Bitcoin Trading Comes Under Threat of Chinese Government – TheStreet.com

Tech-savvy Chinese bitcoin traders may have just seen their good days come to a halt as China's central banks continue to place sharperscrutiny over the virtual currency market.

Under pressure to clamp down on capital outflow and prop up the Chinese currency, the People's Bank of China warned nine bitcoin trading exchanges at a meeting in Beijing on Wednesday that it will shut down venues that violate foreign exchange management, money laundering, and other regulatory rules. The warning is followed by some of China's biggest bitcoin exchanges announcing that they would prevent customer withdrawals of the cryptocurrency.

Three of China's biggest bitcoin exchanges OkCoin, Huobi and BTCC, which had accounted for more than 90 percent of the global bitcoin market in January, had respectively suspended withdrawals or subjected all bitcoin withdrawals to a 72-hour review. The disruption is likely to temporarily constrain volumes further after already shrinking trading volumes since the government started clamping down in January.

Analytics platform Sosobtc showed the number of bitcoins traded on the three exchanges slid from 13.6 million on Jan. 6 to just over 120,000 on Feb. 9. but as an analyst pointed out, the exchange volumes might be misleading.

"Prior to January 24 those exchanges didn't charge a trading fee and the volume was largely compared to exchanges that were charging a trading fee. Without a trading fee, I could sit there and trade 1,000 BTC back and forth with myself all day and generate massive volume but it isn't economically meaningful," said Spencer Bogart, a bitcoin analyst at Needham & Co., one of the few Wall Street investment banks that covers bitcoin.

"Exacerbating this effect was the fact that these exchanges also provided leverage for trading. Starting on January 24, in response to concerns from the PBOC, the Chinese exchanges began charging a trading fee and stopped offering leverage. In that sense it's a one-time shock that has normalized trading volumes and not an ongoing 'downward spiral'," said Bogart.

But the announcement is notable and Bogart said he expects that "volume will fall significantly until withdrawals are re-enabled and confidence in the exchanges and regulators returns."

China has been the leading venue for bitcoin trading. Bitcoin prices have soared to near-record highs since last year even as the Chinese currency maintains a sharp depreciation streak against the dollar. But bitcoin's meteoric 120% gain in 2016 is also coincided with China's ever-widening capital outflow.

According to an outlook report fromthe Institute of International Finance on Thursday,China is expected to have around $1 trillion of resident outflows, including errors and omissions, and $560 billion of net capital outflows in 2017. In the past, the Chinese government has resorted to several measures to stanch the money outflows, which includesrequiring citizens to report overseas transfers over $10,000, discouraging Chinese companies from making overseas acquisitions andbarring individuals from moving more than $50,000 out of the country each year.

However, none of these measures have managed to bring any pronounced improvements to the problem so far, which is lately evidence by China's currency reserves hitting down below the $3 trillion mark. A lot of this is said to have come from Chinese investors' resort to using bitcoin as a way to move money out of the country.

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Bitcoin Trading Comes Under Threat of Chinese Government - TheStreet.com

Grab Hold Of Bitcoin’s ‘Bigger Picture,’ Gavin Andresen Urges The Community – CryptoCoinsNews

Bitcoin Foundation chief scientist and core developer Gavin Andresen believes engineers are losing sight of bitcoins bigger picture, according to a recently-posted blog. Hence, he has proposed what he calls a big picture definition of bitcoin.

Andresens pronouncement is bound to gain attention, given the central role he has played in bitcoins development. He became the core maintainerchief developerof the open source code that defines the rules of bitcoin and provides the software needed to make use of it, according to the MIT Technology Review.

The CIA and Washington regulators have looked to him to explain the currency. And it was Andresen who conceived of the nonprofit Bitcoin Foundation in 2012, which is the closest thing to a central authority in the world of bitcoin.

Engineers spend a lot of time to make precomputing eigenwidgets faster, Andresen noted in his recent blog. They will take a few days to make snark agitation faster rather than addressing the next performance bottleneck. Instead, they focus on a performance of a routine, decentralization, compatibility or security and ignore everything else.

Andresen proposed the following big picture definition of bitcoin:

Bitcoin is the ledger of not-previously-spent, validly signed transactions contained in the chain of blocks that begins with the genesis block (hash 000000000019d6689c085ae165831e934ff763ae46a2a6c172b3f1b60a8ce26f), follows the 21-million coin creation schedule, and has the most cumulative double-SHA256-proof-of-work.

By agreeing on what is meant by the word bitcoin, Andresen believes the needless argument about the trees can be avoided.

Bitcoin continues to be accepted by majority hash rate. It is still a different arrangement of the merkle tree in the block header. It can still fix the off-by-one error in the difficulty retarget code.

Bitcoin is not a minority hash rate branch of the chain. It does not change the proof-of-work. Having the majority hash rate decide 1% inflation is not a good idea for bitcoin.

Andresen ends his blog asking if there is a better technical definition for what should and should not be considered bitcoin.

Andresen is one of the earliest known people to communicate with bitcoins eponymous founder Satoshi Nakamoto.

When Australian Craig Wright claimed to be Nakamoto last year, Andresen was quick to say he believed, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Wright was Nakamoto. Andresen received a lot of backlash from bitcoiners who thought he was bamboozled.

Andresen has also weighed in on the bitcoin block size debate in favor of increasing the block size. He has noted the possibility that the bitcoin community could see exchanges, miners and merchants move to a highly centralized clearing agreement model. He believes that this will indicate an unhealthy bitcoin network that will be slower, less reliable and more vulnerable to attacks.

Andresen raised eyebrows last fall when he tweeted that Ethereum has more nodes now than bitcoin and that it will grow its lead as its block size exceeds bitcoins.

Featured image from Flickr.

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Grab Hold Of Bitcoin's 'Bigger Picture,' Gavin Andresen Urges The Community - CryptoCoinsNews

Want an app to help see eclipses, comets and constellations? This is my favorite. – Washington Post

Space. I love space. I didnt study astronomy or anything related, but Ive been an armchair astronomer since I was 11 and pored over a giant picture book detailing our solar system, galaxy and what might lie beyond. I never actually considered studying the stars, nor did I catch the astronaut bug as a child, but sometimes I think I may have missed a calling.

Of course, 21st-century technology hasonly fed my obsession. Ive perused a few space-related apps, and although I havent tried them all I found my favorite easily. The interface is marvelous in its simplicity and I can tell the developers are making good use of phones capabilities. This app could be pared down to its most-basic interaction and still be great, but the depth of information behind its wow-factor is remarkable.

This app makes my not-so-inner nerd sing.

Itscalled SkyGuide, and its available for iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch (the last of which I havent experimented with). Its $2.99 in the Apple App Store.

Something comparable on the Android appears to be Star Walk 2, which is $0.99 on Google Play. Reviews for this app have been similarly favorable to the iOSs SkyGuide. (Do you have a favorite astronomy app for Android? Tell us in the comments!)

Far and away the best feature of the SkyGuide app is the main attraction the ability to lift your phone up to the sky and see all of the constellations, planets, satellites, comets and other space objects in your phones field of view.

I cant even count the number of times Ive been sitting outside with friends who look up and wonder what a certain bright dot is in the sky. If I dont already know, out comes SkyGuide, in which we inevitably lose ourselves in for the next 15 minutes.

The app gets even moreexcitingfor big events past and the future including this years total solar eclipse which will be visible across North America. Curious what that will look like from where youre standing? Turn the time forward to Aug. 21, 2017, between 2 and 4 p.m., Eastern time.

Im in Washington, which will not see the moon cover all of the sun. But it will come close. I could always drive to North Carolina, I suppose.

Nowlets look at Fridays lunar eclipse! I can do this right now by changing the sky time, so to speak, to the time of peak eclipse. When I do, the sky appears exactly as it will at 7:44 p.m. Eastern time, including the shadowed moon. The moon will not turn red tonight, since its not a total lunar eclipse. It will turn gray as Earths shadow grazes the moon.

It labels comets, constellations, meteor showers and individual stars. I spoke with the developers at Fifth Star Labs and they saidregrettably, they did not get Comet 45P/Honda-Mrkos-Pajduskov into the app in time for tonights pass. Each event is added by hand and there are a lot of comets. Understandably, its hard to know which ones will pique peoples interest in advance.

At the very least, set up an alert for the International Space Station and impress your friends by pointing it out in the sky. Youll earn some serious nerd-cred.

(Fifth Star Labs/SkyGuide)

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Want an app to help see eclipses, comets and constellations? This is my favorite. - Washington Post

Balance tips game for Comets | News-Gazette.com – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

FITHIAN Oakwood coach Jeff Ford admitted it. A first quarter like his team had Thursday night against Watseka just seven points on 3-of-13 shooting would have been a difficult slow start to recover from earlier this season.

The young Oakwood girls basketball lineup with two freshmen and two sophomores starting might have struggled. The Comets did struggle sometimes in those situations at the beginning of the season.

But Thursdays slow start was one Oakwood was better suited to handle.

The third-seeded Comets showed some poise, knocked down more shots and turned a four-point halftime lead into a 55-39 victory in the championship game of their own Class 2A regional. The win sends Oakwood (26-4) into Tuesdays sectional semifinal against Monticello at St. Thomas More.

Thats where Ive seen the progression over the year, Ford said. Early on, when we got down like that to an excellent team like Watseka, we would have lost. I just think theyve matured a lot. Theyve been in big games.

Junior guard Shaelyn Turner the only upperclassman in the starting lineup and one of four on the Comets roster said Oakwoods chemistry has improved during the course of the season. The Comets have a better feel for what everyone can do on the court together.

We started to get comfortable with each other and know whos hot and whos not and get them the ball, Turner said. We just worked together as a team to get it done in the second half.

Turner was one of four Oakwood players in double figures with 12 points, getting several of her dozen off Watseka turnovers she forced. Kylie Neuman led the Comets with 16 points, Katelyn Young finished with 13 points and 16 rebounds and Rylee Dowers had 12 points.

Second-seeded Watseka focused its defensive attention primarily on Young Oakwoods 6-foot-1 Division I prospect. The Comets said they know they have to make shots when teams do that. Neuman, Turner and Dowers, the latter of whom made Oakwoods only two three-pointers, did just that.

I thought we did a decent job on Young, said Watseka coach Barry Bauer, whose team was led offensively by Summer Cramer with 17 points. If youre going to pick your poison a little bit, I think its going to be from the perimeter with Oakwood. Even some of the ones they shot close to the three-point line, I thought we had a hand up. A good team makes shots like that.

It was all part of Oakwoods comeback bid. The Comets shot 50 percent from the field in the second half, hauled in plenty of offensive rebounds for second-chance opportunities and continued to force turnovers by the Warriors (23-8).

We realize whats at stake, Neuman said. If we lose, were done, so we know weve got to give it all. We do that. We go for every loose ball. We know its the little things that can change a game. Once we get on a run, we just try to keep it.

Neuman was the most efficient on the offensive end, going 8 of 12 from the field and helping spark the Comets as they pulled away in the final 16 minutes.

When you see somebody make a shot, youre like, Yeah! Neuman said. We were getting open shots, and we were hitting them.

You could tell it was catching once a couple of them started hitting, Ford added. Everybody else got a little bit of confidence, and that made a huge difference.

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Balance tips game for Comets | News-Gazette.com - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

How to Watch Tonight’s Ultra Rare Eclipse and Comet Flyby – Gizmodo

Cancel all your plans immediately: tonight, stargazers will be able to view a penumbral lunar eclipse, a stunning full moon, and a comet flyby. Itll make for a fantastic Friday night, and its totally free!

Its worth noting that lunar eclipses only occur during a full moon, but penumbral lunar eclipses are still pretty special, albeit subtle. These sorts of eclipses occur when the Moon enters the outer region of Earths shadow, called the penumbra. Observers will notice an unusual dark shade toward the top of the moon when it reaches mid-eclipse, since this will be the region closest to the Earths full shadow, called the umbra. Since penumbral eclipses are more subtle than partial eclipses, stargazers will have to look carefully to see this slightly darker shadeunless they live in Australia or Japan, where the eclipse wont be visible at all. Sorry, guys.

For those who plan to watch, remember to look up at 7:43PM ET (4:43 PT)thats when the Moon will be darkest. Every year, two to five lunar eclipses occur, and one in every three will be penumbral. However, this will be the only penumbral lunar eclipse of 2017.

Farmers Almanacs have long referred to the full moon in February as the snow moon. The snow moon name allegedly traces backhundreds of years, to Native Americans who used the name to keep track of seasons. The full moon in February was associated with a cold and snowy month that made hunting difficult, and thus, the snow moon was born. Its also sometimes called the hunger moon.

But with comet 45P coming into join the party, this eclipse will be extra special. The comet is a Jupiter family comet, meaning its orbit is determined by Jupiters gravitational pull. Its believed that such comets originated in the Kuiper Belt, where an abundance of icy-rock clusters are organized just beyond Neptunes orbit. There are roughly 400 Jupiter family comets that we know of, though comet 45Ps greenish glowwhich comes from the diatomic carbon in its nucleusmakes it a little more special.

Youll have to stay up a little longer to see comet 45P, which will whizz by Earth around 3AM ET. This particular comet is a fast one, traveling at about 51,000 miles per hour, and only visits Earth twice per decade. Unfortunately, comet 45P wont be visible to the naked eyeyoull need a telescope or binoculars to view it.

Dont let this opportunity fly bycomet 45P wont come this close to Earth again until 2022. Slooh will be broadcasting live views of the snow moon starting at 5:30PM ET (2:30PM PT), and a live stream for the comet starting at 10:30PM ET (7:30 PM PT). You can check it all out below:

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How to Watch Tonight's Ultra Rare Eclipse and Comet Flyby - Gizmodo

Comets fall in bid for second conference seed with 46-41 loss to Martinsville HS – YourGV.com

Halifax County High School needed a win in Thursday night's final regular-season game against Martinsville High School to have a shot at earning the second seed and a first-round bye in next week's 5A North Region Conference 16 Tournament, but came up short.

After a fourth-quarter rally got the Comets to within two points with 51 seconds left in the game, they victimized themselves with three turnovers in the final 45 seconds and lost to Martinsville High School 46-41 in the game played at Halifax County Middle School.

The loss left the Comets, who finished the season with a 14-7 overall record, as the third seed for next week's Conference 16 Tournament. Halifax County High School will host sixth seed Patrick Henry-Ashland Monday night at 7 p.m. at Halifax County High School.

That game will follow an opening-round game in the girls tournament in which third seed Halifax County High School will host Patrick Henry-Ashland at 5:30 p.m.

Thursday night's game was a tough one for the Comets as they struggled against Martinsville High School's active zone defense. The Comets hit only three of 11 attempts from 3-point range and had 15 turnovers in the game.

"It was just a tough night for us," remarked Comets Head Coach Sterling Williams.

"We couldn't knock down the shots, and we couldn't get the ones around the basket to fall."

Williams said Martinsville High School played as he expected it to play, sticking with a zone defense the entire night.

"That's what they do," Williams pointed out.

"They play zone all the time. We also had some situations in which we turned the ball over late in the game. It hurt us. On the other end, they were able to get to the basket and finish around the basket."

Zion Bailey led the Comets in scoring with 14 points, but had only one field goal in the second half, that one a 3-pointer in the fourth quarter. James Smith Jr. followed with 12 points after being held to just four points in the first half. Ford Morrison chipped in nine points. Tyliek Powell and reserve Shelquan Edmonds both had three points. Only five Comets players scored in the game.

After failing to lead any of the first quarter that ended with Martinsville High School up 10-9, the Comets took the lead in the second quarter with two free throws from Bailey, a layup from Smith after a steal and a layup from Bailey after another steal to go up 18-14 with 4:44 left in the first half.

The Comets led 20-17 after Morrison hit a shot from inside the paint with 4:20 left in the half. Martinsville High School answered with a 10-2 run over the last 3:19 of the half with E.J. Bratcher connecting three times from deep in the paint to give Martinsville High School a 28-22 lead at halftime.

Martinsville High School led by as many as a dozen points in the third quarter as the Comets went just over half of the quarter without a score. A basket from Morrison inside the paint and a free throw from Smith in the last 1:01 of the quarter accounted for half of the six points the Comets scored in the quarter as they trailed 37-28 entering the final period.

A 3-point basket from Bailey and two free throws from Smith to open the fourth quarter gave the Comets life as they cut their deficit to four points at 37-33 with 6:45 left in the game.

Trailing 43-35, the Comets saw Powell complete a three-point play after being fouled to get to within five points. A 3-point shot from Smith with 51 seconds left in the game got the Comets to within two points at 43-41.

The Comets got a break when the Bulldogs were cited for a backcourt violation, but turned the ball over themselves on the ensuing possession. Forced to foul, the Comets put the Bulldogs' Zanthus Hairston on the free throw line. Hairston missed the front end of the one-and-one opportunity, and the Comets got the ball back, only to turn it over again, this time on a bad pass that sailed out of bounds after hitting the backboard.

Again forced to foul in an attempt to get the ball back, the Comets targeted Hairston another time with 16 seconds left. Hairston made the first shot at the charity stripe to put the Bulldogs up 44-41, but missed the second attempt. The Comets got the ball back, only to again lose it on a turnover.

The Bulldogs' T.J. Pettway quickly broke down the floor on the inbounds play, snared a pass and dunked a layup with two seconds left to give Martinsville High School the final five-point margin.

Aaron Martin led Martinsville High School in scoring with 15 points that included a pair of 3-point baskets. Bratcher followed with 12 points and Pettway chipped in eight points.

For the Comets, the object now is to put the loss behind them and get ready for Monday's opening-round game of the Conference 16 Tournament.

"We've got to get back up and dust ourselves off and get ready for the playoff run starting Monday," Williams said.

"We've got tough guys. This is what we do. We look for challenges. I think the guys will be ready to play."

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Comets fall in bid for second conference seed with 46-41 loss to Martinsville HS - YourGV.com

Halley’s comet? Nope. New discovery is 100000 times bigger – USA TODAY

This artist's concept shows a massive, comet-like object falling toward a white dwarf. New Hubble Space Telescope findings are evidence for a belt of comet-like bodies orbiting the white dwarf, similar to our solar system's Kuiper Belt. The findings also suggest the presence of one or more unseen surviving planets around the white dwarf, which may have perturbed the belt to hurl icy objects into the burned-out star.(Photo: NASA)

Astronomers in Germany have found a massive, comet-like object packed with the essentials of life: Water, nitrogen, carbon, oxygen and sulfur.

The icy object has been ripped apart, scattering debris near a burned-out star. It's also similar in composition to the famed Halley's comet, but is about 100,000 times larger and contains more water.

Astronomers in Garching, Germany, used NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to make the discovery. They say the debris from the object is polluting the white dwarf, or a star such as the sun that runs out of nuclear fuel. The white dwarf is located about 170 light years away from Earth.

It's the first time scientists have discovered comet-like material in a white dwarf's atmosphere. About a quarter to a half of white dwarves are polluted by the debirs ofasteroid-like bodies.

USA TODAY

Triple treat: Eclipse, comet, full moon all coming Friday night

The discovery also suggests there could be planets that have survived the star's demise. Those planets, the astronomers said, may have drawn the icy object toward the white dwarf.

The cosmic find also tells researchers there may be a belt of comets orbiting the burned-out star similar to the solar system's Kuiper Belt, near Neptune. The comets from the Kuiper Belt, NASA said, may be responsible for providingwater and other material that served as the basis for the creation of Earth billions of years ago.

The researcher who led the discovery team, Siyi Xu, said this is the first time nitrogen has been found in debris falling onto a white dwarf.

"Nitrogen is a very important element for life as we know it," XU said. "This particular object is quite rich in nitrogen, more so than any object observed in our solar system."

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Trump vows to win travel ban court fight – BBC News


Yeshiva World News
Trump vows to win travel ban court fight
BBC News
It means visa holders from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen can continue to enter the US, and refugees from around the world, who were also subject to a temporary ban, are no longer blocked either. But the ruling does not affect one ...
Trump considers writing 'brand new' immigration orderWashington Post
Trump Calls Ruling on Travel Ban a 'Political Decision'Yeshiva World News
US Appeals Court bars enforcement of Trump travel banWorld Socialist Web Site
The Seattle Times -The Independent -The Times (subscription)
all 5,210 news articles »

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Trump vows to win travel ban court fight - BBC News

Highlight destination of the week: New York City – World Travel Guide


World Travel Guide
Highlight destination of the week: New York City
World Travel Guide
Built by migrants, New York has always been a meeting place for world cultures, a port city welcoming arrivals to the shining beacon of the Statue of Liberty. It's a place where you can still experience the frenetic buzz of Chinatown, a wealth of black ...

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Highlight destination of the week: New York City - World Travel Guide

Watters Confronts Students Who Ditched Class to Protest Trump – Fox News Insider

Several hundred New York City high school and college students walked out of their classrooms at noon on Tuesday to protest President Donald Trump and his executive order restricting travelers from seven Muslim-majority nations.

Jesse Watters spoke to students gathered in Manhattan's Foley Square to get to the bottom of why they oppose the travel ban.

You'll be surprised to learn that many of the students weren't exactly well-versed on the policy ... or not.

Some were skeptical about the true nature of the threat...

Others denied that these other countries are any worse than the United States...

Meantime, some students were surprised to discover they actually agree with the travel ban...

Watch the full segment above, and be sure to tune in to Watters' World this Saturday at 8:00 p.m. ET on Fox News Channel.

Kellyanne Conway on Ivanka Trump's Fashion Line: 'Go Buy It Today!'

Pres. Trump Meets with Top Airline Executives at White House

Trump Says Judge Gorsuch's Comments 'Misrepresented' by Sen. Blumenthal

Sessions Sworn In as Attorney General as Trump Signs 3 Executive Orders

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Watters Confronts Students Who Ditched Class to Protest Trump - Fox News Insider

Cincinnati makes list of 50 best places to travel in the world – MyDaytonDailyNews

In Travel + Leisure magazines annual list of the best places to travel, you might be surprised that Cincinnati made the cut among exotic worldwide destinations.

Ranked on the list of the 50 best places to travel in 2017, the magazine highlights several reasons why travelers should pack their bags and head to the Queen City.

The recent transformations in Over-the-Rhine were mentioned, including the unique shops and restaurants making that neighborhood a must-see.

Also highlighted were the Cincinnati Bell Connector, which started rolling last year, and the extensive renovations underway at Music Hall.

Just outside the city, Travel + Leisure suggests paying a visit to Hotel Covington, just over the river in Covington, Ky. The 1907 building used to house Coppens Department Store, and its unique architecture and rich history are worth a stop at its Artisan Coffee Bar.

What makes Cincinnatis ranking even more special is that the list wasnt just limited to the United States. Cities from around the world were included

Key factors that determine which cities make the cut are new development, food and drink, according to the magazine.

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Cincinnati makes list of 50 best places to travel in the world - MyDaytonDailyNews

This woman visited every country on Earth in record time – CNN

Over the past year and a half, American traveler Cassie De Pecol has visited every country in the world, and the greetings she received weren't always gracious. She had set out to promote peace in her own small way, by meeting people from every country in the world -- and she did so at a record pace.

Traveling to all the world's 196 sovereign nations in 18 months and 26 days, De Pecol made the trip in less than half the time it took the previous Guinness World Record holder.

She recalled telling the North Korean guard about her mission: She was there to show that, even if their governments couldn't be friends, the two of them didn't have to be enemies. "I just like to show that we can be friends and we can kind of coexist," De Pecol said.

De Pecol, who majored in environmental studies in college, said she felt she couldn't travel the world without having a larger purpose. She embarked on her world tour in July 2015, promoting sustainable tourism everywhere she went as an ambassador for the International Institute of Peace Through Tourism.

The nonprofit was founded in 1986, the United Nation's "Year of Peace," to promote cultural understanding after terrorist incidents sparked tensions between Eastern and Western countries.

The 27-year-old spoke before more than 16,000 students about the ways to offset your carbon footprint when you travel.

"If you say, fly from Bangalore, India, to Colombo, Sri Lanka, you end up killing one tree during that flight, the goal is to plant two trees, for regenerative tourism, not just sustainable tourism," De Pecol said.

Having flown over 255 times on her expedition, De Pecol says she's been called hypocritical for boasting a sustainable mission.

De Pecol aims to completely offset the heavy carbon footprint of her trip, however, planting trees in over 50 countries.

"It's tough to figure out to get permission to plant a tree in a lot of countries, but I've been trying to do that as much as possible. I've planted close to 50 trees now but there's about 500 more, so that's just a goal."

She said she would plant the rest when she gets back home to Connecticut after the expedition.

De Pecol said she's faced criticism for the short time she spent in each place -- too brief, critics say, to have meaningful experiences.

"It all comes down to two words: time management," De Pecol says in her defense. "One could spend Saturday and Sunday chilling at home watching Netflix -- totally OK, I am guilty of that at times -- or traveling to five places within one country, five countries within those two days."

Others accuse her of only being in it to chase the record -- and money.

In total, De Pecol budgeted $198,000 to get herself around the world.

De Pecol was 23 years old when she began planning her journey, and in the beginning she had no funding. During the year and a half that she spent planning her trip, she says she saved $10,000 by babysitting, then went about acquiring sponsors.

"I had to really utilize Google and be like 'how am I going to find the funding to do this?' 'How did other people find the funding to do this?' So I looked at people like Ranulph Fiennes who is considered the worlds greatest living explorer," De Pecol said.

She attracted a wide range of sponsors, from big companies like AIG to a hand-painted tote bag artisan, and she exchanged board at eco-hotels for promotional coverage of their sustainability efforts.

Before she embarked on her record-setting adventure, De Pecol had some practice traveling abroad on a budget. A semester shy of graduating at 21, she left college with a one-way ticket to Europe and $2,000. She spent two years traveling and working in hotels to satisfy her wanderlust.

Though Americans can travel freely in many parts of the world, obtaining visas for the countries that require them proved to be one of the biggest challenges, she said -- and geopolitical tensions came into play.

Travelers are not allowed to enter North Korea alone, and Americans who wish to visit are charged a hefty price.

"The visa was like $1,000 for three days, whereas I went in with a group of Chinese tourists and their visa was like $300 for three days," De Pecol said.

In other places where she struggled to get approved for a visa, like Turkmenistan and Syria, she turned to social media for help.

"There have been cases when I post on my Facebook 'Hi I need help getting into Libya' or 'I need help getting into Syria,' and at that point it's kind of trusting in the unknown, trusting in people," De Pecol said.

Guinness World Records officials split the "fastest person to travel to all sovereign countries" into gender categories after another woman attempting the record said she couldn't get into Saudi Arabia without a male escort.

"When determining if a record will be separated by gender, we look at each record on a case by case basis to see whether or not the record poses a different challenge for each gender. This does not mean that one category is more challenging than the other, only that the challenge is different," said Kaitlin Holl, records manager for Guinness World Records.

For De Pecol it was another mountain to climb for women's equality.

"I thought this is not right, this shouldn't be this way, and that's when I realized it was just one step backwards for equality between men and women, so I really made a push to bring that record back to where it was for the fastest person," De Pecol said.

To stay fit and healthy during her trip -- and to offset the times while traveling when she only had chips to eat -- De Pecol made sure to drink enough water, take vitamins and exercise.

She also went running wherever she was in the world, and practiced Krav Maga, an Israeli martial art she learned to be able to defend herself as a woman traveling alone. Krav Maga Worldwide was among her sponsors.

Her post-expedition body in top shape, she's scheduled to compete in an Ironman Challenge in San Diego this March.

De Pecol said she may never put roots somewhere permanently, and isn't so sure about adopting the nine-to-five grind.

"I thought, you know what, it actually scares me a little bit. I would quit like after a week," she said.

There's just one place De Pecol hasn't been: Antarctica. While not technically a sovereign nation, she'll journey there with Quark Expeditions in late February.

"I was like, hey, if I go to six continents, 196 countries, I may as well hit up the last continent," De Pecol said.

She has plans to write a book about her journey and finish an educational documentary when she returns from Antarctica.

"I put myself in this position where now I have to figure out how I'm going to support myself through entrepreneurial projects and that sort of thing for the rest of my life," she said.

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This woman visited every country on Earth in record time - CNN

NCSA Facilitates Performance Comparisons With China’s Top Supercomputer – HPCwire (blog)

Feb. 10 China has topped supercomputer rankings on the internationalTOP500 listof fastest supercomputers for the past eight years. They have maintained this status with their newest supercomputer,Sunway TaihuLight, constructed entirely from Chinese processors.

While Chinas hardware has come into its own, asForeign Affairs wrote in August, no one can say objectively at present how fast this hardware can solve scientific problems compared to other leading systems around the world. This is because the computer is newhaving made its debut in June, 2016.

Researchers were able to use seed funding provided through the Global Initiative to Enhance @scale and Distributed Computing and Analysis Technologies (GECAT) project administered by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)Blue Waters Projectto port and run codes on leading computers around the world. GECAT is funded by the National Science FoundationsScience Across Virtual Institutes(SAVI) program, which focuses on fostering and strengthening interaction among scientists, engineers and educators around the globe. Shanghai Jiao Tong University and its NVIDIA Center of Excellence matched the NSF support for this seed project, and helped enable the collaboration to have unprecedented full access to Sunway TaihuLight and its system experts.

It takes time to transfer, or port, scientific codes built to run on other supercomputer architectures, but an international, collaborative project has already started porting one major code used in plasma particle-in-cell simulations, GTC-P. The accomplishments made and the road towards completion were laid out in a recent paper that won best application paper from theHPC China 2016 Conferencein October.

While LINPACK is a well-established measure of supercomputing performance based on a linear algebra calculation, real world scientific application problems are really the only way to show how well a computer produces scientific discoveries, said Bill Tang, lead co-author of the study and head of theIntel Parallel Computing Center at Princeton University. Real @scale scientific applications are much more difficult to deploy than LINPACK for the purpose of comparing how different supercomputers perform, but its worth the effort.

The GTC-P code chosen for porting to TaihuLight is a well-traveled code in supercomputing, in that it has already been ported to seven leading systems around the worlda process that ran from 2011 to 2014 when Tang served as the U.S. principal investigator for the G8 Research CouncilsExascale Computing for Global Scale IssuesProject in Fusion Energy, orNuFuSE.It was an international high-powered computing collaboration between the US, UK, France, Germany, Japan and Russia.

A major challenge that the Shanghai Jiao Tong and Princeton Universities collaborative team have already overcome is adapting the modern language (OpenACC-2) in which GTC-P was written, making it compatible with TaihuLights homegrown compiler, SWACC. An early result from the adaptation is that the new TaihuLight processors were found to be about three times faster than a standardCPUprocessor. Tang said the next step is to make the code work with a larger group of processors.

If GTC-P can build on this promising start to engage a large fraction of the huge number of TaihuLight processors, well be able to move forward to show objectively how this impressive, new, number-one-ranking supercomputer stacks up to the rest of the supercomputing world, Tang said, adding that metrics like time to solution and associated energy to solution are key to the comparison.

These are important metrics for policy makers engaged in deciding which kinds of architectures and associated hardware best merit significant investments, Tang added.

The top seven supercomputers worldwide on which GTC-P can run well all have diverse hardware investments. For example, NCSAs Blue Waters has more memory bandwidth than other U.S. systems, while TaihuLight has clearly invested most heavily in powerful new processors.

As Tang said recently in atechnical program presentationat the SC16 conference in Salt Lake City, improvements in the GTC-P code have for the first time enabled delivery of new scientific insights. These insights show complex electron dynamics at the scale of the upcomingITERdevice, the largest fusion energy facility ever constructed.

In the process of producing these new findings, we focused on realistic cross-machine comparison metrics, time and energy to solution, Tang said. Moving into the future, it would be most interesting to be able to include TaihuLight in such studies.

About the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)

TheNational Center for Supercomputing Applications(NCSA) at theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaignprovides supercomputing and advanced digital resources for the nations science enterprise. At NCSA, University of Illinois faculty, staff, students, and collaborators from around the globe use advanced digital resources to address research grand challenges for the benefit of science and society. NCSA has been advancing one third of the Fortune 50 for more than 30 years by bringing industry, researchers, and students together to solve grand challenges at rapid speed and scale.

Source: NCSA

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NCSA Facilitates Performance Comparisons With China's Top Supercomputer - HPCwire (blog)

OCASCR scientists make progress in TSET-funded adult stem cell research – NewsOK.com

OCASCR scientist Lin Liu at work. Photo provided.

Working together, scientists from Oklahoma State University, the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation are advancing adult stem cell research to treat some of todays most devastating diseases.

Under the umbrella of the Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research (OCASCR), created with funding from the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust, these scientists have amassed groundbreaking findings in one of the fastest growing areas of medical research.

We have made exciting progress, said OCASCR scientist Lin Liu, director of the Oklahoma Center for Respiratory and Infectious Diseases and director of the Interdisciplinary Program in Regenerative Medicine at Oklahoma State University.

We can convert adult stem cells into lung cells using our engineering process in petri dishes, which offers the possibility to repair damaged lung tissues in lung diseases, said Liu, whose research primarily focuses on lung and respiratory biology and diseases.

Using our engineered cells, we can also reverse some pathological features. These studies give us hope for an eventual application of these cells in humans.

Adult stem cells in the body are capable of renewing themselves and becoming various types of cells.

Until recently, stem cell treatments were largely restricted to blood diseases. However, new studies suggest many other types of adult stem cells can be used for medical treatment, and the Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research was created to promote this branch of research.

OCASCR scientist Lin Liu and his team discussing their work. Photo provided.

Liu said the discipline provides hope for many ailments.

What most fascinated me in stem cell research is the hope that we may be able to use stem cells from our own body; for example, bone marrow or fat tissues to cure lung diseases, Liu said.

It is impossible to know exactly which diseases will respond to treatments.However, results of early experiments suggest many diseases should benefit from this type of research, including lung, heart, Alzheimers and Parkinsons diseases, as well as cancer, diabetes and spinal cord injuries. The field is often referred to as regenerative medicine, because of the potential to create good cells in place of bad ones.

While the application of stem cells can be broad, Liu hopes that his TSET-funded work will help develop treatments for diseases caused by tobacco use.

The goal of my research team is to find cures for lung diseases, Liu said. One such disease is chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

COPD is the third leading cause of death in the country and cigarette smoking is the leading cause of COPD.

Cigarette smoking is also a risk factor for another fatal lung disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), which has a mean life expectancy of 3 to 5 years after diagnosis, he added.

There is no cure for COPD or IPF. The current treatments of COPD and IPF only reduce symptoms or slow the disease progression.

Using OCASCR/TSET funding, my team is researching the possibility to engineer adult stem cells using small RNA molecules existing in the body to cure COPD, IPF and other lung diseases such as pneumonia caused by flu, Liu said.

This is vital research, considering that more than11 million peoplehave been diagnosed with COPD, but millions more may have the disease without even knowing it, according to the American Lung Association.

Despite declining smoking rates and increased smokefree environments, tobacco use continues to cause widespread health challenges and scientists will continue working to develop treatments to deal with the consequences of smoking.

We need to educate the public more regarding the harms of cigarette smoking, Liu said. My research may offer future medicines for lung diseases caused by cigarette smoking.

Under the umbrella of the Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research (OCASCR), created with funding from the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust, these scientists have amassed groundbreaking findings in one of the fastest growing areas of medical research. Photo provided.

Liu has been conducting research in the field of lung biology and diseases for more than two decades.

However, his interests in adult stem cell therapy began in 2010 when OCASCR was established through a grant with TSET, which provided funding to Oklahoma researchers for stem cell research.

I probably would have never gotten my feet into stem cell research without OCASCR funding support, he said. OCASCR funding also facilitated the establishment of the Interdisciplinary Program in Regenerative Medicine at OSU.

These days, Liu finds himself fully immersed in the exciting world of adult stem cell research and collaborating with some of Oklahomas best scientific minds.

Dr. Liu and his colleagues are really thriving. It was clear seven years ago that regenerative medicine was a hot topic and we already had excellent scientists in the Oklahoma, said Dr. Paul Kincade, founding scientific director of OCASCR. All they needed was some resources to re-direct and support their efforts. OSU investigators are using instruments and research grants supplied by OCASCR to compete with groups worldwide. TSET can point to their achievements with pride.

The Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research represents collaboration between scientists all across the state, aiming to promote studies by Oklahoma scientists who are working with stem cells present in adult tissues.

The center opened in 2010 and has enhanced adult stem cell research by providing grant funding for researchers, encouraging recruitment of scientists and providing education to the people of Oklahoma.

We are fortunate that the collaboration at the Oklahoma Center for Adult Stem Cell Research is yielding such positive results, said John Woods, TSET executive director. This research is leading to ground breaking discoveries and attracting new researchers to the field. TSET is proud to fund that investments for Oklahomans.

Funding research is a major focus for TSET and it comes with benefits reaching beyond the lab. For every $1 TSET has invested at OCASCR, scientists have been able to attract an additional $4 for research at Oklahoma institutions, TSET officials said.

TSET also supports medical research conducted by the Stephenson Cancer Center and the Oklahoma Tobacco Research Center.

For more information, visit http://www.ocascr.org.

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OCASCR scientists make progress in TSET-funded adult stem cell research - NewsOK.com

Spirituality center welcomes artist-pastor – La Crosse Tribune

Wisconsin-based artist and pastor Paul Oman will visit the Franciscan Spirituality Center on Saturday, March 18, for a special event, Drawn to the Word: Seeing the Bible Story Come to Life Before Your Eyes.

Oman will journey through Lenten texts from the Gospel of Luke as he paints a large mural before an audience, sharing the stories not only visually and artistically but also scripturally and musically.

People of all faith traditions are welcome.

Oman was serving as a science teacher and then Lutheran pastor when, in 2011, he took up work as an artistic pastor full time. He says he seeks to give new vision to Gods Word by using the process of painting to captivate audiences in our visually oriented culture.

Oman lives near Amery, Wis., with his wife and three children. Highly proficient in both watercolor and acrylic mediums, Oman has earned numerous awards for his work over the years. Learn more about him at http://www.paulomanfineart.com.

Drawn to the Word will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the center, 920 Market St. Cost is $50, and lunch is included. To register, call 608-791-5295 or go to http://www.fscenter.org.

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Director of Chaplaincy and Spirituality – Church Times

Contract: Permanent Location: London and Home Counties

Appointment of Director of Chaplaincy and Spirituality

MHA is a charity providing care, accommodation and support services for older people throughout Britain. MHA is one of the most well respected care providers in the sector and amongst the largest charities in Britain, providing services to older people for almost 75 years. With income of over 200m per year, we provide residential care, retirement communities and community schemes to over 17,000 older people. We work with over 7,000 dedicated staff, enhanced by the commitment of 5,500 volunteers. Our mission is to improve the quality of life for older people, inspired by Christian concern.

After 15 years of service, our Director of Chaplaincy and Spirituality will be returning to local ministry. MHA is now seeking to appoint someone to continue to develop this distinctive aspect of what MHA does on spiritual wellbeing of older people. As a full member of the Leadership Team, this person will be part of the team leading the whole organisation and be responsible for realising MHA's potential for thought leadership on spirituality and faith in later life. The successful candidate will bring an understanding of a broad spectrum of spiritual needs, especially those of older people, and wide, relevant pastoral care experience to lead a network of chaplains. They will have a track record of relevant leadership experience, including successfully managing large numbers of volunteers as well as outstanding communication skills and an ability to reflect creatively on spiritual matters. Candidates could be ordained or lay and from a Methodist or other Christian denomination background. An occupational requirement exists for the post-holder to be a practising Christian in accordance with the Equality Act 2010.

Saxton Bampfylde is acting as employment agency advisor to MHA on this appointment. Candidates can learn more about the role and apply through Saxton Bampfylde's website at http://www.saxbam.com/jobs using reference code UAFMH. The closing date for applications is

noon on Monday 27th February 2017

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Seven Essential Books on the Spirituality of the Desert Fathers and Mothers – Patheos (blog)

A Monastery in the Egyptian Desert

The headwaters of the Christian contemplative and mystical tradition aside from the Bible, of course is the wisdom of the Desert Fathers and Mothers, hermits and early monks and nuns who lived in the deserts of Egypt, Palestine and Syrian in the third and fourth centuries.

A literature of stories, parables, wisdom teachings, biographies, and even travelogues grew up around the lives and sayings of the Desert dwellers, giving us valuable insight into early Christian understandings of community, prayer, devotion, holiness, meditation, and even contemplation.

While none of the Desert Fathers orMothers appear to have the kind of profound mystical life such as Julian of Norwich or Teresa of vila, their down-to-earth (and often quite funny) wisdom remains surprisingly relevant for seekers of deeper intimacy with God, even now in the third millennium.

Many books are available that collect the sayings of the Desert elders, or that interpret their spirituality for 21st-century Christians.Here are seven that I have found the most useful for my own learning and spiritual formation:

Desert Christians

Desert Christians by William Harmless far and away the best book Ive ever readabout the Desert Fathers and Mothers and the world they lived in. Harmless provides excellent, and accessible, historical background and detailed description of their lives, their circumstances, and the personalities of the most renowned of the Desert elders.

The Sayings of the Desert Fathers

The Sayings of the Desert Fathers translated by Benedicta Ward sayings and words (brief wisdom teachings) of over 100 Desert Fathers and Mothers are anthologized in this collection, arranged alphabetically according to the subjects Greek name. An excellent way to get to know the personalities of the various figures, such as John the Dwarf and Amma (Mother) Syncletica.

The Praktikos & Chapters on Prayer

The Praktikos & Chapters on Prayer byEvagrius Ponticus unlike many of the Desert elders, Evagrius was well-educated, and so brings a philosophical and theological sophistication to his writings. This collection of two of his most important works show just how deeply contemplative the Desert elders were, lauding silence and self-forgetfulnessas key elements of mature prayer.

Read these seven books and you will have a rich and nuanced overview of the history, wisdom, and spirituality of the Desert. Enjoy!

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On Black Suffering and the Legacy of Liberating Black Spirituality – Patheos (blog)

Photo is of public domain from pixabay.com

ByYsuf Abdul-Jmi

Verily, tyrannical rulers will come after me and whoever affirms their lies and supports their oppression has nothing to do with me and I have nothing to do with him, and he will not drink with me at the fountain in Paradise. Whoever does not affirm their lies and does not support their oppression is part of me and I am part of him, and he will drink with me at the fountain in Paradise. (Jmi al-Tirmidh)

It does not matter. Let a man help his brother whether he is wrong or being wronged. If he is oppressing others, then stop him for that is helping him. If he is being oppressed, then help him. (a Bukhr & Muslim)

Prophet Muhammad, The Blessed Messenger of Allh (saw)

I am accustomed to seeking solace from scenes of black death and dying in the depths of dhikr where my heart has hidden what hope I have left that our souls can be healed. I am accustomed to it because prayer and remembrance have been the refuge of my forefathers and foremothers ever since they first tasted and then toiled on the Ames plantation in southwestern Tennessee. My weary heart was introduced to the Islamic forms of remembrance through the guidance of shuykh and scholars at some of the most beautiful and beneficial spiritual retreats Ive ever attended.

Some of these shuykh, and their students, have demonstrated a sincerity about understanding the realities of racism that I wished was more widely shared.

But this time my hands are wet with tears and the prayer beads slip past my fingers too easily onto the floor. And as I strain to hear the guidance that Im certain will come from the descendants of saints, scholars and servants of the sacred traditions of Sunni, Shia and Sufi, silence returns to sit besides me and smile at my pain. As black bodies struck the streets, a familiar silence strikes me again and again. I recognize it as the same silence that emanated from the majority of non-black Muslims when black people, who were experiencing the harshness of injustice, called out for solidarity and support.

Among the words I do hear, mostly from their followers, students and admirers, are admonitions to ignore the suffering on the streets, the torrents of tears and the terrorism of tyrants that claims black innocents. Condescending caution, clothed in spiritual speech, seeks to calm me lest my anger at justice denied cost me both peace and paradise. I hear that I should have more patience and less anger. I hear that we arent worthy of solidarity because we respond too violently, too emotionally to oppression.

I hear that we dont have any leaders worth following and that if we would only be more like Bilal, more like post-Hajj Malcolm, more like the Martin that dreamed and less like the Martin that marched. I hear that as Black Muslims we should turn our efforts towards being less black and more Muslim, as if Muhammadan resemblance and blackness were mutually exclusive.

If certain inheritors of the Prophets have not inherited the urgency of the Prophetic injunction to prioritize the pain of the oppressed and aid their struggle against the slaughter in our streets, what spiritual nourishment will starving souls find? If more shuykh, like the perceptive and patient souls Ive personally encountered, arent willing to fully engage black suffering and our legacy of a liberating black spirituality, on their own terms and as divine sustenance for the sons and daughters of slaves, how will minds and hearts ever be unshackled?

Prayer beads dont stop bullets and the mercies of mawlids dont suffice to protect innocents from manifest malevolence. Dhikr can and should be done while, not instead of, defending the dignity of the disenfranchised. Black American Muslims come into increasing contact with traditions of taawwuf in times of such urgent turmoil, these traditions must offer forms of remembrance that respect the balance between sanctity and struggle, represented to varying degrees of effectiveness by the lives of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz, Warith Deen Muhammad, Ahmadou Bamba, Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman.

Prophetic resemblance within the African-American spiritual context is most often predicated on how effectively this synergy is maintained during our struggle for existence against all forms of extermination. Our rituals of remembrance include a tradition of scholarship, seeking the peace and blessings of Allh upon our beloved Prophet , and continuing the best traditions of our righteous ancestors sacred struggle.

Praying on the plains of Arafat

Unless sacred spaces offer solidarity and sanctuary, not just a sanctity more suited to sleepwalking past beaten bodies than struggle, what refuge from slaughter can former slaves find from terror and trauma? When some shuykh and their students silence the oppressed by suggesting that they occupy themselves with sanctification while soldiers of post-racial slavery slam their bodies to the streets with bullets and bombs, where are we to search for saints?

Calling for the oppressed to take up the inner jihd of Prophetic remembrance while abandoning them in their struggle for justice, which is the essence of Prophetic resemblance, is a betrayal of both. Shaming those who are suffering by asserting that their sins are the reason they are being slaughtered gives moral sanctuary to the supremacist footsoldiers of shirk.

Insisting on silent suffering as a requisite for salvation, on supplication as a substitute for struggle and demanding deference to dogma or to Muhammadan descendants, whose silence is indicative of both disengagement and distance from the black and Muslim experience, as conditions of Divine deliverance from oppression is to misrepresent the meaning of mercy.

May Allh preserve His saints, scholar-warriors, steadfast servants, and the legacy of His Prophets, peace be upon them all. And May He strengthen, encourage and deliver the oppressed and persecuted among his servants from every affliction and injustice into His mercy and everlasting peace.

O Allh, make me better than what they think of me, and forgive me for what they do not know about me, and do not take me to account for what they say about me (Allhumma-jaaln khayran mim yaunn wa-ghfir l m l yalamn wa l tukhidhn bim yaqln). Ab Bakr a-iddq

Ysuf Abdul-Jmi (Jimmie Jones) was born and raised on the south side of Chicago. He is currently serving on the board of the Muslim Wellness Foundation to reduce stigma associated with mental illness, addiction and trauma in the American Muslim community. As a Muslim, an African American and a father with ADD, he engages in advocacy efforts around mental health, race, culture and spirituality. He currently lives in Maryland with his wife, an educator and a doula, and their three children. A version of this article originally appeared on SapeloSquare.com.

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On Black Suffering and the Legacy of Liberating Black Spirituality - Patheos (blog)

Edison’s spirituality is more similar to ‘scientific deism’ – Port Huron Times Herald

Jim Ketchum, For the Times Herald 12:03 p.m. ET Feb. 10, 2017

Crossroads column by Jim Ketchum.(Photo: Getty Images)

Today marks the 170th anniversary of the birth of Port Hurons most favorite of sons, Thomas Alva Edison.

Local residents swell with some justifiable pride at the mention of the great inventor, even though he did most of his great inventing in his laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey.That lab, incidentally, became part of Greenfield Village in Dearborn at the behest of Edisons good friend, Henry Ford.

If you have lived anywhere near Port Huron for any length of time, you understand how important Thomas Edison is to the citys history and heritage. Theres a statue of young Tom near the St. Clair River just south of the Blue Water Bridge.

Theres also the Thomas Edison Museum nearby along Thomas Edison Parkway.

A walk through the oldest section of Lakeside Cemetery reveals the graves of Edisons parents.

Sadly, Edison didnt care much for Port Huron. As a youth, he was thrown off the train at Smiths Creek after the laboratory he set up in a boxcar caught fire. He was selling newspapers at the time. Legend has it he lost much of his hearing when the angry conductor boxed his ears.

Later biographers say Edisons handicap resulted from scarlet fever as a boy and repeated, untreated middle-ear infections. Edison later said his hearing loss resulted when the conductor lifted him by the ears as they evacuated the burning rail car.

For all his accomplishments, Ive always wondered where the great inventor stood regarding religion. Research proves enlightening.

According to historian Paul Israel, Edison was a freethinker. Edison didnt join a church denomination, rather took his spiritual education from Thomas Paines The Age of Reason. He was especially attracted to the idea of scientific deism.

Edison and Paine were not atheists. According to Israel, both believed in a guiding power in the universe.

I do not believe in the God of the theologians, but that there is a Supreme Intelligence I do not doubt, Edison said in a 1910 interview in the New York Times Magazine.

He also said, Nature made us nature did it all not the gods of the religions.

Still, Edison said that statement did not mean he was an atheist. What you call God I call Nature, the Supreme Intelligence that rules matter.

None of this really should surprise us. As an inventor, scientist and inquirer, Edison believed what he could absorb with his five senses. He spent much more time in his laboratory tinkering with natures elements than he did contemplating what he considered esoteric concepts.

Edison did, however, cultivate the notion of nonviolence. During a stint as a naval consultant during World War I, he said he would work only on defensive weapons. He took pride in not inventing any new ways to kill humans.

Edison also was a vegetarian because he abhorred the way animals were raised for slaughter. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are still savages, Israel quotes him as saying.

Yet an incident at the end of Edisons life raised questions about his spirituality. As he lay dying, some sources reported the inventor turned his head toward a window and said, Its lovely over there. Then he died.

Where precisely was over there?" No one ever figured it out.

Contact Jim Ketchum at jeketchum1@att.net.

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Edison's spirituality is more similar to 'scientific deism' - Port Huron Times Herald

Caregivers – Using Spirituality to Cope With Alzheimer’s Disease – Huffington Post

Eric J. Hall President & CEO of HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Chairman of Alzheimers Global Initiative This post is hosted on the Huffington Post's Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and post freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

With millions around the globe currently battling Alzheimer's disease, millions more are providing vital and necessary care to these individuals. There is no better time for this community to start exploring some of the different ways in which caregivers can start helping themselves and their families cope with this condition. Currently, there is no cure for Alzheimer's. Care for an individual with Alzheimer's is often a 24/7 daunting and exhausting responsibility.

There is plenty of conversations being held about how a caregiver needs to care for themselves physically and emotionally. Caregivers cannot give what they do not have, so care of oneself is very important. Little has been discussed regarding the importance of spiritual care. Now more than in the past the health care field is comprehending that meaning and comfort can be found in one's spirituality.

The term spirituality means something different to everyone. However, for caregivers, "spiritual care" is one of the few ways that brings them and the families of individual's with Alzheimer's peace and comfort. For individuals with end-stage dementia or Alzheimer's, they may be dealing with changes in mood and personality, they may be unable to communicate or perform any of their normal functions. These changes, this reality of Alzheimer's, directly impacts the caregiver.

However, many caregivers find that spiritual assistance can help their families during this troubling time. For some, this may include praying - leaning on a soul connection with that which is sacred. For others, it may be stealing a quiet moment in the backyard. Others may just want to connect with another kind person. The important thing is that these practices can help them find comfort and meaning. Studies have found these are significant tools to help family members cope with their own battles with a loved one who has Alzheimer's.

No matter how you choose to express your own inner spiritual self and your relationship that which is sacred and divine, it is important for caregivers to consider spiritual care as a support to their role.

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Caregivers - Using Spirituality to Cope With Alzheimer's Disease - Huffington Post