Daily Archives: September 14, 2022

Community Voices: Where were you when the world stopped turning? – The Bakersfield Californian

Posted: September 14, 2022 at 1:06 am

I once overheard a conversation. It started like this: I dont want to remember 9/11. Too many people died. It was horrible. Another person responded, If we dont remember, they might do it again. A third person said, The spot where the twin towers stood should be declared a hallowed ground.

Close to 3,000 people died during the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and numerous first responders and survivors became sick from the debris. The anniversary of the terrorist attack brings back vivid memories of a devastating loss and tragedy that will never be forgotten. So how do we deal with the memories of such deep losses?

The proper way may be found in an ideal held in the heart of every U.S. military member. It says, Leave no man behind.

This motto is built into the fabric of our service branches. In the Army Rangers Creed, the fifth stanza says: I will never leave a fallen comrade to fall into the hands of the enemy ... The Soldiers Creed says, I will always place the mission first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. I will never leave a fallen comrade. The last verse of The Airmans Creed states: I will never leave an Airman behind. Last and by no means the least, the motto of the Marine Corps Personnel Retrieval and Processing Company, those who retrieve the remains of fallen service members, is Nemo resideo, the Latin version of Leave no man behind.

Soldiers have been faithful to this principle since wars began. They have been loyal to the mission, their country, keeping the homeland safe and each other.

It is a comfort on the battlefield to know you will be brought home if you fall and will not be forgotten. It is the loving promise and bond of being a United States service member. Each soldier follows this golden rule, knowing his comrades do as well.

Is the principle of leaving no soldier behind adhered to consistently? Seventy-three thousand troops are still missing from World War II. Although the chances of them being found after several years is slim, the search does not stop. Our nations sense of patriotism and looking out for each other is what has brought us together in the most challenging times.

The memory of the people lost and missing the mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, parents and children, friends and neighbors, brothers and sisters all must remain with us and never be left behind.

The names of our loved ones who died in the 9/11 attack are written in stone at the Sept. 11 memorial site in New York. In Bakersfield, we have honored the fallen with a memorial of the twin towers on the grounds of Bakersfield College. Other similar memorials stand throughout the United States. All of them keep the memory alive of the fallen and remind us of the high cost of freedom.

As a fellow veteran, my heart beats with gratitude when I remember those who have served and given their all to protect our nation. I feel the tragedy of those who died on 9/11. However, they died for you. They died for me. They died for us.

We must never forget to give back what we have been given. Every life lost on 9/11 and in the military response after was a sacrifice. This is America, and we honor our heroes. We are united in our loyalty and follow the golden rule of loving each other. Let us give back a little today. We will sacrifice a bit of our time today to remember the lives lost and the countless families that will never forget that solemn morning. We will offer a place in our hearts. We will always pledge love and allegiance to our flag and each other as we move forward, leaving no one behind.

Sen. Shannon Grove represents Californias 16th Senate District, which encompasses large portions of Kern, Tulare and San Bernardino counties. Find her website at https://grove.cssrc.us.

Link:

Community Voices: Where were you when the world stopped turning? - The Bakersfield Californian

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on Community Voices: Where were you when the world stopped turning? – The Bakersfield Californian

Dear parents, dont ruin kids autonomy – The New Indian Express

Posted: at 1:06 am

Express News Service

KOCHI: Look at the typical school day of primary school children. Parents wake them up and push them off to the washroom. In most cases, you would hear them yelling about arranging the school bag. In a frantic hurry to put the child on the school bus, parents help them to get dressed up, arrange the books, have breakfast, and put their shoes on.Though development-wise, children are capable of doing all these tasks on their own, many parents end up depriving them of the opportunity to master skills that aid them in the journey to healthy independence and personal autonomy. We often see this pattern extending to the later years of their lives, too.Rescript parenting, right from the daily activities It is essential to encourage children to do things they can from a very young age. There has to be an uncompromising mission to achieve this through healthy child-rearing practices. Lessons of independence suitable for the age have to be initiated right from early childhood.

Golden rule: Daily activities of life, appropriate for the age, need to be performed by themselves.For instance, make them wash up, wear clothes and eat by themselves. At school-going age, they should be prepared to wake up by themselves and be at the table for breakfast on time, without any goading.

School work A personal missionOver-enthusiasm of parents to do everything for their child steals a healthy mindset that tells them that they would ultimately have to manage life by themselves. With the over-involvement of parents in school work, many children end up thinking they study their lessons or do homework just for the sake of the parents. Learning should rather be a personal mission.

Parents who coax children to study or do their homework inadvertently weaken this spirit. But, what if they dont study, if left unsupervised? This is a concern parents often raise. They, however, forget the reality that they cannot sustain this pushing beyond a point in the childs life. So, it is better they equip the child with the spirit of autonomy.

Over-involvement is certainly not good parenting, as many doting parents assume it to be. List activities that the child can do on his or her own. Make it a practice to not get involved in them. Let the children face the negative consequences, if any, of their action/inaction. Facilitate learning from mistakes and lapses, without blaming or punishing them.

Resist the urge to help or protect the child. Understand that it is not an expression of care or love. In effect, it may ruin the spirit of autonomy that is vital for life in the new world.Also, resist the trap of feeling inadequate or getting carried away when other parents elaborate on what all I do for my child. There is absolutely no space for peer pressure in this case!

SELF-DISCOVERY THROUGH INDEPENDENT THINKING Facilitate and stimulate decision-making and opinion-formation appropriate for the age. Allow free expression of aptitudes that would aid in self-discovery. Encourage everything that the child does by oneself to boost confidence. This would surely be the building blocks for a confident personality, capable of executing life plans independently. There is a need to rescript parenting styles that heavily encourage dependency. A young generation that is economically dependent on parents, but is rebellious for independence in all other aspects, as in the western culture, is perhaps a paradoxical outcome of such faulty parenting. The question is how many parents would be ready for the rescripting.

See the rest here:

Dear parents, dont ruin kids autonomy - The New Indian Express

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on Dear parents, dont ruin kids autonomy – The New Indian Express

Leading The Change In Sustainable Tourism and Hospitality | By Raki Phillips – Hospitality Net

Posted: at 1:06 am

With sustainability and ESG high up on the agenda at the Future Hospitality Summit (FHS) in Dubai this September, we asked a number of industry partners how they are leading the change when it comes to sustainable tourism and hospitality.

The global tourism industry is facing the perfect storm of ongoing uncertainty, amplified by troubling inflation, concerns about recession, geo-political uncertainty and increasing fuel prices. How are destinations and operators facing these new challenges, and how can they successfully navigate through these troubled waters?

The tourism and hospitality industry has undoubtedly been among the most affected industries over the past 24 months or so. In my 20 plus years working with international hotel brands, global attractions and theme parks as well as starting-up several F&B and hospitality concepts, the past two years have given us all the opportunity to be daring. This new (and constantly changing) reality allows us to completely rethink and revolutionise the way we do things. My golden rule is that its essential to be agile, quick and decisive, and never lose sight of whats needed to ensure long-term resilience.

In an ever-changing world, the pandemic brought into focus the need more so than ever to commit to a sustainable and responsible tourism growth. Even pre-pandemic, consumers were more mindful of sustainability and travelling in a responsible and purposeful manner and this trend is only accelerating. In a recent report from Booking.com, a huge 81% of global travelers confirmed that sustainable travel is important to them - a 10% increase over 2021 data - with 50% saying that recent news about climate change has influenced them to make more sustainable travel choices. Sustainability must now be top of mind for any destinations long-term investment and hospitality development to tap into this evolving landscape.

Often when people talk about sustainability, it is usually just a buzzword that means recycling or reducing single-use plastic. The need for good stewardship of our cultural heritage, environment, people and infrastructure has never been stronger, especially as customers look to engage and connect with brands that reflect their evolving values.

The expectation for companies to back up words with impactful actions is becoming more important. As the licensing authority for all new hotel developments, Ras Al Khaimah Tourism Development Authority is able to set guidelines and protocols to regulate sustainability standards and work closely with hotels to ensure sustainable practices. To provide independent and transparent credentials, we work with EarthCheck, experts in global environment, to co-create green practices and together with our hotel partners, collectively reduce food wastage, energy and water consumption, as well as undertake green procurement from local suppliers. In addition, we have launched the Green Hotels Rating with the aim to achieve 100% integrated sustainability across our hotels.

However, sustainability is a lot more than environmental management, waste management and water consumption - it is also about economic progress and social development. True sustainability must encompass all aspects including environment, culture, conservation and liveability. This is something that emerging destinations such as Slovenia have done with great success and is the rationale behind Ras Al Khaimahs own bold new approach to responsible stewardship and development - Balanced Tourism.

Under our all-encompassing banner of Balanced Tourism, the Authority is shaping tourism in the UAE by placing all aspects of sustainability (environment, culture, conservation and livability) at the center of its investment and development strategy. As part of this commitment, we have a adopted a measured approach with a controlled pipeline of sustainable development to ensure issues surrounding over tourism such as over development, crowding of heritage sites, and the spoiling of its unique natural environment are avoided, and creating a destination that will resonate with todays responsible traveller.

By working towards establishing the destination as a leader in sustainable tourism, we improve the lives of our citizens and workforce, protect and enhance our unique natural environments and traditional communities, as well as address the needs of the visitors and the industry.

Read the original post:

Leading The Change In Sustainable Tourism and Hospitality | By Raki Phillips - Hospitality Net

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on Leading The Change In Sustainable Tourism and Hospitality | By Raki Phillips – Hospitality Net

Back to school in UAE: Emirates Transport releases 3 animated films on school transport safety awareness – wknd.

Posted: at 1:06 am

Aimed at students of all ages, they will cover topics such as evacuation procedures in the event of an emergency

Published: Tue 13 Sep 2022, 3:30 PM

Emirates Transport (ET), the UAE's largest school transport provider, released three short cartoon films targeting school students of all grades that highlight important passenger safety guidelines for the school transport services provided by the company.

The films were launched during a visit by an ET delegation headed by Amer Al Shehhi, the supervisor of school transport operations in Abu Dhabi, Al Dhafra and Al Ain in coordination with the Abu Dhabi Police to Khalifa City, a primary school in Abu Dhabi, where it was then shown to the students.

Jasim Al Marzouqi, Executive Director of School Transport at Emirates Transport, said: Emirates Transport harnesses all its available capabilities to deliver its safety awareness messages to students benefiting from its services. It takes into account in its messages the optimal method and the best channels to reach its young target audience and achieve its awareness goals.

Raising safety levels in school transport cannot be completed without educating transported students, by providing them with appropriate knowledge and behaviour guidelines, as well as engaging with them positively regarding their role and responsibility for safety, he added.

Khaled Shukur, manager of the Environmental, Occupational Health and Safety Department, said: The three new safety awareness films use animated cartoons with an attractive modern appeal, and is available in both Arabic and English languages.

They will be circulated and shown in coordination with school administrations, according to the agreed awareness and training programmes in addition to being accessible on the company's social media channels to achieve as wide a reach as possible.

Shukur added that the films deal with various topics covering safety during the school bus journey, in which the main character 'Salem' plays the role of a mentor student who urges his colleagues to follow the optimal safety behaviour during various situations that occur on the bus, thus providing them with appropriate instructions and guidelines.

The first short film shows how to get on and off the bus safely by adhering to the Golden Rule. The second deals with evacuation procedures in the event of an emergency during the school trip, and the third short film relates to general safety procedures and regulations during the school transport trip, added the manager of the Environmental, Occupational Health and Safety Department.

ALSO READ:

See the article here:

Back to school in UAE: Emirates Transport releases 3 animated films on school transport safety awareness - wknd.

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on Back to school in UAE: Emirates Transport releases 3 animated films on school transport safety awareness – wknd.

Chiefs gameday 101: A wildly superstitious fans guide to rituals – Arrowhead Addict

Posted: at 1:06 am

Many fans do not subscribe to superstitious actions, but many border on psychosis in their rituals. Lets take a look inside the behaviors of a wildly superstitious Chiefs fans game-daypreparation.

A couple of weeks ago I took you all on a Sherpad journey through the experience that is a Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium. One of the more hallowed venues in North American sports and what many consider to be objectively the best place on Earth. Now I want to introduce you to another ritualistic practice that plagues my existence throughout the entirety of football season.

Human beings are without a doubt creatures of habit. Some of you do the same thing every single day without even realizing youre conditioned to doing it. In fact, the foundation of how most of us feed and groom ourselves on a daily basis is formed from habits learned from a very early age. Outside of eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner at the same time essentially every day and showering, brushing your teeth, doing your hair, plucking your eyebrows whatever your morning routine consists of we all have our habitual quirks in life.

Some take the same walk around the neighborhood every evening with their dogs or their family. Some workout every morning at the same time at the same gym. Others sit in the same chair in their house or apartment to take in some quality Netflix programming or if youre really old school reading a book. Some meditate, some play video games, and some even blog at the same time every day.

Others take rituals way too far. Im not talking about anything perverted or occult here, keep your eyes on the road. Im of course talking about sports football specifically, and the craziness that it can induce from even the most mentally capable and emotionally calm individuals. Am I mentally capable and emotionally calm? Maybe and no. Anyone who tries to tell you theyre calm probably isnt calm in the first place, but Im definitely not, especially when it comes to Chiefs football. But before you write this off as crazy talk, take a walk in my meticulously selected shoes for a second.

Youll find football guys everywhere who will tell you that luck is when preparation meets opportunity. Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, Chris Jones, even Andy Reid and the coaching staff work tirelessly around the clock all year long to prepare for 17 Sundays from September to January. They grind, they sweat, they bleed, they eat Q39 in their office while watching film until the wee hours of the morning. They prepare relentlessly for not just their opponents, but for situations that each season can throw at them. And when the work pays off, and the opportunity presents itself, they tend to excel.

NFL coaches, executives, and players are some of the more driven people on Earth. But what truly sends a championship caliber team over the top from contender to champion? Does everything I mentioned above help? Well, yeah. For sure. But you know what really does it?

The anonymous actions of fans across the country on the days specifically during the hours that they play football games.

Were talking every aspect of someones day revolving around something they cant control in the least bit. Is it crazy? Absolutely. But isnt that part of the beauty of sports? ESPN famously ran an ad campaign in the early 2000s touting the tagline Its not crazy, its sports. If youve rooted for a team long enough, youve more than likely been driven crazy by said organization, or atvery least know someone who has. But you know what they say: its not crazy if it works.

Im glad you asked.

To truly understand, you have to wrap your head around what it means to be truly superstitious. Not just a little stitious. Im talking super superstitious. I was around my great grandma a lot when I was a kid. She was raised in the south in the 1920s and 30s the dust bowl south. The birthplace of wives tales. So to say that Ive learned some things that I should never do, under any circumstance, would be an understatement.

I am 34 years old. Ive never knowingly crossed the path of a black cat. Ive never once stepped under a ladder. Never broken a mirror. Ive never even clipped my fingernails or toenails on a Friday or a Sunday. I abstain from both because no one really ever knew which day was correct, so Ive just been oddly terrified of both my entire life.

Once you begin to understand how my brain works, youll begin to understand how I operate on game-days. When at Arrowhead you park in the same spot (or at least close by, depending on availability). You drink the same beverage combo. You walk in at the same time, etc, etc, etc.

But it all really starts before hand and permeates more deeply when youre watching from the safety and security of your own home.

Everyone knows that the proper game-day prep begins with the proper game-day threads. A game-day shirt is a must. Of course it gets cooler towards the end of season, so make sure you designate a game-day hoodie for the colder months. If youre like me, you need consistency all the way through the process. Game-day shorts (and pants, again it gets cold) come highly recommended, but are not as crucial as the shirt. If youre living or have lived life as a balding man like I did for years, might I interest you in a game-day hat as well? For our female readers, a hat would also work or you could even go oppo from that and rock a Chiefs headband, bow, or hair tie. Guys, help yourselves on that too not my style, but it takes all kinds to make the world go round.

Were not just covering our mid-drifts here, folks. This is head to toe exercise. That means you need to find and commit to a pair of game-day shoes that you feel will make 53 grown men play football to the best of their abilities. My choice? My Nike Killshots I got inyou guessed it, 2019. They work! Why would I change it up? I do in the winter months if Im at Football Mecca on Sundays, but otherwise its the tennies. Find what works for you, and rock it.

The final part of the clothing portion is without question the most crucial. Youre now set on what other peoplecan see about your wardrobe, but what about what theycantsee? This is no exaggeration I wore the same underwear to and during every game for 3 years until they became simply tattered. Your undies matter. Your socks matter. If youre an undershirt person, that matters. It all matters, but when you consider the proximity of undergarments to majorly important parts of your anatomy, I would argue underwear are the most crucial of game-day fan traditions.

Caveat: In any of these scenarios, if the Chiefs go on a losing streak, consider switching it up. You can always come back to it if the alternative doesnt work. And always change your underwear in a responsible and sanitary way.

This can have numerous answers. It all depends on where you watch the game. If youre always on the go, you may be watching from a phone, laptop, or tablet. Thats fine! For the more nomadic of us, I would advise you find a spot that you deem A) most effective to your teams success and B) most comfortable, in that order. Bonus points if youre in an airport, bus stop, or train station and you find a fellow traveller wearing your teams gear to enjoy the game with.

Watching from home? Heres where the tedious superstitions come back in to play. I dont care if you have a favorite recliner, if you watch from a specific couch, or you sit on the floor. I dont care if you stand up. Justcommit to something.I sit in the exact same spot on my couch downstairs the comfy couch every time I watch the Chiefs at home. Do I always watch the Chiefs at home? No. But if Im at my in-laws house, you better believe Im in the same spot on their couch. If Im at my parents house? Same. Follow the golden rule: commit, then sit.

Caveat: If the Chiefs have turnovers on multiple drives in a row, switch up the seating. Theres bad energy everywhere, do what you can to change it. Be the sage.

Dont be crazy. Of course you dont have to eat the same thing every week. Each weeks menu should be carefully and individually crafted to maximize your dietary needs for the given week and opponent.

Playing the Bills this week? Emasculate the population of Buffalo by making wings better than they could ever dream of. Eagles? Cheesesteaks on the menu that would make Genos mouth water. What about a team like the Ravens, a food that would be repulsive to consume? Just grill a whole chicken and tell people its a Raven, I promise you it works and our quarterback will maintain legal custody of theirs.

My point is that the menu can change. In all honesty, it doesnt have to be themed every week. I would eat pizza for every meal, including game-days even when the Chiefs arent playing a team from a city with pizza-rich tradition. And while the food can rotate, Id encourage you to have at least one game-day beverage that you keep coming back to. I have a general rule of thumb for my beverage consumption on Sundays in the fall, but I will not try to sway you one way or the other you choose your own path on this one.

Caveat: If electing to consume adult beverages, do so responsibly. No one likes the drunk guy who thinks the officials can hear him through the TV.

Thats the beauty of it all you dont.

Embrace the process. Specifically in Chiefs Kingdom, we have the privilege of watching a historically significant span of consistent high level football. Since 2013 when Andy Reid took the helm, and specifically since 2018 when Patrick Mahomes was named the starting quarterback, the Chiefs have been on a historic tear from an offensive standpoint as well as a team achievement perspective. Being the first team to host four consecutive AFC Championships is nothing to sneeze at, especially with two Super Bowl appearances and a Lombardi to show for it.

So why not try to keep pushing them to greater heights? Lets face it, nothing we do is going to impact the way that the 53 guys on the field play. Its just not. Sure, we can get loud at Arrowhead and get the defense hyped up, that definitely helps. For those guys, the drive comes from within. But our quirky, albeit in some instances deeply personal, rituals that we commit to on Sundays dont really move the needle.

But when you wear that same shirt, those same shoes, sit in that same seat, around the same people, wearing the same underwear and the team does something unexpectedly spectacular, for a second it gives you some pause to wonder if the two things arent somehow weirdly tied together. When you really commit to it and your team finds real, consistent success, you can trick yourself into thinking that maybe, just maybe, you had something to do with it.

I know this all sounds crazy. But I promise you its not crazy if it works.

Read the original post:

Chiefs gameday 101: A wildly superstitious fans guide to rituals - Arrowhead Addict

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on Chiefs gameday 101: A wildly superstitious fans guide to rituals – Arrowhead Addict

ALFORD: Noisy kids make it hard to sleep in church these days – The Sentinel-Echo

Posted: at 1:06 am

When the church service ended, a father scolded his preschool son for being noisy.

Dont you understand why its important to be quiet during the sermon? the father asked.

Yeah, because other people are sleeping, the preschooler said.

Sometimes things backfire when were trying to make a point to our children, and that was perhaps one of those times.

Another was when a father was trying to teach his son to steer clear of alcohol. That father put a worm in a glass of water and another worm in a glass of moonshine.

The worm in the water lived, and the worm in the moonshine died.

The father then looked at his son, and asked, What does that show you?

Well, the son answered, it shows that if you drink moonshine you wont have worms.

Fathers really do teach their children lots of things sometimes intentionally and sometimes unintentionally.

Perhaps you remember the Like father, like son anti-smoking TV commercial from the late 1960s. It showed a little boy wanting to do everything his father does. When the father lights up a cigarette, the little boy watches closely. A narrator says, Like father like son. Think about it.

So I was reading Hosea the other day and ran into an interesting parallel to the like father, like son idea.

Like people, like priest: and I will punish them for their ways and reward them their doings (Hosea 4:9).

That verse reminds us that we can learn good habits and bad from those we worship with. Its very important that congregations have biblically solid preachers to lead them and to show them the way.

I wrote an article not long ago about a pastor who gave a kidney to one of his church members. You know why he did it? Because his church member needed one, and he, the pastor, happened to have two. So, it seemed altogether natural to that dear pastor to give one away.

Thats the kind of pastor who sets a great example for a congregation.

Great pastors are always doing incredible things like that. Great pastors live by the Golden Rule of Matthew 7:12 by treating others the way theyd want to be treated.

Great pastors lead their congregations into closer walks with the Lord by being living, breathing examples of love.

Jesus said, A new commandment I give you, that ye love one another; as I have loved you. By this shall men know that ye are my disciples, if you have love one to another (John 13:34-35).

A great pastor lives out that kind of love. and a great pastors ultimate reward is to see Gods people do the same.

The TV commercial that declared like father, like son is perfectly true.

And thats why we need noisy little boys in church, to make sure others stay awake and listen to the preacher.

Reach Roger Alford at 502-514-6857 or rogeralford1@gmail.com.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

More here:

ALFORD: Noisy kids make it hard to sleep in church these days - The Sentinel-Echo

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on ALFORD: Noisy kids make it hard to sleep in church these days – The Sentinel-Echo

‘The number 6 million is impenetrable’: Burns discusses new film, ‘The U.S. and the Holocaust’ New Hampshire Bulletin – New Hampshire Bulletin

Posted: at 1:06 am

The U.S. and the Holocaust, a three-episode film by Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, and Sarah Botstein, will debut on Sept. 18 on PBS. Burns and his partners and staff at Florentine Films work out of a production studio in Walpole, N.H. After watching the film, I interviewed Burns.

Our discussion has been shortened and lightly edited for length and clarity.

Did your thinking about this project change between when you started it, before the Trump presidency, and when you finished it?

We did it because we were interested in the subject. Were not interested in scoring any contemporary points. We know that whatever we work on will resonate with today, that the echoes of yesterday will fully engage with the present moment, but its our responsibility not to pay any attention to that.

After the World War II film [The War] came out in 2007, we were approached by people saying, How come you didnt talk about what an anti-Semite FDR was? or Why didnt you explore why the St. Louis [a ship carrying Jewish refugees] was turned away from American shores? or Why didnt the United States bomb Auschwitz? Finally, we said, You know what? We really have to do this.

Coincidentally, the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., had just started an exhibition called Americans and the Holocaust and asked if we would be interested in making a film about it. We said yes, wed love to be associated with you and get your help in identifying sources, archives, and scholars.

Then it was just pushing to get to a complex relationship between what transpired in the Holocaust through the filter of what Americans saw, what we knew, what we didnt know, what we did, what we didnt do, what we should have done. You could just march the Holocaust story along while going back and forth between the United States and Germany and seeing uncomfortable echoes between the two places.

What do you hope people will take from the film in the current political environment?

Were storytellers, and every person will relate, or not relate, in their own individual ways. And thats a good thing.

A sensitivity to our fragility is an important reason we accelerated the project it was going to come out next year. I think everyone in the film articulates this, but no one more precisely than Daniel Mendelsohn, when he says, dont kid yourself, theres no bottom to what human beings can do and how fragile our institutions are.

I insisted on putting a paragraph early in episode one saying that if you wanted to be in the hippest, most democratic, artistically exciting, vibrant place in 1931 and 32, youd do no better than Berlin in arts, architecture, music, intellectual circles. And the change was almost instantaneous.

The willingness of people to believe the lies of an evil regime and manipulative leaders demagogues isnt something thats a one-off. It isnt, Oh, its too bad that happened. We see the rise of authoritarianism, we see the stresses on democratic institutions, we see that the superficial appeal of order has a huge human consequence.

I was glad to see Mendelsohn in the film. Years ago, I read his book, The Lost: A Search for Six of the Six Million. He goes looking for six family members killed by the Nazis. The book changed the way I saw the Holocaust.

The number 6 million is impenetrable. It means nothing anymore. We begin the film by saying lets reconfigure that equation. There are 9 million Jews in Europe in 1933, and by 1945, two out of three are missing. Were looking at a woman looking out the window joined by, one assumes, her father and her mother, and you realize that in any given threesome, two are missing.

Or it is Mendelsohn devoting so much of his life to finding out what happened to his great uncle, Shmiel Jager, and his wife and four daughters, whatever it takes. And he particularizes it that was the word he used.

More than half the Jews in Germany and Austria escaped. They often had connections in Western Europe and the United States. But when Germany expanded for the breathing room the lebensraum that Hitler wanted in places where he considered people stateless and nameless, much the way we treated Native Americans, he ended up acquiring Jews. That led to a decision to kill them all.

In your film the United States before World War II is full of anti-Semitism, racism, eugenics, the Chinese Exclusion Act, forced deportation of Mexicans who had become American citizens, attempts to restrict immigration to Nordic races. This is so different from the history I learned in high school. Should this be part of the curriculum?

Nell Irvin Painter [historian quoted in the film] is smart about this: We are an exceptional country, but sometimes were not. If you say, as Lincoln put it, you are the last best hope of earth, youve got to be tougher on yourself than anybody else.

We cannot get by anymore with a sanitized view of our history. It exposes women to all the things that the Me Too movement is trying to say. It relegates Native peoples and African Americans to backseat, passive victims or non-existent people whose stories dont need to be told because its upsetting to some. That is not right.

Were obliged to tell a fuller story, and that makes it richer. We need to honor what actually takes place.

Your film describes Franklin D. Roosevelts Holocaust strategy. It was to win the war as quickly as possible and punish the perpetrators afterward, not to rescue the Jews. He could see no way to rescue them, and with all the losses his armies were suffering, he thought it impolitic to lose more lives in a rescue attempt. Was he wrong?

Politically, nothings wrong with it. Its accurate. Hes not a king or absolute dictator he cant by fiat rescue Jews and admit them to the United States.

Hes not unmindful of the problem. He just knows what he has to do. It seems, in retrospect, perhaps cruel, but lets back up were all culpable. We repeatedly tell you about the polls taken at the time. Theyre devastating. Even after we learn about Kristallnacht, even after we see the footage from liberated concentration camps, nobody wants to let any more Jews in.

Roosevelt, a masterful politician, knows this what he can pass, what he cant do. Lets not just put it on FDR. There are lots of forces operating.

If we had been more public about the crimes being committed, earlier and louder, that might have helped. We didnt do that. That is on FDR, but its also on members of his administration who were virulently anti-Semitic and slow-walked or obstructed anything good. It is true of Congress, reflecting the mood of the country a vast majority of American citizens.

Holocaust survivors, long the tellers of this story, are dying off. Has that reduced the attention rising generations pay to this tragedy and what they know about it?

Youre sadly right were losing a lot of witnesses. A generation from now, there wont be any around, so it seems important to hear their stories.

Fortunately, Steven Spielberg and the Shoah Foundation have saved 54,000 testimonies. Hes got an elaborate hologram project that has asked questions of dozens of survivors. Its almost impossible when a school group comes through for someone to ask a question these survivors havent already been asked and have a hologram answer it. That is a way to keep it alive.

But there were themes that needed to be told. There were back eddies of American experience germane to this story, whether its the Germans modeling their exclusionary laws against the Jews in the early 1930s by studying our Jim Crow laws in the South, whether its Hitlers approval of our treatment of Native peoples or our immigration act.

And then hearing that some of the titans of our mythological past Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, just to mention two were virulent anti-Semites. And the eugenics movement that bone-chilling comment by Helen Keller essentially approving of death committees. Here is a kind of eugenics that would not have let her live.

How do you think what your film conveys about our behavior 75-80 years ago can help us face the problems were having today with similar issues: a rise in anti-Semitism, a racial divide, white supremacist violence, prejudice against immigrants?

Yes, there are similar issues, which is why, in the past, we rarely brought our films up to the present, but in this film we do. Its just information, but its important. As the novelist Richard Powers said, the best arguments in the world wont change a single point of view. The only thing that can do that is a good story, and we hope weve told a good story.

Why do you think anti-Semitism persists in American today?

When I was working on the country music film, I realized that I had been making films about the U.S. for nearly 50 years. But I had also been making films about us, the lower-case, two-letter plural pronoun all the intimacy of us and all the majesty, intricacy, complexity, and controversy of the U.S. Thats been my beat.

The epiphany was that theres only us, theres no them. When you see somebody creating a them, were on our way. It was the malevolent strategy and tactics of an evil demagogue to blame a group of others. In this case that was Jews, people without a country, people who brought us the ideas of the Golden Rule, fair play, the ideals of socialism, an internationalist view.

If you are appealing to the lowest common denominator in people, its easy to make Jews or someone whose skin pigmentation is slightly different the enemy.

The rest is here:

'The number 6 million is impenetrable': Burns discusses new film, 'The U.S. and the Holocaust' New Hampshire Bulletin - New Hampshire Bulletin

Posted in Golden Rule | Comments Off on ‘The number 6 million is impenetrable’: Burns discusses new film, ‘The U.S. and the Holocaust’ New Hampshire Bulletin – New Hampshire Bulletin

What the Orion Nebula Looks Like to Webb Telescope Vs Hubble Telescope – Gizmodo

Posted: at 1:05 am

The Webb Telescope recently imaged a region of the Orion Nebula associated with star birth, and the result is about what weve come to expect from the cutting-edge space observatory.

Im not saying that the image is bad. Its quite nice! It was taken with the telescopes NIRCam instrument and captures an inner region of the Orion Nebula.

But, I must say, its not quite as thrilling asWebbs recent conquests: a deep field eight times larger than the telescopes first, the eerie tendrils of the Tarantula Nebula, and the observatorys first direct image of an exoplanet.

This image was taken as part of Webbs early science program by the PDRs4All scientific collaboration. The collaborations goal is to image Photo-Dissociation Regions (PDRs), where ultraviolet light from stars creates warm regions of gas and dust in space.

The predominant feature here is the Orion Bar, a massive belt of gas and dust, which appears brownish-yellow. Toward the center of the bar is a bright star, 2 Orionis A. The star is bright enough to be visible from Earth with the naked eye, if the observer is in a dark enough place.

G/O Media may get a commission

The image is peppered with hot, young stars, especially toward the upper right corner. These stars are collectively known as the Trapezium Cluster; their ultraviolet radiation is slowly eroding the Orion Bar. So an image that at first glance looks to capture a giant space mustache shows a more dynamic phenomenon than you might expect.

Set next to an earlier image of the Orion Nebula taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, Webbs impressive quality is more apparent. The Webb image shows cooler material than Hubbles, where hot gas is the main attraction. Webbs infrared instruments are an improvement on Hubbles in that they can peer through clouds of dust and gas, to see star-forming regions and other areas of astrophysical intrigue.

When Webbs images debuted, they appeared almost shockingly resolved. Now, that novelty has faded a bit, as weve grown accustomed to seeing the cosmos in what was once unprecedented detail. But setting Webb images next to Hubble shotsno disrespect to Hubbleis a great reminder of how much our observational technology has improved. Its also a reminder of how our knowledge of the cosmos is only as good as our best technology.

More: Are the Colors in Webb Telescope Images Fake?

Follow this link:
What the Orion Nebula Looks Like to Webb Telescope Vs Hubble Telescope - Gizmodo

Posted in Hubble Telescope | Comments Off on What the Orion Nebula Looks Like to Webb Telescope Vs Hubble Telescope – Gizmodo

Understanding Human Genetic Variation – NCBI Bookshelf

Posted: at 1:04 am

Genetics is the scientific study of inherited variation. Human genetics, then, is the scientific study of inherited human variation.

Why study human genetics? One reason is simply an interest in better understanding ourselves. As a branch of genetics, human genetics concerns itself with what most of us consider to be the most interesting species on earth: Homo sapiens. But our interest in human genetics does not stop at the boundaries of the species, for what we learn about human genetic variation and its sources and transmission inevitably contributes to our understanding of genetics in general, just as the study of variation in other species informs our understanding of our own.

A second reason for studying human genetics is its practical value for human welfare. In this sense, human genetics is more an applied science than a fundamental science. One benefit of studying human genetic variation is the discovery and description of the genetic contribution to many human diseases. This is an increasingly powerful motivation in light of our growing understanding of the contribution that genes make to the development of diseases such as cancer, heart disease, and diabetes. In fact, society has been willing in the past and continues to be willing to pay significant amounts of money for research in this area, primarily because of its perception that such study has enormous potential to improve human health. This perception, and its realization in the discoveries of the past 20 years, have led to a marked increase in the number of people and organizations involved in human genetics.

This second reason for studying human genetics is related to the first. The desire to develop medical practices that can alleviate the suffering associated with human disease has provided strong support to basic research. Many basic biological phenomena have been discovered and described during the course of investigations into particular disease conditions. A classic example is the knowledge about human sex chromosomes that was gained through the study of patients with sex chromosome abnormalities. A more current example is our rapidly increasing understanding of the mechanisms that regulate cell growth and reproduction, understanding that we have gained primarily through a study of genes that, when mutated, increase the risk of cancer.

Likewise, the results of basic research inform and stimulate research into human disease. For example, the development of recombinant DNA techniques () rapidly transformed the study of human genetics, ultimately allowing scientists to study the detailed structure and functions of individual human genes, as well as to manipulate these genes in a variety of previously unimaginable ways.

Recombinant techniques have transformed the study of human genetics.

A third reason for studying human genetics is that it gives us a powerful tool for understanding and describing human evolution. At one time, data from physical anthropology (including information about skin color, body build, and facial traits) were the only source of information available to scholars interested in tracing human evolutionary history. Today, however, researchers have a wealth of genetic data, including molecular data, to call upon in their work.

Two research approaches were historically important in helping investigators understand the biological basis of heredity. The first of these approaches, transmission genetics, involved crossing organisms and studying the offsprings' traits to develop hypotheses about the mechanisms of inheritance. This work demonstrated that in some organisms at least, heredity seems to follow a few definite and rather simple rules.

The second approach involved using cytologic techniques to study the machinery and processes of cellular reproduction. This approach laid a solid foundation for the more conceptual understanding of inheritance that developed as a result of transmission genetics. By the early 1900s, cytologists had demonstrated that heredity is the consequence of the genetic continuity of cells by cell division, had identified the gametes as the vehicles that transmit genetic information from one generation to another, and had collected strong evidence for the central role of the nucleus and the chromosomes in heredity.

As important as they were, the techniques of transmission genetics and cytology were not enough to help scientists understand human genetic variation at the level of detail that is now possible. The central advantage that today's molecular techniques offer is that they allow researchers to study DNA directly. Before the development of these techniques, scientists studying human genetic variation were forced to make inferences about molecular differences from the phenotypes produced by mutant genes. Furthermore, because the genes associated with most single-gene disorders are relatively rare, they could be studied in only a small number of families. Many of the traits associated with these genes also are recessive and so could not be detected in people with heterozygous genotypes. Unlike researchers working with other species, human geneticists are restricted by ethical considerations from performing experimental, "at-will" crosses on human subjects. In addition, human generations are on the order of 20 to 40 years, much too slow to be useful in classic breeding experiments. All of these limitations made identifying and studying genes in humans both tedious and slow.

In the last 50 years, however, beginning with the discovery of the structure of DNA and accelerating significantly with the development of recombinant DNA techniques in the mid-1970s, a growing battery of molecular techniques has made direct study of human DNA a reality. Key among these techniques are restriction analysis and molecular recombination, which allow researchers to cut and rejoin DNA molecules in highly specific and predictable ways; amplification techniques, such as the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which make it possible to make unlimited copies of any fragment of DNA; hybridization techniques, such as fluorescence in situ hybridization, which allow scientists to compare DNA samples from different sources and to locate specific base sequences within samples; and the automated sequencing techniques that today are allowing workers to sequence the human genome at an unprecedented rate.

On the immediate horizon are even more powerful techniques, techniques that scientists expect will have a formidable impact on the future of both research and clinical genetics. One such technique, DNA chip technology (also called DNA microarray technology), is a revolutionary new tool designed to identify mutations in genes or survey expression of tens of thousands of genes in one experiment.

In one application of this technology, the chip is designed to detect mutations in a particular gene. The DNA microchip consists of a small glass plate encased in plastic. It is manufactured using a process similar to the process used to make computer microchips. On its surface, it contains synthetic single-stranded DNA sequences identical to that of the normal gene and all possible mutations of that gene. To determine whether an individual possesses a mutation in the gene, a scientist first obtains a sample of DNA from the person's blood, as well as a sample of DNA that does not contain a mutation in that gene. After denaturing, or separating, the DNA samples into single strands and cutting them into smaller, more manageable fragments, the scientist labels the fragments with fluorescent dyes: the person's DNA with red dye and the normal DNA with green dye. Both sets of labeled DNA are allowed to hybridize, or bind, to the synthetic DNA on the chip. If the person does not have a mutation in the gene, both DNA samples will hybridize equivalently to the chip and the chip will appear uniformly yellow. However, if the person does possess a mutation, the mutant sequence on the chip will hybridize to the patient's sample, but not to the normal DNA, causing it (the chip) to appear red in that area. The scientist can then examine this area more closely to confirm that a mutation is present.

DNA microarray technology is also allowing scientists to investigate the activity in different cell types of thousands of genes at the same time, an advance that will help researchers determine the complex functional relationships that exist between individual genes. This type of analysis involves placing small snippets of DNA from hundreds or thousands of genes on a single microscope slide, then allowing fluorescently labeled mRNA molecules from a particular cell type to hybridize to them. By measuring the fluorescence of each spot on the slide, scientists can determine how active various genes are in that cell type. Strong fluorescence indicates that many mRNA molecules hybridized to the gene and, therefore, that the gene is very active in that cell type. Conversely, no fluorescence indicates that none of the cell's mRNA molecules hybridized to the gene and that the gene is inactive in that cell type.

Although these technologies are still relatively new and are being used primarily for research, scientists expect that one day they will have significant clinical applications. For example, DNA chip technology has the potential to significantly reduce the time and expense involved in genetic testing. This technology or others like it may one day help make it possible to define an individual's risk of developing many types of hereditary cancer as well as other common disorders, such as heart disease and diabetes. Likewise, scientists may one day be able to classify human cancers based on the patterns of gene activity in the tumor cells and then be able to design treatment strategies that are targeted directly to each specific type of cancer.

Homo sapiens is a relatively young species and has not had as much time to accumulate genetic variation as have the vast majority of species on earth, most of which predate humans by enormous expanses of time. Nonetheless, there is considerable genetic variation in our species. The human genome comprises about 3 109 base pairs of DNA, and the extent of human genetic variation is such that no two humans, save identical twins, ever have been or will be genetically identical. Between any two humans, the amount of genetic variationbiochemical individualityis about .1 percent. This means that about one base pair out of every 1,000 will be different between any two individuals. Any two (diploid) people have about 6 106 base pairs that are different, an important reason for the development of automated procedures to analyze genetic variation.

The most common polymorphisms (or genetic differences) in the human genome are single base-pair differences. Scientists call these differences SNPs, for single-nucleotide polymorphisms. When two different haploid genomes are compared, SNPs occur, on average, about every 1,000 bases. Other types of polymorphismsfor example, differences in copy number, insertions, deletions, duplications, and rearrangementsalso occur, but much less frequently.

Notwithstanding the genetic differences between individuals, all humans have a great deal of their genetic information in common. These similarities help define us as a species. Furthermore, genetic variation around the world is distributed in a rather continuous manner; there are no sharp, discontinuous boundaries between human population groups. In fact, research results consistently demonstrate that about 85 percent of all human genetic variation exists within human populations, whereas about only 15 percent of variation exists between populations (). That is, research reveals that Homo sapiens is one continuously variable, interbreeding species. Ongoing investigation of human genetic variation has even led biologists and physical anthropologists to rethink traditional notions of human racial groups. The amount of genetic variation between these traditional classifications actually falls below the level that taxonomists use to designate subspecies, the taxonomic category for other species that corresponds to the designation of race in Homo sapiens. This finding has caused some biologists to call the validity of race as a biological construct into serious question.

Most variation occurs within populations.

Analysis of human genetic variation also confirms that humans share much of their genetic information with the rest of the natural worldan indication of the relatedness of all life by descent with modification from common ancestors. The highly conserved nature of many genetic regions across considerable evolutionary distance is especially obvious in genes related to development. For example, mutations in the patched gene produce developmental abnormalities in Drosophila, and mutations in the patched homolog in humans produce analogous structural deformities in the developing human embryo.

Geneticists have used the reality of evolutionary conservation to detect genetic variations associated with some cancers. For example, mutations in the genes responsible for repair of DNA mismatches that arise during DNA replication are associated with one form of colon cancer. These mismatched repair genes are conserved in evolutionary history all the way back to the bacterium Escherichia coli, where the genes are designated Mutl and Muts. Geneticists suspected that this form of colon cancer was associated with a failure of mismatch repair, and they used the known sequences from the E. coli genes to probe the human genome for homologous sequences. This work led ultimately to the identification of a gene that is associated with increased risk for colon cancer.

Almost all human genetic variation is relatively insignificant biologically; that is, it has no adaptive significance. Some variation (for example, a neutral mutation) alters the amino acid sequence of the resulting protein but produces no detectable change in its function. Other variation (for example, a silent mutation) does not even change the amino acid sequence. Furthermore, only a small percentage of the DNA sequences in the human genome are coding sequences (sequences that are ultimately translated into protein) or regulatory sequences (sequences that can influence the level, timing, and tissue specificity of gene expression). Differences that occur elsewhere in the DNAin the vast majority of the DNA that has no known functionhave no impact.

Some genetic variation, however, can be positive, providing an advantage in changing environments. The classic example from the high school biology curriculum is the mutation for sickle hemoglobin, which in the heterozygous state provides a selective advantage in areas where malaria is endemic.

More recent examples include mutations in the CCR5 gene that appear to provide protection against AIDS. The CCR5 gene encodes a protein on the surface of human immune cells. HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, infects immune cells by binding to this protein and another protein on the surface of those cells. Mutations in the CCR5 gene that alter its level of expression or the structure of the resulting protein can decrease HIV infection. Early research on one genetic variant indicates that it may have risen to high frequency in Northern Europe about 700 years ago, at about the time of the European epidemic of bubonic plague. This finding has led some scientists to hypothesize that the CCR5 mutation may have provided protection against infection by Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. The fact that HIV and Y. pestis both infect macrophages supports the argument for selective advantage of this genetic variant.

The sickle cell and AIDS/plague stories remind us that the biological significance of genetic variation depends on the environment in which genes are expressed. It also reminds us that differential selection and evolution would not proceed in the absence of genetic variation within a species.

Some genetic variation, of course, is associated with disease, as classic single-gene disorders such as sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, and Duchenne muscular dystrophy remind us. Increasingly, research also is uncovering genetic variations associated with the more common diseases that are among the major causes of sickness and death in developed countriesdiseases such as heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and bipolar disease (manic-depression). Whereas disorders such as cystic fibrosis or Huntington disease result from the effects of mutation in a single gene and are evident in virtually all environments, the more common diseases result from the interaction of multiple genes and environmental variables. Such diseases therefore are termed polygenic and multifactorial. In fact, the vast majority of human traits, diseases or otherwise, are multifactorial.

The genetic distinctions between relatively rare single-gene disorders and the more common multifactorial diseases are significant. Genetic variations that underlie single-gene disorders generally are relatively recent, and they often have a major, detrimental impact, disrupting homeostasis in significant ways. Such disorders also generally exact their toll early in life, often before the end of childhood. In contrast, the genetic variations that underlie common, multifactorial diseases generally are of older origin and have a smaller, more gradual effect on homeostasis. They also generally have their onset in adulthood. The last two characteristics make the ability to detect genetic variations that predispose/increase risk of common diseases especially valuable because people have time to modify their behavior in ways that can reduce the likelihood that the disease will develop, even against a background of genetic predisposition.

As noted earlier, one of the benefits of understanding human genetic variation is its practical value for understanding and promoting health and for understanding and combating disease. We probably cannot overestimate the importance of this benefit. First, as shows, virtually every human disease has a genetic component. In some diseases, such as Huntington disease, Tay-Sachs disease, and cystic fibrosis, this component is very large. In other diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, and heart disease, the genetic component is more modest. In fact, we do not typically think of these diseases as "genetic diseases," because we inherit not the certainty of developing a disease, but only a predisposition to developing it.

Virtually all human diseases, except perhaps trauma, have a genetic component.

In still other diseases, the genetic component is very small. The crucial point, however, is that it is there. Even infectious diseases, diseases that we have traditionally placed in a completely different category than genetic disorders, have a real, albeit small, genetic component. For example, as the CCR5 example described earlier illustrates, even AIDS is influenced by a person's genotype. In fact, some people appear to have genetic resistance to HIV infection as a result of carrying a variant of the CCR5 gene.

Second, each of us is at some genetic risk, and therefore can benefit, at least theoretically, from the progress scientists are making in understanding and learning how to respond to these risks. Scientists estimate that each of us carries between 5 and 50 mutations that carry some risk for disease or disability. Some of us may not experience negative consequences from the mutations we carry, either because we do not live long enough for it to happen or because we may not be exposed to the relevant environmental triggers. The reality, however, is that the potential for negative consequences from our genes exists for each of us.

How is modern genetics helping us address the challenge of human disease? As shows, modern genetic analysis of a human disease begins with mapping and cloning the associated gene or genes. Some of the earliest disease genes to be mapped and cloned were the genes associated with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, retinoblastoma, and cystic fibrosis. More recently, scientists have announced the cloning of genes for breast cancer, diabetes, and Parkinson disease.

Mapping and cloning a gene can lead to strategies that reduce the risk of disease (preventive medicine); guidelines for prescribing drugs based on a person's genotype (pharmacogenomics); procedures that alter the affected gene (gene therapy); or drugs (more...)

As also shows, mapping and cloning a disease-related gene opens the way for the development of a variety of new health care strategies. At one end of the spectrum are genetic tests intended to identify people at increased risk for the disease and recognize genotypic differences that have implications for effective treatment. At the other end are new drug and gene therapies that specifically target the biochemical mechanisms that underlie the disease symptoms or even replace, manipulate, or supplement nonfunctional genes with functional ones. Indeed, as suggests, we are entering the era of molecular medicine.

Genetic testing is not a new health care strategy. Newborn screening for diseases like PKU has been going on for 30 years in many states. Nevertheless, the remarkable progress scientists are making in mapping and cloning human disease genes brings with it the prospect for the development of more genetic tests in the future. The availability of such tests can have a significant impact on the way the public perceives a particular disease and can also change the pattern of care that people in affected families might seek and receive. For example, the identification of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and the demonstration that particular variants of these genes are associated with an increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer have paved the way for the development of guidelines and protocols for testing individuals with a family history of these diseases. BRCA1, located on the long arm of chromosome 17, was the first to be isolated, and variants of this gene account for about 50 percent of all inherited breast cancer, or about 5 percent of all breast cancer. Variants of BRCA2, located on the long arm of chromosome 13, appear to account for about 30 to 40 percent of all inherited breast cancer. Variants of these genes also increase slightly the risk for men of developing breast, prostate, or possibly other cancers.

Scientists estimate that hundreds of thousands of women in the United States have 1 of hundreds of significant mutations already detected in the BRCA1 gene. For a woman with a family history of breast cancer, the knowledge that she carries one of the variants of BRCA1 or BRCA2 associated with increased risk can be important information. If she does carry one of these variants, she and her physician can consider several changes in her health care, such as increasing the frequency of physical examinations; introducing mammography at an earlier age; and even having prophylactic mastectomy. In the future, drugs may also be available that decrease the risk of developing breast cancer.

The ability to test for the presence in individuals of particular gene variants is also changing the way drugs are prescribed and developed. A rapidly growing field known as pharmacogenomics focuses on crucial genetic differences that cause drugs to work well in some people and less well, or with dangerous adverse reactions, in others. For example, researchers investigating Alzheimer disease have found that the way patients respond to drug treatment can depend on which of three genetic variants of the ApoE (Apolipoprotein E) gene a person carries. Likewise, some of the variability in children's responses to therapeutic doses of albuterol, a drug used to treat asthma, was recently linked to genotypic differences in the beta-2-adrenergic receptor. Because beta-2-adrenergic receptor agonists (of which albuterol is one) are the most widely used agents in the treatment of asthma, these results may have profound implications for understanding the genetic factors that determine an individual's response to asthma therapy.

Experts predict that increasingly in the future, physicians will use genetic tests to match drugs to an individual patient's body chemistry, so that the safest and most effective drugs and dosages can be prescribed. After identifying the genotypes that determine individual responses to particular drugs, pharmaceutical companies also likely will set out to develop new, highly specific drugs and revive older ones whose effects seemed in the past too unpredictable to be of clinical value.

Knowledge of the molecular structure of disease-related genes also is changing the way researchers approach developing new drugs. A striking example followed the discovery in 1989 of the gene associated with cystic fibrosis (CF). Researchers began to study the function of the normal and defective proteins involved in order to understand the biochemical consequences of the gene's variant forms and to develop new treatment strategies based on that knowledge. The normal protein, called CFTR for cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, is embedded in the membranes of several cell types in the body, where it serves as a channel, transporting chloride ions out of the cells. In CF patients, depending on the particular mutation the individual carries, the CFTR protein may be reduced or missing from the cell membrane, or may be present but not function properly. In some mutations, synthesis of CFTR protein is interrupted, and the cells produce no CFTR molecules at all.

Although all of the mutations associated with CF impair chloride transport, the consequences for patients with different mutations vary. For example, patients with mutations causing absent or markedly reduced CFTR protein may have more severe disease than patients with mutations in which CFTR is present but has altered function. The different mutations also suggest different treatment strategies. For example, the most common CF-related mutation (called delta F508) leads to the production of protein molecules (called delta F508 CFTR) that are misprocessed and are degraded prematurely before they reach the cell membrane. This finding suggests that drug treatments that would enhance transport of the defective delta F508 protein to the cell membrane or prevent its degradation could yield important benefits for patients with delta F508 CFTR.

Finally, the identification, cloning, and sequencing of a disease-related gene can open the door to the development of strategies for treating the disease using the instructions encoded in the gene itself. Collectively referred to as gene therapy, these strategies typically involve adding a copy of the normal variant of a disease-related gene to a patient's cells. The most familiar examples of this type of gene therapy are cases in which researchers use a vector to introduce the normal variant of a disease-related gene into a patient's cells and then return those cells to the patient's body to provide the function that was missing. This strategy was first used in the early 1990s to introduce the normal allele of the adenosine deaminase (ADA) gene into the body of a little girl who had been born with ADA deficiency. In this disease, an abnormal variant of the ADA gene fails to make adenosine deaminase, a protein that is required for the correct functioning of T-lymphocytes.

Although researchers are continuing to refine this general approach to gene therapy, they also are developing new approaches. For example, scientists hope that one very new strategy, called chimeraplasty, may one day be used to actually correct genetic defects that involve only a single base change. Chimeraplasty uses specially synthesized molecules that base pair with a patient's DNA and stimulate the cell's normal DNA repair mechanisms to remove the incorrect base and substitute the correct one. At this point, chimeraplasty is still in early development and the first clinical trials are about to get underway.

Yet another approach to gene therapy involves providing new or altered functions to a cell through the introduction of new genetic information. For example, recent experiments have demonstrated that it is possible, under carefully controlled experimental conditions, to introduce genetic information into cancer cells that will alter their metabolism so that they commit suicide when exposed to a normally innocuous environmental trigger. Researchers are also using similar experiments to investigate the feasibility of introducing genetic changes into cells that will make them immune to infection by HIV. Although this research is currently being done only in nonhuman primates, it may eventually benefit patients infected with HIV.

As indicates, the Human Genome Project (HGP) has significantly accelerated the pace of both the discovery of human genes and the development of new health care strategies based on a knowledge of a gene's structure and function. The new knowledge and technologies emerging from HGP-related research also are reducing the cost of finding human genes. For example, the search for the gene associated with cystic fibrosis, which ended in 1989, before the inception of the HGP, required more than eight years and $50 million. In contrast, finding a gene associated with a Mendelian disorder now can be accomplished in less than a year at a cost of approximately $100,000.

The last few years of research into human genetic variation also have seen a gradual transition from a primary focus on genes associated with single-gene disorders, which are relatively rare in the human population, to an increasing focus on genes associated with multifactorial diseases. Because these diseases are not rare, we can expect that this work will affect many more people. Understanding the genetic and environmental bases for these multifactorial diseases also will lead to increased testing and the development of new interventions that likely will have an enormous effect on the practice of medicine in the next century.

What are the implications of using our growing knowledge of human genetic variation to improve personal and public health? As noted earlier, the rapid pace of the discovery of genetic factors in disease has improved our ability to predict the risk of disease in asymptomatic individuals. We have learned how to prevent the manifestations of some of these diseases, and we are developing the capacity to treat others.

Yet, much remains unknown about the benefits and risks of building an understanding of human genetic variation at the molecular level. While this information would have the potential to dramatically improve human health, the architects of the HGP realized that it also would raise a number of complex ethical, legal, and social issues. Thus, in 1990 they established the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications (ELSI) program to anticipate and address the ethical, legal, and social issues that arise from human genetic research. This program, perhaps more than any other, has focused public attention, as well as the attention of educators, on the increasing importance of preparing citizens to understand and contribute to the ongoing public dialogue related to advances in genetics.

Ethics is the study of right and wrong, good and bad. It has to do with the actions and character of individuals, families, communities, institutions, and societies. During the last two and one-half millennia, Western philosophy has developed a variety of powerful methods and a reliable set of concepts and technical terms for studying and talking about the ethical life. Generally speaking, we apply the terms "right" and "good" to those actions and qualities that foster the interests of individuals, families, communities, institutions, and society. Here, an "interest" refers to a participant's share or participation in a situation. The terms "wrong" or "bad" apply to those actions and qualities that impair interests.

Ethical considerations are complex, multifaceted, and raise many questions. Often, there are competing, well-reasoned answers to questions about what is right and wrong, and good and bad, about an individual's or group's conduct or actions. Typically, these answers all involve appeals to values. A value is something that has significance or worth in a given situation. One of the exciting events to witness in any discussion in ethics is the varying ways in which the individuals involved assign values to things, persons, and states of affairs. Examples of values that students may appeal to in a discussion about ethics include autonomy, freedom, privacy, sanctity of life, religion, protecting another from harm, promoting another's good, justice, fairness, relationships, scientific knowledge, and technological progress.

Acknowledging the complex, multifaceted nature of ethical discussions is not to suggest that "anything goes." Experts generally agree on the following features of ethics. First, ethics is a process of rational inquiry. It involves posing clearly formulated questions and seeking well-reasoned answers to those questions. For example, we can ask questions about an individual's right to privacy regarding personal genetic information; we also can ask questions about the appropriateness of particular uses of gene therapy. Well-reasoned answers to such questions constitute arguments. Ethical analysis and argument, then, result from successful ethical inquiry.

Second, ethics requires a solid foundation of information and rigorous interpretation of that information. For example, one must have a solid understanding of biology to evaluate the recent decision by the Icelandic government to create a database that will contain extensive genetic and medical information about the country's citizens. A knowledge of science also is needed to discuss the ethics of genetic screening or of germ-line gene therapy. Ethics is not strictly a theoretical discipline but is concerned in vital ways with practical matters.

Third, discussions of ethical issues often lead to the identification of very different answers to questions about what is right and wrong and good and bad. This is especially true in a society such as our own, which is characterized by a diversity of perspectives and values. Consider, for example, the question of whether adolescents should be tested for late-onset genetic conditions. Genetic testing centers routinely withhold genetic tests for Huntington disease (HD) from asymptomatic patients under the age of 18. The rationale is that the condition expresses itself later in life and, at present, treatment is unavailable. Therefore, there is no immediate, physical health benefit for a minor from a specific diagnosis based on genetic testing. In addition, there is concern about the psychological effects of knowing that later in life one will get a debilitating, life-threatening condition. Teenagers can wait until they are adults to decide what and when they would like to know. In response, some argue that many adolescents and young children do have sufficient autonomy in consent and decision making and may wish to know their future. Others argue that parents should have the right to have their children tested, because parents make many other medical decisions on behalf of their children. This example illustrates how the tools of ethics can bring clarity and rigor to discussions involving values.

One of the goals of this module is to help students see how understanding science can help individuals and society make reasoned decisions about issues related to genetics and health. Activity 5, Making Decisions in the Face of Uncertainty, presents students with a case of a woman who is concerned that she may carry an altered gene that predisposes her to breast and ovarian cancer. The woman is faced with numerous decisions, which students also consider. Thus, the focus of Activity 5 is prudential decision making, which involves the ability to avoid unnecessary risk when it is uncertain whether an event actually will occur. By completing the activity, students understand that uncertainty is often a feature of questions related to genetics and health, because our knowledge of genetics is incomplete and constantly changing. In addition, students see that making decisions about an uncertain future is complex. In simple terms, students have to ask themselves, "How bad is the outcome and how likely is it to occur?" When the issues are weighed, different outcomes are possible, depending on one's estimate of the incidence of the occurrence and how much burden one attaches to the risk.

Clearly, science as well as ethics play important roles in helping individuals make choices about individual and public health. Science provides evidence that can help us understand and treat human disease, illness, deformity, and dysfunction. And ethics provides a framework for identifying and clarifying values and the choices that flow from these values. But the relationships between scientific information and human choices, and between choices and behaviors, are not straightforward. In other words, human choice allows individuals to choose against sound knowledge, and choice does not require action.

Nevertheless, it is increasingly difficult to deny the claims of science. We are continually presented with great amounts of relevant scientific and medical knowledge that is publicly accessible. As a consequence, we can think about the relationships between knowledge, choice, behavior, and human welfare in the following ways:

One of the goals of this module is to encourage students to think in terms of these relationships, now and as they grow older.

Biological Sciences Curriculum Study. Teaching tools. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company; 1999.

Bonwell CC, Eison JA. Washington, DC: The George Washington University: School of Education and Human Development; Active learning: Creating excitement in the classroom. 1991 (ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Report No. 1)

Brody CM. Collaborative or cooperative learning? Complementary practices for instructional reform. The Journal of Staff, Program, & Organizational Development. 1995;12(3):134143.

Harrison GA, Tanner JM, Pilbeam DR, Baker PT. Human biology: An introduction to human evolution, variation, growth, and adaptability. New York: Oxford University Press; 1988.

Knapp MS, Shields PM, Turnbull BJ. Academic challenge in high-poverty classrooms. Phi Delta Kappan. 1995;76(10):770776.

Lander ES. Array of hope. Supplement to nature genetics. 1999 January;21

Moore JA. Science as a way of knowing: The foundations of modern biology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; 1993.

National Institutes of Health. Congressional justification. Bethesda, MD: Author; 1996.

National Research Council. National science education standards. Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 1996.

Perkins D. Smart schools: Better thinking and learning for every child. New York: The Free Press; 1992.

Project Kaleidoscope. What works: Building natural science communities. Vol. 1. Washington, DC: Stamats Communications, Inc; 1991.

Roblyer MD, Edwards J, Havriluk MA. Integrating educational technology into teaching. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc; 1997.

Saltus R. Tailor-made drugs. The Boston Globe. 1998 April 20;

Saunders WL. The constructivist perspective: Implications and teaching strategies for science. School Science and Mathematics. 1992;92(3):136141.

Sizer TR. Horace's school: Redesigning the American high school. New York: Houghton Mifflin Co; 1992.

Vogel F, Motulsky AG. Human genetics: Problems and approaches. 3rd ed. New York: Springer; 1997.

The following glossary was modified from the glossary on the National Human Genome Research Institute's Web site, available at http://www.nhgri.nih.gov.

One of the variant forms of a gene at a particular locus, or location, on a chromosome. Different alleles produce variation in inherited characteristics such as hair color or blood type. In an individual, one form of the allele (the dominant one) may be expressed more than another form (the recessive one).

One of 20 different kinds of small molecules that link together in long chains to form proteins. Amino acids are referred to as the "building blocks" of proteins.

Gene on one of the autosomes that, if present, will almost always produce a specific trait or disease. The chance of passing the gene (and therefore the disease) to children is 50-50 in each pregnancy.

Chromosome other than a sex chromosome. Humans have 22 pairs of autosomes.

Two bases that form a "rung of the DNA ladder." The bases are the "letters" that spell out the genetic code. In DNA, the code letters are A, T, G, and C, which stand for the chemicals adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine, respectively. In base pairing, adenine always pairs with thymine, and guanine always pairs with cytosine.

Defect present at birth, whether caused by mutant genes or by prenatal events that are not genetic.

First breast cancer genes to be identified. Mutated forms of these genes are believed to be responsible for about one-half the cases of inherited breast cancer, especially those that occur in younger women, and also to increase a woman's risk for ovarian cancer. Both are tumor suppressor genes.

Diseases in which abnormal cells divide and grow unchecked. Cancer can spread from its original site to other parts of the body and can be fatal if not treated adequately.

Gene, located in a chromosome region suspected of being involved in a disease, whose protein product suggests that it could be the disease gene in question.

Mutation that confers immunity to infection by HIV. The mutation alters the structure of a receptor on the surface of macrophages such that HIV cannot enter the cell.

Collection of DNA sequences generated from mRNA sequences. This type of library contains only protein-coding DNA (genes) and does not include any noncoding DNA.

Basic unit of any living organism. It is a small, watery, compartment filled with chemicals and a complete copy of the organism's genome.

One of the thread like "packages" of genes and other DNA in the nucleus of a cell. Different kinds of organisms have different numbers of chromosomes. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes, 46 in all: 44 autosomes and two sex chromosomes. Each parent contributes one chromosome to each pair, so children get one-half of their chromosomes from their mothers and one-half from their fathers.

Process of making copies of a specific piece of DNA, usually a gene. When geneticists speak of cloning, they do not mean the process of making genetically identical copies of an entire organism.

Three bases in a DNA or RNA sequence that specify a single amino acid.

Hereditary disease whose symptoms usually appear shortly after birth. They include faulty digestion, breathing difficulties and respiratory infections due to mucus accumulation, and excessive loss of salt in sweat. In the past, cystic fibrosis was almost always fatal in childhood, but treatment is now so improved that patients commonly live to their 20s and beyond.

Visual appearance of a chromo some when stained and examined under a microscope. Particularly important are visually distinct regions, called light and dark bands, that give each of the chromosomes a unique appearance. This feature allows a person's chromosomes to be studied in a clinical test known as a karyotype, which allows scientists to look for chromosomal alterations.

Particular kind of mutation: loss of a piece of DNA from a chromosome. Deletion of a gene or part of a gene can lead to a disease or abnormality.

Chemical inside the nucleus of a cell that carries the genetic instructions for making living organisms.

Number of chromosomes in most cells except the gametes. In humans, the diploid number is 46.

Technology that identifies mutations in genes. It uses small glass plates that contain synthetic single-stranded DNA sequences identical to those of a normal gene.

Process by which the DNA double helix unwinds and makes an exact copy of itself.

Determining the exact order of the base pairs in a segment of DNA.

Gene that almost always results in a specific physical characteristic (for example, a disease) even though the patient's genome possesses only one copy. With a dominant gene, the chance of passing on the gene (and therefore the disease) to children is 50-50 in each pregnancy.

Structural arrangement of DNA, which looks something like an immensely long ladder twisted into a helix, or coil. The sides of the "ladder" are formed by a backbone of sugar and phosphate molecules, and the "rungs" consist of nucleotide bases joined weakly in the middle by hydrogen bonds.

Particular kind of mutation: production of one or more copies of any piece of DNA, including a gene or even an entire chromosome.

Process in which molecules (such as proteins, DNA, or RNA fragments) can be separated according to size and electrical charge by applying an electric current to them. The current forces the molecules through pores in a thin layer of gel, a firm, jellylike substance. The gel can be made so that its pores are just the right dimensions for separating molecules within a specific range of sizes and shapes. Smaller fragments usually travel further than large ones. The process is sometimes called gel electrophoresis.

See the rest here:
Understanding Human Genetic Variation - NCBI Bookshelf

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on Understanding Human Genetic Variation – NCBI Bookshelf

Genetics – National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)

Posted: at 1:04 am

Why do scientists study the genes of other organisms?

All living things evolved from a common ancestor. Therefore, humans, animals, and other organisms share many of the same genes, and the molecules made from them function in similar ways.

Scientists have found many genes that have been preserved through millions of years of evolution and are present in a range of organisms living today. They can study these preserved genes and compare the genomes of different species to uncover similarities and differences that improve their understanding of how human genes function and are controlled. This knowledge helps researchers develop new strategies to treat and prevent human disease. Scientists also study the genes of bacteria, viruses, and fungi for solutions to prevent or treat infection. Increasingly, these studies are offering insight into how microbes on and in the body affect our health, sometimes in beneficial ways.

Increasingly sophisticated tools and techniques are allowing NIGMS-funded scientists to ask more precise questions about the genetic basis of biology. For example, theyre studying the factors that control when genes are active, the mechanisms DNA uses to repair broken or damaged segments, and the complex ways traits are passed to future generations. Another focus of exploration involves tracing genetic variation over time to detail human evolutionary history and to pinpoint the emergence of disease-related attributes. These areas of basic research will continue to build a strong foundation for more disease-targeted studies.

Here is the original post:
Genetics - National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on Genetics – National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)