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Monthly Archives: May 2022
Initiative to Support Rural Pastors Could Be Helping Save Farmers Lives – Daily Yonder
Posted: May 21, 2022 at 6:17 pm
Editors Note: This article is republished from Faith & Leadership, an online magazine of the Leadership Education program at Duke Divinity School.
In the 1960s sitcom Green Acres, wealthy New Yorkers leave the city for rural life. As the shows twangytheme songsays, Farm living is the life for me. Its a funny, lighthearted show but in reality, many farmers lives are far from idyllic.
In January 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published areport on suicide ratesby occupation. Farmers landed in the top five. Along with workers in construction, mining, transportation, and services such as auto repair, workers in agriculture die by suicide at disproportionally high rates. The complexity of farming, along with isolation, shame over economic distress, and a lack of mental health resources is fueling thisepidemic.
Four years ago, we launchedThe Moses Project, a program to equip rural pastors with resources for congregational leadership, connect them to peers and support them with mentors. Our hope was to inspire innovative thinking among those serving in rural settings. The effort is funded by a Thriving in Ministry grant from Lilly Endowment Inc.
The name for the project came from Deuteronomy 34:7: Moses was 120 years old when he died; his sight was unimpaired and his vigor had not abated (NRSV). The idea is that where there is vision, there is passion. We hoped to inspire vision among pastors. We didnt know that this work would also help improve mental health among farmers.
One of the programs exemplars is the Rev. Grant Woodley, a fourth-generation farmer and a Lutheran pastor. Woodleys bivocational work places him in a unique position to inform and inspire his colleagues. Speaking to a group of pastors, Woodley said, Farmers face tremendous pressure, as global dynamics, the weather, economic markets both domestic and global and politics all factor into the business of farming.
That pressure can kill. We have pastors whove buried high school students and farmers in their 20s and 30s who feel overwhelmed at not being able to continue the family legacy. These deaths take a heavy toll on the local community including the pastors themselves.
Yet farmers can serve as positive models, Woodley said. To survive, farmers need to be flexible in their business; they also need to be empathetic to care for themselves and loved ones in their community.
Woodley then challenged his colleagues to be pastors who think like farmers: to be flexible and empathetic with the long game in mind. In other words, to practice traditioned innovation.
This challenge resonated for the Rev. Stephen Zeller, a project participant, who serves a rural congregation at St. Pauls Lutheran Church in Cole Camp, Missouri. Zeller began thinking about the mental health of farmers in his church and community. He realized that no one talked about mental health. With empathy for the community, Zeller and his church decided to act.
The church hosted a concert at a family farm featuring the Peterson Farm Brothers band. Funded by a grant, it was touted as a We love our farmers event and included family activities and food. Zeller also invited participation from the local University of Missouri Extension Office.
The outdoor event was attended by 150-200 people and included eight representatives from the extension office and lots of resources on suicide awareness for rural communities. Some farmers quietly grabbed pamphlets and avoided making eye contact. Others connected with church members, extension representatives and others.
The success of the concert led to further collaboration. Zellers church partnered with a clinic for farmers. This free event included students completing a rural-track internship through the University of Missouri School of Medicine, who provided mental health screenings, a presentation on mental health and suicide awareness, and a free lunch.
By thinking like a farmer, Zeller identified needs in the community and sought collaboration partners who were already active in mental health support for rural communities. Such work not only helps the congregation flourish; it also brings an awareness that can save lives.
One thing is clear: Pastors and church leaders stand in a crucial space within rural America. Their buildings are often the nicest ones in town, and everyone has passed through those spaces for weddings, funerals, baptisms and other life events. When pastors and churches take the time to be flexible and creative, many blessings arise.
Zeller explains: Being able to notice what we were doing well, what didnt need to be done, and what the needs around us were at that time allowed us to create new partnerships and offer Gods love where it was really needed.
The church has an important role to play in facilitating conversations about suicide, mental health and other needs faced by rural communities. Unlike Moses, who watched a generation of his community die in the wilderness, we as rural pastors can work to help a generation of farmers live.
If we commit to thinking like farmers, with empathy and creativity, lives can be changed. And maybe over time, we might help more people in our communities say, Farm living is the life for me.
Russell Lackey is senior campus pastor at Grand View University in Des Moines, Iowa.
Trisha Wheelock is program director of the Moses Project.
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by Tim Marema, The Daily Yonder May 20, 2022
This article first appeared on The Daily Yonder and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.![]()
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Initiative to Support Rural Pastors Could Be Helping Save Farmers Lives - Daily Yonder
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LEVOIT Vortex IQ 40 cordless stick vacuum review – the easiest vacuum I’ve ever used! – The Gadgeteer
Posted: at 6:17 pm
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REVIEW A cordless stick vac was not something I thought Id ever need. We have a LIDAR-guided robot vacuum that handles the task a few times a week, a more traditional upright vacuum for deep cleaning, and an older corded hand-held vacuum for spot cleaning. So when the opportunity to review the Levoit cordless stick vacuum came along, I thought it would be interesting, but I was skeptical. I was wrong. Using it is easy, fun, and when Isaw the amount of dirt it picked up, I was left wondering how I had gotten bywithout one.
Its a wireless (cordless, rechargeable) stick vacuum with a powered brush and several other attachments.
The LEVOIT Vortex IQ 40 cordless stick vacuum features a main head unit that contains the filters, dust bin, battery, filters, motor, display, and controls. All the accessories pop right into the head unit. And those accessories are all modular. Want to use the crevice tool with the extension to get behind your dryer? You can. Want to use the carpet unit without the extension tube to clean small rugs? No problem.
Perhaps my favorite feature of the LEVOIT Vortex IQ 40 cordless stick vacuum was the auto suction. The vacuum monitors the dust level and adjusts the suction power accordingly. This optimizes both cleaning and battery life. Of course, you can always adjust the power manually, but I never felt the need.
The Levoit Vortex IQ 40 features a handy storage cradle that recharges the battery and holds the accessories when not in use. You can also recharge the battery by plugging the charger directly into the battery instead of plugging it into the cradle a nice feature if you want to take the vacuum with you but leave the cradle behind (which is a good idea, since its likely bolted to your wall).
The unit easily disassembles without any tools for removing jams, and cleaning or replacing the filters. Speaking of filters, there are three of them. The first is in the dust bin and is made of perforated metal. Youll never need to replace this one just rinse it off in the sink. The other two are standard pleated paper filters and are easily replaceable, but can also be rinsed in water.
The powered carpet unit has LED lights on it for vacuuming in dim conditions or seeing under furniture, and this unit easily comes apart to clear jams or remove hair from the powered brush.
Having never used a stick vac before, I was immediately impressed by how light and maneuverable the LEVOIT Vortex IQ 40 cordless stick vacuum was. It was also clear that this was not a unit that I would not want to vacuum my whole house with. If you live in a small space, or use this for grabbing small messes, its fantastic. Its also great for accessing areas traditional vacuums cant get to. It wouldjust take too long to do your whole house. Save that for a larger unit, or for a robot vacuum.
The filters in the Levoit are very good. One of the first things I did with the vacuum was to clean up some spilled ash from our wood stove. Ash is exceptionally fine and often makes it through many vacuum filters. Not so with this one. Ash also is notorious for clogging filters that it doesnt pass through, greatly reducing suction. No decrease in suction was noted. I was impressed.
The carpet tool does quite a good job getting dust, hair, and other crud off of our carpets. It also worked great on hardwood floors, which is mostly what we have in our house. One of the nicest features of the carpet tool is its low profile; simply twist the unit 90 degrees to either side, and you can slide the whole thing under any gap larger than 3 inches or so. This was great for getting into dust-bunny territory under sofas and other furniture.
This ability to clean the great unclean was where I encountered the Levoits first limitation. The dust bin is pretty small. Once in dust bunny territory, it fills quickly. And if you dont notice, the crud will jam up at the top of the dust bin around the filter, making emptying a difficult and messy chore. This is mostly user error since I did not notice that it had filled, but it would be nice to have a larger dust bin.
The carpet unit also has LED headlights.They were useful for seeing into the abyss under the sofa, but not so helpful when just vacuuming in a dim corner.
The LEVOIT Vortex IQ 40 cordless stick vacuums accessories are helpful and well designed. The crevice tool is particularly unique since its telescopic. Have a very deep crevice? This tool can help. I was able to use the crevice tool together with the tube extension to clean between and behind the washer and dryer a task that previously necessitated moving both appliances. The dusting tool is also useful, and can be used in two different configurations, for hard and soft surfaces. I found it to be pretty effective for getting dog hair off of the furniture. I also used it to clean dust off of vents and ceiling fan blades very effectively.
The two big questions that always seem to come up with stick vacs are how are they at picking dirt up, and whats the battery life like? For the first question, Id say the Levoit Vortex is fantastic at picking up dirt. This is the first vacuum Ive used with a clear dust bin, so actually seeing the dirt get picked up and deposited in the bin is a little eye opening. Lets just say that it picks up a lot more than I ever thought was there. For battery life, I was impressed. While using the unit for this review, I literally went all through my house vacuuming everything I could find. I even went out and vacuumed the cars. I barely put a dent in the battery. I think the auto suction setting plays a big part in this if I manually turned the suction up and kept it there, Im sure the battery would have gone down faster. But if you use the auto setting, and dont try to clean your whole 4000 square foot house, you should be fine.
It turns out that vacuuming is not a one tool fits all job. Given that floors are the ultimate repository for a lot of crud in our homes, it makes sense to have a few different tools to take care of that crud. The Levoit VortexIQ 40 Cordless Stick Vacuum is a great addition to help with those dust bunnies, dirt tracks, and pet hair that accumulate in our homes from daily life.
Price: $259.99Where to buy: Levoit or AmazonSource: The sample for this review was provided by Levoit
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The man who murdered the Logies: Julia Morris on Tom Gleeson, the Logies and life – Sydney Morning Herald
Posted: at 6:17 pm
Fitz: Your real breakthrough?
JM: Doing Midday with Kerri-Anne. That was amazing for me in those days because it got me known. And then one night I was doing a stand-up with Kitty Flanagan in Balmain and the executive producer from Full Frontal was in the house and he approached us after the show and said, Im gonna have someone from the office call you. I want you guys to come to Melbourne and audition because theres two female spots on Full Frontal. And that was amazing, like, Well, its happening now and its never going to stop!
Kerri-Anne Kennerley gave Julia Morris her big break.Credit:WireImage
Fitz: And it never has stopped. You then did eight years in the UK, and more or less came home with a husband.
JM: Yes, I met Dan through some friends and when I was doing stand-up at the Edinburgh Festival. And I thought, Oh my God, Ive got to kiss you. And then obviously after the first overnight romance ... no judgment we started dating straightaway, got married in Vegas a few years later and had two baby girls!
Fitz: Little knowing that superstardom was just round the corner ...
JM: Yes! Winning the first Celebrity Apprentice when I was in my early 40s really helped. I was cast a week before which kind of maybe leads me to believe somebody else dropped out but who cares? And off I went and won, and with that ever more opportunities came my way.
Fitz: Did you have to do a screen test with your subsequent co-host on Celebrity Apprentice, Chris Brown?
I'm A Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here! hosts Dr Chris Brown and Julia Morris.Credit:Network Ten
JM: No, we had presented at the Logies the year before, and that set things ablaze. Then it was kind of full steam ahead because Id seen the show in the UK and I loved it deeply and I thought that is going to be a fun one to work on. And I was right.
Fitz: Are you and Dr Brown very close off-screen, too, or is it all for the cameras?
JM: Its not all for the cameras. We get on beautifully like siblings that adore each other, but we see each other rarely. So therell be little text messages through the year. But like I wouldnt break bread with my beloved doctor until were back in Africa and then we go like a house on fire.
Fitz: Now, Julia, to get the womens magazines behind your push for the Gold Logie, we need you to make some casual aside about some of the celebrities on Im a Celebrity that can lead to front pages: Julia Morris! My clash with Warnie! sort of thing.
JM: Ah, dear Warnie. He was amazing in it and created one of the most spellbinding moments of television that Ive ever seen when he held a spider, you know, even though he had a proper phobia, but he did it for the rest of the team. He just, you know, he showed the guy that he was. Theres no hiding in the jungle. And the fact that he would do it! He wanted to make his kids laugh ...
Fitz: How bout Bernard Tomic? How did you go with him?
JM: When he arrived, I thought this is gonna be amazing for this young man. There is a nice guy in there, but he struggled from the first. He had never been camping in his life. He just worked, worked, worked on his tennis, and I think once he got in there, he was just like, What am I doing here? and he walked out the next day!
Fitz: Well, who did you love most? Think womens magazines. Throw them something they can work with, a tiny off-hand comment they can blow up into something huge.
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JM: Well, the person we could all aspire to be more like was Miguel Maestre. He was just super fun with such a super high-octane personality which I really related to. Everyone did. Hes amazing. But he had a lot of generosity for others. He had a lot of patience. And the other thing was, he seemed never to be aware that he was on camera. He wasnt faking it. He just relaxed into it. And I also loved Freddie Flintoff as well, but its very difficult for me to choose between my babies.
Fitz: Cut. That will generate at least a months worth of cover stories. Speaking of womens magazines though, I did see a story recently that your marriage had sadly broken up? None of my damn business of course, but are you ok?
JM: Yes. It was towards the end of COVID lockdown. I think the two of us, Peter, were at that stage where we just thought What are we doing? This is not it? Where has the happy bit gone? And I think I just said to him, You know, I love you, but I dont want this, and he goes Oh my God, exactly. Thats how I feel, but I didnt know how to say it, I didnt want to hurt you. But we are in a good place with each other and our daughters, which is really good because we also made the decision that there is no point breaking up to stop the fighting if youre going to keep fighting. But it wasnt fighting, just couple of smart-arses going hard, non-stop. So something had to change.
Some of this years Gold Logie nominees: Karl Stefanovic, Julia Morris, Hamish Blake, Tom Gleeson, Sonia Kruger and Ray Meagher.
Fitz: OK, lets start bagging the other nominees and get that part of the campaign going.
JM: (Laughing.) Hows this? All the boys that are nominated already have Gold Logies. None of the girls have!
Fitz: Excellent. Misogyny, writ large. And Tom Gleeson has been the bloody carry-over champion for three years now, so we can eliminate him.
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JM: Youre right, Tom is the man who murdered the Logies!
Fitz: What about Hamish? Can we get a slogan going? It will be lamish, if you give it to Hamish?
JM: Yes! How very dare they all be so talented.
Fitz: What about Sonia Kruger. She frightens me. I always feel like she doesnt suffer fools gladly, and mine is in the balance. Does she frighten you?
JM: She doesnt because Ive known her since we were 17. We were in theatre groups together. But there is another super exciting thing is to be women well into our 50s contending for these nominations thats pretty kickass. And then theres Melissa Leong. Shes stunning not just her talent, but for her lips. Shes just so glorious on MasterChef, an exquisite wordsmith, and an exquisite human so I really am very upset about that.
Fitz: Enough. Youre meant to be cutting the others down, not building them up. Win, lose or draw, whats the future hold for you?
JM: I want to totally Betty White the shit out of it. Im just gonna be Betty White and be around forever. Im in a position now where I dont have to take as much work as Ive had to in the past, and maybe I can explore more of the work/life balance they talk about, but all I really want to do is keep going because I love it all!
In late 1996, just after Bill Clinton had beaten Bob Dole in the presidential election but before the inauguration, Bill and Hillary are in the presidential motorcade just leaving Little Rock Arkansas, heading back to that towns airport, where Airforce One is awaiting to take them back to Washington. As they pass by a tiny, dingy little garage on the edge of town, just as dusk falls, Hillary points it out and says, You see that garage, Bill? I used to go out with the man that owns that garage. Wryly amused, the president chortles and says, That is amazing, Hillary! Just think, if you had married him, youd be the wife of a garage proprietor. No, Bill, Hillary says firmly. If Id married him, hed be president.
If he needs an erotic cartoonist, I am at his disposal.
@Albo an Italian artist of vulgar bent and intent, who is frequently mistaken for Anthony Albanese on social media, as told to Crikey.
The decision of one man to launch a wholly unjustified and brutal invasion of Iraq ... - President George W Bush in a speech attacking Vladimir Putin. He corrected himself and said, ruefully, I mean, of Ukraine.
Prime Minister, you said at your launch on Sunday that you saved the country. You dont hold a hose, you werent in your tinnie plucking people off rooftops, you werent doing 16-hour days in PPE on COVID wards, you didnt get enough vaccines soon enough, you didnt get enough RATs so that we could finally have a holiday interstate for Christmas, and China is set up, based in the Solomons. Do you think maybe you slightly overegged the part about saving the country? - Tracy Grimshaws opening question to the PM on Wednesday evening.
This, this is a tragedy anyway, you look at it. Whatever the outcome of the inquiry, it is a tragedy. But its clear that, in the interest of justice, there has to be a further public inquiry that is open, transparent, fair and efficient. This has been a difficult decision but, in the end, I think there was no other option but to have some kind of a review chance for Ms Folbigg given the way the scientific evidence has emerged, and the nature of this scientific evidence. - NSW Attorney-General Mark Speakman announcing that there will be a new public inquiry into the conviction of Kathleen Folbigg.
Nothing less than halting the serious erosion of our shared democratic principles is at stake. There must be conferred upon that commission a broad jurisdiction and strong investigative powers, including the power to hold public hearings, and respond to bona fide complaints from the public, so that serious or systemic corruption and misconduct can be adequately investigated and exposed. - From an open letter by 31 former judges about the need for a national integrity commission and warning that Australians risk being exposed to the corrupt exercise of power if parliament does not act to create a federal ICAC.
The last two-and-a-half years have been frustrating dealing with shoulder injuries day-in, day-out. Its the stuff away from the pool that affects me; I cant sleep on my shoulders, driving, drinking coffee, everything, lifting my shoulders above my head. If it was just the two or four hours a day I was in the pool it would be fine. But you just cant get away from them. Im turning 24 next month but I feel like Im 40 most days. - Swimmer Kyle Chalmers, the freestyle great who won 100m gold in Rio and silver in Tokyo, with an unflinching insight into the physical toll exacted by elite swimming, saying he is prepared for a life where he cant lift his arms above his head due to his burned-out shoulders.
I wasnt expecting or prepared to be at the summit with mum. Wed kind of convinced ourselves that it just wasnt possible. - Melbourne teenager Gabby Kanizay, 19, who this week became the youngest Australian to climb Mount Everest, reaching the summit with her mother, Jane.
The community has spoken on this issue. There is no reason to delay it anymore. - NSW Deputy Nationals leader Bronnie Taylor saying that the voluntary assisted dying laws should pass the states parliament unchanged. They did, on Thursday.
I have never been this disappointed in the political arena. - Gold Coast mayor Tom Tate after the home affairs minister, Karen Andrews, wrote an open letter to residents of the Gold Coast suburb Palm Beach saying she had requested federal urban infrastructure minister Paul Fletcher oppose any federal funding for the fourth stage of the citys light rail project a proposed extension from Burleigh Heads to Coolangatta but not mentioning that the light rail expansion would run directly past an investment property she co-owns with her husband.
We would never make it free, but if theres economic modelling there that suggests that a reduction in public transport fares would see a massive increase in usage and therefore a gross increase in revenues, well, then thats something that obviously I would have a discussion [about] with cabinet colleagues. I would love to see the masses of the usage of public transport increase, which would obviously improve revenue. - NSW Transport Minister David Elliott saying that he is open to considering cheaper public transport fares if it helped boost patronage after revelations of growing financial pressures on the network.
Sorry, go on. I dont want to interrupt you, David, please go on. - Tanya Plibersek to Insiders host David Speers when he interrupted her once too often.
You should hang your head in shame, Shark. I went to the memorial service of Jack Newton [the Australian player] yesterday and was surrounded by true professional golfers who believe in loyalty and history. GFY Shark. - Wayne Grady, who played with Greg Norman for Australia on several occasions, in an epic rant on social media, criticising his one-time friend for fronting the Saudis bid to engage in sportswashing putting billions of dollars to launch a new golf championship overhaul the top of the professional male game.
The Liberals hate the superannuation system they object to working Australians having wealth in retirement independent of the government. The Libs believe ordinary bods should be happy with the age pension. Let them know their place. If the public needs yet another idea to put this intellectually corrupt government to death, this is an important offence and with the government, its unprincipled prime minister. - Paul Keating dismissing the superannuation plan.
As a prime minister, you pour your heart and soul into this job every single day. You dont get everything right. Ive never pretended that I have. But I tell you what, I never leave anything on the field. And Im seeking a second term to ensure that we can take this to the next level, to those better days. - Scott Morrison at the beginning of the week, still hoping for a sympathy vote.
Twitter: @Peter_Fitz
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The State Behind Roes Likely Demise Also Does the Least for New Parents in Need – Cobb County Courier
Posted: at 6:17 pm
By Sarah Smith, ProPublica
This story was originally published by ProPublica.
ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.
When it comes to reproductive care, Mississippi has a dual distinction. The state spawned the law that likely will lead to the Supreme Court striking down Roe v. Wade. It is also unique among Deep South states for doing the least to provide health care coverage to low-income people who have given birth.
Mississippians on Medicaid, the government health insurance program for the poor, lose coverage a mere 60 days after childbirth. Thats often well before the onset of postpartum depression or life-threatening, birth-related infections: A 2020 study found that people racked up 81% of their postpartum expenses between 60 days and a year after delivery. And Mississippis own Maternal Mortality Review Committee found that 37% of pregnancy-related deaths between 2013 and 2016 occurred more than six weeks postpartum.
Every other state in the Deep South has extended or is in the process of extending Medicaid coverage to 12 months postpartum. Wyoming and South Dakota are the only other states where trigger laws will outlaw nearly all abortions if Roe falls and where lawmakers havent expanded Medicaid or extended postpartum coverage.
Its hypocrisy to say that we are pro-life on one end, that we want to protect the baby, but yet you dont want to pass this kind of legislation that will protect that mom who has to bear the responsibility of that child, said Cassandra Welchlin, executive director of the MS Black Womens Roundtable, a nonprofit that works at the intersection of race, gender and economic justice.
Efforts to extend coverage past 60 days have repeatedly failed in Mississippi where 60% of births are covered by Medicaid despite support from major medical associations and legislators on both sides of the aisle.
Mississippi House Speaker Philip Gunn, a Republican, said shortly after he killed the most recent bill that wouldve extended postpartum coverage that hes against expanding any form of Medicaid. We need to look for ways to keep people off, not put them on, he told The Associated Press in March. When asked about the issue during a May 8 interview on CNN, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said, When you talk about these young ladies, the best thing we can do for them is to provide and improve educational opportunities for them. (Neither Gunn nor Reeves responded to requests for comment.)
During the pandemic, a change in federal rules prevented states from cutting off Medicaid recipients, which has allowed people in Mississippi and elsewhere to retain postpartum coverage beyond 60 days. But at the end of the federal public health emergency declaration which is set to expire in July 2022 states will revert to their prior policies. What we are afraid of is that when that does end, it will go back to what we knew was pre-pandemic health care, Welchlin said.
We discussed the implications of Mississippis post-Roe reality with Welchlin and two other experts in the field: Alina Salganicoff, the Kaiser Family Foundations director for womens health policy, and Andrea Miller, president of the National Institute for Reproductive Health. Their answers have been lightly edited for length and clarity.
Salganicoff: Typically, everything from assistance if the person is having problems breastfeeding to screening for depression services.
Welchlin: We know the struggles of so many who have had life threatening illnesses such as heart conditions and hypertension. We know of course that Medicaid helps in that.
Welchlin: One of the stories that really touched me over the course of this pandemic was that of a mom who already had a child, and she needed access to child care so she could get back and forth to the doctor. During this particular pregnancy she had a severe heart disorder where she couldnt breathe, and she had to get rushed to the hospital. Because she was so connected to doulas and a supportive care organization like us, she was able to get admitted and sure enough thats when they diagnosed her with that heart condition. And she was a mom on Medicaid.
Miller: Only giving someone two months postpartum doesnt allow for the kind of continuation of care that you need. If there are indications of problems in the postpartum period, they dont all necessarily show up within the first two months. And we certainly know that the ability to have a healthy infant and keep an infant healthy is also related to whether you have coverage. The extension to 12 months really allows for that kind of continuum of care.
Welchlin: We know in the state of Mississippi, women die at higher rates, and of course its higher for Black women. And so, when women dont have that coverage, what happens is they die.
Miller: These bans on abortion are going to be layered on top of an already-unconscionable maternal and infant health crisis that most particularly impacts those who are struggling to make ends meet. It particularly impacts Black women and other communities of color. A state like Mississippi that is so clearly wanting to ban abortions the fact that they refuse to extend basic health care benefits that will help during pregnancy and postpartum just clearly indicates that they are not interested in the health and well-being of women and families and children, that they are purely on an ideological crusade.
Salganicoff: Were very focused on that first year of life. But if youre speaking about a woman who is not going to be able to get an abortion that she seeks and ends up carrying the pregnancy, the supports that shes going to need and her child is going to need go far beyond the first year of life.
Miller: You cant have a conversation about legality or soon-to-be illegality of abortion in these states and not have a conversation simultaneously about the existing crisis around maternal and infant health. These things are all interconnected, and thats why it is so deeply disturbing that the states trying to ban abortion are the same states that are refusing to expand Medicaid under the ACA, that are failing to take advantage of the ability to extend postpartum [coverage] by 12 months, that dont invest in child care, that dont invest in education these are all part of the same conversation.
Welchlin:Audre Lorde said, There is no such thing as a single-issue struggle because we do not live single-issue lives. So, abortion access, reproductive justice, voting rights, racial justice, gender equity these are not separate issues, they are intersecting issues that collectively determine the quality of our lives.
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Meyer: Theistic Implications of the Multiverse – Discovery Institute
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Image credit:Gerd Altmann viaPixabay.
Stephen Meyer writing atThe Daily Wireexamines the rise of the Multiverse in popular culture, inspired by the imaginings of scientists. From, The Madness of the Multiverse and the Strangeness of Atheism:
As millions of fans know, Marvel Studios recently released its latest superhero blockbusterDoctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Like earlier Marvel films, this offering unfolds within an interconnected network of parallel universes known as the Multiverse.
Scientists uneasy about the theistic implications of the cosmic fine-tuning at the inception of the universe have embraced the Multiverse as a remedy. As Meyer explains, there are a couple of issues with that. The first has to do with Ockhams razor. The second is the doozy.
Second and heres the twist all Multiverse proposals, whether based on inflationary cosmology or string theory, posit universe-generating mechanisms that themselves require prior, unexplained fine-tuning. This means that the ultimate origin of the fine-tuning remains a mystery which seems to take us right back to the need for an ultimate Fine-Tuner.
Ironically, the folks at Marvel and DC studios seem to recognize this. The Marvel Universe envisions a God-like figure called the One-Above-All as the creator of all the interconnected universes in the Multiverse. His DC equivalent is called The Presence.
Yet many modern scientists, wedded to atheism or materialism, fail to distinguish these ideologies from science itself. Consequently, they have recently advanced ever more strange and exotic hypotheses. In addition to the multiverse, some scientists posit a space alien designer to explain the digital code in DNA, while others suggest we may be nothing more than the simulation of a cosmic computer programmer.
These speculative hypotheses illustrate the growing strangeness of scientific atheism, as scientists reach for increasingly exotic ideas to explain evidence that seems otherwise to point straightforwardly to God.
As for the Multiverse, even sci-fi writers now recognize thatifsuch a thing exists, it would still require an ultimate Creator.
So, who will tell the scientific atheists?
Read the rest atThe Daily Wire(note that it is behind a paywall). Meyers latest book isReturn of the God Hypothesis: Three Scientific Discoveries That Reveal the Mind Behind the Universe.
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Denton: How Science Leads the Charge to Theism – Discovery Institute
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Photo credit: NOAA, via NASA.
William Paley once quipped that observation of the complexity of the human eye (which, it will be recalled, was wont to give Darwin uncomfortable doubts about the efficacy of natural selection) supplied an assured cure for atheism. Extending Paleys quip, I would add that if the eye doesnt do it for you, the brain with itsquadrillionsofsynchronizedelectro-chemical operationsalmost certainly will. There seems to be little exaggeration in claiming that cytology, the microscopic study of cells enabled by the ultra-high magnifications of the electron microscope, has led to a wholly unexpected revival of the fortunes of Paleys once derided natural theology.
Recent advances in biological science, a subject formerly proclaimed to be corrosive of metaphysical beliefs1, have somewhat unexpectedly become a stimulus to the emergence of new advances which endorse many of the older observations of natural theology. As astronomer Paul Davies remarked some four decades ago, It may seem bizarre, but in my opinion science offers a surer path to God than religion.2Supporting this contention that science itself leads the charge toward a fresh theistic turn Michael Denton makes the firm observation in his new book,The Miracle of Man: The Fine Tuning of Nature for Human Existence, that recent studies of the way the terrestrial environment appears to be fine-tuned for humankind are not based on the Judeo-Christian scriptures or classical philosophy but on evidence derived from advances in our scientific understanding of nature. (p. 208)
Providing chapter and verse for his views, in convincing detail with an enviably multi-disciplinary command, Denton elaborates on ways in which the properties of light, carbon, water, and metals contribute to the fitness of nature for humankind, providing substantial circumstantial evidence that the world we in habit was pre-adapted for our use. Taking as an example the earths hydrological cycle, which provides our water, this reveals itself to be an autonomous phenomenon enabling and promoting human life which, unlike gasoline and other products, requires no human input to garner it for our use. It is, to use a proverbial clich, simply a gift from the gods. Comments Denton: If you were Platos demiurge starting from scratch, you would need to create water and configure it with precisely its present suite of thermal properties. (p. 134)
Turning to human physiology, Denton points out how such organs as the heart and lungs appear to have been optimized with extraordinary prescience and he does not hesitate to call them and other human organs miracles of bioengineering. Such fitness for human purpose, he emphasizes, cannot be ascribed to Darwinian natural selection since human-friendly features must have been built into nature long before natural selection could have had time to act. (p. 149) Fully embracing Darwins proscribed t word (teleology), Denton does not shrink from referencing the teleological details of natures shaping.
Denton is particularly strong on what he terms the post-Copernican delusion of mankinds cosmic irrelevance. (p. 149) This is a fallacy which he traces back to Darwinisms having triggered a form of philosophical regression towards an unregenerate form of ancient materialism:
With the acceptance of Darwinism by the biological mainstream, western civilization took the final step back to the atomism, materialism and many-worlds doctrine of Democritus and other pre-Socratic philosophers of ancient Greece. (p. 21)
The notion that we are simply an epiphenomenon of mindless processes cast adrift in a cosmos configured by pure chance has in the last half century or so been challenged by a new scientific landscape, Denton argues with some understatement. For as Michael Behe comments in his advance praise of Dentons work, the philosopher Bertrand Russells notorious contention that Man is the product of causes which had no prevision of the end they were achieving has turned out to be the most spectacularly wrong-headed pronouncement of the 20th century. (p. ii)
Questions about the nature and origin of mankind are clearly no respecters of traditional academic compartmentalization, and Darwinism has clear cosmological as well as biological implications.It is at this point of intersection that Dentons work makes common cause with the idea put forth by modern astronomers that planet Earth itself must have in some sense been, to use Dentons term, pre-planned. Before the beginning of the 1970s many people might have accepted that the universe was a jumble of material forces churning away mindlessly over the eons with the unaccountable exception of theunplannedanomaly of human life. Yet that idea was challenged once astrophysicists came to realize that planet Earth was being constantly ministered to by a group of forces dubbed the cosmological constants, all precisely calibrated to promote and sustain life.3Such factors give the Earth its uniquely privileged position and run counter to the older opinion that it arose through purely aleatory processes of cosmic vicissitude. These modern findings stand in implicit but conspicuous opposition to that de-centering of the Earth brought about by the Copernican Revolution, and Denton points to many points of contact linking modern cosmology and biology with the distinctly anthropocentric medieval view of the human estate as it has been articulated by the Judeo-Christian tradition.
Surrounded by an infinity of purposeless nullity on all sides, our Earth stands out as a cosmic beacon pulsating with life and purpose.4Cosmologists make no bones about the fact they can see no logical pathway to how we all came to be here on this planet. The cosmological constants which create conditions favorable to life are on any statistical reckoning improbable to an extreme, even prohibitive degree. The same goes for the genesis and proliferation of life forms: the whole phenomenon remains stubbornly unamenable to rational decipherment. There cannot even be any sensible talk of an inference to the best explanation when there are no helpful indices pointing inanydirection on the naturalistic continuum of understanding.
Planet Earth would therefore appear torepresent a cosmic exception so singular as to require a separate form of explanation altogether from the rest of a dead universe. In fact,the absolute disparity in existential status between our living cosmos and its surrounding chaos of jostling corpse planets prompts the inference thatsentient life could not have developed without a form of foresight and an accompanying instrumental power to realize some originary vision through a selective abrogation of the otherwise universal laws of chaos dominating the rest of the universe. Hence,despite the undeniable fact of the suns geometrically central position, Earth, as the single locus of habitability amidst the lifeless chaos of our extraterrestrial surroundings, can with some justice lay claim to a form of moral and symbolic centrality within the cosmic scheme of things.
Denton has gone further than this in earlier writings and argued that the new discoveries in astrophysics point to a form of providential dispensation. For that reasonhe has taken exception with modern liberal theologians who have apparently resigned themselves to seeing science and theology occupying discrete epistemological realms where science acts as the senior partner, so to speak. Support for Dentons position has also been amply hinted at in the work of Paul Davies who concludes that it would be a considerable stretch to suppose that the temperate zone cocooning the Earth might be the result of pure accident. He therefore feels himself unable to subscribe to the belief that the accumulated intricacies of our planet could have come about by pure chance.5
Even Denis Diderot, it will be recalled, one of the free-thinking Frenchphilosopheswho was speculating on evolutionary matters in the same century as Charless free-thinking grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, was ready to accept the Argument from Design. It seemed self-evident to Diderot that the readily observable and palpable works of nature were more convincing of a divine hand then any amount of philosophizing or theologizing.6Diderots somewhat inchoate intuitions certainly receive weighty and scientifically corroborated support in Michael DentonsThe Miracle of Man.
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The Musician Who Gave Me the City and Stars, Vangelis, Is Dead – TheStranger.com
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Spaceship of Vangelis's electronic imagination... PBS
Now, my boyhood had two life-changing experiences. First was watching Star Wars with my aunt (more specifically, maiguru) in 1977. This was the moment, which happened in Seattle (the summer city of my boyhood), I first saw that Christianity did not structure the whole universe. It wasn't fundamental. Evil could be Satan or Darth Vader, and good could be Jesus or Luke Skywalker. This discovery broke my boy-mind. No one had told me that Jesus might not be seen as all that is good on Jupiter, or Alpha Centauri, or a galaxy far, far away.
My atheism was born in that theater that afternoon. (Star Wars was the first movie I watched.) But I needed something to replace the growing vacuum initiated by that experience. I still needed to believe in something. No-thing was not enough. I was spiritually adrift until I watched the first episode of Cosmos near the end of 1980.
Three things about this show moved me profoundly. One was Carl Sagan himself (so reasonable, so thoughtful, so human), another was the Spaceship of the Imagination (a "spacecraft/set Sagan used to travel through wonderful space and marvelous time... with translucent skin and a control panel of glittering crystals..."), and, finally, the show's theme song, "Heaven and Hell," by a Greek composer who died of COVID-19 on Tuesday, May 17, Vangelis.
I was sold. I believed in God, but a secular one. A God made of star-stuff, to use Sagan's language. But the transference of my religion from the church to the stars would not have been possible without Vangelis's transportive "Heaven and Hell." I made every effort not to miss the show's opening because this sorrowful and starry-full piece gave my feelings access to the essence of the show's defining images: planets, stellar gas clouds, pulsars, galaxies.
Near the end of the second episode of Cosmos, "One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue," Sagan said something that truly stunned me: "The molecules of life fill the universe." And as he speculated on life on other worlds, and transformed the Jesus I lost in the movie theater into universal matter and laws of physics from which life emerged, Vangelis provided a perfect piece of music: "Alpha".
Fifteen years later, the Canadian producers Dino & Terry boosted "Alpha" and transformed it into a deep trip-hop groove, "Gibby Disco":
Vangelis, who is mostly known for a soundtrack that did nothing for me (the "Chariots of Fire" theme), provided the revolutionary soundtrack for a film that first pictured cyberpunk on the screen, Blade Runner. My first encounter with this work happened in 1984, in Harare. I rented the movie from a video store at the Chisipite mall. I was with my friend Martin. After playing Asteroids at an arcade, we watched the movie at his place on Enterprise Road. When we overcame our speechlessness, we could not stop talking about and re-watching the science fiction film.
There is not enough time in my life to say nearly enough about the music/images in this work: Its opening (the fiery industrial blasts of an endless city whose pollution has made day into night and rain toxic); its peak (a police car landing on the top of a 300-story police station); its conclusion (a techno beat as the doomed androids flee to the Pacific Northwest). The way to feel this Los Angeles, which 1982 saw as the year 2019, was made so real by a genius who gave me the cosmos and the urban sublime, Vangelis.
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Gospel in Art: If the world hates you, remember that it hated me before you | ICN – Independent Catholic News
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Contempt of Hatred, by Ernest Joseph Bailly 1792 Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Ghent / Alamy
Source: Christian Art
Gospel of 21 May 2022John 15:18-21
Jesus said to his disciples:
'If the world hates you, remember that it hated me before you.
If you belonged to the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you do not belong to the world, because my choice withdrew you from the world, therefore the world hates you.
Remember the words I said to you: A servant is not greater than his master. If they persecuted me, they will persecute you too; if they kept my word, they will keep yours as well. But it will be on my account that they will do all this, because they do not know the one who sent me.'
Reflection on the portrait painting
Most of our Gospel readings this week talked about love, trust and friendship, but today's reading talks about hatred. Jesus says 'If the world hates you, remember that it hated me before you.' Jesus is very realistic in what he is asking us to do. He knew that Christians would be met with hostility and hatred. In the early Church this would sometimes take the form of persecutions (which sadly still happen in parts of the world now). In the 21st-century Church, the hostility towards Christianity is in the form of aggressive atheism or of deeply rooted secularist indifference.
The hostility towards Christians in our century is more subtle. We may not even be especially aware of it, but we know that rejection of faith is present in our societies. This leads us to being afraid to publicly witness our Christian beliefs. We'd rather keep our heads down and just quietly live out our faith. There is a lot to be said for that, but Jesus calls us to try to be lights in a darkened world by the way we live our lives.
In line with Paris and Lille, the Ghent Academy in Belgium organised its first Salon in 1792. It was a competition focusing on the theme of a character portrait. Ernest Joseph Bailly obtained first prize with this portrait. The face is contorted and grimacing, exuding nothing but contempt. The work is titled 'Contempt of Hatred', as the man is actually rejecting hatred he is seeing in someone else. So whilst this is a harsh, unusual and uncomfortable portrait, its aim is a noble one: to convey a dislike of hatred.
LINKS
Christian Art: http://www.christian.art
Today's image: https://christian.art/daily-gospel-reading/john-15-18-21-2022/
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Summer reading suggestions from Baylor Family authors – Baylor University
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Looking for some summer reading? Whether your interest is sports, healing racial division, or self-care, weve got some recommendations for you all written by Baylor Bears!
First up:The Road to J.O.Y.: Leading with Faith, Playing with Purpose, Leaving a Legacy, by Baylor mens basketball coach Scott Drew. Drews rebuilding of the Baylor program has been talked about at length but with this new book, we get an inside look into the culture of J.O.Y. (Jesus, Others, Yourself) that he has instilled throughout his two decades as head coach. (As we write this, the book is No. 2 on Amazon among Christian Business & Professional Growth books, and No. 5 in Basketball Biographies.)
This book isnt just for those who play basketball or coach a team; were all a part of a group or organization, and if youre doing things for others as a servant leader, Drew says people will follow that and want to be a part of something greater than themselves. The book focuses onthe people who were a part of the rebuild. This books gives us an opportunity to share how Gods blessed not only our program, but the players, the coaches, and everyone that has played a part in it, Drew told NBCs Today show.
Drew, of course, is the national championship-winning head coach of the Baylor mens basketball team. With 19 seasons at the helm, he is tied with Kansas Bill Self as the Big 12s longest-tenured head coach. Drew owns program records with 370 victories, nine NCAA tournament appearances, and a national championship. More than his records, Drew is known for his passion, leadership, and tremendous belief in helping others achieve their goals.
Next up is Beyond Racial Division: A Unifying Alternative to Colorblindness and Antiracism, by Baylor sociology professor George Yancey. He writes that colorblindness and antiracism depend on the idea that they have the right solution and the other side must accept their path, but Dr. Yancey offers a third way an inclusive conversation about mutual accountability that acknowledges that we dont all have the answers.
While the world may seem deeply divided on race, Yancey is hopeful that with a lot of hard work, we can find healing and racial reconciliation. With empirical rationale, this book lays out how collaborative conversations and mutual accountability can reduce the racial division. When I say mutual, what I mean is that everyone, regardless of race or perspective, has a responsibility of entering to this conversation, Yancey explains. Im not saying that the solution is going to be mutual, but Im saying that the conversation has to be, because if it is not, then all were going to do is set ourselves up for more of the animosity and anger that we have kept seeing in our society.
Yancey, a professor of the social sciences, came to Baylor in 2019 from the University of North Texas. He is the author of more than a dozen books on such subjects as racial diversity and identity, anti-Christian bias, and atheism in America.
And finally, we haveThe Soul of the Helper: Seven Stages to Seeing the Sacred Within Yourself So You Can See It In Others, by Baylor social work professor Holly Oxhandler. Its a timely book written to those who help others. If youre a healthcare worker, teacher, social worker, or anyone else serving those around you, this book is for you.
Helpers have high level of empathy and a tendency to step in during a time of need, sometimes to the point of burnout, writes Dr. Oxhandler. And with burnout comes feelings of shame, fear, anger and resentment. The Soul of the Helper offers space for those helpers to find rest, resources and encouragement. With a seven-step process, Oxhandler teaches the importance of stopping, finding stillness, and finding your sacred spark.This book is packed with strategies to try out, lean on, and consider as people are going through the work that theyre doing as helpers, says Oxhandler.
Oxhandler is associate dean for research and faculty development and anassociate professor in Baylors Diana R. Garland School of Social Work. Her research focuses on the intersection of a persons spirituality and mental health.
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Boeing finally docks a capsule to the space station – NPR
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The Boeing Starliner prepares to dock at the International Space Station on Friday. NASA via AP hide caption
The Boeing Starliner prepares to dock at the International Space Station on Friday.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. With only a test dummy aboard, Boeing's astronaut capsule pulled up and parked at the International Space Station for the first time Friday, a huge achievement for the company after years of false starts.
With Starliner's arrival, NASA finally realizes its longtime effort to have crew capsules from competing U.S. companies flying to the space station.
SpaceX already has a running start. Elon Musk's company pulled off the same test three years ago and has since launched 18 astronauts to the space station, as well as tourists.
"Today marks a great milestone," NASA astronaut Bob Hines radioed from the orbiting complex. "Starliner is looking beautiful on the front of the station," he added.
The only other time Boeing's Starliner flew in space, it never got anywhere near the station, ending up in the wrong orbit.
This time, the overhauled spacecraft made it to the right spot following Thursday's launch and docked at the station 25 hours later. The automated rendezvous went off without a major hitch, despite the failure of a handful of thrusters.
If the rest of Starliner's mission goes well, Boeing could be ready to launch its first crew by the end of this year. The astronauts likely to serve on the first Starliner crew joined Boeing and NASA flight controllers in Houston as the action unfolded nearly 270 miles (435 kilometers) up.
NASA wants redundancy when it comes to the Florida-based astronaut taxi service. Administrator Bill Nelson said Boeing's long road with Starliner underscores the importance of having two types of crew capsules. U.S. astronauts were stuck riding Russian rockets once the shuttle program ended, until SpaceX's first crew flight in 2020.
Boeing's first Starliner test flight in 2019 was plagued by software errors that cut the mission short and could have doomed the spacecraft. Those were corrected, but when the new capsule awaited liftoff last summer, corroded valves halted the countdown. More repairs followed, as Boeing chalked up nearly $600 million in do-over costs.
Before letting Starliner get close to the space station Friday, Boeing ground controllers practiced maneuvering the capsule and tested its robotic vision system. Everything checked out well, Boeing said, except for a cooling loop and four failed thrusters. The capsule held a steady temperature, however, and had plenty of other thrusters for steering.
Once Starliner was within 10 miles (15 kilometers) of the space station, Boeing flight controllers in Houston could see the space station through the capsule's cameras. "We're waving. Can you see us?" joked Hines.
There was only silence from Starliner. The commander's seat was occupied once again by the mannequin dubbed Rosie the Rocketeer, a space-age version of World War II's Rosie the Riveter.
The gleaming white-with-blue-trim capsule hovered 33 feet (10 meters) from the station for close to two hours considerably longer than planned as flight controllers adjusted its docking ring and ensured everything else was in order. When the green light finally came, Starliner closed the gap in four minutes, eliciting cheers in Boeing's control center. Applause erupted once the latches were tightly secured.
"These last 48 hours have just been a barnstorm, so it's going to be very good to sleep tonight," said Mark Nappi, vice president and director of Boeing's commercial crew program.
It was a double celebration for NASA's commercial crew program director Steve Stich, who turned 57 Friday. "What an incredible birthday it was," he told reporters.
The space station's seven astronauts will unload groceries and gear from Starliner and pack it up with experiments. Unlike SpaceX's Dragon capsule that splashes down off the Florida coast, Starliner will aim for a landing in New Mexico next Wednesday.
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