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Monthly Archives: May 2017
One genetic test transforms a life – Arkansas Online
Posted: May 28, 2017 at 7:13 am
En route to Dallas and just an hour out of Arkansas, Lesley Murphy got a call.
She had been tested about a week before for a genetic mutation that would make her more susceptible to breast and ovarian cancer. And, as it turned out, she had the mutation.
She didn't have either cancer, but, at 29, she found herself weighing her options: go in every six months for screenings, take medicine or undergo a preventive double mastectomy. She had some three hours to go to get to Dallas, where, coincidentally, she had an appointment with her gynecologist.
"I spent a lot of that -- probably at least an hour and a half -- telling nobody," Murphy said. "I was like listening to music and just thinking."
Studies have found that more women are choosing preventive mastectomies. Actress Angelina Jolie drew attention to the procedure in 2013 when she had a mastectomy after learning of her susceptibility to breast and ovarian cancer. The studies vary in the rates of women undergoing the surgical procedure, but most show percentages now in the low teens compared with the 2 percent to 4 percent range in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Mastectomies can reduce breast cancer recurrence to 1 percent, said Dr. Daniela Ochoa, a breast surgical oncologist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock.
"We take out all the breast tissue that we can see and identify grossly and anatomically with our eyeballs, but we can't say that at a teeny tiny cell level, we got every cell," she said. "So that's why we can't completely eliminate the possibility that there may be something down the road, but it's certainly the most aggressive thing that you could do to decrease your risk."
Murphy's test results came nearly three years after her mother, Martha Murphy, was diagnosed with breast cancer. An unlikely candidate, Martha Murphy had no cancers in her family history, was healthy, exercised regularly, ate well. Unable to come to terms with the diagnosis, she eventually got a genetic test -- the first in her family -- showing she, too, had the genetic mutation, called BRCA-2, predisposing her to breast and ovarian cancers.
In short order, Martha Murphy opted for a double mastectomy, a reconstruction and later an oophorectomy, the removal of the ovaries.
Her two other daughters took a genetic test later that year: one had the mutation, the other didn't. Lesley Murphy would be the tiebreaker.
Bachelor, Argentina
A Fort Smith native, Lesley Murphy graduated from the University of Georgia and worked in Atlanta and Washington, D.C. In the nation's capital, she took a hiatus from her job at a Democratic consulting firm to compete with 25 other women on ABC's show The Bachelor. She didn't find love on the show.
But after the television stint, Lesley Murphy moved to Argentina with her boyfriend at the time and worked as a marketing manager for a luxury hospitality company. She had been thinking of ways to take advantage of her following -- she has 66,284 followers on Twitter, 224,000 on Instagram and 7,652 on Facebook -- from the show, and nothing had come together, she said.
She spent her time there traveling throughout South America, documenting her travels along the way. She decided to trade in her job to be a professional travel blogger, living out of a suitcase -- albeit, a large one.
On March 10, 2014, Lesley Murphy was in her Argentina apartment when her mom and dad called, breaking the news of Martha Murphy's diagnosis.
The parents reassured their three daughters that Martha Murphy found the tumor early and all would be OK. She had consulted two doctors, both of whom had recommended surgery to remove the tumor and 30 rounds of radiation. One of the doctors, an oncologist and family friend, also had recommended a genetic test.
For Martha Murphy, finding the genetic mutation was like finding a needle in a haystack, said Dr. Kent McKelvey, the director of Adult and Cancer Genetics Services at UAMS.
"It would be like, you know, you're sitting in the cancer institute, and there's a lot of rooms in the cancer institute," he said. "You know in one of the rooms, there's the needle that you're looking for. In her mom, we looked through every room, and we found where the needle was."
Martha Murphy tested positive for the BRCA-2 gene mutation.
Days later, with two months until her oldest daughter's wedding, she had a double mastectomy at UAMS. By the May 31, 2014, wedding, she was on the dance floor.
hereditary risk
If an average woman has an 11 percent risk of breast cancer, those with BRCA-1 may have up to eight times the risk, and those with BRCA-2 have about four or five times the risk, McKelvey said.
Cancer occurs because of changes in DNA, which happen because of bad luck, environmental exposures or heredity, said McKelvey, also an associate professor in UAMS' College of Medicine. Most patients get it because of a combination of bad luck and environmental exposures, including hormone-replacement therapies for post-menopausal symptoms and lifestyle choices, such as not eating well, said Ochoa, the breast surgeon.
In Lesley Murphy's case, the major risk factor was hereditary, McKelvey said.
Genetic tests -- like those the Murphys took -- have increased over the years: just over 1,000 tests were ordered in 2012, and now the number is closer to 50,000 a year, according to the Genetic Testing Registry. Some companies are now offering genetic tests for a slew of predispositions, though McKelvey had a warning.
"You don't just order a genetic test because there are implications for you, for your future health care and for your family," he said. "People need to know what they're getting. I'd say it's important to have pre-test counseling and post-test counseling."
UAMS is the only health care facility that offers cancer genetics in the state -- hundreds of genes are predisposed to about 50 cancer syndromes, he said -- and McKelvey's office includes genetic counseling. One of his genetic counselors called Lesley Murphy on her drive to Dallas in mid-February this year, confirming the gene mutation and setting another appointment with McKelvey nearly two months later.
Hers had been an easier find because they knew what to test for and where to find it, McKelvey said.
Thinking over her options, Lesley Murphy ruled out the regular screenings -- getting a breast MRI every six months and a mammogram every six months -- almost immediately.
She figured she could have the procedure done at any time. But once she got to her gynecologist's appointment in Dallas, the doctor said, "You do not have to do this, but in my mind, what's the point of hanging on to something that's potentially very cancerous?"
Lesley Murphy thought it over for a few more days: she would be gone all of March for work, and the gynecologist was right. She called McKelvey's office to schedule an earlier appointment. Afterward, she marked April 11 as the date for her first-ever surgery.
She spent March traveling to Colorado, the United Kingdom, Finland and Canada. She worked out and did yoga.
On March 8 -- International Women's Day -- on "a horrid eight-hour layover in Germany," she shared with the world her genetic test results.
"I wanted to be a voice for other people who were going through the same thing," she said," even just thinking about it or even just starting the conversation for families or a friend to get tested."
She prepared herself mentally, and before she knew it, it was April 11.
"I remember going to sleep that night and getting pretty sentimental because it was my last night with the old me," she said, "and the next day was going to be completely different."
3-month process
The procedure takes out the breast tissue down to the pectoral muscle, said Ochoa, the breast surgeon and assistant professor in UAMS' College of Medicine. Expanders and implants go underneath the muscle, and some -- if not all -- of the skin is saved for the reconstruction, a three-month process, she said.
"So when you wake up after the first surgery, it's not your final outcome and your final volume. It's not completely flat in what we otherwise would have without a reconstruction," Ochoa said. "They gradually fill up the expander, get up to the size that you're ultimately shooting for, and then there's a second surgery where they come in, switch out the expander to the permanent implant. The permanent implant is when you pick whether you want saline or silicone, kind of what size you're shooting for."
At UAMS, surgeons perform preventive mastectomies, but more often than not, patients find out they have the BRCA gene once they have already been diagnosed with breast cancer, Ochoa said. She added that most cancer patients end up with the disease because of either bad luck or environmental factors, not for hereditary reasons.
Lesley Murphy woke up around 3 p.m. April 11, after some seven hours in surgery. She vividly remembered -- "how could I forget the feeling" -- first feeling pain when she was moved from one bed to another.
"Realization set in on what road was ahead," she said. "I remember my dad was driving me home from the hospital the day after surgery, and I was so nervous because even in the wheelchair from my hospital room to [the first floor], every little crack you would go over, you would feel it."
Her mom, who had been by her side through all the doctor appointments, slept by her side for the first couple of nights. She couldn't sit up in bed or easily get up to use the bathroom. She needed help getting dressed in the mornings. She didn't like being in the same position for too long.
But, day by day, she started to feel more normal.
By May 6, she was lying on her stomach, spending time in the sun and working out, though, she said, she may have cheated on the last one by a bit.
And on May 11 -- a month after her surgery -- she posted on social media a thank-you note to her supporters, who she said helped ease her recovery, and wrote that she hoped she has helped others in a similar situation.
"Knowledge really is power," she said in an earlier interview. "It's been a wash of emotions, but I think this is a story of empowerment."
Metro on 05/28/2017
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Memorial Day Movies: A Politically Incorrect Guide | National Review – National Review
Posted: at 7:12 am
Memorial Day is of course when we remember those who died serving their country in our armed services. There was a time when Americas movie industry took pride in honoring American servicemen, both the living and the dead; there are a few actors and directors in Hollywood who still do. But since movies about Americans at war have largely gone in the opposite direction since Vietnam, this weekend it might be worthwhile going back to see seven movies that deal with war in an honest but not defeatist way. These works portray serving ones country in uniform as something to be revered and respected, not dismissed or derided.
The Big Parade, directed by King Vidor (1925). The one silent entry in the competition, and the only one for World War I (Americas entry into that conflict was 100 years ago this year), this sprawling wartime epic stars John Gilbert as the affluent, rather happy-go-lucky young man who goes to serve in France with the Rainbow Division. While there, he experiences the horrors of trench warfare, the value of comradeship, and (inevitably) romance with a French country girl. Gilberts career was ruined by the advent of talkies, because his voice sounded squeaky and hollow. But Big Parade reminds us of why he was one of the great actors of the silent screen.
They Were Expendable, directed by John Ford (1945). No list of Memorial Day movies is complete without one directed by John Ford, and one starring John Wayne in this case as a lieutenant reluctantly serving on Patrol Torpedo boats while fighting the Japanese invasion of the Philippines. But the movies real star is Robert Montgomery, who actually commanded PT boats during the war and who poignantly captures the movies theme of sacrifice in the face of inevitable defeat. The entire film is poetry in motion, like any John Ford film, but its worth remembering that John Ford, Captain, USNR (as the credits list him) and his film crew also risked their lives more than once doing work for the Navy in World War II.
Battleground, directed by William Wellman (1949). The story follows a squad of GIs in the darkest days of the Battle of the Bulge, when fear of death and defeat tests the courage and manhood of every character. The films technical adviser was LieutenantColonel Harry Kinnard, who had been deputy commander of the 101st Airborne during the Battle of the Bulge, so you can be reasonably confident its an accurate portrayal of the fighting. The standout performance is by James Whitmore, who won a Golden Globe award and who had seen action as a Marine in the South Pacific. Whitmore also does the voice-over narration for the next film on the list.
The Red Badge of Courage, directed by John Huston (1951). Memorial Day began as a holiday to honor the Civil War dead, so its fitting that not one but two films on our list deal with the War between the States. This one is based on the classic story by Stephen Crane of a young soldier who experiences fear and panic on the battlefield but rallies to face the enemy and serve his country as well as his comrades. It stars Audie Murphy, who was a real-life war hero in World War II, and Bill Mauldin, who saw action as an artist and cartoonist on the Italian Front. The Badgeis spare, sparse, and filmed in austere black and white, the studio chopped itfrom two hours to less than 70 minutes despite Hustons protests. It is still worth seeing. The person who finds those lost 50 minutes of Hustons favorite film will earn cinematic immortality.
Pork Chop Hill, directed by Lewis Milestone (1959). This is the Korean Wars entry in our list, commemorating the seemingly pointless firefight of U.S. soldiers desperately holding their position against repeated North Korean and Chinese assaults while waiting for their superiors to negotiate the end of the war. Based on S. L. A. Marshalls best-selling book, it stars Gregory Peck as the officer who is forced to watch his command dwindle from 135 to just 25 men, in a seemingly pointless sacrifice. Directed by the same Milestone who delivered one of the most realistic battle scenes ever in All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), and shot in a nightmare landscape of light and shadow, the film stands as a harrowing, gripping tribute to courage and heroism. Watch for appearances by Martin Landau in his first movie, and by Gavin MacLeod although we are a very long way from the Love Boat.
The Longest Day, directed by Ken Annakin, Andrew Martin, and Bernhard Wicki (1962). Do yourself a favor. Midway through watching this Darryl Zanuckproduced film about the D-Day invasion and starring in cameo roles virtually every American movie star who could fog a mirror from John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, and Henry Fonda to Red Buttons, Sal Mineo, and Rod Steiger break off and run the first 15 minutes of Saving Private Ryan. The rest of Spielbergs movie is largely worth skipping, but the Omaha Beach sequence gives a riveting meaning to the heroism and sacrifice of American soldiers on the Normandy beaches that Longest Day unaccountably misses. What the movie does have, however, is British actor Richard Todd, who actually served on D-Day in the attack on Pegasus Bridge that he is shownleading in the film.
Gods and Generals, directed by Ron Maxwell (2003). The first documented Memorial Day celebration was led in April 1866 by the ladies of Columbus, Miss., who decorated the graves of both Union and Confederate dead. So its worth winding up this Memorial Day tribute by watching a visually sumptuous film that honors both sides in the War between the States, with outstanding performances by Stephen Lang as Stonewall Jackson and Robert Duvall as Robert E. Lee. With the totalitarian Left busy vandalizing and pulling down statues to these heroes, this is a film certain to drive your liberal friends crazy also because all the characters speak movingly of their devotion to God and service to the Almighty as well as to their country.
They say there are no atheists in a foxhole. I cant guarantee there wont still be atheists, and leftists, after watching these films this weekend. But everyone else will have a new sense of dedication to what this country stands for and to the memory of those who gave that last full measure.
Arthur Herman is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, and author of Douglas MacArthur: American Warrior.
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Memorial Day Movies: A Politically Incorrect Guide | National Review - National Review
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Trump administration sued over climate change ‘censorship … – Climate Home
Posted: at 7:12 am
NGO suit claims US agencies are illegally withholding information about the suppression of climate science in public communications
The Centre for Biological Diversity (CBD) filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against four US federal agencies over what it called censorship of climate change information.
Filed at a district court in Washington DC, the legal challenge targetsthe Environmental Protection Agency and Departments of Interior, State and Energy.
It concerns the removal of informationon climate science and policy from government websites and public communicationssince the advent of Donald Trumps presidency.
The environmental group submitted requests under freedom of information law on 30 March to disclose directives to federal employees on this subject. These requests were not answered within the statutory deadlines, according to the complaint.
The Trump administrations refusal to release public information about its climate censorship continues a dangerous and illegal pattern of anti-science denial, said Taylor McKinnon fromthe CBD. Just as censorship wont change climate science, foot-dragging and cover-ups wont be tolerated under the public records law.
Since Trump took office in January, online datafactsheets as well as policy informationhave been taken down, pending review. Scientists have expressed fearsentire datasets could be airbrushed from public record.
Trump is seeking to revive US coal mining and expand oil production, in defiance of the scientific consensus that burning fossil fuels destabilises weather patterns and drives sea level rise.
Weekly briefing:Sign up for your essential climate news update
The centres lawsuit is part of a wave of litigation seeking to promote and defend action to address dangerous climate change.
A surveyfrom Columbia Universitys Sabin Centre for Climate Change Law identified 654 such cases in the US more than three times the number across the rest of the world.
These range fromobjections to specific projects like airports or coal plants to a high profile pleafrom 21 young people for stronger climate policy to protect their future.
International examples include a Pakistani farmers campaign to enforcegovernment policy protecting citizens from the impacts of climate change and a Norwegian NGO lawsuit against oil exploration in the Arctic.
Judicial decisions around the world show that many courts have the authority, and the willingness, to hold governments to account for climate change, said Michael Burger, executive director of the Sabin Centre.
In the United States, climate change litigation has been absolutely essential, from the first lawsuit demanding the US Environmental Protection Agency regulate greenhouse gas emissions, to a recent lawsuit claiming a constitutional right to a stable climate system. Similar litigation all over the world will continue to push governments and corporations to address the most pressing environmental challenge of our times.
Researchers foresee a growth in cases in developing countries, as theybring in more climate laws, and an increased focus on climate refugees.
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CHR to monitor censorship, arrests – Philippine Star
Posted: at 7:12 am
MANILA, Philippines - The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) is monitoring reports of censorship threats and instances of warrantless arrest following the declaration of martial law in Mindanao as Marawi City is under siege by the Maute terror group.
We shall study the matter as we are still waiting for reports from our regional offices, CHR spokesperson Jacqueline de Guia told The STAR yesterday.
She was reacting to reports that several people were taken into custody in Mindanao after they failed to present identification cards to authorities.
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla was also quoted as saying that the military will exercise its right to censor to ensure that no sensitive information will get into the wrong hands.
The military has yet to release details and guidelines regarding the censorship.
Earlier, the CHR urged the public to report any instance of abuse of power to the AFP, citing the assurance made by Padilla that the military will take quick action should any case of abuse be reported to them.
Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
The commission also reiterated its reminder to law enforcers to protect and uphold the basic rights of all people.
We would like to reiterate the guidelines stated in the Philippine National Police (PNP)s refresher on the dos and donts of martial law, as well as the Department of National Defense (DND)s Guidance on Martial Law Implementation enjoining government to ensure that human rights and the rule of law prevail, De Guia said.
The commission reminds the members of its police force and army in Mindanao where the limits of their power lie in regards to protecting civilians, she added.
De Guia also reiterated that there is legislation and protocol in place to ensure that the human rights abuses that have occurred in the past are not repeated, noting that the 1987 Constitution has provisions to protect the rights of citizens and those within the territory of the Philippines.
As stated by the PNP and DND, we encourage all police officers and military personnel to study this list of dos and donts... and to strictly comply to reduce the possibility of any misdemeanor or breach of citizens rights happening during this time of conflict, she added.
The CHR said police and military personnel cannot issue or conduct warrantless arrests outside the circumstances provided by the Rules of Court.
Those who are arrested or detained cannot be charged beyond the period of three days, nor can civilians be tried in military tribunals. The declaration of martial law does not suspend the functioning of the civil courts and the legislative assemblies, the CHR said.
Any arrest, search and seizure executed in the area where martial law is declared, including filing of charges, should comply with the Revised Rules of Court and applicable jurisprudence, the CHR added.
The House of Representatives, which is dominated by President Dutertes new and old allies, supported his declaration of martial law in the entire Mindanao.
Quezon City Rep. Alfred Vargas lauded the AFPs action on the matter as well as Dutertes decision to cut short his trip to Russia in order to deal with the situation in Mindanao.
Rep. Harry Roque ofKabayan party-list believes martial law in Mindanao is justified.
During emergencies such as this, the government must act swiftly. While many fear martial law because of its negative connotations in the past, we should look at the present facts with a sober perspective, he said.
Sen. Cynthia Villar, another ally of Duterte, chided martial law critics in Luzon for criticizing Dutertes decision to declare martial law in Mindanao.
Villar, who ran for the Senate under the ticket of former president Benigno Aquino III of the Liberal Party, said critics of martial law should just shut up and let the Mindanaons do what they think is best to resolve the conflict in Marawi City.
For Quezon City Rep. Winston Castelo, the President may try to seek the help of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in fighting the Maute group that has links to the terrorist group Islamic State (IS).
Castelo cited a newspaper report from the Singapore Straits Times saying two Malaysians were among the 13 IS-linked militants killed in the militarys battle against the Mautes in Marawi City. With Delon Porcalla, Robertzon Ramirez
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Trump Sued for Censorship of Climate Change Data – EcoWatch
Posted: at 7:12 am
The Center for Biological Diversity sued the Trump administration Tuesday to uncover public records showing that federal employees have been censored from using words or phrases related to climate change in formal agency communications.
Tuesday's lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, DC, seeks to require four federal agencies to release climate-censorship records, in compliance with the Freedom of Information Act. The U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Department of the Interior and U.S. Department of State have failed to provide records requested by the Center for Biological Diversity or indicate when they might do so, violating deadlines established under the law.
"The Trump administration's refusal to release public information about its climate censorship continues a dangerous and illegal pattern of anti-science denial," said Taylor McKinnon at the Center for Biological Diversity. "Just as censorship won't change climate science, foot-dragging and cover-ups won't be tolerated under the public records law."
On March 30 the Center for Biological Diversity filed Freedom of Information Act requests for all directives or communications barring or removing climate-related words or phrases from any formal agency communications. The records requests followed news reports that federal agencies had removed climate information from government websites and instructed Department of Energy staff to avoid using the phrases "climate change," "emissions reductions" and "Paris agreement."
The Center for Biological Diversity has filed identical requests with the Council on Environmental Quality, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
On March 23 the Center for Biological Diversity joined conservation biologist Stuart Pimm and the Center for Media and Democracy in a separate Freedom of Information Act request to prevent the administration from removing hundreds of environmental data sets on government websites.
Under the Freedom of Information Act, when federal agencies receive requests for the same records three or more times, they must make the records freely available to the public on their websitesa rule known as "the Beetlejuice provision."
Records responsive to the Center for Biological Diversity's climate censorship requests will be made available to the public and the media.
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Can Libertarians Advocate for Universal Basic Income? The Lowdown On Liberty – Being Libertarian
Posted: at 7:09 am
Welcome to another edition of The Lowdown on Liberty, where each week we take questions submitted from our readers as we attempt to clarify the inner-workings of libertarian principles. This week, we cover a universal basic income, the non-aggression principle, non-interventionism, and the infamous Antifa!
To answer the first part of your question Lucas, while people have always had a fear of automation rendering human labor obsolete, that type of scenario has yet to happen, and most likely never will. Automation doesnt actually destroy jobs, it displaces them usually the lowest skilled jobs. A popular example is: If we imagine the job market as a ladder with jobs being the rungs, and the lowest skilled being at the bottom, moving up in skill as we climb, then automation simply kicks out the bottom rung of the ladder and places a new, higher-skilled rung near the top.
As technology advances, the least skilled jobs, often repetitive, menial tasks are automated first. Causing the immediate job loss for a person in that position, but creating a more skilled position somewhere else. Whether its building the robot that does their previous job, installing it, maintaining it, programming it, or improving its design, these are all new, more skilled jobs that are added to the market in exchange for the less skilled job being automated. Weve seen this over time as first-world nations either automate or outsource low-skilled jobs and acquire more high-skilled, technical ones. People have always speculated that jobs would run out once automation began, but population has only grown and even though automation has become more prevalent, there are more jobs today than ever. We may theorize that automation will eventually get to a point where human labor is no longer useful, but its much more likely that higher-skilled labor that doesnt yet exist will continue to enter the market, as people continue improving and inventing. Half the skilled jobs being done today didnt exist 100 years ago, and there is no reason to think the next 100 will be any different.
Now, the second part of your question is a bit easier to predict. Universal basic income has been a hot topic lately, with people such as Mark Zuckerberg coming out clearly in support of it. However, libertarianisms core value of non-aggression is incompatible with the idea. A program that implicitly states that each person should receive according to their need, while others pay into it according to their ability (which is what it boils down to), sounds like the antithesis of libertarianism, and more in line with what a communist would endorse. Seeing as automation is unlikely to render us all suddenly unemployed, we should stick to fighting the welfare state, not endorsing it.
Great question, Scott. This example points out the obvious need for pre-determined rules in these situations. In current cases regarding these matters, most cities have laws telling citizens when excessive noise can be punishable as a citable offense. As Murray Rothbard noted, we should have clearly defined and enforceable property rights because we all partake in activities with unavoidable consequences that affect more than just our own property (smells, light and sound pollution, etc.). In a privatized society, we may resolve these with contracts voluntarily signed between neighbors, by-laws within a homeowners association, or a myriad of other ways to ensure that rules are agreed upon beforehand to ensure peaceful resolutions.
The ideas of non-intervention and keeping terror out go hand-in-hand. Our recent history in the Middle East has shown quite convincingly that there is no resolution to be had from nation-building and constant foreign occupation. While you could make the argument that simply pulling out of there would not solve all our current issues with terrorism, its important to point out the Dave Smith argument, which is: when you murder peoples children, they tend to fucking hate you. Our current strategy, Operation Enduring Freedom, is now the longest conflict in US history, outlasting the Civil War, WWI, and WWII combined. And its clearly failing, so there is no harm in trying non-intervention, because at least it would be a change, and the worst-case scenario would only be a return to the status quo. Although, there is quite a case to be made that it is our decades-long intervention and attempts at regime change that have resulted in our current predicament more than anything else. Why is it that we see swarms of terrorist groups in countries around Africa, yet the US and Europe experience almost no problems from them compared to the attacks coming from the Middle East? Non-intervention may not guarantee the total end of terrorism, but ongoing foreign intervention and attempts at nation building will certainly guarantee its persistence.
The Antifa movement seems to be bad joke that simply wont go away. The idea that you could fight fascism by forcibly shutting down the free speech of those you disagree with is so repugnant that its hard to take them seriously. Yet, we see from their actions that they are quite serious in their approach.
This is troublesome for libertarians for two reasons.
First, the ideas they represent fly directly in the face of libertarian ideals. Our strict adherence to property rights and non-aggression are the two foundations Antifa fights most adamantly against.
Second, they are providing the media with the opportunity to damage our image. For those who may not know, true anarchists, those who identify as anarcho-capitalist, fall under the larger umbrella of libertarianism. However, the media, as well as Antifa themselves, call themselves anarchists too. Now, we in the liberty movement can distinguish their anarcho-communism from what actual anarchy is, but most average Americans cannot. To the uninformed, these people fall into the category relating to anyone who is anti-government; thats us. With that in mind, we must fight the ideas of Antifa at every point possible if we hope to distinguish ourselves from them. They are truly a hypocritical scourge in our society, but if we arent careful, they may cause serious damage to our image and our credibility.
Alright, thats it for this week. Thank you to everyone who wrote in, and make sure you submit your questions each week on our The Lowdown on Liberty post, and the top questions will be answered the following week!
Featured image: BasicIncome.org
This post was written by Thomas J. Eckert.
The views expressed here belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect our views and opinions.
Thomas J. Eckert is college grad with an interest in politics. He studies economics and history and writes in his spare time on political and economic current events.
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Can Libertarians Advocate for Universal Basic Income? The Lowdown On Liberty - Being Libertarian
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So how does your garden grow? – The Guardian
Posted: at 7:09 am
A peacock butterfly and a small tortoiseshell butterfly warm themselves on a buddleia plant. Well, we think it is... Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
Can you name a shrub? No Googling, no consulting, Ill give you three seconds, three two one GO!
Ah no, sorry. Thats a tree. Good try though.
Who said buddleia? Well done to you.
Oleander? Five points.
OK, Ill grudgingly accept rose. You could have a shrub rose. I think.
Viburnum, you say? Is that not a percussion instrument? Wait, hang on, let me just look at the no, youre right, you can have viburnum.
If youre currently in a room with four other people, ask if anyone can name a shrub. If more than two of them can, youre in an unusual room. According to a survey by the Royal Horticultural Society, held to mark the opening of the 2017 Chelsea Flower Show, 50% of British adults cannot name a single shrub.
You might think: well, that could just be down to the confusing nomenclature. What is a shrub, what is a bush, what is a tree? Its not that people dont know these plants, they just got stuck on category definitions when put on the spot.
But that doesnt explain it, because 40% couldnt name a household plant either. You cant embarrass yourself on the scientific classification of household plant; thats just any plant you find in a house. Peace lily, rubber plant, cactus, African violet, venus flytrap, those Christmas ones, you know, the red ones. Theyre all house plants. But four out of 10 Brits cant name one.
Also gloomily reported was that a fifth of respondents do not grow anything themselves, indoors or outdoors, of any kind. But surely thats a happy twist in the tale: so four-fifths do! 80% of people are trying to grow something! The extrapolation is that literally millions of us, despite not being able to name any plants, are planting them anyway.
And thats the main thing. I think its enormously important to plant things. Theres an incomparable peace and comfort in watching the cycles of plant life, which is deeply therapeutic if youre actually taking part.
You may say: duh, everybody knows that, its a cliche and doesnt bear mentioning. But Im not so sure. It was also reported, in the roar of garden-themed publicity accompanying this most famous of flower shows, that artificial grass is surging in popularity and Britain is awash with illegal orange petunias.
Did you know orange petunias were illegal? I didnt. Apparently, theyre genetically modified to the extent that we dont know what harm they may do to insect life. Were not supposed to buy them or cultivate them and should contact Defra if we see them on sale.
In the future, they may prove harmless. People may delight in whatever the genetic modification cleverly does: survive winter, grow straighter or withstand drought. But the problem there, like the problem with artificial grass, is that its all about the glory of man. And gardening should be the precise opposite.
The soothing power of flowers and grass lies in the way they come and go and come again; theyre a mortal part of an immortal whole. And thats what you feel like yourself, as you watch their cycles and feel your place within them. The key to natures therapy is feeling like a tiny part of it, not a master over it. Theres amazing pride in seeing a bee land on a flower you planted but thats not your act of creation, its your act of joining in.
This simply doesnt apply if its astroturf. Astroturf is a great idea I believe its better for hockey but if you want to bask in the genius of human invention you might just as well stare at an iPhone. Or the fridge.
Im not a luddite. Science, computers, medicine, theyre all great. But nature is context. That which we cant control. Its constant mortality and immortality is an answer to the terror of finite existence. It reassures the soul.
Thats why I sympathise with 79-year-old Guy and Josie Simmins, whose wheelie bin row has been reported in the national press.
The Simminses must be surprised by the level of interest. In the normal run of things, bins are like farts: were quite interested in our own, irritated by those of our immediate neighbours and simply dont think about ones that happen several counties away.
But people have enjoyed sniggering at the stance of Mr and Mrs Simmins, who, along with other residents of their terraced street in Bath, say the front gardens are too pretty to stand the invasion of council-enforced wheelie bins.
Ho ho, snorts the Twitter generation. Rich mans problems! Terrorism Brexit Syria! #checkyourprivilege hashtag hashtag! (Hashtag is the modern equivalent of rhubarb: a meaningless noise to make when pretending to be a coherent crowd.)
But theyre missing the point. This is a couple, nigh on 80 years old, no doubt as terrified and miserable about the state of everything as the rest of us, who find solace in tending the natural environment around them and want (indeed need) to keep doing so.
I dont know the Simminses but, speaking for myself, the hours I spent obsessively watering plants last week were not about shrinking my attention on to something smaller than the immediate fears and tragedies around us, but trying to invest it in something bigger.
Maybe the Simminses are protecting their connection with the eternal. I might be setting too much store by symbolism, but God knows what happens to the psyche if you spend all day staring at a giant dustbin.
These arent big gardens were talking about. Theyre just little patches of green, lining an ordinary street. No astroturf, no orange petunias, just an ordinary selection of calming, leafy, natural shrubs. I was grateful for mere photographs of them in last weeks horrible newspapers although, of course, I couldnt name any.
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We’ll support gov’t end nomadic herdsmen conflict Group – Citifmonline
Posted: at 7:08 am
The Ghana National Association of Cattle Farmers (GNACAF) has pledged their commitment to support government and the security agencies to bring lasting solution to the trans-human conflicts between nomadic Fulani herdsmen and crop farmers in Ghana.
The Association noted that, the protracted conflict between some nomadic herdsmen and crop farmers in the country has led to lose of lives and property and hence concerted efforts needed to end the trend.
Speaking at a Regional and District representatives members GNACAF in Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region, National Chairman of GNACAF, Imam Hanafi Sonde said, they are working assiduously with the Ghana Cattle Ranching committee (GCRC) to resolve the trans human conflicts in Ghana.
In recent times there have been many conflicts between the herdsmen and the crop farmers in some communities of the country that has led to lose of lives and property. These situations create instability; undermine peace and also a threat to food security in Ghana.
GNACAF will continue to work and collaborate with the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA), Security agencies, Ghana Ranching Committee (GCRC), Municipal and District assemblies, Traditional councils and other relevant bodies to bring lasting solution to the unfortunate trend.
Mr. Sonde hinted that, his outfit was in the process of sensitizing cattle farmers to adopt modern technology of cattle grazing in Ghana.
He urged government to support the cattle sector development to significantly contribute to the economic development of the country.
The members in the Upper East Region were given certificates and identification cards of membership.
The meeting was aimed at reviewing the organization and adopts new strategies to enhance its structures and activities in the region.
By: Frederick Awuni/citifmonline.com/Ghana
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We'll support gov't end nomadic herdsmen conflict Group - Citifmonline
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How a 3.3 million-year-old toddler offers researchers a window into … – Washington Post
Posted: at 7:08 am
The fossilized piece of a cheek bone was spotted in a chunk of sandstone sticking out of the dirt in the scorching badlands of northeastern Ethiopia.
Zeresenay Alemseged knew almost immediately that hehad stumbled upon something momentous.
The cheekbone led to a jaw, portions of a skull and eventually collar bones, shoulder blades, ribs and perhaps most important the most complete spinal column of any early human relative ever found.
Nearly 17 years later, the 3.3-million-year-old fossilized skeleton known as the Dikika Baby remains one of the most important discoveries in archaeological history, one that is filling in the timeline of human evolution.
When you put all the bones together, you have over 60 percent of a skeleton of a child dating back to 3.3 million years ago, which is more complete than the famous australopithecine fossil known as 'Lucy,' " Alemseged, a 47-year-old professor of organismal biology and anatomy at the University of Chicago, told The Washington Post. We never had the chance to recover the face of Lucy, but the Dikika child is an almost complete skeleton, which gives you an impression of how children looked 3.3 million years ago.
[Ape that lived in Europe 7 million years ago could be human ancestor, controversial study suggests]
The fossil, also calledSelam peace in the Ethiopian Amharic language has revealed numerous insights into our early human relatives. But Alemseged said one of the most startling findings comes from the toddler's spine, which had an adaptation for walking upright that had not been seen in such an old skeleton.
The result, he said, is a creature whose upper body was apelike, but whose pelvis, legs and feet had familiar, humanlike adaptations.
If you had a time machine and saw a group of these early human relatives, what you would have said right away is, 'What is that chimpanzee doing walking on two legs?' " Alemseged said.
The findings, published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, show for the first time the spinal column was humanlike in its numbering and segmentation. Though scientists know that even older species were bipedal, researchers said Selam's fossilized vertebrae is the only hard evidence of bipedal adaptations in an ancient hominid spine.
Yes, there were other bipedal species before, but what is making this unique is the preservation of the spine, which simply is unprecedented, Alemseged said. Not only is it exquisitely preserved, but it also tells us that the human-type of segmentation emerged at least 3.3 million years ago. Could there have been other species with a similar structure, yes, but we don't know for sure.
Human beings share many of the same spinal structures asother primates, but the human spine which has more vertebrae in the lower back, for example is adapted for efficient upright motion, such as walking and running on two feet.
Among the larger questions researchers like Alemseged are trying to answer include:When did our ancestors evolve the ability to bebipedal?When did we become more bipedal than arboreal,or tree-dwelling? Andwhen did our ancestors abandon an arboreal lifestyle to become the runners and walkers that eventually populated Africa and then the world?
One of the significant barriers to answering those questions is that complete sets of vertebrae are rarely preserved in the fossil record.
For many years we have known of fragmentary remains of early fossil species that suggest that the shift from rib-bearing, or thoracic, vertebrae to lumbar, or lower back, vertebrae was positioned higher in the spinal column than in living humans, but we have not been able to determine how many vertebrae our early ancestors had, said Carol Ward, a curator's distinguished professor of pathology and anatomical sciences in the University of Missouri School of Medicine, and lead author on the study. Selam has provided us the first glimpse into how our early ancestors spines were organized.
[Why these researchers think dinosaurs were minutes away from surviving extinction]
Unpacking the intricacies of Selam's spinal structure would not have been possible without the assistance of cutting-edge technology, researchers said.
After 13 years of using dental tools to painstakingly remove portions of the fossil from sandstone which risked destroying the fossil Alemseged packed up Selam in his suitcase and took the fossil from Ethiopia tothe European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France, in 2010. Alemseged and the research team spent nearly two weeks there using high-resolution imaging technology to visualize the bones.
The fossil had undergone a medical CT scan in 2002 in Nairobi, Alemseged said, but that scanner was unable to distinguish objects with the same density, meaning that penetrating bones encased in sandstone was impossible. Once in France, that was no longer a problem, and the results, he said, were mind-blowing.
We were able to separate, virtually, the different elements of the vertebrae and were able to do it, of course, without any damage to the fossil, Alemseged said. We are now able to see this very detailed anatomy of the vertebrae ofthis exceptionally preserved fossil.
The scans revealed that the child possessed thethoracic-to-lumbar joint transition found in other fossil human relatives, but they also showed that Selam had a smallernumber of vertebrae and ribs than most apes have.
For researchers, the skeleton is a window into the transition between rib-bearing vertebrae and lower back vertebrae, which allowed our early human ancestors to extend at the waist and begin moving upright, eventually becoming highly efficient walkers and runners.
Though hehas been studying Selam for nearly two decades, Alemseged thinks the fossil has more secrets to share with the modern world.
I don't think she will stop surprising us as the analysis continues, he said. Science and tech is evolving so much that I'm sure in a few years well be able to extract even more information that we're not able to extract today.
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How a 3.3 million-year-old toddler offers researchers a window into ... - Washington Post
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Astronomy (magazine) – Wikipedia
Posted: May 26, 2017 at 4:37 am
Astronomy (ISSN0091-6358) is a monthly American magazine about astronomy. Targeting amateur astronomers for its readers, it contains columns on sky viewing, reader-submitted astrophotographs, and articles on astronomy and astrophysics that are readable by nonscientists.
Astronomy is a magazine about the science and hobby of astronomy. Based near Milwaukee in Waukesha, Wisconsin, it is produced by Kalmbach Publishing. Astronomys readers include those interested in astronomy, and those who want to know about sky events, observing techniques, astrophotography, and amateur astronomy in general.
Astronomy was founded in 1973 by Stephen A. Walther, a graduate of the University of WisconsinStevens Point and amateur astronomer. The first issue, August 1973, consisted of 48 pages with five feature articles and information about what to see in the sky that month. Issues contained astrophotos and illustrations created by astronomical artists. Walther had worked part time as a planetarium lecturer at the University of WisconsinMilwaukee and developed an interest in photographing constellations at an early age. Although even in childhood he was interested to obsession in Astronomy, he did so poorly in mathematics that his mother despaired that he would ever be able to earn a living. However he graduated in Journalism from the University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, and as a senior class project he created a business plan for a magazine for amateur astronomers. With the help of his brother David, he was able to bring the magazine to fruition.[citation needed]. He died in 1977.
AstroMedia Corp., the company Walther had founded to publish Astronomy, brought in Richard Berry as editor. Berry also created the offshoot Odyssey, aimed at young readers, and the specialized Telescope Making. In 1985, Milwaukee hobby publisher Kalmbach bought Astronomy.
In 1992, Richard Berry left the magazine and Robert Burnham took over as chief editor. Kalmbach discontinued Deep Sky and Telescope Making magazines and sold Odyssey. In 1996 Bonnie Gordon, now a professor at Central Arizona College, assumed the editorship. David J. Eicher, the creator of "Deep Sky," became chief editor in 2002.
The Astronomy staff also produces other publications. These have included Explore the Universe; Beginners Guide to Astronomy; Origin and Fate of the Universe; Mars: Explore the Red Planet's Past, Present, and Future; Atlas of the Stars; Cosmos; and 50 Greatest Mysteries of the Universe. There also was, for a time in the mid-2000s, a Brazilian edition published by Duetto Editora called Astronomy Brasil. However, due mainly to low circulation numbers, Duetto ceased its publication in September 2007.
Astronomy publishes articles about the hobby and science of astronomy. Generally, the front half of the magazine reports on professional science, while the back half of the magazine presents items of interest to hobbyists. Science articles cover such topics as cosmology, space exploration, exobiology, research conducted by professional-class observatories, and individual professional astronomers. Each issue of Astronomy contains a foldout star map showing the evening sky for the current month and the positions of planets, and some comets.
The magazine has regular columnists. They include science writer Bob Berman, who writes a column called Bob Bermans Strange Universe. Stephen James OMeara writes Stephen James OMearas Secret Sky, which covers observing tips and stories relating to deep-sky objects, planets, and comets. Glenn Chaple writes "Glenn Chaples Observing Basics", a beginners column. Phil Harrington writes "Phil Harringtons Binocular Universe", about observing with binoculars. "Telescope Insider" interviews people who are a part of the telescope-manufacturing industry.
In each issue of Astronomy Magazine, readers will find star and planet charts, telescope observing tips and techniques, and advice on taking photography of the night sky.[2] The magazine also publishes reader-submitted photos in a gallery, lists astronomy-related events, letters from readers, news, and announcements of new products.
Astronomy may include special sections bound into the magazine, such as booklets or posters. Recent examples have included a Messier Catalog booklet, poster showing comet C/2006 P1 (McNaught) and historical comets, a Skyguide listing upcoming sky events, a Telescope Buyer's Guide; a poster titled "Atlas of Extrasolar Planets"; and a poster showing the life cycles of stars.
Astronomy is the largest circulation astronomy magazine, with monthly circulation of 114,080.[3] The majority of its readers are in the United States, but it is also circulated in Canada and internationally.[4]
Its major competitor is Sky & Telescope magazine with a circulation of 80,023.[3]
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