ISU student-founded company offers unique nutritional supplements – Iowa State Daily

Looking for a unique pre-workout or protein supplement? An ISU student-founded company offers unique products that may enhance the benefits of exercise.

A year ago, Devin Wilmott, senior in kinesiology and health, and Greg Arciniegas, senior in kinesiology exercise science, along with two other business partners, started their own nutritional supplement company, I Conquer Everything "I.C.E." Labs Nutritional Supplements.

The team of personal trainersWilmott at Train with Dev, her own online training business, and at AFP Training Studio, and Arciniegas at Premier Athlete Traininghad worked with supplements in the past and knew that many people could benefit fromthem collaborating.

After initially deciding to start the business in March 2016, the team beganrigorous planning to create and sell three different products a protein formula in two flavors and a pre-workout formula.

With the help of a pharmacist, the team created its own unique formula that offers various benefits beyond what a typical protein supplement offers, Arciniegas said.

"All four of us sat down and looked at the best products on the market that we have taken or that we've recommended to clients, and took pieces of ingredients from products that we all liked, and made a [combined] formula," Wilmott said.

The product offers more than just protein, with the addition of extra ingredients such as a higher dose of digestive enzymes than most other protein supplements, Arciniegas said.

By going above and beyond a typical protein supplement, they knew they could potentially lose money compared to other companies that offered separate products for each marketable benefit. However, they decided that offering a unique all-in-one formula made more sense for their customers, Wilmott said.

Our supplements are safe for anyone to take. You could do nothing and take protein protein is obviously a part of [everyday] nutrition," Arciniegas said. "But if youre working out and breaking down muscle, the [extra] protein is going to benefit you more because its going to help you build that muscle back bigger and stronger.

The formula for their protein supplement is a metabolic-enhancing formula that helps individuals recover after a workout, whether the goal is to gain muscle or lose fat.

"Basically what [metabolic-enhancing formulas] do is help you lean out the ingredients in the formula make you use your body fat energy,"Arciniegas said.

When starting their pre-workout product, Wilmott recommends beginners use a half scoop before a workout and work up to the full recommended dosage.

"Pre-workouts are tricky because they affect everybody different," she said.

For example, the beta alanine in the product may make some people feel a tingling sensation, while others may not feel it at all,Arciniegas said.

Both of the CEOs highly recommend that individuals do their own research before buying and starting supplements to know which ones are right for them.

They also recommend researching to avoid taking supplements that contain ingredients that are banned or that are simply fillers in the product.

In order to ensure quality within its own products, the I.C.E. team is currently in the process of getting its products third-party tested to prove label accuracy, and made sure to visit its manufacturing plant personallyto make sure it was up to its standards.

The manufacturing plant that the team chose is both NSF certified, which is a third-party health and safety certification that ensures quality in food-related products, and GMP, Good Manufacturing Practices, certified, which ensures that a product is produced following quality standards.

"If you're going to make an investment, you have to be smart about it," she said. The CEOs researched, analyzed trials and studies that have been done on the ingredients and visited the manufacturing plant to make sure everything was top quality before releasing their products.

Focusing on ensuring high-quality products, offering unique formulas and going above and beyond to create a strong brand has allowed I.C.E. to differentiate themselves from other supplement companies in the market.

"We want to build trust with our customers, and trust with our clients, and also accountability. We're not going to tell you that this product is going to change your life; we're not going to tell you that this product is going to make you lose weight or gain muscle, we're going to tell you that it's going to help," Wilmott said. "Supplements are to supplement what you're already doing. If you put in the work, our supplements can and will help you. If you don't put in the work, and you take our supplements, it will not help you,"

The company sells its products in two, soon-to-be three, retail locations, including AI Supplements in Ames, and online with international shipping as well as domestic.

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Inside The Ultimate Fighter: Talent, check. Alcohol, check. Food …? – Bloody Elbow

Day 1, Season 1. The fighters check out the gym. Theyre impressed. They check out the house. Theyre even more impressed.

And the place is well-stocked with alcohol. The producers thought of everything.

Almost.

They didnt realize how much food 16 fighters can put down, Kenny Florian said. I think they ran out of food the first day. They didnt realize how big of an order we needed as far as food, supplements and all that stuff.

And the cast had little idea what was to come. They reveled to all hours of the night, then got a 5 a.m. wakeup from coaches Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture.

What that brutal wakeup call made clear was that the reality of The Ultimate Fighter wasnt just about the house. The antics of confined men alone wouldnt distinguish the show from The Real World, Big Brother or other reality-show knockoffs. The TUF reality is the collision of an unsupervised house with the disciplined atmosphere at the gym.

The tone was set right away in TUF 1 with a brutal test of endurance in the training center. Liddell admonished fighters not to beat each other up too much, but they wouldve been too exhausted from the cardio workouts to inflict too much damage on each other, anyway.

Dana White, not yet burdened by the murderous travel schedule he would keep when the UFC rapidly expanded, was in the gym and on camera for the early workouts, pushing the fighters through tough exercises and occasionally giving confessionals to reiterate how difficult everything is, selling the sport to a new audience.

Nobody trains as hard as these guys do, White insisted on the broadcast. Thats a fact.

For all the grappling and striking exercises, a treadmill test was the biggest obstacle. Fighters started running for five minutes at 5 miles per hour. Then five more at 6 mph. Then 7. Faster and faster for 30 minutes. Oddly enough, the fighter shown successfully completing the workout was Chris Leben, who spent the previous night getting wasted.

The producers followed the groggy, bewildered fighters as they recovered. Bobby Southworth said it was the hardest workout hes been through. Jason Thacker laughed as a leg cramp kept him from getting out of the van. Then the fighters took turns in an ice bath a recovery trick that in itself might be enough to dissuade people from pursuing careers in sports.

But the producers were hoping early on for a work hard, play hard environment.

"You'd think they'd learn, TUF 1 champion Forrest Griffin said on the UFCs Aftermath program during TUF 13. You'd think they'd maybe seen Season, I don't know, 1 through 12. This happens every year, always toward the end. Someone just gets drunk and makes a complete ass of themselves."

I wont say its encouraged, but lets just say if you drink, its good TV. - Rashad Evans

The tone was set right away in TUF 1.

I was kind of shocked that they provided us with alcohol, fighter Chris Sanford said on camera less than 10 minutes into the series debut. A full bar.

Leben had already found that bar and started serving. Sanford offered a gentlemanly toast. Leben got hammered. By the time he turned in for a couple of hours of sleep, he had also stolen pillows from neighbors beds and spritzed on Thackers bed.

Alcohol fueled a lot of the TUF 1 drama, including a blowout between Leben, Southworth and Josh Koscheck. And even in a calm cast like the TUF 13 crew, the merry drinking could quickly turn to angry drinking, with Tony Ferguson quickly alienating himself from the rest of the house.

TUF 2s Rashad Evans: On the show, they kind of want the antics and craziness to happen. So drinking is not shunned upon at all. I wont say its encouraged, but lets just say if you drink, its good TV. They didnt want guys sitting around to play cards all day. They want guys who drink in the rec room with each other. Thats when all the shit happens.

Yet TUF 2 was more cautious. On the first night in the house, the cast looked warily at the bar. And fighter Tom Murphy saw cautious producers as well:

They brought in serious athletes for our show. I think thats what they wanted. But I think what they found was the demographic of 18 to 25-year-olds that are watching the show wants to see people having ridiculous behavior. I remember Melvin (Guillard) threw a pillow in the pool one day, a couch pillow and they turned off the cameras, the producer called us in and said were going to cancel the show if you guys dont stop getting out of control. A couch pillow in the pool. So all of our guys were pretty serious athletes I think it was more of an idle threat to say, Guys, knock it off. But like I said, it was a couch cushion.

Aside from the caution, TUF 2 dealt with a group of fighters too worn out to party.

Evans: On our season, they trained us way, way, way too hard during the day. So when it came down to it, thats the last thing you want to do is drink. Because tomorrow, I know Im going to get my ass kicked in practice. I dont want to wake up hung over and have to do two hours of practice and get my ass kicked and have to do this twice a day. The next few seasons, it wasnt that hard. They didnt have a hell day like they had the first two seasons.

Alcohol in the house was a sticking point for UFC pioneer Ken Shamrock when he agreed to coach on TUF 3. He recalls:

They asked me to be on the first one, and unfortunately, I was tied up doing other things, so I couldnt do it. They ended up finding up two other guys. I watched the show, and I was a little bit disappointed. So I went on to the show, I sat down and talked with Dana White. I said, listen, if Im going to do this, you've got to promise me you're not going to put alcohol in the house. I saw the things that were going on prior to this. I was like you're putting these guys in a real bad situation. If you put alcohol in the cupboards, that's crazy you know they're going to get bored, you know they're going to get in mischief. I said, listen, I'll do it as long as there isn't alcohol in the house. He said there wouldn't be. I guess we all saw what that was all about.

The TUF 3 cast seemed to appreciate the alcohol. The first-night toasts turned into a long party and a lost eyebrow for Kendall Grove. (Rule #543 on living in the house: Dont pass out when someone else has the razor.)

TUF 6s John Kolosci had one of the most memorable drunken nights after his loss to Mac Danzig drinking to me getting my ass kicked, throwing a foosball table and more stuff into a pool, climbing a cabana, then head-butting a palm tree.

Koloscis memorable confessional: Its a lesson to all the little kids out there that you should not be drinking alcohol because its bad for you.

Getting a cast with the volatility to provide reality-show entertainment along with the fighting skills to make competitive matchups was a challenge early on.

In most seasons, would-be contestants go through a rigorous tryout and interview process. (More on that to come.) For the first season, the process wasnt so firmly established. UFC staff had to scour regional cards to find fighters like Florian.

My audition was actually Dana White showing up at a fight in Boston and watching me fight. He was the one that told me about the show and told me to send in an interview. I still wasnt that interested, but I just sent in a seminar DVD of me teaching (jiu-jitsu), and I got a call from the producers. For Season 1 and I think even Season 2, there were no tryouts. It was just based on your record and the whole interview process.

The UFC also got the word out at established fight camps such as American Kickboxing Academy, where they found Koscheck, Southworth and Mike Swick. But Swick says AKA fighters were confused at first.

They were in need of people. They didnt have enough. None of us from AKA had applied. They kept asking why we hadnt applied. We didnt really know the details. We thought it was for UFC fighters. We didnt know it was for fighters who werent in the UFC. They kept coming back. Basically, we sent in videos of our fights. We submitted it, and they called us back.

We didnt have a fight audition where we had to train or grapple. We just had an interview. They put us in a hotel room and locked the door. We couldnt leave for three or four days. They weeded us out. They made a final cut right at the end. A few people who thought they were in the show they got cut. We didnt really know what to expect. It ended up being three people from my team.

Despite all the questions about the show, TUF 1s talent was quite strong. Half of the 16 fighters went on to long UFC careers, and that didnt include Southworth, the most polished fighter at the shows outset. Plenty of fighters had decent resumes. Griffin had beaten Jeff Monson and Chael Sonnen. Diego Sanchez was 11-0 and a King of the Cage champion. Leben was 14-1 (Sherdog lists four of those bouts as amateur). Only Thacker, who seemed overwhelmed from the outset, was out of his depth.

For TUF 2, with heavyweights and welterweights, the process was still laid-back, with fighters able to get through even if they were a little reluctant. Murphy didnt watch the first season, and his sister prodded him to apply for the second. He borrowed a video camera and did one take of himself in a kimono describing his training with Carlson Gracie, taking care to drop TUF 1 runner-up Stephan Bonnars name as well. Then he went home for the second part of his clip:

I have a little wrestling room in my garage. My kids were running around. I said these are my toughest opponents I opened the door and showed my kids. The video took me about 15 minutes. I sent my application in, and the rest just happened.

At that time, we were locked in your rooms we couldnt even go to the stairwell and work out. You werent allowed to do anything at that time. - Tom Murphy

Still, producers had felt emboldened by the first seasons success to start challenging prospects such as mild-mannered welterweight Luke Cummo.

The producer told me he knew there was a New York asshole inside me and he wanted to find out what it would take to come out. During the second interview at the table with several producers, the head told me there were some real animals in the house, and what was I doing there? But I told him that I would fight them. I mean, what's the worst that could happen?

And they managed to bring in a few eccentrics some of whom, like Cummo, had considerable talent as well. Cummo pulled his mattress off his bed so his head could face north. When Mike Whitehead asked how he could be sure he was facing north, Cummo said he brought a compass.

They also tested how well fighters dealt with deprivation. Murphy said the prospects in his class were given medicals and then screen tests, then sent back to their rooms.

At that time, we were locked in your rooms we couldnt even go to the stairwell and work out. You werent allowed to do anything at that time. Then they call you back up and put you for an interview at a round table.

Then the interviews were befuddling. Murphy didnt make a great first impression.

Danas like, Look at you. Look at how fin small you are. I was like 230 at the time. His phone rings, he stands up and walks out of the room, and I never saw him again. Im thinking, Oh my God that was my interview. Dana White told me how small I was to be on a heavyweight show, and then he walks out of the room.

We just talked about home-schooling my whole interview. We didnt talk about anything else. No fighting, nothing. I went home, they called me up. I must have made an impression on somebody.

Evans also heard he was too small. The recent college grad had his nice little job interview routine down pat. Then Dana White quickly shook him out of it. Heres how Evans recalls it:

White: Youve gotta be fucking kidding me.

Evans: What?

Im fucking bigger than you.

OK.

What are you, fucking 5-foot fucking 7?

No, Im 5-11.

Bro, I just had guys that had to fucking duck down through the door to get inside here. And you fucking come in here, little and small. Listen, heres whats going to happen. Im going to let you come on my show, your fucking little ass is going to get held down for 15 minutes straight. You Cuba Gooding Jr.-looking motherfucker. Ive got a guy whos 6-4, 240 pounds, and he can move like a cat you think you can compete with a guy like that?

Evans had to regroup quickly.

I was so taken aback. I didnt know what to say. I went in there thinking it was going to be a proper interview. I had to think on my feet. So I thought, OK, Im going to play your game.

And so Evans drew upon a boxing analogy, right up the alley for longtime boxing devotee White.

When heavyweights were heavyweights, it wasnt about the biggest guy. You see Muhammad Ali, you see Joe Frazier, you see all the guys that were considered the greatest in boxing they werent cumbersome, big guys that you have now. Boxing was funner to watch back then because the guys werent so big and cumbersome. Guys were able to move, guys were able to put on more of a show because it wasnt all about the size. Thats what I am right now for this season Im the guy thats going to go in there and fight hard as hell and be one of the little guys. Its not going to be boring like you see most of these unathletic heavyweights now.

The interview ended, and Evans didnt think he was going to get picked. But he got one show of support.

One of the producers, Wayne Sampson, was like, I like your interview, I went to bat for you, they might give you a call back. Please do me one favor. If you get on the show, please dont get your ass kicked the first fight.

Evans won the TUF 2 heavyweight division and the UFC light heavyweight belt. Score one for Sampson.

A quick note on quotes: When quotes are taken from TUF broadcasts, books or other sources, they are attributed as such. Unattributed quotes are taken from first-hand interviews for the book Inside The Ultimate Fighter, which was never published. See the intro to this series to see what happened to that book.

Next week: Life and reality in a fishbowl

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Inside The Ultimate Fighter: Talent, check. Alcohol, check. Food ...? - Bloody Elbow

L3 MAPPS to Supply Digital Control Computer System Hardware for Bruce Unit 6, Supporting Life Extension and … – Nuclear Street – Nuclear Power Plant…

--Press Release--

L3 MAPPS announced today that it has won a contract from Bruce Power to replace the existing Bruce B Unit 6 Digital Control Computer (DCC) system with all-new hardware. Three DCCs will be delivered to Bruce Power. The first unit (DCC-Z) will be used as a maintenance platform and is due to be installed in the first quarter of 2018. The other two DCCs (DCC-X and DCC-Y) are redundant units for plant operations and are expected to be delivered in the second quarter of 2019.

DCC systems are used to monitor and control the major reactor and power plant functions at CANDU* nuclear power plants. The new DCC system will feature the latest SSCI-890 CPUs and will replace the legacy Varian V72 computer systems and related equipment to ensure continuous, safe and reliable performance over the service life of the plant.

Our first DCC system, built in the early 1970s, was for the Bruce site. With this new project, we have come full circle, marking a new chapter in L3 MAPPS DCC business, said Michael Chatlani, Vice President of Marketing & Sales for L3 MAPPS Power Systems and Simulation. We are happy to continue our long collaboration with Bruce Power. Leveraging our record of on-time, on-budget performance, we look forward to our further support of the Bruce site for many years to come.

Replacing the DCCs at the Bruce site is an important element of the Life-Extension Program at Bruce Power, said Mike Rencheck, President & CEO of Bruce Power. Bruce Powers Life-Extension program will mean the Bruce site will continue to power the province until 2064, and this is good news for families and businesses across Ontario. Bruce Power, and the electricity it provides Ontario families and businesses, is part of the solution over the short and long terms to provide a source of low-cost stable electricity.

Bruce Power is Canadas first private nuclear generator, providing 30 percent of Ontarios power at 30 percent below the average residential price. The Bruce site, home to eight CANDU reactors in Tiverton, Ontario, is the worlds largest operating nuclear generating facility. The company is progressing with a series of incremental life-extension investments, including Major Component Replacement, to secure a clean, reliable and low-cost source of electricity for Ontario families and businesses for decades to come.L3 MAPPS has over 30 years of experience in pioneering technological advances in the marine automation field and over 40 years of experience in delivering high-fidelity power plant simulation to leading utilities worldwide. In addition, the company has more than four decades of expertise in supplying plant computer systems for Canadian heavy water reactors. L3 MAPPS also provides targeted controls and simulation solutions to the space sector. To learn more about L3 MAPPS, please visit the companys website at http://www.L3T.com/MAPPS.

Headquartered in New York City, L3 Technologies employs approximately 38,000 people worldwide and is a leading provider of a broad range of communication and electronic systems and products used on military, homeland security and commercial platforms. L3 is also a prime contractor in aerospace systems, security and detection systems, and pilot training. The company reported 2016 sales of $10.5 billion. To learn more about L3, please visit the companys website at http://www.L3T.com.

Safe Harbor Statement Under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 Except for historical information contained herein, the matters set forth in this news release are forward-looking statements. Statements that are predictive in nature, that depend upon or refer to events or conditions or that include words such as expects, anticipates, intends, plans, believes, estimates, will, could and similar expressions are forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements set forth above involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from any such statement, including the risks and uncertainties discussed in the companys Safe Harbor Compliance Statement for Forward-Looking Statements included in the companys recent filings, including Forms 10-K and 10-Q, with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The forward-looking statements speak only as of the date made, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

# # #

*CANDU is a registered trademark of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, used under license by Candu Energy Inc., a member of the SNC-Lavalin Group.

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A UO lab digs into worms in the quest to lengthen human life – AroundtheO

In a collaborative project, the UOs Patrick Phillips tackles a problem of reproducibility while studying potential anti-aging compounds

Worms. Might they help us live a healthier and longer life?

Extending human life in ways that keep people both healthy and productive is a goal of many scientists, including the UO's Patrick Phillips.

His latest project, which he leads in collaboration with two other U.S. institutions, may not immediately move us closer to extending human life beyond the national average of 79. It has, however, opened a window on how basic research that which seeks fundamental knowledge about how something works should be done to harness robust results that speed progress toward medical advances.

In a new paper published Feb. 21 in the high-profile journal Nature Communications, Phillips and 33 collaborators got right to the heart of the challenge: Too many laboratory findings are not reproducible, and the genetic makeup of model organisms often responds differently to compounds thought to offer promise.

"Aging is universal. It is complex. Individuals die for many different reasons, so there is a lot of noise in the system," said Phillips, a professor of biology and acting executive director of the Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact. "It is a challenge to figure out the elements necessary to change the process. To do this you have to approach the question at a scale that has never been done before. That's what our paper is about."

In their study, Phillips nine-member UO team and researchers from the Buck Institute for Research on Aging in California and Rutgers University in New Jersey carefully carried out experiments using identical protocols. They simultaneously tested the effects of 10 different compounds on life extension across 22 diverse genetic backgrounds drawn from three species of roundworms.

"This is the largest aging study that has ever been done on an animal hundreds of thousands of individuals have been tested," Phillips said.

Our study indicates that even when following the same methods, insufficient replication of trials could account for failures to reproduce previous studies, the research team noted in the paper. Our focus on rigorously adhering to defined methods to reduce variability between sites necessitated making choices about specific methodologies for which there was no standard across the field.

Locations of worm strains

Across the labs, the researchers identified six compounds that extended the lifespan in one strain of worms. Overall, two compounds had positive results across the various strains, with an amyloid dye, Thioflavin T, being the most effective; two other compounds offered promise under specific conditions. Genetic differences among the species are comparable to those found in mice and humans, the researchers noted.

More details about the science and Thioflavin T are covered in a news release issued by the Buck Institute.

Future experiments, Phillips said, will test these and other promising compounds in genetically diverse strains of roundworm species to see how they perform. Eventually, the most widely acting compounds could advance into testing in other animal models and, eventually, in human clinical trials.

The research emerged from three-year grants to each of the three collaborating institutions from the National Institutes of Health. It is part of an extension of the National Institute on Agings decade-old Intervention Testing Program that has targeted aging studies using mice at three other institutions. The roundworm project is known as the Caenorhabditis Intervention Testing Program.

Roundworms, which have a lifespan of two to three weeks, have a simple genetic makeup that is similar to mice, which in laboratories can live up to three years. Thus, Phillips noted, more individual worms can be used more cheaply in the course of experiments that span the life cycle.

Compounds that have been found to extend life in worms and mice have proved so far to be limited to organisms with a particular genetic background.

Roundworms

This is a dark side of studying a model organism, Phillips said. You have genetic uniformity in worms and mice, but humans are not genetically uniform. We know that different individuals respond differently to drugs and that the cause of disease is often different in each individual. Overcoming those limitations is a big part of the push toward personalized medicine.

From the outset, he said, the roundworm project has been about reproducibility in a way that mirrors the approaches used by the institutions studying mice.

We've had to invest a lot of time in coordinating activities, Phillips said. That's often an unstated part of the difficulty of doing science. For this, we've written hundreds of pages of standard operating procedures to try to normalize the research process.

There is a history in aging studies where one lab finds a result but another lab cannot reproduce it," he said. "Cancer studies are the same. Only about 25 percent of studies can be reproduced with similar results. This is a big emerging issue in science now, so we feel like our study is one of the best on reproducibility that has ever been produced.

For the project, the leaders of the three labs brought different specialties of nematode biology to the table: Phillips is an expert in evolutionary genetics; Gordon J. Lithgow of the Buck Institute is a specialist on chemical interventions; and Rutgers Monica Driscoll is an aging and health expert.

Can we expect to see extended human lifespans soon?

What we find in this worm may or may not work in mice or humans, Phillips said. We're looking at things that affect fundamental cellular processes that are conserved genetically across all animals.

Carrying basic research forward is a goal of the Knight Campus, a $1 billion initiative designed to accelerate the cycle of generating impact from discoveries. The Knight Campus, which has seen some recent behind-the-scences progress on staffing and the selection of architects and general contractors, will foster exchanges of ideas among basic-science researchers with applied scientists and entrepreneurs to foster that translational process.

With this research, you are seeing the classic impact cycle, Phillips said. You have a guy working in a most esoteric part of evolutionary biology something that you'd generally think could have no general impacts just to gain understanding about something about the world. It is important, but in terms of affecting human health, who knows? Understanding genetic variation is being recognized as being more important each day. And so what once seemed esoteric is now important for understanding translational medicine.

As scientists expand into studying stress and aging in terms of natural genetic variation in different species, then my area's unique contributions fit into a broader scale. We're looking at compounds in a way thats never been done before. We are identifying compounds that can affect health and aging, he said. What do we do with that?

The point is not to make worms live a long time. It's how we use the information. How might this translate a decade from now into something that could go into human clinical trials to try to help people to live longer healthier lives? Can we turn this basic research into something that is relevant? Are there potential drugs that could?

That could be a Knight Campus story, Phillips said.

By Jim Barlow, University Communications

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A UO lab digs into worms in the quest to lengthen human life - AroundtheO

Forget PoliticiansThe People Of The West Have Decided Against Muslim Immigration – VDARE.com

[Adapted from the latest Radio Derb, now available exclusively on VDARE.com.]

Talk about fake news: before our very eyes, the Main Stream Media is attempting to disappear Swedens Muslim rape crisis after President Trump alluded to it in his Florida rally on Friday e.g. From an Anchors Lips to Trumps Ears to Swedens Disbelief . [By Peter Baker And Sewell Chan, NYT, February 20, 2017]

Trump did not actually say what the MSM heardthat Sweden had suffered a terrorist attackbut that the Swedes, having taken in large numbers, were having problems like they never thought possible. [Trump Trance? Media Sure It Heard Sweden Comment Trump Never Said, By Charlie Martin, PJMedia, February 20, 2017]

And now immigrants are rioting in Sweden to prove him right. The New York Times is still in denial.

Like disproportionate black crime in the U.S., this phenomenon is a Hate Fact so thoroughly repressed by the MSM that its denizens are genuinely astonished when the subject surfacesalthough its old news to readers of samizdat publications like VDARE.com.

And, of course, ordinary Europeans know, and are drawing conclusions. Listen to this sound clip. Its a caller to a British radio show hosted by Nigel Farage, the Trumpish former leader of Britains national-conservative UKIP party. If the callers accent sounds vaguely familiar, its because hes from Liverpool, so he talks like a Beatle. Thats B-e-a Beatle: B-double-e beetles dont talk:

Well, I went to a mosque in Liverpool. People have been talking about trying to understand Islam, to try and get a grasp of what Islams all about. And the Imam, who was standing in front of the congregation, he said: Allah has given us this country, and every knee will bow at the name of Allah.

Islam is a takeover movement. It wants All it believes, that Allah has given them this country. Theyre just taking over. Well have one choice: Either convert or go. We will be pushed aside.

Now, why are we allowing this to happen? This is colonization. This is takeover. Why have our elite allowed this over the generations?

The Muslim population is exploding in this country. In 1971 there was just 70,000 Muslims. Nobody knows how many there are now. There may be as many as seven million. We know there are 2,000 mosques in Britain now. When the Queen came on the throne there was only one.

Islam is exploding in this country. Its democracy [siche means demography] is increasing dramatically, and were under serious threat. People have got to wake up to this problem. Weve got to do something about it.

Do we let Islam simply take over? No, we have to stop immigration, yes, but their birthrate is exploding as welltheyre filling up the maternity hospitals.

Were going to reach the point where were going to have to say to the Muslims: Its time to go home. Go back to the Dar al-Islam. You dont belong in the West. Youve nothing to contribute here. Those who have integrated can stay; but if you want to remain in your way of life, which is anathema to the West and is totally against our culture, you must go.

Thats where we [second voice, inaudible] should stand.

Islam is taking over Farage stunned as caller tells him fears for Britain

By Darren Hunt, February 14, 2017

Nigel Farage was left somewhat aghast at that. Thats strong stuff, he mumbled.

OK, Im not going to go all Brit-centric on you. Thats not my country any more, and I watch what is happening over there with a calm, detached despair.

I am going to say, though, that this little exchange captures the zeitgeist in the modern West rather neatly, and the direction the zeitgeist is headed. To put it bluntly, its headed from Nigel Farages position to the callers.

Farage is a decent sort, and hes done real service to his country, and to the West at large, by putting a cheerful, likeable, moderate face on national conservatism. That hasnt stopped the CultMarx screamers telling us that hes Literally Hitler, of course. But the bar for being Literally Hitler is now so low that if you like your country, and would prefer it not be swamped with foreigners, then you too are Literally Hitler.

The zeitgeist is, though, moving in a certain direction, and I believe it will leave Farage behind. Earlier in that radio program hed told listeners he couldnt agree with President Trumps executive order suspending entry to the U.S.A. for citizens of seven exceptionally disorderly Muslim nations.

The public in Europe is headed away from that mild, tolerant position to something closer to the callers. Farage, and European politicians of similar views, and possibly our own President, are transitional figuresplace-holders, until someone more frankly and unapologetically nationalist comes along.

A very respectable British think tank, the Royal Institute for International Affairs, carried out a big survey between mid-December and mid-January, covering ten European countries, with at least one thousand respondents in each country, total more than ten thousand.

To the statement, All further migration from mainly Muslim countries should be stopped, overall 55 percent of Europeans said they agreed.

In Nigel Farages Britain the figure was 47 percent.

Given that some unknown proportion of the surveys respondents must themselves have been Muslims, it would be interesting to see the survey re-done with respondents drawn only from the legacy populations. Im betting youd get over half of legacy British peopleI mean, white non-Muslimsagreeing.

And Ill further bet that ten years from now, that half will be three-quarters.

And note that the statement they were responding to in that survey doesnt restrict itself to seriously dysfunctional places like Somalia and Iraq. It covers all mainly Muslim countries, of which there are at least 48.

The survey reveals the usual differences between groups of respondents: city-country, young-old, more or less educated. Younger, more educated, more urban people show less agreement.

There are some suggestive counter-currents moving there, too, though. Heres a poll out of France, taken at the end of January, on support for the candidates in the upcoming presidential election there. It shows support for national-conservative candidate Marine Le Pen at its strongest in the 18-24 age group: 35 percent in that group, falling to just 16 percent in the 65-and-overs.

If Ms. Le Pen comes first in the April vote, it wont be geezers who put her there, itll be millennials.

I said the zeitgeist is moving in the nationalist direction, but it has a way to go yet. If Le Pen does place first in April, shell likely get swamped in the run-off vote in May, when voters for the other four candidates consolidate against her.

Dutch nationalist Geert Wilders is also looking strong for the election in his country next month; but not as strong as Ms. Le Pen in hers, and like her he faces opposition parties that will unite to keep him out of power. [Netherlands Wilders not riding Trumps coattails, By Nick Ottens Leiden, EuOpinon, February 17, 2017]

So there is major support over there for demographic stability and national conservatism, but not likely major enough to be decisive this year, for all Mr. Wilders happy talk about a patriotic spring. The wheel probably needs to turn a while longer before we see major electoral victories.

Its turning, though. Five years ago Le Pen, Wilders, and Farage were written off as extremist fringe candidates. The Brexit vote last June and Donald Trumps victory in November showed how much things have changed.

And just as here, public discussion about the National Question is all constrained in the narrow, dishonest vocabulary of hate, racism, and the rest. We have to work at changing that.

A person who opposes mass Muslim immigration may indeed hate Islam. I think Geert Wilders does. A great many other people, thoughincluding this onedont mind Islam at all, and wish nothing but long life and happiness to Muslims in Muslim countries everywhere. Theyre entitled to live under their own laws and practice their own religion just as much as we are.

As we say here on the nationalist right: Thats what separate countries are for.

Muslims have forty-odd countries of their own to be Muslims in. Thats surely enough. And there is surely nothing hateful in saying so.

[Adapted from the latest Radio Derb, now available exclusively on VDARE.com.]

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Forget PoliticiansThe People Of The West Have Decided Against Muslim Immigration - VDARE.com

Resistance Against Donald Trump Is Not a New Tea Party | Time.com – TIME

In this Thursday, Feb. 9, 2017 photo, people react as U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz speaks during a town hall meeting at Brighton High School in Cottonwood Heights, Utah. Some attendees of the contentious town hall hosted by Chaffetz have sent the congressman fake invoices after he claimed some people there were paid protesters. Rick BowmerAP

Ideas

Ferguson was Deputy National Press Secretary and Senior Spokesperson for Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign for President.

On August 25, 2009, Democratic Congressman Bart Gordon held a town hall meeting in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. A local news report called it a discussion about the nation's health care that led to loud boos and heckling from the crowd. On February 9, 2017, Republican Congresswoman Diane Black elected to Gordons seat in the fall of 2010 held a town hall meeting in the same city. A local news report headline proclaimed, Diane Black, GOP lawmakers faced defenders of Obamacare at lively town hall . Sounds similar, right?

The zeitgeist is quickly setting in: Republicans right now face a backlash akin to what Democrats faced from the Tea Party in 2009 and 2010. Some have gone so far as to call this resistance the Democratic Tea Party. Its a convenient comparison: Democrats like it because the Republican Tea Party was successful in 2010, and the media appreciates it as a simple and straightforward story. I've been guilty of leaning on it myself.

But the Democratic resistance and the Tea Party actually differ in a number of important ways, each of which tells a different story about where our country is and where our politics may be headed.

For starters, the Tea Party was forged as an opposition to a societal reality in our country, while todays resistance is opposed to a political reality. The Tea Party began before the election of President Obama, as a reaction to President Bush and the bank bailouts of 2008. Tea Partiers believed that society and the economy had all left them behind. The movements anger was stoked by the realization that the country had changed to the extent that it would elect someone like Barack Obama and support his liberal policies like the Economic Recovery Act (the so-called stimulus) and the Affordable Care Act (scornfully dubbed Obamacare). These members wanted the entire country to revert to a set of values that more closely resembled what they saw on Leave It to Beaver .

On the other hand, the current resistance isn't based on a belief that our country has gone astray from some former golden age. It's a political backlash, borne out of Donald Trumps policies and his presidency. Its participants arent rejecting the social structures of American society. They are embracing and defending our evolving structures of diversity and inclusiveness. The people stepping forward to resist the Trump Administration are standing against an Administration that doesnt respect the core values that this nation holds: that we are all equal and that we can all achieve our own dreams.

Second, these movements were forged in entirely different political situations. Members of the Tea Party believed they had been marginalized and had to fight back against this new oppression. They represented a minority, losing the 2008 elections by almost 200 electoral votes and 10 million people, while Democrats gained a more significant majority in the House and a filibuster-proof 60-vote majority in the Senate. Headlines announced a permanent progressive majority. The Tea Party disapproved of their country going in this new direction, which bred their movements anger.

Todays resistance is almost the complete opposite. While Trump is indeed president winning the Electoral College by approximately 75 votes he lost the popular vote by nearly 3 million. While Republicans maintained their control of the House and the Senate, they lost seats in both. The current resistance isnt reacting to its lost status as the majority in American politics, as the Tea Party was. It is speaking out for the majority of Americans who feel inadequately represented in Washington. This resistance is giving political voice to those the political system has deprived of a voice. They are speaking for the silenced majority.

The third major difference is in how these movements act. There are certainly some tactical similarities both use rallies and town hall meetings to attract attention to their causes but the undercurrents are very different. The Tea Party was truly a movement of anger at the system, at the country and at the movements members declining station in life. This best manifested in their slogan, from the American Revolutions Gadsen flag, Dont Tread on Me demanding that people and government just leave them alone to their familiar ways.

While todays resistance certainly has some anger, the basic emotions fueling it are alarm and fear. We are alarmed by what the current political system, and its leadership, will do to us, our friends and our country. We are fearful that our family and neighbors might be barred from entering the U.S. by a Muslim ban or might lose their access to health care if the Affordable Care Act is recklessly repealed. We are worried that the political system now serves corporate interests and the Presidents far-flung (but undisclosed) business interests, not the interests of the people or their nation. We are alarmed that people we know and love wont be treated equally or fairly under the new Administration. The Tea Party consisted of people angry about their own perceived situation; the resistance is people alarmed and fearful about what might happen to others.

The best distinction between the two movements, though, is the one that is most important to our President: crowd size. The largest Tea Party rallies reported were between 150,000 and 250,000 people, depending on the source. The Womens March last month irrefutably included over 4 million people nationwide a 16-fold difference. Washington, D.C., alone likely doubled the largest Tea Party totals.

While it would be easy and convenient to pronounce that 2017 is merely 2009 redux, the simplicity of that comparison belies the underlying and important reality. The Tea Party sought to fix our country and align it with Tea Party politics; the democratic resistance seeks to fix our politics and align them with our countrys values. The movements may share some tactics, but the spirit that drives them are, and the consequences of them will be, very different.

Ferguson was Deputy National Press Secretary and Senior Spokesperson for Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign for President; before, he was Executive Director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Independent Expenditure.

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Resistance Against Donald Trump Is Not a New Tea Party | Time.com - TIME

Maybe the Earth Is Flat – The Root

Kyrie Irving (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

This past weekend during the National Basketball Associations All-Star festivities, Cleveland Cavaliers basketball star Kyrie Irving appeared on the NBA podcast Road Tripping With RJ & Channing and said, The Earth is flat. The Earth is flat. ... Its right in front of our faces. Im telling you, its right in front of our faces. They lie to us.

Asked about his comment the next day on ESPN, Irving refused to backtrack, and offered the following:

Hopefully theyll either back my belief or theyll throw it in the water. But I think its interesting for people to find out on their own. ... Ive seen a lot of things that my education system has said that was real that turned out to be completely fake. I dont mind going against the grain in terms of my thoughts.

News outlets, blogs and social media immediately blew up, branding him an insane, anti-science conspiracy theorist. How could someone who attended one of the countrys most prestigious universities long enough to play 11 whole games believe something so asinine? Is Kyrie going crazy? Is he a victim of gross misinformation? Maybe one of the NBAs most eloquent black players is simply stupid.

Or maybe he is just like America.

For a moment, lets set aside the fact that the flat-Earth theory is a growing, global movement that fascinates many ill-informed people (including rapper B.o.B.who feuded with astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson about this subject last year). Irving is a 24-year-old millennial who lives in a world where facts no longer matter. Media, politicians and the entire Cabinet of our pea-brained, petty president have repeatedly shown that truth, logic and science are all debatable in this new era where data exists in shades of gray.

Make no mistake, the Earth is round. Astronomy proved it millennia ago. Every third-grade teacher can explain it in 11 minutes. There is no need to debate it.

How crazy is it to believe the Earth is flat?

It is as crazy as the debate that police brutality is not a black problem. Last week the Journal of Criminology and Public Policy analyzed 990 police shootings in 2015. It found that black Americans are more than twice as likely to be unarmed when they are shot by police. Even when the journal adjusted the data to account for the people who attacked police or other victims, the results were clear: If your skin is black, your chances of getting killed by police while unarmed are double.

Yet police unions, Blue Lives Matter advocates and anyone appearing on Fox News refuse to admit that police brutality is a black problem. Every study shows it, but when faced with facts, they act just like Irving. When the journal released its findings, every black person reading it had the same reaction they would have if you told them the Earth was round:

Well, duh.

Yes, youd have to be an idiot to believe the world is flat, but there are also people who believe that voter-ID laws arent racist despite the evidence to the contrary. The Washington Post published its own extensive research last week after studying data from elections from 2006 through 2016 that shows voter-ID laws suppress the minority vote and benefit Republicans. But state legislatures continue to institute these laws and pretend to act befuddled when people accuse them of racism. Even after courts across the land say they are prejudiced. Even after the facts show that voter-ID laws make the electorate more conservative. Even after Republican consultant Carter Wrenn said, Look, if African Americans voted overwhelmingly Republican, they would have kept early voting right where it was.

But none of these statistics matter. If you learned that the fucktard-in-chief had placed a longtime opponent of the Voting Rights Act in charge of the Department of Justice, youd think that was as stupid as someone telling you that you might fall off the edge of the world.

Water is wet, the planet is actually a sphere and black people have an economic disadvantage in America.

All three of those statements seem clear to anyone with a double-digit IQ, yet only two of them are accepted by the conservative Zeitgeist (pronounced why-pee-pull). Keeping in the theme of studies released last week, the Institute on Assets and Social Policy at Brandeis University joined with the think tank Demos to release a study entitled The Asset Value of Whiteness (pdf). The paper shows that there is an inherent value of being white in America that translates to an economic advantage. It proves that the racial wealth gap in America has nothing to do with education level, income or spending habits.

They will tell you the American dream is achievable through hard work alone. They would have you believe that education is the key, and that success has nothing to do with race, being born into privilege or the generational inheritance of whiteness. If you believe that, you might as well believe the planet is shaped like a dinner plate.

No, the Earth is not flat, but Irving is as crazy as the people who believe that a Muslim ban can save us from terrorismeven though most terrorists are white males. He is as misguided as the people who see the floods, tornados, blizzards and droughts but refuse to believe that global warming is real. Thinking that you are affixed to a Frisbee flying through space is as ludicrous as guns dont kill people, people kill people. The flat-Earth theory is as stupid as All Lives Matter.

The fact that Irving believes that scientists, astronauts, physicists and everyone in the world who owns a telescope are complicit in a global conspiracy to hide an inconsequential fact is absolutely preposterous. But he puts a ball into a hole for a living, so his paranoid delusion about planetary physics doesnt hurt a soul (until he tries to help his kids with their science homework).

Conversely, the people in power who deny the obvious by-products of racism in America to maintain their white-knuckle grip on power and control arent being silly or ill-informed. Their intentional disregard for repeatedly proven fact at the expense of people of color is evil and deranged, and it is our duty to keep punching them in the face until we finally knock out the 400-year-old hate monster.

They would have you believe that math, data, science and truth are now irrelevant and meaningless, but if we allow opinion and lies to replace evidence and accuracy, then we all get to live in our selective, delusional reality. Im sure that in some of those universes, racism doesnt exist, Donald Trump is a great president and, yes ...

Maybe the Earth is flat.

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Maybe the Earth Is Flat - The Root

Report: Boundary Waters nets $77 million from summer visitors – Duluth News Tribune

"We've always known the Boundary Waters makes a contribution we needed to have a scientifically valid way to show that," said Paul Danicic, executive director of Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness. "It shows this is a national and international resource and destination."

Danicic hails the report as the first of its kind for the wilderness area, both in sample size and extent. His group and the Quetico Superior Foundation enlisted the nonprofit Conservation Economics Institute to complete the study.

More than 500 visitors were surveyed last summer, and the results were released last week.

"This is the first of concentric circles of studies to come," Danicic said. "This is in no way the total economic value of the Boundary Waters," since it leaves out local and winter spending.

The report calls the Boundary Waters an export for Northeastern Minnesota, since so much money is coming in from outside the immediate region. And of those outside visitors mostly from the Twin Cities, Wisconsin, Illinois and Michigan more than half reported household incomes of $100,000 or more.

"This outside money brought into the region represents a basic industry and spurs the need for community in-filling services such as medical, financial and entertainment services," the study reads.

About 1,000 jobs are supported by visitors to the wilderness area, which range from outfitters, lodging, food service and other retail and government positions.

"The duration and sustainability of these jobs is much greater than extractive industries based on nonrenewable resource extraction, and nature tourism is not as susceptible to market volatility," reads the study.

Extractive industries do tend to pay more, though Danicic pointed out the region's economy can't be all mining or all tourism.

"These jobs are only one slice of a resilient economy," he said.

The study comes amid an ongoing fight over the Twin Metals proposed copper mines in the Boundary Waters watershed.

"We should use that information in how we make decisions," Danicic said. "We can be proud of our mining past and considerate of our future."

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Report: Boundary Waters nets $77 million from summer visitors - Duluth News Tribune

In the Face of a Trump Environmental Rollback, California Stands in … – Yale Environment 360

Solar panels cover the roof of a Sam's Club storein Glendora, Calif. David McNew/Getty Images

For decades, California has been at the forefront of U.S. environmental policies. Now, with the Trump administration poised to attack environmental and climate regulations, California is ready to play a key role in resisting Washingtons hard right turn.

By JacquesLeslie February21,2017

As environmental standard-bearer and green technology pioneer, no other state rivals California.

More than two decades before the U.S. Congress passed the Clean Air Act, California became the first state to enact air pollution legislation, in 1947. The states Air Resources Board, widely considered the most powerful air pollution regulatory agency in the world, has used its authority to prod hybrid and electric cars into widespread commercial use. Spurred by the nations strongest and most innovative building code, new buildings in California now use about 75 percent less energy than pre-code buildings, and have saved enough energy to head off construction of the equivalent of seven 500-megawatt natural gas-fired power plants.

California is the only state with its own greenhouse gas emissions cap-and-trade program, which earned it about $2.5 billion in revenue from emissions permits last year. Spearheaded by its thriving Silicon Valley technology industry, the state has led the nation in generating inventions for electric and self-driving cars and a smart electricity grid, which are helping create a renewables-based economy.

California plays an incredibly important role as a pathfinder that plots out the course for the energy transition, climate change, and the environment in general, said Jules Kortenhorst, the CEO of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a Colorado-based energy think tank.

All this puts the state on a collision course with President Donald J. Trump, who has made clear through his statements and appointments that he is ready to disregard the threat of climate change and stress fossil fuels as a path to robust economic growth. In response, Californias leaders, all Democrats, have expressed defiance.

Weve got the scientists, weve got the lawyers, and were ready to fight, Governor Jerry Brown proclaimed at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco in December. Then, referring to Trump administration threats to cut funding for climate change research, Brown said, If Trump turns off the satellites, California will launch its own damn satellite!

California GovernorJerry Brown speaks at the Governor's Conference on Extreme Climate Risks and California's Future in December2011. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Whats at stake in this face-off is Californias ability to maintain its own relatively rigorous environmental laws and regulations as the Trump administration loosens environmental provisions at the federal level. Implicit in the battle is a striking reversal of roles, in which environmentalists who once championed federal power over states now support states rights, while Trump appointees who once argued for states rights consider how to squelch Californias renegades. Neither side is likely to emerge with an all-out victory: While the Trump administration may use budget cuts, deregulation, and legislative pruning to box in the state, experts say, it has no way to prevent California from continuing on an independent path in key environmental domains.

As it happens, many California environmentalists regard the environmental record of their new de facto spokesman, Governor Brown, as mixed, largely because of his support for fracking the state is the nations fourth-largest oil producer and water projects that benefit agricultural interests at the expense of rivers and estuaries. Nevertheless, they welcome his emergence as the Democrats leading advocate for responsible climate change policies. I think Jerry Brown is genuinely interested in environmental protection, and I think he will be a leader in pushing back the assault on environmental policies, said Gary Bobker, director of the rivers and delta program at the San Francisco-basedBay Institute.

Last month, the state legislature hired Eric Holder, President Barack Obamas attorney general from 2009 to 2015, to represent it in expected legal battles against the Trump administration. California now seems poised to play the role that Texas performed during the Obama administration, when Texas sued the federal government at least 48 times. More than half of those suits dealt with climate change and air and water quality. I go into the office, I sue the federal government, and I go home, then-Texas attorney general and now-governor Greg Abbott famously said in 2013. Californias attorney general, Xavier Becerra, who was appointed by Brown last month, sounded distinctly Abbott-like in a statement he directed at Trump in December: If you want to take on a forward-leaning state that is prepared to defend its rights and interests, then come at us.

The Trump administrations greatest point of leverage against Californias environmental policies is the air pollution waiver given to the state in the 1970 Clean Air Act. The waiver acknowledged the states severe smog problem and the precedent-setting car emissions regulations California devised to reduce air pollution by allowing the state to establish more stringent standards than the federal governments. Since then, a dozen other states have agreed to follow Californias emissions policies, which means that about 40 percent of American cars are covered by its rules. That number is so large that car manufacturers generally design all their vehicles to meet California standards instead of producing one model for California regulations and another for federal ones. The result is that Californias policies drive technological change in the transportation sector, not just nationally, but internationally.

Beginning with model year 1969, the federal government has granted California waivers for new vehicle emissions standards more than a hundred times, regardless of which party occupied the White House. But statements by Trumps new administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott Pruitt, at his confirmation hearing last month suggest that Californias waiver is in jeopardy. Invited by California Sen. Kamala Harris to commit to upholding the waiver, Pruitt said instead that he would not want to presume the outcome of a review of the policy. His refusal to endorse the waiver is particularly striking given that as Oklahomas attorney general, beginning in 2010, he was an outspoken advocate for states rights and even established a federalism unit that opposed federal energy and environmental laws.

If Pruitt decides to revoke Californias existing waiver, which covers all vehicles manufactured through 2025, he would have to argue that California has no need to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, which would almost certainly trigger a long legal battle. The only way Pruitt could avoid such a battle would be to persuade Congress to revoke the provision of the Clean Air Act that established the states waiver right in the first place. Given Republican domination of the current Congress, that change is certainly conceivable, though it would meet vociferous Democratic and perhaps even some Republican resistance.

The Trump administration could also seize on a California policy it opposes, such as the states opposition to immigrant deportation, to justify cutting federal funding to the state, creating a budget crisis that would hinder Californias ambitious energy programs. Trump threatened such cuts earlier this month in response to proposed state legislation prohibiting state and local law enforcement officials from upholding federal immigration laws. If we have to, well defund, Trump told Fox News interviewer Bill OReilly. We give tremendous amounts of money to California. California in many ways is out of control. But using such a blunt weapon to punish the state could threaten Californias economy, the sixthlargest in the world, and could impede the vast economic expansion that Trump has promised his policies will deliver.

The Trump administration could hamstring Californias energy programs by cutting funding for a broad range of federal energy programs that support national laboratories, universities, and private companies. If, for example, the U.S. Department of Energy decides to cut funding for energy efficiency, Californias Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which focuses on energy-efficient technology, might be vulnerable. Or the administration could cut the Energy Departments loan guarantee program, known for funding the failed solar company Solyndra, but also instrumental in the success of many other companies, including Tesla, the electric car and energy storage manufacturer based in Palo Alto.

Iowa's bipartisan push to become a leader in wind energy. Read more.

The administration could also reduce or eliminate the federal tax credit system for renewable energy, but that would risk opposition from a number of Republican-controlled states that benefit from it. Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said last year that if Trump tries to cut the wind energy tax credit, Hell do it over my dead body. Iowa produces one-third of its electricity from wind power and is the nations third- leading generator of wind energy; California is second.

Iowas example indicates the obstacles the Trump administration could encounter if it tries to weaken support for renewable energy. Everyone talks about red states and blue states, said Hal Harvey, CEO of Energy Innovation, a San Francisco-based policy research group. We really have to start talking about green states and brown states. There are about a dozen states many of them in Republican control with very strong renewable portfolio standards and very strong utility energy efficiency programs, and utilities are going to be the prime movers in building the electric vehicle charging infrastructure.

Californias cap-and-trade program, presumably a lightning rod for the Trump administrations disapproval, faces no threat from the federal government, since it is not dependent on federal approval. On the other hand, a lawsuit brought in 2012 by the California Chamber of Commerce has put the program in some jeopardy. The suit argues that the programs fees amount to taxes, and according to state law, tax provisions must be passed by a two-thirds majority of the legislature, a threshold the cap-and-trade legislation did not meet. But Democrats currently enjoy two-thirds majorities in both the state Senate and Assembly, and so could likely meet the tax vote requirement with new legislation.

In most other respects, California and other states can carry out their environmental and energy policies regardless of the Trump administrations actions. In part thats because utilities, which are at the heart of the clean-energy transition, traditionally are under state, not federal, control. As Ralph Cavanagh, co-director of the Natural Resource Defense Councils energy program, explained, Renewables, energy efficiency, and the most important climate policy solutions going forward in the United States today are under the authority of state officials. The capital investment for clean energy isnt coming from the federal government its coming from the budgets of publicly owned and investor-owned utilities.

Perhaps most notably, California will be able to continue on its ambitious path of reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. The states Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, signed into law by a Republican governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, set in place regulations and market mechanisms to lower Californias emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. Not only is the state on schedule to meet that goal, but last year the legislature approved a new, far tougher target, requiring an additional 40 percent cut below 1990 levels by 2030.

On top of that, the state is carrying out a pioneering reorganization of its electricity grid, and in the process has become a test ground for developing renewable energy. The California Public Utilities Commission has directed the states utilities to develop demonstration projects with smaller companies that use local energy resources such as rooftop solar, batteries, and smart water heaters and thermostats, thereby avoiding the need for major infrastructure investments in things like new substations and transmission lines.

The state is also expanding its grid market to neighboring states to increase the grids flexibility during times of production overcapacity. For example, daily electricity demand increases in Arizona when people get home from work, a time when California may have an overabundance of renewable energy that it could sell to Arizona. Because the sun sets in the two states at different times, peak electricity demand in Arizona (near the end of the day) may overlap with peak solar production in California (near the middle of the day).

Even as California faces regulatory headwinds from the Trump administration, it is riding strong economic and technological tailwinds that favor its goals of weaning its economy off fossil fuels. The administration seems bent on one last lucrative gulp at the fossil fuel trough. But as climate change intensifies, the desirability of fossil fuel use probably will continue to decline, and in any case, the steadily dropping cost of renewable energy will make it increasingly likely that wind energy, solar power, and other renewables will gradually supplant fossil fuels. In that case, California will be in prime position to reap the benefits of its policies.

Jacques Leslieis a regular Los Angeles Times op-ed contributor. His book on dams,Deep Water: The Epic Struggle Over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment, won the J. Anthony Lukas Work-in-Progress Award for its "elegant, beautiful prose.He recently published an ebook,A Deluge of Consequences, that portrays a project in Bhutan to counter flooding caused by climate change. More about Jacques Leslie

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In the Face of a Trump Environmental Rollback, California Stands in ... - Yale Environment 360

VIDEO: Basic Income presentation at Meeting of the Minds Summit – Basic Income News

Sandhya Anantharaman, data scientist and co-director of the Universal Income Project, spoke on basic income at the tenth annual Meeting of the Minds summit.

In a 10-minute talk, Anantharaman argues that the United States needs a new social contract in the form of a basic income.

Setting out the problem, she explains that increases in productivity over the past half-century have not been matched by increases in income for the majority of Americans. Income inequality has risen, and a growing number of people are juggling part-time and contract jobs.

According to Anantharaman, the best solution is to guarantee all Americans an income floor sufficient to meet their basic needs. She contends that the economic security provided by a basic income would, for example, allow individuals to develop the skills and training needed to pursue new careers, promote entrepreneurship, and allow scientists to carry out research for its own sake, without worrying about how to commercialize it. It would, moreover, permit people to devote their time to caregiving, parenting, volunteer work, and other endeavors not traditionally compensated with wages.

Following Anantharamans presentation, the host of the event issued a prediction that the accompanying video (posted below) was one of the most likely to go viral.

Meeting of the Minds 2016 was held October 25-27, 2016 in Richmond, California. The event brought together 480 participants from the public and private sectors, non-profit organizations, and academia, with 23 countries represented.

The Meeting of the Minds network states that its mission is to bring together a carefully chosen set of key urban sustainability and technology stakeholders and gather them around a common platform in ways that help build lasting alliances.

Reviewed byMadhumitha Madhavan.

Cover photo: Still from YouTube video.

Kate McFarland has written 366 articles.

Kate began reporting for Basic Income News in March 2016, joined BIEN's Executive Committee in July 2016, and was appointed Secretary of BIEN's US affiliate (USBIG) in November 2016. She has received funding from the Economic Security Project and Patreon for her work for as a basic income news reporter.

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VIDEO: Basic Income presentation at Meeting of the Minds Summit - Basic Income News

Voices Does automation mean job losses for accountants? – Accounting Today

While opinions vary on the number of jobs that can be automated away, its clear a large number of positions now handled by people, including accounting jobs, will be supplemented or replaced in some way by intelligent machines.

The utterance of the word automation conjures up gloomy images of job losses and people left behind by rapid technological change. While some job losses are inevitable, there is hope for optimism. Whats the reason? Simply put, the analytics at the root of those intelligent machines can provide expanded career paths for accountants and finance professionals.

Were already seeing a displacement of jobs in the accounting industry through outsourcing and robotic process automation, among other trends, yet the role of traditional accountants is expanding well beyond simple reporting measures.

Todays finance professionals must take into account a multitude of forces shaping financial performance: talent acquisition strategies, geopolitical forces, fluctuations in capital, emerging markets and intellectual property challenges, just to name a few. To suggest that smart and insightful accountants cannot acclimate to automation is to miss a fundamental truth about our nature: We are innovative, adaptable creatures who have been evolving and adapting to change for millions of years.

Beyond the Zero-Sum Game

Most enterprises and recruiters have struggled to redeploy jobs. A common mistake in thinking is: Once an accountant, always an accountant. So, what are some of the options?

At the end of 2016, Genpact Research Institute attempted to reframe the job loss mindset away from for every winner there must be a loser to how can we make the transition less painful for those affected? How can we better identify opportunities within the accounting profession to capitalize on the evolving role of the finance function?

Using data from 1,120 randomly selected people with accountant roles in their LinkedIn profiles and employed at large U.S.-based companies, we created a way to explore options for workers whose job has become obsolete or who require additional training.

The data analyzed career histories, education and skills to identify factors that enable people to move into roles traditionally unrelated to finance and accounting (F&A). The data showed that approximately one-third of accountants have held a role unrelated to F&A during their careers. The roles were in a much wider range than expected, and certainly broader than conventional recruiting firms would encourage candidates to consider (see chart below).

Diving deeper into specifics, it is clear that numerous career paths may exist for accountants. Customer service, operations, and sales and marketing were all well-represented in this research. In addition, possible positions in research, program management, consulting and business analysis stood out. Our research findings are clear: the skills and competencies that accountants possess are applicable to many fields, both in and out of finance. Risk-focused professions, where precision capabilities are central to supporting statistical and compliance methods, are just one example. We also found that the ability of accountants to work across the organization and understand other disciplines such as sales, marketing, supply chain and human resources may enable them to channel their skills into those areas.

The role of the finance function is expanding dramatically. Taking into account such factors as supply chains and market fluctuations, as well as how intellectual property and human capital shape business performance, further expands the boundaries of traditional accounting activities and broadens career opportunities.

Whats Next?

While the deployment of automated technologies will inevitably lead to some job losses, the evolving role of the finance function and skill sets accountants possess can lead to new, expanded and rewarding careers. The American Institute of CPAs and its management accounting designation, CGMA, reinforce the value that accountants bring to the table, with skill sets that can help address a wide array of business challenges.

Big Data can also help those at risk of losing their jobs identify new roles. With deeper study, corporate management and human resources professionals will be able to draw deeper conclusions on career progression, more effectively develop reskilling programs, and create new alternative jobs paths. Such learning and development initiatives may identify jobs for many positions in risk of being eliminated through automation.

For accountants, whose professional lives will be impacted by the rapid emergence of automation, it is certainly a time of increased anxiety. But for organizations that think creatively about the skills finance professionals bring to the table and how they can apply more broadly across the enterprise, this may be an opportunity to map a more hopeful and promising path to the future.

Read the rest here:

Voices Does automation mean job losses for accountants? - Accounting Today

Automation and austerity: will robots make you redundant? – Information Age

Technology can aid rather then usurp public workers but for that to happen, public sector teams need solutions that give them autonomy and control

Public sector morale over job security is at an all-time low. More than a million jobs have been cut over the past six years in line with the governments austerity drive, with plans to axe still more from local authorities.

Added to this is concern that automation will see yet more public workers lose their jobs. Amelia, the AI employee deployed by Enfield Borough Council in the autumn of last year, is hailed as being 60% less expensive than her human counterpart, making AI an attractive option. But is the threat of robot replacements a real one?

According to recent research by Oxford University and Deloitte, 850,000 public sector jobs could be automated by 2030. It states that administrative roles are most at risk, while those interacting with the public are less so.

But theres a clear inference in the report that automation doesnt equate to unemployment. The authors suggest that automation has the potential to complement existing jobs by automating repetitive processes or even create new better-paid jobs.

>See also: Do you think a robot could replace your job?

Make no mistake, automation is already with us. The digitalisation of public sector services has already seen many of the processes previously carried out by human hand now scheduled by software.

Far from being met with resistance, this digitalisation has had an emancipating effect, freeing up staff from the daily grind to focus on other issues and the reduction in red tape has generated efficiency gains.

Alongside this, theres another story thats hitting the headlines when it comes to public sector employment: the woeful lack of digital skills. This drove the DWP to rollout digital academies in a bid to upskill staff, with 3,000 civil servants undergoing courses over the last two years.

As of September, those academies came under the remit of the GDS, which has pledged to double the number being trained annually. But the future of the academies now seems uncertain. Some sources even saying a lack of funding is the reason behind the current stonewalling over the Government Transformation Strategy.

So if we cant upskill public sector staff at the rate needed, could we outsource technical expertise? Finding (and keeping) skilled developers can be a challenge and the cost of employing the right people can be high. This is because digital skills are in short supply across the board.

According to the Digital Skills Crisis report published in June, the private sector is also struggling with 93% of tech companies reporting that the skills gap is affecting their business. Clearly theres a technical deficit as well as a fiscal one and to overcome that we will need automation.

Far from being made redundant by robots, technology could continue to empower staff, provided that solutions are built to cater for rather than replace human operators. Investing in this type of enhanced automation makes sense, not least because teams increasingly comprise a range of technical abilities. Technical competencies vary on digital design projects, for instance, and often include user experience designers, business analysts and developers.

Imagine, then, if that team could be united through the use of a technically agnostic solution. Even during the digital design process, theres no need, for instance, for staff to be proficient in code.

What they do need is the vision to design a service that fulfils user needs and thats easier to accomplish if you dont have to hand over your design to a third party, introducing delay, cost and inconvenience.

If solutions are intuitive to use they can empower these non-technical team members to be actively involved in digital service design and management.

Low-code services offer this level of control and flexibility with user-friendly dashboards and GUIs that feature drag-and-drop tools, the ability to reuse interfaces or integrate with third-party extensions and plug-in APIs.

The team doesnt need to be upskilled or supplanted by an expensive third-party contractor conversant in code. They simply need to have access to some initial support and self-help tutorials to quickly get up to speed to create, design and update digital interactive services independently.

The resulting digital services do themselves automate previously time-consuming laborious processes. For example, when it comes to case management, an automated digital solution can provide the applicant and case worker with access to documentation, monitor the progress of the application, and avoid problems such as duplication, incomplete or fraudulent claims.

>See also: Make way for the automated workforce

This type of case management is transforming how government departments work, from solicitors and plaintiffs associated with Legal Aid claims, to those seeking grants from public bodies such as Heritage Lottery Fund and the Creative and Cultural Skills agency, to charities seeking to file financial audit reports via the Charity Commission.

In the future, automation could free workers from other bureaucratic tasks. The police force, social workers and NHS staff all stand to benefit from a joined up system whereby records can be accessed across different government departments.

Automation can break down barriers by enabling staff to collaborate across different departments and across geographical areas. And it can level the playing field between highly technically skilled and the non-technical professionals.

Technology can, and should, aid rather then usurp public workers but for that to happen, public sector teams need solutions that give them autonomy and control.

Sourced from Jane Roberts, strategy director, Toplevel

Originally posted here:

Automation and austerity: will robots make you redundant? - Information Age

Atera adds multi-faceted automation capabilities in new release of joint RMM-PSA platform – ChannelBuzz.ca

Atera, which makes a joint RMM (Remote Monitoring and Management) and PSA (Professional Services Automation) platform with a single code base, has announced a new release with a broad range of enhancements. Chief among them are the addition of auto-healing scripts, and enhanced out-of-the-box monitoring, both of which reduce the amount of work an MSP has to do.

One significant addition is the addition of Auto Healing Scripts, which trigger a script to run when a threshold level is exceeded.

This is a very key thing, because it allows the MSP to build a set of automated actions and reactions, said Gil Pekelman, Ateras CEO. And its all automated, so they dont have to do it again in the future. Anything that is automated in autohealing is work the MSP wont have to do.

It extends the monitoring path once a threshold is reached so you can react automatically with a script, said Oshri Moyal, VP of Research and Development at Atera. If you are close to running out of disk space, for example, you will automatically clean the disk.

Enhanced out-of-the-box monitoring has also been added, which include allowing MSPs to select multiple events in one threshold item.

In feedback, this was high on the list of missing features, Moyal said.

Users have said we want a lot more monitored out of the box, Pekelman said, But how much do you monitor, thats the issue. If you monitor too much, you get lots of false positives and you run around chasing them, and if you monitor too little, you dont get alerts when you need them. A few things are absolutely essential, but beyond that, its tough to determine what gives you the biggest bang for your buck. We have effectively engaged in Crowdsourcing to get feedback, and have given what the crowd has told us they wanted. We added new capabilities out of the box so there is less work to do. Combined with autohealing, where things will be automatically fixed for you, you become more efficient.

The Splashtop remote app has now been fully integrated into the Atera system.

We started with a tool for remote management that we developed ourselves, but we decided to focus on our core competency and we released the integration with Splashtop in September, Pekelman said. Then, you still had to go through Splashtop and get a Splashtop account. Now, when you sign up with Atera you are fully connected. You dont have to set up another account or deal with a third party.

The agent installation process has been streamlined through newly integrated troubleshooting diagnostics, improving the speed and ease of installing agents.

Oshri Moyal, Ateras VP of Research and Development

What we have done here is taken how we handled support cases, and turned it into a piece of software, Moyal said. Our diagnostic tool checks connectivity and in one click finds potential issues when an MSP installs an agent that can the MSP how to fix the problem.

Atera doesnt charge per agent, and so this troubleshooting capability is especially valuable here. Pekelman stated. We dont believe in support, not in this day and age. You dont call Google and Facebook for support. We have a very dedicated support team, but we dont want you to have to call them.

Other improvements beyond the automation ones include the addition of Integrated Wake-on-LAN (WoL) capabilities, which Moyal said was among their most requested enhancements, and which lets a computer to be turned on or awakened directly from the Atera console.

This is a very cool feature, Pekelman said. If a server is down and off and you need to access it, you dont have to drive over to do that. You just click a button, and it wakes up.

User activity status updates now allow MSPs to see if an account is active, disconnected, idle, or locked before they remotely connect to the workstation.

MSPs say when they connect remotely to a machine, they want to know if user is on the machine or not, so that they will only connect if its idle or disconnected, Moyal stated.

Atera stresses its uniqueness in having the same code for its RMM and PSA capabilities, and Pekelman indicated improvements have been made on the PSA side as well.

We now have automatic email alerts on contracts that are about to expire, and more detailed invoices based on contract type, ticket, and time entry, he said.

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Atera adds multi-faceted automation capabilities in new release of joint RMM-PSA platform - ChannelBuzz.ca

Achieving True DevOps Automation – DZone DevOps – DZone News

The DevOps Zone is brought to you in partnership with Sonatype Nexus. The Nexus Suite helps scale your DevOps delivery with continuous component intelligence integrated into development tools, including Eclipse, IntelliJ, Jenkins, Bamboo, SonarQube and more. Schedule a demo today.

DevOps is something that everybody wants to do. Since it's being adopted by a large number of software organizations, a lot of confusion is arising. Everybody is practicingDevOps but are they doing it properly? Is there a roadmap for DevOps success?

It depends on the type of the organization. Today, I am going to show you a holistic view of a road map to DevOps success.

For many years, organizations have struggled to adopt and truly become Agile. DevOps to the rescue!

Here's a systematic mapon how to achieve DevOps success:

You must always remember that zero-touch automation is the goal but that doesnt mean that you have to be deploying straight to production. However, if you want to do it, you should be able to do it. It should be so easy that even an operation guy can do it with just a push of a button without needing to SSH bunch of servers.

DevOps is broken into four different blocks:

Along with these four stages, an organization must go through all of the environments as shown in the image.

The goal here should be moving the automation in your organization as far to the right as possible.

The automation is built on these four core pillars.

Your entireenterprise should be using a common image formator a common image on which all your applications will be getting built. This pillar is a way to check thepackaging and to check what versions will installed across the enterprise.

Just running a particular task is not enough. You need to know all of the other tasks that are running, when they were last run, stable versions, artifacts like IP addresses in automation, Docker container tags, etc. All of these things should be systemically available.

You need to know how the entire workflow is happening without needing to go to each thing. You need to be able to see everything in a single pane. This helps visually get an overview of your application automation process and status.

This pillarhas to do with explaining how you deploy, how you scale, etc.

Doing DevOps the right way starts with figuring out the critical processes that you can automate. If you want more information, this DevOps automation process is explained very well in this video.

The DevOps Zone is brought to you in partnership with Sonatype Nexus.Use the Nexus Suite to automate your software supply chain and ensure you're using the highestquality open source components at every step of the development lifecycle. Get Nexus today.

Topics:

devops ,devops adoption ,test automation

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Achieving True DevOps Automation - DZone DevOps - DZone News

31 Life Lessons After 30 Years – The Good Men Project (blog)

Ive learned a few things along this journey called life. Following are in no order the 31 thoughts about life after three decades breath.

#1 Consistency matters.

Today, we have access to more information than we can handle. On one hand, this luxury can provide convenience. However, it can also send us into paralyzation.Since we can learn how to do pretty much anything with a click of a blue link, we get overwhelmed. The result is that we end up doing nothing.

This cuts us off from the lifeblood of incremental progress consistency. With so much info at our disposal, its creepily easy to consume without action.

Consistency matters, we need to act like it.

#2 Happiness isnt a place we arrive.

The pursuit of happiness seems to be a chase run by many. But lets pretend for second that we get there then what?

We set up outposts that temporarily serve as happiness destinations the new car, the promotion, the house, the fancy but the novelty of these collections or achievements soon wear off.Unless intervened, this cycle will run its course till our last breath. Im not one to tell you how to live, but for me, I have to believe there is another way.

I think happiness is cultivated daily by the way we think and act instead of something we arrive at via accolades and achievements.

#3 We are all artists.

Growing up as kids, we all made stuff.But as we entered the walls of academia and soon thereafter sampled wage slavery, our spirit to create things slowly disappeared like the receding ocean tide.

Our crayons get replaced with scantrons. Our imaginations are dulled with deadlines. Our aims become linear.The book we dream of writing never gets written. The car never gets restored. The garden never gets tended.

You walk by an art boutique and always think, I believe my work can be in there, but you instead youre suffocated by the life others have defined for you keeping you from working on your stuff.

Were all artists whether you get paid for your art is another story.

#4 The ability to focus on demanding tasks is priceless.

Our ability to focus on important tasks is becoming more valuable and more rare at the same time. A lot of my work on this blog is aimed at this very concept.

Over the last few years, Ive had to teach myself how to focus as a writer. However, the principles of focus expand beyond the medium of writing. In any vocation, your ability to focus is appreciating in value. Learn how to do it and youll not only be more valuable but youll get your work done in less time too.

Sounds like a win-win right?

#5 You cultivate passion.

Following your passion assumes it already exists it doesnt.

#6 Everyone doesnt have to like you.

This is far easier said than done (at least for me). But, this doesnt mean you make enemies intentionally. Just be unapologetically you and youll have enough of them.

#7 Sometimes you gotta walk through the storm.

While in Miami Beach, I walked out from the gym to a sudden thunderstorm. On my way there, it wasnt raining. When I got out the neighborhood was flooded the water was up to my knees.At first, I had a mild panic come over me. I thought what about my Nike fly knits or iphone?

I wasnt going to take an Uber to go 0.8 miles.

So, after looking straight into the flood zone in pouring rain acting like I could outrun or outwit the storm, I decided to walk nearly a mile in knee-high water (my fly knits are fine and my phone still works).

Sometimes, you gotta walk through the storm in life. Inconvenient? Yes. Uncomfortable? Probably? Life-threatening? Rarely.

#8 Doing hard things is good for us.

The hack nation has claimed its real estate in our lives today. Im all for doing less for the same result. However, this doesnt mean that we dont challenge ourselves with difficult tasks, projects or dreams.

Do you tell stories about the times you accomplished things that didnt require you to stretch or persevere?

Probably not.

Everyone should attempt to get a boat over a mountain at least once in their lifetime.

#9 We all worship something.

The only malleability is found in the choice of what we worship.

#10 Time management is a joke.

Managing time implies we control it. But you and I both know thats impossible. Whether were tirelessly working to finish the project or were binging on Bloodline over the weekend, time takes its course.

We can only manage energy.

#11 Staying in the game is undervalued.

Because life is a test of endurance. There will be times when the academic advice or kosher recommendations will not provide enough horsepower to keep your head above water.During these times do what you must in order to stay in the game. Its something like a lion who is surrounded by a pack of hyenas.

The lion is going to do what it needs to do to survive.

#12 Youre one fifthof the equation.

If youve read any type of self-edification book, blog or resource, youve heard this saying:

You become the average of the 5 people you surround yourself with.

Theres some validity in the statement to be sure. However, you cant forget that youre one fifthof that equation.Part of being able to surround yourself with people that add value to your life is your capacity to add to theirs.

Reading books is the most practical way to invest in yourself so that you can at the very least bring a substantive conversation to the table.

#13 You (and me) dont have to be Instagram famous to have influence.

I really like Instagram (and Facebook and Twitter for that matter) but I find myself getting caught up in the wrong metrics at times. Follower count, retweets and likes cloud my vision and I get off track. I lose sight of the influence I can or could have and worry over metrics that I have little control over.

Its a constant fight for me: Keeping my energy channeled towards creating my best work to influence the people right in front of me instead of looking past them and concerning myself with potential influence.

The irony is that when Im focused on the right stuff, my influence goes deeper. When I get caught up with the wrong metric my influence seems to be shallow, fabricated, and non-penetrating.

Maybe you can relate?

The reality is that you and I both have influence and our lives matter right where we lie. In fact, we probably have more influence on others than we think. Always remember that.

#14 Getting comfortable in the waiting room makes our lives easier.

You can do everything right to get to the doctors office on time, but if they ask you to wait you have no choice but to do that wait.

Life wears a similar coat.

Sometimes well do everything right and yet, our desired timing and reality dont match. The default response is akin to a child who is toldno.But this invisible skill, the ability to wait patiently is painfully overlooked.

If you find a way to wait, the doctor will eventually see you.

#15 Goals are overrated.

Behaviors and systems are way better.

#16 You arent the logo.

Advertisements have come a long way. We often dont even notice that we are being exposed to them. The swoosh on your shoes. The apple on your laptop. The letters on your sweatshirt.

After a while, the family of logos you support becomes your communitya place where you identify. For some, the logos become their identity.

The reality is that you dont need shoes with a swoosh to be a better basketball player. You dont need a recycled shopping bag to buy healthier groceries. You dont need the little red badge on your jeans to dress well.

But what if you had a life of no logos?

Youd have to brand yourself from scratch. Write your own story per se.

Logos arent malicious. But they can invade your well-being and consume the real estate that is yours brand YOU. Youre great how you are, even without the logos.

#17 Value experiences over stuff.

The value of an experience transcends a momentary shot of satisfaction thatstuffcan provide.

For my 32ndbirthday, Charlie (my wife) planned a dinner at The Bazaar a tapas style restaurant located in the SLS Hotel in Miami Beach, FL.

The meal was incredible.But the story and experience is something well never forget.

The place is admittedly a little bougie, so we got dressed up. After we got suited and booted, we took an Uber to the restaurant.The driver had some trouble finding the place and ended up dropping us off at the back of the restaurant. Meaning we had to walk about 100 yards to get to the front. This normally wouldnt have been a big deal. However, on the night of January the 28th, 2017, it was a slight hiccup.

Within 20 seconds of getting out of the car, a downpour of rain blasted us so hard that by the time we ran up to the entrance, we looked like drowned rats.Completely soaked, we walked up to the front desk while the whole place gazed at us with empathy.

The night didnt start off the way we had planned but it ended up being a great night. And, we have story that well never forget.

Experiences carry their value long after they are over.

#18 Embedding intermittent recovery is crucial.

Athletes do this well.

Everyone else seems to be searching for the magic pill that allows them to run through walls 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Building rest into your plan on a daily, weekly and monthly basis allows you to do better work more consistently.

Rest is the ironic ingredient to doing more.

#19 Habits make your life.

I like what Gretchen Rubin says:

What you do everyday is more important than what you do once in a while.

#20 Walking is good.

Long walks are painfully undervalued. Friedrich Nietzsche has an opinion about walking that I agree with:

All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking.

#21 Health needs to be a part of the success equation.

Over the next 10 to 20 years were going to see the largest shift in knowledge and responsibility. The baby boomers will be passing the baton to the millennials.Our health is the vehicle that will allow us to take this journey. Without it, we show up emotionally flatlined.

I dont know about you, but I dont want the next generation of leaders to be operating in a constant state of brain fog and fatigue.

Without your health everything else suffers. This is more than six pack abs this is the quality of your career, relationships, spirituality and everyone else around.

Were depending on you to be healthy we expect you to thrive so you can put your best foot forward and contribute in a way that matters to you.

#22 Be mindful of your settlements.

A settlement is a resolution between disputing parties about a legal case that is agreed upon typically before court action begins.

In other words, you settled for less because you didnt think you could win the case.

We do this in life too.

We have friction between where we are now and where we would like to be. When it feels to difficult or overwhelming, we settle for the easier route.The dangerous part about this situation is that it happens internally. Usually, only you know if youve settled or not. So you can pretend, and nobody will ever know.

In what areas have you settled, but deep down know you shouldnt have done so? The good news is that unlike a legal cases, you can go back and undo your settlements with your personal aims.

#23 Doing less allows you to do more.

Instead of going wide, aim to go deep. This can be applied in your work, art, relationships and edification.

#24 Behavior and environment design offers an advantage.

Distraction isnt the problem.

Originally posted here:

31 Life Lessons After 30 Years - The Good Men Project (blog)

What Chaos? The Trump Steam Roller has it Under Control – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News


AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
What Chaos? The Trump Steam Roller has it Under Control
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
The "wage slavery" movement was based on the Josie Wales: The prosecutor and the so called Judge need their asses kicked. Paul Anderson Ed.D.: For the serious competition shooter: I would recommend that you contact both: Hart and Shillen barrel ...

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What Chaos? The Trump Steam Roller has it Under Control - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Manchester’s transformation over the past 25 years: why we need a reset of city region policy – EUROPP – European Politics and Policy (blog)

Since the abolition of Manchesters city region government by Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, councillors and officers have been sponsoring the transformation of the city by private property developers. Peter Folkman, Julie Froud, Sukhdev Johal, John Tomaney and Karel Williams explain the unrecognised and unintended consequences of this transformation.

Manchester has been at the centre of claims about an urban renaissance. Specifically, it is claimed that, Greater Manchester has been broadly successful in managing the transition to a post-industrial knowledge intensive economy. It has been able to capitalise on the positive agglomeration effects emanating from its size, density and diversity to reinvent itself and unlock this growth potential. In a recent report, we brought together evidence on diverse indicators from a variety of sources to tell the story of Manchesters transformation over the past 25 years and test these claims.

The report shows how local government has sponsored the transformation of the city by private property developers who have built a new town of office blocks and adjacent flatsin Manchester City and Salford, in which a young in-migrant workforce lives. This formats the city for exclusive growth with gross internal inequalities which cannot be changed by upskilling workers or adding public transport links to the deprived districts of east Manchester or the northern boroughs like Oldham and Rochdale. In light of the upcoming Metro Mayor election, these issues deserve wide debate.

Gross Value Added gaps and inclusive growth

Using the Gross Value Added (GVA) measure as the standard measure of city region achievement, London GVA per capita is twice that of Greater Manchester; Manchester City GVA per capita is twice that of northern boroughs like Oldham, while Manchester City itself has many deprived districts. Using the same GVA measure and time series, the inconvenient truth is that Greater Manchester has not pulled away from other British core cities. Greater Manchester has done no more than hold its position against other British core cities and the internal relativities between the central City and the northern boroughs have hardly changed since de-industrialisation in the 1980s.

Against this back ground, hopes for inclusive growth whose benefits would be distributed to the whole population face challenges.

Economic policy and political accommodation

Mrs Thatcher abolished the city-wide Greater Manchester County Council in 1986 because it was potentially a locus of opposition. Pragmatic councillors and officers in the central boroughs of Manchester City and Salford then concluded that they would have to get things done through the private sector. And from the late 1980s, in a de-industrialised city, that meant getting things built by giving private developers planning permission to put up whatever was most profitable.

The recreation of a new Greater Manchester Combined Authority in 2011 inaugurated a new phase of explicit city-region wide economic policy in the name of the ten boroughs. Uneven development and internal inequalities did not become major issues because policymakers assumed that public transport improvement could ease the problems by bringing people to jobs.

A parallel new town of offices and flats

From the mid-1990s, the central city and the inner south-west around Salford Quays were rebuilt on a high-rise logic of profit as private developers turned square footage into cubed rental value. The transformation of office space began at Barbirolli Square in 1997, with the Spinningfields development subsequently providing a new centre for the central business district; private developers also built adjacent lift-served blocks of one and two bedroom flats, typically sold to buy-to-let landlords who rented then out to junior white-collar workers.

The scale of the new development over the last 20 years is spectacular and it has created a kind of parallel new town of work spaces and flats in the centre whose format encourages in-migration to the centre, not commuting.

Since 1997, Manchester City centre (excluding Salford and Trafford) has added 5.38 million square feet of office space which creates around 50,000 new work spaces. In parallel, there was large-scale building of one and two bedroom flats with Manchester and Salford together adding 44,000 flats between 1991 and 2011. This reformatting took place in a city which had a very limited capacity to create net new jobs.

So few new (private) jobs

The weak record of Greater Manchester on job creation has been obscured by booster claims which confuse cyclical gains and structural effects and fail to separate out private from public sector job creation. We hold activity levels constant by calculating job creation over two sub-periods 1998-2008 and 2008-14 which begin and end with Greater Manchester unemployment rate around 7 per cent; and then cross check by considering long run trends from 1991-2015.

In the pre-2008 period, job creation was heavily dependent on the public sector which was creating jobs in the centre. The public sector accounted for more than half of the 46,000 extra jobs created in the ten Greater Manchester boroughs between 1998 and 2008. Because of the concentration of hospital, university, and administrative functions in central Manchester, Manchester City claimed 16,000 of these jobs, accounting for 40 per cent of its total job creation.

The post-2008 story is dismal. The outer northern boroughs of Oldham, Rochdale and Tameside are in a dire plight because they are now net losers of both private and public sector jobs. Once again, the net gains are concentrated in the central city and the inner south-west quadrant. From 2008-14, Manchester City gains 30,000 net new jobs, while four of the ten GM boroughs see job loss. A commuting solution is then blocked by the formatting of the city.

Not commuting but in-migration to central flats

Central Manchester is not like central London, which is substantially dependent on radial commuting by public transport from outer boroughs. Long distance commuting is discouraged when the Manchester City region combines relatively cheap central flats and inner residential suburbs with low wages and high fares. In 2011, 109,000 residents lived and worked in the borough of Manchester City and this almost exactly equalled the net inflow of 108,000 commuters from outside the borough.

Excluding movements from Salford to Manchester, 60-70 per cent of the commutes in to Manchester City from the nine other boroughs are by car. Lower public transport fares would help but there is often no public transport alternative to the private car for orbital movements; and the major volume increases between 2001 and 2011 are in non-radial commutes which have a high level of car dependence.

The primary limit on commuting into the centre is increasingly not access to public transport but the ready availability of one and two-bedroom inner city rented flats. Because the flats encourage in-migrationof 25-34-year-olds to Manchester and Salford who are generally too old to be students but young enough to be mobile and unencumbered. Between 2001 and 2014, the population of this age group increased by 46,000 in Manchester City and Salford and it declined in all other boroughs; 34 per cent of these inner city 25-34-year-olds are born outside the UK.

Policy reset for a new civic offer

When Greater Manchester has been formatted for exclusive growth by the mono-culture of flat building in the centre, the city region needs a policy reset. The policy reset should reflect the city and economy as it is:

The Brexit result is a warning to Greater Manchester politicians who need to reconnect with their voters by renewing the civic offer. Instead of relying on property development as the accelerator in the centre, they need to rely on the foundational economy as the stabiliser in all ten boroughs. Because the quantity and quality of foundational goods and services is the social precondition of civilized life, and in activities like adult care, the Greater Manchester Combined Authority could start out on the road of social innovation and radical experiment to benefit all citizens.

___

Note: you can read the full report on which this article draws here.

About the Authors

Peter Folkman is an Honorary Professor at the Alliance Manchester Business School.

Julie Froud is Professor of Financial Innovation, Alliance Manchester Business School.

Sukhdev Johal is Professor of Accounting and Strategy at Queen Mary, University of London.

John Tomaney is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at The Bartlett School of Planning, University College London.

Karel Williams is Professor of Accounting and Political Economy, Alliance Manchester Business School.

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Manchester's transformation over the past 25 years: why we need a reset of city region policy - EUROPP - European Politics and Policy (blog)

Impact 100 members tour remodeled STEP Training Center – TCPalm

Jamie Jackson, Your Newsweekly contributor Published 11:36 a.m. ET Feb. 21, 2017 | Updated 12 hours ago

United Against Poverty Executive Director Annabel Robertson (center) accepts a plaque from Carolyn Antenem and Suzanne Bertman (at left) of Impact 100. Joining Robertson are Success Training for Employment Program (STEP) staff Ron Browning (right of Robertson), April McCoy and Canieria Gardner.(Photo: CONTRIBUTED BY DAN LAMSON)

VERO BEACH United Against Poverty of Indian River County recently hosted an open house for Impact 100 members on Feb. 8, at the nonprofit organizations UP Center, located at 2746 U.S. 1 in Vero Beach.

Impact 100 members learned about the Success Training for Employment Program (STEP), which received a $100,000 grant in April 2016 for a project entitled Jump Start Job Opportunities. The Impact 100 grant provided funding to remodel the STEP classroom, underwrite an online job-mentoring platform and to publish the STEP curriculum workbooks, which were written by United Against Poverty staff.

The classroom remodeling project included building permanent walls, carpeting, 20 computer stations equipped with new computers, worktables and seating. Since remodeling the classroom in late 2016, STEP has experienced much greater interest in program enrollment.

Our first STEP class since the renovation enrolled 26 students and had a waiting list of 30, explained Annabel Robertson, United Against Poverty executive director for Indian River County. We know that the increased interest in this program is due to the professional training environment that was made possible through the Impact 100 grant and our programs success in 2016.

In 2016, 100 STEP participants were employed at 60 local employers with a $2.4 million annualized wage impact in the community.

With the classroom remodeling behind them, United Against Poverty is currently working with a professional editor and graphic designer to prepare STEP workbooks for publishing in late spring 2017.

United Against Poverty, formerly Harvest Food & Outreach Center, was founded in 2003 by Austin and Ginny Hunt in Vero Beach. The nonprofit, a 501(c)(3) organization, provides programs that inspire and empower people living in poverty to lift themselves and their families to economic self-sufficiency.

Services include crisis care, case management, transformative education, food and household subsidy, employment training and placement, personal empowerment training and active referrals to other collaborative social service providers. For more information, visit upirc.org.

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Impact 100 members tour remodeled STEP Training Center - TCPalm

Weekly Music Roundup: Big Beautiful Day, Cubafonia, & "Carol" – WNYC

Jordan Klassen (Mandy-Lyn )

Week of Feb 20: This week, Cuban music both funky and serene, a lament for the Internet-addicted, and a raucous yelp of empowerment.

PREMIERE: Moody Chamber Pop From Jordan Klassen

Singer/songwriter Jordan Klassen is going to be releasing an EP called Curses on March 3. Today we premiere the EPs opening track, called Carol. The title track is already out there and gives us a reason to visit with the Vancouver-based songwriter; Carol, with its unusually accented piano figure and its evocative cello section, gives us a reason to stay. Check it out and youll see what I mean.

A Lament For The Internet Age: Nobody Hangs Out Anymore

Omar Sosas Afro-Cuban Journey Goes To Senegal

Weve heard pianist Omar Sosa, on disc and in our studio, over the years as hes steadily moved from a Latin jazz sound to something more spiritual, and grounded in the deep African roots of his native Cuba. Omar lives in Barcelona, where he met up with Senegalese kora player and singer Seckou Keita. On Friday the 24th, they release their album Transparent Water, a translucent set of sonic meditations in which the piano and the kora, a 21-string, two-row harp from West Africa, are beautifully intertwined. (Keita actually plays an older, 22-string form of the kora, for those keeping score at home.) Theres a live Barcelona performance of standout track Dary available online, but here is the version that opens this remarkable album.

Cubafonia May Inspire Cubaphilia

A Ray Of Sunshine, from PWR BTTM

The queer punk duo known as PWR BTTM had a good year last year their live shows, a mix of punk and glam attitude, supported a strong debut album, Ugly Cherries. In May, theyll release Pageant, their sophomore effort, but theyve released their first single this past week. Its called Big Beautiful Day, and it is essentially a song of personal empowerment you know, a be who you really are kind of thing. But this is PWR BTTM, so it has a cheeky quality to it as well: a line about boys who have no choice is followed by a spoken Jesus Christ, lets help them! All this while the duo traffics in all kinds of punk and garage rock tropes yet somehow manages to make them sound fresh thats the real beauty of Big Beautiful Day. For those with tender sensibilities, or kids, enjoy the FCC-friendly version of the song online. Otherwise, heres the over-the-top video with the songs unexpurgated lyrics:

Kishi Bashis New Video Is A Mini Film Noir Kaoru Ishibashi makes cinematic pop under the name Kishi Bashi. As a classically-trained violinist, he has displayed a real gift for creating almost orchestral layers of sound both in the studio and in a live setting, as hes proven on past visits to Soundcheck. If you missed his last album Sonderlust, released last fall, heres a good place to start: a brand new video for the song Cant Let Go, Juno. The song wears its emotions on its sleeve, its pulsing synth-pop dressed in layers of strings (both real and synthesized, by the sound of it). In the video, however, Kishi Bashi is impassive, playing a car service driver who finds various strands of reality impinging on his little car-sized universe. Most of it leaves him unmoved, until the simple but affecting end.

Here Is Aldous Hardings Song, And Here Is Its Enigmatic VideoNew Zealand singer Aldous Harding writes songs whose stark, gothic imagery is usually accompanied by an equally stark piano or guitar. She is also a riveting live performer, as we discovered when she visited us last year. Those song often dont so much tell stories as they do sketch a character or suggest a situation often at a point where a crossroad has been reached, and a choice must be made. That is the case with her most elemental and chilling song, Horizon. A simple falling piano figure that never changes supports a song about making a choice: it seems to be about choosing to stay with the familiar and the comfortable, or striking out for parts unknown, but I could be wrong. Here is your princess, and here is the horizon, is the repeated refrain.Live versions of the song have been on Youtube for a while, but now Harding has released her album, also called Horizon, in which the title track has acquired some backing vocals and stray instrumental sounds while still maintaining its bleak beauty.

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Weekly Music Roundup: Big Beautiful Day, Cubafonia, & "Carol" - WNYC

Teaching Our Kids Real from Fake – Huffington Post

My 8-year-old daughter recently became frustrated as she struggled with an assignment that asked her to memorize the location and spelling of all 50 states.

Why do I even need to memorize this? she complained. I can just Google the location and spelling of any state whenever I need it.

I paused for a moment, not entirely sure how to answer the question. She was right. She could Google this information; but there is a greater value to knowing the whereabouts of Americas 50 states. Would she know, instinctively, when it was worth the effort to Google something like the location of a state?

I replied, Anna, what if someone told you that Montana was located next to North Dakota. Would you believe them and simply take what they were saying as truth? Are you going to Google (i.e., doubt) anything anyone ever says to you?

She stared back at me, understanding that relying on Google to determine all facts from fiction quickly goes awry. Google is useful for some things, but isnt practical for all matters.

The question of course goes deeper than something as simple and easily answerable as geography. It becomes much trickier when we are asked to discern real from fake in areas as fuzzy as public sentiment, portrayals of historical events, and conclusions reached by a confluence of research studies.

iStock from Getty Images

How do I help my daughter to ask meaningful questions, seek multiple sources of truth, and acknowledge the real answer, ambiguous as it may be?

I suppose the conundrum is better phrased this way: How will my daughter know when a simple Google search is sufficient? When will she need to seek multiple sources and doubt even her own understanding?

At Yale University, my undergraduate alma mater, there was a popular slogan that read, Yale doesnt teach you what to think; Yale teaches you how to think.

That premise is critical in todays media environment, because rather than accepting what we are told, we need to teach our children to think critically about how to process the information that they hear.

Early Foundations of Knowledge

If we prioritize our childrens ability think critically, then we need to embed the proper building blocks in their earliest education. While they may seem pass and pedestrian, the basics of literacy and memorization are as paramount as ever.

At Istation, the education technology company where I work, we believe that the fundamentals of critical thinking begin with literacy. With the foundations of reading comes logic, memorization, conceptual thinking, and imagination.

UNESCO writes in its Education for All Global Monitoring Report, it is widely reckoned that, in modern societies, literacy skills are fundamental to informed decision-making, personal empowerment, active and passive participation in local and global social community (Stromquist, 2005, p. 12).

Alongside literacy come the basics of memorization. Memorizing the location of all 50 states may not count as true critical thinking, but it forms a building block of knowledge that allows far more challenging questions to be asked. Even the skill of memorization frees up other parts of the brain for more advanced processing.

The Guardian suggests that memorising facts and lists can build the foundations for higher thinking and problem solving. Effectively, we can draw on what we have memorized to create and grapple with more complex topics. For example, my daughter can use her knowledge of the geographical location of the states to begin to estimate if it would take longer to drive from Dallas, Texas, to Denver, Colorado, or to Portland, Maine.

Once one can read and retain knowledge, one begins to gain the skill of writing. Writing allows a person to express her own thoughts on a topic. We become more than just consumers of information; we become organizers of thoughts and ideas. If our writing resonates with others, we gain the important skill of influence.

iStock by Getty Images

For my 8-year-old, most truths remain simple. Eight times eight is 64, and Austin is the state capital of Texas.

As adults, real meaning and authentic truth become much more challenging to discern. What I hope for my daughter and for our nations children is that they learn how to think critically about the information that is given to them; that they understand the limitations of Google; and that they can embrace a narrative that is not one-sided but multi-dimensional.

In our family, we fully embrace the basics of reading and memorization. We read not just from one author, or one publication, or one geography, but try to embrace both our historical narratives and current events through the lens of multiple sources.

For my daughter, I will continue to encourage what may seem like basic skills of reading and memorization. It is not that I want or expect her to consider that a complete education; quite to the contrary: it is through the building blocks of reading and memorization that we begin to be able to question greater truths, recognize inconsistencies, compare disparate ideas and pursue deeper meaning.

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Teaching Our Kids Real from Fake - Huffington Post