Sterilization: When justice is just a snip away

Published: Friday, February 13, 2015, 12:01 a.m.

After the horrible news recently about a Lake Stevens couple who allegedly abandoned their children in filthy conditions, several people on our Facebook page suggested they were prime candidates for sterilization. So we were curious: Would people really want the government to have the power to sterilize people who commit crimes against their children?

We asked that question in our unscientific poll at HeraldNet.com and the response was positively Orwellian. A resounding 68 percent said yes.

Now, I'm sure we all remember the 1920s and 30s when Washington laws authorized forced sterilization. Eugenics were all the rage in the Roaring 20s, and the prevailing opinion was that mentally ill and feeble-minded people should be weeded out of the gene pool. Almost all of those sterilized were women because, hey, this was the 1920s. State law also allowed sterilization as punishment for certain crimes, but enforcement of that was spotty.

This went on for a couple of decades in our state, where at least 685 people were sterilized, according to a University of Vermont study. Thousands more were sterilized under similar laws across the country.

The Supreme Court eventually addressed this in 1942 when a vasectomy was Oklahoma's prescribed punishment for a chicken thief. Cooler heads prevailed, the scalpel went back in the drawer, and the court's ruling all but ended forced sterilization as punishment. Meanwhile, eugenics fell out of favor thanks to the Nazis. Now you can only find that kind of government power in an authoritarian paradise such as Uzbekistan.

Hopefully we can chalk that 68 percent yes' vote in our poll up to knee-jerk emotion. Yes, the prospect of those people continuing to produce more children is scary, but history says the government can be even scarier.

Doug Parry, Herald Web editor: dparry@heraldnet.com

Next, we have a traffic nightmare to solve:

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Sterilization: When justice is just a snip away

‘Ecosystem services’ help assess ocean energy development

15 hours ago Public data sources from the Northeast Ocean Data portal help determine the impact of a new tidal energy project between Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. Green areas show show coastal bird habitat. Credit: Leslie lab/Brown University

With many projects under development in coastal regions such as New England, tidal powerwhich extracts "hydrokinetic" energy from marine environmentsseems poised to join other U.S. commercial power sources. A new study finds that little is known of the impacts that tidal power projects may have on coastal environments and the people who depend on them, but that the perspective of "ecosystem services" could provide a promising framework for evaluating impacts.

"Ecosystem services are the benefits provided by functioning ecosystems to people," wrote environmental scientist Heather Leslie, the Peggy and Henry D. Sharpe Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies and Biology, in the current edition of the >Marine Technology Society Journal.

The study, written with former undergraduate student Megan Palmer, who is now with the Nature Conservancy, begins with a review of nearly 300 papers on marine and hydrokinetic (MHK) power systems. Only 36 focus on tidal power and of those only a handful specifically address ecosystem concerns, the authors found.

While developers are required to perform environmental studies before installing tidal energy harvesting devices, those wouldn't necessarily encompass the full range of connections between people and marine environments.

"The ability to explicitly link ecosystem health (or functioning, as ecologists often refer to it) and benefits to people is one of the notable differences between an ecosystem services analysis and a typical environmental impact statement," Leslie said.

To illustrate how ecosystem services might be applied to a project, Leslie and Palmer looked at the Muskeget Channel Tidal Energy Project, which is planned for a site south of Cape Cod, between Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. After some analysis, the pair identified biodiversity, tourism and recreation, and food provision as the most important ecosystem services to assess.

Drawing on public data sources available through interactive Northeast Ocean Data portal, they illustrate that while the area of the channel where the power project is planned is likely an important area for coastal birds, such as terns and gulls, it might not be especially crucial for tourism and recreation or food provision.

The case study therefore suggests that the project would benefit from studying how the tidal energy infrastructure may affect the birds and their food resources, in order to better assess how the area's ecosystems and the services they provide to people are likely to be affected by the development. For instance, if the energy infrastructure enhances local fish populations, it could in turn enhance bird populations, which could have effects on both the coastal marine food web and nature-dependent recreational activities like bird-watching.

"An ecosystem services approach enables researchers and energy developers to create an integrative description of the possible environmental and socioeconomic impacts of a particular project, which in turn can help inform project planning, implementation and monitoring," Leslie and Palmer concluded.

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Supergirl Series Casts Cyborg Superman and Alex Danvers

CBS and DC Entertainment have announced two more have joined the cast of their upcoming Supergirlseries with Homeland star David Harewood as Hank Henshaw andChyler Leigh as Alexandra Alex Danvers.

Henshaw, as comic fans know, will go on to become the villain Cyborg Superman, but in the series he is described as A onetime CIA agent, whonow runs the Department of Extra-Normal Operations (DEO), which tracks extraterrestrial threats on the planet Earth.

Alex will be Karas foster sister on the show, described as fascinated by Karas powers from a young age, Alex developed a lifelong obsession with science which inspired her to become a doctor.

In addition, Arrow and The Flash executive producer/writer Andrew Kreisberg has signed on to executive produce the series, which will no doubt rekindle the crossover buzz between Supergirl and The CW shows.

The two join as cast that includesMelissa Benoist as Kara Zor-El,Mehcad Brooks as James Olsen, Laura Benanti as KarasKryptonian mother Alura Zor-El, and Calista Flockhart as Cat Grant.

Hailing from Warner Bros. TV and Berlanti Productions (who also produce the hit DC Comics series Arrow and The Flash for The CW), Supergirl is based on the characters from DC Comics and centers on Kara Zor-El, who comes to Earth after escaping the destruction of Krypton. After many years hiding her abilities, she joins the ranks of her cousin Superman to become the hero she was meant to be.

The pilot episode was written by Ali Adler (No Ordinary Family) and Greg Berlanti (Arrow, The Flash). They will also executive produce along with Sarah Schechter and Warner Bros. TV. The show has a series commitment at CBS.

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Supergirl Series Casts Cyborg Superman and Alex Danvers

Supergirl Casts Cyborg Superman; Flash Showrunner Joins Series

The supporting cast of CBS upcomingSupergirl series has swelled by two, with the roles of star Kara Zor-Els (Melissa Benoist) older sister, and the former CIA operative-turned-superhuman watchdog Hank Henshaw now filled.

For the part of Alexandra Danvers, Karas foster sister, the producers have tapped Chyler Keigh (Greys Anatomy). In the case of Hank Henshaw, it seems David Harewood (Homeland) will be playing the brilliant man who, in the comics, would eventually go on to become the tragic figure/half-robotic supervillain aptly named Cyborg Superman.

The casting news comes courtesy of THR, with Chyler Leigh likely best known to audiences for playing Lexie Grey, half-sister toGreys Anatomysmain character. Leigh was more recently seen in the unofficially-cancelledTaxi Brooklyn on NBC, playing a police officer who joins forces with a New York cab driver.

Adding the character of Alex Danvers to theSupergirl story marks one of the most significant changes to the comic book origin and likely one way which the show will seek to tap into the family drama thats proven so successful inThe Flash. However, Alex wont just be helping to humanize the Supergirl story, as the previous character details implied that her brilliance and familiarity with superhuman activity could end up leading her to a (highly secretive) government job.

The casting that will surely fuel even more conversation among comic book fans, though, will be that of Harewood. Previously seen onHomeland and the recently-cancelledSelfie, Harewoods casting as another high-ranking government agent who plays things close to his vest isnt surprising in the least. InSupergirl, hell by playing Hank Henshaw: a former CIA Agent now overseeing the Department of Extra-Normal Operations, and fulfilling the need to have some shadowy government figure who feels a superpowered vigilante is a threat to national security.

Thats not the mostoriginal character description, but its what lies in Henshaws future that will be getting fans excited. Originally introduced in the comics as a doomed astronaut, Henshaw was able to preserve his consciousness in digital form, eventually viewing Superman as his enemy, and constructing a robotic body including residual DNA of the Man of Steel. Ever since, the hard-to-kill Henshaw has kept a tenuous grip on his sanity, meaning an overall paranoia toward Kryptonians is well-founded.

Its unlikely that such a story will be pursued in the short term, but then again, executive producer Greg Berlantis team didnt delay too many twists inThe Flashs first season. Weve known for some time thatSupergirl would augment its own character pool with established Superman foes (and even include appearances from Superman himself), so add Henshaw to the villains-in-waiting category.

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Arnold Schwarzenegger to return for 'Terminator: Genisys' sequel

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 26 (UPI) -- Arnold Schwarzenegger will return for the sixth Terminator movie.

The 67-year-old actor revealed as much to website The Arnold Fans this week. Schwarzenegger will next star with Emilia Clarke in Terminator: Genisys, and responded, "Yes, of course, next year," when asked if he will appear in a sequel to the reboot scheduled for 2017.

Schwarzenegger first portrayed the titular cyborg in The Terminator (1984), followed by Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) and Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003). The actor was replaced by computer graphics in the fourth movie, Terminator Salvation (2009).

Terminator: Genisys is directed by Alan Taylor, and will see John Connor (Jason Clarke) send Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back in time to protect mother Sarah Connor (Clarke). The film opens in theaters July 1, and two sequels are already scheduled for May 19, 2017 and June 29, 2018.

Schwarzenegger last appeared with fellow action stars Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham and Harrison Ford in Expendables 3. The actor is scheduled for Maggie with Abigail Breslin, Twins sequel Triplets with Danny DeVito and Eddie Murphy, and The Legend of Conan.

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(Schools) Students sample celestial treats

Melissa.Marshall@SVHERALD.COM Huachuca Astronomy Club President David Roemer shows f5-year-old Tristan Gomez, his mother, Elizabeth, and sister, Laurel, 8, the planet Jupiter during Pie in the Sky on Monday night at Joyce Clark Middle School.

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SIERRA VISTA Huachuca Astronomy Club Member Bob Gent can still recall how he would lean the small telescope his grandfather gave him against his house when he was a young boy growing up in Phoenix, and peer into thenightsky.

Just looking up at the sky and seeing thousands of stars and wondering, how far away are they? How many are there? Can we go visit them? What are they made of? Where is the last star? Could there event be a last star? What is the nature of infinity? Gent said. It triggeredmyimagination.

On Monday night, with his 8-inch diameter Newtonian telescope locked on the crescent moon, Gent was passing down that spark to students gathered on the Joyce Clark Middle School sports field. Between bites of sweet snacks, the students took in the natural wonders of space during the schools second-ever Pie in theSkyevent.

I just think that families need to see the fun side of science, Eighth-grade science teacher Tari Hardy said.Sometimes its nice to just relax, have some deserts, see the sky and actually talk to some really knowledgeable people about an interesting aspectofscience.

Hardy organized the event, partnering with the astronomy club to bring its members out to volunteer their timeandtelescopes.

Every time a young student comes up here and looks through the telescope and goes wow! you know that youve helped introduce them to science and astronomy,Gentsaid.

There was no shortage of wows on Monday, with students glimpsing much more than just the moon as the eveningworeon.

Arealtreat

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Perth stargazers on track to break world record

Budding astronomers have flocked to participate in the world's largest astronomy lesson. Photo: ICRAR / Astronomy WA / Astrofest

Close to 1000 people are expected to lift their eyes to the skies on Saturday night in a bid to set a world record.

The world's largest astronomy lesson will get underway at 6.30pm at Maida Vale Reserve and will see Richard Tonello from Astronomy Education Services share some of his expertise after the sun goes down.

He said there were five "targets" to look at including Jupiter and the Moon.

More than 1,000 registrations have already been received for the record attempt. Photo: ICRAR / Astronomy WA / Astrofest

"I wanted to tell a story about how stars are born and also how solar systems are born," Mr Tonello said.

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"We start off with the great Orion nebula, where stars are forming right now.

"Then we'll look at a cluster of stars called the wishing well cluster and then we'll look at a particular star which is very similar to our sun."

Participants will need to bring their own binoculars or telescope. Photo: ICRAR / Astronomy WA / Astrofest

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Lessons From Dying Extrasolar Earths

By all counts, Earth is on a one way trip to oblivion. Our aging Sun will see to that. Within 500 to 900 million years from now, photosynthesis and plant life on Earth will reach a death-spiral tipping point as the Sun continues its normal expansion and increases in luminosity over time.

Trouble is, researchers are still unsure about all the grisly endgame details, and their models of such slow motion horrors are hard to test. But a team of researchers now say that finding and observing nearby aging Earth-analogues, undergoing the ravages of their own expanding sun-like stars, will help Earth scientists understand how the stellar evolution of our own sun will affect life here on Earth. [Within] 500 million light years figure most plants become extinct, although some could potentially last up to 900 million years from now by employing more carbon-efficient photosynthetic pathways, Jack OMalley-James, an astrobiologist at the University of St. Andrews in the U.K. told Forbes. At this point

Night sky over Death Valley. Photo Credit: Wikipedia

In a paper to appear in the journal Astrobiology, OMalley-James, the lead author and colleagues, notes that as the Suns luminosity pushes the inner edge of our solar systems current habitable zone at 0.99 AU (or one Earth-Sun distance) just too far out.

Even so, finding a planet that is a near analogue to the far-future Earth (an old-Earth-analogue) could provide a means to test these predictions; including declines in species diversity, extent of habitat and ocean loss, and changes in such planets geochemical cycles.

If we did find such a planet, detailed long-term studies could give us an insight into its long-term carbon cycle, possible showing us whether carbon dioxide (CO2) levels really will plummet over the next billion years in the way we expect, said OMalley-James.

As he explains, in Earths own far-future, plant life will be extinct and the biosphere as we know it will have collapsed into an unfamiliar form. Thus, even if astronomers spots such a dying Earth, around an older sun-like star, could they recognize any remaining signs of life there?

When it comes to positively identifying life on a distant planet, it is still very early days, said OMalley-James. It would be very difficult to pin down any remotely observable signature that we could be 100 percent certain is caused by life on a distant planet. However, this doesnt make work such as this futile.

The hope is that if astronomers can determine the stars age with high enough accuracy, coupled with the fact that the planet has been in a circumstellar habitable zone for billions of years, but is now encroaching upon the very inner-edge of the habitable zone, then OMalley-James says future observations of such planets could make the case that they had observed the dying gasp of the planets biosphere.

The team ran simulations that placed hypothetical Earths around six aging G spectral type stars all within some 30 light years from Earth. OMalley-James notes that in each case, his team used hypothetical examples of an aging Earth-like planet, all in the inner-hot edge of their respective habitable zones.

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Artificial intelligence can learn Atari games from scratch …

Is a robot uprising coming in 2015?

Maybe but only to show you up at the arcade.

Led by researchers Demis Hassabis and Volodymyr Mnih, Google-owned DeepMind Technologies has created an artificial intelligence capable of playing simple video games with minimal training. They described their breakthrough today in Nature.

Dubbed the deep Q-network agent (or DQN), DeepMinds program can play a number of popular Atari 2600 titles, including Pong, Space Invaders, and Breakout. According to the study, it is the first artificial agent that is capable of learning to excel at a diverse array of challenging tasks.

Video game-playing AI already exists, as any lonely gamer can tell you. In the absence of a real human opponent, most games allow players to challenge the computer. But in those games, the AI is endowed with a series of specific rules that guide its behavior. DQN, on the other hand, is given only one objective maximize the score. From there, it watches the gameplay to learn new strategies in real time. Like the human brain, it learns from experience.

It looks trivial in the sense that these are games from the 80s and you can write solutions to these games quite easily, Dr. Hassabis, who co-founded DeepMind, told BBC. What is not trivial is to have one single system that can learn from the pixels, as perceptual inputs, what to do. The same system can play 49 different games from the box without any pre-programming. You literally give it a new game, a new screen and it figures out after a few hours of gameplay what to do.

Perhaps more impressively, DQN can take these strategies and apply them to games it hasnt played before. In other words, when DQN gets better at one video game, its actually getting better at a whole host of games.

The program is far from perfect, however. While it rivals human players in action-oriented games, it struggles with more open-ended titles.

Games where the system doesn't do well are ones that require long-term planning, Dr. Mnih told NBC. For instance, in Ms. Pac-Man, if you have to get to the other side of the maze you have to perform quite sophisticated pathfinding and avoid ghosts to get there.

As DeepMind prepares DQN for ever more complex gameplay, an even greater potential waits on the horizon. Even more so than chess, video games can provide a model of the real world one that requires intricate, adaptive decision-making. Researchers remain silent on exactly what real-world functions they have planned, but slyly noted that their program could someday drive a real car with a few tweaks. Does that mean DQN could go from Mario Kart champ to digital chauffeur? Only time will tell.

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Artificial intelligence can learn Atari games from scratch ...

Oak Hill project would bring aerospace jobs

Published: Thursday, February 26, 2015 at 5:43 p.m. Last Modified: Thursday, February 26, 2015 at 8:43 p.m.

The name of the company that has hired a site selection consultant to evaluate potential locations remains anonymous, but interviews with several Volusia County civic leaders this week revealed its an aerospace company looking to build a manufacturing facility.

Economic development boosters say the project is pivotal to efforts to attract higher-paying jobs and tap into the growing commercial space market that NASA and Space Florida are trying to develop in the region.

The consultant, Mike Mullis, met recently with Clay Henderson, a New Smyrna Beach attorney who has been among those opposed to Space Floridas proposed commercial spaceport on NASA-owned land at Shiloh, on the Volusia/Brevard county line.

He identified himself as a site selection consultant for an entity that was interested in developing a commercial spaceport at Shiloh, Henderson said. Mullis told him the company was interested in a site east of U.S. 1 known as the Unatin property, said Henderson. The property is owned by the investor group Oak Hill Partnership, and one of the partners is Steve Unatin.

Mullis declined to comment.

On Monday, at Unatins request, Oak Hill city commissioners voted to change the land use on 415 acres of the 423.7-acre site to allow manufacturing and to increase the maximum building height to 100 feet. The property owner has referred questions to Kent Sharples, president of the CEO Business Alliance, a private group of local business leaders assisting economic recruiting efforts. Sharples is handling negotiations between the city and Mullis, whose website states he has more than 30 years in international site location services.

The project is referred to by codename Project Panther to protect confidential details. Such code names are common in highly competitive economic development efforts and officials are often asked to sign confidentiality agreements. Sharples has said he is bound by such an agreement. He and others say they dont want to risk losing the project to one of the other sites being considered in three Southeastern states. Theyve been told the business would start with 100 jobs and could expand to 300 jobs, paying well above the countys average salary.

Several Volusia County Council members also are familiar with details of this project.

The project would be good for the community, said Volusia County Chair Jason Davis. He said he has been told the facility would provide support services for commercial spaceflight and would not be harmful to the environment.

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Oak Hill project would bring aerospace jobs

From Naked Mole Rats To Dog Testicles: A Writer Explores The Longevity Quest

When journalist Bill Gifford turned 40, his friends gave him a cake shaped as a tombstone with the words, "R.I.P, My Youth." As he reflected on his creeping memory lapses and the weight he'd gained, Gifford got interested in the timeless quest to turn back the aging clock or at least slow it down.

His latest book, Spring Chicken, explores everything from some wacky pseudo-cures for aging to fascinating research that point to causes of aging at the cellular level.

"In high school biology we pretty much learn that cells divide and divide forever and that's kind of what they thought up until about 1960," Gifford tells Fresh Air's Dave Davies. "Now they know that cells actually have a kind of lifespan they have a limit to the number of times that they can divide."

Gifford says that after they're done dividing, the cells go into a state called "replicative senescence."

"So they go from being these lively dividing cells to basically retiring," he says. "And they're sitting there and they're kind of grumpy."

Scientists have learned that these cells are "basically toxic," he says.

"It's sort of like certain people bring everybody down," Gifford says. "Senescence cells are kind of the same way. Some people think that senescence cells actually drive much of what we recognize as aging."

Gifford's book not only explores the research at the cellular level, but he also looks at the history of anti-aging, how exercise, diet and stress affect growing old and interesting phenomena in the natural world like the naked mole rat. It lives long, shows no increase in mortality with age, never gets cancer and never experiences menopause.

"They live underground; they're from Africa and they live in a colony," Gifford says. "I held one in my hand and she was the size of between a mouse and a rat and she was 28 years old, whereas a mouse lives to about two years old. In human terms, it was like a 600-year-old person ... and she was pregnant."

These animals, Gifford says, have repair mechanisms in their cells that allow the cells to survive damage and live longer.

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From Naked Mole Rats To Dog Testicles: A Writer Explores The Longevity Quest

Waking up and smelling the roasted coffee

Thomas Wolfes posthumous novel You Cant Go Home Again was published in 1940, and critics and readers have been debating the truth of its title ever since. Wolfe himself had no doubt: His autobiographical writings, with their biting, thinly disguised portraits, made him persona non grata in his hometown of Asheville, North Carolina.

In Japanese films, however, characters are forever heading back to their furusato (hometown), no matter how frosty the reception. Feelings of duty to family often prompt the move, as do hard economic facts: Home may not be where the heart is, but you can usually get three squares a day there.

Misaki Yoshida (Hiromi Nagasaku), the feisty, emotionally wounded heroine of Taiwanese director Chiang Hsiu-chiungs Saihate nite: Yasashii Kaori to Machinagara (The Furthest End Awaits), is under no such obligation or duress when she decides to return to the ruggedly beautiful Noto Peninsula. Instead she has other more personal reasons for taking up residence in the ramshackle boathouse that is the sole bequest of her fisherman father (Jun Murakami) missing at sea for eight years and out of her life for nearly 30.

Based on Nako Kakinokis script, the film falls into the popular heroine finds her groove in picturesque locale genre. Also, Misakis occupation she roasts and sells her own coffee blends to customers all over Japan has parallels in recent Japanese films with foodie or back-to-basics themes, such as the recent Little Forest duology, whose heroine grows and prepares her own delicious-looking organic veggies.

Chiang, who trained under Taiwanese master directors Hou Hsiao-hsien and Edward Yang, lifts Misakis story out of its generic rut by sensitively focusing on specific human dilemmas rather than eye-candy (or coffee) visuals or the miraculous curative powers of Misakis roasted beans.

Instead of a fantasy figure enjoying a rural idyll, Misaki impresses from the start as a dedicated artisan and savvy businesswoman, if one yearning for a father she barely knew. Soon after arriving she has the boathouse looking ship-shape and her coffee roaster up and running. But her only neighbor a statuesque beauty named Eriko (Nozomi Sasaki) living alone in a huge lodge with her two young children is unaccountably rude and abrupt. (Why am I even talking to you go away! is her brush-off when Misaki comes calling.)

When Eriko goes to her job as club hostess, the kids third-grader Arisa (Hiyori Sakurada) and her younger brother Shota (Kaisei Hotamori) are left on their own with hardly any money, hardly any real food (instant ramen being the nearest substitute) and hardly anything to do. Naturally they gravitate toward the strange lady down the hill, who is doing something interesting with a funny-looking machine.

Being a kindly sort, Misaki takes them in and even gives the delighted Arisa a job as her assistant. But the girls flighty-if-well-meaning teacher (Asami Usuda) becomes concerned about her home life (or absence thereof), while her classmates bully her for an alleged theft. Also, the children must live with the ominous presence of their mothers much-older boyfriend (Masatoshi Nagase), who shows up out of the blue with an air of quiet menace.

One fateful day, Misaki returns to the boathouse to find him inside, playing her fathers beloved guitar. Her carefully constructed world, founded on the impossible dream of a father-daughter reunion, is about to fall to pieces.

The ensuing crisis brings Eriko and Misaki together in a way that, given what weve seen of the former, seems little short of miraculous, but with coffee serving as a healing bridge begins to make life-changing sense.

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Waking up and smelling the roasted coffee

WW3 Propaganda Push, CIA Chemtrails, Satanic Ritual Censorship & Fukushima – Video


WW3 Propaganda Push, CIA Chemtrails, Satanic Ritual Censorship Fukushima
TOUGH TALK THURSDAY on The Kev Baker Show ep#264 Team KBS will be going over various topics on this round table LIVE update from UKRAINE, WW3 update,CIA fu...

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