Jayne: We can’t allow liberty to die with thunderous applause – The Columbian

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Greg Jayne, Opinion page editor

There is a scene in Revenge of the Sith an excellent movie, by the way, despite the scorn heaped upon the Star Wars prequels and despite the wooden acting of Hayden Christensen that seems somewhat relevant today.

Senator Padm Amidala is watching Chancellor Palpatine increase his power and seize control of the universe through the capitulation of the Galactic Senate. And as the chancellor is becoming The Emperor and the senators are cheering, Padm says, So this is how liberty dies with thunderous applause.

It was one of the most political moments in any of the Star Wars movies, and it has been co-opted by numerous pundits, politicians, and writers since it was first uttered in 2005. The thing about decrying the death of liberty is that it can be used to suit any number of purposes, and critics accused Barack Obama of destroying liberty nearly as often as the other side accused George W. Bush.

Therefore, we are reluctant to declare that one politician or another is going to mean the death of liberty; our political landscape has far too many Chicken Littles who are far too quick to declare that the sky is falling. This nation is too strong and our values are too secure to be shaken by a single person, regardless of how vehemently we might disagree with them.

But a move Friday by the Trump administration should concern all Americans and should lead to an examination of how willing we are to defend the liberty that forms the foundation of our nation. The White House, you see, was holding an off-camera news briefing and blocked CNN, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Politico, and BuzzFeed from attending.

You might think this is not a big deal, and perhaps you are correct. The off-camera briefing is known as a gaggle and is less formal than the daily question-and-answer session in the White House briefing room. You also might think that CNN or the New York Times deserved it because they have been trying to report facts about the Trump administration instead of alternative facts, whether or not the administration wants those facts to be known.

But, as New York Times editor Dean Baquet wrote: Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties. We strongly protest the exclusion of The New York Times and the other news organizations. Free media access to a transparent government is obviously of crucial national interest.

I have been in this business long enough to understand that much of the public really doesnt care about the difficulties faced by the media; journalists typically stand somewhere near members of Congress in terms of respect. Yet, as Thomas Jefferson once wrote, Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. And unlike most Jefferson quotes you find on the internet, that one is accurate.

Without the media, we never would have known about the Constitution-trampling excess of the Nixon administration. Or the Catholic Churchs cover-up of sexual abuse by priests. Or a former Oregon governors sexual misconduct with a 14-year-old while he was mayor of Portland. Without the media, public officials would be able to act free of the disinfectant that is sunshine.

Because of that, the public needs the media more than the Trump administration does. The presidents constant harangues against the press are not the actions of a well-adjusted adult, nor are they the actions of somebody who is willing to endure scrutiny or is confident in his ability to lead.

I dont think President Trump is akin to Emperor Palpatine; I dont believe he can shoot lightning out of his fingers. I also dont think Trump is going to single-handedly destroy liberty. No, that will only happen if his attempts to limit the press are met with thunderous applause.

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Jayne: We can't allow liberty to die with thunderous applause - The Columbian

Self-Indulgent Libertarian Hypocrisy Knows No Bounds – AlterNet

Photo Credit: Fibonacci Blue / Flickr

I once had a conversation with a libertarian friend who insisted that freedom was the answer to everything, ironic since he was getting married the following week.

Freedom to have sex with others while married? I asked.

Of course not, he said.

Freedom for your children to do whatever they want?

No, thats different, he said.

Freedom for everyone to have a nuclear bomb?

No, that wouldnt be good.

Freedom for people to steal?

No, that has to be controlled.

You dont really think that freedom is the answer to everything, I said. The real question is what to constrain and what to let go free. The question in social engineering is the question in all engineering. Its a question of tolerances: What to constrain with tight tolerances and what to let run free with loose tolerances. That question is built right into the paradoxical declarations that we should all, be intolerant of all intolerance, or tolerate all intolerance.

Sorry, thats not my question, he said.

But why? I asked.

Because its hard and I dont want to bother with it.

I applauded his honesty. If you want to know why its not obvious to everyone by now that the question is what to tolerate and not tolerate, its simply this. The question is difficult.

Its so much easier to be a hypocrite, to claim that total freedom or total constraint are the only possibilities and that you favor one and oppose the other. Its easier to pretend that youre crusading for absolute freedom against absolute control or vice versa than it is to deal with the messy complexity of trying to sort out what to free and what to constrain.

Hypocrisy is the alternative to praying for the wisdom to know the difference between what to constrain and what to let run free. Just pretend that you already have theperfect wisdom to know the obvious difference. Pretend that theres no question, control is always bad, freedom is always good. Or vice versa.

And with hypocrisy, you can even have it both ways depending on your momentary needs and whims. You can claim that you always favor one as you can switch back and forth.

I dont like that this constrains me. We should all be free always.

Always?!

Yes, judgment is always bad. People should never be judgmental.

But isnt should a judgment?

No. And why do you always have to disagree with me?

I dont always and anyway, didnt you just say that people should be free always? Doesnt that apply to me too? Shouldnt I be free to disagree with you?

No. People should always do the right thing. People should always be controlled by the moral principles I know and espouse.

Butbutyou just said

Theres a difference between being and feeling consistent. To be consistent you have to tame the tendency to extrapolate to universal principles from whatever youre feeling in the moment. You have to be able to notice your inconsistencies.

Since thats difficult and self-compromising, its easier to just feel consistent. For that you need only hold one idea constant. Just always chant, Im consistent. I have integrity. Im not like all of the other people around me. Other people are inconsistent hypocrisy. Im not.

If you hold that one thought with all your heart then you dont have to pay attention to your flip-flopping. You can have all your cakes and eat them too.

You wont live by your inconsistent standards, but if youre insistent enough, youll be able to convince yourself that you do, and maybe youll be able to convince others too. There are lots of hypocrisy cults you can join, mutual admiration societies that claim some absolute truth, thereby liberating themselves to follow their whims, confident that theyre consistent.

These days, libertarianism is one such cult, growing in popularity, in large part through sponsorship by the Koch brothers network of donors, spending billions through private charities to achieve a cabal of about 400 billionaires ultimate aim, to be unconstrained in everything they do. The cabal was inspired by a self-serving misreading of the Soviet Union. Fred Koch, the Koch brothers father was a key provider to Stalin as he built the Soviet Unions oil industry. When Fred saw the devastation wrought by his client Stalin he wrote that, What I saw in Russia convinced me of the utterly evil nature of communism. What I saw there convinced me that communism was the most evil force the world has ever seen and I must do everything in my power to fight it, whichI have done since that time.

Rather than bite Stalins hand that fed him he conveniently focused on the rationalization that Stalin employed to justify his dictatorship. Fred went on to say in 1938 that "Although nobody agrees with me, I am of the opinion that the only sound countries in the world are Germany, Italy, and Japan, simply because they are all working and working hard." He loved fascism; he hated communism.

Thus was born the hypocritical Koch campaign, control for freedom; constrain for liberty, dictate anarchy. It was easy to get other wealthy donors enthusiastic about the movement, donors like our new education secretary Betsy Devos, a self-declared libertarian who donated over $200 million to hypocritical campaigns for state-imposed religious education in the name of libertarianism. And its been easy to find politicians who will mouth and defend the hypocrisy for the money.

Thats what happened to what once was the Republican party. The Republicans who embraced American traditions bent to the Kochs will or were chased out by Koch-funded candidates from the Tea Party. If youre wondering whatever happened to our country, what explains the weird jack-knifing lurch toward libertarianism, the Koch brothers are a good place to find answers. The Tea Party wouldnt have lasted any longer than the Occupy movement if it werent orchestrated and funded by the Kochs.

Do I sound like a conspiracy theorist? If the alternative to conspiracy theory is the assumption that there are never any conspiracies, were in real trouble. There are conspiracies. The difference between conspiracy theorists and people who reveal real conspiracies is in whether the eagerness to find oneor the evidence leads one to the conclusion that there is one. If you read the facts on the Koch brothers, I think youll find that the evidence stacks up pretty conclusively.

But no matter how much money you pour into selling something, it wont sell if theres no latent appetite. With libertarianism as a rationalization, theres plenty of appetite, the appetite for some alternative to having to think about whats worth and not worth constraining.

Libertarians have bought themselves the ultimate freedom, paid in full with a commitment to hypocrisy, the freedom to never have to wonder about or learn from anything ever again, the freedom to feel consistent without having to trouble themselves with the hard question that shows up everywhere since sometimes freedom turns out well and sometimes it turns out badly:

In engineering:There are bolts and there are ball bearings. We bolt some things down and we let other things run free.

Computer engineering:Algorithms are constraints that enable you to input a free range of variables and get reliably constrained results.

Social engineering:We want people to have freedom to do what they want so long as it doesnt cause more damage than their freedom is worth. Laws, at their best, are constraints that maximize freedom.

Liberty and justice for all:Justice constrains us, liberty frees us. Justice is security. Government at its best seeks the best mix.

Freedom and responsibility:Youre free on the dance floor, but unless youre special (P.S., youre not) your freedom comes with responsibility for not constraining other peoples freedom. You dont get to crowd everyone into the corner by dancing wildly with your eyes shut shouting I believe in freedom!

Social movements:The best and worst movements in human history have all had the same rallying cry, a proud "We demand more!" That's the cry of those crowded out but also those who already have more than their fair share. It's the cry of the women's and civil rights movement but alsoof the Nazi's. So what's the difference between the good and bad versions of that rallying cry? Hypocrisy, demand for more dancefloor when you're already taking up plenty of it.

Player vs. married:A player is free to date whomever but the freedom comes with a loss of security, no reliable partner to come home to. A married person is more constrained but in the bargain gains some security.

Freelance vs. salaried:Salaried workers are more constrained than freelancers, but in exchange, they get a bit more security.

Evolution:Life is a trial and error process and we are the trials. This makes us ambivalent, rooting for ourselves as trials and rooting for the trial and error process. In our hearts, we cry let the best man win and it damned well better be me!

Sore losers:Sore losers smash the game board if they lose. Libertarians are like that. They think that if they dont win, the game is rigged against them and must be destroyed so that they always win.

Free willvs. determinism:We claim that free will as better than determinism but actually were ambivalent. What wed really like is the freedom to advance and the determinism that locks in the advances weve already made. What we really want is a ratchet, freedom to climb, constraint against falling.

We can have that ratchet if we shut our eyes, dance impulsively and shout freedom is the only answer! while crowding everyone else into the corners by meaning only our personal freedom, the hell with theirs.

Jeremy Sherman is an evolutionary epistemologist studying the natural history and practical realities of decision making. Read his work at Psychology Today.

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Self-Indulgent Libertarian Hypocrisy Knows No Bounds - AlterNet

Libertarian Think Tank Proves That Trump’s Muslim Ban Won’t Work … – The Ring of Fire Network

The Libertarian Cato Institute released a study in 2016 that actually disproves Donald Trumps theory that banning Muslims from entering the United States will save American lives. That likely wasnt the intention of Cato, but their own work proves that Trump is full of it. Ring of Fires Farron Cousins discusses this.

Transcript of the above video:

The Libertarian Cato Institute actually released a report in 2016 that incidentally happened to completely disprove everything that Donald Trump and his Administration have told us about the intended effects of their Muslim ban. Now as it stands right now the Administration is currently redrafting that executive order to make it into something that the courts are not going to rip apart. The likelihood of them being successful with that, extremely low considering the fact that these are not lawyers, these are not people who understand foreign policy. Its likely theyre going to write something thats not exactly going to pass the muster when it comes to being legal.

However, this Cato Institute study from 2016 shows that in the years between 1975 and 2015, a 40 year span, there were 20 incidents where refugees entered the United States and committed acts of violence. In those 40 years, of those 20 people who were refugees three people were killed. 40 years, 20 refugees involved in incidents. Only three people killed.

Contrast that with home grown terrorism. I mean, how many people died in the Oklahoma City bombing? How many people have been killed by right wing hate groups? I mean just this week two men were killed by one white man because he thought they were Muslims. He thought they were Middle Easterners. Turns out they were from India. They were engineers, very well respected people with huge educations, working to make things in the world better, and he murdered them in a hate crime because he thought they were Middle Eastern, as if thats some sort of justification for killing another human being. While he murdered them he was yelling, Get out of my country. No. You get out of the country. Thats not what we do here in the United States.

I bet if Donald Trump and his Administration actually looked in to the amount of terrorism being caused by white men in the United States, maybe wed have a different kind of travel ban. Its not hard to identify the problem when you look at all the variables. Now the Cato Institute Study was just trying to figure out if refugees coming into the United States were a threat or not. It turns out according to Cato that theyre not. If we want to address the real threats we have to look at all the data. We have to look at the acts of home grown terrorism being committed by white men in the United States, because those are the treats. Those are the real problems. The people who take over a wildlife refuge in Oregon, the people who have standoffs with federal officers in the SouthWest, those are terrorists. Those are people that we need to be worried about. Those are people that we should probably be afraid of. Those are people that should spend the rest of their lives behind bars because that is illegal.

Those are the people that we should be worrying about, but instead the Trump Administration, Republicans in general, theyve created these Middle Eastern boogeymen, telling us that we need to be afraid of them coming over here and trying to kill us. Meanwhile, the real people who pose a threat to our very lives are the ones around us. Maybe the crazy neighbor, maybe the guy down the street. The people that you wouldnt ordinarily think because statistically they pose a far greater threat to our lives here in the United States than anyone coming over as a refugee.

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Libertarian Think Tank Proves That Trump's Muslim Ban Won't Work ... - The Ring of Fire Network

CPAC On My Mind: Part Two – Being Libertarian

When Nigel Farage, the man behind #Brexit, spoke at CPAC 2017, I was pleasantly surprised. As a fan of that event myself, but not a Trump supporter, I assumed that many attached to Britains separation from the European Union might also be aligned similarly and, therefore, be less apt to associate with President Trumps more aggressive approach. So the mere appearance was nice enough, but when Mr. Farage then stuck around to mingle and chat, I was more than pleasantly surprised I was blown away.

I came [to CPAC] two years ago, Farage explained when discussing his past relationship to the event with us just outside the ballroom doors. There are a lot more young people here [than last time]. So there is more of a buzz and excitement in the air. Winning does that.

And winning is certainly something both Farage and Trump have in common. And the POTUS even promised more winning for America in his own speech that kicked off the second full day of events at CPAC at the top of the morning. That appearance, which contained a healthy mix of truth and fiction (Trump claimed that he had a line going back six blocks of fans waiting for him at the Gaylord Convention Center; he did not), set the tone as being quite cheeky. The President started things off with a joke: that if the audience never sat down, the dishonest media would likely be able to spin that into a headline claiming that he received no standing ovation. Ha.

But that rhetoric clearly works. The man got elected. And while sitting in the audience during the speech, I was involuntarily back-slapped and elbow-jabbed by an elderly gentleman to my right who kept raving about how bright he thought Trump was, and how he would wager that Trump has a lot more in common with us than with them. Us vs. them. And there it was Trumps winning formula. Not only was his a strategy of populism, but a type of populism based around the concept of the frontier of antagonism. Want solidarity? Unite against a common enemy. Except with Trump, the common enemy is everyone.

Well, everyone except Bernie Sanders. I like Bernie, Trump proclaimed at one point during his appearance.

Luckily, the trend of an open and accepting CPAC, which started one day prior, continued into this day, which saw yet another conservative minority group setting up shop and voicing their views.

This time, it was a group of black Americans who were not only pro-Trump, but adamantly against what they saw as the media-pushed idea that Trump or Republicans at large, are racist. I have always been for God, but now I am also for the Republicans, proclaimed Maurice Symonette, the group leader and administrator of the website Gods2. Symonette continued by pulling from history on behalf of the Republicans and citing failed regulation policies to disparage the Democrats: The Republicans fought to free us; the Democrats are the ones who want to keep us enslaved. The shirts worn by everyone in the group read as follows: TRUMP & Republicans Are Not Racist.

Even more surprises were found as well once one entered The Bone Zone, a booth on the show floor dedicated to taking pictures with overnight sensation Ken Bone, because of what Mr. Bone was actually doing at CPAC. Contrary to what a lot of people may thing, Ken is much more than just a meme he is currently working with a company called Victory Holdings, which is itself developing an app known as DonorDex that aims to provide a network of potential donors for small-profile and third party political candidates to reach out to with but a touch of a button. In this way, Mr. Bone hopes to raise awareness about this new service and therefore make it easier for underdog candidates to truly compete with the elite politicians they will run against. Not a bad idea, at all.

While there were some misfired attempts at humor (because Republicans), such as a sign depicting a shady looking cartoon character reaching into his pants and proclaiming lets get fiscal, the environment at CPAC was largely one of genuine chill and fun. Whispers of an exclusive party held by Breitbart on a reserved boat began circulating; certain attendees showed up who, while not scheduled speakers, were celebrities in their own right (such as Cassandra Fairbanks, a journalist and ex-Bernie Sanders supporter who very publicly switched her allegiances to Trump after Hillary got the Democratic nomination).

Whether one wants to admit it or not, modern conservatism has become cool again. And CPAC 2017 was the place to be in that regard.

This post was written by Micah J. Fleck.

The views expressed here belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect our views and opinions.

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CPAC On My Mind: Part Two - Being Libertarian

South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live Small Islands

With spring headed towards the eastern U.S. coastline, I couldnt help but notice, Ive been getting a great deal of interest from you about the South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live.

Not just from those of you looking to retire to warmer weather.

There has been an continual increase in the number of families looking for theirSouth Carolina Coast Best Places To Live near the beach!

Gone are the days when North Carolina or South Carolina were sought after just for retirement.

Okay, for the past 5 weeks,weve been going through some of theNorth Carolina Piedmont best small towns and citiesto live.

This week were going to take a bit of a left turn and head southeast.

What a great time to plan your summer vacation and visit your list of the possible cities and towns along South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live.

Perhaps one of them is your South Carolina Coast Best Place To Live.

A lot of people are interested in life on the various islands along Coastal South Carolina.

Since I dont think weve looked exclusively at several of the small sea islands that dotCoastal South Carolina now seems like a good time to take a closer look.

So what I am talking about when it comes to small islands that are some of South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live?

Basically, a the small coastal islands are a long chain of barrier islands. These islands line the Atlantic coast from around Georgetown SC down to the northeastern corner of Florida.

In this chain there are over 100 island of varying size and description. Many are yet uninhabited and a large number are still only accessible by boat or other means.

Along Coastal South Carolina, many of these sea islands have long been tourist destinations. Their beautiful natural environments and tourism as well as real estate are pretty much the local economy.

The closer to the water you are, the more you can expect to pay for housing. On some islands the only communities are pricier exclusiveSouth Carolina Coast Best Places To Live planned communities.

Moreover, youll have to take into account the cost of multiple types of mandatory insurance to prepare you for tropical storms and hurricane season.

Ultimately, small islands of Coastal South Carolina offer a sunny, outdoor-based lifestyle. A laid back semi-tropical environment.

While some South Carolina Islands might not have the all the amenities and services youre looking for youll most likely find them not far away on the mainland.

Lets take a look at some of whatSouth Carolina Coast Best Places To Live Small Islands has to offer.

Kiawah Island SC is located about 21 miles south of Charleston SC. Kiawah Island is accessible by car and is a beautiful 33 mile drive.

Kiawah Island SC is a resort. And this Coastal South Carolina planned community has roughly 1400 year round residents. However in season, the population swells to 8,000 10,00 per day!

Kiawah Islands economy is tourism. Based with a strong emphasis on outdoor recreation, especially time spent on its nationally famous golf courses or ten miles of beach.

Housing costs on Kiawah Island SC are quite pricey.

In general, youll find that the median home value is almost $950,000.

Median rental costs are also high at around $2000 per month.

There are a small number of stores and restaurants on Kiawah Island and no hospitals, nevertheless Charleston SC is not far away.

Fripp Island SC is located about 20 miles east of Beaufort SC and can be reached by car via U.S. 21 or SC 406.

Fripp Island, is a Coastal South Carolina private gated community of roughly 887 year round residents with upwards of 3000-5000 annual tourists.

Only 6.5 square miles, Fripp Island SC has not only golfing and 3 miles of beautiful sandy beaches, but also much of the island is a nature reserve.

Median home sales prices hover around $317,000 and the average price per square foot on Fripp Island SC is $275.

Look to Beaufort SC for shopping, medical services and regional transportation options.

Traveling about an hour south of Charleston on Hwy. 174 youll reach Edisto Island SC, population 2,632.

Edisto Island has a charmingly underdeveloped feel to it with a lot of older homes and cottages and little in the way of commercial development.

Housing is much more affordable, the median home sales price being around $214,000 and a median gross rental cost of about $750 a month.

But like most of the South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live Small Islands, cost of living is a bit high.

The U.S. average is 100 and Edisto Island sits at about 222

If you head north out of Charleston SC and cross the Cooper Bridge youll enter the quaint little world of Sullivans Island SC, population 1,891.

This is the place where coastal South Carolinian come to play. And while Sullivans Island SC is a tourist destination, you wont find any hotels. Sullivans Island is filled with beautiful old Victorian houses.

And maybe an interesting restaurant here or there.

Nevertheless, it is a little pricey with a median home sales price of over $1 million.

Well, Ive run out of time and space talking about the South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live Small Islands.

Ill see you next time when well look at more of our South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live.

See You in the Carolinas!

Robert Bencivenga is a professional site locator and location analyst for major corporations. Robert researches the growth of NC and SC to find the Best Places to Retire or Relocate that are still affordable.

Robert Does Not Sell Real Estate! 2005-2017 Places of Value Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction without permission prohibited.

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South Carolina Coast Best Places To Live Small Islands

Scenic but Slow Islands Race – Scuttlebutt Sailing News

San Diego, CA (February 25, 2017) The 2017 Islands Race featured considerable visibility and scenery for those on board, yet disappointingly light winds for the last third of the race. Co-hosted by Newport Harbor Yacht Club and San Diego Yacht Club on February 24 and 25, the 134 nm course carries the fleet from San Pedro around Catalina and San Clemente Islands before finishing in San Diego.

Skies were clear enough at the start (Feb. 24) that competitors and Race Committee could see all the way to Catalina with startling clarity due to the stormy fronts that have been blowing through Southern California over the past few weeks.

Most boats started in about 8 knots of wind out of the northwest and winds increased as boats moved around the course to San Clemente Island. The breeze peaked at about 14 knots at San Clemente and got progressively lighter and came from odd directions (east) as boats approached the finish. Only 14 of the 24 boats entered in this years race finished with others retiring due to the conditions.

Despite the light winds, there was still a fair amount of competition out on the water. Patrick OBrien (TPYC), skipper on Grand Illusion (Santa Cruz 70), recalled his close finish ahead of Holua after sailing next to each other for the majority of the race.

We were boat-to-boat with them for about 70% of the race. After San Clemente, we started to pull away from them quite a bit. However, at the finish line they caught up, which is when the wind got really light. They finished two boat lengths behind us.

Skipper Chris Hemans (Balboa YC) on Varuna (Rogers 46), was one of the boats that retired once they were stuck in 1-2 knots of breeze early in the morning for around 5 hours. Prior to the light winds, Hemans and his crew experienced a great night on board with exceptional visibility.

It was a spectacularly brilliant evening to be on the water. Every star was out! The fact that there was no moon was actually a blessing because the skies were so clear. We thought the deck was going to get wet, but when the wind started to come off the shore, we realized that was why it was so dry. So not only did we have dry decks, but we had clear skies and we dont normally get that. It was a very pleasant evening to be out on the water.

Hemans has participated in almost every Islands Race since its inaugural race in 2010 and is the Islands Race defending champion for the past two years.

We really enjoy the course because it gives us a lot of upwind work which our boat really enjoys, as well as reaching between the two islands. We also enjoy the tactics of getting from the east end of San Clemente all the way to San Diego. Our boat really enjoys big pressure, and though we didnt have big pressure this year, the last couple of years we have had decent pressure which is why we were able to do well in the past.

As expected, Mighty Merloe, the 60-foot trimaran, was the first boat to finish after an elapsed time of 10 hours, 47 minutes. This was about 3 hours slower than their finish in 2015 where they set the multihull record after finishing in 7 hours, 45 minutes.

Timeshaver (J/125) used the Islands Race as a practice event for the Newport to Cabo Race in March. Crewmember Keith Magnussen explained that one of the highlights during this years race was the rivalry.

A lot of the boats converged around San Clemente Island so there was quite a bit of competition which was really fun. After we got around San Clemente Island we saw about 10-12 knots of breeze which pushed us into the morning when the wind died down. We were in no air for about 4 hours, then the breeze came back and we had all of our class with us. We battled with our sister ship Derivative and also had the other J/125 Resolute behind us.

The 2017 overall winner was Pyewacket (Andrews 70) skippered by Roy Disney (CalYC) with a corrected time of 23 hours and 1 minute. Though Pyewacket has won many other offshore races in Southern California, this is their first Islands Race overall win.

Event Co-Chair Wayne Terry understands the changing conditions of this race year to year. Sometimes the race is fast and fun and sometimes its slow and frustrating. Its a shame when you have boats that have to leave right away after a slow race. But we do what we can.

Event details Results Tracking Photos

Source: Emily Willhoft, SDYC

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Scenic but Slow Islands Race - Scuttlebutt Sailing News

Report: Japan to offer Russia economic plan for disputed island chain – World Tribune

Special to WorldTribune.com

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Japan is ready to propose a specific plan to Russia for the joint economic development of an island chain that both countries claim, The Nikkei Asia Review reports.

According to the report published February 25, the Japanese government will propose that it promote the small, windswept islands northeast of Hokkaido as a tourist destination, with a view to attracting Japanese visitors.

Private Japanese and Russian companies would jointly offer tourist cruises under Japans plan for the islands, which Moscow currently administers and calls the Southern Kuriles, but Tokyo claims and calls its Northern Territories.

Medical institutions and universities in Hokkaido would remotely provide medical services to the islands, perhaps through internet-based links.

Japan will also propose joint operation of processing facilities for salmon, abalone, and other fish catches, the report said.

Although Russia administers the islands, which have a population of about 20,000, their sovereignty remains a matter of dispute.

However, that issue will be put aside for the time being while economic issues are decided, the Nikkei report said.

The dispute over the four-island chain goes back decades.

They were seized by Soviet forces at the end of World War II, hobbling relations ever since and preventing the two countries from signing a peace treaty to formally end the war.

In December, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe discussed possible joint-economic projects on the island chain, but no breakthrough was reported.

Negotiators for the two sides plan to meet again on March 18 in Tokyo to discuss proposals, Nikkei said.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov and Japanese counterpart Takeo Akiba are expected to lead the talks.

They are hoping to reach agreement on details before Abe and Putin meet later in the year, Nikkei said.

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Report: Japan to offer Russia economic plan for disputed island chain - World Tribune

Section 3 girls basketball: Thousand Islands victorious, South Jeff loses by a point – WatertownDailyTimes.com

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SYRACUSE The Thousand Islands girls basketball team either received wise advice or good karma during its recent practice visits from Bit Hall ahead of its quest to make school history Sunday afternoon.

Courtney Evans-Eppolito scored 20 points and the top-seeded Vikings closed with a strong fourth quarter to beat No. 5 Cooperstown, 57-44, in the Section 3 Class C semifinals at Onondaga Community Colleges SRC Arena.

Thousand Islands tied a program record with its 20th victory and next Sunday will play in its first sectional championship game since 2010, when Hall was the leading scorer for a 20-win club.

In the Class B semifinal that followed, No. 4 South Jefferson suffered a heartbreaking 51-50 loss to No. 1 Bishop Ludden after Danielle Rauch made a game-winning free throw with three seconds left.

Rauch, a junior, also became the all-time leading scorer for the Gaelic Knights in boys and girls basketball during the victory.

Evans-Eppolito matched her season high in scoring and the Vikings pulled away with a 17-7 fourth quarter to close the victory.

Anna Hoover battled through foul trouble to score 14 points for the Vikings (20-2 overall), who will play No. 3 Syracuse Academy of Science (19-3) for the Class C championship at a time to be determined Sunday in the same location.

I thought we wanted it more, we worked very hard this season, Hoover said. So it was like we made it this far, we might as well just give it all we have.

Thousand Islands held Cooperstown scoreless for the first three minutes and 30 seconds of the fourth quarter and buried a pair of big 3-pointers down the stretch to extend its lead, which stood at 40-37 entering the fourth.

Madyson Amo scored from beyond the arc to put TI up 47-39, and Ashlyn Eyles hit from deep to give the Vikings a 50-41 lead, essentially sealing the game with two minutes left.

Thousand Islands coach Pete Pettit said his team was focused on tying the programs wins record and reaching just the second title game in his 19-year tenure. He invited Hall to practice this week to give them a final motivational push.

Shes come to a couple of our games, too, and we like her support, Evans-Eppolito said. She was on that last team that made it to the finals, so she just encourages us and gave us some tips on how to calm down and take the nerves away, and just come into an arena like this and just play.

Amo added nine points for the Vikings, who avenged last years quarterfinal loss to the two-time defending Class C champion Hawkeyes (18-5).

South Jefferson senior Natalie Burdick drained a 3-pointer with 22 seconds left to tie the game at 50 points apiece, setting up a final chance for Rauch on her milestone day.

The junior guard took the inbound pass at half-court, dribbled the clock down and drove the lane to draw a foul with three seconds left.

She missed the first free throw and made the second, and the Spartans called a timeout but couldnt get a good look off the inbounds pass before the buzzer sounded to end a grueling, physical game.

Rauch converted on 13-of-17 free throws and scored nine of her game-high 25 points during a fourth quarter that featured five lead changes and two ties.

I meant to take charge the whole entire game, but I started off pretty rough, pretty slow, said Rauch, who eclipsed the school record of 1,434 points with a free throw in the third quarter.

But I knew that this is what my team needed me to do. Down the stretch, good players make plays and thats what they needed me to do.

The Spartans took their first lead of the game, 37-36, on a pair of free throws from Alyssa Stevenson early in the fourth quarter.

The Gaelic Knights (20-3) answered with a quick 8-0 run and led until Stevenson scored off the dribble with two minutes left to give South Jefferson a 47-46 lead.

Burdicks bucket, her only three points of the game, brought the Spartans back even before Rauchs game-winning foul shot.

We were down seven or eight points at one point in time, against the No. 1 seed, a really good team, and fought our way back, South Jefferson coach Michelle Whitley said. Unfortunately, a few things we didnt do well at times, made some not-so-good decisions at times and that hurts you. But, God, we were right there and unfortunately they bailed them out at the end and that was it.

Stevenson and Mara Hathaway scored 14 points apiece to lead the Spartans (18-5), who were aiming for their third straight finals appearance and 13th in the past 15 years.

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Section 3 girls basketball: Thousand Islands victorious, South Jeff loses by a point - WatertownDailyTimes.com

Top 10 Songs of the Month: Lana Del Rey, Future Islands, and Migos – Consequence of Sound (blog)


Consequence of Sound (blog)
Top 10 Songs of the Month: Lana Del Rey, Future Islands, and Migos
Consequence of Sound (blog)
We're now two months into 2017, and it doesn't seem like things are about to be getting any lighter, brighter, or fluffier. Best-case scenario, things are just a little bonkers instead of entirely batfuckshit crazy. Or, perhaps more likely, chaos and ...

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Top 10 Songs of the Month: Lana Del Rey, Future Islands, and Migos - Consequence of Sound (blog)

Photos From Cape Cod & The Islands K-9 Relief Fundraiser Held At The Yarmouth House! – CapeCod.com News

The following photos are from the Cape Cod & The Islands K-9 Relief Fundraiser held at the Yarmouth House, Rte. 28, West Yarmouth. The raffle and silent auction event raised money towards medical expenses for retired K-9 police dogs.

Cape Cod K-9 Police Officers, State Representatives Will Crocker and Tim Whelan, and Cape 104 Country Girl Cat Wilson were among the many attendees. Paws for applause!

Picture 1 of 26

Cape Cod & The Islands K-9 Police Officers!

As a child, spending summers in North Truro, I thought Cape Cod began at the Wellfleet Drive-In and ended at Provincetown. As a photographer, I now know that all the Cape towns leading to the canal have their own unique beauty and charm.

Roughly 30 years ago, I had the good fortune to work with the legendary photographer Dick Kelsey and as owner of Kelsey-Kennard have specialized in aerial photography as well as landscape/scenic, portraits, weddings, and photographing events on the Cape, the Islands, and beyond.

Photographs from our Gallery in Chatham are displayed in homes and businesses locally and world-wide.

Besides photography I also enjoy boating/ fishing (fish are usually very safe when Im out there,) gardening and tennis. Cape Cod is a very special place and I look forward to sharing my images with you as I travel about.

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Photos From Cape Cod & The Islands K-9 Relief Fundraiser Held At The Yarmouth House! - CapeCod.com News

Clues to relationship between schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis – Science Daily

Clues to relationship between schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis
Science Daily
... if individual genetic variants may exist that could have opposing effects on the risk of schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis," said co-senior author Vishwajit Nimgaonkar M.D., Ph.D., professor of psychiatry at Pitt's School of Medicine and human ...

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Clues to relationship between schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis - Science Daily

Trump hears clashing viewpoints on health care overhaul – Press Herald

WASHINGTON A meeting Friday between President Trump and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, his former rival in the Republican primaries, had no set agenda. But Kasich came armed with one anyway: his hope to blunt drastic changes to the nations health-care system envisioned by some conservatives in Washington.

Over the next 45 minutes, according to Kasich and others briefed on the session, the governor made his pitch while the president eagerly called in several top aides and then got Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price on the phone. At one point, senior adviser Jared Kushner reminded his father-in-law that House Republicans are sketching out a different approach to providing access to coverage. Well, I like this better, Trump replied, according to a Kasich adviser.

The freewheeling session, which concluded with the president instructing Price and Chief of Staff Reince Priebus to meet with Kasich the next day, underscores the unorthodox way the White House is proceeding as Republicans work to dismantle the Affordable Care Act and replace it with something else. The day after Kasich delivered his impromptu tutorial, Trump spent lunch discussing the same topic with two other Republican governors with a very different vision: Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Rick Scott of Florida.

Scott said Sunday that he used the lunch to press for principles he has pushed publicly, such as financial compensation for states that did not expand Medicaid under the ACA and the importance of providing competition and cutting required benefits to allow people to buy insurance that fits them.

While leaving most of the detail work to lawmakers, top White House aides are divided on how dramatic an overhaul effort the party should pursue. And the biggest wild card remains the president himself, who has devoted only a modest amount of time to the grinding task of mastering health care policy but has repeatedly suggested that his sweeping new plan is nearly complete.

This conundrum will be on full display Monday, when Trump meets at the White House with some of the nations largest health insurers. The session, which will include top executives from Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Cigna and Humana, is not expected to produce a major policy announcement. But it will provide an opportunity for one more important constituency to lobby the nations leader on an issue he has said is at the top of his agenda.

Democrats and their allies are already mobilizing supporters to hammer lawmakers about the possible impact of rolling back the ACA, holding more than 100 rallies across the country Saturday. And a new analysis for the National Governors Association that modeled the effect of imposing a cap on Medicaid spending a key component of House Republicans strategy provided Democrats with fresh ammunition because of its finding that the number of insured Americans could fall significantly. Trump, for his part, continues to express confidence about his administrations ostensible plan.

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Trump hears clashing viewpoints on health care overhaul - Press Herald

Trump tells governors: Our health care plan will be ‘very special’ – CNN

"Perhaps health care will come up. Perhaps," Trump said at the annual Governors' Dinner.

The dinner was first lady Melania Trump's first time officially hosting a major social event at the White House, which Trump noted in his toast.

Governors from around the country gathered in the White House for the dinner, packing the room alongside administration figures and their families. Chief of Staff Reince Priebus could be seen seated alongside fellow Wisconsinite Gov. Scott Walker.

Trump entered the room with his wife after Vice President Mike Pence and second lady Karen Pence.

He boasted of his accomplishments in the few weeks since taking office and said, "It's been a lot of fun."

Pointing to the meetings with governors slated for the next day, Trump said Obamacare has "tremendous problems" and needed to be repealed and replaced, which he said would be one topic among others at the "pretty big sessions" they would have.

"I think you're going to see something very special," Trump said.

He invited governors to hit the ground running ahead of the meetings and said they could speak with Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price at the event.

The President concluded his toast by inviting Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat and the chairman of the National Governors Association, to give a toast. He described McAuliffe as a friend and a very good guy, but also said, "I just destroyed his political career."

McAuliffe told the crowd he expected they would have the "greatest NGA meeting in the history of NGA meetings" and offered a toast to the President.

The President, who doesn't drink, toasted with water. Governors were spotted snapping photos on their cell phones as he gave remarks.

The first lady had made sure to note that Sunday evening's dinner in the State Dining room was a time to put politics aside.

"I am proud to invite all the governors to the White House for this important annual event," Melania Trump, who wore a dark sleeveless gown, said in a statement earlier Sunday. "Tonight, we come together as one Nation, leaving political labels and partisan interests behind."

The black-tie dinner is the first major social event of the Trump administration, planned by the East Wing under first lady Melania Trump and a cadre of aides and advisers, including acting senior adviser Stephanie Winston Wolkoff.

One of the first lady's longtime friends and confidants, Winston Wolkoff was previously the events director at Vogue magazine, orchestrating high-wattage events like the Met Gala.

The evening's theme, per the White House, was "Spring's Renewal," drawing upon nature and florals for inspiration. Tables covered in white tablecloths were adorned with white and green floral arrangements, tall white candlesticks, and White House china (it was not immediately clear which administration's table setting was used Sunday evening).

"The White House has come to life, gleaming with a dazzling, sensorial experience of eternal spring," the White House said in the statement.

"The scents of jasmine and roses fill the air as we give thanks for this great Nation and the glory of renewal," the first lady said.

Ivanka Trump, who spent the earlier part of her Sunday at a monster truck rally in Baltimore, made the quick change into a strapless black gown, posing for a photo with Jared Kushner outside their home in DC's Kalorama neighborhood.

"From the monster truck show to the Governor's Ball..." she tweeted before the evening began.

For his part, tuxedo-clad President Trump seemed to enjoy his surroundings.

"I want to just congratulate the first lady on having done a really beautiful job. The room, they say, has never looked better, but who knows?" he said.

CNN's Kate Bennett contributed to this report.

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Trump tells governors: Our health care plan will be 'very special' - CNN

Congress returns, with health care, Supreme Court on agenda – ABC News

Congress returns to Washington this week to confront dramatic decisions on health care and the Supreme Court that may help determine the course of Donald Trump's presidency.

First, the president will have his say, in his maiden speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night. Majority Republicans in the House and Senate will be closely watching the prime-time address for guidance, marching orders or any specifics Trump might embrace on health care or taxes, areas where some of his preferences remain a mystery.

Congressional Republicans insist they are working closely with the new administration as they prepare to start taking votes on health legislation, with the moment finally upon them to make good on seven years of promises to repeal and replace former President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act. House Republicans hope to pass their legislation by early April and send it to the Senate, with action there also possible before Easter.

Republicans will be "keeping our promise to the American people," House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said as he sent lawmakers home for the Presidents Day recess armed with informational packets to defend planned GOP changes to the health law.

But land mines await.

The recess was dominated by raucous town halls where Republicans faced tough questions about their plans to replace the far-reaching law with a new system built around tax credits, health savings accounts and high risk pools. Important questions are unanswered, such as the overall cost and how many people will be covered. There's also uncertainty about how to resolve divisions among states over Medicaid money.

The lack of clarity created anxiety among voters who peppered lawmakers from coast to coast with questions about what would become of their own health coverage and that of their friends and family. It's forced Republicans to offer assurances that they don't intend to take away the law and leave nothing in its place, even though some House conservatives favor doing just that.

"What I have said is repeal and replace and more recently I have defined that as repairing the ACA moving forward," Rep. Leonard Lance, R-N.J., insisted to an overflow crowd in his politically divided district this past week. "I think we have a responsibility in Washington to try to make the system better."

It remains to be seen whether the release of detailed legislation in the coming days will calm, or heighten, voters' concerns. Details on the size of tax credits to help people buy insurance, and how many fewer people will be covered than the 20 million who gained coverage under Obama's law, could create bigger pushback and even more complications.

With lawmakers set to return to the Capitol on Monday, it will become clearer whether the earful many got back home will affect their plans. GOP leaders are determined to move forward, reckoning that when confronted with the reality of voting on the party's repeal and replace plan, Republicans will have no choice but to vote "yes."

Many Republicans say that how they will handle health legislation will set the stage for the next big battle, over taxes. And that fight, many believe, will be even trickier than health care. Already, it has opened major rifts between House and Senate Republicans.

Senators also will be weighing the nomination of federal appeals Judge Neil Gorsuch, Trump's pick for the Supreme Court. Hearings soon will get underway in the Senate Judiciary Committee; floor action is expected before Easter.

Despite Gorsuch's sterling credentials, Democrats are under pressure from their liberal supporters to oppose him, given voters' disdain for Trump and the GOP's refusal last year to allow even a hearing for Obama's nominee for the high court vacancy, federal appeals Judge Merrick Garland.

Yet some Democrats are already predicting that one way or another, Gorsuch will be confirmed. Even if he doesn't pick up the 60 votes he needs, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., could use a procedural gambit to eliminate Democrats' ability to filibuster Gorsuch, an outcome that Trump has endorsed.

Congress is awaiting a budget from the Trump administration, and the slow process of rounding out Trump's Cabinet will move forward as Republicans tee up more nominees over Democratic protests. The Senate has confirmed 14 Cabinet and Cabinet-level officials, fewer than other presidents at this point.

The most controversial nominees, including Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt have been confirmed. Next up: financier Wilbur Ross for commerce secretary, Rep. Ryan Zinke to lead the Interior Department, retired neurosurgeon and 2016 GOP presidential candidate Ben Carson to be housing secretary and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry at the energy department.

How Democrats vote will be telling, given the extreme pressures on them to oppose Trump at every turn. It's a dynamic to which those with potential presidential ambitions are particularly sensitive. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, among others, took heat for voting in favor of Carson in committee, while Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York as opposed nearly all the nominees.

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Congress returns, with health care, Supreme Court on agenda - ABC News

Here’s how we can act to ensure we all can afford healthcare in the future – The Hill (blog)

Navigating the complex world of healthcare feels nearly impossible for many Americans. Recently, the onus of understanding, managing, and paying for healthcare costs has been increasingly transferred to patients, forcing people to become healthcare consumers by default. Important financial decisions are being made with little to no knowledge of how the labyrinth of modern healthcare works.

The impact of these decisions is significant. Today, almost 10 percent of the typical Americans income is spent on out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. That number has nearly doubled from just 10 years ago, according toDeloitte. This trajectory shows no sign of slowing down.

Increased plan premiums, higher deductibles, constant increases in the cost of medication, and more expensive procedures all combine to make healthcare very expensive. It is more important than ever that we as consumers engage in the management of our healthcare financial responsibility for the present and future.

Understanding the challenges at hand, how can Americans take back control to successfully manage their healthcare expenses?

Be proactive and make a plan: Most people tend to view healthcare as a reactionary, transactional expense. That is, dealing with it as it comes up versus planning for it and proactively managing it. We should plan for our healthcare needs and subsequent costs, just as we save for our childrens college education or our retirement.

Understand the options: It seems obvious, but strategically selecting your health plan is one of the most important decisions you make when it comes to managing the cost of your healthcare. If your employer offers a traditional PPO and a high deductible HSA eligible plan, your unique needs will determine which plan makes more sense for you. Dont fall into the trap of selecting the lowest premium or simply going with what you had last year. This approach may cost you much more in the long term if you or your dependents require more than the annual wellness event.

Take advantage of HSA or FSA: Funds in these tax advantage accounts are excluded from taxable income, so it makes sense to take advantage of them. Use these accounts to pay for healthcare expenses with pre-tax dollars or better still, if your financial situation allows it, elect an HSA eligible high deductible plan and maximize your contributions for the tax benefit, but pay any out of pocket expense from other sources or funds. You will end up with a safety net of savings set aside if you do incur large, unexpected medical bills in the future.

Use an in-network provider: Always make sure that your healthcare provider is in a network. Unfortunately, this has become a much more complicated challenge in recent years. The breadth of your network can be much more difficult to define in modern plans, and narrow networks are becoming increasingly common. For example, it is not uncommon to find that your General Practitioner is in network, but its associated Radiology department falls outside of your coverage. The cost disparity between in-network and out-of-network providers can be quite substantial. Seeing an in-network provider can be the difference between paying your deductible and paying for everything OOP.

Price compare for your care: Realize that the cost of care may vary by provider, geographic location, and network coverage. Take advantage of the price transparency tools offered through your health plan. These tools let you shop for healthcare based on the price. You can compare the cost of a procedure at different providers while taking quality into account. This is especially useful for planned, higher-priced procedures that allow some time for research before you must proceed.

Review your medical bills and explanation of benefits (EOBs): These documents are notoriously complicated and many people find them difficult, if not impossible, to understand. Estimates on the percentage of medical bills that contain errors or overcharges range from 60 90%. Chances are pretty good that your bill may contain a savings opportunity, and it is your right to question and or challenge medical bills.

Utilize wellness benefits and financial incentives: Explore all wellness benefits, health risk assessments, and/or disease management programs that youre offered, particularly those that have financial incentives, such as premium reduction. At the end of the day, healthy people will pay less for healthcare. If you are able to improve your health and directly impact medical costs like your premium, it stands to reason that you should take advantage.

The inevitable transformation to a consumer-centric healthcare model means we must retrain ourselves to be informed health care consumers. We need to pay attention and participate in benefit decisions that have not had a direct impact on our daily life or household budgets in the past.

This requires all stakeholders in the healthcare industry, whether health plans, employer groups, government agencies, providers or patients, accept this change is underway and place a renewed focus on understanding the system and improving the consumer experience. Providing visibility, price transparency and guidance throughout is the first step to a more engaged healthcare consumer and an engaged consumer is essential to creating sustainable infrastructure in the industry.

Building a new model demands change to the current service delivery and pricing. The industry must nurture consumers to be actively engaged and highly autonomous when it comes to healthcare decision-making. Consumers need to understand what is at stake for physical and financial health, as it is clear that the time for passive participation in healthcare is a thing of the past.

Thomas Torre is it chief executive officer at Copatient. A technology enabled medical expense management company.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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Here's how we can act to ensure we all can afford healthcare in the future - The Hill (blog)

Report warns of gaps if federal health care dollars are cut – Belleville News-Democrat


Belleville News-Democrat
Report warns of gaps if federal health care dollars are cut
Belleville News-Democrat
A sobering report to governors about the potential consequences of repealing the Obama-era health care law warns that federal spending cuts probably would create funding gaps for states and threaten many people with the loss of insurance coverage.
Pre-existing conditions pose problems for health care replacementThe Denver Post
Report: GOP healthcare plan would end coverage for millionsWashington Examiner
Medical providers, ACA supporters rally for health care at McCain, Flake offices in PhoenixAZCentral.com
Voice of America -Oneonta Daily Star -CNBC -Politico
all 1,039 news articles »

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Report warns of gaps if federal health care dollars are cut - Belleville News-Democrat

Duterte’s Philippines Climbs The Rankings In Economic Freedom – Forbes


Forbes
Duterte's Philippines Climbs The Rankings In Economic Freedom
Forbes
Duterte's death squads have been killing democracy in Philippines, but not economic freedom. In fact, the country gained a couple of notches in the recently published 2017 Index of Economic Freedom ranking. That's badly needed good news for investors ...
Philippines Improves in Economic Freedom rankingCFO innovation ASIA

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Duterte's Philippines Climbs The Rankings In Economic Freedom - Forbes

Trump Transition Official: ‘Religious Freedom’ Order Is Still Coming – Huffington Post

Former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, who has served as domestic policy chair of President Donald Trumps transition team, told me in an interview on SiriusXM Progressthat the controversial religious freedom order that leaked to the press a few weeks ago is very much on the way,even though White House officials had played it down.

Earlier this month, The Nations Sarah Posner reported on the draft order, which would allow exemptions for those who oppose same-sex marriage, premarital sex, abortion, and trans identity, among many other things:

The four-page draft order, a copy of which is currently circulating among federal staff and advocacy organizations, construes religious organizations so broadly that it covers any organization, including closely held for-profit corporations, and protects religious freedom in every walk of life: when providing social services, education, or healthcare; earning a living, seeking a job, or employing others; receiving government grants or contracts; or otherwise participating in the marketplace, the public square, or interfacing with Federal, State or local governments.

At the time, Trump administration officials claimed the draft was among hundreds of draft orders circulating within the administration. We do not have plans to sign anything at this time but will let you know when we have any updates, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a White House spokesperson, told ABC News at the time.

But Blackwell, a senior fellow at the Family Research Council (deemed an anti-LGBTQ hate group by the Southern Policy Law Center), said in our interview at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) over the weekend that the order is far from dead. He also confirmed that the former director of Family Research Councils Center for Religious Liberty, Ken Klukowski, had actually structured the draft order as a legal advisor to Trumps transition team. Klukowski, who is now a senior attorney at the Liberty First Institute and a Breitbart contributor, is one of the lawyers in the process of redrafting it, Blackwell said, hinting that the original order may have been perceived as being too vulnerable to a legal challenge.

In the final analysis, what we want is an executive order that will meet the scrutiny of the judicial process, he explained. If there is no executive order, that will disappoint [social conservatives]. But a good executive order will not. So were still in the process.

Blackwell envisions the anchor concept of the order as one that will allow people with devoutly religious beliefs to turn away LGBTQ people in the course of business.

I think small business owners who hold a religious belief that believes that traditional marriage is between one man and one woman should not have their religious liberty trampled upon, he explained. I would imagine that that will be, strongly and clearly, the anchor concept [of the order]. (In an interview with me at the Republican National Convention in 2008, Blackwell had explained that he doesnt view LGBTQ people as a class of people who are discriminated against, but rather sees homosexuality as a compulsion that can contained, repressed or changed.)

Asked for comment about Blackwells statements at CPAC, Klukowski said that because its been publicly disclosed by people on the transition team that I worked on the transition, he was not at liberty to speak about the order specifically.

More broadly and as a private citizen [however], Kuklowski added, on the president and religious liberty: The president said when he was a candidate that there is a war on Christianity in America. And as someone who is a religious liberty lawyer who frequently represents the evangelical and Catholic communities in this country, thats exactly the sort of language that most people in that situation use. There has been unprecedented hostility against people of devout faiths in recent years. So the problem is there. Its been clearly defined. The president is aware of it.

Kuklowski said there are several routes to securing religious liberty, including the single most important thing, which is putting constitutional originalists on the federal courts and on the Supreme Court. And he said that Trump, who promised hed put originalists like the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the high court, is keeping that promise with the nomination of Neil Gorsuch, who is also an originalist.

In terms of administrative actions such as an executive order, Kuklowski said there are various types of actions that Trump could take, and he referred to federal law and federal programs that the president could affect. (He acknowledged that state laws protecting LGBTQ people could only be overturned via the federal judiciary, again stressing the importance of putting originalists on the federal courts.)

And Im confident, he continued, that the president is showing much to the shock of many establishment people who said, Theres no way thisll happen that he keeps his promises, even when theyre things that an establishment player would never do. And Im confident that hes going to keep his promise when it comes to protection of religious liberty as well.

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Trump Transition Official: 'Religious Freedom' Order Is Still Coming - Huffington Post

LGBTQ Advocates Fear ‘Religious Freedom’ Bills Moving Forward In States – NPR

Even after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage, there have been efforts to pass a religious freedom bill. LGBTQ rights advocates believe lawmakers anticipate support from the Trump administration. Alex Wong/Getty Images hide caption

Even after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage, there have been efforts to pass a religious freedom bill. LGBTQ rights advocates believe lawmakers anticipate support from the Trump administration.

There are renewed efforts at the state level to pass so-called religious freedom bills. LGBTQ rights advocates believe that's because local lawmakers are anticipating support from the Trump administration.

In Alabama, there's a bill that allows adoption agencies that are religiously affiliated to hold true to their faith if they don't think same-sex couples should be parents. The psychiatric community has found no evidence that having same-sex parents harms children.

The bill is called the Child Placing Agency Inclusion Act. When it was first introduced two years ago, the bill didn't go very far. But since the election that has changed. For the first time the bill is listed on the Alabama State Senate GOP agenda.

"This bill has been fast-tracked through the House of Representatives with support from both Senate and House Republican leadership," says Eva Kendrick, the Alabama state manager for the Human Rights Campaign, an LGTBQ rights group.

With the choice of Jeff Sessions to be attorney general, the Trump administration has picked someone who is likely to be an ally on these state bills. Back when Attorney General Sessions was a U.S. congressman, he referred to separation of church and state as something that was "recent," "unhistorical" and "unconstitutional."

Sarah Warbelow, the legal director for the HRC, fears that the choice of Sessions as attorney general is a signal to local lawmakers.

"A number of states have introduced bills for many years that would allow child welfare agencies to discriminate on the basis of religious belief," Warbelow says. "But since this particular executive order draft leaked out, we've seen a number of states really begin the process of moving those bills."

In addition to the bill in Alabama, she says there are similar ones based on religious freedom that are moving more quickly in Texas, South Dakota and Oklahoma.

Even without the passage of the bill, April Aaron-Brush says she and her wife have run into problems trying to adopt. They already have a 10-year-old adopted daughter.

But for many years in Alabama, only Aaron-Brush could legally adopt her. Then the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage, and now she and her wife are recognized as parents under the law. When they decided they wanted to adopt another child, they ran into problems.

"We've had several agencies that refused to call us back already because we were a same-sex couple although we've got marriage equality, and we're supposed to be equal" says Aaron-Brush. "But at this point in time, we're still having hurdles to jump over."

Aaron-Brush says the agencies didn't explicitly tell her they were turning them down because they are a lesbian couple. But all their forms asked about a mother and father and at least one of the agencies has a Christian affiliation.

Aaron-Brush has thought about investigating and perhaps taking legal action.

That's why religious agencies want protection, says Eric Johnston, an attorney who represents several adoption agencies in Alabama with a religious affiliation.

"They anticipated there could be problems and wanted to in advance think it through and do something that would be reasonable and to the benefit of everyone concerned on both sides of the issue," Johnston says.

The bill's sponsor in the Alabama House is Rep. Richard Wingo.

"The bill is saying that: Do not discriminate against these faith-based agencies and force them to place children foster or adoption into homes that go against their religious beliefs," Wingo says.

According to Wingo, in some states, religious agencies have closed rather than be forced to put children with same-sex couples. He believes keeping them open helps more children. And he says only 30 percent of the adoption agencies in Alabama have a religious affiliation.

So, he feels lesbians like Aaron-Brush have alternatives.

Wingo won't say how he feels about same-sex couples adopting.

"It doesn't matter what I think," he says. "If you are a follower of Christ then what matters is what does the word of God say. What does God say about it?"

Advocates for the LGBTQ community fear that this reasoning will soon make it harder for their community to adopt.

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LGBTQ Advocates Fear 'Religious Freedom' Bills Moving Forward In States - NPR

National Underground Railroad Freedom Center offers hands-on learning – nwitimes.com

Thats the question one Midwest museum is posing to visitors.

Along the banks of downtown Cincinnati sits the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center a facility that prides itself on being a museum of conscience, a convener of dialog and a center that educates.

This month, the museum opened the Open Your Mind: Understanding Implicit Bias learning lab, designed to assist the public in understanding and recognizing bias and other forms of discrimination. The lab is participatory, involving educational and entertaining hands-on exercises.

Partnering with the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at The Ohio State University, the lab also explores recent debates on implicit bias, which are the attitudes or stereotypes that affect a persons understanding, actions and decisions in an unconscious manner.

In fact, research has show that all people harbor implicit bias even if they seem to hold no explicit prejudice, says Jamie Glavic, director of marketing and communications at the center.

While at the center visiting the lab, which is free with general admission, visitors will want to check out a number of other exhibits including Faith and Fashion: The Crowns of African American Women.

The exhibit, which runs through April 1, highlights the various self-expressions of women of all ages and celebrates African-American church culture.

Church services are a time of worship and praise, Glavic said. Oftentimes, in African-American churches, in addition to hearing songs and sermons, observers cannot help but look in amazement at the various hats of its female parishioners.

In addition to exploring the various colors of crowns, personal narratives will account for the historical celebration of how Black women broken away from their domestic uniforms for Sunday services.

With more than 100,000 visitors annually, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center serves to inspire modern abolition through connecting the lessons of the Underground Railroad with todays freedom fighters, Glavic said.

Our physical location in downtown Cincinnati is just a few steps from the banks of the Ohio River, the great natural barrier that separated the slave states of the South from the free states of the North, she said. Since opening in 2004, we have filled a substantial voice in our nations cultural heritage, providing a vivid account of the inspiring narrative of the antebellum Underground Railroad.

This distinct experience is the tie that connects Americans to the universal and ongoing struggle for freedom, Glavic said.

We believe in inclusive freedom all people enjoying rights and privileges of equal kind, equal number and equal quality, she said. We teach people to embrace their common humanity and to realize their power to advance freedom - the birthright of every human being.

Other exhibits currently at the museum include a virtual experience that commemorates Civil Rights icon Rosa Parks historic demonstration and From Slavery to Freedom, which portrays three centuries of slavery from its introduction into the Americas to its abolition at the end of the American Civil War.

Beginning March 24, a new exhibit, Mandela: The Journey to Ubuntu, which commemorates the life and legacy of former South African President Nelson Mandela through photographs.

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. For more information, go to freedomcenter.org.

WHILE YOURE IN THE AREA:

Harriet Beecher Stowe House

Details: This house is operated as a cultural site and focuses on the life of the author of Uncle Toms Cabin.

Details: Located in Ripley, Ohio, this house along the Underground Railroad is one of the states best documented stations.

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National Underground Railroad Freedom Center offers hands-on learning - nwitimes.com