The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: May 2017
Vive le market! – Scoop.co.nz (press release)
Posted: May 7, 2017 at 11:38 pm
Article CMC Markets
A combination of strong data, recovering commodity prices and a win for centrist European politics should see Asia Pacific share markets regain ground today. Chinese trade data and Australian building approvals may influence trading, but the apparent 9.18 am AEST Monday, 8 May 2017
Vive le market!
By Michael McCarthy (chief market strategist, CMC Markets)
A combination of strong data, recovering commodity prices and a win for centrist European politics should see Asia Pacific share markets regain ground today. Chinese trade data and Australian building approvals may influence trading, but the apparent reversal in risk sentiment could see markets receive the benefit of the doubt should they show weakness.
The economic risk of a radical win in the French presidential election passes with the election of the centrist Macron. However, markets edged higher in the lead up and the victory for economic rationalism represents the removal of a negative rather than a market propellant.
More importantly US employment data has swung risk appetites. The creation of 211,000 non-farm jobs in April reverses the previous months weakness and supports the Feds perception that soft first quarter data was a blip. Oil rallied alongside industrial metals. Gold continued its slide as investor confidence grows.
Futures markets indicate solid opening gains for local indices. The Australia 200 contract is up 55 points, reflecting the multiple positives after falls last week. The session may proceed cautiously ahead of regional data and the release of the federal budget statement tomorrow night.
Content Sourced from scoop.co.nz Original url
Visit link:
Posted in Rationalism
Comments Off on Vive le market! – Scoop.co.nz (press release)
The French people don’t know the dangers of autocratic populism: a view from Pakistan – The Conversation AU
Posted: at 11:38 pm
Activists wear masks of Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the National Front, with his daughters hair, Marine, currently the extreme-right candidate in Frances election.
Following in the footsteps of the United States, the French are looking to terrible simplifications to solve their problems as they head to the second round of their presidential election on May 7.
Polls predict that Marine Le Pen, candidate of the far-right National Front party could take 38% of the vote. Even if she loses on Sunday, some commentators believe that this campaign has paved the way for a victory in Frances 2022 election.
Viewed from Pakistan, this situation is a direct blow to a country which, in our minds, has been the bastion of democracy, rationalism and enlightenment.
Frances embrace of Le Pen is all the more concerning because, in Pakistan, we know exactly what autocratic populism looks like, and what it can lead to.
Founded in 1947 during the Partition with India, Pakistan started its journey into nationhood in the turbulent 1950s, after an independence bill liberated the Indian subcontinent from the British empire.
Ordinary Pakistanis were struggling to eke out an existence. But the new nations leaders were experimenting with an ideology, inspired by two nation theory of Pakistans main thinker, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, that advocated for separated nations for India and Pakistan based on religion. To some extent this communal approach prevented the more critical progressive left from developing in Pakistan.
The 1960s gave rise not only to industry but also to numerous economic crises that challenged the fragile young nation. By the end of the decade, frustration was on the rise among the Pakistani people. Widespread protests ultimately brought down president Ayub Khan in 1968, ending Pakistans first military dictatorship.
This change opened the doors for Pakistans first populist leader, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, whose Pakistan People Party (PPP) emerged at the end of the 1960s atop a rising tide of public approval and support. People loved its slogan, roti, kapra, aur makan bread, clothing, and a home and in 1970 Butto was democratically elected as Pakistans fourth president.
Thats how Pakistan entered the age of populist politics: at the ballot box. The PPP expounded the same goals that we hear contemporary populist parties claim, namely that of freeing the state from tyrannical and incompetent rulers.
In the troubled context of the war with India and the subsequent creation of independent Bangladesh in 1971, Bhutto maintained his grasp on power. In 1973 he was elected Pakistans ninth prime minister, claiming that he wanted to bring democratic changes to the country.
His populism took an anti-imperialist guise, which garnered wide domestic support given both Pakistans own history and the state of world affairs at the time, which included US atrocities in the Vietnam War.
But when his power was challenged, particularly on labour and trade questions, Bhutto abandoned democracy. In 1977 he imposed martial law and curfews throughout the country.
The civil unrest that followed galvanised General Zia ul Haq. He deposed Bhutto in a military coup that same year and had him hanged in 1979.
This pattern that has been repeated in Pakistan since then. Our shaky democracy never found stability after Zia, who was killed in a plane crash in 1988.
Four successive democratic governments were unconstitutionally ousted by military leaders, truncating their five-year terms and creating a chaotic alternation between civilian and army rule.
Democracy would not return until 2008, when the Pakistan Peoples Party won a presidential election on a wave of sympathy for the 2007 assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto (daughter of Zulfiqar). For the first time in nearly 20 years, a government was able to complete its five-year term.
Today, Pakistan once again stands at the crossroads of civilian and military rule. The unpopular sitting government lost credibility with the Panama Papers scandal in which the huge financial assets of incumbent Prime Minister Nawaz Sharifs children were exposed and opponents like the former cricket player Imran Khan are now suggesting that the military should take over.
France is still very far from dictatorship, of course. But Pakistans history shows that opening the door to populist leaders is a big step towards a dangerous and unknown future.
If you flirt with extremism, you have to be willing to accept its dire consequences.
Today, populism in Pakistan has a broad and idealistic agenda, ranging from sustenance for the poor to changing the world order. Its euphoric 1960s ideals failed because they assumed the possibility of change as a push-button operation.
Still, populism has now become a cultural norm here. It grows from the inner contradictions of a democratic power structure thats corrupted, incapable of solving social and economic issues and prone to passing liberticidal laws. And it thrives on right-wing patriotic, xenophobic and anti-politics rhetoric. France, take note.
Populist rhetoric also suits the sensation-hungry, ratings-seeking corporate media. In Pakistan the media has openly espoused populism by regularly portraying politics as a dirty game of power-hungry politicians. This narrative gives rise to cynical and anti-politics attitudes within the general public.
To make matters worse, the press covers some of the worlds demagogues, in the US as at home, in a very light manner. Such populist extremists are, of course, happy to win more positive media spin.
Some 8,000 kms from Islamabad, frustrated men and women in France are sick of politics, too. Watching their presidential debates and TV talk shows, they want to see someone who will secure the nation to bring back their lost pride.
Le Pens nationalist proclamations that France should not [be] dragged into wars that are not hers and other Trump-style make France great again slogans have become popular simplifications.
When the decision is upon them, will French voters enter the populist realm of the fantasmatic?
Populism can be far more dangerous than it seems, taking all forms of constraints, from negating the diversity of society to censoring individual liberties and free speech.
Are the French ready for that?
It would be devastating to see France a nation built on the ideals of transparency, equality, freedom, responsibility and compassion taken down in a tragedy of its own making. Life is not a reality show, and demagogues do not make good rulers.
Take it from a people who know: there is no glorious past waiting to be restored. There is no golden future, either.
As the prophet Zarathustra pithily put it, Not perhaps ye yourselves, my brethren! But into fathers and forefathers of the Superman could ye transform yourselves: and let that be your best creating!
Go here to see the original:
Posted in Rationalism
Comments Off on The French people don’t know the dangers of autocratic populism: a view from Pakistan – The Conversation AU
The French People Don’t Know The Dangers Of Autocratic Populism … – Huffington post (press release) (blog)
Posted: at 11:38 pm
Following in the footsteps of the United States, the French are looking to terrible simplifications to solve their problems as they head to the second round of their presidential election on May 7.
Polls predict that Marine Le Pen, candidate of the far-right National Front party could take 38% of the vote. Even if she loses on Sunday, some commentators believe that this campaign has paved the way for a victory in Frances 2022 election.
Viewed from Pakistan, this situation is a direct blow to a country which, in our minds, has been the bastion of democracy, rationalism and enlightenment.
Frances embrace of Le Pen is all the more concerning because, in Pakistan, we know exactly what autocratic populism looks like, and what it can lead to.
Founded in 1947 during the Partition with India, Pakistan started its journey into nationhood in the turbulent 1950s, after an independence bill liberated the Indian subcontinent from the British empire.
Ordinary Pakistanis were struggling to eke out an existence. But the new nations leaders were experimenting with an ideology, inspired by two nation theory of Pakistans main thinker, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, that advocated for separated nations for India and Pakistan based on religion. To some extent this communal approach prevented the more critical progressive left from developing in Pakistan.
The 1960s gave rise not only to industry but also to numerous economic crises that challenged the fragile young nation. By the end of the decade, frustration was on the rise among the Pakistani people. Widespread protests ultimately brought down president Ayub Khan in 1968, ending Pakistans first military dictatorship.
This change opened the doors for Pakistans first populist leader, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, whose Pakistan People Party (PPP) emerged at the end of the 1960s atop a rising tide of public approval and support. People loved its slogan, roti, kapra, aur makan bread, clothing, and a home and in 1970 Butto was democratically elected as Pakistans fourth president.
Thats how Pakistan entered the age of populist politics: at the ballot box. The PPP expounded the same goals that we hear contemporary populist parties claim, namely that of freeing the state from tyrannical and incompetent rulers.
Zulfikar Bhutto speaks as President of Pakistan on the war with Bangladesh, NFO archive.
In the troubled context of the war with India and the subsequent creation of independent Bangladesh in 1971, Bhutto maintained his grasp on power. In 1973 he was elected Pakistans ninth prime minister, claiming that he wanted to bring democratic changes to the country.
His populism took an anti-imperialist guise, which garnered wide domestic support given both Pakistans own history and the state of world affairs at the time, which included US atrocities in the Vietnam War.
But when his power was challenged, particularly on labour and trade questions, Bhutto abandoned democracy. In 1977 he imposed martial law and curfews throughout the country.
The civil unrest that followed galvanised General Zia ul Haq. He deposed Bhutto in a military coup that same year and had him hanged in 1979.
This pattern that has been repeated in Pakistan since then. Our shaky democracy never found stability after Zia, who was killed in a plane crash in 1988.
Four successive democratic governments were unconstitutionally ousted by military leaders, truncating their five-year terms and creating a chaotic alternation between civilian and army rule.
Democracy would not return until 2008, when the Pakistan Peoples Party won a presidential election on a wave of sympathy for the 2007 assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto (daughter of Zulfiqar). For the first time in nearly 20 years, a government was able to complete its five-year term.
Today, Pakistan once again stands at the crossroads of civilian and military rule. The unpopular sitting government lost credibility with the Panama Papers scandal in which the huge financial assets of incumbent Prime Minister Nawaz Sharifs children were exposed and opponents like the former cricket player Imran Khan are now suggesting that the military should take over.
France is still very far from dictatorship, of course. But Pakistans history shows that opening the door to populist leaders is a big step towards a dangerous and unknown future.
If you flirt with extremism, you have to be willing to accept its dire consequences.
Today, populism in Pakistan has a broad and idealistic agenda, ranging from sustenance for the poor to changing the world order. Its euphoric 1960s ideals failed because they assumed the possibility of change as a push-button operation.
Populist rhetoric also suits the sensation-hungry, ratings-seeking corporate media. In Pakistan the media has openly espoused populism by regularly portraying politics as a dirty game of power-hungry politicians. This narrative gives rise to cynical and anti-politics attitudes within the general public.
To make matters worse, the press covers some of the worlds demagogues, in the US as at home, in a very light manner. Such populist extremists are, of course, happy to win more positive media spin.
Some 8,000 kms from Islamabad, frustrated men and women in France are sick of politics, too. Watching their presidential debates and TV talk shows, they want to see someone who will secure the nation to bring back their lost pride.
Le Pens nationalist proclamations that France should not [be] dragged into wars that are not hers and other Trump-style make France great again slogans have become popular simplifications.
When the decision is upon them, will French voters enter the populist realm of the fantasmatic?
Abstract from Charlie Chaplins The Great Dictator Speech
Are the French ready for that?
It would be devastating to see France a nation built on the ideals of transparency, equality, freedom, responsibility and compassion taken down in a tragedy of its own making. Life is not a reality show, and demagogues do not make good rulers.
Take it from a people who know: there is no glorious past waiting to be restored. There is no golden future, either.
As the prophet Zarathustra pithily put it, Not perhaps ye yourselves, my brethren! But into fathers and forefathers of the Superman could ye transform yourselves: and let that be your best creating!
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
Follow this link:
Posted in Rationalism
Comments Off on The French People Don’t Know The Dangers Of Autocratic Populism … – Huffington post (press release) (blog)
Does free speech allow students to post racist images of their classmates online? – Los Angeles Times
Posted: at 11:37 pm
Its hard to imagine what attracted a handful of teenagers in the liberal, highly educated Bay Area town of Albany to the ugliness of racism. But something did, and theyre paying for it with suspensions (and in one case, possibly, expulsion) that will stay on their records, as well as the contempt of most of their fellow students.
The contempt they fully deserve and had better be prepared to live with (though there also are claims that students acted violently toward them, and that cant be allowed either). The suspensions, which are being contested in a lawsuit brought by their parents, are a murkier matter.
If all they were doing, via their private accounts on Instagram, was expressing racist beliefs and liking what others were saying, they are entitled to do so without official repercussions from their school. Students, like adults, are protected under the 1st Amendment and may express even highly offensive opinions freely.
The situation doesnt look that simple, though. According to some news reports, there might have been two Instagram offenses, and at least one of them involved images that clearly went beyond political expression: photos of students from the teenagers school all female and all but one a person of color with nooses drawn around their necks, as well as a similar image of the schools girls basketball coach, who is African American. Some of the photos reportedly were shown alongside images of apes.
Making the distinction between such scenarios pure expression of belief vs. threatening, bullying online treatment of specific students and faculty is critical to reconciling students recognized free-speech rights with the limits the courts have rightly set on behavior that disrupts school, even if it doesnt take place on campus.
One of the lawyers representing the troublemakers likened what they did to a group of students hanging out together while one drew an offensive sketch. Not quite. Just because they were in their own homes, using private accounts, doesnt necessarily mean their actions were entirely private; there were other students reading their posts (and obviously enough social media followers for an uninvolved student to bring this to school officials attention). Nor is privacy the only issue involved. While the students would have had every right to show up in support of a white nationalist rally, in a public place, they would not have the right to shout threats toward their classmates.
The 1st Amendment offers great freedom to students, as it does to adults, but not the freedom to bully or make others on campus feel threatened.
Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinion and Facebook
See more here:
Does free speech allow students to post racist images of their classmates online? - Los Angeles Times
Posted in Free Speech
Comments Off on Does free speech allow students to post racist images of their classmates online? – Los Angeles Times
Arkansas judge’s case hinges on limits of free speech – Arkansas News
Posted: at 11:36 pm
By John Lyon / Arkansas News Bureau
LITTLE ROCK Recent actions by an Arkansas judge known for being outspoken on political issues have raised complex questions: Where should the line be drawn between a judges right of free speech and the need for an impartial judiciary, and who should draw that line?
The controversy
In an April 10 blog post, Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen spoke out against the death penalty, saying, Premeditated and deliberate killing of defenseless persons including defenseless persons who have been convicted of murder is not morally justifiable.
On April 14, Good Friday, Griffen issued a temporary restraining order that barred the state from using a certain drug in executions. Later the same say, he appeared at an anti-death penalty protest in front of the Governors Mansion, where he lay strapped on a cot.
Attorney General Leslie Rutledge complained to the state Supreme Court, which vacated Griffens order and barred him from hearing any cases involving the death penalty. The state proceeded to carry out four executions last month.
The court also referred the matter to the Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission, which enforces the statess rules of judicial conduct.
One of those rules is: A judge shall act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary, and shall avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety.
The commission could impose sanctions or recommend that the Supreme Court remove Griffen from the bench. Some state legislators have said they believe Griffens actions may have been serious enough to merit impeachment, and last week the House adopted rules for bringing forth articles of impeachment against a sitting elected official.
If the House were to issue articles of impeachment against Griffen, the Senate would hold a trial.
(Griffen) should never again be allowed to hold office of any sort in Arkansas. We as the General Assembly can remove the stain that Griffen has left on our judicial integrity, Sen. Trent Garner, R-El Dorado, said in a news release last week.
Griffen has said in a filing with the Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission that his participation in the protest was constitutionally protected and was not directly related to the case in which he issued the temporary restraining order. That case involved a claim by a medical supply company that the state used deception to obtain a drug from the company for use in executions.
Griffen, who also is pastor of New Millennium Church in Little Rock, said the complaint filed against him with the commission is a naked attempt to intimidate me for exercising my rights to freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of religious expression, and right to peaceful assembly that are protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
The judge has filed a complaint with the commission against the Supreme Court and a complaint with the Committee on Professional Conduct against Rutledge. He says he was barred from hearing death-penalty cases without being given a chance to respond, in violation of his due-process rights.
Griffens outspoken past
Griffen has been investigated by the commission before for his public statements. In 2008, the panel looked into comments Griffen made criticizing then-President George W. Bush and the Iraq War, but ultimately the panel dropped the case after Griffen filed a lawsuit against it.
In 2002, the commission admonished Griffen for commenting on racial issues at the University of Arkansas. An admonishment is the mildest sanction the commission can give.
Some say Griffens recent statements against the death penalty, which also have included blog posts, are more objectionable than his past political comments, which did not directly relate to cases before him.
Now we have a situation where he blogs and makes a very clear statement and basically says you cant be a Christian and be for the death penalty, and a matter of days later he takes up a death penalty case, said Rep. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville. Theres a profound appearance of impropriety there.
Ballinger said Griffen was removed from that high-profile case because his alleged bias was widely publicized, but he asked, What about the number of other individuals who come before his court and dont get in the media?
Griffen said in an April 19 blog post, People have strong views about capital punishment. I know that. I have strong views about capital punishment also. But none of our views about capital punishment, whatever they may be and however strongly we may hold them, affect the facts in the (temporary restraining order) motion I reviewed and decided on Good Friday.
Separation of powers
Sen. Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, has expressed concern about the Legislature investigating judges when the judicial branch has its own mechanism for doing so.
We used to teach our kids there are three distinct, separate branches of government, said Elliott, a former schoolteacher. I think we really need to get back to thinking about that letting, in this case, the judiciary deal with the issue if there is something with which to be dealt.
Ballinger, a lawyer, said he hopes the Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission will take action that makes it unnecessary for the Legislature to act, but he said it is within the powers granted to the Legislature by the Arkansas Constitution to impeach an elected official for gross misconduct in office, regardless of what branch of government the official is in.
The constitution contemplates a separation of powers between the branches of government, but it also contemplates a system of checks and balances between those branches, he said.
Increased publicity
Ballinger, a death penalty supporter, said he is aware that impeachment proceedings would draw more attention to Griffen and his anti-death penalty views. That may be exactly what the judge is hoping for, he said.
An unfortunate side effect of moving forward with his impeachment is hes going to get all the headlines he wants, Ballinger said.
See the original post:
Arkansas judge's case hinges on limits of free speech - Arkansas News
Posted in Freedom of Speech
Comments Off on Arkansas judge’s case hinges on limits of free speech – Arkansas News
Atheists: Growing band of non-believers are finding a stronger voice – Irish Independent
Posted: at 11:35 pm
Atheists: Growing band of non-believers are finding a stronger voice
Independent.ie
Brian Whiteside can barely keep up with the demand. In January and February - the time of year when loved-up couples start to plan their weddings - this humanist celebrant estimates that he has to tell six of them that he won't be available for their special day. That's six couples every single day.
Brian Whiteside can barely keep up with the demand. In January and February - the time of year when loved-up couples start to plan their weddings - this humanist celebrant estimates that he has to tell six of them that he won't be available for their special day. That's six couples every single day.
"There has been a huge rise in the numbers of people seeking non-religious ceremonies in the past few years," he says. "I've scaled back a bit, but some of my colleagues would do 80 weddings a year. And the demand keeps going up."
Last year, the Humanist Association of Ireland officiated at 1,500 weddings. A further 6,500 were civil ceremonies. "There were 12,000 Catholic weddings last year," Whiteside said. "That's 53pc of all weddings. Just 10 years previously, in 2006, there were 16,000 Catholic weddings here - 73pc of the total. And the figures for 10 years before that again, in 1996, were overwhelmingly religious - just 6pc were non-religious. Today, that figure today could be as high as 44pc."
For Whiteside, such evidence points to the huge rise of atheism. "It's a sign of society growing up, of people deciding that they don't need to keep up the pretence of being religious when they felt no religious devotion."
The figures are borne out in the latest census. Some 468,421 people - roughly one in every 10 men, women and children in Ireland - indicated 'no religion'. It's a 73.6pc increase since 2011.
Michael Nugent, head of Atheist Ireland, says the figure is likely to be far greater. "We're asked a leading question: 'What is your religion?' It should be, 'Do you have a religion?' A lot of people put down the religion they had when they were children out of habit, and then you have the head of the house filling out the census and sometimes assuming that family members have a religion simply because they were baptised."
Nugent is hopeful that the wording will be changed for the 2021 census which, he says, "would truly reflect how many atheists there are in Ireland right now".
The atheist lobby has made its presence known over the past few weeks. First, there was the controversy surrounding the proposed move of the National Maternity Hospital to the St Vincent's Hospital campus, and to land owned by the Catholic nuns order, the Sisters of Charity.
Then, this week, there's been the contentious vote in the Dil which would compel all TDs to stand for daily prayer and would insist that the Ceann Comhairle be the one to deliver it, irrespective of his or her views.
For John Hamill, such official secularisation can't come soon enough. "Ireland has changed enormously in the past 20 or 30 years and there's a huge cohort of people who do not believe in religion of any description."
He has been atheist for as long as he can remember. "People sometimes say to me, 'Are you angry with the Church? Is that why you don't believe?' It's nothing to do with that: I merely look at Catholicism - and any religion you could care to mention - and think, 'It's simply not true'. I just don't believe in a higher being or a God, call it what you will." Hamill is originally from Belfast but lives in Castleblaney, Co Monaghan, with his wife and four children. They attend the local Educate Together school and he says they are fortunate to have one nearby. "A lot of people feel they have to baptise their children in order to get them into school, because so many are Catholic-run, and I think that's the next big thing that has to be tackled.
"I'm not saying there shouldn't be religion. It should be a personal choice. I would be just as opposed to a school telling children there is no god. I want our kids to be able to make up their own minds."
It's a philosophy espoused by Helen O'Shea (pictured), a mother-of-five from Ardee, Co Louth. "I want my children to make up their own minds," she says. "I don't want to be dogmatic about what I do or don't believe. That sort of freedom was denied to many people of my generation. Growing up, it felt as though the Catholic Church held huge sway over the country."
O'Shea's upbringing was normal for the time, right down to the "obligatory uncle who was a priest", but she started asking questions. "I don't know if I ever believed it," she says, "and I was about 12 or 13 when I decided that I didn't want anything to do with it. The communion thing, I just couldn't get my head around, and I had a fundamental problem with the concept of confession."
Her first child, David, was born in 1990 and she had him baptised because she didn't believe there was much choice at the time, and because she thought it could be difficult to find a school that would enrol a non-christened child.
But none of her four subsequent children - all born much more recently - have been baptised. "The Ireland of the past 10 or 12 years is a very different place to what it was like in 1990," she says. "Societal norms have changed hugely and there are a huge number of people who have no religion. Their voices are being heard now. For too long, we had to keep silent."
But some believe old habits die hard. Hamill says an article he was commissioned to write about his atheism by a regional newspaper was pulled when the editor disliked his reference to the Virgin Mary as "a carpenter's wife", although as Hamill points out, such a description is to be found in the Bible.
For another non-believer, a self-described "virulent atheist", it's time to stop the politeness. "For years, we've had to kowtow and listen to celibate men in dresses telling us what to do when it comes to sex, abortion and so on," he says.
"Well, those days are now in the past and even those who say they have belief tend to pick and choose the parts that suits their lifestyle or agenda.
"Would it not be best to simply say, 'Look folks, it's all rubbish and your faith is simply down to a fear of death.' You want to think there's some other magical existence out there, but you're wrong."
Helen O'Shea sees the message as far less confrontational.
"I know some atheist parents mightn't want to tell their children that they don't believe heaven exists, but what my husband and I do is reinforce the fact that we get one life and we should make the very most of it."
Indo Review
Read more from the original source:
Atheists: Growing band of non-believers are finding a stronger voice - Irish Independent
Posted in Atheism
Comments Off on Atheists: Growing band of non-believers are finding a stronger voice – Irish Independent
Paging Star-Lord! Hubble Spies Hundreds of Galaxies That Need Guarding – Space.com
Posted: at 11:34 pm
As Star-Lord and his team head to the big screen this weekend to guard a galaxy in the Marvel universe, new images from the Hubble Space Telescope remind us that there are far more galaxies in our own universe without any superheroes to protect them from evil villains.
"Much like the eclectic group of space rebels in the upcoming film 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2', NASAs Hubble Space Telescope has some amazing superpowers, specifically when it comes to observing innumerable galaxies flung across time and space," NASA officials said in a statement that was published along with some incredible new views of galaxies in deep space.
A gorgeous galaxy cluster named Abell 370 stars in the images, which NASA released on Thursday (May 4). The cluster contains hundreds of galactic neighbors bound together by their own gravitational pull. Abell 370 lies about 4 billion light-years away in the constellation Cetus (the Sea Monster). But you can also see more distant galaxies that lie behind the cluster. [The 10 Must-Read 'Guardians of the Galaxy' Stories]
Hubble Space Telescope image of the galaxy cluster Abell 370.
The background galaxies in appear cloudy and distorted due to an effect called gravitational lensing. All that gravity from the hundreds of galaxies inside the cluster bands the light that comes from the other side, causing those distant objects to appear warped.
"These far-flung galaxies are too faint for Hubble to see directly, NASA officials said in the statement. "Instead, the cluster acts as a huge lens in space that magnifies and stretches images of background galaxies like a funhouse mirror." One of these warped galaxies seen in Hubble's new images is nicknamed "the Dragon" for its shape and size.
These images from the Hubble Space Telescope's Frontier Fields program features massive galaxy clusters that act as gravitational lenses in space, magnifying and stretching images of distant objects in the background that would otherwise be too small and faint for Hubble to see.
Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble telescope has provided the deepest views of the cosmos we've even seen. Unlike the superpowers of the heroes in the Marvel realm, Hubble's superpower is far from science fiction. So if and when you decide to go see "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2" (which hits movie theaters Friday, May 5), maybe you'll take a moment to stop and think about the countless defenseless galaxies in the real universe that Hubble is keeping an eye on.
Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her @hannekescience. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.
See the original post:
Paging Star-Lord! Hubble Spies Hundreds of Galaxies That Need Guarding - Space.com
Posted in Hubble Telescope
Comments Off on Paging Star-Lord! Hubble Spies Hundreds of Galaxies That Need Guarding – Space.com
The US Without NATO Could Mean No Wars and Terrorism in the World – Center for Research on Globalization
Posted: at 11:33 pm
NATO was primarily founded by the US with then-12 members in 1949 as a bulwark against Soviet aggression. NATOs mission terminated following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the dissolution of Warsaw pact in 1991. At that time, there was no giant beyond Soviet Union to take up position, though the US scrambled to keep NATO running, otherwise the disbandment of NATO could mean a recipe for the USs shrinking of supremacy over the world.
The other advantage by maintaining NATO is that it is a combined force that allows US to hold an overall grip on the European region. NATO involves 25 European member states among others while the European Union and the NATO have 22 members in common. In this row, France, Britain and the US are nuclear powers.
According to NATO treatys article 5,
if a member of the organization faces direct incursion from outside powers, the rest of members shall spring into its defense.
The most spectacular example and the only tragedy ever seen that represents this article was 9/11 attacks. The NATO powers were, indeed, on their own to go for helping the US, yet the enormity of world trade centers havoc earned their sympathy to join US forces in the invasion of Afghanistan.
NATOs latest mission began in 2003 in Afghanistan where it deployed thousands of troops through International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). By the term NATO, the finger is pointed at those few member states that really run things and hold a massive stake on the ground. The US and UK are the only two spearheads when it comes to the Afghan war. The rests below these two in the list are just operating under NATO with far fewer troops or some may even contribute to appease the US.
The US deployed NATO forces in Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan and Indian Ocean, of which Uzbekistan demanded several million dollars as payment for exploitation of its soil against Afghanistan.
The second to US at the helm of NATO is the UK. This leading NATO member played more like an influential conduit for the passage of NATOs proposals and plans into the European Union. But this trend seems to start faltering after the revolutionary Brexit referendum in the UK last year. Although the NATO and UK officials have ruled out a likely split of UK from the NATO following Brexit, it is presumed that the deadlock would start to loom in the longer term if not in near one.
NATO binds its members to dedicate at least 2 percent of their GDP for defense spending, while only five members including the US, the UK, Greece, Poland and Estonia are less or well above the target. Amazingly, the powerful economies such as Germany and France are falling short in this area.
As aftereffect of the Brexit referendum, the UK could lose the most senior military position of Deputy Supreme Allied Commander which it held for more than 60 years. The deputy leadership among other key roles could possibly slip to France.
The other turning point triggered by Brexit is the EUs intention to speed up the creation of independent military headquarters outside NATO. This idea, however, was frequently downplayed and turned down by the UK which it saw as a threat to the role of NATO. The UK had said last year it would veto such a proposal, because it may possibly undercut UKs vigorous engagement in NATO.
Given the pre-emptive use of force, NATOs chief Jens Stoltenberg last year in a meeting in Brussels urged allies to keep anti-Russian sanctions alive. He said:
The international community must keep pressuring Russia to respect its obligations.
If it sees all this allegations to be hurled at Russia over Ukraines standoff, then NATO too has to end a protracted and costly war in Afghanistan, which Russia terms as offensive.
It was until Russias annexation of Crimea when NATO and Russia led easy marriage and would strike several cooperation deals. In the wake of Crimeas annexation whose reason was inferred as Russias fear over NATOs plan to build military headquarters there the organization froze relationship with Russia.
As a major determinant of NATO, Germany press for exercising of sanctions against Russia at a time this country is Russias largest trade partner, followed by France and Italy. By all this, we discover that the NATO and the EU go on the same trajectory after the latter approved anti-Russian bans and embargoes over Ukraines crisis which was sparked by NATO in the first place. While others believe the EU is NATO in the guise of a Union.
Given the EUs drastic need for Russias energy resources as well as the broad Russian markets for European products, the EU, more or less, is eager to cut the intensity of sanctions and edge it towards the end. Moreover, the German businessmen and economists have vocalized opposition to further and tougher sanctions on Russia.
On the heyday of NATO deployments and engagements in Afghanistan, some wrecked sectors of this victimized country were shared out among a number of members for the purpose of revival. The US assumed the training and strengthening of the Afghan Army, Japan was handed over the Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) project, Germany undertook training of the Afghan police, the UK picked war on narcotics and stationed only in southern Helmand province despite having second highest number of troops following the US, and Italy took on the responsibility of the justice sector reform.
Fewer would fit into their tasks, as Japan had no servicemen or armed forces at the time to forcefully disarm the militias. And the UKs failure to tackle narcotics is largely on display in the eyes of world as Afghanistan still ranks the first for feeding world habits of addiction, let alone the booming drug business worldwide. Lastly, Italy was a poor choice for the justice sectors reform thanks to being a big law-breaker and Mafia country in the Europe.
On the Syrian side, the latest chemical attack bears out the fact on the collusion and conspiracies of critical NATO members behind peppering of blames on Assads regime. First the US used every effort at disposal to direct the blame on Syrian government. Later the UKs also first in toeing the USs line foreign minister Boris Johnson meaninglessly called off an official trip to Russia allegedly over this countrys involvement in Syria and the gas attack. In third place, France inconsiderately released a report blaming Syrian government for chemical gas attack without a shred of evidence.
All these concurred attacks come as the international neutral investigators as well as Russian team sought to inspect the chemical attack for findings, but they said the US blocked them from participating in a formal investigation.
If it was not for NATO or concerted conspiracies, the UKs Boris Johnson or French report had nothing to do with a far-regional chemical weapon attack, even if it was perpetrated by very Assads government.
The NATOs pro-war European members are the cornerstone of the USs decision-making process on waging a war or invading a country. North Korea, for example, might be on the brink of bursting into a war with US. Apart from South Koreas opposition to the US-DPRKs likely armed strife, the US might still strongly hesitate to instigate another endless conflict without consent of leading NATO members, importantly because it is unwilling to bear the brunt of costs and arms alone, and thats why compelling of the NATO members to raise defense spending matters.
Back in 2003, France and Germany stood critical to the US war plans against Iraq. The Wall Street Journal at that time accused Germany of actively promoting American defeat. It concluded by declaring
What President Bush calls a coalition of the willing will become Americas new security alliance, even though the two states continued to take several diplomatic initiatives to avert a military strike against Iraq which were not well covered in media.
The same year, French president Jacques Chirac and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin presented a joint declaration by France, Germany and Russia calling for extended weapons inspections in Iraq. It said:
There is still an alternative to war. The use of violence can only be the last resort.
It was a riposte to President Bushs remarks just a week earlier that said,
The game is over.
After NATO representatives from Germany, France and Belgium vetoed military preparations for the protection of Turkey in case of war in Iraq, President Bush publicly accused Berlin, Paris and Brussels of damaging NATO.
Most NATO allies were distaste to the USs invasion of Iraq, because the ploy to draw them into this [Iraq] war was not as elaborate as that of Afghanistan [9/11 attacks] and unconvincing for the European members. More than a decade later now, we notice a U-turn or a fair degree of rotation in some European and NATO members posture towards globalization of war and warmongering. It can be concluded that if major aides of the US the UK, France and Germany withhold military and non-military support to this superpower, the peace may descend into the earth over the long haul.
Go here to read the rest:
The US Without NATO Could Mean No Wars and Terrorism in the World - Center for Research on Globalization
Posted in NATO
Comments Off on The US Without NATO Could Mean No Wars and Terrorism in the World – Center for Research on Globalization
Why we need NATO in a single bullet – The Boston Globe
Posted: at 11:33 pm
124RF/STAFF ILLUSTRATION
Its just 5.56 centimeters long about 2 inches and only 5.7 millimeters in diameter at its business end. In its most common American variant, it weighs 12.3 grams. It can reach a muzzle velocity of over 3,000 feet per second, and it is designed to penetrate three-eighths of an inch of steel at 350 meters.
It is, of course, a bullet.
Advertisement
In 1980, after decades of development and negotiation, the NATO member states agreed to use this particular cartridge and it is now one of the most common small-arms munitions in the world. The argument for such standardization is obvious: In combat, being able to share ammunition can make the difference between surviving a firefight and being overrun. The argument against standardization is that should one nation want to deploy another option a more powerful bullet, for instance it cant. At least not within the confines of the alliance.
NATO has been a central pillar of US security policy since the Cold War. In 2016, candidate Donald Trump proposed upending that 70-year consensus, calling the alliance obsolete a statement repeated by President-elect Trump on Jan. 15. But such a claim ignores whats really lost when such common ventures break apart.
An alliance, like any collaboration, doesnt work simply because its members agree on a course of action. It requires much more: Standardization of equipment served as a force multiplier for Western armies against the Soviet Union. But when humans succeed in striving toward a common goal, much more than mere common gear is involved: practices, processes, and a shared vision of risk and reward. This cohesion creats powerful intellectual bonds and, over time, lead to the accumulation of knowledge.
Europe is quite capable of shaping and paying for its own security, but NATOs structure remains in place.
Consider the scientific alliance through which a group of men set out to measure the weather.
The story of what made the world modern is often told in heroic terms, tales of grand ideas, or battles, or inventions and inventors. Isaac Newton, Gottfried Leibniz, Galileo Galilei these are the kind of figures remembered as the leaders of the scientific revolution. But a host of others built an intellectual infrastructure vital to the ongoing advance of science for over three centuries. At the heart of that effort: agreed standards for both material and habits of mind that have propelled the transformation in human knowledge over the last four centuries.
Advertisement
Thomas Tompion, for example, is hardly as celebrated as Robert Hooke, Englands Galileo. But he built the first watches driven by the balance spring mechanism that Hooke had invented, which yielded far more accurate time-keeping than prior approaches. Tompion was hugely prolific his workshop produced roughly 5,500 watches but perhaps his most wholly original idea had nothing to do with the mechanical side of his designs. From the 1670s forward, Tompion inscribed numbers on each watch and other devices that emerged from his shop, in the first known use of serial numbers.
In the 1670s, neither Tompion nor anyone else produced perfectly replicated devices. Serial numbers were thus not an assertion that each of his watches would measure time to a specific standard of accuracy. Rather, subjecting his creations to the rule of number advanced the possibility of such standardization, providing the first piece of data needed to ensure that one measurement matches another to be confident a second is a second is a second no matter who is observing and no matter where the observation is taking place.
While this first step toward the standardization of the tools of science was a milestone, it took the development of a common process shared habits, ways of working to truly transform the eager curiosity of the 17th and 18th centuries into a revolutionary new approach to knowledge, the one we now call science. In 1705, the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society published an article by the philosopher John Locke. It was a modest work, just a weather diary: a series of daily observations of temperature, barometric pressure, precipitation, cloud cover. He was a careful observer, working with the best available instruments, a set built by Tompion himself. On Sunday, Dec. 13, 1691, for example, Locke left his rooms just before 9 a.m. The temperature was 3.4 on Tompions scale a little chilly, but not a hard frost. Atmospheric pressure had dropped slightly compared to the day before, 30 inches of mercury compared to 30.04. There was a mild east wind, 1 on Lockes improvised scale, enough to just move the leaves. The cloud cover was thick and unbroken which is to say it was an entirely unsurprising December day in the east of England: dull, damp, and raw.
On the pages of the Royal Societys journal, though, these perfectly banal details coalesce into a more significant advance. Locke described his methods and approach, what instruments he used; how he used them; when, each day, he made his measurements; everything anyone would need to interpret his data or to observe on their own. That made Lockes report more than a mere list of facts about local weather patterns in Essex. It described a method, a process that could produce new knowledge.
The creation of standards, for equipment and for process, was and remains central to what makes science work as an institution, an enterprise, and not simply as a siloed exercise in individual curiosity. It was designed that way from the start: Locke got inspired to tackle meteorology when Robert Hooke published a call in the Royal Societys journal, seeking volunteers who would buy instruments, calibrate them, and take weather data every day.
To put this move into the jargon of the NATO alliance, Hooke set out to forge the scientific revolutions own force multiplier. His army of citizen scientists committed to a shared use of the apparatus of inquiry thermometers and the like and to a social compact: how they would collect new knowledge (in scientific reports) combined with the obligation to share, to publish, all to come up with a picture of the natural world that no one of them could possibly have assembled on their own.
PATRICK BAZ/AFP/Getty Images
A US soldier with the 101st Airborne Division fires an AT-4 as Combat Outpost Nolen on the outskirts of the village of Jellawar came under Taliban attack on September 11, 2010.
Fundamentally, NATO works in much the same way, however much its scale and complexity exceed Hookes network of weather watchers. The NATO round is an example of the more obvious parallel, the need to ensure that everyones tools work together. A common cartridge hits the highest level of cooperation it is truly interchangeable. Much of the time, though, NATO allies look for interoperability, ways to ensure different systems can still function on the same battlefield, just as researchers from the 17th century onward must work out how to compare observations acquired on different instruments.
Such interoperability depends on a huge number of often seemingly small choices. Tanks need regular refueling, for example, but NATO allies deploy several different types of tanks. So resupply operations have to bring not just the fuel, but various filters, too, so that one tanker truck can serve every piece of armor in need. When a battery dies? To get a jump from a European tank to an American one, soldiers must use a variety of cables and adapters. Such details matter in action, lives may depend on having the right electrical connector and given the amount of equipment used to fight modern war, there is a lot of specific hardware that has to be identified, agreed on, and deployed. But even so, this is the easier side of what it takes to make NATO go.
The more complicated and more important task: forging a common approach to thinking and communicating across the alliance. Common material is important, but whats vital is a common methodology, a common language. Sometimes, its purely vocabulary at issue. You have to be proficient in language in English to have a common perspective particularly in combat, says Colonel Ivan Mikuz, formerly a NATO strategic planner, now the Slovenian defense attach in Washington.
Just as essential, and more difficult to achieve, NATO over the decades has developed common habits of thought, the procedures its personnel use to work together on every level from small unit operations to strategic planning. You have to find agreement in a structured way, Mikuz says. Doctrine and tactics that are commonly shared.
This plays out from the top down, where strategic planning is (or at least is supposed to follow) a shared formal decision making process, complete with checklists and a sequence of problems to be solved. The same enforced common approach extends to combat. When a wounded soldier needs to be evacuated from the battlefield, for example, there is a standard nine-line form that must be filled out in English. The form tells the medical team where they need to go, how to contact those in need, the severity of the wounds, whether enemy troops are nearby, and so on. Interoperability is much more than technical. It connects people on many levels, Mikuz says. When those connections fray, it can cost lives.
Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images
Cartridges lie in the sand as Canadian Task Force Kandahar soldiers take part in a shooting exercise at Camp Nathan Smith on June 7, 2010.
None of this is to say that collaboration within NATO works perfectly. Since 1989, the fall of the Berlin wall, NATO has atrophied, says US Army Colonel Mark Aitken. War today moves quickly, he says, and NATO hasnt kept up not on the hardware, nor the human part of collaboration. Member armies use a variety of digital systems to control artillery fire, for example, and many of the systems dont talk to each other. On the human side different NATO members take different approaches to making sure a fire mission will hit what its aimed at, and nothing else. The US standard says that it should take no more than three minutes to make sure the downrange area is clear and fire a shell. In a recent multinational exercise, the fastest we got, the colonel says, was just under an hour.
That failure illustrates just how much work goes into making even long-established alliances function effectively. Arguments for preserving NATO tend to focus on the larger issues of international security. Aitken emphasizes that leaving NATO would damage US relations with Europe, risking the destabilization of the continent. One retired military officer puts it this way: Whats the cost of walking away from the alliance? 40,000 guys. Thats what the Europeans put into Afghanistan and thats 40,000 Americans that didnt have to show up.
Behind such strategic questions, though, theres this to consider: Should the alliance shatter, all the social infrastructure that allows people to collaborate will break with it. On the most obvious level, different nations could, for example, begin using weapons that dont fire the NATO round. There isnt an infinite supply of jumper cable adapters. More deeply, the human systems, all the formal and informal lines of communication NATOs officers and enlisted forces have worked out over the decades can fall apart much more quickly than they can be remade. How long would it take before a wounded soldier dies en route to care because the habits embedded in that nine-line form no longer hold?
On April 12, after a meeting with the NATO secretary general, President Trump announced, I said it was obsolete. Its no longer obsolete. While the ease with which Trump stuck his back-flip doesnt yield much confidence, for now it seems the United States intends to remain in the alliance. But even as a thought experiment, recognizing what truly is required to sustain complex human collaborations suggests how much there is to lose.
Get Arguable with Jeff Jacoby in your inbox:
Our conservative columnist offers a weekly take on everything from politics to pet peeves.
John Locke died in October 1704, seven months before his weather diary appeared in print. In what can thus be read as late, if not last words, he there allowed himself to dream of what might come from his having indulged his Curiosity. His intellectual heirs, he wrote, could accumulate enough data in enough places so that several Rules and Observations concerning the extent of Winds and Rains, [and could] be in time established, to the great advantage of Mankind.
Over the three centuries since those words appeared, we have done just that, and so much more. We abandon the kinds of connections that produce such accomplishments at our peril.
The rest is here:
Why we need NATO in a single bullet - The Boston Globe
Posted in NATO
Comments Off on Why we need NATO in a single bullet – The Boston Globe
Local soldiers recognized for NATO operation – Tbnewswatch.com
Posted: at 11:33 pm
THUNDER BAY - As a way of strengthening ties with partnering nations under the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, several members from the local Canadian Forces regiment travelled to Europe to participate in a joint operation.
In a ceremony on Sunday, five members of the Lake Superior Scottish Regiment were awarded Special Service Medals with Bar NATO for their deployment overseas with NATO as part of Operation Reassurance.
The recipients included Cpl. Gabriel Green, Cpl. Ben Deley, Cpl. Allan Faykes, Cpl. Andrew Biscardi, and Master Cpl. Billy McElroy.
Its a great honour to be here and its great to be here in front of the civilian population that is here, said Cpl. Gabriel Green after receiving his medal.
The five members travelled to Poland last August where they were deployed for six months. During their deployment, they participated in exercises with fellow NATO armies throughout Eastern Europe.
The biggest thing I learned over there is just how different the Canadian army is compared to most other nations, Green said. The Romanian army, the Polish army, the Lithuania army, even the German army were very different in terms of the way that they operate, the equipment they use, and some of the tactics they employ.
But those differences could be beneficial, Green added, saying he brought home a lot of great experiences and ideas after training with the Romanian army.
It was great to see and experience the way that the Romanias, for example, employ their armored vehicles, he said.
Cpl. Andrew Biscardi was also deployed to Eastern Europe and he said the entire experience was very rewarding.
You get to meet a lot of different cultures and its interesting to see what other parts of the world are like, he said.
As with any military exercise, its not going to be a walk through the park, but both Green and Biscardi said they did not face too many challenges.
Other than the normal military challenges of living in the field and enjoying the weather, it was good, Biscardi said.
During the ceremony on Sunday, the Lake Superior Scottish Regiment also promoted chief warrant officer Harry Kaucharik to the rank of regimental sergeant major.
This is the top of the career for a non-commissioned officer, Kaucharik said. Thirty-three years of service and Im very proud to finally become the RSN, to take over the job of caring for the welfare of the men.
Kaucharik has served three peacekeeping tours, a tour in Afghanistan, and served with NATO. Seeing young members of his regiment receive honours for their own overseas service is a very proud moment for Kaucharik.
I know what it feels like it, he said. They had a special bonus, normally a solider gets his medal in country, and his family doesnt get to see that. So its a special bonus for families to watch their family member get a medal for their service overseas.
Even though his family couldnt be at the ceremony because they live in Ottawa, Green said there was no shortage of pride from his family.
My mom was extremely proud and very happy, he said. She wouldnt get off the phone with me when I told her.
You are very proud and you feel like youve contributed, Kaucharik added. These medals are awarded for service in other countries and helping other people.
Follow this link:
Local soldiers recognized for NATO operation - Tbnewswatch.com
Posted in NATO
Comments Off on Local soldiers recognized for NATO operation – Tbnewswatch.com







