Daily Archives: March 18, 2022

Atlanta United vs CF Montreal: Match Preview – Dirty South Soccer

Posted: March 18, 2022 at 8:35 pm

Atlanta United had perhaps a little too much trouble getting past a pointless Charlotte FC last week but it has another chance of prolonging a winless run in Week 4 when CF Montreal visits the Benz. The Canadian side has three losses from three in regular-season play, though it did make it to the CONCACAF Champions League quarter-finals. Its the type of game Atlanta should win, but as we saw a week ago, the Five Stripes are prone to inconsistency.

After missing out on the playoffs in 2021 by two points, Montreal avenged itself with a Canadian Championship trophy in Wilfried Nancys debut campaign. The Quebec side brought back almost all of last seasons core and added Nashville defender Alistair Johnston in the offseason. Though things haven't gone to plan in domestic play, Montreal has started the season with one of the toughest schedules in the league to go along with CCL action. Montreal fell to road losses to Orlando and NYCFC, with a home defeat to Philadelphia sandwiched in between. Its CCL journey has fared much better, as Nancys side knocked out Liga MX side Santos Laguna 3-1 on aggregate before a quarterfinal matchup with Cruz Azul.

Now that its international commitments are put aside, Montreal will put its full focus on MLS just in time for Atlanta. Romell Quioto and Djordje Mihailovic are the main danger men and combined for 12 goals and 18 assists last season. They already have a combined two goals and three assists so far, albeit the majority of which came in CCL. Montreals real problems come in defense, as its been outscored 10-2 across its first three MLS games. Atlanta showed it has no problems creating chances against Charlotte, but the Five Stripes finishing needs some work and Montreal is the perfect opportunity for the good guys to find its scoring boots.

Atlantas 2-1 win over Charlotte was the result we all predicted/expected but didnt quite come in the desired fashion. The Five Stripes needed a last-gasp Jake Mulraney winner to take the three points after a less-than-inspiring performance. Despite similar records, Montreal will mount a much tougher test than Charlotte and Atlanta will have to take it up a gear to make it three home wins from three.

Previous Results

Atlanta has a 5W-2T-2L advantage in the all-time record against Montreal and split last seasons three meetings evenly.

Predicted Starting XIs

Prediction: Atlanta United 3-1 CF Montreal

Josef Martinez will follow up his opening goal of 2021 with a brace against Montreal from a pair of Marcelino Moreno assists before Thiago Almada comes off the bench to seal the victory. Montreal will make things interesting with a Quioto strike but it wont be enough to keep Atlanta from closing the curtains on March with a W.

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Atlanta United vs CF Montreal: Match Preview - Dirty South Soccer

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Heyward Willing to Play CF, Who Closes for the Cubs, Bauer, Minors Lawsuit, and Other Cubs Bullets – bleachernation.com

Posted: at 8:35 pm

Finally recording a new episode of Onto Waveland (its the podcast I do with Sahadev Sharma and Patrick Mooney) after months of being locked out (not literally, but, well, effectively), and then a week of trying to coordinate schedules of people in three different time zones covering different aspects of the sport exploding back into life. Itll be good to get back on the mic. If you want to check it out, our regular schedule will resume soon twice a week and you can find it wherever you get your podcasts.

Jason Heyward is willing to move to center field to accommodate Seiya Suzuki, who is believed to be best deployed in right field:

I think thats a fine and admirable offer sincere, too but there are a couple things to keep in mind. For one, Heyward would have to get back to actually hitting righties well in order to justify even thinking about keeping him semi-regularly in the lineup against righties in center field (where you could otherwise deploy, for example, Rafael Ortega, who destroyed righties last year). For another thing, Heyward hasnt played any center field since 2019, and he rated out a little below average. If he could still be a little below average out there, that would probably be fine from a defensive perspective (Ortega and Ian Happ, as other options against righties, wouldnt necessarily be better defensively), but I dont know after three more years of aging.

That is all to say: good to know that Heyward might be a part-time option in center field for the Cubs, but it should be considered far from a sure thing that, even if Suzuki is the regular right fielder, Heyward is the best option against righties in center field. (And against lefties, you DEFINITELY wouldnt want Heyward in there, both because he hasnt hit lefties in years and years, but also because thats where Id like to see Michael Hermosillo getting every start, if he makes the team.)

Cubs reliever David Robertson, one of MANY new additions this week, on signing with the Cubs (Cubs.com): Its a good fit for me. Its a strong team. Its a great city. Ive lived in Chicago before. I just thought that I could mix in here and probably pick up some late innings in the back end of this pen. They were very convincing.

To that point, Robertson is one of many theoretical back-end options for the Cubs in the early part of the season. I tend to think David Ross is not going to NAME A CLOSER to open the season, but instead there will be a couple guys who might get the 9th depending on how the game has shaken loose, with a particular deference to one guy or the other. Robertson obviously has closing experience, albeit pre-injury and a bit in the past. Mychal Givens has done some closing over the last few years. Rowan Wick has closer stuff. I think Manny Rodriguez, if he makes the big league team, will work in earlier innings. Chris Martin is more of a middle/setup type. Keegan Thompson, I would argue, could have the stuff to be dominant in a one-inning role, but he might be even more valuable to the Cubs in a multi-inning role. This is just gonna have to shake loose over time.

Speaking of which, FanGraphs looked at a trio of Cubs recent relief signings Robertson, Givens, and Daniel Norris and I think appropriately sums up the hey, they could be good or maybe not but lets find out nature of not only these signings, but the entire 2022 Cubs enterprise. Among their comments:

Will his control rebound enough to put together another solid season? I have no idea, and the Cubs probably dont either. But he might be great, and hell certainly be serviceable, and if things work out well he might fetch a prospect at the trade deadline.

Robertson is even more of an enigma. After a long string of effective years of relief, things have fallen apart for him recently. He blew his elbow out in 2019, missed all of 2020 rehabbing, and only got a major league job after pitching well for Team USA at the Olympics. He struck out 32% of his opponents in a brief stint in Tampa Bay, threw four scoreless innings in the postseason, and hit free agency.

Robertson lives or dies with his cutter, which he throws 75% of the time. He complements it with a two-plane curveball that hitters simply cant pick up; the pitch sports a career 20.6% swinging strike rate, which is downright outrageous. At 36, hes one elbow injury or velocity decline away from looking quite ordinary but he looked excellent last year, and the money is certainly right from Chicagos side to take a chance on him and see what they find.

Givens walked 12.5% of his opponents between stops in Colorado and Cincinnati last year, and looks far removed from his peak years in Baltimore. But stop me if youve heard this before he still throws hard, and his fastball/slider/changeup pitch mix gives him the tools to attack lefties and righties, and he misses a ton of bats when hes right. Will he be good this year? I have absolutely no idea. But if the alternative was some non-roster invitees and career minor leaguers, I like the idea of trying to catch lightning in a bottle with three pitchers who have shown they can put up good numbers at the major league level.

If you want to get into sports betting during the NCAA Tournament, make sure to check out the best March Madness promos weve collected right here.

Scott Effross throws wiffleballs out there, with his sinker and his slider pairing together perfectly, each breaking hard in opposite directions. Heres the slider from yesterday:

Trevor Bauers administrative leave has been extended through April 16. I understand there is an investigation ongoing by MLB, but at some point the league has to stop punting and just issue its decision/punishment. Whenever that does happen, it seems pretty likely it will be retroactive (i.e., Bauer will have already served his suspension from last July through whenever), and then the clock will immediately start ticking on what the Dodgers decide to do.

In other words, Rick Hahn made it pretty plain last fall that the White Sox were going to trade Craig Kimbrel, but then, well, things happened:

It still seems possible that a Kimbrel trade will come together over the next couple weeks, maybe especially after Kenley Jansen signs. Kimbrel, man. Dude has had ONE normal-ish Spring Training in the last four years.

A significant case about minor league pay and jobs continues to wind its way through the courts in California (appeals will be forthcoming), and there could also be legislation in the state that aims to blow up the whole developmental system:

It seems highly likely to me that, if that bill were actually made law in California, MLB organizations would pull their minor league teams out of the state rather than risk losing their minor league players after just four years (compared to every other org, which would get upwards of seven years). Still, this is definitely worth tracking now.

This is a pretty interesting random data pull:

Inflatable mattresses, puzzle boxes, eye masks, and more are your Deals of the Day at Amazon. #ad

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Heyward Willing to Play CF, Who Closes for the Cubs, Bauer, Minors Lawsuit, and Other Cubs Bullets - bleachernation.com

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As Villarreal CF Reaches Champions League Quarter Finals, Color Star Technology Invites the World to Witness Footballing Glory – PR Newswire

Posted: at 8:35 pm

In February 2022, Color Star's subsidiary, Color Sky Entertainment Limited, and Villarreal CF, which is known as the "Yellow Submarine", formally reached a partnership agreement to begin their footballing journey together. In this Champions League Round of 16 match, Villarreal CF won the match with superb tactical acumen and footballing ability.

Color Star's CEO, Lucas Capetian announced: "We've stuck together like a family since the first day of our partnership and I'd like to congratulate Yellow Submarine for their great success. I am really proud of the team and extend them my best wishes for the rest of Championship. We anticipate further strengthening our partnership and to even greater achievements in the future."

About Color Star Technology

Color Star Technology Co, Ltd. (Nasdaq: CSCW) is an entertainment and education company that provides online entertainment performances and online music education services. Its business operations are conducted through its wholly-owned subsidiaries, Color China Entertainment Ltd. and CACM Group NY, Inc. The Company's online education is provided through its Color World music and entertainment education platform. More information about the Company can be found at http://www.colorstarinternational.com.

Forward-Looking Statement

This press release contains forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements concerning plans, objectives, goals, strategies, future events or performance, and underlying assumptions and other statements that are other than statements of historical facts. When the Company uses words such as "may," "will," "intend," "should," "believe," "expect," "anticipate," "project," "estimate" or similar expressions that do not relate solely to historical matters, it is making forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantee of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that may cause the actual results to differ materially from the Company's expectations discussed in the forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to uncertainties and risks including, but not limited to, the following: the Company's goals and strategies; the Company's future business development, including the development of the metaverse project; product and service demand and acceptance; changes in technology; economic conditions; the growth of the educational and training services market internationally where CSCW conducts its business; reputation and brand; the impact of competition and pricing; government regulations; fluctuations in general economic and business conditions and assumptions underlying or related to any of the foregoing and other risks contained in reports filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission. For these reasons, among others, investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon any forward-looking statements in this press release. Additional factors are discussed in the Company's filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which are available for review at http://www.sec.gov. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly revise these forwardlooking statements to reflect events or circumstances that arise after the date hereof unless required by applicable laws, regulations or rules.

SOURCE Color Star Technology Co., Ltd.

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As Villarreal CF Reaches Champions League Quarter Finals, Color Star Technology Invites the World to Witness Footballing Glory - PR Newswire

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Nimmo’s faster than ever. But will that make him the CF starter? – MLB.com

Posted: at 8:35 pm

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- Two offseasons ago, the Mets changed their conditioning recommendations, urging players to complete their cardiovascular work before hitting the weight room. It was a minor tweak based upon the science of injury prevention, but Brandon Nimmo found it productive for another reason.

It was harder, Nimmo said.

At least partially because of that program, Nimmo came into Spring Training in 2021 feeling faster than ever before. And it wasnt just a feeling. By seasons end, Nimmos Statcast data revealed that he had increased his average sprint speed to 28.9 feet per second, the highest mark of his career and up significantly from his 28.0 feet per second in 2020. With that as a pedestal, Nimmo also improved from -4 Outs Above Average in center field in 2020 to +4 OAA in 2021.

Thanks to that speed, Nimmo was able to play deeper in center field, preventing more balls from going over his head without sacrificing those in front of him. He even became a frequent source of highlights, often diving straight forward to catch line drives.

Im really proud of it, Nimmo said, and want to continue that as long as possible.

Soon, Nimmo will find out if the Mets intend to let him. The team has a choice this spring between Nimmo and new acquisition Starling Marte, a two-time Gold Glover in left field who has played almost exclusively center since 2018. Before last season, Marte probably would have been the obvious choice for the job, given his elite sprint speed and defensive history. But he is 33 years old -- 4 1/2 years older than Nimmo -- and his metrics in center last year simply werent as strong.

As of Thursday, Mets manager Buck Showalter had not yet crowned either player as his everyday center fielder, in part because Showalter values competition in camp. To date, Nimmo has worked almost exclusively in center, but thats with Marte battling a minor bout of left oblique soreness. (He should be fine for Opening Day.)

The reality is that Showalter wants Nimmo, Marte and starting right fielder Mark Canha to all take practice reps in center in case any of them must play there during the regular season.

Theyve all three been receptive to whats best for the team, Showalter said. So thats a really good start.

No matter what alignment the Mets use, they should have a far stronger outfield than in years past, when they routinely ranked near the bottom of the league in Defensive Runs Saved. Offensively, all three starters are also proven hitters, with Nimmo coming off another strong -- albeit injury-plagued -- season, and Marte offering the type of baserunning aggressiveness that the Mets havent had since Jos Reyes heyday.

For Nimmo, there is a personal element in all of this, too: he can become a free agent after the season, and free-agent center fielders tend to earn more money than corner outfielders with similar offensive profiles. If Nimmo can prove that last years defensive performance was no fluke, he could theoretically make himself more valuable on the market.

I take a lot of pride in the work that I do and how I go out there and play and prepare, Nimmo said. So it would be great to play center field. But I think competition is a good thing, too. All I know is that I am getting a lot of reps in center field, so Im being prepared out there.

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Nimmo's faster than ever. But will that make him the CF starter? - MLB.com

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Russian invasion of Ukraine shows need to protect Canada’s North: Norad – CTV News

Posted: at 8:35 pm

OTTAWA -- A senior Canadian general in charge of protecting North American airspace says Russia has the capability to strike this continent, bolstering the need for improved defensive systems.

Russia has spent years investing in its military, including when it comes to things like cruise missiles and developing a variety of non-nuclear weapons, among other defence measures.

Protecting North America from the threat of a cruise-missile attack is the job of the North American Aerospace Defense Command, better known by the acronym Norad.

Maj.-Gen. Eric Kenny, commander of the Canadian Norad region, says Russia has the capabilities, if it so desires, to strike within North America through different means, although he doesn't expect imminent attack.

Kenny made the comments in an interview from Yellowknife as Norad conducted a previously planned exercise that included Canadian CF-18 fighter jets.

Kenny says the exercise aims to give new and veteran members of the Forces a feel for operating in the North, and ideally to give Norad a leg up on adversaries.

But the reality is, we can only do so much with the force that we have, Kenny said. So we make very conscious and deliberate decisions on what that means within the Norad context.

Successive Canadian and American governments have vowed to modernize systems as part of a sweeping update to Norad, which was first created during the Cold War to protect against a Soviet attack.

The federal Liberals set aside an initial $163 million for the effort last year.

The Defence Department's forward-looking plan for the fiscal year that begins in April noted that a number of the modernizing initiatives have yet to be fully defined and funded. The report specifically mentioned the North Warning System, a string of radars built in the Canadian Arctic in the 1980s.

Kenny said officials are looking closely at needed infrastructure, ensuring it is the right size and at the right location, and noted the planned replacement of the aging CF-18s.

He also expects an announcement in the next year on the long-delayed procurement, with delivery of new planes by the middle is this decade.

The government's main spending estimates released earlier this month listed a $25.9 billion budget for the Department of National Defence, slightly above the $25.7 billion authorized for the department so far this fiscal year. Within next year's allotment was almost $4.8 billion for procurement.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has hinted that more money may be coming for the military in her upcoming budget as Canada sees many of its allies boosting their defence spending.

Among NATO allies, the goal is to make defence spending equal to two per cent of the size of domestic economies. The latest figures from the alliance put Canada's defence spending at 1.39 per cent of the country's gross domestic product in 2021.

Defence Minister Anita Anand has been meeting with her NATO counterparts this week in Brussels, including a one-on-one Thursday with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, as the military alliance debates next steps in Ukraine.

The discussions I had while at NATO reinforce the shared commitment of allies and partners to supporting Ukraine and the need to adapt the alliance's deterrence and defence posture, Anand said in a statement.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to join other NATO leaders at a special summit next week.

Some of the military members taking part in the Norad exercise in the North were part of Canadian efforts to train Ukrainian security forces before Russia invaded three weeks ago.

Kenny said the fighting in Ukraine is striking a personal chord with them. He said Canadian soldiers are proud of the training they provided, and seeing the results of some of that training now, but are equally disturbed by the impact on Ukrainians.

The world is not safe as some may think it is, Kenny said.

When certain actors, in particular peer states, decide to commit military forces, you have what you have at that moment.

The federal government on Thursday looked to tighten the financial screws on allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said the government is slapping economic sanctions on 22 senior defence officials in Belarus who supported Putin's action, including by allowing Belarus to be used as a launch pad for the Russian invasion.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 17, 2022.

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Read It and Reap: Clinton author explores perils of perfection in novel about eugenics – Worcester Telegram

Posted: at 8:33 pm

Ann Connery Frantz| Telegram & Gazette

Area author Patrick Broderick, who writes as Silas Barrow, will be at Tidepool Bookshop, 372 Chandler St., at 6:30 p.m., March 24, to present his book, For Their Blood Burns Wild.

Broderick, a Clinton resident, has written about a fictional (but once real) society that employs eugenics to sort out the perfect from the imperfect genetic family. Those deemed impure (criminals, homosexuals, mentally ill or anyone with a disability in their family) are rounded up and sterilized before being removed from proper societies, their belongings confiscated, their jobs ended.

Its based on the real turn-of-the-century eugenics movement in the U.S., during which thousands of people were sterilized in various states. The author researched the era thoroughly and has written an absorbing novel, revolving around a fictional family, hiding with others from the eugenics agents and gang members of pures, who search for anyone deemed imperfect. It is a readable, thought-provoking story, opening up a dialogue about societal attitudes toward people with different backgrounds, different lifestyles or medical problems.

Barrows self-published book is available at Tidepool and through Amazon.

Author Fern Davis Nissim of Shrewsbury has written a series to encourage children to engage in family history through the characters of ants. The first books in her series, Antilines Brave Adventure: A Tale of Freedom for Young Children, and Antilines True Discovery: A Tale of Finding Family and Friendship, opens the world of family backgrounds and accepting others who are different. Nissims little Red Ant books urge an understanding of freedom, self-acceptance and tolerance.

Currently, there are six books in the red ant series.

As her first foray in illustration, Fern adapted her dads original story, Antilines Brave Adventure, into a rhyming format for her own grandchildren. In the second book, Antilines True Discovery, written and illustrated by Nissimand Sue Fleishman, they have kept the integrity and personality of the main character as she moves forward on her journey of self-discovery and awareness of the world around her.

Despite her years in marketing, communications and public relations, Nissim fulfilled a lifelong ambition after she became a grandmother, starting the Little Red Ant series for her grandchildren to learn about self-discovery, family and the world they share. She created the books as conversation starters between adults and young children.

For information, see http://www.littleredantbooks.com/ourbooks.

E. Raymond Tatten of Sterling has published Sawyers Regret: A Contest with Circumstances, a story of Colonial America based on the actual October 1705 kidnapping of a 16-year-old Lancaster boy and his father by Indians. The book is an entertaining read, and will provide younger students of Lancaster history with information about kidnapping and ransom of pioneers that they may never have suspected. Elias and his father joined a small group of prisoners as they made their way 500 miles to Canada. The book in paperback or Kindle is available on Amazon and Root and Press Bookstore.

The NOW Book Group meets at 5 p.m.March 17at the TidePool Bookshop, Chandler Street. Topic is Nella Larsens Passing. The February bookwill be reviewed before discussion turns to March, with Richard Osmans The Thursday Murder Club. The book features strong female characters and pushback on stereotypes of the elderly.

The March 15 SciFi Book Club meeting at Simon Fairfield Public Library, Douglas, will discuss Andy Weirs Hail Mary. The novel tells the story of a teacher-turned-astronaut who awakens from a coma afflicted with amnesia.

Fairfields Book Bunch club will meet at 4 p.m.March 23to discuss Chasing Vermeer by Blue Balliett.

Send book club news to ann.frantz@gmail.com. This column is published twice monthly.

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Read It and Reap: Clinton author explores perils of perfection in novel about eugenics - Worcester Telegram

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Babel, and the Search for the Perfect Human Being – The Independent

Posted: at 8:33 pm

Photos provided by Susana Susana Ortiz

The search for the perfect world, the perfect civilization, the perfect human being is a recurring theme, a fundamental question and perhaps intrinsic to our nature. How can we improve the world as a society, as individuals? The history of humanity is largely the history of the answers to these questions in action, operating on the face of the earth. Literature has also contributed to this debate, but instead of being restricted to looking back, it has the power to imagine how far the consequences of the ideas that guide humanitys actions can go along paths traced from today.

The lesson we can draw from history, from the times paradise on Earth has been promised, is that with the best of intentionsor disguised as the best of intentionsthe greatest atrocities are committed. The role of dystopias may not be to teach lessons but to suggest questions, to shake, to wake up, to open ones eyes to what is not yet but could be, or even more alarming, to show what is already happening but remains in some way hidden from our eyes. Instead of the blunt inevitability of history, dystopias,even if they paint sometimes dire pictureshold out the hope that something can still be done about it.

Babel tangentially deals with a dark page of history that cannot be erased but can be prevented from repeating: eugenics. The eugenics movement arose at the end of the 19th century by attempting to apply the theories of Darwin to human beings. Francis Galton, cousin of Charles Darwin himself, is considered the father of eugenics, defined in his own words as the study of all agencies under human control which can improve or impair the racial quality of future generations. This affirmation carries an intrinsic racist formulation and the denial of the equality of all human beings, of their equal value and dignity.

Theories of scientific racism were fed from the seed of eugenics, which reached wide development in the United States with authors such as Madison Grant with The Passing of the Great Race, a book published in 1916, where he made the statement of the racial superiority of the Northern Europeans. This publication contributed to the founding of the American Eugenics Society in 1921, an organization from which eugenics theories were transformed into government policies, such as the forced sterilization of people with disabilities or mental illness, but especially of the black population. Later, it was praised by Hitler.

These racist and eugenicist policies explicitly served as a model for the Nuremberg Laws that institutionalized the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany. They were taken to the extreme with the massive sterilization of Jewish women and the Aktion-T4 plan that ended the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who, due to different physical or psychological disabilities, were considered a financial and genetic burden on German society and state.

In the world of Babel, the racial component of the eugenics of the early 20th-century has been overcome, but instead, the new eugenics establishes the criteria to determine which lives are worth living and which are not based on genetic parameters. Only the fittest should be born for the good of the community, which is still an approach similar to that of Nazi Germany since it is an exclusive community, of which only the certified are part.

The new eugenics, using scientific and technological progress, develops and takes genetic determinism to the last consequences, an idea that was already present in the first eugenics movement and postulates that we are determined in all aspects of our existence by our genetic material and that human beings do not change. However, the evidence against that claim is overwhelming. The personal experience of any individual is enough to show that life is ever-changing and that although genetics is a factor to be taken into account, it is a conditioning element but not a determining factor. Our history, experiences, decisions, freedom of action and conscience say more about someone than any genotype can.

Determining who should or should not live by their genetic information is an arbitrary decision, just like the 19th-century race theories used by early eugenists. They also believed that they acted following the infallibility of science and progress. But what is science but a relative and partial knowledge of the immensity of the universe? What is progress but a word empty of content and in need of a direction? Science and progress must be placed at the service of humanity as a whole and, at the same time, of each and every one of the human beings in a particular and personal way. Not the other way around. When humanity ceases to be an end and becomes a means, human lifeespecially that of vulnerable, oppressed and discriminated groupsbecomes something disposable, substitutable. As Hannah Arendt said: where human life becomes superficial, totalitarianism lurks

In Babel, we see how the lives of those who do not meet the genetic standards are directly cut short without further consideration. Seeing this on stage can surprise or even shock us, but the truth is that reality is not far off. Considered one of the fathers of modern genetics, Jrme Lejeune, the French scientist who discovered trisomy 21, or Down syndrome, also developed the amniocentesis as a prenatal diagnostic tool soon after. His biggest fear was that instead of becoming a scientific breakthrough for treating and improving the quality of life for people with Down syndrome, it would become a way to eliminate them before they were born. His fears have been confirmed over time as well as in the cases of people with spina bifida or even with easy-to-treat diagnoses such as cleft lip.

I cannot get out of my head two moments in the theater where both Renee and Ann said they did not want to bring a monster into the world. Is it possible for a child, a baby, no matter how serious his condition is, to be a monster? Can a defenseless being without guilt or evil be a monster? Would it not be the other way around? Are not those who deem them monsters, the ones who deny their humanity, the real monsters?

I have kept thinking about that word, monster, and I have discovered that after allalthough a shiver ran down my spine when I heard it in the playmonster is not an entirely inappropriate way to refer to those who are different. It is a word that originated from the Latin monstrumto showthis is derived from the verb monere, which means to warn. According to classical literature, a monster was a warning sent to the world by supernatural forces to communicate a message.

Perhaps those whom we insist on calling monsters are here to tell us something, to show us that the perfect human being is none other than the one capable of showing humanity, of leaving their selfishness, to give on behalf of others. To warn us that the true human being is the one capable of seeing in the eyes of otherseven in those who are differentperfect human beings, just like him, with the same value and dignity.

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Babel, and the Search for the Perfect Human Being - The Independent

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Smashed stereotypes or revisionist reveries? | Christopher Snowdon – The Critic

Posted: at 8:33 pm

It still comes as a surprise to some people that Prohibition was one of the flagship policies of the Progressive movement in the early 20th century, alongside womens suffrage, income tax and anti-imperialism. The idea of a fundamentalist Christian Left is as alien to modern readers as the idea of Progressive eugenics, but both flourished in the USA in the decades leading up to the First World War.

This is no secret. While it is easy to imagine Prohibition being enabled by killjoy conservatives, almost every book on the subject written in my lifetime has given due credit to Bible-thumping progressives. As Mark Schrad notes in this controversial new history of Prohibition, it is even acknowledged on Wikipedia.

Smashing the Liquor Machine does not seek to downplay the role of Progressives, nor does it dismiss their prohibitionism as a mistake. On the contrary, Schrad argues that Prohibition was a righteous cause that has been maligned and misunderstood by generations of historians. It was seen as a social justice issue at the time and, he says, it should be recognised as such today. It was not, he claims, an act of coercive paternalism enforced on the Wets by the Drys, but a progressive shield for marginalised, suffering and oppressed peoples to defend themselves from further exploitation.

Central to his thesis is the claim that prohibitionists were not illiberal because they never sought to stop people drinking; they merely wished to destroy the exploitative liquor traffic and, above all, the saloon. For Schrad, this is a crucial distinction because, he argues, restricting commercial activity was not viewed through the prism of liberty at the time and should not be viewed as such today. The crusade was not against drinking but against predatory capitalism, of which the liquor traffic was the most insidious example.

He leans on three facts to make this case. Firstly, the biggest prohibitionist pressure group of the era was called the Anti-Saloon League rather than, say, the Anti-Alcohol League. Secondly, temperance activists talked endlessly about the evils of the liquor traffic and the liquor trust. Thirdly, neither the 18th Amendment nor the Volstead Act which was enacted to enforce it banned the possession or consumption of alcohol.

All this is true. Prohibitionists talked obsessively about the evils of the drinks industry, a habit which Schrad has picked up in the course of his research (I lost track of the number of times he uses the words exploitative and predatory to describe it). They often said that their real enemy was the alcohol industry, and Schrad implores us to take them at their word. But taking people at their word is not always good advice, especially for historians studying fanatical single-issue pressure groups who repeatedly used the bait and switch technique on the public.

The freedom to sell and the freedom to buy are indivisible

We do not say that a man shall not drink, said Richmond P. Hobson when he presented his prohibition amendment to the House of Representatives in December 1914. We do not say that man shall not have or make liquor in his own home for his own use. Perhaps he meant it. After all, his amendment to the constitution proposed only that the manufacture for sale, transportation for sale, importation for sale and exportation for sale of intoxicating liquors be forever prohibited. The amendment failed, but by 1917 the Anti-Saloon League was in a far stronger position. With victory in sight, their new text which became the 18th Amendment deleted every mention of the phrase for sale and simply banned the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors. Aside from a carve-out for American farmers which permitted the fermentation of cider and other fruit juices for personal use, the home production of alcohol was made illegal.

Consumption and possession remained legal, but it is doubtful whether the 18th Amendment would have been ratified had the Anti-Saloon League pushed their luck any further. In any case, a ban on consumption was hardly necessary. The freedom to sell and the freedom to buy are indivisible. Few Americans had the skills, resources or floor space to brew their own beer and distill their own whiskey, even if it had been legal. In practice, their freedom to consume relied on the drinks industrys freedom to sell. Schrads history ends in 1920 just as Prohibition comes into force so he never has to deal with the fall out, but it should be noted that the Anti-Saloon League managed to get a de facto ban on the purchasing and possession of alcohol in 1929 when the Jones Act made it a felony to fail to report the sale of alcohol; in other words, the buyer had to turn himself in.

Why should we judge prohibitionists by their words when we can judge them by their actions? If, as Schrad argues, Prohibition was really about regulating capitalist excesses and opposing exploitation and profit, why was home-brewing banned? If the Anti-Saloon League was only concerned with saloons, why didnt the 18th Amendment simply ban saloons and allow alcohol to be sold in shops and restaurants? If prohibitionists did not object to people drinking in the privacy of their own home, why did they fight so hard for the Webb-Kenyon Act which banned the interstate sale of alcohol by mail order? Schrad insists that the latter was not some nefarious attempt to erode individual liberty to drink but that is exactly what it was.

When asked why he robbed banks, the Prohibition-era criminal Willie Sutton is reputed to have said because thats where the money is. Prohibitionists went after the saloons because thats where the alcohol was. They went after the booze industry because it made booze. The whole point of smashing the liquor machine was to stop people drinking liquor. Enforced sobriety was not an unfortunate side effect of Prohibition. It was the whole point.

Prohibitionist broadsides against the liquor traffic were not purely rhetorical. The Drys genuinely hated the drinks industry and you did not need to be a teetotaller to deplore the way some saloons operated. But the rhetoric served another purpose. If left-wingers believed, as Schrad does, that the actual battle lines of prohibition werent between religion and drink, but capitalist profits versus the common good, it was obvious whose side they should be on. In the same way that modern public health activists shout about Big Tobacco and Big Soda when campaigning for lifestyle regulation, fury at the liquor barons helped obscure the reality that it was their fellow citizens who were the quarry. The campaign for Prohibition showed how easy it is to get people to sacrifice liberty if they believe that faceless corporations will suffer more.

Smashing the Liquor Machine is a rebuttal to almost every history book written about prohibition, but it particularly feels like a riposte to Lisa McGirrs The War on Alcohol (2016). McGirr emphasised the disproportionate suffering of ethnic minorities and urban immigrants under Prohibition and drew parallels with the war on drugs. Schrad, by contrast, emphasises the role of ethnic minorities in bringing Prohibition about. He focuses on Black and Native American prohibitionists who have often been overlooked and searches beyond the USA to discover prohibitionist movements in India, Russia, southern Africa and beyond. He makes it clear that prohibitionism was not the preserve of gammon-faced evangelists in Kansas but was endorsed by a range of public figures including Gandhi, Lenin and Tolstoy.

This is a valuable contribution to the literature and bolsters his argument that Prohibition was not a howl of rage by angry WASPs against modernity. As it happens, I share Schrads scepticism about the overly simplistic sociological theories of Joseph Gusfield, who argued that Prohibition was a symbolic crusade between rural Protestants and city-dwelling immigrants. Nevertheless, it is difficult to ignore the religious dimension in the USA. The movement began with women praying in saloons. It was led first by the Womens Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) and then by the Anti-Saloon League (popularly known as the church in action). It was supported by the YMCA, YMWA, Salvation Army and many other Christian organisations. Schrad does a fine job of highlighting prohibitionists from more diverse backgrounds and he makes an interesting argument about the role of temperance in fighting colonialism, but his approach sidelines the white Protestant reformers who were more representative of the Anti-Saloon Leagues rank and file.

Even the more open-minded prohibitionists were happy to exploit the prejudices of others

Richmond P. Hobson, for example, was one of the most famous anti-alcohol campaigners of his day but is barely mentioned in this book. Almost as famous was the baseball player turned evangelist Billy Sunday who receives just two mentions despite the Anti-Saloon League saying in 1913 that the liquor interests hate Billy Sunday as they hate no other man. The dour and corrupt Bishop James Cannon, who served as the Anti-Saloon Leagues chief legislative lobbyist, is mentioned in passing three times. The only white, male, American prohibitionist who features heavily is the charismatic William Pussyfoot Johnson. Johnson was an important figure in the international temperance movement, but getting Prohibition over the line in the USA was the work of less sympathetic characters who are pushed to the periphery of this book, leaving the impression that the typical prohibitionist was less Methodist, less white and more in tune with the politics of modern day liberals than she was.

Racism and xenophobia were endemic a century ago, and we should not judge our ancestors by our own standards. Nevertheless, Schrad is too quick to ignore and downplay the Social Darwinism of many Progressives. Even the more open-minded prohibitionists were happy to exploit the prejudices of others, whether stirring up fears about black drunkards in the Deep South or fuelling hatred of the Hun after 1914 to turn the public against Americas German brewers. Schrad claims that neither phenomenon was significant. Contemporary Anti-Saloon League cartoons tell a different story.

At times, the revisionism goes too far. Schrad claims the prohibitionists were given a helping hand in the late 19th century by emerging medical science, which debunked long-standing myths about purported benefits of moderate alcohol consumption and which identified health risks which have since been substantiated by volumes of peer-reviewed research. Central to this was the WCTUs Mary Hanchett Hunt who set up the Department of Scientific Temperance Instruction in order to, as Schrad puts it, publicise new scientific investigations into the harms of alcohol and encourage their teaching as part of public-school physiology courses.

This is absurdly generous. Hunt was a fraudulent monomaniac who used the WCTUs political muscle to put sensationalist pseudo-science on the school syllabus for decades while syphoning money off into a secret bank account to pay her mortgage. By the late 19th century, temperance instruction was mandatory in all federal schools, and Hunt used her power as de facto censor to create what she called trained haters of alcohol. It is thanks to her that generations of school children were taught that most beer drinkers die of dropsy, that alcohol burns the skin, is instantly addictive and is poisonous in any quantity. Needless to say, such claims are not supported by modern science, unlike the benefits of moderate drinking which have indeed been corroborated by volumes of peer-reviewed research.

The scandal of single-issue fanatics embedding lies in school textbooks for half a century is barely hinted at by Schrad, who concedes only that unsound temperance propaganda may have been counterproductive to the cause while insisting that there was breathless hyperbole on both sides. Scientific temperance wasnt some connivance of Victorian Bible-thumpers looking to legislate morality, Schrad writes. In Hunts hands, that is exactly what it was.

Schrad is neither a teetotaller nor a prohibitionist. His objection is to predatory liquor capitalism, and he seems to favour a state-run alcohol industry. I dont share that view. Having been happily exploited by the liquor machine for the last thirty years, I have no great desire to smash it. As I am not a socialist, the knowledge that Trotsky supported prohibition does not warm me to the cause. I do not see Prohibition as a liberation movement from economic exploitation, as Schrad calls it. I think he is on firmer ground when he says, two pages earlier, that the prohibition movement was based upon a deep-seated desire to get rid of whiskey.

Despite strongly disagreeing with its central premise, I greatly enjoyed this book. Schrad is a gifted historian and a fine story teller. His research on the temperance movements of Europe and the British Empire, which make up half the book, is original and valuable. If nothing else, it is refreshing to hear the story told from the prohibitionists perspective. Many of them truly believed it was a movement of liberation. No one ever sees themselves as the bad guys.

What is missing from the story is the lesson that should never be forgotten, that the prohibitionists were wrong, that the desire to drink alcohol did not disappear with the abolition of the industry, that millions of Americans went out of their way to be exploited by the insurgent liquor traffic that emerged under Prohibition, and that this industry was more predatory than the one it had replaced.

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Star Trek Series We Want To See On The Small Screen – Looper

Posted: at 8:33 pm

The Eugenics War was initially discussed in "Star Trek: The Original Series," during the now-iconic episode, "Space Seed." The episode had the Enterprise crew stumble across the SS Botany Bay, which was adrift in space. They find that, after nearly 200 years, members of the crew are still alive in suspended animation. The Enterprise crew awakens the leader and brings him on board their ship, where he discloses that he is Khan Noonien Singh. The crew soon discovers that Khan and his people were genetically engineered to be perfect examples of the human species. In the 1990s, however, the augmented humans turned against the non-augmented humans, believing themselves to be superior, and the Eugenics War broke out.

While augmented humans have been discussed briefly in other Trek shows, such as by Dr. Bashir (Alexander Siddig) in "Deep Space 9" and the incredibly fun arc in "Enterprise" that brought back the character Doctor Soong (Brett Spiner) from "The Next Generation," this bloody war in Federation history has never truly been explored. We propose an entire series dedicated to this story. Audiences could even have Spiner reprise his role of Doctor Soong, as he was instrumental in creating the augments. The show could showcase Khan's beginnings and how he and his crew were eventually lost in space for years on the Botany Bay.

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Star Trek Series We Want To See On The Small Screen - Looper

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Space Conference Censors Name of First Human in Space Because He Was Russian – Futurism

Posted: at 8:32 pm

Whipping themselves into a Freedom Fries-esque fit of censoriousness, a space industry conference has removed the name of celebrated Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first human to travel into space, from an event.

The nonprofit Space Foundation announced in a now-deleted note that in light of current world events it would be changing the name of a fundraiser from Yuris Night to A Celebration of Space: Discover Whats Next at its Space Symposium conference.

The focus of this fundraising event remains the same to celebrate human achievements in space while inspiring the next generation to reach for the stars, the deleted update notes.

Its a rather dubious show of solidarity with the Ukrainian people, especially considering that Gagarin worked for the USSR, a completely different country from modern day Russia. And the icing on the cake? Ukraine actually appears to be rather fond of Gagarin and his monumental achievement.

Erasing the name of the first person to ever fly to space while supposedly celebrating human achievements in space is bad enough.

But doing so in line with the milquetoast trend of disavowing all things Russian, including famous composers and food products, amid the countrys current invasion of Ukraine is just outrageous.

For instance, a 2011 Ukraine stamp commemorated the 50th anniversary of his pioneering space flight. And the recently-bombed Chernihiv Stadium was renamed by the Soviets as the Yuri Gagarin Stadium back in the 1960s, and is also still referred to as such by fans despite a new official name.

In a post published last year about Gagarins often-overlooked relationship with Ukraine, the countrys Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute noted that during his first and only visit to the capitol city in 1966, the cosmonaut had kind words to say about the countrys capital, which was part of the USSR at the time.

My friend Pavel Popovich told me a lot about the beauty of Kyiv, Gagarin reportedly said when visiting school children at a youth center, but what Ive seen with my eyes is incomparable to what Ive heard!

Its far from the first time on-Earth geopolitics have affected the world of spaceflight hell,NASA likely wouldnt have made it to the Moon as soon as it did if it hadnt been for the Cold War.

Space cooperation between the United States and Russia has led to decades of remarkable international unity and scientific research, even as politics have, on occasion, strained that delicate alliance.

Censoring Yuri Gagarins name will not help a single Ukrainian fend off Russias invasion, but it does serve as yet another reminder that fair weather activism often flies in the face of reality.

More on US-Russia space cooperation:NASA Says Its Astronaut Is Definitely Still Carpooling Back to Earth On A Russian Spacecraft

More bizarre Russia news:Elon Musk Threatens Vladimir Putin With Flamethrower

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