freedom and freedom of expression, including the creation of spaces for contestation of ideas."

The university said its own values, guided by the Library and Information Association of South Africa, will always stand for the free flow of information, the support of intellectual freedom and not exercising censorship.

The university wished Goldblatt and the collection well and hoped both go from strength to strength.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

Read more:

UCT defends stance on artistic freedom after Goldblatt pulls out - News24