Daily Archives: May 13, 2017

Virginia to Open Autonomous Technology Center – Government Technology

Posted: May 13, 2017 at 5:44 am

On May 11, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe promised that automation would be a cornerstone of the commonwealths new economy.

Over the past three years, weve made tremendous progress to support this emerging industry, and well continue our efforts to cut red-tape and open the door for further growth, he said in a release announcing the launch of the Autonomous Systems Center of Excellence (ASCE).

The center will be operated by the Center for Innovative Technology (CIT), a nonprofit corporation focused on creating technology-based economic development strategies to accelerate innovation. The ASCE will function as both a development and deployment system of all aspects of the autonomous systems industry. The announcment was made during the Xponential event held by the Associaion for Unmanned Vehicle System Internation.

The center also will operate as an advocate for the autonomous industry within the state. Virginia has already gotten started in the autonomy sector through its 2013 partnership with the FAA.

Per the release, Virginia ranks consistently among the top 10 of states positioned to reap the largest economic benefit from the onset of autonomous technology.

Virginia has already established itself as a leader in the autonomous systems industry, said Secretary of Technology Karen Jackson in the release. ... It is essential that we create an epicenter that drives collaboration, facilitates information sharing, and provides streamlined access to all of our world-class assets.

While not expressly mentioning autonomous vehicles, the new center may focus on the burgeoning technology. McAuliffe recently expressed his desire for Virginia to become the capital of automated vehicles, according to The Washington Post.

As states race toward autonomy and hope to get out in front of the disruptive technology, McAuliffe said he believes a mix of a well-educated workforce and lack of government regulations will propel his state as a leader of the pack. The state has chosen to create minimal regulations for the young industry in hopes that the open slate will attract manufacturers.

There are no local regulations at all. We do not have state regulations. The industry is too new, and I dont want us writing laws that could stifle innovation, he said while delivering the event keynote.

The opening of the ASCE will hopefully continue Virginias development as a hub of autonomous vehicles.

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College celebrates graduation with technology – Williamsport Sun-Gazette

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CARAMORNINGSTAR/Sun-Gazette Graduates from the Pennsylvania College of Technology class of 2017 gather Friday in the Community Arts Center in Williamsport for the graduation ceremony.

The Pennsylvania College of Technology held the 2017 spring commencement ceremony at the Community Arts Center in Williamsport on Friday.

Spring is a time of rebirth and renewal, and I must say, I feel rejuvenated every May, said Davie Jane Gilmour, Penn College president.

But Penn College celebrates a little differently than other schools.

Now this is the time when most college presidents would stop you to say, please put away your phones and turn off the noise, Gilmour said. This is Penn College, and we are a college of technology. So Id like you to turn on your phones and Im going to take the first selfie of the day.

The crowd cheered as Gilmour posed on stage for her own selfie in celebration of technology with the graduates.

Elliott Strickland, chief student affairs officer, introduced the commencement speaker, Lauren Jayde Crouse, class of 2017.

Its not often that a student like Lauren comes around, he said. Shes one of the most evolved students weve ever had Because of her involvement and service, shes been consistently recognized by faculty and her peers.

Crouse also received the Presidents Award for leadership and service along with Morgan Nicole Keyser.

It amazes me all the hard work that we all put in to be where we are today, Crouse said.

She said she had considered dropping out her freshman year and that it had been a different time in her life. She credited her success to getting involved, and she said she would not be standing in front of everyone had she not done that.

She challenged everyone in the room to try to be a small light for everyone else.

Gilmour also presented an award she said she prefers to keep a surprise for as long as she can, the 2017 Veronica M. Muzic Master Teacher Award, to J.D. Mather, associate professor of engineering design and technology.

Its the most prestigious of our faculty tributes, Gilmour said.

She said the award has only been awarded 30 times with Mather being the 31st recipient.

Ive just been blindsided, said Mather. I want to thank my students Really, this is their award.

Gilmour also presented the 2017 Excellence in Teaching Award to Nicholas Stephenson, graphic design instructor. She said a second teacher will also receive the award in the ceremony on Saturday to be announced online at http://www.pctoday.pct.edu.

Teaching here at Penn College is an absolute joy, Stephenson said.

The Alumni Achievement Award went to Thomas J. Giannattasio, class of 2006, product manager for InVision.

Back in high school I was not the most studious person, I suppose. The only award my high school gave me was class clown, he said. Penn College sort of changed my trajectory.

Penn College will be holding two more ceremonies on Saturday.

The first ceremony for the School of Construction and Design Technologies and the School of Health Sciences will be at 10 a.m. with student speaker Madison L. Carts.

The second ceremony for the School of Business and Hospitality and the School of Transportation and Natural Resources Technologies will be at 1:30 p.m. with student speaker Robert E. Wood.

Both additional ceremonies also will be at the Community Arts Center.

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The Williamsport Business Association is holding a launch party for its new member-driven website, ...

WASHINGTON (AP) Raging against a political firestorm, President Donald Trump on Friday shot a sharp warning at ...

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The trial for a man accused of shooting and killing another city man outside of the Shamrock Grill in 2015 is set ...

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‘Turn it off’: how technology is killing the joy of national parks – The Guardian

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An illegally flown drone gives scale to next to a lava tube in Hawaii Volcanoes national park. Photograph: Andrew Studer

Andrew Studer was admiring a massive lava fire hose at Hawaii Volcanoes national park when he spotted something unusual: a small quadcopter drone flying very close to the natural wonder pouring hot molten rock.

There were other visitors sitting out relaxing in somewhat of a meditative state, just trying to enjoy this phenomenon, said Studer, who recently captured a viral image of a drone hovering near the lava. I do feel like drones are extremely obnoxious, and Im sure it was frustrating for some of the people there.

In recent years, there have been growing concerns about technology invading national parks, with drones and other noisy gadgets disrupting wilderness areas, wildlife habitats and other recreational areas.

While the boom in drones has increasingly spoiled the natural sound that the National Park Service (NPS) is charged with protecting, there has also been a rising number of reports of social media use leading hikers to snap inappropriate and dangerous selfies, threatening wildlife and the environment in the process.

Being in nature, you should be focused on nature, said Judy Rocchio, an NPS program coordinator, who works on preserving natural sounds. Nature is very healing leave the tech at home or put it away and turn it off.

As drones became increasingly popular in 2014, the NPS moved to ban the launching and landing of unmanned aircrafts, but the problem has persisted. Since the new rule went into effect, parks have issued 325 citations related to drones, according to spokesman Jeffrey Olson.

It was pretty quickly apparent that visitors who werent flying them didnt like them, he said. People were really upset ... Its like a buzzing bee you cant get out of your head. People observed drones being used to herd wildlife.

The buzzing and clamor of drones, smartphones, music speakers and other tech gadgets that hikers can now carry in their hands isare contributing to damaging noise pollution, which is pervasive in US protected areas, according to a new study published last week.

People were really upset ... Its like a buzzing bee you cant get out of your head

The park service, however, has no control over drones that fly from outside park boundaries, which has allowed some pilots to skirt the rules and enter protected areas.

There are very few places that still have a very natural quiet setting, Rocchio said. How are we supposed to manage wilderness when you have drones flying over them?

NPS surveys and research suggests that drones and other tech-related noises are disturbing both visitors and wildlife. Minnesota black bears experienced elevated heart rates when they saw drones in the sky, according to one study.

Research further indicates that drones and similar aircraft and unnatural noises make it harder for wildlife to perceive natural sounds, which can interfere with communication, reproduction and survival.

Chronic exposures to relatively low sound levels could have significant impacts for animals by reducing their environmental awareness, said Kurt Fristrup, an NPS senior scientist who co-authored the recent noise pollution study suggesting that human noises are often 10 times that of background levels.

Sometimes the harm to animals are more obvious.

In 2014, NPS sent out a press release titled Drone Harasses Bighorn Sheep after volunteers at Zion national park witnessed a remote-controlled drone flying close to a herd, causing them to scatter, leading a young sheep to become separated from the adults. Today, law enforcement in the area gets roughly once every two weeks about drones, said Zion spokesman John Marciano.

If we dont start now, children of the future will never know what a natural quiet peaceful setting sounds like

People come in the park for a peaceful zen spiritual-type experience and when they have hiked for four hours somewhere and they want to be in the wilderness and suddenly, they hear this vrrrrrrr sound, it kind of kills the whole experience.

Other common gadget noises have increasingly annoyed visitors, according to park officials, who note research showing that natural sounds can have health benefits for humans.

At Muir Woods national monument, a popular destination in California, cellphone and other human noise recently became such a problem that the park began putting up signs reminding people to be quiet, according to Rocchio.

If we dont start thinking about this now, children of the future will never know what a natural quiet peaceful setting sounds like, she added.

In recent years, there have also been growing concerns about tourists displaying a lack of respect for nature in national parks, especially from visitors hoping to capture viral Instagrams. In an effort to take impressive photos for social media, park tourists have vandalized parks with graffiti, trampled on wildflowers in rare super blooms and faced attacks from bison.

Marciano said there have also been increasing demands for internet service throughout Zion national park.

A lot of people want wifi access. They want to use their phone gadgets They want to plug in, he said, noting that there are park areas that now have wifi. We have to adapt to new technologies.

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New ‘exoskeleton’ technology can help protect seniors from slips and falls – ABC News

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For seniors stuck using a cane or walker to stay on their feet, there soon may be a new way to get around without falling: an exoskeleton.

Researchers in Italy have created a wearable robotic system designed to use torque to help prevents people from slipping and falling, according to a report published yesterday in Scientific Reports.

The teams at from the Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Ecole polytechnique fdrale de Lausanne (EPFL) and the Don Carlo Gnocchi Foundation Mission studied a small group, including eight elderly people and two amputees, and the preliminary results were promising.

"Our study revealed that a wearable robotic platform can effectively interact with humans during reactive motor responses, such as accidental slipping," Dr. Vito Monaco, lead author of the study and expert in locomotion biomechanics at the Don Carlo Gnocchi Foundation Mission said in a statement. "These results open new perspectives for researchers who are expected to develop robotic platforms for enhancing human capabilities all day long."

Falls may seem like a small risk, but they are the number one cause of injuries and deaths from injury among older Americans, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Older Americans experienced 29 million falls causing seven million injuries in 2014. Those falls cost an estimated $31 billion in annual Medicare costs, according to the CDC.

To test if the robotic exoskeleton they developed could help reverse falls, the researchers had the subjects wear the device and walk on the treadmill while wearing a safety harness. The treadmill would start normally and periodically jerk forward, causing the subjects to slip.

The device worked by recognizing that a person was falling and then applying counteracting "torque" to the body to help a person regain their balance.

They found that those wearing the exoskeleton when it was activated were better able to keep their balance without losing their center of mass as much as if they were not wearing it.

While the research is in the early stages, this could help researchers develop an assistive device that could help the elderly stay on their feet -- or at least be an upgrade from current walkers, canes or wheelchairs.

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Elon Musk shows off The Boring Company’s progress, with a warning – MarketWatch

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Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Elon Musk on Friday revealed what his newest venture has been up to, including a video that he warned could cause motion sickness or seizures.

The Boring Company has begun digging under Los Angeles, and Musk posted pictures and video on Twitter and Instagram to document the companys progress.

The first full-length tunnel will run from the Los Angeles International Airport to the cities of Culver City, Santa Monica, Westwood and Sherman Oaks in Southern California, with future tunnels planned to cover all of greater LA, Musk said.

The tunnels will be earthquake-proof, he said in response to a question on Twitter. Musk also christened the tunnel-boring machine as Godot, presumably after Samuel Becketts play Waiting for Godot.

Unlike the Godot in the play, who never arrives, Musks machine apparently was hard at work: Musk posted a video showing a ride on an electric sled that would transport the cars through the tunnels. The video came with the warning against motion sickness or seizures.

Musk announced The Boring Co. last month at his TEDTalk, an idea he first floated in December after saying Los Angeles traffic was driving me nuts.

Besides leading Tesla TSLA, +0.53% Musk also helms privately held rocket company SpaceX and earlier this year disclosed plans a neuroscience startup called Neuralink, which ultimately aims to help peoples brains keep up with artificial intelligence. Tesla stock has jumped 52% so far this year, while the S&P 500 index has gained 7% in 2017.

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Reversing Progress, Sessions Order Embraces ‘Vicious Cycle of Incarceration’ – Common Dreams

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Common Dreams
Reversing Progress, Sessions Order Embraces 'Vicious Cycle of Incarceration'
Common Dreams
Similarly, Udi Ofer, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Campaign for Smart Justice, said that Sessions "is pushing federal prosecutors to reverse progress and repeat a failed experimentthe War on Drugsthat has devastated the lives and ...
Sessions issues sweeping new criminal charging policyWashington Post
Memorandum on Department Charging and Sentencing Policy - US Department of JusticeUS Department of Justice

all 348 news articles »

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Paralyzed Cal Rugby Player Makes Progress as Family Holds … – NBC Bay Area

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A Cal rugby player who was partially paralyzed last weekend during a match in Santa Clara, was making progress and was moved to the rehab trauma center at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center.

A GoFundMe page for Robert Paylor posted the news of his transfer Thursday while about a hundred people gathered for a prayer service in Berkeley to show their support.

Paylor was injured early in the national championship match Saturday at Santa Clara University. The injury left him paralyzed from the chest down.

His Cal teammates on Thursday night huddled together outside the private prayer service, wearing their blue cardigans with gold stripes.

Those in attendance at the service talked about the sense of family inside.

"Our sons played rugby; we're a rugby family," team friend Bob Wilson said. "We know how the game goes. Some people get injured, but always have great support."

The GoFundMe page has raised about $400,000 for the Paylor family's medical expenses.

Cal students were still stunned by the news.

"I'm getting emotional," said Steve Burstin. "He's at the best school. He needs all the support he can get."

Even as UC Berkeley students remember the weekend's championship victory and deal with finals this week, their thoughts are with Paylor.

"I think everybody has hope," Wilson said. "With the grace of God, he'll come through."

Published at 10:28 PM PDT on May 11, 2017 | Updated at 11:21 AM PDT on May 12, 2017

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Trump touts ‘economic progress’ to college grads – The Hill

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President Trump on Friday said his administration provides a hopeful economy for new college graduates.

"Our economic progress is especially good news for the millions of young Americans who, at this time of the year, are putting on a cap and gown and receiving a diploma certificate," Trump said in his weekly White House address.

"This weekend, I am delighted to be participating first-hand in the excitement by joining the students and faculty at Liberty University to celebrate the success of their graduates," he added.

Trump will deliver the commencement speech to Liberty University, Americas largest Christian college,on Saturday morning.

"To young Americans at both schools, I will be bringing a message of hope and optimism about our nation's bright future. That is a message that I want to extend to all young Americans today, especially those who are graduating this year and entering the labor force," he said.

Trump further reiterated his promises to stabilize the U.S. job market and end "the sellout of American workers."

"I want you to know that my adminstration is working every single day to create new opportunities and to reverse years of stagnant growth, falling wages, and disappearing jobs. We are ending the sellout of American workers," the president said.

"I want every young citizen regardless of education or geography to be able to live out their American dreams. So, to all of America's graduates, congratulations. And to all of America's youth, we are here to help create the jobs and future you deserve."

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Perversion As Progress | The American Conservative – The American Conservative

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A reader sends in this latest example of the Law Of Merited Impossibility (Thats never going to happen, and when it does, you bigots will deserve it): a big piece in The New York Times asking if open marriages are happier marriages. From the story:

Elizabeth, baffled by Daniels disappointment, wondered: How great does sex have to be for a person to be happy? Daniel wondered: Dont I have the right to care this much about sex, about intimacy? Occasionally, when he decided the answer was yes, and he felt some vital part of himself dwindling, Daniel would think about a radical possibility: opening up their marriage to other relationships. He would poke around on the internet and read about other couples arrangements. It was both an outlandish idea and, to him, a totally rational one. He eventually even wrote about it in 2009 for a friend who had a blog about sexuality. As our culture becomes more accepting of choices outside the norm, nonmonogamy will expand as an acceptable choice, and the world will have to change as a result, he predicted.

An outlandish idea back then. But you know what happened next to Elizabeth and Daniel, who are now living in an open marriage. The Times story says that polyamory has become much more accepted today, thanks in large part to the efforts of Dan Savage:

In recent years, probably no one has made the idea of open marriage more accessible than Dan Savage, who coined the word monogamish to describe his own relationship status. Savage, an internationally syndicated, podcast-hosting and often-quoted voice on sexual ethics, is gay, married, a father and nonmonogamous. He has used his vast reach to defend consensual nonmonogamy, which Savage says is widely accepted in the male gay community as a choice that can foster a relationships longevity, provided all parties involved behave ethically.

And technology:

Technology also imports nonmonogamy into mainstream heterosexual dating life, making the concept more visible and transparent. On the popular dating site OkCupid, couples seeking other partners can link their profiles; users can filter their searches for people who label themselves nonmonogamous. The site, an intimate tool in the romantic lives of its users, renders no judgment, and therefore normalizes, institutionally, a practice few people had neutral language for in the past. Among 40-to-50-year-olds who identify themselves as nonmonogamous on OkCupid, 16 percent also announce that they are married, according to the site.

The taboo is eroding:

Two-thirds of Americans feel that a growing variety in the types of family arrangements that people live in is a good thing or makes no difference, according to a 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center.

And this is surprising:

Conventional wisdom has it that men are more likely than women to crave, even need, variety in their sex lives. But of the 25 couples I encountered, a majority of the relationships were opened at the initiation of the women; only in six cases had it been the men. Even when the decision was mutual, the woman was usually the more sexually active outside the marriage. A suburban married man on OkCupid told me he had yet to date anyone, in contrast to his wife, whom he called an intimacy vampire. There was a woman in Portland whose husband had lost interest in sex with anyone, not just her. A 36-year-old woman in Seattle said she opened her marriage after she heard about the concept from another young mom at her book club.

Perhaps the women in the couples I encountered were more willing to tell their stories because they did not fit into predictable unflattering stereotypes about the male sex drive. But it was nonetheless striking to hear so many wives risk so much on behalf of their sexual happiness.

risk so much on behalf of their sexual happiness.I guess this is what counts as courageous in this post-Christian culture. If you read the entire story, you will see surprise! that the author pretty much concludes that polyamory can strengthen marriages:

Daniel and Elizabeth had turned their union into an elaborate puzzle, one they could only solve together, had to solve together, for the well-being of their family, even if doing so demanded more from each of them than their marriage ever had. Energy for generosity in a marriage can easily suffocate beneath the accumulation of grievances and disappointments, or even laziness of habit; now both Elizabeth and Daniel felt the weight of those histories somehow shifting, if not entirely lifting. They had experienced enough to know that they could not predict how much their lives might change in another year or two; but they felt more confident that they could weather what was coming their way. The marriage is better than it was when it started, Daniel said in March. It is. It really is.

Look, at this point, why argue? This kind of thing means the dissolution of family and eventually of society. Marriage is damned difficult, as anyone who has been married for any length of time knows. It requires immense sacrifice on both sides. The priest who prepared my wife and me for marriage told us that sometimes, the burden of sacrifice would fall heavily on one of us, and at other times on the other. But neither of us would be able to avoid sacrifice and suffering within the marriage; that is in its nature. When we made our vows at the altar, we entangled our fingers around a crucifix. The priest said at the altar that as long as we hold on to Christ, we can hold on to each other, but if we let go of Christ, we would find it hard to hold on to each other.

Today, after 20 years of marriage, I think of what the priest told us, both in the wedding rite and in our preparation, was profoundly true, and profoundly useful. Its not for nothing that in the Orthodox Christian wedding rite, both bride and groom receive a symbolic crown. It is the crown of martyrdom, for dying to self is key to the mystery of marriage. Father Stephen Freeman, an Orthodox priest, writes:

No issues in the modern world seem to be pressing the Church with as much force as those surrounding sex and marriage. The so-called Sexual Revolution has, for the most part, succeeded in radically changing how our culture understands both matters. Drawing from a highly selective (and sometimes contradictory) set of political, sociological and scientific arguments, opponents of the Christian tradition are pressing the case for radical reform with an abandon that bears all of the hallmarks of a revolution. And they have moved into the ascendancy.

Those manning the barricades describe themselves as defending marriage. That is a deep inaccuracy: marriage, as an institution, was surrendered quite some time ago. Todays battles are not about marriage but simply about dividing the spoils of its destruction. It is too late to defend marriage. Rather than being defended, marriageneeds to be taught and lived.

The Church needs to be willing to become the place where that teaching occurs as well as the place that can sustain couples in the struggle required to live it. Fortunately, the spiritual inheritance of the Church has gifted it with all of the tools necessary for that task. It lacks only people who are willing to take up the struggle.

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The classical Christian marriage belongs to the genre of martyrdom. It is a commitment to death. As Hauerwas notes: faithfulness over the course of a life-time defines what it means to love someone. At the end of a faithful life, we may say of someone, He loved his wife.

Father Stephen continues:

Some have begun to write about the so-called Benedict Option, a notion first introduced by Alasdair MacIntyre in his book, After Virtue. It compares the contemporary situation to that of the collapse of the Roman Christian Imperium in the West (i.e., the Dark Ages). Christian civilization, MacIntyre notes, was not rebuilt through a major conquering or legislating force, but through the patient endurance of small monastic communities and surrounding Christian villages. That pattern marked the spread of Christian civilization for many centuries in many places, both East and West.

It would seem clear that a legislative option has long been a moot point. When 95 percent of the population is engaging in sex outside of marriage (to say the least) no legislation of a traditional sort is likely to make a difference. The greater question is whether such a cultural tidal wave will inundate the Churchs teaching or render it inert a canonical witness to a by-gone time, acknowledged perhaps in confession but irrelevant to daily choices (this is already true in many places).

And:

The Benedict Option can only be judged over the course of centuries, doubtless to the dismay of our impatient age. But, as noted, those things required are already largely in place. The marriage rite (in those Churches who refuse the present errors) remains committed to the life-long union of a man and a woman with clearly stated goals of fidelity. The canon laws supporting such marriages remain intact. Lacking is sufficient teaching and formation in the virtues required to live the martyrdom of marriage.

Modern culture has emphasized suffering as undesirable and an object to be remedied. Our resources are devoted to the ending of suffering and not to its endurance. Of course, the abiding myth of Modernity is that suffering can be eliminated. This is neither true nor desirable.

Virtues of patience, endurance, sacrifice, selflessness, generosity, kindness, steadfastness, loyalty, and other such qualities are impossible without the presence of suffering. The Christian faith does not disparage the relief of suffering, but neither does it make it definitive for the acquisition of virtue. Christ is quite clear that all will suffer. It is pretty much the case that no good thing comes about in human society except through the voluntary suffering of some person or persons. The goodness in our lives is rooted in the grace of heroic actions.

In the absence of stable, life-long, self-sacrificing marriages, all discussion of sex and sexuality is reduced to abstractions. An eloquent case for traditional families is currently being made by the chaos and dysfunction set in motion by their absence. No amount of legislation or social programs will succeed in replacing the most natural of human traditions. The social corrosion represented by our over-populated prisons, births outside of marriage (over 40 percent in the general population and over 70 percent among non-Hispanic African Americans), and similar phenomenon continue to predict a breakdown of civility on the most fundamental level. We passed into the Dark Ages some time ago. The Benedict Option is already in place. It is in your parish and in your marriage. Every day you endure and succeed in a faithful union to your spouse and children is a heroic act of grace-filled living. [Emphasis mine RD]

We are not promised that the Option will be successful as a civilizational cure. Such things are in the hands of God. But we should have no doubt about the Modern Project going on around us. It is not building a Brave New World. It is merely destroying the old one and letting its children roam amid the ruins.

Please, please, please read the whole thing. This is the bold, clear, hard, shining truth. There is no point in trying to argue with this culture anymore. Shake the dust off your feet. The ark is here, within the Church. Turn your back on this culture, and run towards the ark of the Church. There you will not find relief from suffering, but rather the strength to endure it, to sanctify it, and by Gods grace, overcome it.

I have written a book called The Benedict Option, which I hope will inspire Christians to wake up to the reality around us, and to take necessary measures to hold on to what we know to be true in this age of lies. As Father Stephen writes, It is too late to defend marriage. Rather than being defended, marriageneeds to be taught and lived. The fight that many conservative Christians have committed themselves to, to defend traditional marriage is over and we lost. We lost not because we were wrong, but we lost all the same. My friends who are still involved in trying to fight this culture war at the level of policy and politics are battling for a lost cause.

The cause of traditional marriage is not lost, in the sense that it has been proven wrong. But the forces of atomization in the modern world did overcome it;the changing laws reflect the changing cultural consensus. The great fight now is within the Church, to hold on to what we know to be true and to pass it on despite overwhelming pressure from outside. The Church will have to be prepared to take on castaways and refugees, children who have been left to roam amid the ruins. We cannot do that if we do not teach and live out a model of marriage that stands in radical contradiction to the way of the world today.

This is the Benedict Option. Its not anything new, but rather something very old and tested by time. The Times story documents one aspect of the decadence and self-destruction of Western civilization. Let the spiritually dead cuckold the spiritually dead. Life is elsewhere.

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McCleary roundup: Useful discussions, but no substantial progress, says governor – The Seattle Times

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As the Washington Legislature marked the halfway point of its first special session this year, most lawmakers were nowhere to be found in Olympia.

Teachers singing about McCleary on the Capitol steps. Children marching with papier-mch dandelions. And an elementary school student howling like a wolf for Gov. Jay Inslee.

As the Washington Legislature marked the halfway point of this years first special session, those were some of the scenes in Olympia this week.

But state lawmakers? You know, the elected officials under Supreme Court order to fix Washingtons broken school-finance system?

Most of the gang of 147 were nowhere in sight at the Capitol. And theres no sign they will reach a compromise on the 2017-19 state budget which must include a way to fully fund K-12 schools without having to enter another overtime session.

Heres a roundup of all the McCleary action over the past week:

No, that wasnt a young girl yawning during one of the governors bill-signing ceremonies late last week.

Inslee on Friday actually coaxed the Hazel Wolf Elementary student to howl like her Seattle schools namesake, a famous environmental activist who had often mimicked wolves at meetings, according to The Spokesman-Review.

While a bit of political theater, the ceremony actually helped break up the monotony of the Legislatures special session: What little legislation that may be going on happens behind closed doors, observed Spokesman-Review reporter Jim Camden.

On Monday, the governor told The Associated Press that a bipartisan group of lawmakers have held useful discussions on the K-12 part of the state budget but have not made substantial progress on how to pay for any of it.

If no agreement is reached by June 30, the state could enter a partial government shutdown.

Meanwhile, superintendents for some school districts west of Seattle alarmed some teachers with a letter they sent to lawmakers asking for limits on collective bargaining with teachers unions.

As The Seattle Times detailed earlier this year, school districts have increasingly relied on an obscure provision in teacher contracts to help cover what the state doesnt pay for teacher salaries.

Its unclear whether the Legislature will try to rein in that practice.

But after union leaders quoted in the Kitsap Sun decried any erosion of local bargaining rights, at least one Kitsap County superintendent attempted to reverse course on the issue.

On Tuesday, The News Tribune noted the empty hallways in Olympia but reporter Melissa Santos did speak to House Majority Leader Pat Sullivan, D-Covington.

Hes one of eight lawmakers meeting regularly to hammer out a McCleary compromise. And he told Santos that theres no reason for other legislators with regular lives and jobs back home to remain at the Capitol until they have a budget agreement to debate and vote on.

Still, thats not stopping teachers from continuing their two-week Occupy Olympia movement to pressure lawmakers to find a compromise.

On some days the number of teachers have outnumbered the number of state lawmakers, reported the public-radio Northwest News Network.

The current special session ends May 23.

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McCleary roundup: Useful discussions, but no substantial progress, says governor - The Seattle Times

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