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Monthly Archives: February 2022
Here are the candidates standing in Dacorum by-elections for Berkhamsted West and Boxmoor – Hemel Today
Posted: February 1, 2022 at 3:06 am
Residents in parts of Berkhamsted and Boxmoor will go to the polls this week to elect two new district councillors.
The tightly-contested wards of Berkhamsted West and Boxmoor will choose a new representative on Thursday, February 3.
The Conservatives previously held all available seats in the two wards since 2003, but Liberal Democrat councillors completed a sweep during the 2019 local elections.
One seat in either ward will be up for election after Nicky Woolner (Berkhamsted West) and Liz Uttley (Boxmoor) both left their roles at the start of November.
Dacorum Borough Council usually elect all district councillors at the same time, with the next elections due in 2023 so the new members will serve a year-long term.
The by-elections wont have a significant say on the ultimate make-up of the council, with the Conservative group currently holding 31 of the councils 51 seats, with 19 Liberal Democrat councillors and one independent.
The Local Democracy Reporter has contacted all eight candidates to outline their priorities for the ward and explain they should get your vote on Thursday.
In addition to a district council seat, Berkhamsted West will also elect a new town councillor for the ward.
Anne Foster (Liberal Democrat)
The Liberal Democrats said: Anne has lived in the ward since 1976 and has been speaking up against inappropriate development in the town for many years. Last winter she joined forces with local residents groups and Lib Dem councillors to raise awareness of the threat to the green belt around Berkhamsted from Dacorum Borough Councils local plan.
Annes hard work contributed to the councils decision to re-write the proposals. She is determined that any re-write of the plan should come back to the public for full consultation.
Anne has also been outspoken against sewage being released into the River Bulbourne and is an advocate for protecting and improving green space within the town and for more electric vehicle charging points.
She has also been speaking up to prioritise local school places for Berkhamsted children for a number of years, having sent her children to schools in the town.
Anne is already putting her back into improving Berkhamsted. As part of Berkhamsted Town Councils re-wilding project to attract pollinators into the centre of town, she can often be found digging in the flower beds on Lower Kings Road.
The by-election has been called because Councillor Nicky Woolner has moved to the south coast to be near her elderly mother, leaving vacancies at town and borough. Nicky Woolner says I was humbled that you chose me to be your representative. I know that Anne Foster will be a dedicated councillor, who will continue to fight for our town.
If elected Anne will be the Dacorum Borough Council ward mate of Councillor Sally Symington who says Anne has an unrivalled local knowledge and excellent understanding of the many issues facing Berkhamsted.
"Annes understanding of planning issues is second-to-none. Anne will be an outstanding advocate for local residents ensuring their voice is heard and the councils decisions scrutinised.
Kevin Fielding (Green Party)
Kevin Fielding said: I first moved to Berkhamsted in 1999, have raised my family here, and care deeply about this community and its surrounding environment.
"I have also worked locally as a Science Teacher and Laboratory Technician at Ashlyns School and been involved in many social and sporting activities, such as regular attendance with my son at the Sunnyside Rural Trust, and being an active member of the local golf, orienteering and running clubs.
I care passionately that residents views are heard, respected and acted upon by local decision makers. I promise to bring new energy, and an independent voice to council meetings.
"Decisions made by councillors affect our local environment and community. However, the wishes and interests of the town and its residents were ignored in some past decisions.
"I will fight against any further attempts to damage our town and its surroundings and actively support any scheme that promotes a cleaner, happier, and more prosperous future for us.
"I promise to listen to your views, and I will bring them to bear at council meetings.
With your vote, I can win here, and enhance your voice in the decisions that will affect how Berkhamsted will develop in the coming years. Residents in Berkhamsted have already recently voted in two Green town councillors, so lets get your voice heard at Dacorum Borough Council too.
Gary Moore (Conservative)
Gary Moore: Im passionate about Berkhamsted. After many years of saving, I bought my first home here with my fiance, Georgina. We are so lucky to live in this wonderful town with beautiful countryside on our doorstep.
"Im campaigning to represent you at Dacorum Borough Council and Berkhamsted Town Council because I want to make Berkhamsted even better.
"I promise to fight for Berkhamsteds interests. I have three priorities: 1) a better Local Plan, 2) better access to hospital services and 3) a greener town.
"Ill be hardworking, responsible and accessible. You will see me around town: on the high street and in local shops and restaurants. Please contact me if you have comments or questions I will listen to you. I hope you will see the results of my actions in real improvements to the town.
"Berkhamsted needs strong representatives who are passionate about making it the best possible place to live. Ill make sure Berkhamsteds voice is heard; whether thats about the effects of population growth on congestion and pollution, access to healthcare or protecting our local environment and biodiversity.
"If you also love our town and agree we can make it even better please vote for me on the 3rd of February.
Peter Scott (Labour Party)
The Labour Party said: Your local Labour Party candidate Peter Scott has lived in Berkhamsted since 2011. Peter is a retired Chartered Electrical Engineer, who specialised in domestic appliances.
Prior to moving to Berkhamsted to be closer to his family, Peter served as a Labour County Councillor in Greater Manchester for 2 periods, 1974 and 1986, during which time Peter was the Chairperson of Planning, with responsibility for the local Green Belt.
Following the abolition of the GMC in 1986, Peter served as a councillor for Stockport Metropolitan Council from 1987 to 2011. At Stockport Metropolitan Council, Peter was the leader of the opposition from 2005 to 2010, after which he stepped down, having decided to move to Berkhamsted, to be closer to his family.
Peter is standing as your local Labour candidate in both the Berkhamsted West Dacorum Borough Council by-election, on Thursday 3rd February 2022, as well as in the Berkhamsted West Town Council by-election on the same date.
If elected, Peter Scott will campaign on the following issues:
> The installation of Green heating systems and insulation in new and renovated social housing
> The provision of 35 per cent of new housing permissions being socially affordable rented properties
> Re-wilding farm land and waterways wherever possible.
Cameron Brady-Turner (Labour Party)
The Labour Party did not respond to a request for a statement, but Cameron Brady-Turner has previously stood as a candidate in the 2019 General Election and 2021 County Council elections. He works as a caseworker in Parliament.
Simy Dhyani (Liberal Democrats)
Simy Dhyani said: For me being a councillor is all about the community and standing up for the community. I am a hands on person who will do my best to represent Boxmoor and represent the residents on the Council.
It is important that the next councillor knows Boxmoor. I own and run the Boxmoor Steakhouse and lived in Boxmoor for almost 10 years.
"My children went to South Hill Primary and I have lived in Beechfield Road, St Johns Road and the Cotterells.
"Over that time I have made many friends in the area, built up a record of community engagement, as well as being a friend of Boxmoor Foodies.
For a few years now, time permitting, I have helped as one of the several community volunteers with litter picking and traffic surveys. Through my business I was able to help Boxmoor Primary with their raffle.
"When Marcus Rashford ran a campaign to get the Government to provide free school meals during half term October 2020 my business did what the Government didnt do and provided lunches for low income families. Which I paid for out of my own pocket.
Brandon Geary (Conservative Party)
On the Hemel Hempstead Conservative Association website, Brandon Geary said: Brandon says: I have a huge passion for politics, and it is my life when I am not working. I have dreamt about becoming an MP and making a real change, and I realise I can also serve local people by becoming the Conservative Councillor for Boxmoor.
"Boxmoor is a commuter area and I know just how important investment in transport infrastructure is.
To reduce car numbers, we need more accessible transport and increased frequency serving the area. I also believe we need to work to reduce problem parking in Boxmoor and keep the open spaces of Boxmoor open to all, whilst keeping an eye on planning and encroachment.
MP for Hemel Hempstead, Sir Mike Penning added: Its good to see a young enthusiastic conservative candidate standing for Boxmoor.
"Brandon is a very personable young man and will serve the residents of Boxmoor well. I wish him the very best for the election on the 3rd February.
Sherief Hassan (Green Party)
Sherief Hassan said: I have lived and worked in Hemel Hempstead for about 25 years and have raised both of my children here. I have been actively involved in Boxmoor through Boxmoor Theatre, where I am the Child Protection Officer, and have campaigned for the environmental welfare of the area for more years than I can remember.
"I was recently co-opted as a committee member of the Boxmoor Trust, which has been a great honour and responsibility.
"We have recently been able to improve our signage to fight against the terrible dog mess problem that plagues the Trust land which is enjoyed by many residents in Boxmoor.
Im a trustee of the Halsey Field Nature site which was recently recognised by the CPRE as a valuable site worthy of protection. After involvement with the Woodlands for All group led by Hemel Hempstead Quakers, I jointly founded Woodland Towns woodlandtowns.org.uk to record our vital green spaces and monitor/map all planning applications and consultations to allow residents to understand the impact and threats of mass housebuilding.
"I have always believed that there should be a balance with our elected representatives. The views and needs of residents have to be paramount, and that must include their future welfare and security.
"This needs independence and a willingness to work with different partys to achieve the best results. Boxmoor and the rest of Hemel Hempstead needs someone who will know when to fight and to compromise in order to respect the wishes and needs of the town and its surroundings.
My colleagues, Councillor Paul de Hoest and Mary Jane Hardinge have worked with the Lib Dem Town councillors in Berkhamsted to bring active change. Simon Grover in St Albans who has a 60 per cent vote share is proving his worth in all aspects of Council activity, and Herts Councillor Ben Crystall is on the planning and licensing committees in Herts County Council. Hemel Hempstead needs its first Green Councillor.
With your vote, I can win and be the Green who will enhance your voice in the decisions that will affect how Boxmoor will develop in the coming years.
Polling stations are open between 7am and 10pm on February 3.
Dacorum Borough Council has also confirmed the count will be held at The Forum, Hemel Hempstead on Thursday night.
Last year most councils in Hertfordshire quarantined ballot papers for 24 hours, but this will not be required this year with the result announced on the same day as the vote.
> Brandon Geary and Cameron Brady-Turner did not respond to a number of requests from the Local Democracy Reporter, which is why we havent been able to include an image
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Energy contradiction, Veolia incinerator and more | Letters to the editor – Goulburn Post
Posted: at 3:06 am
comment,
It is said that we live in a post-truth world and the question is how is our Federal Governments faring in that new world and in serving the needs of the people? Are our Federal Ministers, in delivering on their oath to serve the people? Our Energy Minister tells us that we need more fossil fuels rather than less if we are going to avoid the price of electricity rising. Some might say that energy policy has been to create uncertainty rather than certainty in renewable energy investment market. With the price of fossil fuel, especially thermal coal rising as the world emerges from COVID, the wholesale price of electricity has risen, in those states most reliant on coal, NSW and Queensland and least in those that have more renewable energy, in particular South Australia, which is close to achieving their target of 100 per cent renewable energy. The organisation responsible for running our electricity grid, the AEMO, tells us that we need more renewable energy and less coal and gas as they are more expensive than renewable energy, the price of which continues to fall. Many of our local corporates such as Coles are committed to using only renewable energy. READ ALSO: Goulburn house prices rise as city prepares to swell So who do we believe? Is our Federal Government preferencing fossil fuel companies ahead of the needs of the Australian people, both in respect of their health and their economic well being? Does the Federal National Party support those companies over the needs of farmers and the protection of farming land? Interesting that this new council is putting out feelers for rezoning the southern end of Auburn Street. The properties have had no maintenance for years so if they can be knocked down and redeveloped in the name of "progress" it will be a huge money making scheme for the present owners. McKell Place is now a speed-plus zone and a very big danger to many, such as children (day care), the medically impaired, movie-goers and club patrons. Does anyone agree that a general manager of a LGA jumping and posing in front of a camera with a local Liberal is unsuitable and inappropriate? I find Warwick Bennet's 'playful' photo shoot at the netball courts with the local Liberal MP to be both unseemly and questionable. If you want to be a politician you should stand for election, otherwise fade into the background like a good public servant. I am writing to you today in the hope that you can join the Tarago Community, Goulburn Mulwaree Council and the No toTarago Incinerator and Southern Highlands area in the fight to oppose the Veolia Woodlawn Mine Waste to Energy Infrastructure. In other words an incinerator. READ ALSO: School scores welcome crossing as police urge slow-down If these plants are so safe you have to ask why are they wanting to build them in rural areas. There is a list of proposed location. This is not our rubbish it belongs to Sydney and that's where it should stay. The Government stand on these facilities seems to be of sight out of mind. Why build these plants in the first place? Veolia wants to spend $600 million building an incinerator at Tarago. Why not use that money developing new ways to break down the non-recyclable material and produce new articles. This can be done, already there is a microbe organism that does just that. With the fallout from this incinerator our primary producers in this region will be affected, the water catchment, our dams, the environment, the air that we breath our health and the future of the next generation. This plant won't be fixing climate change, it will be harming it. All this advertising regarding cleaner air and environment, someone has got it wrong. The toxic fumes, dioxine, furins and other substances omitted from this plant isn't safe. The toxic plume will be carried through the air to so many towns and regions. The so-called scientific support and the EPA can not give a definite answer to the question? READ ALSO: Hospitals under 'enormous pressure' but support is at hand, says Health How safe are these incinerators? If an incident occurs it will take six to eight hours to shut the plant down. That's not good enough. There's so many things that is not right with this situation. So much to be said. You can be reading for hours regarding all the negatives of this proposal. Read for yourself, like myself and all the others who are concerned for the future of our environment and our existence. For Veolia it's all about the dollar and who can benefit. Veolia. Take a moment out of your busy schedule. Think about it, sit in an open pasture and watch the animals, breath the air, look at the environment our lives and then make a decision. Hopefully it will be to help us oppose this Waste to Energy Infrastructure. An INCINERATOR
/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/hFr6g9patBg6iG57tGHW5M/35c66443-4e05-4a8d-8a16-8915b495158f.jpg/r3_1_1198_676_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg
Fossil fuel pushing up electricity prices
It is said that we live in a post-truth world and the question is how is our Federal Governments faring in that new world and in serving the needs of the people? Are our Federal Ministers, in delivering on their oath to serve the people?
Our Energy Minister tells us that we need more fossil fuels rather than less if we are going to avoid the price of electricity rising. Some might say that energy policy has been to create uncertainty rather than certainty in renewable energy investment market.
With the price of fossil fuel, especially thermal coal rising as the world emerges from COVID, the wholesale price of electricity has risen, in those states most reliant on coal, NSW and Queensland and least in those that have more renewable energy, in particular South Australia, which is close to achieving their target of 100 per cent renewable energy.
The organisation responsible for running our electricity grid, the AEMO, tells us that we need more renewable energy and less coal and gas as they are more expensive than renewable energy, the price of which continues to fall.
Many of our local corporates such as Coles are committed to using only renewable energy.
So who do we believe? Is our Federal Government preferencing fossil fuel companies ahead of the needs of the Australian people, both in respect of their health and their economic well being? Does the Federal National Party support those companies over the needs of farmers and the protection of farming land?
Interesting that this new council is putting out feelers for rezoning the southern end of Auburn Street.
The properties have had no maintenance for years so if they can be knocked down and redeveloped in the name of "progress" it will be a huge money making scheme for the present owners.
Slow down cars in McKell Place
McKell Place is now a speed-plus zone and a very big danger to many, such as children (day care), the medically impaired, movie-goers and club patrons.
Public servants should stay in the background
I find Warwick Bennet's 'playful' photo shoot at the netball courts with the local Liberal MP to be both unseemly and questionable.
If you want to be a politician you should stand for election, otherwise fade into the background like a good public servant.
Join fight against Veolia incinerator
I am writing to you today in the hope that you can join the Tarago Community, Goulburn Mulwaree Council and the No toTarago Incinerator and Southern Highlands area in the fight to oppose the Veolia Woodlawn Mine Waste to Energy Infrastructure. In other words an incinerator.
If these plants are so safe you have to ask why are they wanting to build them in rural areas. There is a list of proposed location. This is not our rubbish it belongs to Sydney and that's where it should stay. The Government stand on these facilities seems to be of sight out of mind. Why build these plants in the first place?
Veolia wants to spend $600 million building an incinerator at Tarago. Why not use that money developing new ways to break down the non-recyclable material and produce new articles.
This can be done, already there is a microbe organism that does just that.
With the fallout from this incinerator our primary producers in this region will be affected, the water catchment, our dams, the environment, the air that we breath our health and the future of the next generation.
This plant won't be fixing climate change, it will be harming it. All this advertising regarding cleaner air and environment, someone has got it wrong.
The toxic fumes, dioxine, furins and other substances omitted from this plant isn't safe. The toxic plume will be carried through the air to so many towns and regions. The so-called scientific support and the EPA can not give a definite answer to the question?
How safe are these incinerators? If an incident occurs it will take six to eight hours to shut the plant down. That's not good enough.
There's so many things that is not right with this situation. So much to be said. You can be reading for hours regarding all the negatives of this proposal. Read for yourself, like myself and all the others who are concerned for the future of our environment and our existence.
For Veolia it's all about the dollar and who can benefit. Veolia. Take a moment out of your busy schedule. Think about it, sit in an open pasture and watch the animals, breath the air, look at the environment our lives and then make a decision. Hopefully it will be to help us oppose this Waste to Energy Infrastructure. An INCINERATOR
Do you have something to say? Send a letter to the editor:
See the original post:
Energy contradiction, Veolia incinerator and more | Letters to the editor - Goulburn Post
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Book Promoting Atheism Launched with Great Fanfare in China – Bitter Winter
Posted: at 3:04 am
by Peng Huiling
A new textbook promoting atheism is being promoted in colleges and to CCP cadres as part of the campaign implementing the decisions of the National Conference on Work Related to Religious Affairs of December 2021, where the book was first introduced. The textbook is promoted as an answer to Xi Jinpings instructions at that conference that Marxs views on religion should be more thoroughly studied within the CCP.
The book is called The Principles of Scientific Atheism. It is a massive text of some 400,000 words, published by Bashu Publishing House, and we are told it was six years in the making.
Its author is Li Shen, known for his History of Chinese Science, and History of Chinese Atheism, where he promoted Xi Jinpings theory that Chinese culture has always been intrinsically non-religious.
Li Shen was born in 1946. After earning his doctorate, he worked at the Institute of World Religions of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and was the director of its Confucianism Research Office. He then became a professor of the Department of Philosophy at Shanghai Normal University, and the vice-chairperson of the Chinese Atheism Society. He is also an academic committee member of the International Confucian Federation, and in this capacity he promotes the theory, also supported by the CCP, that Confucianism is essentially a form of atheism.
The book includes four chapters, What is God, Proof of the Non-Existence of God, The Gods and Their Effects, and The Communist Partys Religious Theory and Religious Policy. There is also an appendix on the Main Theological Knowledge and Criticism of Religion. Zhu Xiaoming, former secretary of the CCP Leadership Group of China Tibetology Research Center, wrote a preface.
The book argues that both the non-existence of God and the harmful effect of religion have been demonstrated scientifically, through a process at work both in Western and Chinese philosophy, which culminated in the definitive demonstrations by Karl Marx and by the CCP in China.
The promotion of Lis book confirms the turn in Chinese institutions dealing with religion and departments of religion in the universities from a somewhat more neutral study of religious issues to propaganda for Marxist atheism. This turn can be traced to speeches and instructions by Xi Jinping himself.
Go here to see the original:
Book Promoting Atheism Launched with Great Fanfare in China - Bitter Winter
Posted in Atheism
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Is There a Place for Spirituality in Space Science? – The Wire Science
Posted: at 3:04 am
An Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASAs James Webb Space Telescope onboard on December 25 from Kourou. Photo: NASA JWST/Flickr, CC BY 2.0
It wasnt just that he mentioned a religious holiday. After all, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson wasnt the only person to observe, following the successful launch of the James Webb Space Telescope last month, that the long-awaited feat had occurred on Christmas Day. Rather, Nelsons comments raised eyebrows for their spiritual tone.
Its significant that we had the delays and it kept us all the way to today, Christmas Day, Nelson said in a video released by NASA shortly after the launch. He went on to quote a passage from Psalm 19: The heavens declare the glory of God. The firmament shows his handiwork.
To some viewers especially those who believe religion and science are incompatible the very mention of a religious text seemed to undercut the messaging of scientific achievement. The suggestion that the telescope served a Christian purpose, or that its use would reinforce a Christian worldview, also seemed to belie a commitment to inclusivity in science that NASA has claimed to value. (The agency is still reeling from the controversy over its decision to name the telescope after James Webb, a man alleged to have been complicit in the persecution of LGBTQ government workers.)
These are all valid concerns. But its also worth remembering that Nelsons biblical references follow in a long tradition of religious rhetoric in the US space program. Theres a tendency to flatten this history to imagine that religious language is and always has been inappropriate in the scientific discourse. But one needs only look back a few decades to find a time when comments like Nelsons were not only acceptable in the American space culture they were a central part of Americas science identity.
From the 1950s, the United States was embroiled in a decades-long rivalry with the USSR known as the Space Race a competition that turned the technological and military practicalities of space exploration into a sort of proxy battle for cultural, political, and economic validation. Each nations scientific successes were interpreted as triumphs of one national ideology over the other. Among those warring ideologies were the nations sharply contrasting attitudes toward religion.
The USSR had officially embraced atheism (though some Soviet citizens were people of faith). In her recent history of Soviet atheism, Victoria Smolkin describes how Soviet leaders and cosmonauts used their victories in the Space Race as occasions to wave a banner of antipathy toward religion. During a 1962 visit to the US, Smolkin writes, Soviet cosmonaut German Titov, the second person in space, proclaimed his atheism, remarking that he had not seen God or angels during his 17 orbits of Earth. Later Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev similarly joked to American reporters about Gods failure to show up in space. The brash rejection of God served to advance the Soviet effort to solidify state atheism and defuse religions threat to state authority.
But the Soviet Unions dismissal of religion also stirred a backlash on the other side of the Iron Curtain. In fields ranging from evolutionary biology to cosmology, American scientists criticized the ideological dogmatism of Marxism, claiming that it impaired free scientific inquiry. Whereas the Soviet regime was totalitarian and oppressive, the American scientific establishment, by embracing religious tolerance, projected an image of openness. Opposed to the strict atheism of the Soviets but wary of the perceived anti-science attitude of fundamentalist Christians, the American scientific establishment staked out a middle ground of respectable, generic but still Christian-leaning religiosity.
As public figures as well as scientists, NASA astronauts were frequently seen as exemplifying this milquetoast religious identity. Some astronauts were explicit about their own Christianity; others were more vague about the spirituality they experienced in the stars. Neil Armstrong, though he considered himself a deist, was nonetheless looked up to as a Christian role model who fulfilled a divine promise that humanity would someday reach the stars.
On Christmas Eve in 1968, the crew of Apollo 8 broadcast themselves from lunar orbit reading from the opening passages of Genesis as the Sun rose above the Moons horizon: In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. The juxtaposition of those words with images of the lunar sunrise seemed to symbolize the convergence of religious and scientific values.
The Christmas Eve reading prompted Madalyn Murray OHair, the founder of the organization American Atheists, to file a lawsuit against NASA, arguing that the act abridged their First Amendment rights. But the lawsuit failed, and since then the tradition of astronauts expressing their personal faith, carrying objects of religious significance among their personal effects, even celebrating holidays in space, has largely been permitted and even incorporated into NASAs public outreach.
American Presidents including John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Ronald Reagan all used religious language when talking about the Space Program, often with implicit or explicit criticism of the Soviets. Ultimately, NASA, American politicians of both parties, and the wider US public created a narrative that Americas religiosity had helped the country succeed in the Space Race over its godless rival. This religiosity was effective in part because it avoided the messy specifics that might have created friction with science or between theologies.
Few people exemplify this melding of space exploration and spirituality more than Nelson himself. In 1986, decades before he became NASA Administrator, Nelson went to space on the shuttle Columbia, the last NASA mission before the Challenger disaster. His 1988 memoir described his extraterrestrial sojourn as an eye-opening religious experience that contrasted starkly with that of his Soviet counterparts. Yuri Gagarin, the first Russian cosmonaut, proudly proclaimed when he returned to earth that he had looked for God and had not found him, Nelson wrote (perhaps misattributing Titovs 1962 comments). I looked, and could see nothing else. The Soviets might have reached the heavens first, but the Americans were the first to find God up there.
Nelson also recalled reaching into his pocket and pulling out his Bible while on the Columbia:
I remembered when, as a student at Yale, I had read the ancient words of the 19th Psalm, written by a shepherd boy in Israel almost 3,000 years ago. My college mind had wondered, What could David possibly know about space? As I read those words again, I was amazed that they could express my feelings so perfectly: The heavens declare the glory of God. The firmament sheweth His handiwork.'
More than 30 years later, Nelson uttered the same scripture nearly verbatim while reflecting on the launch of the the telescope. It is a passage that has long been invoked by scientists and theologians to express the idea that there are truths that can only be discovered outside of scripture truths that must be learned from the handiwork of nature. Its been quoted to argue against Biblical literalism and science denial. And, for Nelson, it seems to give voice to a certain sense of awe and spiritual wonder at nature that has abided in him since his time as an astronaut.
The scientific, religious, and political culture of the US, however, has evolved tremendously since then. Christian nationalism has become a widespread and antidemocratic political force one that has been deployed to attack government-supported, science-based efforts to stem the COVID-19 pandemic and curtail climate change. Cold War-era God-talk, and the embrace of generic religiosity, no longer exemplify Americas place in the modern geopolitical world. The words Nelson uses to capture his connection with the cosmos may not have changed since the 1980s, but its a different nation now.
Adam R. Shapiro is a historian of science and religion. He is the author of Trying Biology: The Scopes Trial, Textbooks and the Antievolution Movement in American Schools and (with Thomas Dixon) the forthcoming Very Short Introduction to Science and Religion.
This article was originally published on Undark.
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Is There a Place for Spirituality in Space Science? - The Wire Science
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The Fallout is a surprisingly restrained drama about the aftermath of a school shooting – The A.V. Club
Posted: at 3:04 am
Photo: Warner Bros./HBO Max
Some achieve teen angst, and some have teen angst thrust upon them. In less-fortunate cases, a pivotal trauma can jump-start a young persons maturation by challenging their base assumptions about a world no longer handling their innocence with kid gloves. Holden Caulfield turned bitter upon losing his brother. Lindsay Weir dabbled in atheism after her grandmother announced that she saw nothing in her final moments. And in The Fallout, Canadian actor Megan Parks well-measured first feature as a writer and director, a school shooting triggers a model students rebellious phase.
Well-meaning zoomer Vada (Jenna Ortega, going places) has kept her head down and nose to the grindstone all her life, her idea of bad behavior limited to risking tardiness for some Starbucks before class. But when the notion that we could go at any moment transforms from an abstract to a horrifying reality, shes moved to reassess her priorities. If every day might be your last, who would use it to memorize cell organelle functions?
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Jenna Ortega, Maddie Ziegler, Niles Fitch, Will Ropp
HBO Max January 27
We experience the semiautomatic rampage as she does, trapped in a bathroom stall for a few unbearable minutes near the top of the film. Through sheer chance, she shares her hiding spot with lower-tier TikTok star Mia (Dance Moms alumna and Sia affiliate Maddie Ziegler) and the sensitive Quinton (Niles Fitch). Aside from a general disapproval of the frequency with which this nightmare plays out in reality, Park keeps the politics to a dull rumble in the distance. Shes more invested in these kids personal, imperfect pathways forward through a thicket of grief.
There is a human toll beyond the death count, she submits, in how survivors reassess their lives and struggle to recognize themselves during the intimate hell of the aftermath. The Fallout makes this point without histrionics, speaking through little details of character while confining the maudlin stuff to a pair of scenes near the end. Im a chill, low-key kind of person, Vada tells the therapist (Shailene Woodley) her parents have requested she sees. The movie is low-key, tooa winning approach to such delicate subject matter.
With a firm handle on tone, Park skirts the pitfalls of bad taste one might expect from a film that uses mass violence as a narrative device for a coming-of-age plot. In the first sign of her restraint, she gives the carnage a wide berth by leaving it as unseen noise, without the faintest whiff of the morbid fascination that still haunts the reputation of Gus Van Sants Elephant. She conveys the intense pain thats left Vada numb through gestures closer to the banality and ritual humiliation of high school. On her first day back, Vada cant bring herself to return to the lavatory without an anxious panic, and must hastily chart an escape route after pissing herself. Getting high on ecstasy between periods moves her to gnaw on a pen until it explodes in her mouth. Park understands that agony doesnt preclude comedy, but rather accentuates the absurdity Vadas never noticed before.
The core of the film is Vadas gravitation toward Mia despite their differing social strata, as they form a bond over their shared tragedy. Popular hottie and bookworm learn to see each other as more than stereotypes couldve been dreadful stuff, but Parks credible, unforced dialogue enriches the afternoons these girls share. (Theres no overstating the benefit teen films reap by accepting an R rating, allowing their characters to talk like kids actually talk today.) Unfortunately, the naturalism of Ortega and Zieglers performances does have the adverse effect of accentuating the phonier bits of drama, like Vadas literal screaming into the void with Dad (John Ortiz) or her tension with the gay BFF (Will Ropp) restyling himself as a David Hogg type in the wake of tragedy. The twerpy lil sister (Lumi Pollack) seems to have wandered in here from another, broader script.
Even so, its a shame that The Fallout has received a little-promoted streaming run in the dead days of January. Parks got chops, and her work shows that off without drawing too much attention to them. She knows how to assemble and hold a wide shot, and use creative editing to condense visual information. (Eliding the funerals and instead piling up shots of In Memoriam cards in a small box is one such stroke of inspiration.) Moreover, shes got something to say about Gen Z, a wave of adolescents staving off the nihilism they have every reason to adopt. On a dying planet, risking life and limb every time they walk into homeroom, they can find refuge only in each other.
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Car enthusiasts speak out about reckless driving as new bill is proposed to rev up penalties | News Channel 3-12 – KEYT
Posted: at 3:02 am
MONTECITO, Calif. - In a parking lot full of horsepower, car lovers spoke out about those who are "show offs" with their vehicles in a dangerous and deadly way. It is the focus of new legislation.
Some of the reckless driving has led to deaths in California.
Kevin Haeberle is with the Community Hot Rod Project, a non profit on the South Coast. He says "your 30 seconds of fame doesn't belong on the streets with showboating with your cars."
He promotes automobile education, design and engineering. The group also mentors youth. "Showing up and showing how creative you are with your build, that's a different story," he says.
Friday legislators in the Los Angeles area gathered with the California Highway Patrol to speak out against several forms forms of street racing and on-the-spot events that sometimes takes over entire streets with no notice.
State Senator Henry Stern(D-Los Angeles) is working on tough new enhanced laws andto improve traffic safety funding.
He says. "the reckless speeding and sideshows and street races,the use of cars as weapons are not victimless crimes and they are certainly not a game or a vanity project something to put on your Tik Toc or Instagram and be proud of." One victim of a high speed car crash during a street spectacle was the mother of a 13-year old who was eating in a restaurant. She died when an out of control car hit the building.
Senator Stern says at the state level they can write legislation that would effect how crimes are prosecuted without a range or discretion, and that could make the penalties far more costly than they are now. He said, "There's got to be an enforcement piece to this. There has to be consequences."
In some cases it could end up with the loss of a vehicle due to these violations.
The Senator's office says,Sterns bill is still in development, but it will require more resources go directly to enforcement, not just traffic safety infrastructure and public education, as has been the primary focus in years past. The bill he will introduce next month also will push prosecutors to be more aggressive in going after street racers and other reckless speeders.
Haeberle says, "when it comes to public safety, keep it off the road. Do it in a sanctioned area."
He also says those attending his events are advised to follow the rules to be able to return. "Upset neighbors is not a good thing. That's why we promote no revving, no burnouts and anything like that at our events."
Over the weekend, Santa Barbara transportation officials gathered in La Mesa Park to talk about a $25-million project for Cliff Drive on the Mesa. This will include more crosswalks, signals, and safety features in an area that has had deadly accidents, in some cases because of speeding and reckless driving.
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Vandalism reported at Tiffin city parks – TiffinOhio.net
Posted: at 3:02 am
Tiffin, Ohio Tiffin Parks and Recreation has been experiencing a substantial amount of vandalism in recent months. With the recent snowfalls, staff have noticed damage to the volleyball courts, basketball courts, parking lots and grass areas at Hedges-Boyer Park and other parks throughout the city.
The mission of Tiffin Parks and Recreation is to provide the people of Tiffin with full and equitable access to local parks, recreational programs, and leisure opportunities that enhance the quality of life in our community.
With the vandalism that has occurred, the Parks Department and Tiffin Police Department have had to divert time and resources in an attempt to bring this to an end. Additionally, expenses may be incurred to repair damage to the basketball courts, which were surfaced in 2017 for $25,000.
Mason Correll, Recreation Operations Manager for the City of Tiffin said, We ask you, as citizens of Tiffin and the surrounding areas and patrons of our local parks, to be vigilant while enjoying all that the parks have to offer. If you see something, please, say something. Together, as a community, we can make our parks even better.
In 2021, the Parks and Recreation Department invested in a high-quality surveillance system with the hopes of preventing further vandalism to the parks. Additionally, due to a large amount of vandalism, specifically car donuts, to the parking lot of the former Vic Wurm baseball field at Hedges-Boyer Park, the department will be installing concrete barriers at the top of the hill in order to restrict vehicle traffic to the parking lot.
Tiffin Mayor Aaron Montz said, These are not victimless crimes, and unfortunately result in a cost to taxpayers both through employees time and resources to address damage. City staff work hard to maintain our beautiful parks system, and it is heartbreaking to see this kind of unnecessary destruction.
To report information about recent vandalism, call Tiffin Police Department at (419) 447-2323 or Tiffin Parks and Recreation at (419) 448-5408.
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Shirley Tilghman wins award for ‘exemplary contributions to the genetics community and society’ – Princeton University
Posted: at 3:01 am
The Genetics Society of America (GSA)selected former Princeton University President Shirley M. Tilghman as the 2022 winner of the George W. Beadle Award for outstanding contributions to the community of genetics researchers.
The award citation lauded Tilghman's "exemplary contributions to the genetics community and society with service on the National Advisory Council for the Human Genome Project Initiative and advocacy for transparent, equitable policies, openness in data sharing and publicly available databases, and sustainable funding policies. The award also recognizes pioneering contributions to mammalian imprinting."
I am deeply grateful to the Genetics Society of America, and my colleagues who nominated me for this wonderful honor, said Tilghman, who is an emerita professor of molecular biology and public affairs in addition to having served as University president from 2001 to 2013. Having an award named after one of the 20thcenturys greatest geneticists is truly meaningful to me.
A native of Canada, Tilghman received her Honors B.Sc. in chemistry from Queens University in Kingston, Ontario, in 1968. After two years of secondary school teaching in Sierra Leone, West Africa, she obtained her Ph.D. in biochemistry from Temple University in Philadelphia.
Tilghman came to Princeton in 1986 as the Howard A. Prior Professor of the Life Sciences. In 1998, she became the founding director of Princetons Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics. She was a member of the National Research Councils committee that set the blueprint for the U.S. effort in the Human Genome Project, as well as one of the founding members of the National Advisory Council of the Human Genome Project for the National Institutes of Health.
She is renowned not only for her pioneering research, but for her national leadership on behalf of women in science and for promoting efforts to make the early careers of young scientists as meaningful and productive as possible.
Her other awards and honors include being named a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator in 1988, winning the LOral-UNESCO Award for Women in Science in 2002, receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society for Developmental Biology in 2003 and receiving the GSA Medal in 2007. She is a member of the American Philosophical Society, the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine and the Royal Society of London.
The Beadle Award is awarded annually to someone who the GSA determines has contributed to the genetics community beyond an exemplary research career, for example by creating an invaluable technique or tool, helping the community adopt a model system, being a voice for the community in public or political forums, or maintaining active leadership roles. GSA established the award in 1999 in honor of George W. Beadle (1903-1989), an outstanding scientist and a respected academic and public servant who won the 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Tilghman and the recipients of the GSA's other awards will present their work in a lecture series to be held online during 2022.
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Inherited retinal diseases the patient journey – Insight News
Posted: at 3:01 am
Assessment of viable retinal cells is made by combining the information derived from the clinical assessment including BCVA, OCT, visual field assessment, visual electrophysiology (including full field scotopic threshold testing and patient reported outcomes). The assessment will include a combination of all the investigations, and this will vary from patient to patient.
IRD management is similar to other complex conditions. The management around this process is critical to ensure that patients receive the appropriate ophthalmic and genetic advice.56-58Patients are best managed in a multi-disciplinary clinic with ophthalmologists experienced in IRD diagnostic steps and management, and with access to clinical geneticists and genetic counsellor expertise
The four steps outlined in this review will lead to improved patient care with streamlined ophthalmic diagnosis, molecular diagnosis and counselling, management of visual dysfunction and preparation for clinical trials and therapies.
The complexity of IRDs requires input from both ophthalmology and clinical genetics.44 The benefits of modern genetic diagnostics and counselling supports the introduction of equitable genetic testing for patients with presumed genetically-caused retinal diseases.5
NOTE: Some of the material has been adapted from the RANZCO Guidelines for the assessment and management of patients with inherited retinal diseases, which Profs Grigg and Jamieson co-authored with seven other experts.
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Bitcoin price: Can the cryptocurrency recover in February? – Marca English
Posted: at 3:00 am
Bitcoin (BTC) returned at over $38,000 on the last day of January as selling pressure is apparently wearing off after a rocky start to 2022.
Historically, bitcoin has positive returns in February, which could give traders some hope as technical indicators suggest short-term buyers could stay active around the $35,000-$37,000 support area, but upside looks to be limited toward $45,000. Despite the recent spike in price, some analysts are still skeptical of BTC due to the Biden administration preparing to release an executive order in February to regulate bitcoin as a matter of national security.
It's hard to predict if the new regulations will have a positive or negative impact on the digital coin, so the crypto market remains highly volatile. Even though history points to positive returns in February, bitcoin could end up falling for a third consecutive month.
Bitcoin produced an average return of 12% in February throughout the past nine years. The second month of the calendar finishes with a gain over 85% of the time.
As the crypto market stabilized to end January, investors poured 22.1 million into bitcoin-focused funds last week, the second consecutive week of money inflow into BTC. Despite one of its worst-ever starts to a year, crypto funds saw inflows of $19 million during the seven days through January 28.
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