Monthly Archives: March 2022

Know why the Church teaches what it does about abortion – Our Sunday Visitor

Posted: March 31, 2022 at 3:33 am

Pro-life advocates are seen near the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 1, 2021, the day justices heard oral arguments in a case about a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks of gestation. (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn)

It would require having the best crystal ball on the market to predict the decision of the Supreme Court regarding the abortion case from Mississippi, but however the court rules, if it decides only to narrowly modify its Roe v. Wade decision of nearly 50 years ago, many Americans devoted to the sanctity of life will be unhappy. If it altogether reverses Roe, many Americans who want abortion to be available on demand will be displeased.

Unhappy and displeased may be putting it mildly.

Tempers will rise. The only certain forecast well may be that debate will continue regarding the right of unborn life to exist without being deliberately terminated. Those who, along with Catholic Church teaching, see unborn life as the life of a human being, with all the dignity and rights pertaining to that status, will have to explain and defend their position.

They will have to stand facing very high winds of cultural opinion, because they will have to voice their beliefs in an environment in which traditional morality, in many manifestations, is forgotten, ignored or criticized. Anything, everything, goes today.

Recently, a television sports news reporter interviewed a senior in a Catholic high school who is acclaimed as the best scholastic basketball player in his state. The reporter asked the young man what would be next in his life.

The Catholic high school star did not say it would be college, or the military, or learning the family business. Goodness knows, he did not say he was thinking about the seminary. He said that in a few days he would be 18, in June he would graduate, as would his girlfriend, and then they would get jobs, move into the same apartment, and begin adult life. Marriage? Who knows? Maybe one day. Maybe not. Children? Maybe.

He is completing 12 years of Catholic education, during which time he surely heard Catholic moral teaching. As the old saying goes, You can lead a horse to water, but .

In another newscast, the wedding of a popular entertainer, his Catholic background was reported. His bride also has Catholic origins. Their two young sons were ring bearers. The reporter was not at all surprised.

Cohabitation is a way of life, as is easy divorce. Nobody questions artificial birth control, and many Catholics find Church doctrine on the question embarrassing at best, absurd at worst.

Euthanasia is coming, no doubt about it.

Abortion, and legal access to it, have their own serious implications to consider, but, overall, discussion about the moral propriety of abortion on demand is burdened by the increasingly widespread attitude in America, and throughout Western civilization, that something is immoral only if, and to the extent, that an individual person sees it as wrong for himself or herself.

Personal judgment is essential to any evaluation of morality, but also vital is admitting the fact that each one of us is limited in wisdom and prudence a somewhat ominous thought until it is coupled with the realization that God, through Christ, echoed in the teachings of the Church, has shown us the better way.

The bottom line is that this cultural atmosphere has exaggerated individual human decision-making, and the righteousness of consequent action, setting the reality of a Supreme Being aside and, therefore, obviously, any revelation proceeding from a Supreme Being.

When arguments regarding abortion occur, think about what abortion is. Ponder why Catholic teaching celebrates the sanctity of marriage and values integral to marriage, such as lifelong commitment and fidelity. Bravely, and carefully, note sociological and psychological facts indicating that cohabitation is not inevitably as productive and fulfilling as some assume it to be. Study the rationality behind Catholic doctrine about artificial contraception.

Remember what Pope St. Paul VI predicted two generations ago, that in ignoring God and Gods revelation, pronounced by the Church, humanity would reap the whirlwind. Smart man.

Msgr. Owen F. Campion is OSVs chaplain.

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Know why the Church teaches what it does about abortion - Our Sunday Visitor

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Ginni Thomas’s Texts Are a Barometer for the Far Right – The Atlantic

Posted: at 3:31 am

It was, by any measure, an extraordinary and unsettling set of exchanges. President Donald Trumps chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and the right-wing political activist Virginia Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, texted each other at least 29 times in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election. Their purpose was not to lament the result; it was to encourage efforts to overturn it.

That would be worrisome enough, but what makes it doubly so is the arguments invoked, the sources cited, and the mindset revealed in these raw, unfiltered texts. They are a window into a very distorted, very disturbed world. A world of true believers. And a world that has largely influenced and defined the American right during the Trump era.

David Frum: The real Ginni Thomas problem is Trump

The texts, which were first reported by The Washington Posts Bob Woodward and CBSs Robert Costa, were among the 2,320 that Meadows provided to the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol by insurrectionists.

Twenty-one of the texts were sent by Thomas, eight by Meadows. The first was sent on November 5, 2020; the last on January 10, 2021, four days after the Stop the Steal rally, which Thomas said she attended, and the violent assault on the Capitol. (Committee members and aides told Woodward and Costa that they believe the messages may be just a portion of the pairs total exchanges.)

So what did the texts between Thomas and Meadows disclose? Thomas in particular wasnt just skeptical about the election results but fully marinated in QAnon conspiracy theories. For example, she was intrigued by the idea that Trump and others in his orbit might have set up an elaborate sting operation in which millions of secretly watermarked ballots would catch Democrats in the act of stealing the election. Thomas thought that the attorney Sidney Powellwho at a December press conference blamed Cuba, Venezuela, the Clinton Foundation, George Soros, and antifa for making Trump votes disappearshould be the lead and the face of Trumps legal challenge. Thomas believed that the Biden crime family & ballot fraud co-conspirators were being arrested and detained for ballot fraud before being shipped to Guantnamo Bay for military tribunals. And she believed that Joe Biden and the left were attempting the greatest Heist of our History.

The text exchanges revealed Thomass belief that America was at the precipice and faced an existential threatand that a Trump victory was the only thing that would save us from the left taking America down. In January, Thomas was more desperate still: We are living through what feels like the end of America, she wrote to Meadows. We were witnessing the end of Liberty.

We learned from the texts that Thomas agreed that the most important thing you can realize right now is that there are no rules in war. And: This war is psychological. PSYOP.

The communications between Meadows and Thomas disclosed her anger that so few Republicans were rallying behind Trump in the way that Representatives Louie Gohmert, Jim Jordan, Paul Gosar, and Chip Roy were. Do not concede, Thomas told Meadows. It takes time for the army who is gathering for his back.

We witness, too, her contempt for Mike Pence. Most of us are disgusted with the VP and are in listening mode to see where to fight with our teams. Those who attacked the Capitol are not representative of our great teams of patriots for DJT!! Thomas also expressed concern that the Trump team might cave to the elites and that millions, including herself, might simply walk away from politics. I think I am done with politics, and I dont think I am alone, Mark. Meadows replied three minutes later: I dont know what you mean by caving to the elites, to which Thomas responded, I cant see Americans swallowing the obvious fraud. Just going with one more thing with no frickin consequences ... the whole coup and now this ... we just cave to people wanting Biden to be anointed? Many of us cant continue the GOP charade. Meadows later told her, Youre preaching to the choir. Very demoralizing.

We learned that Mark Meadows believed, This is a fight of good versus evil. Evil always looks like the victor until the King of Kings triumphs. Do not grow weary in well doing. The fight continues. I have staked my career on it. Well at least my time in DC on it. To which Thomas replied, Thank you!! Needed that! This plus a conversation with my best friend just now I will try to keep holding on. America is worth it!

What are we to make of all this?

There have always been people with bizarre ideas at the fringes of politics, but Ginni Thomas is hardly relegated to the fringes. Although not a dominant figure on the American right, she has for decades now been well knownand, as these texts show, she was a highly influential figure during the Trump era, with a direct line to the White House chief of staff, one of the most important individuals in American government.

What these texts reveal isnt the White House chief of staff telling Thomas, politely or not, that shes spreading crazed conspiracy theories and needs to accept that Trump lost the election fair and square; his responses suggest that he either buys into those conspiracy theories or is willing to play along. Meadows and Thomas are aligned, allies in the same cause, speaking the same language. The fact that the chief of staff and the president were on the same page as an activist with rabid political views was a distinct and distinctly terrifying feature of the Trump years.

David French: The worst Ginni Thomas text wasnt from Ginni Thomas

And its not simply that Meadows and Thomas share an affinity for freakish conspiracy theories; it is that they believe were engaged in a war without rulesthat anything goes because Trumps victory was stolen and he was all that stood between America and its destruction. One senses from both Thomas and Meadows not just fear of the left, but hatred for it. As for Meadows, he frames it as a fight of good versus evil. And then he invokes Jesus (the King of Kings) not just to ratify his political ideology, which is bad enough, but to advance a lie in order to overturn an election.

To assume that the majority of Republicans hold all the same views that Thomas and Meadows expressed in their texts would be a mistake. But they dont have to for there to be a problem. Plenty of people on the right, although not as radical as Thomas and Meadows, share their basic attitudes, at least for now. They arent necessarily at the same points on the continuum as Thomas and Meadows; they may not buy into the watermarked-ballots story or view Sidney Powell as a great legal mind, but they do believe that the election was stolen. They view the Democratic Party as an existential threat, and regard Democrats with contempt. They disdain Republicans who dont share their fervor, especially those who have spoken critically of Trump. They fear that America is on the edge of the abyss. And they view our politics as a battle between good and evil. They see themselves, too, as Gods instrumentshis foot soldiersin this great political-spiritual battle.

It has been said that we do not see things as they are; we see them as we are. All of us do this to some degree; it is part of what it means to be human. Reality is always interpreted, at least in part, through the prism of our own lives, our own experiences, the communities we have been and are now a part of. But reality is also independent of subjective human experiences, and when people superimpose an imaginary world on the real world, bad things happen.

In the case of Ginni Thomas and Mark Meadows, we are able to glimpse a fearful, angry, imaginary world that a significant part of our country, including Americas 45th president, inhabits. It is one reason our political culture is so damaged, why dialogue is often so hard. Its difficult to sustain a democracy when there arent shared truths, when false perceptions become false gods. And what becomes really dangerous is when people with powerof whatever party or ideologydont just enter a hall of mirrors but try to force the rest of us to follow them there. They have to be resisted by individuals who speak out and institutions that step up.

Over the past decade, too many people who knew better didnt speak up and too many institutions didnt step up. As a result, fanatics took power, and as the events since November 3, 2020, have shown, they dont give it up without violence.

So in light of this, how do we repair the breach and achieve some measure of social peace? Its a complicated question, of course, but for now let me suggest that part of the answer is disaggregation. We must distinguish between those who cant be reached by reality and those whose partisan passions are inflamed but who canover time, if dealt with in the right waybe reached. The former need to be defeated; the harm they do needs to be contained. The latter need to be provided an on-ramp back to reality.

Thankfully, theres a rich and growing body of work on the cognitive reasons people adopt rigid ideologies and on how to overcome virulent polarization. Polarization creates a substrate thats favorable to propaganda, the author Jonathan Rauch told me. We need to learn from social psychologists such as NYUs Jonathan Haidt and Columbia Universitys Peter Coleman, the author of The Way Out: How to Overcome Toxic Polarization. There are things we can do, including, on an individual level, listening well and berating others less. This approach wont work with everyone, but it will probably work with more people than you might imagine. And although one person acting alone might not make much of a difference, a lot of people acting together create a culture.

Striking the right balance in this inflamed political eracombining a fierce resolve to defend what is true and honorable with civic grace and a measure of charity; confronting those who spread lies that inflict deep wounds on our republic without adopting their no rules in war tactics; seeing the damage that fanatics are doing without dehumanizing them; believing that people can hold misguided and even harmful ideas without being irredeemableisnt easy. I struggle with achieving that balance all the time. But it is urgent that we try, because we cant keep going down the road of indiscriminate mutual contempt.

The incandescent words of Martin Luther King Jr. are worth holding close to our hearts: Ive seen too much hate to want to hate, myself Hate is too great a burden to bear.

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DeSantis’ office warns Antifa not to hold violent rallies in response to anti-grooming bill – Rebel News

Posted: at 3:31 am

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis office issued a warning Tuesday to Antifa cells operating in the Sunshine State, warning them not to conduct any violent actions in response to Floridas anti-grooming bill.

The anti-grooming bill, HB 1557, which has been incorrectly referred to as the Dont Say Gay bill by Democrats and members of the press, has faced increasing resistance from the left.

Christina Pushaw, DeSantis press secretary, told Townhall.com that journalists and TV personalities who have uncritically repeated the Dont Say Gay narrative are partly responsible for stirring up radical leftist activists.

As detailed by Townhalls Julio Rosas, the so-called Florida Youth Liberation Front, a far-left activist group and branch of the Antifa movement, called for a mobilization of their members to carry out actions in opposition to the anti-grooming bill.

Yes, at least in part. We believe individuals are ultimately responsible for their own actions, but the irresponsible, misleading and inflammatory media coverage of this bill has prompted these protests and calls to action, said Pushaw.

The governors office respects the right of any U.S. citizen anywhere to peaceably exercise their First Amendment rights and express their opinions, even if we may find those opinions objectionable or uninformed. In Florida, we do not tolerate violent protests or rioting, and anyone who riots or engages in political violence will be brought to justice regardless of which groups they may be affiliated with, she continued.

As previously detailed by Rebel News, the Parental Rights in Education bill bans educators from promoting woke sexual identity and gender orientation for children ages five through seven. Critics of the conservative-led bill have found support among Hollywood actors and the White House, who have pulled out every stop to oppose its passage.

We hope the truth becomes more widely expressed to the public. Most people in Florida and in the nation support this legislation, and most parents do not feel comfortable with classroom instruction for very young children on topics like gender transition and sexuality, added Pushaw.

Citizens can advocate for or against any legislation they want, but Governor DeSantis will always stand for parental rights and child protection, she said.

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On the Space Station, U.S. and Russian Astronauts Steer Around the War in Ukraine – The New York Times

Posted: at 3:30 am

Mark Vande Hei, a NASA astronaut, returned to Earth on Wednesday with two Russian counterparts, landing in Kazakhstan after he spent 355 days in space.

Mr. Vande Hei and his Russian crewmates, Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Dubrov, flew home together in a Russian spacecraft, guided by Russian flight controllers. After touching down on a grassy plain at 5:28 p.m. local time, or 7:28 a.m. Eastern time, Mr. Vande Hei was met by a contingent of NASA and Russian personnel, a close collaboration between the two space agencies that has continued despite Russias deadly invasion of Ukraine and the tensions it has caused between Moscow and the West.

The three men emerged in a world where cooperation between Russia and the United States to preserve the future of the International Space Station can no longer be taken for granted.

The space station was meant to be a marvel of peaceful post-Cold War amity between Moscow and Washington, drawing Russia into the community of international collaboration and preventing Russian rocket engineers from selling expertise to countries like North Korea seeking to build better missiles.

But in the past month, Russia has faced withering sanctions, condemnation and growing isolation from Western nations. President Biden harshly condemned President Vladimir V. Putin for the invasion.

NASA has tried to stay above the fray for the past month with minimal statements saying that operations on the space station are unaffected. And the astronauts say publicly that they are inclined to steer around the rupture between their governments. But the ongoing military conflict could test NASAs ability to continue working with Roscosmos, the state corporation that runs Russias space activities.

In Kazakhstan on Wednesday, the Soyuz capsule landed upright, but as often happens, winds dragged the parachute and pulled the capsule over on its side. Within half an hour, recovery teams helped all three astronauts out of the Soyuz.

After a journey of 5,680 orbits of Earth that stretched more than 150 million miles, Mr. Vande Hei was greeted by NASA flight doctors, public affairs officials and representatives from the astronauts office and the space station management.

The astronauts first sat outside, drinking tea during initial medical tests. Mr. Vande Hei smiled broadly and gave a thumbs up before putting on a protective mask. He took off a pair of sunglasses, commenting that it was a beautiful day. As he and the two Russian crew were carried into an inflatable tent for more medical checks, Mr. Vande Hei spoke with someone on a satellite phone.

Following their stay in the tents, the astronauts were to take a two-hour flight on Russian helicopters to the city of Karaganda. There Mr. Vande Hei and the American delegation were expected to a board a NASA Gulfstream jet and head back to the United States, with one stop in Germany for refueling.

While NASA and Roscomos worked together Wednesday to bring their crew members back from orbit, their cooperation was preceded in recent weeks by bellicose outbursts from Dmitry Rogozin, who leads the Russian space program. He shared a video on Twitter that suggested the Russians might leave Mr. Vande Hei behind.

NASA officials have carefully sidestepped what Mr. Rogozin has said and insisted that nothing has changed.

For the safety of our astronauts, the working relationship between NASA and our international partners continues, Bill Nelson, the NASA administrator, said during his State of NASA speech on Monday. And that includes the professional relationship between the cosmonauts and our astronauts.

On Tuesday, Mr. Shkaplerov, one of the returning Russian astronauts, turned over command of the space station to Tom Marshburn of NASA. We are one crew, Mr. Shkaplerov said during the ceremony, which ended with hugs.

While NASA remains mum, Scott Kelly, a retired astronaut who held the record for consecutive days in space by an American until Mr. Vande Hei passed it recently, feuded on Twitter this month with Mr. Rogozin. He stopped at NASAs request.

Outside of the space station, Russian and European cooperation has all but collapsed since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The European Space Agency postponed a rover mission to Mars because it relied on a Russian rocket. And a British satellite internet company, OneWeb, canceled a series of launches that used Russias Soyuz rockets, shifting some of them to SpaceX rockets. Russia also said it would cease cooperative science experiments with Germany conducted on the Russian part of the space station. A German astronaut, Matthias Maurer, is currently a member of the crew.

March 31, 2022, 1:12 a.m. ET

Orbital construction of the International Space Station, a cooperative venture between the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan and Canada, began in 1998 with the launch of the module Zarya. Financed by NASA and built by Russia, it is actually part of the NASA-led half of the space station reflecting American foreign policy at the time, which sought to sustain Russias space program during the economic tumult after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Russian and American astronauts permanently moved into the fledging space station on Nov. 2, 2000, and it has been continuously occupied by rotating crews of astronauts ever since.

The Russian and NASA-led segments of the station are separate but tightly connected. The Russians rely on American solar panels for power while Russian cargo ships provide periodic boosts to keep the station from falling into the atmosphere. It is not really an operation that you can separate and go your own way, said Joel Montalbano, the program manager for the space station at NASA, during a news conference a couple of weeks ago.

Mr. Montalbano said of the conflict in Ukraine, Were aware of whats going on, but we are able to do our jobs to continue operations.

The astronauts also may be circumspect when talking with one another in orbit. In February, before Russian troops entered Ukraine, Mr. Vande Hei told KARE, a Minnesota television station, that the crew got along fantastically and that Ukraine was not a frequent topic of conversation.

All I can say is we havent talked about that too much, Mr. Vande Hei said. Im not sure we really want to go there.

But Mr. Kelly, who spent 340 days on the space station in 2015 and 2016, said that if he were still in orbit, he would likely discuss the conflict with his Russian counterparts.

Russia moved into Syria when were there, he said in an interview. He and his Russian crewmates even talked about the possibility of direct armed conflict between the United States and Russia but it was at an abstract, not personal level.

Putins advisers. U.S. intelligence suggests that President Vladimir V. Putin has been misinformed by his advisersabout the Russian militarys struggles in Ukraine. The intelligence shows what appears to be growing tension between Mr. Putin and the Ministry of Defense, U.S. officials said.

We all recognizee what was important to us at that time was supporting each other, Mr. Kelly said. Literally relying on each other for our lives if the situation warranted.

In an interview recorded last week but streamed on NASA Television on Wednesday, Mr. Vande Hei referred indirectly to the war in Ukraine.

This is a very challenging time for international relations, Mr. Vande Hei said. My hope is that in our attempt to further and find peace throughout the world, that these type of connections that we have can be maintained and serve as a path forward.

April will be a busy month of comings and goings at the space station. As early as April 6, private company, Axiom Space of Houston, will lead three space tourists to the orbital lab. They paid $55 million each for the experience.

Later in April, another crew of four astronauts three from NASA, one from Italy are to launch on SpaceXs Falcon 9 rocket to the space station.

The longer-term future of the International Space Station remains unclear. The current agreement between the partner nations extends through 2024. NASA would like to extend operations until 2030 as it tries to support companies that want to launch future commercial outposts in orbit. Russia has not agreed to the extension, suggesting that it might want to set off on its own instead. It may also seek to collaborate with China in space.

However, it is unclear how much Roscosmos can do with limited financing that will get tighter as it cuts off contracts from foreign countries.

Russia also no longer brings in money flying NASA astronauts to orbit. For nearly a decade after the space shuttle was retired, Russias Soyuz was the only way Americans could get to and from the space station. NASA now uses on SpaceXs Crew Dragon capsule, and a second spacecraft by Boeing, Starliner, could start flying astronauts late this year.

NASA would still like to fly some of its astronauts on the Soyuz, but instead of paying for the flights, it wants to trade seats on the American spacecraft for Russian astronauts. While Russian astronauts are still training in Houston, NASA and Roscosmos have not yet completed an agreement for such a swapping of seats. And negotiations have been slowed by other U.S.-Russian disputes, including the aftermath of a Russian antisatellite weapon test in November.

Mr. Vande Hei and his Russian crewmates wont only be adjusting to the worlds changing geopolitics. It might take a little while to get used to gravity again.

Youre nauseous, said Mr. Kelly, recalling own his recovery after nearly a year of floating. Youre dizzy, youre tired. Youre sore.

Mr. Kelly said the most striking effects were in his cardiovascular system, with blood and fluid pooling in his lower legs.

I cant speak for everyone else, but that was the most troubling thing he said. Standing up and just physically seeing your ankles get like twice as big.

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U of U Health experiment prepared for launch to International Space Station | @theU – @theU

Posted: at 3:30 am

The perils of space flight often seem as boundless as the universe around us. From blastoff to splashdown, astronauts are exposed to a withering array of health hazards, including exposure to cosmic radiation, loss of muscle mass, lowered immunity, high blood pressure and increased risk of infections that can have lingering effects.

Yet even after more than 60 years of manned space exploration, much remains unknown about the long-term effects of space travel on humans. In hopes of answering one of the key outstanding questions about space biology, University of Utah Health scientists, in collaboration with NASA, are preparing to launch an experiment to the International Space Station (ISS) that will evaluate the effects of space travel on bone marrow cells, called megakaryocytes, and their daughter cells circulating in the blood, called platelets. Platelets curb bleeding and help dampen the effect of infectious diseases. The payload is being developed and could be ready for launch within the next year.

PHOTO CREDIT: University of Utah Health

Hans Schwertz and Matthew Rondina are leading the effort to prepare a University of Utah Health experiment for delivery to the International Space Station.

The study, one of 10 space biology research projects selected by NASA in 2021, could help amplify scientific understanding of how human bodies respond, adapt, and acclimate to space, says Matthew Rondina, professor of internal medicine and pathology at U of U Health and a study co-investigator along with principal investigator, Hans Schwertz, an adjunct professor of family and preventive medicine at U of U Health who practices at the Billings Clinic in Bozeman, Montana.

This unique research will not only provide vital information about how to protect future space travelers from the potentially harmful effects of altered megakaryocyte function and platelet activity during and after long-term space travel, but it could also have important implications for health care here on Earth, Rondina says. What we learn from this experiment could broaden our understanding of what role megakaryocytes and platelets have in inflammation, wound healing, immunity and tissue regeneration. This knowledge could potentially lead to new treatments for a host of autoimmune diseases and other disorders.

Every adult has about 3 trillion platelets floating around in the blood stream. These cells not only form blood clots in response to bleeding but also are natural sources of growth factors and other substances important for maintaining healthy tissue. Previous studies have suggested that weightlessness, exposure to cosmic radiation and the psychological stress of space flight can alter platelet activity, increasing the risk of hemorrhages and slow wound healing. In addition, scientists found that astronauts working on the ISS had an increased risk of blood clot formation.

To better understand this phenomenon, Schwertz, Rondina and colleagues will explore how space flight might disrupt the function of megakaryocytes that are responsible for the production of platelets. They theorize that space travel could induce genetic changes in megakaryocytes that could impair platelet production, blood counts and function.

The three-stage experiment consists of:

The NASA-funded study could lead to better understanding of how platelet activity can go awry in space, why inadvertent blood clots form in space crews and how long these effects linger after space travelers return to Earth, Schwertz says.

The researchers have begun the ground-based experiments at U of U Health. Moving forward, they will work with NASA to establish flight hardware assessments and prepare for the launch of the experiment to the ISS, which could take up to a year.

When you dive into it, it can seem to be overwhelming, Schwertz says. All the experiments must be precisely set up for space, which is a totally unforgiving environment. But at the same time, we must think about why we are doing this. Its for the astronauts and how we can protect them better.

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ZIN Technologies Commercial Space Station Project to Add Jobs in Middleburg Height – Middleburg Heights

Posted: at 3:29 am

ZIN Technologies, headquartered in Middleburg Heights, will expand and add 125 new jobs. ZIN is a provider of advanced engineering and product development services for NASA, the U.S. Department of Defense and private industry. The State of Ohio has awarded a Job Creation Tax Credit to facilitate ZIN adding 125 new positions to the 191 engineers and scientists currently located in Middleburg Heights. The expansion is the result of ZIN Technologies being among a team of companies working on the first free-flying commercial space station, called Starlab.

Mayor Matthew J. Castelli commented on the announcement, Middleburg Heights City government regularly collaborates with ZIN Technologies to ensure the companys continued success in our community, and we are excited that this growth opportunity in the commercial space market will bring new investment and jobs to Middleburg Heights and the State of Ohio.

Read the full press release opens in a new windowhereopens PDF file .

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Guy Snaps Photo of Space Station So Detailed You Can See Spacewalking Astronauts on Exterior – Futurism

Posted: at 3:29 am

"I feel like I just made a once-in-a-lifetime image."Slam Zoom

The shots of stuff in space that you can get with a high quality telescope these days are incredible. For a gobstopping example, look no further than German astrophotographer Sebastian Voltmer, who managed to snap a photo of the International Space Station in which, amazingly, you can actually make out two astronauts clambering on its exterior during a spacewalk last week.

I feel like I just made a once in a life time image, Voltmer wrote of the image. Its probably the first ground based picture showing two spacewalkers on the ISS at the same time.

Heres the shot:

The unbelievable shot shows NASA astronaut Raja Chari and and ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer during a spacewalk last week. Voltmer says that the image was captured using a C11 EdgeHD telescope (and you can check out more of his space photography here.)

During the spacewalk of the two astronauts [Raja Chari] and [Matthias Maurer] the International Space Station appeared shortly after sunset in the bright evening sky over Germany, he wrote. This image of the ISS was taken on March 23, 2022.

Weve seen a lot of incredible space images over at Futurism but in terms of a shot takenfrom the ground, this ones going to be tough to beat.

More on space photography: Awesome Photo Shows James Webb Space Telescope in Deep Space Home

Care about supporting clean energy adoption? Find out how much money (and planet!) you could save by switching to solar power at UnderstandSolar.com. By signing up through this link, Futurism.com may receive a small commission.

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See The International Space Station Over Boise Now Through April 12th, Here’s How – KIDO Talk Radio

Posted: at 3:29 am

Does Astronomy, space and the beyond fascinate you? Of course it does, you would not have clicked and started reading. I studied astronomy and astrophysics in school and used to get lost in time stargazing, studying and learning about what is beyond earths atmosphere. Being an astronaut is, or at least used to be a pretty classic answer for most kids when asked, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Even though most of us didn't become astronauts ourselves we can admire those that did make the childhood dream come true.

NASA has a Spot the Station website that tracks the International Space Station as it travels around the globe. "Watch the International Space Station pass overhead from several thousand worldwide locations. It is the third brightest object in the sky and easy to spot if you know when to look up. Visible to the naked eye, it looks like a fast-moving plane only much higher and traveling thousands of miles an hour faster!"

They share where it can be easily seen from the sky, when and over what cities. Well Boise, The International Space Station just became visible over our skies starting and will be able to be spotted until April 12th.

According to spotthestation.com/nasa.gov, "All sightings will occur within a few hours before or after sunrise or sunset. This is the optimum viewing period as the sun reflects off the space station and contrasts against the darker sky."

Here are the best times and if you have a telescope the best positions in the sky to set it for maximum visibility.

Nikki West

Did you know we have a home grown Idaho Astronaut who has been to the International Space Shuttle? James F. Reilly fromMountain Homewent on three space shuttle missions during his career from 1994 to 2008. According to theNASA website, "These missions included the transport of important equipment for other stations, the retrieval of astronauts from different expeditions, and performing construction and repair on the International Space Station."

A look at all of the space shuttles that served our nation.

This is not only one of the most incredible homes in Idaho, this Sun Valley home has been hailed as one of the most unique and breathtaking in the world. With it's incredible design, attention to detail and full blown livable cement bunker like home, photos of this masterpiece are worth checking out.

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See The International Space Station Over Boise Now Through April 12th, Here's How - KIDO Talk Radio

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Israeli Company to Measure Brain Activity on Space Mission to ISS – VOA Learning English

Posted: at 3:29 am

An Israeli company will test its equipment on astronauts in space expected next week during a SpaceX flight to the International Space Station (ISS).

The company Brain.Space has been developing methods to study brain activity for four years.

The company said on Monday that three astronauts on the planned private space firm Axiom Spaces mission to the ISS will wear its devices. The equipment will be a head covering, or helmet, that can record electrical brain activity through a test called an electroencephalogram (EEG).

The 10-day mission is the first private trip to the space station. The launch is set for April 3 with four astronauts.

Brain.Space Chief Executive is Yair Levy. He told Reuters scientists know that a low-gravity environment affects the way the body works. He said that such an environment will probably also affect the brain. He said his company would like to study that.

Levy said that data has continuously been collected on heart rate, skin resistance, and muscle mass through measurements in space but not brain activity.

Brain.Spaces effort joins 30 experiments that will be included in the so-called Rakia Mission to the ISS.

Three of the four astronauts, including Israeli Eytan Stibbe, will wear the special helmet. The device has 460 points that connect to the top of the head. It performs a number of functions for 20 minutes a day. During that time, data will be sent to a computer on the space station. The company said one of these jobs, called the visual oddball, has been effective at finding unusual brain activity.

Similar studies using these functions have been completed on Earth. After the mission, Brain.Space will compare the EEG data to look for any differences in brain activity between Earth and space.

Company officials say such experiments are needed because long-term space exploration and off-world living are within grasp.

Brain.Space said it raised $8.5 million in investments. It describes itself as a brain infrastructure company.

Brain.Space is working with the brain sciences department at Israels Ben Gurion University to turn huge amounts of data into useful knowledge. Levy said he hoped the space mission would help organizations, researchers, and computer program developers.

"Space is an accelerator. The idea is to revolutionize and make possible brain activity apps, products and services that's as easy as pulling data from an Apple Watch," Levy said. He said measuring mental health disorders like ADHD could be a possible goal.

Im Gregory Stachel.

Steven Scheer reported this story for Reuters. Gregory Stachel adapted it for VOA Learning English.

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mission n. a flight by an aircraft or spacecraft to perform a specific task

function n. the special purpose or activity for which a thing exists or is used

grasp n. the ability to get or find something

infrastructure n. the basic equipment and structures (such as roads and bridges) that are needed for a country, region, or organization to function properly

accelerate v. to quicken the progress or development of something

revolutionize v. to change (something) very much or completely

app n. a computer program that performs a special function

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Israeli Company to Measure Brain Activity on Space Mission to ISS - VOA Learning English

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The Fascinating History And Evolution Of Photography – SlashGear

Posted: at 3:26 am

To this point, photography had succeeded in capturing brief moments in time. Despite the exposures sometimes taking several seconds, minutes, or even hours, the images obtained through these early methods appeared as discrete blips, captured in amber. The next step, of course, was to capture motion.

As explained by Smithsonian Magazine, the person perhaps most responsible for pushing the issue was Leland Stanford, the founder of Stanford University. Like Maxwell, Stanford didn't capture the resulting images himself, instead partnering with photographer Eadward Muybridge, and he did it to answer a nagging question. He wanted to know if all four of a horse's hooves left the ground at the same time when they run.

To pull it off, Muybridge devised a complex collection of twelve cameras, each of which were triggered by a tripwire. Stanford set his horse coursing down the racetrack, pulling a cart behind it. As the wheels of the cart rolled over each of the tripwires, an exposure was taken. In only a few seconds, Muybridge had collected twelve sequential images capturing the horse in motion.

Those frames, or copies of them, could then be played in sequence using a zoopraxiscope to create the first moving image.

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The Fascinating History And Evolution Of Photography - SlashGear

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