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Daily Archives: August 6, 2017
Parliamentary inquiry into record euthanasia submissions: ‘note … – Stuff.co.nz
Posted: August 6, 2017 at 3:34 am
STACEY KIRK
Last updated16:52, August 2 2017
STUFF
A petition by former MP Maryan Street and more than 8000 others called for euthanasia to be made illegal.
A Parliamentary investigation into euthanasia has detailed an overwhelmingly negative response by New Zealanders who took the time to submit, and delivered almost no recommendations, other than that MPs "note" it.
But the inquiry was never intended to recommend a law change. Rather, it was designed to "investigate the views of New Zealanders".
And despite 80 per cent of people who made their views known to MPs on the Health Select Committee opposing it, the report has been welcomed by pro-euthanasia campaigner ACT leader David Seymour - who has a bill before Parliament to make it legal under strict controls.
1 NEWS
The ACT leader says it's good Parliament's health select committee has scotched conspiracy theories about euthanasia.
In a report delivered back to Parliament, from the committee, it detailed the arguments MPs heard over the issue as they undertook an inquiry that garnered a record 21,000 submissions. It also acknowledged a number of scientific polls that showed up to 75 per cent of New Zealanders were in favour of euthanasia.
READ MORE: *Euthanasia: How is it done, and what's it like putting down something you've vowed to care for? * Helen Kelly:'Why can't I have the option of assisted dying?' *MPs to vote on euthanasia after bill places the issue back in front of Parliament
Many who spoke to the committee talked of the "risk of coercion" and the concern that vulnerable elderly or disabled people might feel compelled to opt for euthanasia, if they felt they were a burden to their families.
Four MPs have tried to get Parliament to legalise voluntary euthanasia.
Many - both for and against - spoke of their own personal experiences of watching loved ones go through the final stages of a terminal illness. The committee also heard from experts right throughout the medical profession, academics, psychologists and healthcare workers.
"Some submitters were concerned that disabled people would be pressured to choose assisted dying. However, several submitters who identified as disabled rejected this view, and argued that they should have the right to make end-of-life choices.
"Many submitters questioned why anyone would let a loved one suffer a prolonged and undignified death when they would not allow the same for a family pet," the report said.
Dignity was a major theme across submissions.
"Proponents often defined dignity on the basis of maintaining independence, and physical and mental capacity. There was a clear desire to maintain bodily functions and not become reliant on others.
"Submitters often spoke of not wishing to be a burden, either to family or society, and commented that to be a burden would lessen their own self-worth," the report said.
Those in opposition to euthanasia however, said that argument undermined the idea of human dignity "by equating an individual's worth with their ability to contribute to society".
The majority of people who supported a law change did so for reasons of choice and individual freedom. That was in contrast to many who believed the law was there touphold the value of life.
But most agreed, there was a clear line to cross before allowing someone to die became euthanasia.
"There is general consensus that it is ethically and legally permissible to withdraw treatment at a patient's request or because treatment is not working. This is not euthanasia.
"Other arguments that predominated among those supporting a law change included the desire to not lose their abilities or a sense of self (41 per cent of those in favour), and the desire to not suffer (41 per cent of those in favour). Key arguments from those against included the dangers to vulnerable people (38 per cent of those opposed) and that modern palliative care is sufficient to treat suffering (31 per cent of those opposed)," the report said.
Health Select Committee chair Simon O'Connorsaid it was "by far" the largest parliamentary investigation undertaken. It was a "complicated, divisive" issue.
The committee's NZ First MPs delivered a minority view, that any potential law changes should be the subject of a public referendum.
The committee encourage "everyone with an interest in the subject to read the report in full, and to draw their own conclusions based on the evidence presented in it".
Seymour said he welcomed the report, because it scotched "the mythology and the conspiracy theories" around euthanasia.
"I think it's unfortunate that the report's recommendations are weak, but that shows we need a bill to be voted on in Parliament," he said.
"The report acknowledges that there's no connection between suicide and assisted dying, the report acknowledges that there is no connection between weakening perceptions of doctors and assisted dying.
"So in many respects that report is a good thing, because it trashes some of these conspiracy theories that we hear where people say only the most negative things about assisted dying that just aren't true."
Seymour was now encouraging voters to lobby their MPs at the electionto support euthanasia, as he began to work his own numbers to gain support for his bill.
It was still uncertain whether Parliament would have the time to hear the bill on its first reading, before the House rose on August 17 for the General Election.
-Stuff
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Euthanasia used for 4.5 percent of deaths in the Netherlands – New … – New Jersey Herald
Posted: at 3:34 am
Posted: Aug. 2, 2017 8:00 am Updated: Aug. 2, 2017 7:28 pm
LONDON (AP) Euthanasia has become "common practice" in the Netherlands, accounting for 4.5 percent of deaths, according to researchers who say requests are increasing from people who aren't terminally ill.
In 2002, the Netherlands became the first country in the world that made it legal for doctors to help people die. Both euthanasia, where doctors actively kill patients, and assisted suicide, where physicians prescribe patients a lethal dose of drugs, are allowed. People must be "suffering unbearably" with no hope of relief but their condition does not have to be fatal.
"It looks like patients are now more willing to ask for euthanasia and physicians are more willing to grant it," said lead author Dr. Agnes van der Heide of Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam.
The 25-year review published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine is based on physician questionnaires. The use of euthanasia and assisted suicide "to relieve end-of-life suffering has become common practice in the Netherlands," the authors said in the report.
The review shows that in 1990, before it was legal, 1.7 percent of deaths were from euthanasia or assisted suicide. That rose to 4.5 percent by 2015. The vast majority 92 percent had serious illness and the rest had health problems from old age, early-stage dementia or psychiatric problems or a combination. More than a third of those who died were over 80.
Requests from those who aren't terminally ill still represents a small share, but have been increasing, Van der Heide said.
"When assisted dying is becoming the more normal option at the end of life, there is a risk people will feel more inclined to ask for it," she said.
About 8 percent of the people who died in 2015 asked for help dying, the review showed. Van der Heide said about half of all requests are approved now, compared to about a third in previous years.
Scott Kim, a bioethicist at the U.S. National Institutes of Health who was not part of the study, said the report raises concerns, particularly in regards to people seeking euthanasia due to age-related issues.
"These are old people who may have health problems, but none of them are life-threatening. They're old, they can't get around, their friends are dead and their children don't visit anymore," he said. "This kind of trend cries out for a discussion. Do we think their lives are still worthwhile?"
Euthanasia is also legal in Belgium, Canada, Colombia and Luxembourg. Switzerland, Germany and six U.S. states allow assisted suicide.
Some experts said that the euthanasia experience in the Netherlands offered lessons to other countries debating similar legislation.
"If you legalize on the broad basis (that) the Dutch have, then this increase is what you would expect," said Penney Lewis, co-director of the Centre of Medical Law and Ethics at King's College London.
"Doctors become more confident in practicing euthanasia and more patients will start asking for it," she said. "Without a more restrictive system, like what you have in Oregon, you will naturally see an increase."
In 1997, Oregon was the first state to allow physician-assisted suicide for those given six months or less to live. It is now legal in Colorado, California, Montana, Vermont, Washington state and the District of Columbia.
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Man sentenced for computer crimes – Traverse City Record Eagle
Posted: at 3:33 am
TRAVERSE CITY Bradley Thomas Southerton knows he lost trust in the local community but he said hell do everything he can to earn it back. And hell have the next four years on probation to prove it.
The 37-year-old Traverse City man last month pleaded guilty to a felony count of using a computer to commit a crime after authorities seized his computer and discovered a trove of suspected child pornography. Prosecutors argued up to 5,000 images some involving infants were uncovered during the investigation.
But Southertons attorney Craig Elhart argued only a handful of the files were confirmed as child sexually abusive material. Many of them could have been nude images but they werent necessarily abusive, he said. And Southerton deleted the files just as quickly as he realized they existed in his hard drive, Elhart added.
This is not a victimless crime and although I never in my life would hurt or harm anyone, I realize that I have here, Southerton explained to 13th Circuit Court Judge Kevin Elsenheimer. It was a stupid mistake and it was foolish and Ill never do this again. Ill always be ashamed of it. This is not me.
Southerton dodged a potential seven-year prison stint and will serve four years of probation following his conviction, Elsenheimer decided Friday. The judge recognized the extraordinarily disgusting nature of the accusations but said Southerton isnt a threat to the public and understands his behavior was wrong.
Its clear this behavior is outside the expected behavior from him, Elsenheimer said. He has no prior record whatsoever no felonies, no misdemeanors. Hes not a traditional criminal. In lieu of a sentence to jail, Ill simply let you know youll plan on going to jail for 30 days for any (probation) violation at all."
Michigan State Police investigators in January seized Southertons computer after they received a tip that an online sharing account connected to the suspect had been used to share and receive child sexually abusive material. He pleaded not guilty to several criminal charges but later accepted a deal that dropped all but one.
Grand Traverse County Assistant Prosecutor Kyle Attwood said Southerton tried to minimize the severity of the offense. He argued the defendant traded pictures with other people around the world and contributed to an underground industry that exploits and endangers young children.
County Prosecutor Bob Cooney also said Southerton soon will be placed on Michigan's sex-offender registry and undergo mandated counseling.
Elsenheimer said Southerton is highly regarded by his family, peers and associates. He recognized the severity of the accusations but noted that he took steps to delete the images from his computer before the investigation began. The problem: Nothing is ever really deleted in cyberspace, Elsenheimer added.
If you come back, you can plan on bringing your toothbrush, Elsenheimer told Southerton.
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Riverside County sheriffs’s deputy did his job of upholding the rule of … – Redlands Daily Facts
Posted: at 3:33 am
Riverside County sheriffs deputy was doing his job
Re No need to manhandle vendor at graduation (Sal Rodriguez, July 22):
Regarding Sal Rodriguezs column on the Riverside County Sheriffs Deputy taking down a woman selling flowers without a permit at the Perris High School graduation, Rodriguez made a forceful case against the heavy-handed enforcement against the perpetrators of victimless crimes, but he lost me in his final paragraph where he states, Something has gone wrong when a woman selling flowers can find herself manhandled by an overpaid deputy allegedly tasked with upholding the rule of law.
First of all, our law enforcement officers are, by definition, tasked with upholding the rule of law. Theres nothing alleged about it. Secondly, how does Rodriguez know that this deputy is overpaid? And what the heck relevance does this have to the incident at all?
For me, Rodriguezs pejorative characterization of our police officers nullified the several good points he made in his column.
Greg Schneider, Redlands
Why no input from residents of Fontana?
Winston Churchill once said, Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.
He could well have been talking about Fontana. This past week, the Fontana City Council voted to move forward a proposal to enact electoral districts without allowing for reasonable input from the community.
In a city comprised of over 200,000 residents, the council felt that two, yes two, public hearings would prove sufficient to gather the intel needed to move forward on a plan of action. Only that didnt happen. On July 25, Mayor Acquanetta Warren arrived at City Hall with a prepared statement and resolution language to move forward.
In other words, the mayor and her two sure votes on the council already had planned their intent to ignore civic input. Compare this to the implementation of the city General Plan, when the city held countless hearings, community workshops and town halls. I guess their message is simple: when decisions are tied to money, an earnest effort will be made to gather input. When decisions are tied to political longevity, the less the public knows, the better.
Carlos D. Bravo, Fontana
GOP threw Inland Empire residents under the bus
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Re Mayes must go as Assembly leader (John Pillips, July 30) and Republican support wasnt needed (Jon Coupal, July 30):
The GOP threw Inland Empire residents under the bus with their votes. With the gas tax set to increase and adding the additional cost of cap and trade to a gallon of gasoline will hit motorists in Riverside and San Bernardino hard in their pocketbooks.
The reality is public transportation is not a viable entity in California, unlike in New York or DC. For instance, when I took a public transportation from Yucaipa to Ontario Airport, it took approximately four hours catching two buses.
Finally, the bus dropped me way off from the airport and I was told the public transit does not go anywhere near arrival or departure areas, only cars, taxis and shuttles go there. It was almost as if a citizen taking public transportation was not expected to fly.
In addition, a significant amount of the cap-and-trade dollars are going to be spent on high-speed rail going from Los Angeles to San Francisco; How does that benefit San Bernardino, Riverside or San Diego? Overall, it was a poor choice by the GOP and any goodwill they have will be gone as well.
Hari Iyer, Yucaipa
Enough with the bullying
Re What does the Republican Party stand for? (Question of the Week, July 31):
The seemingly eternal verbal bullying about which major party is the better reminds me of when kids used to get into an argument ending with each one claiming, Oh yeah? Well, my old man can lick your old man!
Now, in my 86th year as a Californian, I recall when I was growing up, my older brother explaining to me that its the job of the Democratic Party to come up with new ideas, and the job of the Republican Party to make them work. Lets help both parties do their job.
Ralph Manus, Banning
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Author Michael Stafford visits Black Dog Books for signing – Current in Zionsville
Posted: at 3:32 am
By Chris Bavender
Black Dog Books will host a book signing from 2 to 4 p.m. Aug. 12 with Michael Stafford, author of Between the Walls of Time. The historical fiction centers on Cyrus Kohler, who starts an organization called The Front that one day becomes a major third political party in America.
Stafford
They call themselves The Unbought and have no PACs or lobbyists. Everyone joins for $1, said Stafford, a Hendricks County resident. By books end, The Front has 32 million members. Surrounding the main plot are an ongoing number of other events that make the story come alive.
Stafford spent more than five years working on the 104-chapter book. It is divided into three books within the main book. It is the third full-length novel he has written and the first he has published.
The title came from my understanding of our evolutionary spot in this sea of time we now find ourselves in on Earth. We are a poorly evolved species that still believes violence is a solution to social problems, he said. We live in a time that has not yet committed to peace. We worship unseen gods as all our predecessors have done before us.
Between the Walls of Time was released June 15 by Grey Swan Press, the same publisher of Oprah Winfreys books. Stafford was introduced to the publishing group run by Jim Kelley and his daughter, Jocelyn who worked for Winfrey during her book club years by online blogger Jenn Mattern.
Grey Swan publishes three to four novels yearly and does a wonderful job with emerging writers, Stafford said. Everyone behind the book feels this is a worthy successor to powerful books about our government and society such as Brave New World and Atlas Shrugged. Only time will tell, but our hopes are high. It is quite a story.
Response to the book has been overwhelmingly positive, Stafford said.
I want readers to remember the characters who lead this drama and what they stand for. I want readers to come face-to-face with the reality of social congruence and the Doctrine of Limited Rights. I want people to expand their mental universe, to think bigger about what is possible, he said. I want everyone who reads this book to decide for themselves if The Front, a more empirical, science-based organization, is the way to our future. It would be great for the planet if they acted on their decisions.
Between the Walls of Time is available at area bookstores, Amazon, abebooks.com, or Staffords website, johnmichaelstafford.com.
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Author Michael Stafford visits Black Dog Books for signing - Current in Zionsville
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A Turning Point on the Left? Libertarian Caucus Debuts at … – Truthout – Truth-Out
Posted: at 3:32 am
Roughly 100 anti-Trump protesters demonstrate peacefully in Market Square on February 19, 2017, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Jeff Swensen / Getty Images)
The Democratic Socialists of America, a traditionally progressive socialist organization founded in 1982, has seen it's membership increase multiply from roughly 5,000 to 25,000 members in the past year following the Bernie Sanders campaign and the subsequent election of Trump. Now, many on the left are looking at the organization as a barometer of sorts for the fate of the larger left. In addition, many are viewing the DSA convention this week in Chicago as a key turning point within the organization. Coming out of the DSA is a new caucus called the Libertarian Socialist Caucus. The LSC promotes a vision of "libertarian socialism" -- a traditional name for anarchism -- that goes beyond the confines of traditional social democratic politics. I asked John Michael Coln, a member of the group's provisional organizing committee, to talk about its vision and goals.
Adam Weaver: The DSA has a range of tendencies and is sort of a "big tent" of socialist politics. What made you want to form a Libertarian Socialist Caucus (DSA-LSC)? Tell us about yourself and what you see as the political influences of the group.
John Michael Coln: I've been a member of DSA for over a year; some of us involved have been members before the "Bernie and Trump bump." So it's not a matter of anarchists infiltrating and joining DSA ... but anarchists who have been members of DSA all along. We want to organize them as we believe that libertarian socialism is democratic socialism.
Once upon a time, before Trump and Bernie Sanders, there had been a thing called the Left Caucus which aimed to organize all the DSA members who wanted to push the organization to the left. It was good, I was part of it, but it's now basically defunct because with so many new members joining DSA, many are already to the left of the DSA. But what the existence of the Left Caucus proved was that caucuses based on ideological interests had a place in DSA. We want to be the first caucus within the DSA that had a more specific vision, that openly talks about a specific political direction that they would move towards. Rather than say we want to move the DSA to the left, we [are saying we] want to move to the left with specific positions and a specific manner. And not everyone who identifies with the left is going to agree.
Speaking for myself here, I believe that the LSC has an especially important role not just in promoting its own ideas, but also in setting an example for others for how to do caucuses right in being internally democratic, in co-existing, cooperating with and having cross-membership with other caucuses. Caucuses can be hubs of organizing activity, hubs of political education, hosting reading groups, etc. There's a dimension of caucuses that are akin to being political parties within the larger DSA.
It's important to note that you can't be in the LSC unless you are a dues-paying member of DSA. Most of our members were people who were already members of the DSA. There are some people who, because we announced our existence, joined DSA, and that's a consequence of the libertarian socialists already in DSA who were getting organized.
At the end of the day, the Libertarian Socialist Caucus, or any other caucus for that matter, is not an alien entity within DSA; rather it's a caucus of DSA members united around a shared interest.
What do you see as the commonalities and differences between the politics that you are looking to put forward and DSA's current politics and organizing? What are you looking to change?
I would contest the framing of the question a little bit. It's important to note that beyond the idea of big-tent socialism, the DSA doesn't actually have a party line. Outside observers, though, act as if DSA does, but the reality is it doesn't have a set of positions that you have to accept. Rather, the DSA is an internally democratic organization of socialists that adjudicate their disputes through liberal parliamentary norms of conflict resolution. In other words, if we disagree, like on the convention floor, it will be argued out on the floor between delegates. It's not a centralist organization where there's a party line and if you disagree you have to leave.
The problem is that, at this point, it's difficult to say exactly what LSC stands for because we don't have official positions. We just finalized our membership, and because we are democratic we haven't reached positions yet. There are probably shared values that we have that people in DSA don't have, and we want to promote those values and make them more popular.
These [values include] skepticism of the state, a critique of the state and seeing the state as going hand-in-hand with capitalism. A second component is a belief in radical democracy with a higher standard of democracy, one which is more rigorous. A lot of people believe that democracy is just elections. But we believe democracy means more than electionsthat it is participatory.
We want to advocate and convince people by the strength of our ideas that there are things DSA should be doing and should be promoting. We want to see more things like directly democratic neighborhood assemblies, worker cooperatives, participatory budgeting, radical syndicalism and municipalism that DSA is currently not promoting, as well as the things DSA is already doing, like organizing workplaces and fighting bosses and landlords. We see these as the fullest embodiment of the values that unite the different kinds of socialism within the DSA under its banner.
The DSA's convention is happening in Chicago this weekend. With over 40 proposals and with the huge influx of new members who have entered the organization, many observers see this convention as a turning point. Can you tell us what you see as the key issues at stake that will be debated at the coming convention? How is DSA-LSC leaning on these issues?
I do want to answer this one by saying, like I said before, LSC doesn't have an official position yet. The very first event that we are organizing [Friday] morning is our first general assembly where members of LSC will follow a procedure presented to our membership to make decisions about convention debates. We are going to go one-by-one through all of the floor debate questions that will happen at the convention. If our assembly can arrive at a consensus, we are going to ask the delegates present to vote in accordance with that.
We don't know how many will show up exactly, but we are expecting, based on our listserve, something like 20 confirmed delegates, and we are allowing any DSA member to attend.
A major decision at the convention will be elections for the 16-member National Political Committee of DSA, which acts as a sort of national level policy and steering committee for the organization. Right now there's the competing Momentum/Spring Platform and Praxis slates, individuals drafted and signed onto a "Unity Platform" document, and now members of DSA-LSC are putting forward their candidates as well, called DSA Friends and Comrades. What do you see as the competing visions represented?
I can't say anything on our official position on them. Speaking only for myself, I think that Momentum and Praxis both have some pros and they both have some cons. They are all good organizers and comrades that have done good work. But I personally disagree very strongly with what I would see as the centralizing tendencies in Momentum's positions. But I'm only speaking for myself, and I know for a fact that other LSC members have different opinions.
What I would say about both Momentum and Praxis is that the way they came about is that [their candidates] only represent themselves. My hope is that in the future LSC sets an example where candidates are selected by caucuses and are accountable to them rather than self-selecting. And I think that's important because the platforms of the slates have shaped the convention as a whole, and it's more democratic if those conversations arise from larger groups of members within the DSA.
The DSA Friends and Comrades coalition is something that came out of LSC members and was organized by LSC members informally and hasn't been approved by the group. We wish them well, and some of us will vote for them and promote them on our social media, but they don't represent the LSC. Next convention we aim to organize a primary and democratic process to put forward a slate.
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A Turning Point on the Left? Libertarian Caucus Debuts at ... - Truthout - Truth-Out
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Following the Golden Rule – Register Pajaronian
Posted: at 3:31 am
SANTA CRUZ Just a few hours after an 18-hour trip from Redwood City that included a jaunt under the Bay Bridge, the Golden Rule docked in Santa Cruz Small Yacht Harbor for a two-week rest.
The sailboat, a 34-foot, two-mast ketch, is in town as part of a worldwide tour to protest nuclear proliferation, an all-encompassing mission that includes nuclear power, but focuses on weapons.
The tour, which is sponsored by Veterans for Peace, comes as the United Nations pushes a first-ever multilateral treaty to ban nuclear weapons. More than 120 countries signed the legally binding treaty on July 7, a group that did not include the United States, Russia and 48 other countries.
The treaty will become international law once it is ratified by 50 countries.
The crew of the Golden Rule hopes among other things to focus on those holdout nations, said project manager Helen Jaccard.
Jaccard said the ship will also travel along the southern states and the eastern seaboard, as well as up the Mississippi River.
After traveling through the U.S., the crew plans to go through the Panama Canal and on to Asia, she said.
The overall mission is to educate people about the overall danger of radiation, stop war and protect the environment, she said. If we reach out to a broad audience, we have a much better chance of ending the nuclear era.
The Santa Cruz stop on Thursday also came just before Hiroshima Day, the Aug. 6 anniversary of the day the U.S. dropped a nuclear bomb on that Japanese city in 1945.
Veterans for Peace Santa Cruz chapter president Henry Meserve called the ships arrival, a sign of the possibility of peace, and the possibility of doing away with nuclear weapons.
Meserve, who served in the U.S. Marines from 1960-65, said his father was a pacifist who knew the Golden Rules original crew. He said the ships mission is particularly relevant at a time of increasing hostility between the U.S. and North Korea, which is ramping up its nuclear weapons program.
We dont want any more veterans, he said.
In 1958, the Golden Rule became one of the first environmental activism vessels to go to sea, manned by a crew that planned to sail to the Marshall Islands. There, they wanted to stop the U.S. government from conducting aboveground nuclear weapons tests.
The ship sailed from San Pedro toward the U.S. nuclear test zone, but the trip was sidelined after a crewmember got sick and a storm damaged the boat.
On March 25 they sailed again, but the crew was arrested and jailed in Honolulu.
But that incident, coupled with growing concern and skepticism from a public against its government, resulted in the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1963.
The story set the stage for such environmental crusaders as Greenpeace and the Sea Shepherds.
Still, the Golden Rule languished for years in Humboldt Bay, eventually sinking thanks to two holes in its stern, Jaccard said.
The ship was removed by a salvage company and was narrowly saved from being turned into firewood by a call by its previous owner, extolling its historical virtues, Jaccard said.
After that, a group took five years to restore it, with the help of several financial contributions, Jaccard said.
The rotating crew sleeps on four bunks, and share a kitchen and a small bathroom.
Jaccard said years of living in an RV made such a cramped lifestyle all the easier.
Goldie is really lucky, she said. She is incredibly lucky or magical. When I lay on the bunk with my feet up, I think to myself how incredibly lucky I am.
The Golden Rule will be docked at P Dock through Aug. 18. The public is invited to visit through Sunday, and then Aug. 16, 17 and 18 from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
For information, to follow the progress of the Golden Rule or make donations, visitwww.vfpgoldenruleproject.org or call (206) 992-6364.
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Amid liberal backlash over vacation, Trump explains the real reason behind New Jersey trip – TheBlaze.com
Posted: at 3:31 am
Much to the chagrin of many liberals, President Donald Trump on Saturday clarified what would be happening on his 17-day New Jersey vacation.
In a tweet seemingly directed at those who opposed the presidents vacation, Trump claimed that the vacation was not what it seems.
Working in Bedminster, N.J., as long planned construction is being done at the White House, Trump explained in a tweet. This is not a vacation meetings and calls!
CNN on Friday called the president a hypocrite for taking the vacation, and claimed that Trump was not supportive of former President Barack Obamas decisions to take vacations.
CNN contributor Dean Obiedallah wrote, Recall that Trump had regularly skewered Barack Obama for taking vacations while he was President, and had even tweeted, quoting from his own book, that if you like your job you dont need a vacation. Dont take vacations, he wrote in Think Like A Billionaire. Whats the point? If youre not enjoying your work, youre in the wrong job.
Obiedallah continued, While Trump is clearly not deserving of a 17-day vacation only six months into his new job, we, the people, desperately need one!
Typically presidents, like Lincoln, will visibly age while in office, he wrote. In this case, Trump is doing a reverse-Lincoln: he is aging all of us. That is, all of us who are responsible for his dismal 33% approval rating.
Others including late-night show host Stephen Colbert who infamously went on a vulgar, expletive-laden rant against the president in May, sarcastically said that the president earned his vacation.
Hes earned it is a phrase that you dont say about Donald Trump, Colbert said during the Friday airing of his CBS show.
Comedian Chelsea Handler tweeted on Friday about the presidents vacation and said, Trump is leaving for vacation. Lets hope its like that vacation that Bill OReilly went on.
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Liberal Racism Horror ‘Get Out’ Is Most Profitable Film of 2017 – teleSUR English
Posted: at 3:31 am
Critics say it differs from most mainstream examples of the genre because the Black male character is not an early victim or the bad guy.
Jordan Peele'shorror Get Out is not just an excellent movie addressing racial politics in the United States, it has also made a lot of money, according to a recent report published by The Wrap.
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With US$217 million in profits and a 630 percent return on investment, Peele's directorial debut ranked first, before another horror movie, M. Night Shyamalans Split which recorded a 610 percent return.
Both features were produced by Blumhouse Pictures, which specializes in horror movies made with small budgets.
As for Get Out, Peele was initially allocated a US$4.5 million budget.
That's turned into an impressive US$252.4 million profits at the box office worldwide so far this year including US$175 in the United States alone.
The critically-acclaimed movie focuses on an interracial couple, with Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) meeting the parents of his white, liberal girlfriend (Allison Williams) for the first time it soon turns into a literally horrific encounter.
Peele wanted the audience, regardless of race, to see the subtle racism through Chris' eyes.
"It was very important to me to just get the entire audience in touch in some way with the fears inherent [in] being black in this country," Peele said. "Part of being black in this country, and I presume being any minority, is constantly being told that ... we're seeing racism where there just isn't racism."
"Get Out" has benefited from being embraced by reviewers, earning a rare 100% "fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
While critics such as the Wall Street Journal's Joe Morgenstern hailedits "explosive brilliance" and the New York Times' Manohla Dargis praised it as "exhilaratingly smart."
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Free your brain: How Silicon Valley denies us the freedom to pay attention – Salon
Posted: at 3:31 am
In late June, Mark Zuckerberg announced the new mission of Facebook: To give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together.
The rhetoric of the statement is carefully selected, centered on empowering people, and in so doing, ushering in world peace, or at least something like it. Tech giants across Silicon Valley are adopting similarly utopian visions, casting themselves as the purveyors of a more connected, more enlightened, more empowered future. Every year, these companies articulate their visions onstage at internationally streamed pep rallies, Apples WWDC and Googles I/O being the best known.
But companies like Facebook can only give people the power because we first ceded it to them, in the form of our attention. After all, that is how many Silicon Valley companies thrive: Our attention, in the form of eyes and ears, provides a medium for them to advertise to us. And the more time we spend staring at them, the more money Facebook and Twitter make in effect, its intheir interest that we become psychologically dependent on the self-esteem boost from being wired in all the time.
This quest for our eyeballs doesnt mesh well with Silicon Valleys utopian visions of world peace and people power. Earlier this year, many sounded alarm bells when a 60 Minutes expos revealed the creepy cottage industry of brain-hacking, industrial psychology techniques that tech giants use and study to make us spend as much time staring at screens as possible.
Indeed, it is Silicon Valleys continual quest for attention that both motivates their utopian dreams, and that compromises them from the start. As a result, the tech industry often has compromised ethics when it comes to product design.
Case in point: At Januarys Consumer Electronics Convention a sort of Mecca for tech start-ups dreaming of making it big I found myself in a suite with one of the largest kid-tech (childrens toys) developers in the world. A small flock of PR reps, engineers and executives hovered around the entryway as one development head walked my photographer and me through the mock setup. They were showing off the first voice assistant developed solely with kids in mind.
At the end of the tour, I asked if the company had researched or planned to research the effects of voice assistant usage on kids. After all, parents had been using tablets to occupy their kids for years by the time evidence of their less-than-ideal impact on childrens attention, behavior and sleep emerged.
The answer I received was gentle but firm: No, because we respect parents right to make decisions on behalf of their children.
This free-market logic that says the consumer alone arbitrates the value of a product is pervasive in Silicon Valley. What consumer, after all, is going to argue they cant make their own decisions responsibly? But a free market only functions properly when consumers operate with full agency and access to information, and tech companies are working hard to limit both.
During a 60 Minutes story on brain hacking, former product manager at Google Tristan Harris said, Theres always this narrative that technologys neutral. And its up to us to choose how we use it.
The problem, according to Harris, is that this is just not true [Developers] want you to use it in particular ways and for long periods of time. Because thats how they make their money.
Harris was homing in on the fact that, increasingly, it isnt the price tag on the platform itself that earns companies money, but the attention they control on said platform whether its a voice assistant, operating system, app or website. We literally pay attention to ads or sponsored content in order to access websites.
But Harris went on to explain that larger platforms, using systems of rewards similar to slot machines, are working not only to monetize our attention, but also to monopolize it. And with that monopoly comes incredible power.
If Facebook, for instance, can control hours of peoples attention daily, it can not only determine the rate at which it will sell that attention to advertisers, but also decide which advertisers or content creators it will sell to. In other words, in an attention economy Facebook becomes a gatekeeper for content one that mediates not only personalized advertising, but also news and information.
This sort of monopoly brings the expected fiscal payoff, and also the amassing of immeasurable social and cultural power.
So how does Facebooks new mission statement fit into this attention economy?
Think of it in terms of optics. The carotid artery of Facebook, along with the other tech giants of Silicon Valley, is brand. Brand ubiquity means Facebook is the first thing people check when they take their phones out of their pockets, or when they open Chrome or Safari (brought to you by Google and Apple, respectively). It means Prime Day is treated like a real holiday. Just like Kleenex means tissues and Xerox means copy, online search has literally become synonymous with Google.
Yet all these companies are painfully aware of what a brand-gone-bad can do or undo. The current generation of online platforms is built on the foundations of empires that rose and fell while the attention economy was still incipient. Todays companies have maintained their centrality by consistently copying (Instagram Stories, a clone of Snapchat) or outright purchasing (YouTube) their fiercest competitors all to maintain or expand their brand.
And perhaps as important, tech giants have made it near impossible to imagine a future without them, simply by being the most prominent public entities doing such imagining.
Facebooks mission affixes the company in our shared future, and also injects it with a moral or at least charitable sensibility even if its only in the form of bring[ing] the world closer together-type vagaries.
So how should we as average consumers respond?
In his award-winning essay Stand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Persuasion in the Attention Economy, James Williams argues, We must move urgently to assert and defend our freedom of attention.
To assert our freedom is to sufficiently recognize and evaluate the demands to attention all these devices and digital services represent. To defend our freedom entails two forms of action: first, by individual action not unplugging completely, as the self-styled prophets of Facebook and Twitter encourage (before logging back on after a few months of asceticism) but rather unplugging partially, habitually and ruthlessly.
Attention is the currency upon which tech giants are built. And the power of agency and free information is the power we cede when we turn over our attention wholly to platforms like Facebook.
But individual consumers can only do so much. The second way we must defend our freedom is through our demand for ethical practices from Silicon Valley.
Some critics believe government regulation is the only way to rein in Silicon Valley developers. The problem is, federal agencies that closely monitor the effects of product usage on consumers dont have a good category for monitoring the effects of online platforms yet. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) tracks medical technology. The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) focuses on physical risk to consumers. The Federal Communication Commission (FCC) focuses on content not platform. In other words, we dont have a precedent for monitoring social media or other online platforms and their methods for retaining users.
Currently, there is no corollary agency that leads dedicated research into the effects of platforms like Facebook on users. There is no Surgeon Generals warning. There is no real protection for consumers from unethical practices by tech giants as long as those practices fall in the cracks between existing ethics standards.
While it might seem idealistic to hold out for the creation of a new government agency that monitors Facebook (especially given the current political regime), the first step toward curbing Silicon Valleys power is simple: We must acknowledge freedom of attention as an inalienable right one inextricable from our freedom to pursue happiness. So long as the companies producing the hardware surrounding us and the platforms orienting social life online face no strictures, they will actively work to control how users think, slowly eroding our societys collective free will.
With so much at stake, and with so little governmental infrastructure in place, checking tech giants ethics might seem like a daunting task. The U.S. government, after all, has demonstrated a consistent aversion to challenging Silicon Valleys business and consumer-facing practices before.
But while we fight for better policy and stronger ethics-enforcing bodies, we can take one more practical step: pay attention to ethics in Silicon Valley. Read about Ubers legal battles and the most recent research on social medias effects on the brain. Demand more ethical practices from the companies we patronize. Why? The best moderators of technology ethics thus far have been tech giants themselves when such moderation benefits the companies brands.
In Silicon Valley, money talks, but attention talks louder. Its time to reclaim our voice.
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Free your brain: How Silicon Valley denies us the freedom to pay attention - Salon
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