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Daily Archives: July 29, 2017
First Editing of Human Embryos Performed in United States – NBCNews.com
Posted: July 29, 2017 at 6:44 pm
Technology that allows alteration of genes in a human embryo has been used for the first time in the United States, according to Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) in Portland, which carried out the research.
The OHSU research is believed to have broken new ground both in the number of embryos experimented upon and by demonstrating it is possible to safely and efficiently correct defective genes that cause inherited diseases, according to Technology Review, which first reported the news.
None of the embryos were allowed to develop for more than a few days, according to the report.
Some countries have signed a convention prohibiting the practice on concerns it could be used to create so-called designer babies.
Results of the peer-reviewed study are expected to be published soon in a scientific journal, according to OHSU spokesman Eric Robinson.
The research, led by Shoukhrat Mitalipov, head of OHSU's Center for Embryonic Cell and Gene Therapy, involves a technology known as CRISPR that has opened up new frontiers in genetic medicine because of its ability to modify genes quickly and efficiently.
CRISPR works as a type of molecular scissors that can selectively trim away unwanted parts of the genome, and replace it with new stretches of DNA.
Scientists in China have published similar studies with mixed results.
In December 2015, scientists and ethicists at an international meeting held at the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in Washington said it would be "irresponsible" to use gene editing technology in human embryos for therapeutic purposes, such as to correct genetic diseases, until safety and efficacy issues are resolved.
But earlier this year, NAS and the National Academy of Medicine said scientific advances make gene editing in human reproductive cells "a realistic possibility that deserves serious consideration.
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Sorry, it’s all in your genes – Daily Trust
Posted: at 6:44 pm
Enough of blaming your environment every time you come down with an illness. Heres a new possibility: it could all be in your genes.
And proponents of genetic medicine are pushing the practice a notch higher in Nigeria.
The premise is that specific genes are responsible for specific conditions, and finding the right gene is the silver bullet.
Genetic disorder in medicine is not very well recognised, says Hyung Goo Kim, associate professor in neuroscience and regenerative medicine department at Augusta University, USA.
Hes part of a team expanding the scope of regenerative medicine through lectures at the National Hospital, Abuja.
Many people suffer disease but the [cause] is not recognised. The point is to find the disease gene for diagnosis and in the long run cure and treatment.
If we can identify the gene causing the disorder then we can understand the biology of the disorder more than before. That way we can intervene to try to cure and treat.
Regenerative medicine works by allowing body tissues to reprogramme themselves to act in different ways depending on what they are required to do or where they are placed.
For this, researchers use pluripotent cells, capable of becoming just about anything, and abundant in bone marrow.
Every disease in your body system can actually be tackled if we engineer the production of stem cells to fight that disease, says Prosper Igboeli, a professor at University of Nigeria and Augusta University.
The science of regeneration makes it possible to induce pluripotent stem cells.
Igboeli cautiously explains it is like taking skin and reorganising it to make any cell, even sperm.
I dont like to say things that are not correct. But we are having this new feeling that we can take your skin and make sperm out of it.
The bone marrow is a reserve of cells that can be re-engineered and configured through passage, injected into organs and organs respond to that particular disease state and revert back to normal.
The payoff is in having your body produce what you need for a cure instead of popping pills.
The range is anything from infertility and diabetes to spinal cord injuries and cancer.
Some endeavours have reached clinical stage, including experimental treatment for premature ovarian failure and polycystic ovarian syndrome.
National Hospital is building up its interest in stem cell research and looking at bone marrow transplantation as a possibility.
Health care research provides answers to questions lingering in the minds of health care providers in terms of diseases they are trying to manage, says Dr Jafar Momoh, chief medical director of the hospital.
The first world spends a lot of money on research and National Hospital is trying to collaborate with various [nongovernmental organisations] to deliver on the mandate for research.
We are looking at bone marrow transplantation. This is something the country needs for various diseases.
Research here will bring in funding from donor agencies interested in new research areas. Hence we need a robust research program. We have published papers but we want to take it to another level: molecular genetics, stem cell medicine and bone marrow transplantation, said Momoh.
Genetic medicine research is big in Egypt and Tunisia.
The effort now is to build a network of experts and a network to accumulate a database to help identify disease genes.
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Stanford Center for Definitive and Curative Medicine to tackle genetic diseases – Scope (blog)
Posted: at 6:44 pm
Good news for people suffering from genetic diseases and for those who could be helped with stem cell therapies. This week, Stanford announced the creation of the Center for Definitive and Curative Medicine, a new center that aims to bring life-changing advances to millions of patients.
The Center for Definitive and Curative Medicine is going to be a major force in theprecision healthrevolution, saidLloyd Minor, MD, dean of the School of Medicine, in a press release. Our hope is that stem cell and gene-based therapeutics will enable Stanford Medicine to not just manage illness but cure it decisively and keep people healthy over a lifetime.
The center plans to tap the rich vein of stem cell and gene therapy research underway at Stanford. These techniques pinpoint problems causing disease and introduce functional copies of genes or cells to replace malfunctioning ones. Its exciting work with the potential to make real changes in patient lives and Stanford with its deep strengths in research and clinical care is poised to lead.
The release explains:
Housed within theDepartment of Pediatrics, the new center will be directed by renowned clinician and scientistMaria Grazia Roncarolo, MD, the George D. Smith Professor in Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, and professor of pediatrics and of medicine.
It is a privilege to lead the center and to leverage my previous experience to build Stanfords preeminence in stem cell and gene therapies, said Roncarolo, who is also chief of pediatric stem cell transplantation and regenerative medicine, co-director of theBass Center for Childhood Cancer and Blood Diseasesand co-director of theStanford Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine. Stanford Medicines unique environment brings together scientific discovery, translational medicine and clinical treatment. We will accelerate Stanfords fundamental discoveries toward novel stem cell and gene therapies to transform the field and to bring cures to hundreds of diseases affecting millions of children worldwide.
Previously: Stanford scientists describe stem-cell and gene-therapy advances in scientific symposium Photo of Maria Grazia Roncarolo by Norbert von der Groeben
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Adam Carolla drops politically incorrect truth bomb about family – Conservative Review
Posted: at 6:44 pm
Conservative Review | Adam Carolla drops politically incorrect truth bomb about family Conservative Review Testifying before Congress Thursday on the state of free speech on college campuses, comedian and filmmaker Adam Carolla made a profound observation that will doubtlessly please social conservatives. Asked by Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., what ... |
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Apple Accused Of Removing Apps Used To Evade Censorship From Its China Store – NPR
Posted: at 6:43 pm
Apple has been accused of removing apps from its China App Store that can be used to skirt the country's Internet filters. Above, customers at an Apple Store in Beijing in 2016. Mark Schiefelbein/AP hide caption
Apple has been accused of removing apps from its China App Store that can be used to skirt the country's Internet filters. Above, customers at an Apple Store in Beijing in 2016.
Updated at 5:56 p.m. ET
There are iPhone apps that make it possible to get around China's notorious Internet filters. And on Saturday, makers of those apps said Apple had removed their products from its App Store in China.
It would be another sign of Apple's willingness to help Beijing control its citizens' access to the Internet.
The apps create virtual private networks connecting a user to the Internet via an encrypted connection. In China, VPNs can be used to skirt the government's extensive system of internet controls, sometimes called the "Great Firewall."
"We received notification from Apple today ... that the ExpressVPN iOS app was removed from the China App Store," app maker ExpressVPN said in a blog post. "Our preliminary research indicates that all major VPN apps for iOS have been removed."
"We're disappointed in this development, as it represents the most drastic measure the Chinese government has taken to block the use of VPNs to date, and we are troubled to see Apple aiding China's censorship efforts," the company added.
ExpressVPN, which says it is headquartered in the British Virgin Islands, posted a screenshot of the notice from Apple that its app "includes content that is illegal in China."
Another company, Star VPN, tweeted that its apps were also removed from the China App Store.
In an email to NPR, Apple said: "Earlier this year China's MIIT announced that all developers offering VPNs must obtain a license from the government. We have been required to remove some VPN apps in China that do not meet the new regulations. These apps remain available in all other markets where they do business."
The New York Times reports that Internet crackdowns in China tend to happen about every five years, timed to precede an upcoming congress of the Chinese Communist Party. The Times notes that China is Apple's largest market outside the U.S. In December, Apple pulled the Times app from its app store in China.
ExpressVPN says its apps for other operating systems remain accessible and that it's possible (though it's not easy) for Chinese users to create an account to access another country's App Store, if they list a billing address elsewhere. If they can do so, they can still download VPN apps for the iPhone.
The government's focus on cutting out VPNs is said to be taking other forms, as well.
"A southern China data-services company with over 160 clients said it received orders last week from the Ministry of Public Security, which runs China's police forces, to cut off access to foreign providers of VPNs," The Wall Street Journal reported. "Those orders came days after a luxury hotel in Beijing, the Waldorf Astoria, said in a letter to guests that it had stopped offering VPNs 'due to legal issues in China.' " The newspaper noted that it was unusual for Apple to remove several apps at once.
Apple announced earlier this month that it's building a new data center in Guizhou its first in China that will comply with new Chinese cloud storage regulations. It's part of a $1 billion investment in the southwestern province.
Bloomberg reports the tech company's market share has "fallen as consumers wait for an updated iPhone 8, which is likely to be released later this year, or switch to cheaper Android devices."
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Activists Say Censorship in North Korea Will Not Last – VOA Learning English
Posted: at 6:43 pm
North Korea has increased efforts in recent years to prevent outside information from entering the country.
But international activists say technology and outside forces will one day lead to the end of state censorship.
North Korea is one of the most disconnected nations in the world. The country has a ban on foreign media. Most people do not have access to the Internet. The Transitional Justice Working Group reports that the government has even executed citizens for sharing media from South Korea. The group researches human rights abuses in North Korea.
North Korea is following a similar method to other authoritarian governments, observers in Cuba and Myanmar say. Cuban and Burmese leaders of organizations that have fought censorship in their own countries recently met in Seoul to share their experiences with Koreans doing similar work.
Cuba
In Cuba, as in North Korea, there is a growing demand for foreign movies and television programs. This has made the business of illegally bringing in outside information increasingly profitable.
Rafael Duval is with Cubanet, an independent news organization that fights government restrictions in Cuba.
Cubanet uses devices such as USB drives and DVDs to spread a weekly collection of foreign videos and other materials. The collection is called "El Paquete" "the package" in English. Cubanet delivers the materials through the black market a system through which things are bought and sold illegally.
Duval says it is the job of some Cuban officials to prevent foreign media from entering the country. But many of them accept illegal payments in exchange for not reporting the sharing of media. And many officials often use foreign media themselves, he adds.
Another project helps Cubans who have email accounts find out information from the Internet. About 25 percent of Cubans have access to email.
The project, called Apretaste, connects Cubans with volunteers in places like the U.S. state of Florida. Cubans can email questions to the volunteers. The volunteers then send them the Internet search results. The organization responds to more than 100,000 requests for information each month.
Myanmar
Myanmar is another country where the free exchange of information has increased. Before the countrys democratic reforms in 2011, the military government closely controlled the Internet.
But its loose border with Thailand, along with a rise in satellite television receivers in the country, brought change. This change made it easy for exiled opposition groups to get around the governments restrictions on media.
North Koreas growing black market
The North Korean economy has grown in recent years, even with international sanctions placed on the country because of its continued missile tests.
In the past year, the countrys gross domestic product rose 3.9 percent. The Bank of Korea in Seoul says the increase was driven in part by the exports of coal and other minerals.
But there is also a private market in the country that is driving economic growth. The communist government lets it operate, but does not officially approve of it.
A recent study says that most North Koreans now earn about 75 percent of their money from the black market. The study was done by the Beyond Parallel project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.
The illegal export of North Korean fish, shoes, cigarettes and cooking oil has given has given people new buying power. This power makes it possible for them to bring in outside information and technology.
Nat Kretchun is deputy director of the Open Technology Fund. The project is supported by Radio Free Asia, or RFA. RFA and VOA are each part of the U.S. government-supported Broadcasting Board of Governors.
Kretchun says technology like televisions and DVD players are now ubiquitous -- or seemingly everywhere -- in North Korea.
The number of legal North Korean mobile phone users has also grown in recent years. Many North Korean cell phones were able to spread unapproved media and information. But recent changes to the phones operating systems added censorship and surveillance technology.
Kretchun says the technology blocks unapproved media files from being used on North Korean phones.
However, activists are developing technology of their own in response to government actions.
Kim Seung-chul is a North Korean who fled to South Korea. He created North Korea Reform Radio, which sends anti-government messages to the North.
Kim feels the South Korean government should offer more support to groups working to get into North Koreas closed information environment.
The South Korean government, conservatives, veterans and famous people have a lot of money, but they do not use the money for this. They get angry about North Koreas situation, but they do not act, Kim said.
Im Pete Musto. And I'm Ashley Thompson.
Brian Padden and Youmi Kim reported this story for VOA News. Pete Musto adapted it for Learning English. Ashley Thompson was the editor.
We want to hear from you. How long do you think it will be before North Korea becomes more open? Write to us in the Comments Section or on our Facebook page.
________________________________________________________________
censorship n. the system or practice of examining books, movies, or letters in order to remove things that are considered to be offensive, immoral, harmful to society
authoritarian adj. not allowing personal freedom
black market n. a system through which things are bought and sold illegally
account(s) n. an arrangement in which a person uses the Internet or e-mail services of a particular company
sanction(s) n. an action that is taken or an order that is given to force a country to obey international laws by limiting or stopping trade with that country, by not allowing economic aid for that country
gross domestic product n. the total value of the goods and services produced by the people of a nation during a year not including the value of income earned in foreign countries
communist adj. used to describes a person or people who believe in a way of organizing a society in which the government owns the things that are used to make and transport products and there is no privately owned property
ubiquitous adj. seeming to be seen everywhere
surveillance n. the act of carefully watching someone or something especially in order to prevent or detect a crime
veteran(s) n. someone who fought in a war as a soldier or sailor
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Kelvin Benjamin’s heartfelt Instagram post shows human side of football – ESPN (blog)
Posted: at 6:41 pm
Kelvin Benjamin (left) said being with his Panthers teammates has helped him grieve the loss of his mother.
SPARTANBURG, S.C. -- We all have tough days at work that are influenced by something tragic or sad in our personal lives. Sometimes those around us dont have a clue as to why we might have been off in our performance or short with them in conversation.
Football players are no different.
Fans sitting on the hill at Wofford College during the first week of Carolina Panthers training camp had no idea wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin lost his mother last week, not until he wrote Friday afternoon on Instagram that he was in a dark place when she was buried last weekend.
Reporters had no idea, either.
Even some of Benjamins teammates werent aware because he kept much of what he was going through to himself.
So if the 6-foot-5, 243-pound star dropped a pass or two in practice, most would write it off simply as a bad day or that he was struggling in the extreme heat and humidity.
Some might even have been critical, saying he still was a little overweight, as he was early in offseason workouts, and not considering whether it might be something else.
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Football players, particularly stars like Benjamin, are held to different standards. They are viewed as superheroes, not humans.
Former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre set the bar high in 2003 when he passed for 399 yards and four touchdowns in a prime-time Monday night victory over Oakland the day after his father passed.
It doesnt always play out that way.
We need to understand this.
It happens a lot more than people realize, Carolina coach Ron Rivera said. These guys are human beings, too. They go through ups and downs with families. Thats the thing weve all got to understand. These young men, theyre human.
Rivera went through a similar situation two years ago. On the eve of the 2015 training camp, his brother, Mickey, lost a two-year fight with pancreatic cancer.
Rivera reported to camp on time, but to his credit he took two days off to be with his family in Reno, Nevada, for the funeral.
He needed the time away.
He also needed the time with the football team during his grieving.
The tremendous support I got from this organization was unbelievable, Rivera said. For some of these young guys, a lot of them are very private, too.
Kelvin was very private about it. He didnt open up right away. Now he is. I tell you, its just been great for him. Its good to see.
Benjamin was laughing and smiling after Fridays practice as fans screamed for his autograph. He was feeling well enough about where he was mentally that he shared for the first time how being around the team has helped.
It was a heartfelt message about how he feeds off the energy of his teammates. He ended the post with, Love mom keep watching over me.
This puts a different perspective on things.
It humanizes the athlete.
Sometimes people dont know whats going on, Panthers receiver Austin Dukes said. Sometimes we dont know whats going on. ... But its a brotherhood, man. When somebody goes down or somebody loses somebody, youre there for him.
Benjamins brothers have been there for him, and hes stronger for it. Hes working hard to shed the label he got for being overweight and is focused on returning to the form he was in during the 2015 camp before he suffered a season-ending knee injury.
At some point, hell talk about what the past week or weeks has been like.
For now, hes in a good place, not a dark place.
Kelvins was really a tough situation, Rivera said. He really took it hard, but I do know this -- and he told everybody -- him being out here has been great for him.
Sometimes the best therapy is to be around your teammates.
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If you could ‘design’ your own child, would you? – Washington Post
Posted: at 6:41 pm
Scientists in Portland, Ore., just succeeded in creating the first genetically modified human embryo in the United States, according to Technology Review. Ateam led by Shoukhrat Mitalipov of Oregon Health & Science University is reported to have broken new ground both in the number of embryos experimented upon and by demonstrating that it is possible to safely and efficiently correct defective genes that cause inherited diseases.
The U.S. teamsresults follow two trials one last year and one in April by researchers in Chinawho injected genetically modified cells into cancer patients.Theresearch teamsused CRISPR, a new gene-editing system derived from bacteria thatenables scientists to editthe DNA of living organisms.
The era of human gene editing has begun.
In the short term, scientists are planning clinical trials to use CRISPR to edit human genes linked to cystic fibrosis and other fatal hereditary conditions. But supporters of synthetic biology talk up huge potential long-term benefits. We could, they claim, potentially edit genes and build new ones to eradicate all hereditary diseases. With genetic alterations, we might be able to withstand anthrax attacks or epidemics of pneumonic plague. We might revive extinct species such as the woolly mammoth. We might design plants that are far more nutritious, hardy and delicious than what we have now.
But developments in gene editing are alsohighlighting a desperate need for ethical and legal guidelines to regulate in vitro genetic editing and raising concerns about a future in which the well-off couldpay for CRISPR to perfect their offspring. We will soon be faced with very difficult decisions aboutwhen and how to use this breakthrough medical technology.For example, if your unborn child were going to have a debilitating disease that you could fix by taking a pill to edit theirgenome, would you take the pill? How about adding some bonusintelligence? Greater height or strength? Where would you draw the line?
CRISPRs potential for misuse by changinginherited human traits has prompted some genetic researchers to call fora global moratorium on usingthe techniqueto modify human embryos. Such use is a criminal offense in 29 countries, and the United States bans the use of federal funds to modify embryos.
Still, CRISPRs seductiveness is beginning to overtake the calls forcaution.
In February, an advisory body from the National Academy of Sciences announcedthe academys support for usingCRISPR to edit the genes of embryos to remove DNA sequences that doctors saycause serious heritable diseases. The recommendation came with significant caveats and suggested limiting the use of CRISPR to specific embryonic problems. That said, the recommendation is clearly an endorsement of CRISPR as a research tool that is likely to become a clinical treatment a step from which therewill be no turning back.
CRISPRs combination of usability, low cost and power is both tantalizing and frightening, with the potential tosomeday enableanyone to edit a living creature on the cheap in their basements. So, although scientists might use CRISPR to eradicate malaria by making the mosquitoes that carry it infertile, bioterrorists could use it to create horrific pathogens that could kill tens of millions of people.
With the source code of life now so easy to hack, and biologists and the medical world ready to embrace its possibilities, how do we ensure the responsible use of CRISPR?
Theres a line that A Prairie Home Companion host Garrison Keillor uses whendescribing the fictional town of Lake Wobegon, whereall the children are above average. Will we enter a time when those who can afford a better genome will live far longer, healthier lives than those who cannot? Should the U.S. government subsidize genetic improvements to ensure a level playing field when the rich have access to the best genetics that money can buy and the rest of society does not? And what if CRISPR introduces traits into the human germ line with unforeseen consequences perhaps higher rates of cardiac arrest or schizophrenia?
Barriers to mass use of CRISPR are already falling. Dog breeders looking to improve breedssuffering from debilitating maladies are actively pursuing gene hacking. A former NASA fellow in synthetic biology now sells functional bacterial engineering CRISPR kits for $150 from his online store. Its not hard to imagine a future in which the big drugstore chains carry CRISPR kits for home testing and genetic engineering.
The release ofgenetically modified organisms into the wildin the past few years has raised considerable ethical and scientific questions. The potential consequences of releasing genetically crippled mosquitoes in the southern United States to reduce transmission of tropical viruses, for instance, drew a firestorm of concern over the effects on humans and the environment.
So, while the prospect of altering the genes of people modern-day eugenics has caused a schism in the science community, research with precisely that aim is happening all over the world.
We have arrived at a Rubicon. Humans are on the verge of finally being able to modify their own evolution. The question is whether they can use this newfound superpower in a responsible way that will benefit theplanet and its people. And a decision so momentous cannot be left to the doctors, the experts orthe bureaucrats.
Failing to figure out how to ensure that everyonewill benefit from this breakthroughrisks the creation of a genetic underclasswho must struggle to compete with the genetically modified offspring of the rich. Andfailing to monitor and contain how we use itmay spell global catastrophe. Its up to us collectively to get this right.
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Why human rights defenders love John McCain – The Washington Post – Washington Post
Posted: at 6:41 pm
By Berivan Orucoglu By Berivan Orucoglu July 28 at 2:47 PM
Correction: An earlierversion of this post incorrectly said the McCain Institute was founded by Sen. John McCain and his family. The institute was named for the McCain family. This version has been updated.
Berivan Orucoglu is the program coordinator of the Supporting Human Rights Defenders program at the McCain Institute for International Leadership. (Note: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the policies of the McCain Institute.)
Im a Turkish journalist. Ive spent my career criticizing politicians. I have always seen that as my job.
Yet I now find myself in the unaccustomed position of singing the praises of one of them the remarkable Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). When we learned last week that he was afflicted with brain cancer, the news not only jolted Washingtons political scenebut also sent a shock wave through the community of human rights defenders around the globe. Its important to appreciate just how unusual this is. These two worlds the politicians and the activists almost never agree on anything. Yet McCain enjoys immense respect in both of them.
That should help to explain why his medical diagnosis was top news not only in the United States but also across Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Since the news of his illness broke, my phone hasnt stopped ringing. Journalist and activist friends from Afghanistan and Ukraine, from Egypt and Turkey have been calling in shock and dismay, refusing to accept the news.
The first time I met McCain was at a meeting in Brussels during the George W. Bush administration. At the time, the European Union was outraged by the CIAs clandestine flights and torture policies. McCains clear and resolute stance against torture came as a huge relief to the United States allies in Europe. The world would be a safer place if Sen. McCain was the U.S. president, one Dutch diplomat told me.
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I next met the senator several years later, in a Syrian refugee camp in Turkey. By then, I had been to many camps and covered several high-level meetings. In striking contrast to other high-level visitors, McCain spent most of his time actually talking with the Syrians who had been forced to flee their war-torn homeland. It was refreshing to see a politician who didnt care about photo ops and who paid more attention to the refugees themselves than to the official statement from the camp authorities. I wasnt the only one impressed by the senators visit. One Syrian who attended the meeting with McCain told me: He was the only visiting politician to give us more than lip service.
I havent always agreed with all of McCains policies, but from the minute I met him, I have had the utmost respect for his bravery and his loyalty to what he believes in. Hes a man who has always stuck to his values even when they arent popular. While many politicians remember human rights and democracy only when its convenient, the senator has consistently championed human rights, democracy and the rule of law. He has been one of Washingtons most consistent defenders of the late Chinese Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo, a man many U.S. politicians have been reluctant to praise for fear of offending China. He called for the closure of the U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay when this wasnt exactly calculated to make him friends in his own party. Even though Egypt is one of the United States closest military allies, he has been willing to call Egypt out on its harsh treatment of dissidents.
Full disclosure: Three years ago, I was fortunate enough to come to the United States as one of the fellows of the Next Generation Leaders program at the McCain Institute in Washington. The institute, named for McCain and his family, is a testament to the senators lifelong devotion to human rights. Over the past five years, the institute has created a network of 44 emerging leaders from 33 countries and five continents who are committed to good governance, leadership and human rights. Every year, the institute gives human rights defenders a unique opportunity to gather in Arizona, where they speak about their fight against tyranny and their desire to make the world a better place.
By doing this, McCain hasnt just given human rights defenders a chance to make their case to people in the United States. He has also given them an opportunity to share lessons and expertise with one another, creating a worldwide community of people working for positive change. Apparently, some Americans dont know Sen. McCain as well as we do, one Ukrainian activist told me when he heard the news about the senators illness. Hell never back down from a fight because the odds arent in his favor.
McCain has been a guardian angel for many activists who have been fighting for their freedoms despite the odds. That might help Americans to understand why they arent the only ones who are now appreciating his legacy afresh. From Syria to Russia, from Burma to Ukraine, those who truly believe in freedom are praying for a speedy recovery of their true friend in the United States.
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Fellow humans, don’t panic yet – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | Fellow humans, don't panic yet Pittsburgh Post-Gazette On the other side of the argument, however, are equally knowledgable figures, such as Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and Andrew Ng, chief scientist at Baidu, known as China's Google. They see the many ways AI will serve humans, such as by diagnosing and ... |
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