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Monthly Archives: April 2017
Hillary Clinton warns LGBT progress may not be secure under Trump – CBS News
Posted: April 23, 2017 at 12:43 am
New York, N.Y. Hillary Clinton told an audience of LGBT advocates Thursday night that the progress theyve achieved in recent years may not be secure under the Donald Trump administration, and urged them to keep fighting.
I know that the election hit a lot of us hard, Clinton said of her bitter loss to Trump in November. But I can tell you this: Even when it feels tempting to pull the covers over your head, please keep going.
The audience at the fundraising dinner for The Center, an LGBT community group in New York, greeted Clinton with multiple standing ovations and cheers as she accepted the organizations Trailblazer Award. One of the biggest cheers came when she reiterated remarks she made in Geneva in 2011 as secretary of state: Gay rights are human rights, and human rights are gay rights.
Play Video
CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman discusses the issues at stake as the Trump administration shifts policy on LGBT rights.
But I think we have to face the fact that we may not ever be able to count on this administration to lead on LGBT issues, Clinton said. Lets remember, 2018, the midterm elections ... We can never stop fighting.
It wasnt just in the U.S., Clinton said, that were seeing clouds gathering on the horizon.
Weve heard terrifying accounts from Chechnya of gay and bisexual men being taken from their homes and families, tortured, even killed, she said. The United States government yes, this government should demand an end to the persecution of innocent people.
In America, she said, the progress that we fought for ... that we celebrated and maybe even (took) for granted may not be as secure as we once expected.
She spoke of protections for transgender students being rescinded, and proposed cuts in funding for HIV and AIDS research.
I thought of all our efforts to try to achieve an AIDS-free generation, and we were on the way, she said. We can, if we stay on that path, finally realize that dream but not if we are forced off.
Clintons appearance was one of several in recent months where she has been greeted with huge ovations including several at Broadway shows. She joked at the dinner that she realized she was preaching to the choir, but added: Thats OK, I love standing ovations.
She also quipped that the evening had posed a dilemma for her: Shed had the choice, she said, of attending the dinner or seeing Bette Midler in Hello, Dolly!
I really struggled to figure out which event would best reflect my commitment to the community, she said, adding that she had struck a compromise she put on her Sunday Clothes a song title in the show and came to the dinner.
Clinton ended her speech by sharing what she called her new mantra the kind of thing that does pop into your head when youre out in the woods.
When a good friend or loved one says, Quit yelling at the television set, she said, Just remember: we need to resist, insist, persist and enlist.
Also honored was designer Marc Jacobs, who received the groups Visionary Award and is a longtime Clinton supporter. When asked what he thought Clinton should do now she has said her only plans for the moment are working on her book and finding new ways to help people he said, I wish she were doing what we voted for her to do. But that didnt happen.
Clinton herself gave no hints in her speech about her future, but did note that she had made a new discovery: Sleep is good.
I highly recommend it, she said. When I wasnt walking in the woods, I was catching up on my sleep.
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PHANTOMS: Postseason experience should accelerate Sanheim, Lyon progress – Burlington County Times
Posted: at 12:43 am
ALLENTOWN, Pa. When it comes to Ron Hextalls long-term rebuilding plan, Flyers fans have just one question: How long?
The consensus is multiple years, and it all depends on how fast kids like defenseman Travis Sanheim and goaltender Alex Lyon develop.
We already know about Ivan Provorov and Travis Konecny. They were splendid in their rookie seasons with the Flyers. And two older rookies, 24-year-olds Jordan Weal and Mike Vecchione, could be well on their way to regular jobs in the NHL.
But the progress of hopefuls such as Sanheim, Lyon, Sam Morin and Robert Hagg is still a bit up in the air. The learning curve could be accelerated by the Phantoms' appearance in the American Hockey League playoffs.
Sanheim could be the one who bears the most watching.
The first-round (17th overall) draft pick in 2014 has been lauded for his overall game, particularly in the area of transition play, since he became property of the Flyers.
In fact, he was named best defenseman at the 2014 IIHF World U18 Championships, after leading all backliners with six points in seven games.
Since then, its been a steady rise through the ranks, including 162 points in 186 games with the Calgary Hitmen (WHL) and a stellar 10-27-37 campaign in the recently concluded Phantoms season.
So while the prime objective of this postseason is to achieve as much team success as possible, analyzing the individual play of talents such as Sanheim also carries high priority status.
The 21-year-old native of Elkhorn, Manitoba, understands that.
Obviously, teams look at playoff experience, proven winners, Sanheim said after Friday nights 1-0 overtime loss to Hershey in Game 1 at the PPL Center. Thats something were trying to build toward. We didnt want this result tonight.
Some believe Sanheim, with his smooth, effortless skating stride and above-average two-way play, could be ready for the big time when Flyers training camp opens in September.
Hextall will be watching Sanheims efforts with particular attention.
This is the pinnacle of the season, right here in the playoffs, Hextall said. Guys are performing their best right now. Theyre giving themselves a leg up in September.
Coach Scott Gordon said Sanheim began the season believing that, with the teams blessing, he had to be an offensive force. But then he realized he had to put more focus on the defensive side of the puck.
Gordon was discussing the play of Phil Myers in junior hockey, how he was playing big minutes and perhaps not giving everything he had at both ends of the rink, but the same might have applied to Sanheim.
The kids come in from junior and there are things in their game that they have to get out as pros, he said. Phil went from 27 to 30 minutes a night (with his junior team, Rouyn-Noranda of the QMJHL) and, when you play that much, you will find shortcuts to take. Those become habits.
We saw that with Travis at the beginning of the year. He was asked to get offense for the team (at Calgary), so he was up on the play all the time, milling around an opponents net. As a result, almost neglecting the defense part of it. To his credit, after about three weeks of that, we didnt see it the rest of the year.
Meanwhile, Lyon, a free-agent signing out of Yale, caught everyone a little by surprise with his first year of play with the Phantoms.
Basically, he wrested the starting job away from Anthony Stolarz, considered by many to be a contender for duty with the Flyers next season. Stolarz spent the better part of two months with the Flyers as backup to Steve Mason while Michal Neuvirth recovered from a knee injury.
But when Stolarz returned to Allentown, Lyon didnt just step aside and hand back the No. 1 job. Now hes getting a chance to prove that was no fluke by performing under fire, like he did Friday night when he kept the Bears off the scoreboard for the first 60 minutes and then some.
We really liked Alex; we went after him hard, Hextall said. There was a lot of interest in him (from other NHL teams), obviously.
"We liked the way he played, we liked the professionalism, his preparation for a game, the way he played a game. Very solid technically.
Am I surprised by the good year he had? No. The part you dont know about a college kid, he hasnt played a ton of hockey. How was it going to go as the season progressed? He didnt fall, so he did a good job.
Lyon appreciates this opportunity.
While youngsters such as Carter Hart and Felix Sandstrom might be ranked higher on the organizational goalie depth chart, theres nothing that says Lyon cant climb past those guys in the next little while.
A big playoffs here would help the cause.
I think anybody who was in the building tonight would say thats an NHL atmosphere, said the 24-year-old Lyon, who went 17-14-5 with a 2.74 goals-against average and .912 save percentage. (Hextall) is exactly right. Im going to learn as much as I can in this stretch. And try to have a little fun. Its going to be a very valuable experience.
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5G Progress, Realities Set in at Brooklyn 5G Summit – IEEE Spectrum
Posted: at 12:43 am
5G technologies are early in their development, and the business cases for them are a bit fuzzy, but wireless researchers and executives still had plenty to celebrate this week at the annual Brooklyn 5G Summit. Theyve made steady progress on defining future 5G networks, and have sped up the schedule for the first phase of standards-based 5G deployments.
Now, the world is just three years away (or two, depending on who you ask) from its first 5G commercial service. Amid the jubilance, reality is also starting to set in.
While attendees can agree that 5G networks will incorporate many new technologiesincluding millimeter waves, massive MIMO, small cells, and beamformingno one knows how all of it will work together, or what customers will do with the resulting flood of data. The video below provides a primer on these technologies, and a hint of what we can expect.
This was my second year attending the two-day summit, an annual gathering organized by NYU Wireless, and here are my observations from the first day:
1. Update from AT&T
For the past year, AT&T has tested early 5G technologies at 4 gigahertz, 15GHz, and 28 GHz from its labs in Austin, Texas. Like many of its competitors, the company is currently focused on fixed wireless, which means providing over-the-air broadband Internet service between two stationary points.
Already, the company has used high-frequency millimeter waves (roughly between 30 and 300 gigahertz)to provide superfast Internet service at speeds of 1.5 gigabits per second to one enterprise client. (Its service is broadcastat 28 GHz.)
Now, Dave Wolter, assistant vice president for radio technology and architecture, said AT&T plans to expand its fixed wireless trials to serve roughly 10 pilot customers in the Austin area this year.They'll bea mix of residential properties and small businesses.
For its enterprise trial, the company installed a transmitter on top of one of its buildings, with a clear line of sight to a receiver placed about 250 meters away on an upper floor of a clients office building. The only problem was that the clients office had double-coated windows, which are energy efficient but block millimeter waves. To make the trial work, AT&T had to switch out those windows for a single-coated variety.
Moving forward, Wolter expects 39 GHz become AT&Ts key frequency for fixed wireless, as well as for mobile devices. AT&T recently acquired Straight Path Communications, which had vast spectrum holdings for both 39 GHz and 28 GHz.
Its still an open question of what customers will do with their upgraded serviceand how much they will pay for it. When an audience member asked Wolter to name an application that he believes will justify the capital expenditure that AT&T must shell out for spectrum holdings and a 5G build-out, Wolter deferred.
Good question, and I hope our business folks are working on that, he said.
2. Massive MIMO
High-frequency millimeter waves have been all the rage in wireless circles for the past few years, and NYU Wireless led much of the early work that catapulted them to fame. But this year, the summit organizers devoted an entire session to massive MIMO, which seems to be having a bit of a moment.
There have been several big stories about massive MIMO since last years event, including new world records in spectral efficiency, the worlds first commercial trials, and early mobile trials. Facebook even got in the game with Project ARIES.
In the past year, weve actually shown that [massive MIMO] works in reality, said Ian Wong of National Instruments. To me, the biggest development is that the skeptics are being quiet.
Massive MIMO builds on a 4G technology known as multiple input, multiple output, or MIMO.This technologyuses many antennas, combined with signal processing, to communicate with several users on the same frequency, at the same time. With it, carriers have added capacity to crowded frequency brands below 6 GHz, where most consumer electronics operate today.
The actual definition of massive MIMO was the subject of some debate during the session, but Fred Vook, an engineer at Nokia, describes it as the extension of traditional MIMO to a large number of controllable antennas. And by a large number, he means more than eight antennas, though some massive MIMO arrays have 100 or more.
Based on the days conversation, massive MIMO has solidified its place as a foundational 5G technology. 4G was the first system to start out with MIMO, and we expect 5G will be the first system to start right off the bat with massive MIMO, declared Durga Malladi, a senior vice president at Qualcomm.
Theres certainly more work to be done (one of the stickier questions is how to integrate gobs of antennas into a smartphone) but the general outlook for massive MIMO now feels rather upbeat.
I truly believe that theres no other technology below 6 GHz that can give 5G gains, other than massive MIMO, said Wong.
3. 5G New Radio
Earlier this year, a slew of companies petitioned 3GPP, a group that defines 5G standards, to speed up the schedule for describing 5G New Radio. This standard is imporotant, because it will set the terms for the air interface by which base stations communicate with mobile devices, with the goal of improving performance and ensuring consistency across carriers and manufacturers.
Those companies were particularly interested in one type of 5G New Radiowhats called non-standalone, as opposed to standalone. At the summit, Malladi of Qualcomm described the difference between the two like this: In one mode, you rely upon 4G as an anchor, and in the other one, you deploy 5G without 4G as an anchor.
The thinking is that a non-standalone 5G New Radio could be deployed more quickly, because its meant to be integrated into a 4G core network, whereas standalone 5G New Radio would operate on a brand new 5G core network (which is a much bigger undertaking to deploy and relies on even more standards).
In an afternoon panel, five executives confirmed their interest in developing non-standalone 5G New Radio as quickly as possible, and allowing the standalone version to lag behind. This suggests 5G will look and function a lot like 4G LTE in its early phases, before eventually migrating over to a spiffy new core.
In March, 3GPP accepted the accelerated schedule for non-standalone 5G New Radio, which should be defined by the end of this year. Some companies now expect to deploy their first standards-based 5G networks with it as early as 2019.
4. Will 5G live up to the hype?
Over the past few years, engineers and executives have set sky-high expectations for 5G. Theyve spoken of 5G as the wireless network that will unleash radical new technological advances in every possible realm, and promised that it will enable autonomous cars, streaming virtual reality, and remote surgeries.
Much of the talk at this years summit was as bold as ever. In a keynote about how 5G would improve industrial systems, Kenneth Budka of Bell Labspredicted that 5G technologies would fundamentally transform human existence.
This year, though, such grandiose statements were also punctuated with more sobering analyses. A generous helping came from Seizo Onoe, chief technology officer of NTT DOCOMO, who has developed something of a reputation for pouring cold water on 5G expectations.
During his keynote, Onoe said he has noticed an informal law during his time at DOCOMO: The wireless industrymanages to achieve great leaps of success only in even-numbered generations. By his measure, 2G and 4G were truly transformational, while the improvements that came with 1G and 3G were mostly incremental.
Applying this law to 5G, I would say we have to wait until 6G to fill all the expectations of 5G, he said. Stay tuned.
IEEE Spectrums general technology blog, featuring news, analysis, and opinions about engineering, consumer electronics, and technology and society, from the editorial staff and freelance contributors.
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Millimeter waves, massive MIMO, full duplex, beamforming, and small cells are just a few of the technologies that could enable ultrafast 5G networks 27Jan
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Full duplex could double the capacity of wireless networks, making it a key technology for 5G 1Apr
Just hold it in front of your face, and youre in 29Mar
University of Michigan researchers spoof an accelerometer by hitting the right note 17Mar
Instead of a dedicated antenna, the company's approach radiates radio-frequency signals from the ground plane 14Mar
Dont expect early 5G service in South Korea to reflect what carriers elsewhere have described 8Mar
The company knows it needs to ditch the dongle, and believes Li-Fi-enabled chipsets will be here soon 1Mar
Almost limitless bandwidth beckonsif we can tame a wild region of the spectrum 23Feb
Cellphones as a fifth-order elaboration of Maxwellstheory 20Feb
To help, a federal project examines how wireless signals propagate in industrial settings 14Feb
Now telecom companies fear interference from 50,000 SatPaq devices 13Feb
A tiny CMOS-based terahertz transmitter can hit 105 Gb/s 9Feb
She manages a team of 15 engineers responsible for plotting Verizons next big move 3Feb
The Annikken Andee U shield is a bridge between the Arduino and your mobile devices 27Jan
A new terahertz modulator demonstrates dizzying data speeds of 28 Gb/s 24Jan
Ethertronics says its antenna steering technology can remove Wi-Fi dead spots and let you cut your cable TV bill 17Jan
In 2017, Samsung will likely release a smartphone that transforms into a tablet 30Dec2016
The US military's annual tech wish list is out, and it's loaded with new digital tools and devices to fight terrorism 12Dec2016
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UNI Coach Mark Farley pleased with progress as spring football ends – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines
Posted: at 12:43 am
Apr 22, 2017 at 3:20 pm | Print View
CEDAR FALLS The new coaches are up to speed, and the players are up to speed about them. No wonder Mark Farley sounded so upbeat late Friday afternoon, on the eve of his Northern Iowa football teams final spring practice.
I am excited, Farley said. When we went into spring, we had four or five new coaches, a new group of receivers. You just didnt know how everything was going to gel because you didnt just have new players, you had new coaches.
Four brand new assistants, to be specific, including a new offensive coordinator. Thats a lot of potential upheaval.
But UNIs 15 spring practices went very well, according to Farley. The 15th and final was Saturday morning.
It was the same message as in years past, but it was somebody else giving it, Farley said. The attentiveness was much greater this spring. They were listening to every word, responding every way they could. Then you had coaches working like it was the middle of the season, getting ready for the biggest game of the year every week. Because they were trying to stay ahead of the players, making sure they understood it as a group.
I just saw the extra effort put in by the players and the coaches ... I saw the results of it.
This promises to be a strong Panthers club this fall, as it seeks to return to the FCS playoffs after a frustrating 5-6 record in 2016. UNI lost five games by six points or less.
There are 11 returning starters and 54 letterwinners.
Number one (thing) is that toughness, Farley said. It goes right back to the line of scrimmage with your offensive line. It starts there and ends there. Trying to create that edge in that front seven, our offensive line and tight ends. Then, in turn, they are going against our defensive line and linebackers all the time. We put extra emphasis there.
Farley said he liked how his o-line improved as spring ball went along. The Panthers return three starters there.
The defensive line also was good, he said, specifically mentioning the re-addition of Adam Reth, who missed all of last season for believed academic reasons.
I thought the defensive line was impactful every practice, Farley said. When you get a guy like Adam Reth back to lead the group, and guys like Preston Woods, I thought the line made an impact in every practice for us with their experience and talent. They showed up every day, made an impact and changed the course of practice many times.
The second half of camp was spent more on the skill positions. Farley said quarterback Eli Dunne continues to improve and look more comfortable running the offense.
He started the last half of the 2016 season.
There is some question right now about running back, where UNI lost Tyvis Smith and Michael Malloy. Farley said he expects the position to be filled by committee, with Trevor Allen, Marcus Weymiller and JVeyon Browning.
Receiver appears it will be a strength for the 2017 Panthers. Guys like Daurice Fountain bring size and strength, guys like Jalen Rima bring speed, quickness and game-breaking ability.
Rima emerged as the 2016 season progressed as both a big-play receiver and kickoff/punt returner. It was telling that Farley mentioned the freshman from Cedar Rapids Prairie in the same sentence as Arizona Cardinals running back (and UNI grad) David Johnson.
What I learned last year about Jalen is the challenges you put in front of him are critical, because he always rises to them, Farley said. Hes one of those players that you do not know (about) until you put him into a situation. Then its like All right, he passed that test. You can check that box off.
Hes more of a quiet guy, very similar to David Johnson in that any challenge you put in front of him, he conquers. Hes as fast as anybody on the field, but Ive never put a clock on him. Nobodys caught him, yet, but its one of those things where it doesnt look like hes running that fast. Hes got a lot of those same characteristics as David Johnson. To be compared (to) a guy like that is pretty good.
Northern Iowa opens its 2017 season Sept. 2 at Iowa State. The home opener is the following week against Cal Poly.
l Comments: (319) 398-8259; jeff.johnson@thegazette.com
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Did the Movie-Theater Audience Ruin Personal Shopper for Me? – New York Magazine
Posted: at 12:40 am
Photo: Hany Rizk/EyeEm/Getty Images
A few weeks ago, I agreed to see a movie Id heard nothing about. Kristen Stewart was in it; this was all I needed to know. The film was Personal Shopper, in which Stewart plays a sullenly hip assistant to an older actress, not unlike her role in Clouds of Sils Maria both movies were written and directed by Olivier Assayas. I liked Clouds, but I hated Personal Shopper. So did everyone I saw it with: my girlfriend and another couple, Caroline and Laura. (I tell you our entire viewing party was queer women only because there is no demographic more likely to give any Kristen Stewart vehicle the benefit of the doubt.) It wasnt just us, either; people around us shifted uncomfortably in their seats, and snickered at lines not meant to be funny. A scene revealing a series of incoming text messages meant to incur dread made my theater giggle, not gasp. I felt okay about whispering baffled feedback to my seatmates Im sorry, did the ghost just ride the elevator? because I could hear other peoples confused and incredulous murmurs too. It was as if our entire theater took a silent, psychic vote, and together ruled Personal Shopper very bad.
When we left the theater, I Googled reviews for the movie, and was surprised to find a pretty positive critical reception (80 percent on Rotten Tomatoes). Were we crazy not to like it? Whose taste was bad: the critics, or an entire audience at the Sunday matinee? I asked another trusted friend whod seen the movie what she thought, and she said she liked it. Then I asked her how her theater had reacted to it did they laugh? She said no. They were quiet, almost reverent. I wondered if our divergent crowds had affected our ability to enjoy the movie.
The answer, apparently, is more than you think. Weve all seen a blockbuster comedy that seemed funnier among a raucous crowd than it did upon a second rewatch at home, but this phenomenon isnt just social its biological. According to research done by psychologist Uri Hasson, movies can have a synchronizing effect on human brains. People in a theater tend to blink at the same time, and in some cases, fMRI scans revealed that viewers brains were active in the same areas, at the same times, when watching the same movie together. This unifying effect is particularly pronounced in highly cinematic films movies that make heavy use of quick cuts and camera angles meant to direct our attention, like Gravity, or Mad Max: Fury Road. Hasson admits these effects dont necessarily speak to the quality of the film, or our enjoyment of it, but they do suggest a tendency toward like-mindedness in the movie theater. A group of people watching the same movie are, after all, responding to a set of shared stimuli.
Then, too, there is the human tendency to mirror the emotions of those around us. A.J. Marsden, assistant professor of psychology at Beacon College, refers to my Personal Shopper experience as a kind of emotional contagion meaning that human beings are always transmitting our emotions to those around us, to be picked up unknowingly, and sometimes unwillingly.
If youre in a theater and everybody in there is just rolling and having a good time, chances are, those positive emotions are going to rub off on you, and youre going to enjoy it more than if you were in a quiet theater or by yourself, says Marsden. Even in a dark, ostensibly quiet room, we are constantly picking up cues from the people around us: Hearing even one quiet giggle or muffled sob can affect the way we process the movie in front of us. For my theaterful of Personal Shopper viewers, it might have been over from the first skeptical Ha! From there on out, everything was (inadvertently) hilarious.
Part of this behavior is more or less assimilationist: People want to share the popular reaction of the group around them. You want to fit in, you want to be part of the social crowd, says Marsden. You dont want to be an outsider. I tell her this sounds a lot like middle school, but she says its something closer to survivalism. In order for us to survive we have to understand what other people are thinking and feeling, she says. Its a form of empathy or emotional intelligence. In a way, its also a coping mechanism by laughing with my fellow audience members, I bonded with them, and I enjoyed our shared experience more than I would have if Id had to sit through it in silence. When I saw Deadpool a truly awful movie, I dont care what anyone says the mutual eye-rolling and sighing shared between my girlfriend and me made sitting through it tolerable.
For me, I dont think a silent, adoring theater would have been enough to save Personal Shopper a crowds reaction might supplement or enhance your own when they align, but when the two dont match up, youre more likely to leave the theater feeling contrarian or confused. If the general vibe of the group doesnt match up with how you feel or what you believe, you can actually go the other way and become very reactive against the crowd, says Marsden. Either way, you get to leave the theater feeling sure that youre right, and your taste is impeccable. How nice is that?
The Internet Isnt Making Us Dumber Its Making Us More Meta-Ignorant
Dont just fill the time change the way you think about the time.
A new study linked diet soda to stroke and dementia.
Scientists arent entirely sure why allergies make you fuzzy-headed, but they have a theory.
People with severe mental-health problems really are suffering, and it doesnt make sense to scrub the language we use to pretend they arent.
Its great for your fitness, but it has other, more surprising benefits, too.
The psychology (and biology) of watching with a crowd.
Most of the time, your nose cant detect your own body odor.
Psychologists deconstruct the power of the most popular girl in school.
The best thing I can do for my surgeons is to try to be a book of knowledge.
There seems to be a recent, nobly intentioned uptick in parents insisting children play and dress in gender-conforming ways.
It covers a lot of ground, from the best messaging approaches to how to get people to act in more energy-efficient ways.
Done right, it can actually be a pretty useful activity.
New census data shows that this trend really has grown staggeringly, but that most young people living at home are working or in school.
It can be draining. But it doesnt have to be.
A new study found our social networks can encourage us to exercise.
If you want to relate, it might be better to admit that youre a little lost, too.
A new study explores what plenty of parents already know.
In a country plagued by really poorly thought-out criminal-justice policies, this is a nice departure.
It can actually be a useful way to spend your time.
A new study found taking antidepressants when pregnant has fewer risks than previously thought.
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Did the Movie-Theater Audience Ruin Personal Shopper for Me? - New York Magazine
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Report: Aaron Hernandez Drew ‘Illuminati’ Symbols in Blood – Heavy.com
Posted: at 12:40 am
(Photo by Jim Rogash/Getty Images)
Aaron Hernandez left behind numerous messages in his prison cell, reports say, and the most bizarre were scrawlings in blood that referred to the Illuminati, according to WCVB-TV Boston.
Hernandez also drew a Bible verse on his forehead.
Hernandez wrote John 3:16 on his forehead and left notes to his 4-year-old daughter and his fiancee beside an open Bible in the prison cell where he hanged himself, reports the Boston Herald.
The verse reads, For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
However, its the reports of Illuminati images that are adding a bizarre layer to an already tragic story.
According to WCVBs Kathy Curran, Hernandez drew images in blood on his cell. One of the drawings was whats known as the unfinished pyramid and the all-seeing eye of God. The image is similar to what is found on the back of U.S. currency, reports WCVB, adding that Hernandez wrote ILLUMINATI in capital letters below the image.
The illuminati is a person or group claiming to have religious enlightenment or knowledge. The illuminati has also been the subject of several theories, including one that claims they control of the world, reports WCVB, which adds, Above the pyramid, Hernandez drew an oval with rays coming from the edges.
CrystalLinks reports that the all-seeing eye symbol or The Eye of Providence (or the all-seeing eye of God) is a symbol showing an eye often surrounded by rays of light or a glory and usually enclosed by a triangle. It is sometimes interpreted as representing the eye of God watching over humankind (or divine providence). In the modern era, the most notable depiction of the eye is the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States, which appears on the United States one-dollar bill.
The symbol is prevalent in freemasonry and, reports CrystalLinks, Popular among conspiracy theorists is the claim that the Eye of Providence shown atop an unfinished pyramid on the Great Seal of the United States indicates the influence of Freemasonry in the founding of the United States. This was dramatized in the 2004 film National Treasure.
A site on the Illuminati describes it as an elite organization of world leaders, business authorities, innovators, artists, and other influential members of this planet.
Hernandez sketched the references to the Illuminati on his prison wall in blood, the television station reports.
Weirdly, you can find references to Aaron Hernandez and the Illuminati on Twitter that date back years, such as these posts in 2015:
And from 2013:
You can find other bizarre Illuminati conspiracy theories online about Hernandez former team, the New England Patriots. Slideshows online purport that people believe this celebrity or that is part of the Illuminati, with the goal of controlling the masses.
According to the article Angels & Demons from the Book to the Movie FAQ Do the Illuminati Really Exist?, the Illuminati was established on May 1, 1776 at the University of Ingolstadt, then part of the Kingdom of Bavaria, in Germany, by a professor of law called Adam Weishaupt (1748-1830). The Illuminati were an interesting organization, with both esoteric rituals and a political aim, based on the Enlightenment philosophy and ultimately aimed at overthrowing the Roman Catholic and politically conservative Kingdom of Bavaria and replacing it with a liberal republic.
Its a secret society thats been tied to the Knights Templar and blamed for the French Revolution and other conspiracy theories.
The Associated Press reported previously that the government and other experts have debunked conspiracy theories that the symbols on American money the unfinished pyramid and all-seeing eye, for example derive from free mason allegiances among the countrys founders. The AP described those conspiracy theories as arguing that the Seal proves the domination of the United States by a powerful, quasi-religious cult. The Ancient Scottish Rite of Freemasonry is a perennial favorite of conspiracy theorists as some Founding Fathers were Masons and the Seal uses several Masonic symbols and that the Seal draws on Satanism or polytheistic ritual to promote a universal new world order under which Earth would be ruled by a single omnipotent government. The government created an exhibit on the symbols in an attempt to repudiate the myths, AP reports.
(Getty)
Hernandez death was officially ruled a suicide on April 20.
His family now says they want his brain studied by medical experts. The family had arranged for Boston University researchers looking at brain trauma in athletes to take possession of Hernandezs brain following the autopsy, reports ESPN, quoting the Hernandez family attorney, Jose Baez.
According to NBC News, the family wants Hernandez brain studied for CTE, which is a degenerative brain disease that has been linked to athletes, including football players, who might suffer concussions and head trauma. It can only be diagnosed after death and can be linked to suicide, reports NBC.
The family wants the brain to go to Boston Universitys Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Center. The center studies a progressive degenerative brain disease found in some athletes who have experienced repetitive brain trauma, reports People Magazine.
The Hernandez family and the medical examiners office appeared at odds over the brain at least according to a family lawyers statement. Aaron Hernandezs family wants to donate his brain to science, but Massachusetts officials are refusing to release it despite turning over the rest of his body to a funeral home, the former NFL stars lawyer said Thursday, according to ESPN. The brain has now been released, and officials say they just needed to await for the official cause of death determination, which has now happened.
(Getty)
The Hernandez family has indicated it is not satisfied with the official account of Hernandez death.
The family has retained former New York medical examiner, Dr. Michael Baden, to perform another autopsy. He completed it, but wont discuss his findings until outside labs finish a toxicology report and a study of Hernandezs brain, reports The Washington Post.
Baden has performed autopsies in numerous high-profile cases, the Post reports.
According to People magazine, the official ruling is that the former Patriots tight end committed suicide just five days after he was acquitted of double murder charges in the deaths of two men outside a Boston nightclub in 2012.
He was still in prison because he was serving a life sentence for another murder, that of Odin Lloyd, his fiances sisters boyfriend, according to People.
The official account says Hernandez hanged himself with a bed sheet.
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Grasshopper Manufacture’s Descent Into Nihilism – Paste Magazine
Posted: at 12:39 am
When The Silver Case cuts to a shot of the Moon, usually at the end of each level, it appears as a cool but benevolent onlooker. The title of the games first chapter, Lunatics, becomes a double entendre. Perpetually in conflictkilling one another on behalf of rival institutions and ideasthe characters in The Silver Case are nevertheless unified by the Moon. At the end of each day it watches over them all.
Throughout its work, Grasshopper Manufacture struggles with people. How The Silver Case details both specific crimes and the bureaucracies charged with investigating them betrays an infatuation with human experience not found in the studios later exploitation gamesby Lollipop Chainsaw and Let It Die, the developers have either given up on the rigors of our lives or become jaded to the point of nihilism. Just like how, as The Silver Case progresses, the Moon takes on different, gradually more ominous hues, Grasshopper, as it has produced more games, seems to have become first angrier at people and then dejected. In Killer7, one of the studios subsequent major works, blood and death are much more commonplace than in The Silver Case: rather than spiritually unite characters, the Moon appears to precede each sequence of mass-murder.
Killer7s characters suits and affectations suggest an interest in style rather than substance. Its deliberately convoluted, sometimes gaseous plot and many wonderful abstractions belie the presence of a single, encompassing truth. But still Killer7 has a heart. As its protagonists are murdered one-by-one, we cannot help but mourn them. And when Garcian is revealed to be a puppet of Harman and Kun-Lan, duelling gods who fight, endlessly, in service to their own egos, he seems suddenly similar to the put-upon police officers of The Silver Case, misused by the institutions that claim to protect them. At the end of Michigan: Report from Hell, after learning his employer, a huge corporation called Zaka, is responsible for creating and leaking deadly viruses, the protagonist is unceremoniously assassinated. Travis Touchdown, of the next Grasshopper staple No More Heroes, is manipulated also by a self-interested, higher power: after fighting and killing through the ranks of the United Assassins Association, he discovers the Association doesnt actually exist, and has been fabricated completely by a con-artist named Sylvia.
Since all these characters, ultimately and to varying extents, are defrauded or destroyed by organisations, its tempting to call Grasshopers earlier games adolescent or cynical. The mathematical way in which the city in The Silver Case is laid outlettered districts contain numbered wardsimplies a dehumanising totalitarianism which we automatically distrust. Harmans base of operations in Killer7, a lame trailer, also containing his assistant Samantha, who flips between eerie subservience and fiery rage, implies God is exaggerated and two-faced. When even the supernaturally cool Killer7 are helpless against the system, it impresses a belief common among angry teenagers that wealth and power crush nonconformity. But the fact we remain, despite some of these games inevitable endings, allied with the individual characters and not the organisations is precisely what saves them from irrelevance. In Grasshoppers earlier work, and before games like Haze, BioShock and Spec Ops: The Line, we are told to question instruction and admire individuality, to like the people even if we disagree or find repellent what they are being made to do. The Killer7 may murder for money, but their distinct personalities and attractiveness, contrasted with the shadiness and uncertainty surrounding the orders they receive, suggests we should root for people, not ideas.
Which is why the misanthropy or, more specifically, misogyny of Grasshoppers later games is so striking. Paula, the driving love interest of Shadows of the Damned, is also the subject of a rap by ostensibly the games most endearing character; its a contradiction, telling of how barely Grasshopper seems to regard its leading lady, when as well as beautiful, angelic and worth journeying into Hell to rescue, shes also described as a bitch whom the villain has kidnapped to help scratch his itch. Killer Is Dead seems similarly content to use its characters for any and whatever purpose. In one scene, women areperhaps in the most literal sense of the term possibleeye candy, since points are awarded for glaring at their legs and cleavage. In other scenes, they are innocent pixies, kidnap victims, bitchy traitors and grotesque monsters. If they were all given more screen time, or allowed a humanising moment each, one might argue the women in Killer Is Dead are varied, and by extension complex, above some of their contemporaries. But it uses them fleetingly and to appeal only to its assumed audiences superficial instincts. Feel sorry for them, be grossed out by them, be scared of them, lust after themthese are the only feelings Killer Is Dead wants us to have about its women.
Lollipop Chainsaw, released a year prior, is somewhat more covert: despite its pornographically proportioned protagonist, her skimpy clothes and humiliating lines like Agnes used to be hot, but now she has an intestine coming out her vagina, Grasshopper and writer James Gunn seem to almost anticipate the revisionist reviews, and keep reminding us they have a woman as their lead, shes likeable and shes dressing and doing things her own way. But Juliet Starling is an insipid materialist. Like Bayonetta, who is designed to appealalbeit via the smuggle-through-customs language of womens agencyto male dominatrix fantasies, she wears a cheerleader outfit quite literally placed on her by men. And so her enemies jeers, slut, fucking bitch, stupid cooze, seem not like barked encouragement to go and fight sexism, but genuinely disdainful: when Lollipop Chainsaw bullies Juliet, another of Grasshoppers superficial characters, it encourages us to laugh along.
The doubtfulness with which Grasshopper Manufacture once appraised systems, of any kind, seems to have evolvedor rather devolvedinto encompassing, people-hating nihilism. If The Silver Case, quite nobly, started on bureaucracy and Shadows of the Damned, Lollipop Chainsaw and Killer Is Dead moved onto women, by Let It Die, Grasshopper concludes that everyones lives are meaningless and were all not to be trusted. The very title suggests having given up; the games mechanics, whereby you die repeatedly, replace yourself using another generic body, stored inside a giant freezer like meat, and then go and kill your former self, who has since turned into a monster, suggests were disposable, similar and, in our final and definitive form, duplicitous. In its 18 years since releasing The Silver Case, Grasshopper appears to have stopped caring about its characters. Like David, the maniacal villain of Killer Is Dead, it seemingly wants to get away from peopleto observe from the Moon.
Ed Smith is a writer from the UK. You can follow him on Twitter @mostsincerelyed and find more of his work at bulletpointsmonthly.com.
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The Disheartening Nihilism of Modern Science – Michigan Journal
Posted: at 12:39 am
By CHRISTIAN LEDFORD, Staff Writer
In 1859, Charles Darwin published On the Origins of Species, his magnum opus and the foundation of evolutionary biology, and changed the world. While many point to the publication of Origins as the point at which religion and science began to collide, it was merely a sign of the times; humanitys descent into naturalism began earlier, in the Enlightenment of the 1700s in which scholars and scientists began to reject millennia-old Aristotelian and Biblical knowledge. Whereas, anachronistic thinkers like Galileo, Kepler, Newton, Pascal, and too many others to name were devoutly religious, this age of naturalism saw a departure from theism in efforts to explain the world around us, and the universe as a whole, outside of intelligent design and outside of God.
Today, after centuries of secular scientific thought on biology, geology, and cosmology, science has left religion behind. Those who express skepticism in unproven theories of modern science are looked down upon as unintelligent. Those who advocate belief in intelligent design or even (gasp) creationism are seen as worse than unintelligent; as mentally-unsound deniers and haters of knowledge. In the wake of this abandonment, weve seen a rise of something peculiar called New Atheism, contrasted with the deistic atheism of Enlightenment men like Voltaire. This atheism couples itself directly with modern science in militant anti-theism, dedicated literally to the eradication of religious faith. This movement heralds champions like Richard Dawkins and the late Christopher Hitchens, men whove made it their lives purposes to angrily persuade the world that life has no purpose.
Ive never understood atheism. I was admittedly raised in a devoutly Christian home and educated in church all my life, but that doesnt mean that Ive gone without my doubts and moments of existential crisis. However, every time Ive lapsed in faith or doubted God, Ive always come back to my core belief that there is a God who both created the universe and guides its fate. Nothing else makes sense. Atheism, coupled with theories like evolution and geological uniformitarianism, has always been an ideology of meaninglessness. Under Atheism, life, as well as every single other aspect of existence, is a combined result of chance, pure random, lucky chance.
Its by pure chance that the planet we live on exists perfectly in our suns habitable zone, which allows liquid water, an utter necessity for life, to exist abundantly on Earths surface. Its pure chance that our moon exists in the perfect location to secure Earths axial tilt and guarantee our necessary day-night cycle. Its pure chance that life, something we havent observed anywhere in any form in the entire observable universe, exists on Earth at all. Its pure chance that humans, intelligent life, exist and are capable of not only speech but species consciousness and advanced thought, things not seen in any other species. For all the talk of Earth as a privileged planet and humanity as a privileged species, theres equally as much equating this all to nothing more than a roll of the interstellar dice. At a certain point, does it not make more sense to attribute our monumental existence to some intention, some design, rather than pure luck? As Thomas Aquinas eloquently said long ago in Summa Theologica, Whatever is in motion must be put in motion by anotherTherefore it is necessary to arrive at a first mover, put in motion by no other [than]God.
However, it isnt the scientific atheisms reliance on chance that disturbs me, but rather the natural denotation of this ideology. Specifically, if our understanding of truth in the universe can rest only on nature and its laws (i.e. gravity, thermodynamics, etc.,) then what does this implicate for decidedly non-natural phenomena, most importantly morality? It means that there is no absolute moral truth; it means that existence, deep down at its core, has no purpose, and in a universe where there is no meaning, nothing can have a meaning, least of all our short, insignificant lives. As far as Im concerned, this is the fundamental problem of atheism.
If there is no God, no absolute judge of right and wrong, no designer of our lives, no scribe of our purpose, then were all governed simply by nature, and, in natural governance, anything goes. Per the theory of evolution, the weak will suffer and the strong will survive, with no guilt or ethics required from either. Per atheism, in what position would we be in if we even attempted to ascribe some ethical judgement on the actions of either? What Im saying heres controversial; any self-respecting atheist would argue ethics developed as means to achieve communal unity to propel our species forward or that morality stems from our status as social animals. However, while perhaps making some sense on a base level, none of these attempts at explanation come close to explaining our uniquely-human species consciousness, instead only serving to promote tribalism. For example, a man in America may be implored to care for his neighbors or countrymen, but why should he care about those suffering in North Korea or Syria? A woman in Tokyo may care for her family, but why should she care if Congolese Africans starve to death? What evolutionary incentive is there in either case for compassion of the distant?
Finally: death, the great unifier. In atheistic science, death is nothingness; our deaths are but a slide into eternal oblivion, a complete failure to exist. In this sense, what hope does atheism have for children being blown apart in Aleppo? What hope is there for those forced into brutal, unending labor in Pyongyang? Under atheism, what hope is there for the downtrodden, brutalized, or broken? Their lives will not only be short but meaningless and insignificant as well.
In the end, there is no hope for man in detached atheistic science; therein lies only meaninglessness and despair. For all their vast knowledge, scientists like Richard Dawkins miss the painfully obvious, the fact that humanity needs truth and purpose, things that come only from one place: God.
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The Disheartening Nihilism of Modern Science - Michigan Journal
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Free Fire puts the fun back into super-violent nihilism – Straight.com
Posted: at 12:39 am
Starring Brie Larson. Rated 14A
U.K. director Ben Wheatley has never met a genre he couldn't mangle to his own perverse and mostly satisfying ends. This is the filmmakers bluntest crowdpleaser yet, being no more than a 90-minute shootout between a group of exaggerated '70s stereotypes.
Brie Larson gets top-billing as Justine, who brokers a tense deal in an abandoned Boston warehouse between a couple of IRA operatives, Chris and Frank (Cillian Murphy and Wheatley regular Michael Smiley), and the weapons dealer and international asshole Vernon (Sharlto Copley, who gives his preposterous would-be tough guy just enough comic shading to nearly steal the film.)
Also along for the firefight, which we see coming within the films first 20 seconds, is Vernons disturbingly unkillable partner Martin (Babou Ceesay), a too-smooth liaison called Ord (Armie Hammer, also hilarious), and a pair of grunts on either side of the deal who, it turns out, have some unrelated business to settle from a bar fight the night before. Which is why the guns start blazing.
Probably because they thought they should, Wheatley and his screenwriting partner Amy Jump fire off a few brazen rounds of plot once each of these characters is bunkered down and bleeding out in their own grimy corner of the warehouse (for instance, those snipers in the rafters that somebody apparently invited). But Free Fire really exists to let this outstanding cast have a riot with the films flip nihilism (I think we can all agree that hes gone to a better place, announces a bizarrely hale Ord, when one guy seems to take a final slug).
As a reductio ad absurdum picture of gun violence, this film might have even less of a soul than Reservoir Dogs. And yetfurther aided by a faux-King Crimson score by Ben Salisbury and Portisheads Geoff BarrowFree Fire feels wonderfully, gleefully alive. It offers not a shred of pretence toward meaning (guns are bad, I guess?) and it does fuck all with the potentially fertile notion that were watching arms dealers go to war with their clients. But that's okay. Maybe Free Fire is just about having seriously shitty aim?
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Arrival of orphan girl makes a man’s life ‘Gifted’ – CatholicPhilly.com
Posted: at 12:38 am
McKenna Grace and Chris Evans star in a scene from the movie Gifted. (CNS photo/Fox)
By John Mulderig Catholic News Service Posted April 21, 2017
NEW YORK (CNS) Endearing and well-acted, director Marc Webbs drama Gifted (Fox Searchlight) might have been a family-friendly movie.
Elements in screenwriter Tom Flynns script, however, make this thoughtful film which examines the proper balance between cultivating youthful talent and the need for even extraordinary kids to lead a normal life exclusively suitable for grown-ups and perhaps older teens.
Facing the issue outlined above is easygoing Florida boat mechanic Frank Adler (Chris Evans). Informally entrusted with the care of his then-infant niece, Mary (McKenna Grace), at the time of her mothers suicide, Frank has had to adjust his bachelor lifestyle for the sake of stand-in fatherhood (Marys real dad has shown no interest in her.)
Frank has also had to come to grips with the fact that Mary, like her mom before her, is a math prodigy.
Believing, as the audience eventually learns, that his sisters death was at least partially caused by the demands their hard-driving mother, Evelyn (Lindsay Duncan), made on her to concentrate only on her studies, at the cost of both friendships and romance, Frank wants something different for Mary. So, after homeschooling her to the age of 7, he enrolls her in the local public school.
Though Marys caring teacher Bonnie (Jenny Slate) soon discovers her gift, and suggests that she would be better off in a more competitive environment, Frank keeps to his plan. He even turns down the possibility of a full scholarship at a private academy.
When British-born Evelyn turns up, though, Frank faces a more formidable challenge to his intentions. Evelyn initiates a lawsuit to win custody, and Mary becomes the prize in a bitter courtroom battle between the two.
The generally wholesome atmosphere of the proceedings is briefly marred by Marys exposure to the aftermath of a bedroom encounter and her use of a vulgar expression. Additionally, viewer discernment is required to sort through a conversation Mary and Frank have about religion.
This discussion pits ex-philosophy professor Franks somewhat passive agnosticism against the faith that guides his and Marys warmly affectionate landlady and neighbor, Roberta (Octavia Spencer). Frank maintains, fairly enough, that no one can know for certain whether there is a God. But Frank is open to belief in general and, when Mary specifically asks about Jesus, Frank encourages her to imitate him.
The dialogue implies that religious ideas are wholly unconnected to reason, an exaggeration of the proper dividing line between what we can perceive with our senses and what transcends them. Yet the fact that this exchange takes place against a glowing sunset suggests that the moviemakers sympathies may not be on the side of cold rationalism.
The film contains nongraphic premarital sexual activity, mature references, including a suicide theme, a single rough term and a couple of uses each of crude and crass language. The Catholic News Service classification is A-III adults. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.
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