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Daily Archives: August 4, 2022
The primary is over Here’s who you can expect to see on JoCo ballots in November – Shawnee Mission Post
Posted: August 4, 2022 at 2:46 pm
There are several federal, state and local elections on the ballot for the upcoming general election see who is on the docket. File photo.
Unofficial results from Tuesday night show that Johnson County voter turnout hit more than 53% for the 2022 primary election.
Next up is the Nov. 8 general election, during which voters will decide who becomes the new chair of the Board of County Commissioners, as well as races for U.S. Senate, the Third District U.S. House of Representatives seat, a slew of local statehouse contests and some other statewide and local offices.
The Post put together the following list using Johnson County Election Offices unofficial final results and the Kansas Secretary of State unofficial Kansas election results of candidates who have either already filed for November or who won their primary Tuesday and are set to advance.
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Climate change and the Supreme Courts version of police abolitionism – The Hill
Posted: at 2:46 pm
West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, which in June gutted the Biden administrations ability to reduce the electrical power industrys carbon emissions, may be the Supreme Courts most reckless and lawless decision (in an extremely competitive field). The court comes close to anarchism, crippling Congresss capacity to protect the country from disaster and undermining the fundamental purpose of the Constitution.
Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the court, embraced a newly bloated version of the major questions rule for interpreting statutes, one that Congress could not have known about when it gave the president the power to create environmental regulations: there are extraordinary cases . . . in which the history and the breadth of authority that the agency has asserted and the economic and political significance of that assertion provide a reason to hesitate before concluding that Congress meant to confer such authority. The challenged Obama-era plan would have restructured an entire industry, and Roberts declared that there was little reason to think Congress assigned such decisions to the Agency.
If you need a reason, how about the plain words of the statute? Section 111of the Clean Air Act instructs the EPA to select the best system of emission reduction for power plants, as part of its mandate to regulate stationary sources of any substance that causes, or contributes significantly to, air pollution and may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health or welfare.
Roberts says the court should look to the history and breadth of the authority asserted by the agency as well as the economic and political significance of the regulation, and then speculate as to whether Congress really meant to confer such authority. But the best evidence of what Congress meant is the language it enacted.
The current Court is textualist only when being so suits it, wrote Justice Elena Kagan, dissenting. When that method would frustrate broader goals, special canons like the major questions doctrine magically appear as get-out-of-text-free cards. (A few months ago, she made the same point about the courts invalidation of OSHAs rules to limit COVID-19 in workplaces.) The courts decision is already being cited in challenges to regulations of pipelines, asbestos, nuclear waste, corporate disclosures and highway planning.
Roberts observes that the EPA has rarely used its Section 111 power. But statutes dont disappear because they arent being used. They remain in effect until they are repealed. Right now, we are seeing antiabortion laws that have been dead for half a century suddenly spring back into life.
Justice Neil Gorsuch, concurring, offers a more specific account of how one decides what counts as a major question, explaining that the first question a court should ask is whether an agency claims the power to resolve a matter of great political significance.
How does a court know what gives a matter great political significance? Gorsuch cites earnest and profound debate across the country not at the time of enactment, but decades later. OSHAs effort to prevent thousands of COVID-19 deaths was improper because it came at a time when Congress and state legislatures were engaged in robust debates over vaccine mandates.
I thought I was offering a reductio ad absurdum last January when I wrote that the Supreme Court was making Fox News a source of law. But Gorsuch isnt even hiding it: If the conservative press raises enough of a fuss to trigger a political fight, then government action that was previously authorized will become illegal.
Congress in the 1970s was under the impression that air pollution and workplace dangers were unquestionably evils, and that creating agencies was the best way to address those threats. The court declared way back in 1819 that Congress has broad discretion to choose the most convenient means for carrying out its powers. Kagan observed: A key reason Congress makes broad delegations like Section 111 is so an agency can respond, appropriately and commensurately, to new and big problems. Congress knows what it doesnt and cant know when it drafts a statute.
It knew that scientific knowledge would improve. For instance, now we understand that coal the leading source of water and air pollution is the worst fossil fuel: When one accounts for the costs it imposes, every unit that is burned has negative economic value. The EPA aimed to have coal provide 27 percent of the nations electricity by 2030, down from 38 percent in 2014.
Most Americans once would have been astounded to learn that anyone would ever try to block efforts to contain a pandemic or prevent environmental catastrophe. The courts decision reflects the growing influence of libertarianism, which thinks that liberty means a government that is small and weak. Libertarians have been unable to think clearly about environmental harms. Thats why, for all their purported cold rationality, they are drawn to daffy climate change denialism and, more recently, antivaxx ideology. The libertarians capture of the Republican Party is so complete that its members will not give President Biden a single vote for his climate plan. Actually, from a libertarian standpoint, the effects of climate change involve clear violations of property rights that the state must remedy: One isnt permitted to devastate other peoples land.
The slogan abolish the police, embraced by some on the left, is foolish because it focuses on government dysfunction while failing to notice what government is for. The court has now embraced its own form of reckless anarchism and at the worst possible time. In the midst of a deadly plague and worsening climate catastrophe, it has blocked Congresss ability to choose the tools it deems most effective and left unclear what Congress or the EPA is now allowed to do to protect the human race from impending disaster.
Gorsuch presumes that an agency exceeds its authority when it seeks to regulate a significant portion of the American economy, or require billions of dollars in spending by private persons or entities. Both he and Roberts tell us, in effect, that the bigger the problem, the less capacity Congress has to address it by delegation. This is like a weirdly selective form of police abolition that abolishes only the homicide squad or yanks police out of high-crime neighborhoods.
There have always been some Americans who did not like the Constitution, who thought that it created government that was too powerful. In 1788 they almost prevented it from being ratified. Most voters, however, have repeatedly rejected the radical libertarian notion that liberty means a government too feeble to solve the nations most urgent problems. They voted that way when the Constitution was adopted, and again when Congress created these agencies. Todays Supreme Court perversely interprets law as if the Constitutions opponents had won.
Andrew Koppelman, John Paul Stevens Professor of Law at Northwestern University, is the author of Burning Down the House: How Libertarian Philosophy Was Corrupted by Delusion and Greed (St. Martins Press, forthcoming).Follow him on Twitter@AndrewKoppelman.
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Discontent Is Never Enough – by Jonah Goldberg – The G-File – The Dispatch
Posted: at 2:46 pm
Hey,
I set out to write this new effort to launch a third party and then, a few hundred words in, I started putting out a cigar on my face just to remind myself Im alive. So, Im starting over.
Dont get me wrong, Id be delighted to see a third party emerge that could send either the GOP or the Democrats the way of the Whigs. Its just that the topic has been so exhaustingly chewed-over you could drink it with a straw. So let me at least try to come at it from a different angle.
First, I do think that conditions have not been better in my lifetime for a third party to emerge.
Think of it like a man with three buttocks. No, wait, dont do that.
Think of it like our national forests, where bears continue to defecate with libertarian impunity. Weve spent a century suppressing natural fires to the point that theres an enormous amount of fuel lying around, making a much bigger fire inevitable.
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Progressive Conservatism: How Republicans Will Become America’s Natural Governing Party – The Ripon Society
Posted: at 2:46 pm
Q&A with Frank Buckley
With polls showing that Republicans stand a good chance of recapturing control of the U.S. House and possibly the Senate in the November election, many Americans are asking what the party will do if it holds the reins of power next year.
In the House, Republicans are attempting to provide an answer to that question by rolling out a series of proposals which they are calling their Commitment to America aimed at addressing high energy prices, rising violence, and some of the other key challenges Americans face.
In the Senate, Republicans appear to be of two minds about which is the proper course to take. Some, such as Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, believe the focus of the upcoming election should be on what Democrats have done or failed to do over the past two years. Others, such as Florida Senator Rick Scott, believe the party need to follow the Houses lead and put down in writing what they hope to achieve if they hold the majority next year.
Frank Buckley is taking an even broader view. Buckley is a professor at George Mason Universitys Scalia School of Law who is perhaps better known in Republican circles as the author of several speeches Donald Trump delivered during the 2016 presidential campaign. Buckley is no longer a supporter of the former President he calls him toxic. But he is a supporter of some of the positions that Trump took and some of the messages that he conveyed.
Buckley believes it is time for Republicans to move beyond the former President and get behind a vision that not only encapsulates some of these positions and messages, but appeals to the broad swath of working class Americans who supported Trump in response. Buckley lays out just such a vision in a new book. Called Progressive Conservatism: How Republicans Will Become Americas Natural Governing Party, the book recommends that members of the GOP look to three leading statesmen from the GOPs past for guidance about the path to follow, and argues that issues relating to improving economic mobility, fighting corruption, and making government work will be keys to the partys success in the years ahead.
The Forum spoke with Buckley recently about his book, his vision for progressive conservatism, and where he would like to see the party go in 2022 and beyond.
________________________________
RF: First things first explain to our readers, what is a progressive conservative?
FB: A progressive conservative is someone who is faithful to the leading statesmen of the Republican Party Eisenhower, Theodore Roosevelt, Lincoln. There are several themes that are associated with those statesmen.
Lincoln was the one who invented the American Dream the idea that whoever you are, wherever you come from, you should be able to get ahead and your kids will have it better than you did. When polled in 2014, Americans said, We no longer believe in the American Dream. We dont think its happening. And the economic evidence bears them out. That should have been a sign of a revolution in American politics. But the only person who picked up on that was Trump, and they elected him president.
So I think the Republican Party has to take on mobility economic intergenerational mobility as a big theme, and specifically point out how its the Democrats who are holding people back with their immigration policies and their education policies and their regulatory policies. They have placed a boulder in front of the people who want to get ahead. So that should be an important element of what progressive conservatism means. And it all goes back to Lincoln.
Teddy Roosevelt came to government as a reformer an anti-corruption reformer. And, you know, the GOP has given away the issue of corruption to Democrats. And thats just wrong. There are things we should be doing. We should be taking up the issue of corruption, specifically with respect to regulating lobbyist contributions to politicians and closing the revolving door between K Street and Congress. Those should be Republican themes.
And then finally, like Ike, we have to make our peace with the welfare state and recognize, as Lincoln did, that we want equality of opportunity, not equality of results. And the government has a role to play in achieving this goal. The government has a role in providing good, decent school choice, for example. Were on the right side of that. These are all themes that define progressive conservatism.
RF: Lets talk about the progressive conservative vision on some of the challenges facing America today. You mentioned school choice. To expand on that, where do progressive conservatives come down on the issue of education?
FB: Well, were in favor of good education. The guy who really was an education president was Lincoln, who supported the land grant colleges through the Morrill Act, and who was not merely in favor of the equality of opportunity, but who lived it himself, rising from a hardscrabble farm to the presidency. What was really basic to Lincoln was the idea that all Americans both white and black should have the opportunity to get ahead. And a good part of that is education. Lincoln is the only president to hold a patent, and loved the idea of education for farmers as a means by which everybody can get ahead.
RF: Were in the middle of a heat wave right now. What about climate change?
FB: Climate change is an issue on which I think one is permitted to be skeptical. Ive read what Bjorn Lomborg has had to say in the Wall Street Journal. I agree theres such a thing as global warming. Im something of a skeptic as to the subject of spending a vast amount of money to try to cure the problem. At this particular point, you ask whats to be done today. Well, the big issue today is inflation. So big government spending programs right now arent going to be the answer.
RF: What about defense and foreign policy. What is the progressive conservative view towards Ukraine and the importance of American leadership abroad?
FB: You know, if there was a pro-Russian fellow in the Trump campaign, that wouldve been me. I helped draft Trumps foreign policy speech in the beginning of the campaign, I put in a line to the effect that I could see why the Russians were troubled by the expansion of NATO. That line was taken out. And what was substituted was a line that said, They say we cant trust the Russians to cut a deal. I intend to find out. Thats what Trump said. I think thats, thats what we should have done.
The tragedy of the idiotic Russian collusion paranoia was it prevented anything like a deal with the Russians. And clearly, a deal was the way to solve the problem. Even now in Ukraine, even at this moment, we should be getting on the blower with Putin as Macron does, as the Pope does and try to craft a deal. I mean, you do peace deals with your enemies, not with your friends. Putins very much an adversary who we threw into the lap of the Chinese, which is madness.
I dont think we should be spending money fighting a proxy war which gets Ukrainians killed. I think what we should be trying to do is craft a peace treaty that would solve the problem. Indeed, the opportunity for such a deal even now I think exists with Putin. That also, by the way, is what Henry Kissinger thinks.
RF: Picking up on your earlier point about corruption, you dedicate an entire chapter in your book to draining the swamp, First, what is your definition of the swamp? Is it entrenched bureaucrats, entrenched special interests, or both? And how do you propose to go about doing it?
FB: Well, I have some specific suggestions geared towards reining in the lobbyists and closing the revolving door between K Street and Congress. Its been said that Congress is a farm team for K street, right? People come here and they never leave they just move down to K Street. Those are the kinds of issues that I think Republicans should take on.
RF: You write about the importance of having a government that is aligned to the whole of the voters and say Republican Virtue will be required to reach that goal. Could you talk about that for a moment?
FB: The idea of Republican Virtue is traced back to the Founders in 1776. They thought that the revolution wouldnt succeed unless it was supported by Americans who had a disinterested desire to promote the common good of Americans. Republican Virtue is also something I identify with the West. Im from the West. And so I buy into Frederick Jackson Turners story of the frontier as being crucial in American history and, and history as being a contest between the West which is democratic, egalitarian, mobile, and virtuous, as opposed to an aristocratic and corrupt East. So Republican Virtue thus means that what is for the common good of all Americans let us support that.
The cynical view, which I associate with Madison, is that were also intrinsically corrupt and we cant be trusted to promote Republican Virtue. Were disinterested in virtue in any way, and the best we can do is just have people bargain with one another. Thats called pluralism, and its an idea that traditionally was associated with the Democratic Party a party of coalitions. The notion is that everybody is bargaining at the table. Everybody will be well taken care of. And that obviously didnt happen.
I think we have to break away from that idea of dividing us up by race or gender or whatever leave that job for the Democrats. Instead, ask for people to speak to that which is for the common good of all Americans. And that historically has been what the Republicans have done as opposed to the Democrats.
RF: Lets return to progressive conservatism and the politics of today. You wrote speeches for Donald Trump in 2016, yet write that you believe Republicans need to move beyond Trump in 2024. Why do you no longer support him? And what kind of candidate do you believe the party needs to get behind the next time around?
FB: Well, I think hes toxic for any number of reasons. January 6th, obviously, but even before that, he was a failed President by virtue of his inability to know which levers to pull when he was in office. He didnt have a sense as to the kinds of people who should be appointed. He surrounded himself with the most knavish of people. I hope that the January 6th hearings persuade the American people that the fellow should be toast. If they do that, what theyll have done in the end is help the GOP more than the Democrats.
So yes, we have to say goodbye to Trump. But I think what we want to do at the same time is remember that this guy won in 2016, and he brought to the party a whole bunch of people who had never voted Republican before. And were not going to win an election if we say goodbye to them. If we revert to the old right wing party of Barry Goldwater, thats not going to work.
What well need is a party that recognizes the limitation of 60 years of libertarianism and of being a party that was indifferent to issues like mobility and corruption.
RF: I think the term you used in your book is that Republicans need a happy warrior in 2024
FB: Which is to say I rather like Ike. We need a smiling person who doesnt communicate a sense of hostility. And thats certainly not Trump. Its more like Ike.
###
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Local News: Donnie Brown elected as 149th representative (8/2/22) | Standard Democrat – Standard-Democrat
Posted: at 2:46 pm
Donnie Brown
NEW MADRID, Mo. Donnie Brown of New Madrid will be the next representative from the 149th District.
According to unofficial vote totals from the office of New Madrid County Clerk Amy Brown, Republican Brown received 1,255 votes in New Madrid County. His opponent on the Republican ticket Eric Garris had 396 votes. There were no Democrats seeking the office.
The 149th District also includes Mississippi County and a portion of Pemiscot County. Brown had 727 votes in Mississippi County and 310 votes in Pemiscot County for a total of 2,292. Garris had 331 votes in Mississippi County and 285 votes in Pemiscot County giving him 1,012 votes overall.
Brown offered his thanks following his win.
I had so many generous people that donated to the campaign, that walked with me, put signs up. I couldnt have done it without them, Brown said.
According to Brown, he will make jobs a priority when serving as the 149th District representative along with technical skills education to provide the work force to fill those jobs. Also he said he hopes to serve on the states budget committee.
Nearly 87 percent of the 1,972 voters casting ballots Tuesday opted for a Republican ballot. There were a total of 1,701 voters picking up the GOP primary ballot and 270 who selected a Democratic ballot. Only one person voted the Libertarian ticket and there were no Constitution Party voters in the county.
Overseeing her second election since appointed New Madrid County Clerk, Amy Brown said overall the election on Tuesday went smoothly.
With no locally contested primary races, turnout in New Madrid County was just under 18 percent, or 1,972 of the countys 11,030 registered voters.
There will be one contested county election in November.
Mary Hunter Starnes had 239 votes cast for her by Democrats for the office of New Madrid County treasurer. Republicans cast 1,226 votes for Renee Westmoreland Smith as their partys nominee for New Madrid County treasurer. They will face one another in the November election.
The remaining candidates for county office were without opposition in the August primary.
Listed on the Democratic ballot for county office was incumbent Recorder of Deeds Kim St. Mary Hall, who had 250 votes.
On the Republican ticket for county office were incumbents Josh Underwood, associate circuit judge, 1,304 votes; Mark Baker, presiding commissioner, 1,262 votes; Amy Brown, county clerk, 1,276 votes; Shannon Harris-Landers, circuit clerk, 1,259 votes; Andrew C. Lawson, prosecuting attorney, 1,259 votes; and Dewayne Nowlin, collector, 1,331 votes.
In Portageville, voters approved a proposal to issue combined waterworks and sewerage system revenue bonds for $7 million. The money will be used to acquire, construct, improve, extend and equip the citys water and sewage system. The principal and interest of the bonds will be paid through the operation of the system.
There were 195 votes in favor of the issue compared to 105 opposed.
For U.S. representative from the Eighth District, Republican incumbent Jason Smith received the nod from New Madrid County voters over challenger Jacob Turner. Smith had 1,405 votes to 186 votes for Turner.
In November, Smith will face Democrat Randi McCallian, who had 237 votes cast in his favor in New Madrid County and Libertarian Jim Higgins, who received 1 vote in Tuesdays county primary.
The top vote-getter from a long list of Republicans vying to be the partys nominee for U.S. senator in New Madrid County was Eric Greitens. The candidates and their vote totals in New Madrid County were: Patrick A. Lewis, 21; Eric Schmitt, 650; Billy Long, 7; Eric Greitens, 680; Bernie Mowinski, 3; C.W. Gardner, 2; Deshon Porter, 4; Vicky Hartzler, 240; Dave Sims, 2: Mark McCloskey, 14: Eric McElroy, 2; Dennis Lee Chilton, 0: Robert Allen, 2; Dave Schatz, 1; Hartford Tunnell, 1; Kevin C. Schepers, 1; Rickey Joiner, 1: Robert Olson, 2; Russel Pealer Breyfogle Jr., 2; Darrell Leon McClanahan III, 1: and Curtis D. Vaughn, 3.
New Madrid County residents who picked up a Democratic ballot picked Trudy Bush Valentine as their candidate for U.S. senator. The vote tally was as follows: Lewis Rolen, 26: Gena Ross, 18; Carla Coffee Wright, 20; Josh Shipp, 9; Spencer Toder, 11; Lucas Kunce, 60; Jewel Kelly, 12; Clarence (Clay) Taylor, 16: Pat Kelly, 16: Valentine, 62: and Ronald (Ron) William Harris, 7.
Jonathan Dine, the Libertarian Party candidate, garnered 1 vote and no votes were cast for Paul Venable, the Constitution Party candidate for U.S. senator.
For state auditor on the Republican ticket, New Madrid County residents opted for Scott Fitzpatrick, who received 868 votes over David Gregory, who had 569 votes. Alan Green, who was the sole Democrat on the ballot for state auditor, polled 224 votes and John A. Hartwig Jr., the Libertarian Party candidate, had 1 vote.
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Local News: Donnie Brown elected as 149th representative (8/2/22) | Standard Democrat - Standard-Democrat
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Former TV anchorman wins GOP nomination in Missouris 4th Congressional District – Missouri Independent
Posted: at 2:46 pm
Former Kansas City anchorman Mark Alford emerged from the crowded GOP primary in the 4th Congressional District on Tuesday.
In the sprawling 24-county 4th District, Alfort bested his main rivals Sen. Rick Brattin, farmer Kalena Bruce and former Boone County Clerk Taylor Burks in a race that saw massive outside spending from political action committees lined up behind their preferred candidate.
Alford will now face Jack Truman of Lamar, who was unopposed in the Democratic primary, and Libertarian Randy Langkraehr.
The seat opened up after the incumbent, U.S. Rep. Vicky Hartzler, decided to run for Senate.
Alford, who worked as a news anchor at Fox 4 in Kansas City before retiring, boasted support for former President Donald Trumps border wall, gun rights, congressional term limits and school choice, along with total opposition to abortion.
We must deport illegal aliens, Alford said during a debate last month. And no, we have enough jobs here in America for Americans to fill.
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New Zealands The Beths bringing smorgasbord of music to Grog Shop next week – cleveland.com
Posted: at 2:45 pm
CLEVELAND, Ohio While bands in the United States were forced to perform virtual shows or refrain from live performances altogether in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, it was a different scene in New Zealand.
Thanks to the countrys famously strict lockdowns early-on in the diseases spread, bands were able to play out when the rest of the music world hit pause and indie-rock standout The Beths was one of them. The band, named after singer-guitarist Elizabeth Stokes, went on a tour in late 2020, performed at Christmastime festivals in its home country and even released a live album, Auckland, New Zealand, 2020, from one of the shows.
We were pretty lucky for a long time, Stokes said. Omicron caught up in late 2021, so New Zealand is in a similar boat to the rest of the world now. Luckily, the vaccination rate is very high.
Just this month, New Zealand finally fully opened its borders for the first time since 2020 but The Beths have already been traveling around the world, supporting its 2020 album Jump Rope Gazers and its upcoming album Expert in a Dying Field.
The bands tour is set to reach the Grog Shop for a show on Thursday, Aug. 11, with support from Rosie Tucker. Tickets, $10-$20 are still available to the concert on Grog Shops website.
The new tunes were flavored by the pandemic, but Stokes doesnt call Expert in a Dying Field a pandemic album. Here, expect the bands consistent upbeat approach to indie-rock fitting for energizing live shows.
It would be difficult not to have the last couple of years leak into whatever art you make. Even if you specifically were avoiding it, it would still affect the way people listening to it would experience it. So definitely its there, Stokes said. What we knew we wanted was an album that we could picture playing live, touring and really having fun with. We realized how important the live experience is to us.
Though some songs from Expert will be shared at the Grog Shop show, expect more of a focus on the bands earlier releases 2018s stellar Future Me Hates Me and 2020s dynamic Jump Rope Gazers.
Were conscious that this is our first show in Cleveland since 2019, so were making sure to play a good selection from the last album too, and plenty of first album faves, Stokes said. It should hopefully be a well-rounded smorgasbord.
As for The Beths current tour which has brought the group around the globe in recent months the band feels right at home while on the road, especially after the past few harrowing years.
It just feels right. Its super busy and exhausting, but in the best way, Stokes said. We feel like penguins whove been on land for the last couple of years, and now were back in the sea. We just need to avoid leopard seals.
Find more information about The Beths upcoming Cleveland show at grogshop.gs.
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New Zealands The Beths bringing smorgasbord of music to Grog Shop next week - cleveland.com
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Axiom Space will put New Zealand on International Space Station – Space.com
Posted: at 2:45 pm
New Zealand has a research ticket to work on the International Space Station.
The country partnered with commercial research company Axiom Space on July 28 to fly experiments on future missions with the Houston-based company.
"We at Axiom Space are pleased to partner with Aotearoa [the original Maori name for New Zealand] to offer new access to space and create opportunities for companies, scientists and researchers," Michael Suffredini, Axiom's president and CEO, said in a July 28 statement (opens in new tab).
Photos: The first space tourists
New Zealand will focus on manufacturing and biotechnology on the International Space Station (ISS) as a part of the agreement, which includes research teams from the University of Canterbury and the University of Auckland.
The new memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Axiom appears to be part of the country's ongoing expansion of work in space. In 2021, New Zealand was the 11th country to sign the Artemis Accords, a set of international agreements governing future lunar exploration under NASA's leadership.
New Zealand signed on to the accords, focused on lunar exploration through the Artemis program that aims to put boots on the surface, to discuss space resource management on the moon. (NASA plans to mine moon waterto bring down the cost and complication of long-term settlement of the moon.)
Institutions in New Zealand will use the MOU with Axiom for matters such as drug and vaccine development, along with an artificial intelligence system meant to simplify clinical decision-making, the statement said.
"Initiating development to help manage astronaut health, the tool could help health professionals assess health risks and treatment planning when they are very remote from patient locations, such as those in space or in Antarctica," Axiom and New Zealand officials wrote. "Axiom Space will contribute in-space operational experience to the study, with the New Zealand team providing computational, medical, and human performance expertise."
Axiom Space, founded in 2016, ran the first ever private research mission on the ISS earlier in 2022. The mission, called Ax-1, flew three paying space tourists and a retired NASA astronaut to the International Space Station on a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft.
As the company prepares to launch more missions already approved by NASA, Axiom has ambitious plans to create new structures to attach to the orbital outpost many of them dedicated to research. When the space station is decommissioned (which is expected to happen in the early 2030s), these structures will collectively detach as a self-sufficient private space station in low Earth orbit.
Axiom Space's first module is scheduled to reach the space station sometime in late 2024, according to the company's website (opens in new tab).
Prior to New Zealand, Axiom signed similar MOUs with Italy, Hungary, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), including bringing Emirati astronaut Sultan AlNeyadifor the first Arab nation long-duration mission on the ISS in spring 2023.
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Axiom Space will put New Zealand on International Space Station - Space.com
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Coast House is a minimalist retreat in the heart of New Zealands South Island – Wallpaper*
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Coast House is a minimalist retreat in the heart of New Zealands South Island
Stacey Farrells contemporary retreat is a stealthy passive design that keeps a low profile amidst the natural splendour ofNew Zealands wild south coast
This low-energy retreat, the Coast House,sits between two of New Zealands most spectacular areas, the Fiordland National Park and the sparsely populated, densely forested Catlins. Fiordand is the countrys largest national park at nearly 5,000 square miles. It occupies a substantial chunk of the most westerly part of South Island, while the Catlins lie on the south coast.
A terrace opens off the main living space
Building anything in proximity to these remote wildernesses presents a significant challenge.
The climate is relentless, with very high annual rainfall and moisture-laden winds blowing in from the Tasman Sea.
The Coast House is nestled into the landscape
Stacey Farrell designed the Coast House to Passive House standards, embracing a sustainable architecture approach and ensuring it was highly insulated to minimise the amount of energy it consumed.
Modestly sized, its set low into the scrub, close to sand dunes on a site sprinkled with wind-blasted trees.
The aim was to keep things low and work with the landscape, the architect explains, pointing out how the materials palette is kept simple and unadorned.
The Structurally Insulated Panels (SIPs) used to create the internal walls havebeen meticulously hand-stained and left unadorned, rather than covered over, for example.
The exterior is finished with low-maintenance cladding that slopes towards a water-collection system, as well as keeping the structure out of the winds.
It also makes the dark house hard to see from the surrounding landscape.
Inside, there are two cocoon-like bedrooms and an open-plan kitchen living area, heated by a wood burner.
The dining table doubles up as kitchen island and table tennis table, complete with hand-stitched leather net, for when the weather keeps you indoors.
The build process avoided as many complications as possible. The house sits on driven timber piles, theoretically allowing it to be moved if required. If sea levels rise, or if coastal erosion in this little pocket of the world becomes an issue, Farrell says.
Inside, the SIPs have been left exposed, with rooms sized to make use of single panels without any additional cuts or wastage. Reclaimed timber is also used wherever possible.
Farrell has practised for over 20 years, building up a portfolio of modest, hard-wearing houses that have garnered a clutch of awards in her native New Zealand.
Based in Queenstown, her studio is committed to using modern materials in a minimal way, often working on dramatic sites that require careful approaches to design and energy use.
The main bedroom
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Coast House is a minimalist retreat in the heart of New Zealands South Island - Wallpaper*
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NED vs NZ Live Streaming Details- When And Where To Watch Netherlands vs New Zealand Live In Your Country? New Zealand Tour Of Netherlands 2022, 1st…
Posted: at 2:45 pm
New Zealand take on the Netherlands in a two-match T20I series after clean sweeping Scotland in a T20I series. The first T20I will be played on August 4 at the Sportpark Westvliet, The Hague. The second T20I will be played at the same venue on August 5. This is a short series and the games will be played on back-to-back days.
The Kiwis played a T20I series against Scotland and beat them in all three games. New Zealand defeatedScotlandin the 1st T20I by 68 runs, 2nd T20I by 102 runs, and 3rd T20I by 7 wickets.
Meanwhile, the Netherlands are yet to play a T20I game this year. They played an ODI series against England earlier this year which was their last international assignment. They lost the 1st ODI by 232 runs, 2nd ODI by 6 wickets, and 3rd ODI by 8 wickets. The Netherlands and New Zealand have only played 1 T20I game with each other so far which was won by New Zealand.
The Kiwis will be led by Mitchell Santner as Kane Williamson continues to rest ahead of the T20 World Cup. Martin Guptill, Ish Sodhi, Lockie Ferguson and Santner himself form the core of the side without the other senior players.
In India
Fan Code will live stream the New Zealand Tour of Netherlands 2022 for Indian fans.
In the Caribbean
In the Caribbean islands (West Indies), SportsMax will present the live telecast of the NED vs NZ and T20I series. Flow Sports will present the live streaming of the matches.
In Australia
In Australia, Fox Sports and Channel 7 will present the live telecast of the matches between the Netherlands and New Zealand.
In New Zealand
In New Zealand, SKY Sport NZ will present a live telecast of the matches between the Netherlands and New Zealand.
In South Africa
In South Africa, SuperSport will present the live telecast of the New Zealand Tour of the Netherlands.
In USA and Canada
In the USA, Willow TV will present the live telecast of the series. In Canada, ATN Cricket Plus will present the live-action of matches.
In the UK
In United Kingdon, Sky Sports Cricket will present the live-action of New Zealand Tour of the Netherlands.
Also Read: Hardik Pandya & KL Rahul Get Relief From Jodhpur Court For Their Comments On Koffee With Karan Show 3 Years Ago
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