SpaceX Seeks Property Buyouts Near Starhopper Launch Site in Texas: Report – Space.com

SpaceX wants to buy out the properties of residents in a community located only a few miles away its Starhopper launch site in south Texas, according to a report.

The company's Starhopper flights made headlines this summer as the rocket prototype flew as high as 500 feet (about 150 meters) in altitude. Starhopper fits in well in with SpaceX's Mars exploration plans, as Starhopper is supposed to be an early prototype for the Starship vehicle that SpaceX hopes will bring people to the Red Planet in the coming decades.

But that testing has also produced an unintentional 100-acre brush fire and even explosion warnings in the launching region, which lies nearby the tiny hamlet of Boca Chica, according to Business Insider.

So, SpaceX sent buyout offers to at least 10 households in the community which has a predominantly elderly population of only about 20 people saying the company is concerned about "increased disruption to Boca Chica residents and our commitment to complying with public health and safety guidelines," according to the letter, which is written with SpaceX letterhead.

Related:SpaceX's Starship and Super Heavy Mars Rocket in Pictures

"We did not anticipate that local residents would experience significant disruption from our presence," SpaceX explains of its reasoning to use Cameron County as a potential spaceport location. "However, it has become clear that expansion of spaceflight activities, as well as compliance with Federal Aviation Administration and other public safety regulations, will make it increasingly more challenging to minimize disruption to residents of the village."

SpaceX is offering each household a fixed buyout price of three times the appraised property value, saying that it favors giving an identical deal to residents because it is "the fairest approach." The letter, which is dated Thursday (Sept. 12), adds that the offer is good for two weeks or until Sept. 26.

To anyone who will accept the offer, SpaceX also plans to give those residents exclusive access to more Starship development events, through "future private VIP launch viewing events that are unavailable to the public."

A few residents told Business Insider they have no interest in accepting the buyout. For example, Maria Pointer, who runs a Facebook group about SpaceX that generally supports its work, said that the company does not understand that most residents cannot afford to buy properties nearby, even with SpaceX's offer to triple property values.

"They need to understand that most of this community has very limited income," she said. "We want to move on, just give us what we need to move on. I'm not going to go to a trailer or an apartment. I gave my life to this property. I gave it everything I had. Nobody else wanted to tame it."

SpaceX did not immediately respond to a Business Insider request for comment. On Sept. 28 two days after the offer deal closes the company reportedly plans to give a presentation in an area nearby to provide an update about the Starship development program.

Since SpaceX is not a publicly owned company, outsiders can only get a partial view of its financial situation. The company's valuation was appraised at $33.3 billion in May, according to CNBC. SpaceX is engaged in multiple spaceflight projects, including Starship, creating a vast network of 5G satellites called Starlink, developing a Crew Dragon commercial crew vehicle for NASA, making cargo runs to the International Space Station, and hefting satellites using its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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SpaceX Seeks Property Buyouts Near Starhopper Launch Site in Texas: Report - Space.com

There might be some problems when we try to make babies in space – Massive Science

Earth is great and all, but with climate change and the extremely highly likely reemergence of dinosaurs due to genetic engineering, we might need to consider inhabiting other planets. Sending out a pioneering colony of carefully-selected humansis today science fiction but, someday, it might save our species.And, if we ever actually docolonize space, were going to need to have babies up there, which might turn out to be more complicated than it is on Earth.

Im not concerned about the actual baby making part we can figure that out with practice. The part thats tricky is the fine-tuned and carefully orchestrated process of human development, particularly in the brain. Cells in microgravity dont grow exactly like cells on Earth, and a whole bunch of them in a developing babys brain may not grow exactly the same either.

Thankfully, there's a researcher for that. UC San Diego scientist Alysson Muotri is usingblossoming clumps of brain cells called brain organoids to understand how neurons proliferate, form synapses, and communicate but in space.

Pictured: spaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaace

NASA/ESA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) on Wikimedia Commons

In late July, Muotri and his team sent a bunch of organoids to the International Space Station. Previous research has documented the proliferation of HeLA cells, cancer cells, bone cells and more, but there is limited information about the gravity-free growth of early brain cells, known as neural progenitor cells, or brain organoids. Such organoids have proven to be a useful model for understanding brain development, so understanding how they develop in the microgravity of space could demonstrate the ways in which human brain development might be affected if we ever become a space-faring society.

Muotri has long been intrigued by research in space, especially the NASA twins study. A while ago, he half-seriously talked about the idea of doing his own biology space study with one of his collaborators, but nothing quite came of it. He dreamed of sending organoids to space, but didn't know if it was possible.Once he met an engineer who convinced him it was feasible to actually build a device to keep organoids alive in space, he decided it was time for takeoff.

Still, he had some trouble selling others, particularly granting organizations, on the idea. Hes funding the project out of his own salary savings and gifts to the lab, with the hope that his first wave of findings will draw attention to his work and convince funding agencies that his research is valuable.

Backed by his own money, the first task was figuring out how to keep the organoids healthyat the International Space Station.

Even on Earth, the organoids require a lot of care to ensure that they are at the proper temperature and growing conditions. For one, they're kept in a shaker so that they are constantly suspended in a solution, without anchoring down to anything (though that won't be a problem in microgravity).Butlike living cells in a body, organoids require nutrients, and they also spit out waste. To support these processes, their solutions need to be changed,andthe temperature and pH needs to be carefully maintained, like fish in a tank. Organoids require a lot of babysitting, and Muotri simply cant expect the astronauts to spend as much time caring for his cells as he and his students do back on Earth.

Alysson Muotri shows off the Space Tango

Ashley Juavinett

So, he collaborated withan engineering team from Kentucky that specializes in sending biological material into space.They developed a shiny red box called the Space Tango CubeLab.

Space Tango may sound like a bad 80s science fiction film starring Antonio Banderas, butit's actually the name of the company, and the productsthey make are so much cooler than '80s sci-fi. The "CubeLab" essentially functions like a fully automated, climate-controlled mini-laboratory: it can change the media for the cells, monitor their growth, and send the data back to Earth. The astronauts just need to plug it in.

For this very first mission with the organoids, Muotri wants to see how the cells grow and proliferate. Based on previous research,he predicts that The progenitor cells will proliferate faster and will probably generate a bigger organoid. Although a bigger brain sounds better, this might actually be a problem: if the brain and surrounding skull are too big,it might prevent birth through the birth canal. It's still speculation, but it's entirely possible thatmaybe humans cannot have natural deliveries in space.

The other issue with faster brain development is that large brain volumes have been implicated in the development of autism spectrum disorder. In fact, having a larger brain circumference is one of the most robust biomarkers of autism. We dont fully understand how cell proliferation may later in life lead to intellectual problems or cognitive disability, so this gives us a model to understand that, Muotri hopes.

At the moment, we dont know much about the cellular mechanisms that microgravity could directly impact. Using genome sequencing and techniques to detect epigenetic signatures, Muotris team will look to see if the genomes of the organoids have changed. There is definitely an epigenetic signature that changes neurons in space,"Muotri insists, "thats what we want to figure out.

Of course, organoids cant capture brain development in utero in its full complexity. However, this study could point us to important considerations before we pack our space bags. For example,it's possible that people with certain genetic backgrounds are less susceptible to the (lack of) pressures of microgravity and might fare better in space. However far-fetched, the social implications are staggering. If it turns out that some genetic backgrounds are better adapted to have babies in space, would this dictate who could become space-faring?

Lastly, Muotri would like to compare organoids generated from cells of healthypatients to those from people with Alzheimers or Parkinsons disease. In 2011, a lab down the hall from Muotri's at UC San Diego showed thatneurons derived from schizophrenic patientswere different than those derived from neurotypical patients. However, similar in-the-dish research on diseases of the aging brain have been limited. Organoids closely resemble young neural tissue, and it is a lot of work to keep them alive until they start to look like an aging brain. When Muotricompared neurotypical and Alzheimers organoids in Earths gravity, they were indistinguishable. However,this might not be true in space: Maybe in the microgravity of space the organoids will age faster, and we could reveal their [Alzheimer's] phenotypes.

We are still learning a lot about the brain on Earth, but Alysson Muotri is already testing what might happen to the developing brain in space

Photo by jesse orrico on Unsplash

Muotri would also like to send the organoids up with even more sensors, including recording arrays that can actually measure the electrical activity of the organoids while theyre in space. Such data could provide clues about the functionality of these brain clumps, in addition to their genetic and anatomical signatures.

Muotris energy and enthusiasm for the project is palpable. But he has one big concern: when the mini-brains were sent into space, there was a 24-hour black out period during launch preparation over which the Space Tango couldnt send back data. Muotri confessed that this was his biggest worry for the mission. But, he still laughed heartily, We just have to hope that everything is going to be okay.

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There might be some problems when we try to make babies in space - Massive Science

First Space Hotel Set To Open In 2025 – wkdq.com

A company is working on creating the first hotel to orbit above Earth. Where do I sign up?

I have always been fascinated by space and thought that it would be cool to go up there one day. That day looks like it may be about six years away.

A California-based company namedThe Gateway Foundation, has released designs for a rotating space station, known as "The Von Bruan Station," that will "produce differing levels of artificial gravity and will accommodate up to 100 tourists a week when it opens in 2025'" according to WHIO.

The Von Braun Station will consist of various "modules," that according to The Gateway Foundation, will include:

Air Water Power (AWP) Module

Gymnasium and Assembly (GA) Module

Kitchen, Restaurant and Bar (KRB) Module

Crew Quarters Module, which will be configurable for gravity and micro-gravity habitation.

Privately owned modules used for villas, hotels, or commercial activity.

Government owned modules used for scientific research, training and staging facilities.

So one of the big questions for me here is, how will people get to the Von Braun Station?

Tim Alatorre, who is the architect behind the station said that he believes that travel to the Von Braun Station would be comparable to a cruise or a Disney World vacation with activities like concerts, movies, and seminars, according to WHIO.

Another question that I have, is how affordable will a stay be? That's the one thing that would stop most people, like myself, from going. Well, The Gateway Foundation isn't the only organization looking into space tourism. According to CNN,

Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic plans to launch passengers into sub-orbital space at the hefty sum of $250,000 per person, per trip.

Meanwhile, Aurora Station says a stay in its space hotel will cost an eyewatering $9.5 million.

Price wise, in the early phases the Von Braun hotel will also be catering to those with dollars to spend, but the foundation is hoping to make it equivalent to "a trip on a cruise or a trip to Disneyland."

That's a pretty hefty chunk of chance, but if The Gateway Foundation could find a way to get the prices down to something similar to what they mentioned above, I could see people canceling a trip to Disney to go into space...I would.

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First Space Hotel Set To Open In 2025 - wkdq.com

One-time UBC researcher headed to International Space Station – Vancouver Sun

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir training for her mission to the International Space Station.Josh Valcarcel NASA John / PNG

Jessica Meir has always been interested in how Earth creatures respond to extreme environments, so it makes sense that she is heading to outer space, the most extreme environment of all.

The one-time UBC post-doctoral researcher will blast off Sept. 25 aboard a Russian Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft for a six-month stay on the International Space Station and to fulfil a childhood dream.

Ive wanted to be an astronaut since I was five, so it wont surprise anyone that Im going to space, said Meir, who is at the Star City cosmonaut training facility outside Moscow. I just never thought it would come true.

Aboard the ISS, Meir will be conducting a variety of experiments in human physiology using herself as the main research subject. She has long experience studying the physiology of animals at extreme depths and high altitudes.

At the University of B.C., Meir and her colleague Julia York played mother to baby bar-headed geese so they could teach them to fly in a wind tunnel.

The goal was to learn how the geese regulate their metabolism when they migrate in low-oxygen environments at altitudes reaching 8,500 metres, nearly the height of Mount Everest. That paper was published this week, 10 years after they started the project.

Once the goslings had imprinted on the researchers, they trained them to fly sometimes following Meir on her motor scooter then used the wind tunnel to simulate high-altitude conditions.

Jessica Meir training a bar-headed goose to fly alongside her on a motor scooter.Milsom Lab/UBC / PNG

That was the most challenging project Ive ever done and it took much longer than I thought, she said. Its funny that it is finally being published just as Im about to go into space.

Meir, commander Oleg Skripochka, and Hazzaa Ali Almansoori of the United Arab Emirates will take six hours to reach the ISS where they will join six crew members already aboard. Scheduled departures will bring the crew back down to its usual six members about a week later.

During the mission, the crew will tackle 250 experiments that would be impossible under the influence of Earths gravity on such things as human physiology, fuel efficiency, growing transplant tissues, exotic materials science pharmaceutical development, and practical experiments intended to extend the range of human space travel to Mars, such as a Zero-G Oven for baking on long space missions.

In a zero-gravity environment, it is possible to create crystals and other materials that have industrial and even medical application in drug development for Parkinsons, cancer and a whole variety of stubborn ills. A Japanese Space Agency study recently led to a drug for muscular dystrophy that is in trials.

Space may also be the perfect environment for growing delicate human organs for transplant that are difficult to create in Earths gravity because they require supporting structure, said Meir, who is an American.

The idea is that in zero gravity, you could grow organs without those support structures, she said. Maybe we could have something like a biological 3D printer to make organs in space for use on Earth.

Meir will monitor herself for changes in eye and retinal health as well as changes in cardiovascular tissue already observed in astronauts.

Thats a hot topic because the carotid arteries and some other blood vessels get thicker after six months in space, she said. They age by 20 years.

Meir and her crewmates have been training for the mission at Star City for most of the past 18 months and their official commissioning ceremony was held earlier this week at Red Square. They will spend the next few weeks in quarantine.

While she had obtained her pilots licence years ago while a biology undergrad, she was trained in Russia to help pilot Soyuz in Russian.

Its a lot more work to learn the co-pilot job, but its really worth it, she said.

Meir first applied to be an astronaut in 2008 while working at NASA but fell just short of selection. She applied again in 2012 after completing her PhD, while she was researching goose physiology at UBC. She later became at assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, before being selected as an astronaut.

The common theme that has driven me throughout my life is exploration and curiosity, she said. But what interested me the most with geese and with deepsea diving in my PhD is the physiology of organisms in extreme environments, which really ties in to our lives as astronauts.

Space is the most inhospitable environment imaginable for a human being, but its just another day at the office for Meir.

Working for NASA I was facilitating experiments to be conducted by astronauts, but this time I will be the one being poked and prodded in the name of science, she said. So, its really come full circle.

rshore@postmedia.com

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One-time UBC researcher headed to International Space Station - Vancouver Sun

What Happens to Your Body If You Die in Space? – Popular Mechanics

This is an excerpt from the new book, Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs, published by W. W. Norton & Company.

Like the vast reaches of space, the fate of an astronaut corpse is uncharted territory. So far, no individual has died of natural causes in space. There have been eighteen astronaut deaths, but all were caused by a bona fide space disaster. Space shuttle Columbia (seven deaths, broken apart due to structural failure), space shuttle Challenger (seven deaths, disintegrated during launch), Soyuz 11 (three deaths, air vent ripped open during descent, and the only deaths to have technically happened in space), Soyuz 1 (one death, capsule parachute failure during reentry).

Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?: Big Questions from Tiny Mortals About Death

These were all large-scale calamities, with bodies recovered on Earth in various states of intactness. But we dont know what would happen if an astronaut had a sudden heart attack, or an accident during a space walk, or choked on some of that freeze-dried ice cream on the way to Mars. Umm, Houston, should we float him over to the maintenance closet or . . . ?

Before we talk about what would be done with a space corpse, lets lay out what we suspect might happen if death occurred in a place with no gravity and no atmospheric pressure.

An astronaut, lets call her Dr. Lisa, is outside the space station, puttering away on some routine repair. (Do astronauts ever putter? I assume everything they do has a specific, highly technical purpose. But do they ever spacewalk just to make sure everything looks tidy around the ol station?) All of a sudden, Lisas puffy white space suit is struck by a tiny meteorite, ripping a sizable hole.

Unlike what you may have seen or read in science fiction, Lisas eyes wont bulge out of her skull until she finally shatters in a blast of blood and icicles. Nothing so dramatic will occur. But Lisa will have to act quickly after her suit is breached, as she will lose consciousness in nine to eleven seconds. This is a weirdly specific, kind of creepy time frame. Lets call it 10 seconds. She has 10 seconds to get herself back into a pressurized environment. But such a rapid decompression will likely send her into shock. Death will come to our poor putterer before she even knows what is happening.

In theory, you could store Lisa in her powdered form for years before returning her to Earth .

Most of the conditions that will kill Lisa come from the lack of air pressure in space. The human body is used to operating under the weight of the Earths atmosphere, which cradles us at all times like a planet-sized anti-anxiety blanket. From the moment that pressure disappears, the gases in Lisas body will begin to expand and the liquids will turn into gas. Water in her muscles will convert into vapor, which will collect under Lisas skin, distending areas of her body to twice their normal size. This will lead to a freaky Violet Beauregarde situation, but will not actually be her main issue in terms of survival. The lack of pressure will also cause nitrogen in her blood to form gas bubbles, causing her enormous pain, similar to what deep- water divers experience when they get the bends. When Dr. Lisa passes out in nine to eleven seconds, it will bring her merciful relief. She will continue floating and bloating, unaware of what is happening.

As we pass the minute and a half mark, Lisas heart rate and blood pressure will plummet (to the point where her blood may begin to boil). The pressure inside and outside her lungs will be so different that her lungs will be torn, ruptured, and bleeding. Without immediate help, Dr. Lisa will asphyxiate, and well have a space corpse on our hands. Remember, this what we think will happen. What little information we have comes from studies done in altitude chambers on unfortunate humans and even more unfortunate animals.

The crew pulls Lisa back inside, but its too late to save her. RIP Dr. Lisa.

Space programs like NASA have been pondering this inevitability, although they wont talk about it publicly. (Why are you hiding your space corpse protocol, NASA?) So, let me pose the question to you: should Lisas body come back to Earth or not? Heres what would happen, based on what you decide.

Decomposition can be slowed down in cold temperatures, so if Lisa is coming back to Earth (and the crew doesnt want the effluents of a decomposing body escaping into the living area of the ship), they need to keep her as cool as possible. On the International Space Station, astronauts keep trash and food waste in the coldest part of the station. This puts the brakes on the bacteria that cause decay, which decreases food rot and helps the astronauts avoid unpleasant smells. So maybe this is where Lisa would hang out until a shuttle returned her to Earth. Keeping fallen space hero Dr. Lisa with the trash is not the best public relations move, but the station has limited room, and the trash area already has a cooling system in place, so it makes logistical sense to put her there.

What if Dr. Lisa dies of a heart attack on a long journey to Mars? In 2005, NASA collaborated with a small Swedish company called Promessa on a design prototype for a system that would process and contain space corpses. The prototype was called the Body Back. (Im bringing body back, returning corpses but theyre not intact.)

If Lisas crew had a Body Back system on board, heres how it would work. Her body would be placed in an airtight bag made of GoreTex and thrust into the shuttles airlock. In the airlock, the temperature of space (270C) would freeze Lisas body. After about an hour, a robotic arm would bring the bag back inside the shuttle and vibrate for fifteen minutes, shattering frozen Lisa into chunks. The chunks would be dehydrated, leaving about fifty pounds of dried Lisa-powder in the Body Back. In theory, you could store Lisa in her powdered form for years before returning her to Earth and presenting her to her family just like you would a very heavy urn of cremated remains.

Who says Lisas body needs to come back to Earth at all? People are already paying $12,000 or more to have tiny, symbolic portions of their cremated remains or DNA launched into Earths orbit, to the surface of the moon, or out into deep space. How psyched do you think space nerds would be if they had the chance to float their whole dead body through space?

After all, burial at sea has always been a respectful way to put sailors and explorers to rest, plopped over the side of the ship into the waves below. We continue the practice these days despite advances in onboard refrigeration and preservation technology. So, while we do have the technology to build robot arms to shatter and freeze-dry space corpses, perhaps we could employ the simpler option of wrapping Dr. Lisa in a body bag, space-walking her past the solar array, and letting her float away?

Space seems vast and uncontrolled. We like to imagine that Dr. Lisa will drift forever into the void (like George Clooney in that space movie I watched on the plane that one time), but more likely she would just follow the same orbit as the shuttle. This would, perversely, turn her into a form of space trash. The United Nations has regulations against littering in space. But I doubt anyone would apply those regulations to Dr. Lisa. Again, no one wants to call our noble Lisa trash!

Humans have struggled with this challenge before, with grim results. There are only a few climbable routes to climb to the top of Mount Everests 29,029-foot peak. If you die at that altitude (which almost three hundred people have done), it is dangerous for the living to attempt to bring your body down for burial or cremation. Today, dead bodies litter the climbing paths, and each year new climbers have to step over the puffy orange snowsuits and skeletonized faces of fellow climbers. This same thing could happen in space, where shuttles to Mars have to pass the orbiting corpse every trip. Oh geez, there goes Lisa again.

Its possible the gravity of a planet could eventually pull Lisa in. If that happens, Lisa would get a free cremation in the atmosphere. Friction from the atmospheric gas would super-heat her bodys tissues, incinerating her. Theres the smallest of small possibilities that if Lisas body was sent out into space in a small, self-propelled craft like an escape pod, which then departed our solar system, traveled across the empty expanse to some exoplanet, survived its descent through whatever atmosphere might exist there, and cracked open on impact, Lisas microbes and bacterial spores could create life on a new planet. Good for Lisa! How do we know that alien Lisa wasnt how life on Earth started, huh? Maybe the primordial goo from which Earths first living creatures emerged was just Lisa decomposition? Thanks, Dr. Lisa.

Caitlin Doughty is a licensed mortician and the New York Times best-selling author of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and From Here to Eternity. Her new book is WILL MY CAT EAT MY EYEBALLS? She created the Ask a Mortician web series and owns a funeral home in Los Angeles, California.

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What Happens to Your Body If You Die in Space? - Popular Mechanics

US Space Module Genesis II Might Crash into Relict Russian Satellite – Space Daily

The space habitat development company Bigelow Aerospace tweeted on Tuesday that two inoperative satellites, the US's Genesis II and Russia's Soviet-era Cosmos 1300, might collide.

While the odds of a crash are only 5.6 percent, Bigelow Aerospace, the owner of Genesis II, says it's another troubling sign that Earth's orbit is becoming dangerously crowded.

Bigelow Aerospace followed up with a warning about the rapid proliferation of space junk, a problem raised earlier when one of SpaceX's numerous StarLink satellites nearly crashed into a European Space Agency observation satellite.

"This proliferation, if not controlled in number, could become very dangerous to human life in low Earth orbit," Bigelow Aerospace tweeted.

The Bigelow Aerospace Genesis-2 module, designed to test the technology of commercial space stations, was launched into orbit in June 2007 and worked for about 2.5 years. The developer planned to create a commercial space station from transformable modules.

The Soviet-era satellite Cosmos-1300 was launched in August 1981 as part of the Tselina-D military space-based radio surveillance system.

Source: RIA Novosti

Related LinksBigelow AerospaceSpace Technology News - Applications and Research

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US Space Module Genesis II Might Crash into Relict Russian Satellite - Space Daily

What happens to the human body in space – Business Insider

Following is a transcript of the video.

Narrator: In 2016, astronaut Scott Kelly returned to Earth after nearly a year on the International Space Station. But when he came back, he was 2 inches taller. So, what exactly happened up there, and what does that mean for the future of space travel?

Narrator: If you're planning a trip to the International Space Station, be prepared to feel weightless. The station orbits the planet every 90 minutes, moving at more than 17,000 miles per hour. That's 30 times faster than a commercial jet aircraft. As a result, astronauts on board live in a constant state of free fall, or weightlessness.

Garrett Reisman: Being up there in microgravity is awesome. It's, like, the coolest thing, because it's like you have the power to fly.

Narrator: That's Garrett Reisman, a former NASA astronaut who's logged 107 days in space. There are a few immediate side effects, he says, when you first experience microgravity.

Reisman: So the first thing you really feel is you feel kinda sick. You don't feel very good those first couple days. It's kinda like being airsick or seasick. We call it space-adaptation sickness. Your vestibular system, your organs that provide information to the brain about your rotation and your acceleration, they're not working that great without being in gravity.

Narrator: Without gravity working on your body, your bones and muscles start to break down, too. In fact, bone density drops by over 1% per month. By comparison, the rate of bone loss for elderly men and women is around 1% to 1.5% per year. And, because it doesn't take much effort to float through space, your muscles lose strength and endurance pretty quickly.

Reisman: You have to work out every day. So, they scheduled two hours a day pretty much every day while I was on the space station for working out. What we found was, if you do enough resistive exercise, you can halt the effects of the bone loss and the muscle atrophy.

Narrator: Without gravity pulling them down, fluids pool in the body, tricking it into thinking it's carrying too much water. As a result, astronauts have to pee... a lot. This makes it easy for them to get dehydrated and develop kidney stones.

Reisman: So, you have a shift in your fluid. A lot of the blood volume that normally is down in your legs ends up up here, and your chest kinda puffs up and your face puffs up, and you can see it. If you look at pictures of us on the space station, it looks like we put on some weight or something and we're all puffed up.

Narrator: Swelling in the upper body puts pressure on the eyes as well, which can cause vision problems.

Reisman: A lot of us, including myself, had a shift in our vision while we're up in space. You start out, everything was fine, and all of a sudden things get blurry. We could see the effects of it. We could see swelling in the optic nerve, we could see folds in the cornea, but we're still not 100% sure exactly what's causing it and how to stop it.

Narrator: With all the challenges of space travel, one benefit is you actually get taller.

Reisman: So, yes, you do get taller when you go to space. It's the whole reason I signed up for this job. Your spine is being compressed by gravity. So, when you go into the microgravity environment and you no longer have any kind of compressive loads on the spine at all, it stretches. I grew about an inch.

Astronaut: Woo-hoo!

Narrator: Without gravity working against it, the heart doesn't have to work as hard to pump blood throughout the body. Over time, this could lead to the heart actually decreasing in size.

Reisman: There is an effect on the cardiovascular system about being up in space. So you do get a reduced aerobic capability. You can be in great shape, and after being up in space for a couple days, you might get on the treadmill, and you might be like, "Man, I must not have been hitting the gym."

Narrator: The immune system also takes a hit. Researchers discovered that a lack of gravity weakens the functions of T cells, which play a crucial role in fighting off diseases.

Narrator: Another concern is cosmic radiation. Astronauts on the station are exposed to over 10 times the amount of radiation that we get on Earth.

Reisman: At a couple hundred miles, we're well above the atmosphere, but we're still well below the magnetic field of the Earth. But we still get a large bit of protection from that magnetic field. In fact, you could tell, because when you close your eyes, you see little lightning bolts, and that's actually a result of some of the radiation hitting your eyeballs and releasing photons.

Narrator: Artificial shielding on the ISS only partially protects astronauts from harsh radiation, leaving them more susceptible to cancer and other diseases later in life.

Narrator: Finally, astronauts must also be able to handle the psychological challenges of confinement and isolation.

Reisman: So, there is a psychological aspect to being in space, both because of the fact that you're isolated from the rest of humanity, it was really strange to be looking out the window at billions of people down there that had no way to get to me. When I was there, I only had two crewmates at a time on the space station, so if you don't get along with somebody, that could be bad, because you don't have too many choices there in making new friends.

Narrator: And, without a 24-hour sleep cycle, astronaut circadian rhythm is thrown off, which can cause more stress and lead to sleep disorders.

Reisman: You're taking jet lag to a whole nother extreme. Well, the weird thing is that you go around the planet once every hour and a half. So every 45 minutes, the sun is either rising or setting. So you can't, like, tell what time it is by looking out the window.

Narrator: So, what does all this mean for the future of space travel? Well, a trip to Mars would expose astronauts to even more dangers than those on the International Space Station. They would face higher levels of radiation, shifting gravity fields, and longer travel times, which would compound all of the negative effects of space on the human body and mind.

Reisman: I think the biggest issue we gotta deal with is the radiation. We don't know precisely what that exact radiation does to human beings. But what does gamma rays or what does heavy ions, what do they do human tissue? We don't really know.

Narrator: Right now, NASA and other research organizations are working to develop better technology that protects astronauts against these hazards, so maybe one day humans might make it to Mars.

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What happens to the human body in space - Business Insider

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The Statue of Liberty Museum opens on Liberty Island in …

The irony is stunning: At a time when the President of the United States appears at campaign-style rallies ranting against immigrants, on Thursday the new $100 million Statue of Liberty Museum opens on Liberty Island in New York Harbor.

Its centerpiece: the original torch Lady Liberty carried, replaced in the 1980s because it leaked. If a visitor stands in the right spot, they can get a perfect view of the torch, and of the Statue of Liberty and American flag outside the window.

The dueling messages couldn't be more contradictory. "Immigration has been a controversial subject, not just now," said Stephen Briganti, president and CEO of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation. "You go back through our history, it's been controversial. I think it's interesting how this country has remained a symbol of welcome at the same time that we didn't really always welcome people."

Briganti said the purpose of the new museum is to tell the story of the development of the statue back in the 1800s, as well as the story of how it came to be seen as the American symbol a symbol of good, of inclusion, of liberty.

Even when that story, to some, is myth.

"Liberty Enlightening the World" is the statue's official name. Designed by Frdric Auguste Bartholdi, she was a gift from the people of France to the United States. It was the Americans' responsibility to build the pedestal.

Unfortunately, fundraising fell $100,000 short, until Joseph Pulitzer, the owner of the New York World (and himself an immigrant from Hungary) stepped in with a bright idea: "If you gave any money, your name appeared in the newspaper," said Briganti. "I thought it was pretty brilliant, 'cause you bought the newspaper to see your name!"

It took just five months to raise the money. On the day the pedestal was completed, workmen sprinkled coins into the wet mortar to recognize the 120,000 gifts, most less than a dollar.

The museum contains a photo of Bartholdi's actual studio; in it, the statue as a collection of colossal body parts. Also featured: A full-sized replica, built in the 1980s, of a foot of the Statue of Liberty. The copper playing, like the original, is remarkably thin, not much thicker than a penny.

Under the statue's thin copper skin: an iron skeleton, designed by Gustave Eiffel, who later designed the Eiffel Tower.

On October 28, 1886, the day Lady Liberty was dedicated, a million people came out in the rain. New York held its first-ever ticker tape parade to celebrate her.

From foundation to flame, the whole monument is 305 feet high. The statue itself is about half that. She weighs 225 tons.

By the time the famous Emma Lazarus poem ("Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses") was inscribed on her base in 1903, the statue had already become a beacon for immigrants. Songwriter Irving Berlin, an immigrant from Russia, would put the words to music.

Briganti said, "It was the first big thing they saw as they arrived in New York Harbor. They would write home to people and say, 'When you see the Statue of Liberty, you're there. You're in America.'"

Dave Luchsinger was the last National Park Service superintendent to live on Liberty Island. His house was destroyed during Superstorm Sandy in 2012, making way for the new museum. He's retired now, but his reverence for the statue remains. Being superintendent there, he said, was "the honor of my life, the highlight of my career.

"I never cease to get more and more inspired by her, actually. Every time I see her, she turns different colors. There are times where she actually looks like she's gonna step right off the pedestal and say hello to you."

She cast her spell on the workers who built the museum, including their boss, Doug Phelps. "We're doing something for our country," Phelps said.

Correspondent Martha Teichner asked, "What does the statue mean to you?"

"It's liberty," he said. "It means freedom. It means our country."

More than four million people visit the Statue of Liberty every year, all coming to bask in her promise.

In the new museum like the statue itself, paid for entirely from private donations they are asked to consider what liberty is, and to be her promise.

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The Statue of Liberty Museum opens on Liberty Island in ...

Liberty – Wikipedia

Broadly speaking, liberty (Latin: Libertas) is the ability to do as one pleases.[1] In politics, liberty consists of the social, political, and economic freedoms to which all community members are entitled.[2] In philosophy, liberty involves free will as contrasted with determinism.[3] In theology, liberty is freedom from the effects of "sin, spiritual servitude, [or] worldly ties."[4]

Sometimes liberty is differentiated from freedom by using the word "freedom" primarily, if not exclusively, to mean the ability to do as one wills and what one has the power to do; and using the word "liberty" to mean the absence of arbitrary restraints, taking into account the rights of all involved. In this sense, the exercise of liberty is subject to capability and limited by the rights of others.[5] Thus liberty entails the responsible use of freedom under the rule of law without depriving anyone else of their freedom. Freedom is more broad in that it represents a total lack of restraint or the unrestrained ability to fulfill one's desires. For example, a person can have the freedom to murder, but not have the liberty to murder, as the latter example deprives others of their right not to be harmed. Liberty can be taken away as a form of punishment. In many countries, people can be deprived of their liberty if they are convicted of criminal acts.

The word "liberty" is often used in slogans, such as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"[6] or "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity".[7]

Contents

Philosophers from earliest times have considered the question of liberty. Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius (121180 AD) wrote:

a polity in which there is the same law for all, a polity administered with regard to equal rights and equal freedom of speech, and the idea of a kingly government which respects most of all the freedom of the governed.[8]

According to Thomas Hobbes (15881679):

a free man is he that in those things which by his strength and wit he is able to do is not hindered to do what he hath the will to do.

John Locke (16321704) rejected that definition of liberty. While not specifically mentioning Hobbes, he attacks Sir Robert Filmer who had the same definition. According to Locke:

In the state of nature, liberty consists of being free from any superior power on Earth. People are not under the will or lawmaking authority of others but have only the law of nature for their rule. In political society, liberty consists of being under no other lawmaking power except that established by consent in the commonwealth. People are free from the dominion of any will or legal restraint apart from that enacted by their own constituted lawmaking power according to the trust put in it. Thus, freedom is not as Sir Robert Filmer defines it: 'A liberty for everyone to do what he likes, to live as he pleases, and not to be tied by any laws.' Freedom is constrained by laws in both the state of nature and political society. Freedom of nature is to be under no other restraint but the law of nature. Freedom of people under government is to be under no restraint apart from standing rules to live by that are common to everyone in the society and made by the lawmaking power established in it. Persons have a right or liberty to (1) follow their own will in all things that the law has not prohibited and (2) not be subject to the inconstant, uncertain, unknown, and arbitrary wills of others.[9]

John Stuart Mill (18061873), in his work, On Liberty, was the first to recognize the difference between liberty as the freedom to act and liberty as the absence of coercion.[10] In his book Two Concepts of Liberty, Isaiah Berlin formally framed the differences between these two perspectives as the distinction between two opposite concepts of liberty: positive liberty and negative liberty. The latter designates a negative condition in which an individual is protected from tyranny and the arbitrary exercise of authority, while the former refers to the liberty that comes from self-mastery, the freedom from inner compulsions such as weakness and fear.

The modern concept of political liberty has its origins in the Greek concepts of freedom and slavery.[11] To be free, to the Greeks, was not to have a master, to be independent from a master (to live as one likes).[12] That was the original Greek concept of freedom. It is closely linked with the concept of democracy, as Aristotle put it:

This applied only to free men. In Athens, for instance, women could not vote or hold office and were legally and socially dependent on a male relative.[14]

The populations of the Persian Empire enjoyed some degree of freedom. Citizens of all religions and ethnic groups were given the same rights and had the same freedom of religion, women had the same rights as men, and slavery was abolished (550 BC). All the palaces of the kings of Persia were built by paid workers in an era when slaves typically did such work.[15]

In the Buddhist Maurya Empire of ancient India, citizens of all religions and ethnic groups had some rights to freedom, tolerance, and equality. The need for tolerance on an egalitarian basis can be found in the Edicts of Ashoka the Great, which emphasize the importance of tolerance in public policy by the government. The slaughter or capture of prisoners of war also appears to have been condemned by Ashoka.[16] Slavery also appears to have been non-existent in the Maurya Empire.[17] However, according to Hermann Kulke and Dietmar Rothermund, "Ashoka's orders seem to have been resisted right from the beginning."[18]

Roman law also embraced certain limited forms of liberty, even under the rule of the Roman Emperors. However, these liberties were accorded only to Roman citizens. Many of the liberties enjoyed under Roman law endured through the Middle Ages, but were enjoyed solely by the nobility, rarely by the common man.[citation needed] The idea of inalienable and universal liberties had to wait until the Age of Enlightenment.

The social contract theory, most influentially formulated by Hobbes, John Locke and Rousseau (though first suggested by Plato in The Republic), was among the first to provide a political classification of rights, in particular through the notion of sovereignty and of natural rights. The thinkers of the Enlightenment reasoned that law governed both heavenly and human affairs, and that law gave the king his power, rather than the king's power giving force to law. This conception of law would find its culmination in the ideas of Montesquieu. The conception of law as a relationship between individuals, rather than families, came to the fore, and with it the increasing focus on individual liberty as a fundamental reality, given by "Nature and Nature's God," which, in the ideal state, would be as universal as possible.

In On Liberty, John Stuart Mill sought to define the "...nature and limits of the power which can be legitimately exercised by society over the individual," and as such, he describes an inherent and continuous antagonism between liberty and authority and thus, the prevailing question becomes "how to make the fitting adjustment between individual independence and social control".[5]

England (and, following the Act of Union 1707, Great Britain), laid down the cornerstones of the concept of individual liberty.

In 1166 Henry II of England transformed English law by passing the Assize of Clarendon. The act, a forerunner to trial by jury, started the abolition of trial by combat and trial by ordeal.[19]

1187-1189 sees the publication of Tractatus de legibus et consuetudinibus regni Anglie which contains authoritative definitions of freedom and servitude:

Freedom is the natural faculty of doing what each person pleases to do according to his will, except what is prohibited to him of right or by force. Sevitude on the other hand may be said to be the contrary, as if any person contrary to freedom should be bound upon a covenant to do something, or not to do it.[20]

In 1215 Magna Carta was enacted, arguably becoming the cornerstone of liberty in first England, then Great Britain, and later the world.

In 1689 the Bill of Rights granted "freedom of speech in Parliament", which laid out some of the earliest civil rights.[23]

In 1859 an essay by the philosopher John Stuart Mill, entitled On Liberty, argued for toleration and individuality. "If any opinion is compelled to silence, that opinion may, for aught we can certainly know, be true. To deny this is to assume our own infallibility."[24][25]

In 1958 Two Concepts of Liberty, by Isaiah Berlin, identified "negative liberty" as an obstacle, as distinct from "positive liberty" which promotes self-mastery and the concepts of freedom.[26]

In 1948 British representatives attempted to but were prevented from adding a legal framework to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. (It was not until 1976 that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights came into force, giving a legal status to most of the Declaration.)[27]

According to the 1776 United States Declaration of Independence, all men have a natural right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". But this declaration of liberty was troubled from the outset by the presence of slavery. Slave owners argued that their liberty was paramount, since it involved property, their slaves, and that Blacks had no rights that any White man was obliged to recognize. The Supreme Court, in the Dred Scott decision, upheld this principle. It was not until 1866, following the Civil War, that the US Constitution was amended to extend these rights to persons of color, and not until 1920 that these rights were extended to women.[28]

By the later half of the 20th century, liberty was expanded further to prohibit government interference with personal choices. In the United States Supreme Court decision Griswold v. Connecticut, Justice William O. Douglas argued that liberties relating to personal relationships, such as marriage, have a unique primacy of place in the hierarchy of freedoms.[29] Jacob M. Appel has summarized this principle:

I am grateful that I have rights in the proverbial public square but, as a practical matter, my most cherished rights are those that I possess in my bedroom and hospital room and death chamber. Most people are far more concerned that they can control their own bodies than they are about petitioning Congress.[30]

In modern America, various competing ideologies have divergent views about how best to promote liberty. Liberals in the original sense of the word see equality as a necessary component of freedom. Progressives stress freedom from business monopoly as essential. Libertarians disagree, and see economic freedom as best. The Tea Party movement sees big government as the enemy of freedom.[31][32]

France supported the Americans in their revolt against English rule and, in 1789, overthrew their own monarchy, with the cry of "Libert, galit, fraternit". The bloodbath that followed, known as the reign of terror, soured many people on the idea of liberty. Edmund Burke, considered one of the fathers of conservatism, wrote "The French had shewn themselves the ablest architects of ruin that had hitherto existed in the world."[33]

According to the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics, liberalism is "the belief that it is the aim of politics to preserve individual rights and to maximize freedom of choice". But they point out that there is considerable discussion about how to achieve those goals. Every discussion of freedom depends on three key components: who is free, what they are free to do, and what forces restrict their freedom.[34] John Gray argues that the core belief of liberalism is toleration. Liberals allow others freedom to do what they want, in exchange for having the same freedom in return. This idea of freedom is personal rather than political.[35] William Safire points out that liberalism is attacked by both the Right and the Left: by the Right for defending such practices as abortion, homosexuality, and atheism, and by the Left for defending free enterprise and the rights of the individual over the collective.[36]

According to the Encyclopdia Britannica, Libertarians hold liberty as their primary political value.[37] Their approach to implementing liberty involves opposing any governmental coercion, aside from that which is necessary to prevent individuals from coercing each other.[38]

According to republican theorists of freedom, like the historian Quentin Skinner[39][40] or the philosopher Philip Pettit,[41] one's liberty should not be viewed as the absence of interference in one's actions, but as non-domination. According to this view, which originates in the Roman Digest, to be a liber homo, a free man, means not being subject to another's arbitrary will, that is to say, dominated by another. They also cite Machiavelli who asserted that you must be a member of a free self-governing civil association, a republic, if you are to enjoy individual liberty.[42]

The predominance of this view of liberty among parliamentarians during the English Civil War resulted in the creation of the liberal concept of freedom as non-interference in Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan.[citation needed]

Socialists view freedom as a concrete situation as opposed to a purely abstract ideal. Freedom is a state of being where individuals have agency to pursue their creative interests unhindered by coercive social relationships, specifically those they are forced to engage in as a requisite for survival under a given social system. Freedom thus requires both the material economic conditions that make freedom possible alongside social relationships and institutions conducive to freedom.[43]

The socialist conception of freedom is closely related to the socialist view of creativity and individuality. Influenced by Karl Marx's concept of alienated labor, socialists understand freedom to be the ability for an individual to engage in creative work in the absence of alienation, where "alienated labor" refers to work people are forced to perform and un-alienated work refers to individuals pursuing their own creative interests.[44]

For Karl Marx, meaningful freedom is only attainable in a communist society characterized by superabundance and free access. Such a social arrangement would eliminate the need for alienated labor and enable individuals to pursue their own creative interests, leaving them to develop and maximize their full potentialities. This goes alongside Marx's emphasis on the ability of socialism and communism progressively reducing the average length of the workday to expand the "realm of freedom", or discretionary free time, for each person.[45][46] Marx's notion of communist society and human freedom is thus radically individualistic.[47]

Some authors have suggested that a virtuous culture must exist as a prerequisite for liberty. Benjamin Franklin stated that "only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters."[48] Madison likewise declared: "To suppose that any form of government will secure liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people, is a chimerical idea."[49] John Adams acknowledged: "Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."[50]

This also is remarkable in India, that all Indians are free, and no Indian at all is a slave. In this the Indians agree with the Lacedaemonians. Yet the Lacedaemonians have Helots for slaves, who perform the duties of slaves; but the Indians have no slaves at all, much less is any Indian a slave.

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Liberty - Wikipedia

Liberty City (Miami) – Wikipedia

Once a part of the sparsely populated outskirts of northern Miami, what became Liberty City developed during the Great Depression of the 1930s when President Franklin D. Roosevelt authorized the construction of the Liberty Square housing project in 1933, the first of its kind in the Southern United States. Built as a response to the deteriorating housing conditions in densely populated and covenant-restricted slums of Overtown, construction on the initial housing project began in 1934 and opened in 1937.

Into the 1940s and 1950s, the growing Liberty City and adjacent Brownsville thrived as a middle income black American community, hosting several churches, hospitals, and community centers. The area served as home to prominent figures such as Kelsey Pharr, M. Athalie Range (the first black American elected to serve on the Miami city commission) and boxer Muhammad Ali. Although segregation laws prohibited black Americans from resting and residing in popular Miami Beach, service establishment and resorts such as the Hampton House Motel and Villas catered to and entertained the likes of notables such as Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Althea Gibson, and even whites such as Mickey Mantle.

Construction of Interstate 95 in Florida in Overtown and declining use of restrictive covenants in the wake of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 dramatically altered the neighborhood into the 1960s. Increasing numbers of lower income elderly and welfare-dependent families migrated to the Liberty City neighborhood following their displacement primarily from inner city Overtown, leading to large-scale black flight of middle and higher income blacks and other blacks like West Indian Americans largely to suburban areas like Florida City and Miami Gardens in southern and northern Dade County, respectively.

Crime grew prevalent in the increasingly poverty-stricken area in the immediate post-Civil Rights Movement era of the 1960s and 1970s. The ensuing problems of the poor and disenfranchised grew most apparent and notable in race riots which occurred in Liberty City in August 1968 during the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach, and in 1980 following the acquittal of police officers charged with the killing of Arthur McDuffie.

The plight of inner-city black Miamians increasingly came to be highlighted in national press into the 1980s as the Hurricanes football team of the University of Miami won several national college football championships led by players recruited from the mostly black, lower income neighborhoods such as Liberty City and Overtown. National exposure continued with the popularity of nationally broadcast programs such as the NBC crime drama Miami Vice, which brought the deteriorating conditions of the area to greater prominence.

Into the 1990s and 2000s, the music grew to reflect the area with locals such as Luther Campbell of 2 Live Crew pioneering the Miami bass genre which dominated Southern hip hop music during the decade. Other music and sports talents rose to national prominence from the area such as rappers Trina and Trick Daddy and NFL players Chad "Ocho Cinco" Johnson, and Willis McGahee.

In 2000, Liberty City had a population of 23,009[3] and 43,054[4] residents, with 7,772 households, and 5,428 families residing in the neighborhood. The median household income was $18,809.87. The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 94.69% Black, 3.04% Hispanic or Latino of any nationality, 1.68% Other races (non-Hispanic), and 0.59% White.[3]

The zip codes for the Liberty City include 33127, 33142, 33147, and 33150. The area covers 5.968 square miles (15.46km2). In 2000, there were 19,286 males and 23,768 females. The median age for males was 25.9 years, while the median age for females was 30.3 years. The average household size had 3.1 people, while the average family size had 3.7 members. The percentage of married-couple families (among all households) was 20.3%, while the percentage of married-couple families with children (among all households) was 9.1%, and the percentage of single-mother households (among all households) was 33.1%. The percentage of never-married males 15 years old and over was 21.9%, while the percentage of never-married females 15 years old and over was 29.7%.[4]

In 2000, 2.7% of the population spoke little to no English. The percentage of residents born in Florida was 74.5%, the percentage of people born in another U.S. state was 16.7%, and the percentage of native residents but born outside the U.S. was 0.8%, while the percentage of foreign born residents was 7.9%.[4]

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Liberty City (Miami) - Wikipedia

Healthcare sharing ministries | Liberty HealthShare

Liberty HealthShare provides individuals and families with an affordable way to share medical care expenses in a like-minded community.

In the midst of an increasingly complex and confusing healthcare system, Liberty HealthShare is committed to bringing clarity and peace.

Liberty HealthShare is not insurance. Since 1995, our parent organization has equipped hundreds of thousands of like-minded, health-conscious individuals and families to take seriously the biblical command to do good and share with others.

Our members commit to five statements covering belief in God, freedom, and ethics, and we seek to support the community through healthy living, wise decisions, and good stewardship.

Liberty HealthShare is a leader in the growing field of healthcare sharing ministries that offer a different approach to paying for medical care.

Members make an affordable monthly contribution online, which is matched to a medical need within the group. Our large, geographically diverse community commits to supporting each others medical expenses after a low annual threshold is met.

Liberty HealthShare offers three different programs to fit members with different resources and circumstances.

Liberty HealthShare operates on a fully transparent, non-profit basis, using biblical principles of stewardship to keep costs low while meeting our commitments to our community.

Unlike other healthcare sharing ministries, Liberty HealthShare provides members with a secure, intuitive online system. We make it simple to see where your monthly share amount goes and check on the status of your shared expenses if the need arises.

From providing low-cost healthcare sharing programs to offering customized support for people working to improve their health, Liberty HealthShare is committed to changing the way people manage the economics of medical care.

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liberty | Definition of liberty in English by Oxford …

nounmass noun

1The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life, behaviour, or political views.

compulsory retirement would interfere with individual liberty

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Synonyms

independence, freedom, autonomy, sovereignty, self government, self rule, self determination, home rule

people who attacked phone boxes would lose their liberty

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Synonyms

free, on the loose, loose, set loose, at large, unconfined, roaming

the Bill of Rights was intended to secure basic civil liberties

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Synonyms

right, birthright, opportunity, facility, prerogative, entitlement, privilege, permission, sanction, leave, consent, authorization, authority, licence, clearance, blessing, dispensation, exemption, faculty

the Statue of Liberty

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2The power or scope to act as one pleases.

individuals should enjoy the liberty to pursue their own preferences

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Synonyms

freedom, independence, free rein, freeness, licence, self-determination

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Example sentences

3informal count noun A presumptuous remark or action.

how did he know what she was thinking?it was a liberty!

Synonyms

act with overfamiliarity, act with familiarity, show disrespect, act with impropriety, act indecorously, be impudent, commit a breach of etiquette, act with boldness, act with impertinence, show insolence, show impudence, show presumptuousness, show presumption, show forwardness, show audacity, be unrestrained

he was at liberty for three months before he was recaptured

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Synonyms

free, on the loose, loose, set loose, at large, unconfined, roaming

2Allowed or entitled to do something.

he's not at liberty to discuss his real work

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Synonyms

free, permitted, allowed, authorized, able, entitled, eligible, fit

1Behave in an unduly familiar manner towards a person.

you've taken too many liberties with me

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Synonyms

act with overfamiliarity, act with familiarity, show disrespect, act with impropriety, act indecorously, be impudent, commit a breach of etiquette, act with boldness, act with impertinence, show insolence, show impudence, show presumptuousness, show presumption, show forwardness, show audacity, be unrestrained

2Treat something freely, without strict faithfulness to the facts or to an original.

the scriptwriter has taken few liberties with the original narrative

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Venture to do something without first asking permission.

I took the liberty of checking out a few convalescent homes for him

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Late Middle English: from Old French liberte, from Latin libertas, from liber free.

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Incoming Freshman Night!On Tuesday, March 26, from 6:00-8:00pm, Liberty High School will host Incoming Freshman Night for our...

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In this issue of E-News:Secondary World Language Curriculum Adoption SurveyTalent Show March 8 ISD STEM/CTE Partner TEALS...

Sent March 4, 2019

In this issue of E-News:Check for Fees and FinesTalent Show March 8 PBSES SDQ Survey / Altered Bell Schedule March 15News from...

Sent February 28, 2019

In this issue of E-News:Spring Sports Information Night: March 4Liberty AP Exam Schedule: May 6-242019 Summer School...

Sent February 27, 2019

Community Presentation: Supporting Students and Families Through Grief and Loss February 28This is a friendly reminder that...

Sent February 27, 2019

As a result of the recent school closures from weather, we have moved some of the Advanced Placement exams tolater dates in May so that...

Sent February 25, 2019

In this issue of E-News:Community Presentation: Supporting Students and Families Through Grief and Loss February 28After...

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Liberty High School - issaquah.wednet.edu

Tax Preparation, File Taxes, Income Tax Filing | Liberty …

The information contained on this site is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional advice.

Easy Advance

An Easy Advance is a loan secured by and paid back with your tax refund and is offered by Republic Bank & Trust Company, member FDIC, to eligible taxpayers. Loan amount options are based on your expected Federal refund less authorized fees. If approved for an Easy Advance, a Finance Charge may apply depending on your loan amount. Loan is subject to underwriting and approval. Easy Advance proceeds are typically available within 24 hours of IRS acceptance of tax return or within 24 hours for those filing before the IRS start date however, if direct deposit is selected it may take additional time for your financial institution to post the funds to your account. Visit your LibertyTaxoffice to learn about the cost,timingand availabilityof all filing and product options. Valid at participating locations. Valid Jan. 2-Feb. 28, 2019.

Cash-In-Flash

With paid tax preparation. Valid at participating locations. Cannot be combined with other offers or used toward past services. One coupon per customer and per return. Other exclusions may apply. Void where prohibited by law. Valid 12/26/2018-2/26/2019.

Send-A-Friend In-Office Referral Program

Valid at participating locations. Referral payment amount, terms, conditions, and availability vary by location and are subject to change without notice. To qualify, your Friend must: (1) Be a new Liberty Tax customer; (2) Present your valid Liberty Send-A-Friend coupon in store; and (3) Prepare, file and pay for their tax return preparation in the store. Discount offer valid only for intended recipient, cannot be combined with any other offer, and may not be used toward past services. Other exclusions may apply. Void where prohibited by law.

Liberty Tax School

There may be a small fee for books, which vary per market. Availability is based on classroom capacities per office.

Liberty Tax Service has been approved by the California Tax Education Council to offer Liberty Tax School (CTEC Course #2097-QE-0001), which fulfills the 60-hour qualifying education requirement imposed by the State of California to become a tax preparer.A listing of additional requirements to register as a tax preparer may be obtained by contacting CTEC at P.O. Box 2890, Sacramento, CA 95812-2890, toll-free by phone at (877) 850-2883, or on the Internet atwww.ctec.org

Licensed by Oregon Higher Education Coordinating Commission (OAR) 715-045-0033(6). Students must pass the Tax Preparer examination given by Oregon Board of Tax Practitioners before preparing tax returns for others.

In Maryland and New York, additional instruction and requirements are necessary to prepare an individual for employment as a Registered Tax Return Preparer.

In Arkansas, Liberty Tax is licensed By the SBPCE State Board.

In Tennessee, students will be offered employment per satisfactory completion.

Liberty does not make any promise, warrant or covenant as to the transferability of any credits earned at Liberty Tax Service. Credits earned at Liberty Tax Service, may not transfer to another educational institution. Credits earned at another educational institution may not be accepted by Liberty Tax Service. You should obtain confirmation that Liberty Tax Service will accept any credits you have earned at another educational institution before you execute an enrollment contract or agreement. You should also contact any educational institutions that you may want to transfer credits earned at Liberty Tax Service, to determine if such institutions will accept credits earned at Liberty Tax Service prior to executing an enrollment contract or agreement. The ability to transfer credits from Liberty Tax Service to another educational institution may be very limited. Your credits may not transfer, and you may have to repeat courses previously taken at Liberty Tax Service if you enroll in another educational institution. You should never assume that credits will transfer to or from any educational institution. It is highly recommended and you are advised to make certain that you know the transfer of credit policy of Liberty Tax Service, and of any other educational institutions you may in the future want to transfer the credits earned at Liberty Tax Service, before you execute an enrollment contract or agreement.

*Enrollment in, or completion of, the Liberty Tax Course is neither an offer nor a guarantee of employment, except as may be required by the state. Additional qualifications may be required. Enrollment restrictions apply. State restrictions may apply and additional training may be required in order to become a tax preparer. Valid at participating locations only.

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Tax Preparation, File Taxes, Income Tax Filing | Liberty ...

Liberty Label | Releases | Discogs

Cat# Artist Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year 0C 156-83023/24 Whitesnake Live... In The Heart Of The City (2xLP, Album) Sell This Version 1A 052Z-83321 Marz (2) Hooked On That Lovin' Thing (12") Sell This Version 1 A 062Z-83317 Classix Nouveaux Because You're Young (12") Sell This Version 1A 006-60276 Scott Fitzgerald & Yvonne Keeley Scott Fitzgerald & Yvonne Keeley - If I Had Words / This Time Of Year (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-82732 Sandy Nelson Let There Be Drums / Teen Beat (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-82865 Gerry Rafferty Bring It All Home (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83008 Kenny Rogers Lady (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83015 Slim Whitman When (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83016 J.J. Burnel Girl From The Snow Country (7", Wit) Sell This Version 1A 006-83055 J. Berry* Midnight Cowboy (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83058 Classix Nouveaux Nasty Little Green Men (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 006 83105 Gene McDaniels* A Hundred Pounds Of Clay / Tower Of Strength (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83106 Ernie K.Doe* Mother-In-Law / I Cried My Last Tear (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83107 Martin Denny Martinique / Sake Rock (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83108 Shirley Bassey Goldfinger / Diamonds Are Forever (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83112 Classix Nouveaux Guilty (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83116 Fischer-Z Marliese (Single) 4 versions Sell This Version 4 versions 1A 006-83137 Whitesnake Don't Break My Heart Again (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83150 Fischer-Z Berlin (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A006-83159 Dottie West What Are We Doin' In Love (7", Single) Sell This Version 1 A 006-83 163 Sheena Easton For Your Eyes Only (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 006-83166 Kenny Rogers I Don't Need You (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83180 The Ventures Walk Don't Run / Hawaii Five-O (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83188 Robbie Patton Don't Give It Up (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83194 Kenny Rogers Blaze Of Glory (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83196 Classix Nouveaux Inside Outside (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83235 The Stranglers Let Me Introduce You To The Family (7", Single, Hea) Sell This Version 1A006-83240 Kenny Rogers Kentucky Homemade Christmas (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83255 The Stranglers Golden Brown (Single) 3 versions Sell This Version 3 versions 1A 006-83275 Classix Nouveaux Is It A Dream (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-83279 Xavier (2) Work That Sucker To Death / Love Is On The One (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83284 The Stranglers La Folie (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83293 Kenny Rogers Lucille / Ruby Don't Take Your Love To Town (7", Single) Sell This Version 1 A 006-83316 Classix Nouveaux Because You're Young (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 006- 83321 Marz (2) Hooked On That Lovin' Thing (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-83322 Kenny Rogers Love Will Turn You Around (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83333 The Stranglers Strange Little Girl (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83335 Gerry Rafferty Sleepwalking (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-83336 Cher Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) / All I Really Want To Do (7", RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-83374 Kenny Rogers, Sheena Easton Kenny Rogers, Sheena Easton - We've Got Tonight (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-83375 Julie London Cry Me A River (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-91094 Timi Yuro Hurt / Smile (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 006-92299 Bobby Goldsboro Honey / Danny (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-92795 Eddie Cochran C'Mon Everybody / Summertime Blues (7", Single, MP, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-93112 Don McLean American Pie - Part I / American Pie - Part II (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-93503 Fats Domino Blueberry Hill / My Girl Josephine (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-93731 Canned Heat On The Road Again / Going Up The Country (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-93744 Ricky Nelson (2) Hello, Mary Lou / Travelin' Man (Single) 3 versions Sell This Version 3 versions 1 A 006-97041 The Marketts Balboa Blue / Surfer's Stomp (7") Sell This Version 1A 006-98421 Vikki Carr It Must Be Him (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-99377 Sandy Nelson Drums A Go Go / Let There Be Drums (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-99380 Johnny And The Hurricanes Red River Rock / Reveille Rock (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A006-99381 Del Shannon Runaway (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A006-99383 The Rivingtons Papa Oom Mow Mow / The Bird Is The Word (7", Single, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006-99384 Ike & Tina Turner Proud Mary / Nutbush City Limits (Single) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 038-61220 Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 038-90308 The Ventures Hawaii Five-O (LP) Sell This Version 1A 038-95671 Country Gazette A Traitor In Our Midst! (LP, Album, RE, Gat) Sell This Version 1A 054-83017 Motrhead On Parole (Album) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 054-90639 Various Midnight Cowboy (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (LP) Sell This Version 1A 054-91422 Timi Yuro The Best Of (LP, Comp) Sell This Version 1A 054-92656 Canned Heat Masters Of Rock (Comp) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 058-61356 Ricky Nelson (2) More Songs By Ricky (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 058-61357 Rick Nelson* Album Seven By Rick (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A-058-61358 Ricky Nelson (2) Songs By Ricky (LP, Album) Sell This Version 1A 058-82992 Fats Domino Just Domino (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 058-82993 Fats Domino Let The Four Winds Blow (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 058-99106 Ricky Nelson (2) Ricky (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 006 20 0384 7 Michael Martin Murphey Disenchanted (7", Single) Sell This Version 1A 006-20 0610 7 P.J. Proby Today I Klilled A Man / I Apologize (7", Single) Sell This Version 1 A 062-26519 Shirley Bassey Onvergetelijke Hits (Comp) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 062-45848 Various Rock 'N' Roll Hits (LP, Comp) Sell This Version 1A 062-60395 Gerry Rafferty City To City (Album) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 062-62440 Shirley Bassey The Magic Is You (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82635 Fischer-Z Word Salad (LP, Album, RP) Sell This Version 1A 062-82740 The Stranglers The Raven (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82741 Whitesnake Lovehunter (Album) 3 versions Sell This Version 3 versions 1A 062-82748 Eddie Cochran 20 Rock 'n' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, Mono) Sell This Version 1A 062-82749 Ricky Nelson (2) 20 Rock 'N' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, Mono, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82751 Johnny Burnette 20 Rock 'N' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82752 Del Shannon 20 Rock 'N' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82753 Johnny Rivers 20 Rock'n'roll Hits (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82755 Sandy Nelson 20 Rock 'N' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82756 Jan & Dean 20 Rock 'n' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, Mono) Sell This Version 1A 062-82757 Bobby Vee 20 Rock 'n' Roll Hits (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82814 Billie Jo Spears The Billie Jo Singles Album (LP, Comp, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-82904 Whitesnake Ready An' Willing (Album) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 062-83003 Kenny Rogers Grootste Hits (Comp) 3 versions Sell This Version 3 versions 1A 062-83019 Slim Whitman Songs I Love To Sing (LP, Comp) Sell This Version 1A 062-83045 Earl Klugh Late Night Guitar (LP, Album) Sell This Version 1A 062-83052 Billie Jo Spears Special Songs (LP) Sell This Version 1A 062-83084 The Stranglers The Gospel According To The Meninblack (LP, Album, Gat) Sell This Version 1A 062-83100 Fischer-Z Red Skies Over Paradise (Album) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 062-83111 The Vapors Magnets (LP, Album) Sell This Version 1A 062-83134 Whitesnake Come An' Get It (Album) 3 versions Sell This Version 3 versions 1A 062-83143 Classix Nouveaux Night People (Album) 2 versions Sell This Version 2 versions 1A 062-90960 Ennio Morricone The Good, The Bad And The Ugly - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (LP, Album, RE) Sell This Version 1A 062-93703 Don McLean American Pie (LP, Album) Sell This Version 1A 062-97530 Ike & Tina Turner Greatest Hits (LP, Comp) Sell This Version 1A063-83091 David Mansfield Heaven's Gate (LP, Album) Sell This Version

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Liberty Label | Releases | Discogs

liberty | Definition & Examples | Britannica.com

Liberty, a state of freedom, especially as opposed to political subjection, imprisonment, or slavery. Its two most generally recognized divisions are political and civil liberty.

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human rights: Libert: civil and political rights

The first generation, civil and political rights, derives primarily from the 17th- and 18th-century reformist theories noted above (i.e.,

Civil liberty is the absence of arbitrary restraint and the assurance of a body of rights, such as those found in bills of rights, in statutes, and in judicial decisions. Such liberty, however, is not inconsistent with regulations and restrictions imposed by law for the common good. Political liberty consists of the right of individuals to participate in government by voting and by holding public office. Since the proletarian and socialist movements and the economic dislocations after World War I, liberty has been increasingly defined in terms of economic opportunity and security. In Anglo-American countries liberty has often been identified with constitutional government, political democracy, and the orderly administration of common-law systems.

In a more particular sense, a liberty is the term for a franchise, a privilege, or branch of the crowns prerogative granted to a subject, as, for example, that of executing legal process. These liberties are exempt from the jurisdiction of the sheriff and have separate commissions of the peace. In the United States a franchise is a privilege, the term liberty not being used in such cases. The concept of liberty as a body of specific rights found in English and U.S. constitutional law contrasts with the abstract or general liberty enunciated during the French Revolution and in the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. However, modern liberty involves, in theory, both the support of specific rights of the individual, such as civil and political liberty, and the guarantee of the general welfare through democratically enacted social legislation.

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liberty | Definition & Examples | Britannica.com

Homepage – Liberty University Online

Since 1971, weve had one mission Training Champions for Christ. That is, and always will be, the core of Liberty University. But as we are increasingly in the public eye of a culture that understands Christianity less and less, it is important that we clearly define what we mean by Champion for Christ.

It is an advocate. A defender. Someone who champions living like Christ displays gratitude, humility, integrity, joy, love, service, and unity. At Liberty, a champion is a Christ-centered man or woman with the values, knowledge, and skills essential for impacting tomorrows world.

Here, all of our courses are taught from a biblical perspective because we dont just train skilled professionals we train exceptional professionals who want to make a difference. We believe this focus on ethics sets our students apart from their peers in fact, many employers seek out our students because of their reputation for trustworthiness. Students from any faith background are welcome to study with us, and many find the experience personally enriching.

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Homepage - Liberty University Online

Liberty High School

We hope all of our students and staff had a restful holiday break and are returning to school ready to learn. In an effort to minimize lost instructional time, Keystone testing will occur on January 8th & 9th. Only test takers will report to school on Tuesday, January 8th. Students in special programs who have been previously notified will also attend. On Wednesday, January 9th, all students are to report to school for a regular school day. Test takers will report to the amphitheater for testing. Regular busing and meals will be provided on January 8th for test-takers. All of this information was sent home by mail for test-takers or taken home by your student.

Liberty High School strives to create a positive learning community, dedicated to a culture of excellence, where all relationships are valued. All members of the Liberty family have a responsibility to uphold the spirit of accountability through open communication, consistency, mutual respect, and school wide safety. Through collaboration, our school will provide growth and develop independent thinkers for our 21st century global family.

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Liberty High School

Stem Cell Treatment | Arizona | Stem Cell Rejuvenation Center

ADIPOSE STEM CELL THERAPIES AND TREATMENTS

PHOENIX ARIZONA | (602) 439-0000

WE PLAY AN ESSENTIALROLE IN IMPROVING THE LIVESOF PATIENTS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

For Immediate Assistance please fill out he form below:

TREATABLE CONDITIONS

HAVE GENERAL QUESTIONS

Please Note: Although we have supplied links to the research journals above on the use of stem cells for specific conditions, we are not saying that any of these studies would relate to your particular condition, nor that it would even be an effective treatment. OurAutologousStem Cell Therapy is not an FDA approved treatment for any condition. We provide stem cell therapy (less than manipulated) as a service &as a practice of medicine only. Please see theFAQ pagefor more information. Thesejournal articlesare for educational purposes only &are not intended to be used to sell or promote our therapy.

MAKING A POSITIVE IMPACT AROUND THE WORLD

2017 Stem Cell Rejuvenation Center

7600 N 15th St. Suite 102Phoenix, AZ 85020 USA

Telephone:(602) 439-0000Fax: (602) 439-0021

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Stem Cell Treatment | Arizona | Stem Cell Rejuvenation Center