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Monthly Archives: July 2017
Randolph county berry farm uses new technology to tame crop – Washington Times
Posted: July 2, 2017 at 9:09 am
STEELEVILLE, Ill. (AP) - David Knop is not scared of risk. Thats why when he looked at the 14 acres behind is home in rural Steeleville he had no problem with planting organic blackberries in hopes for a harvest in the next two years.
Knop, who comes from a background of traditional grain farming in Randolph County, said he had been looking for something to do with the land for some time and when grain prices began to sink in the last few years, he started to think outside the box.
Grain farming is not the best crop to be in, or field to be in right now. Prices are low, Knop said.
Knop said he spoke with a friend who had looked into using Indiana-based Trellis Growing Systems to plant berries, but never pulled the trigger.
Knop said this was the last piece of his puzzle.
After the initial talks and planning phase, Knop has finally been able to put plants in the ground. Now he waits - blackberries take one-to-two years to mature and produce a full harvest.
Looking out at one section of his berry farm hedged by woodland, Knop can already see progress. The tiny blackberry plants that are not yet a month in the ground are already showing fresh growth. Knop said he looks forward to taking his first harvest to market and to having families out for you-pick, opportunities, making another chance for drawing in tourism to the county.
Large-scale berry farms, like the one Knop has started, are not the norm in Illinois, or even the Midwest. Travis Olinske, small fruit crop adviser for Trellis Growing Systems, said the inconsistent winters can put a strain on farmers - at least those using traditional methods. Olinske said it has been the norm for blackberry farmers to grow plants vertically on a hedgerows system. This creates tall, dense rows of brambles that leave themselves exposed to the elements.
In the last decade, however, Olinski said his company devised a new way that will allow farmers to get consistent yields year-to-year - music to the ears of producers like Knop.
This new system trains plants to grow along low-lying wires. Plants are staggered every five feet with new plants growing along this length and being rotated down, or trained to root themselves again in the ground not far from where another plant is located. Olinske said this system of using low-profile trellises allows plants to be covered during cold winters, which is not always possible for hedgerows that can be five to seven feet tall. This combats one of the biggest issues berry farmers have in the Midwest - winter damage. Olinske said it is the hope that this method will bring berry production from the coasts to the Midwest and Knops operation is a good start.
Keeping costs low is key to success in farming and Olinske said with an operation Knops size this will be a big challenge.
The biggest thing that is going to be his make or break is how he manages his labor, Olinske said. Olinski said labor can also be a killer for berry farmers, but with their system of growing, the blackberry blossoms grow in one direction - either the east or the north to protect the fruit from sun scalding - making harvesting that much easier. He said pickers only have to work one side of the row and because the trellises are so small, workers do not have to search deep within a plant to find fruit cutting down in labor costs.
Knop admitted this kind of farming is new to him, but he likes a good challenge - he said he always does his homework before jumping in. However, he admitted having Olinske to work with directly has been incredibly helpful. Olinske has been there to help him every step of the way from building his irrigation system to putting plants in the ground - even with helping go through the hoops of getting his organic certification from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Olinske said Knops venture is unique in a lot of ways. It is one of only a scant few berry farms in Southern Illinois and is certainly the biggest he knew of. Knop said he hopes the organic certification will also help set him apart. He said it also just seems to be the right thing to do and he hopes it will inspire others in the area to plant consumer-ready crops like fruits and veggies, but maybe even to step up and go organic.
Maybe this will change things around here. Maybe other people will start, Knop said, adding that there is a lot of ideal farm land for berry farming.
Theres a lot of ground like Ive got thats not the best for raising corn, he said.
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Source: The (Carbondale) Southern Illinoisan, http://bit.ly/2uiovMg
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Information from: Southern Illinoisan, http://www.southernillinoisan.com
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Report sheds light on value of two-year engineering technology degree – My Edmonds News
Posted: at 9:09 am
Mel Cossette (Photo courtesy Edmonds Community College)
A recent national report co-authored by Edmonds Community Colleges Mel Cossette asserts that U.S. innovation will require the production and retention of workers skilled in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math).
The purpose of this report was to shed light on the relatively underappreciated roles and contributions of engineering technicians and technologists, said Mel Cossette, executive director and principal investigator of the National Resource Center for Materials Technology Education (MatEdU) and coauthor of the report, Engineering Technology Education in the United States. MatEdU, a National Science Foundation Advanced Technological Education funded center, is housed at Edmonds Community College.
The report presents and analyzes the findings and recommendations in four areas: the nature of engineering technology education, supply and demand, educational and employment pathways, and data collection and analysis.
According to Cossette, the focus has been on four-year degrees in engineering; however, two-year community and technical colleges are graduating excellent technicians in engineering technology.
The report makes the following comparison: If engineers are viewed as being responsible for designing the nations technological systems, then engineering technicians and technologists are the ones who help build and keep those systems running.
The demand for trained engineering technicians is high because it takes a support team with many technicians to support one engineer, Cossette said.
Edmonds CC offers Engineering Technology associate degrees in Materials Science Technology, Manufacturing and Materials Science Technology, and Robotics and Electronics, and certificates in Aircraft Electronics Technician and Basic Electronics.
Many potential technician students are not aware of interesting and rewarding careers as engineering technicians, Cossette wrote in Educational Pathways for Engineering Technicians, an article for the National Academy of Engineerings publication The Bridge (Summer 2017 edition) and co-authored with colleague Daniel Hull.
They may not also know that U.S. two-year colleges offer relatively low tuition and strong opportunities for technician graduates to enter the workforce at annual starting salaries exceeding $50,000.
For more information about Edmonds CCs degrees, go to edcc.edu/etec.
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Report sheds light on value of two-year engineering technology degree - My Edmonds News
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WH refutes reports that Science and Technology office unstaffed – The Hill
Posted: at 9:09 am
An official from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) told The Hill the department's science division is staffed, despite a report saying the last three employees of the division left last week.
However, an OSTP official told The Hill there are currently 35 employees in OSTP, and 12 employees in the department's science division, adding that the division is organized and divided differently under the Trump administration compared to the Obama administration.
"Science division out. Mic drop, former OSTP assistant director for biomedical and forensic sciences Eleanor Celeste said on Friday in a tweet.
science division out. mic drop. pic.twitter.com/RoYTJqLoXa
"By COB today, number of staffers in White House OSTP's Science Division = 0, Obama era OSTP staffer Kumar Garg tweeted on Friday.
By COB today, number of staffers in White House OSTP's Science Division = 0. https://t.co/o4dsn4y3hO
There were more than 100 employees in OSTP during the Obama administration.
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Giants ace Bumgarner pleased with progress, but when will he return? – Sacramento Bee
Posted: at 9:08 am
Sacramento Bee | Giants ace Bumgarner pleased with progress, but when will he return? Sacramento Bee Madison Bumgarner left the mound to a standing ovation at Raley Field on Friday night. As a one-game member of the River Cats, he acknowledged the sellout crowd of 14,014 with a wave. The Giants ace had mixed results against the Fresno Grizzlies in his ... |
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Parowan Canyon open; Brian Head blaze 65% contained – Deseret News
Posted: at 9:08 am
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
FILE - Homes that were spared from the Brian Head Fire are pictured on Friday, June 30, 2017.
BRIAN HEAD, Iron County Crews fighting the Brian Head Fire had contained 65 percent of the wildfire late Saturday.
The human-caused fire has burned more than 60,300 acres since it roared to life 14 days ago.
Parowan Canyon also opened Saturday. Brian Head and Dry Lakes residents and visitors can return via state Route 143 from Parowan to Brian Head or along state Route 14 through Cedar Breaks National Monument.
While evacuation orders have been lifted at Brian Head and the Dry Lake area, more than 1,800 firefighters continue to battle the blaze heading northeast.
Several areas remained under evacuation orders Saturday: Upper Bear Valley, Horse Valley, Beaver Dam, Clear Creek, Castle Valley, Blue Springs, Rainbow Meadows and Second Left Hand Canyon.
Fire officials said crews made "significant progress" toward containing the fire Friday.
"Thanks in large part to lighter winds, fire behavior has been reduced," fire officials said in a prepared statement. "Some isolated tree torching occurred, but crews had a successful day directly suppressing the fire perimeter and mopping up hot spots around the communities at risk."
Saturday, firefighters continued working on cleanup and planning on contingencies in case of any fire perimeter growth.
"Dozers have been used extensively in the northeastern flank of the fire where there is little containment," fire officials said. "Increasing containment has allowed numerous resources from the west side of the fire to be transferred to the northern perimeter, where most of the fire growth has occurred in the past three days."
Firefighters will continue to patrol the fire perimeter around the town of Brian Head and Second Hand Canyon.
The Dixie National Forest has also closed access to lands north of S.R. 14.
Fire officials encouraged visitors to check their route before planning any recreational activities for the Fourth of July weekend.
Maps of closed areas are posted on the federal fire incident website at http://www.inciweb.nwcg.gov.
Contributing: Ashley Stilson
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Progress in Bay Cleanup, But Much Work Remains – Lynchburg News and Advance
Posted: at 9:08 am
The Chesapeake Bay almost died in the 1970s when pollution came close to killing it off. Sewage and deadly agricultural and urban chemical runoff were well on the way to it.
Today, however, the Bay is in better health than its been in for decades, largely because of a determination from the federal government down that this iconic and unique body of water must be saved. Progress thats been called incredible has been made in Virginia, but much work remains.
Last month, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation released a preliminary report detailing the progress thats been made, especially in the last six years, in the fight to restore the Bay to health. Today, there is a record high level of sea grass the foundation upon which a healthy Bay is built, a noticeable rise in the number of female blue crabs, an oyster stock thats coming back from record low levels in the past decade and an oxygen-less dead zone thats projected to be 60 percent smaller than in the mid-1980s.
Considering how close the Bay was to death in the 1970s and 1980s, this progress is nothing short of amazing, though its taken more than three decades of effort to get to this point. Early efforts by Virginia, Maryland, the District of Columbia and Delaware simply were too limited in scope to tackle the problem, and because of the voluntary nature of the pact between the parties, the work of one could be negated by the inactions of another.
It wasnt until former President Barack Obama, through an expanded reading of the Waters of the United States Act, directed the federal Environmental Protection Agency to take the lead in the cleanup efforts. At the same time, the states of West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York, large portions of which are in the Bays watershed, were added to the group of states involved in the cleanup. With the EPAs lead, came federal dollars the compact members could leverage in efforts to implement a wide range of environmental steps to limit pollution inflows to the Bay; currently, the federal contribution is $78 million annually.
The Bay foundations report notes that Virginia has made noticeable progress incredible progress was the phrase the foundation used in upgrading sewage treatments in the Bay watershed. The progress made on this front was enough to offset shortcomings in state efforts to meet pollution reduction targets for farms and for curbing urban/suburban runoff.
According to foundation data, Virginia fell more than 10 percent shy of the goal to cut urban/suburban runoff pollution. Rain washes chemicals such as nitrogen and phosphorus chemicals that lead to deadly algae growth from lawns and chemicals from roadways, along with sediment itself, into the Bays watershed. Meeting the 2025 runoff goal the EPA has set for Virginia, the foundation says, will be difficult, if not impossible.
The success rate for meeting the goals set for the state agriculture sector is a more mixed picture. While phosphorus goals were met, nitrogen and sediment goals came up short by 10 percent or so. One highly successful program to tackle agricultural runoff has been working with farmers to fence off streams and their banks, preventing livestock from depositing nitrogen-laden waste in the waters. There are currently more than 300 conservation plans encompassing more than 65,000 acres, with farmers receiving cost-sharing dollars to protect their waterways, but again, unsteady funding and a backlog of cost-sharing applications have held back progress.
We have written many times over the years of the Bays environmental and economic importance, both for Virginia and the nation. We have also written in support of President Obamas federalization of the cleanup efforts, the reasoning being that the Bay is a national resource whose protection and restoration is beyond the capabilities of any one state or group of states. And we have also written in support of congressional efforts to restore the $78 million for Bay cleanup efforts to the federal budget on the grounds that the taxpayers return on investment more than justifies the expenditure.
This Chesapeake Bay Foundation report underscores the success, thus far, of the new approach to Bay restoration. The raw data alone argues for the continuation of this policy; we can only hope Congress is listening and restores the full $78 million in funding for the Bays cleanup.
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Jennings pleased with progress of wideouts – The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)
Posted: at 9:08 am
MORGANTOWN Gary Jennings sees West Virginias wide receiving corps as one with a ton of potential but one that also must prove itself.
Jennings listed several possible breakout players for the coming season, including Dominique Maiden, Reggie Roberson and Marcus Simms. The three add multiple skill set complements to the likes of Jennings, a sure-handed wideout and punt returner who tallied 10 receptions for 165 yards and two scores a season ago.
Factor in KaRaun White and his 48 catches for 583 yards and five touchdowns in 2016 and that the Mountaineers again secured the services of David Sills after a stint trying his hand at quarterback at El Camino College in Calif, and WVU has the breadth of ability to provide plenty of targets for new quarterback Will Grier.
The question, then, isnt one of if as much as whom. Can Jennings better his stats, and can White, coming off a season-ending leg injury suffered in November, at least duplicate his?
Will Jovon Durante bounce back as a big play threat to replace Shelton Gibson after a mild sophomore slump which saw his yardage production fall from 378 yards to 331 despite 11 more catches? Thats a difference of more than six yards per grab, which translated in Durante being far more of a true mid-range threat than the vertical one he was in his first year at WVU.
And what of Maiden and his 6-foot-5, 203-pound frame? Simms burst and increased playing time as his freshman season wore on last year, including a career-best 80 plays in the regular season finale versus Baylor, should be viewed as a positive. The coaching staff raves about Roberson, who is the most likely to see significant action as a true freshman.
Even William Crest, a former quarterback like Sills, is back at receiver after flirting with a transfer option during the spring.
Dominique Maiden, and Reggie Roberson, those guys are definitely stepping up, but as a group as a whole were all starting to gel and mesh together which I feel is very good, Jennings said. Marcus Simms, hes a different player as well with what he can bring to the table. He does the right things.
Jennings noted that the wideouts routinely run patterns and work on timing and other aspects with Grier, who showed flashes of his excellence as a freshman at Florida during the Gold-Blue spring game. Grier completed nine of his first 10 throws while also finding Ricky Rogers for a 60-yard catch-and-run in a 202-yard performance.
Hes great, Jennings said. Cant wait for this upcoming season. (The passes are) on point, a good ball. You have to be ready for certain passes. Thats a part of us just meshing together and making sure were all on the same page all the time. Thats what we have worked on. Every single chance we get, were working with the quarterbacks and trying to get timing down.
Thats a key, especially as the Mountaineers, under new offensive coordinator Jake Spavital, attempt to play at a faster pace. WVU ran 983 snaps a season ago actually a dozen fewer than its opponents for an average of 75.6 plays per game.
California, under Spavital, ran 1,035, and that was over just 12 games as opposed to West Virginias 13, translating to an average of more than 86 snaps per contest.
We can go pretty fast, Jennings said. Theres a lot of short game stuff and he uses the passing game as a run game as well. Theres a few things as far as tempo wise, but I guess well see.
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T&D Region lawmakers: Progress made on big issues – The Times and Democrat
Posted: at 9:08 am
They didnt get everything they wanted, but local lawmakers believe the General Assembly accomplished a lot this year.
This was a good session for the state, said Sen. John Matthews, D-Bowman.
Lawmakers approved a plan to fund roads, found additional money for poor school districts and addressed state pension problems.
I think that there were some very big issues that we had to tackle this year that certainly made the session very challenging, said Rep. Jerry Govan, D-Orangeburg.
Even though some of those issues we did not totally solve, I thought that we at least made some progress in trying to solve them, he said.
Lawmakers say one of their biggest accomplishments was the passage of the road-funding bill.
That was certainly an achievement well look back on in years to come, said Sen. Brad Hutto, D-Orangeburg.
The bill increases the state gas tax of 16.75 cents per gallon by 12 cents over a six-year period. The first two cents were added yesterday.
The state Department of Transportation reported that more than half of roadway pavement in South Carolina is considered in poor condition. Repairs would cost nearly $500 million annually to bring roadways into good condition.
That has been an issue that has continuously hung a cloud over the state, said Rep. Russell Ott, D-St. Matthews.
Road conditions present safety issues and negatively affect businesses and their transportation of goods, he said.
Ott said the increase will create a more sustainable and recurring funding source, which the state needs.
Rep. Justin Bamberg, D-Bamberg, agreed, saying, There is simply not enough money to go around to fulfill all the needs the state has.
We need new revenue streams, he said.
Govan said the gas tax is a fair way to raise the needed revenue, as the burden will not fall completely on South Carolinians. Travelers who use the roads will share the cost.
Its only fair that those persons driving through also share the burdens of the cost, he said. We have taken a positive step forward in terms of roads funding.
Area lawmakers were also glad to see pension reform advance.
Retirees, theyve worked for the state and served, and they ought not to be worried, said Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter, D-Orangeburg.
Currently, the pension plan is underfunded by roughly $24 billion because of low returns in past years.
The plan covers an estimated 550,000 government workers in the state and has collected around $2 billion annually from workers and employers but has paid out $3 billion in benefits.
This issue really got out of hand a number of years ago, Govan said. Im glad to say that we added money to the system and made some other adjustments that hopefully will begin to put us on the right track.
The proposed solution would increase most employees' contributions from 8.66 percent to 9 percent of their annual pay and cap those payments at that percentage.
Employer contributions would increase by 1 percent annually through 2022.
This also means an increase in the amount of money that school districts, local governments and state universities have to contribute.
Nobodys really happy with what had to be done, Ott said. Its never popular, but the worst thing you can do is stick your head in the sand.
In the area of education, the budget provides $55.8 million for capital improvements at high-poverty schools.
Cobb-Hunter said $100 million was originally proposed only for schools involved in the Abbeville lawsuit, which include Orangeburg County schools.
Govan said wishes there was more money for school improvements, especially since it will now be spread throughout the state.
Although the Legislature was not able to pass a bond bill to fund higher education building needs, local lawmakers hope one can be passed next year.
Higher education needs it to pass, Cobb-Hunter said.
Ott said it is needed to address the issues of deferred maintenance at college buildings.
Once you see a leak, you have to go ahead and replace it, he said. It makes sense to borrow the money.
Bamberg said he wants one to pass as well but, A bond bill wont solve the problem itself.
He encourages the Legislature to put politics aside and consider new, innovative ways of creating revenue streams.
Were at a point in South Carolina where we need to be more proactive, Bamberg said. He said the state could get left behind as other states continue to advance.
He was glad to see the governor sign into law the industrial hemp program.
The program will allow 20 farmers to grow and harvest industrial hemp, which can be made into oil, rope, clothing, paper, canvas, soap and even some food and drinks.
Farmers said the ability to diversify the crops they grow will not only benefit them, but the state as a whole.
That was a huge, Ott said. I think thats going to be a program were going to continue to see grow.
Bamberg added, We need to work on passing medical marijuana legislation.
He said it will be a benefit to patients with illnesses or conditions that are treated with medical marijuana.
Bamberg said legalizing gambling should also be considered.
If done correctly, we can strike the balance between those people who are against it and those people who recognize that when we talk about new revenue for education and new revenue for roads, a legalized gaming system is something that can bring in millions and millions of dollars, he said.
The increased revenue could also help the state lower taxes, he said.
It is a very difficult task to consistently lower taxes on industries and small business while at the same time the state fails to create new revenue streams to combat that, Bamberg said.
Lawmakers are looking forward to addressing several issues next year.
Hutto wants to come up with a plan to replace school buses.
Gov. Henry McMaster vetoed $20 million for school buses this year. He said he wants to come up with a plan to replace buses, but doesnt want to use lottery money that should go to scholarships.
Lawmakers arent expected to address the governors vetoes until they return in January.
Education Superintendent Molly Spearman says the state needs $73 million to replace all of the buses which go back to 1995.
Matthews will be pushing for his port enhancement zone proposal, which is still in the House.
The bill would give businesses tax credits for locating within a 35-mile radius of the intersection of interstates 95 and 26.
He says the location makes it an ideal distribution hub for cargo shipped to and from the port and the incentives would help lure jobs into the area.
Bamberg wants to address the Local Government Fund, which provides counties and towns with a share of the states revenue.
I am disappointed in our inability to fully fund the local government fund, he said. It puts them in a bind when we have unfunded state mandates.
He said the local governments deserve to be properly funded.
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Ukraine’s Downward Spiral – The Globalist
Posted: at 9:02 am
Kiev had an eventful week. On Wednesday, a global cyber attack, launched from Ukraine, spread like wildfire globally. While all of this was happening the head of the Kiev regimes counter-intelligence was blown to pieces as his car passed through an intersection in the center of the city.
The default reaction was that this was another episode in the Kiev-Moscow-US intrigue. Others on the ground say it was more likely linked to corruption related to arms sales. Will we ever know
The latest polls here show that the presidentwhom everyone here calls Porkyis at single-digit support. In comparison, Trump at 38% is doing rather well.
It is debatable, I suppose, and we likely will never know, but many here consider the current regime the most corrupt ever.
They are spending oodles on defense, and several persons have told me that it is common knowledge that the summit creams 7-10% off the top7-10% of a billion here, a billion there, another billion over thereafter a while it becomes real money!
They say that countries get the politicians they deserve. If that is true, you have to ask yourself, what the Ukrainians did to deserve what they have experienced for the last 27 years, indeed for much longer
A few weeks back, I re-read Bulgakovs White Guard. From 1917-1920, Kiev had no less than 18 governments.
Today, there is a vast sense of desolation, of resignation, among some of nihilism, and among others a view that there is nothing to do, no hope for anything, so live now, intensely, or leave.
At a museum of contemporary art, there is an exhibition which pretty much expresses these sentiments. A video that plays non-stop with the word FUTURE in big black capital letters across the screen.
Two of the letters of FUTURE have toppled over. What remains of the word is on fire. That sort of sums up how many here see their future.
In another room, there is an installation called Wasted Veteran. The room is entirely white, and empty, save for a few pieces of military gearso obviously obsoletestrewn about the floor, and a man, standing alone, wearing combat fatigues, and who is starring straight into the corner, into nothingness.
The sense of waste, of uselessness, of betrayal is crushing.
Then there is an entire room focused on Chernobyl; the photos and the texts are of pure desperation. The cyber attack earlier in the week, perhaps right on cue, shut down all of the monitoring equipment at Chernobyl
A few days back, the EU granted visa free travel to Ukrainian passport holders. Watch for a mass exodus of the young and the bright. And that cant be good for this place.
Meanwhile, the mob rules still over Odessa and its ports, distribution point to the West of some 90% of the heroin produced in Afghanistan.
After the United States has led the war there for a decade and a half, this year the poppy fields are at their most productive ever, with a record bumper crop on the cards. Odessa is also the plaque tournante of the illicit global arms trade
One has to feel for the Ukrainian people: The civil war, the vast corruption, the deep and ever more insurmountable divisions in the country, the flight of young people, the desperation of the armies of unemployed, the repeated devaluations, the crash of real income, the embezzlement of bank deposits, the fraudulent loans, the theft of state assets
It is estimated that over $1 trillion of state assets have been stolen, and there has not been one whimper out of the IMF, the EBRD, nor from the governments of Western Europe, the United States or Canada.
Not one peep, like setting a condition for IMF funding of recovering 20% of stolen assets.
It is said that a good place to start looking for the owners of some of these assets would be the Kiev government cabinet and parliamentary stand-ins for some of the coterie of vastly wealthy oligarchs who effectively run the country.
The cultural, political and social cauldron which is Russia-Ukraine is far beyond me to understand. A visit to the Bulgakov museum is expressive of this.
There is vast pride in the man and his work. Yet, he was Russian, wrote all of his books, plays, novellas in Russian, was born to an ethnic Russian family, was a descendant of a Russian orthodox priest.
Yet, none of that is mentioned, and only emerges when one probes the guide with questions
Yet spend but a little time, for example, in a Karaoke bar, or a caf, and virtually all of the songs which are belted out are Russian songs, or songs sung by Ukrainians in Russia. Complex, complex, complex.
Ukraines destiny would surely be very different it there was a mountain range somewhere between the Franco-German border and Moscow, and if Crimea did not offer the only all year ice free maritime port for the Russian navy.
One one hand, the geopolitics are what they are and point to a real politik resolution, similar to what Kissinger has several times suggested, and with which Moscow would likely be happy to accept.
On the other, there is a people, which have suffered so much, and continue to be trampled on by their own politico-economic oligarchic caste, as well as by their neighbours.
Today to some extent by Russia, yesterday with full military occupations by Germany, Sweden, Poland, France, Lithuania
But there is no doubt, Kiev is a European city, just as are Warsaw and Riga. The city continues to have one of the best ballet troops in the world, and a very active cultural life.
Kiev is such a pretty city, especially under the cloudless sky of today, as the dog days of summer begin.
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Why We Will Never Control Healthcare Costs – National Review
Posted: at 9:02 am
On one hand bioethicists bemoan the high costs of medical care and promote health care rationing forthe elderly, seriously disabled, and dying.
On the other, they promote expanding publicor insurance funding of health care to ensure that peoples desires are satisfied and to promote social justicemedicine harnessed in the service of hedonism,the ethical theory that pleasure (in the sense of the satisfaction of desires) is the highest good and proper aim of human life.
For example, California requires all group insurance plans to cover fertility treatments for gays and lesbians in the same way they do biologically infertile heterosexual couples. The Obama Administration promulgated a regulation so that Medicare now funds sex change surgeries.
Now this. Advocacy has commenced in the UK to have the socialized NHS fund uterus transplants so that men who identify as women can give birth. From the Daily Mail story:
Transgender women who were born male should be given womb transplants so that they can have children, leading NHS doctors have told The Mail on Sunday. And fertility experts say taxpayers should fund such transplants for those who identify as women, on the basis of equality enshrined in law.
Leading the debate on the controversial procedure is medical ethics lawyer Dr Amel Alghrani, who is pressing for a talks on whether womb transplants for trans-women should be publicly funded. Dr Alghrani, of Liverpool University, also predicts that a successful programme would lead to others demanding wombs including gay and straight men who wanted to experience the joys of carrying a child.
This would be wrong on so many levels, ranging from safety concerns for both patient and potential future baby, the prospect of doctors and hospitals being forced to participate even if it violates their religious or moral beliefsalready beginning to happento the question of whether going to such extremes to satisfy individual yearnings constitutes wise and public policy.
But make no mistake: Powerful political and cultural forces will bearepushing us hard in this direction.
This much is sure: If the current trends continue, there is no way we will ever be able to adequately control healthcare costs.
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Why We Will Never Control Healthcare Costs - National Review
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