Daily Archives: July 17, 2024

The Singularity Is Nearer by Ray Kurzweil review the coming AI revolution – The Times

Posted: July 17, 2024 at 11:40 pm

In 2005 Ray Kurzweil futurologist, computer scientist and transhumanist cheerleader published The Singularity Is Near, the burden of which was: the Singularity is coming and it will be great. The Singularity is the moment when the upward curve on the graph of progress goes vertical, when technological advance actualises a step change in human existence.

Kurzweils new book revisits his earlier volume, repeating and reinforcing its message. Everything he previously predicted is, he says, coming true. The Singularity will launch us into bright, sunlit uplands: superintelligent artificial intelligence (AI) will interface with human consciousness, expanding our mental capacities a millionfold; nanotechnology will cure all illness; a second industrial revolution will generate global prosperity from which all benefit. To support its claims the book is supplied with great hose-blasts of data a hundred pages of tiny-font notes and appendices and the tone is remorselessly upbeat throughout.

A less optimistic individual might see downsides in all this, and Kurzweil does include one chapter, called Peril, on the possible dangers of these technologies. Theres the fear that nanotech might go rogue and process all the carbon in the world into grey goo, killing all life. A worrying thought, but one that Kurzweil thinks can be averted by the creation of a prophylactic blue goo nanotech that will guard against it. I worry that the two goos might decide that they have more in common with each other than they do with humanity and join forces. That would be, as John Lennon never sang, goo goo gdbye.

Or again: if AI really does achieve consciousness, given its vastly superior processing capacity, it might be a kind of god. Whos to say it would be a kindly one? Kurzweil believes it should be possible to programme emergent AI to avoid this, to make it compatible with ideals of human dignity, rights, freedom and cultural diversity. He concedes that AI may develop beyond our power to control it, but thinks overall we should be cautiously optimistic.

The Silicon Valley biohacker Dave Asprey believes living to 180 is a boringly, easily achievable goal

IAN ALLEN FOR THE TIMES MAGAZINE

Other concerns are not addressed, although climate change might do the grey goos job for it. The mammoth power and cooling requirements of the computers in the cloud on which these (hugely expensive) experiments with AI depend will contribute to rising oceans, storms and heatwaves, mass methane release from warmed-over tundra, and societal collapse.

Thats not the future of The Singularity Is Nearer. Kurzweil believes that the Singularity is so imminent it will overtake, and solve, all todays pressing problems. The world of employment will change self-driving cars will make all lorry and taxi drivers redundant, for instance but that wont matter since so much wealth will be generated by AI and automation that governments can pay us all a generous salary simply to be ourselves.

Nanobots in our blood will cure all diseases, extending human lifespans on a sliding scale by 2030 living to 120 will be normal, which will take us to 2050 by which time newer tech will make living to 200 normal, by which time even more splendiferous tech will make living to 300 normal, and so on. This is what Kurzweil calls longevity escape velocity, and hes convinced that it will launch us into functional immortality; he repeats Aubrey de Greys sensational claim that the first person to live to 1,000 years has likely already been born.

Computer says, were all doomed! Will AI ruin our world?

By the 2050s we will rebuild our bodies to go vastly beyond what our biology is capable of. As nanotechnology takes off well be able to run much faster and longer, swim and breathe under the ocean like fish, and even give ourselves working wings if we want them. We will think a million times faster, but most importantly we will not be dependent on the survival of our bodies for our selves to survive. Sounds pretty exhausting to me, but chacun son got.

That last point, thinking a million times faster and avoiding death by uploading our consciousness to the cloud to evade death, is the boldest part of Kurzweils Singularity, and the biggest hole in his argument. He takes it as axiomatic that being a million times cleverer would be a good thing. Would it?

Kurzweil understands that intelligence has been selected evolutionarily (sophisticated brains provided a marked evolutionary advantage), one among many strategies animals have developed to pass on their genes: the speed of the cheetah; the camouflage of the stick insect; the long neck of the giraffe. Each of these adaptations improves the creatures fit to their environments. Brain-smarts are our one weird trick to improve our chances of passing on our DNA and weve been pretty successful as a species on the strength of it. For Kurzweil, though, its more. Regardless of consciousnesss origin, he says, it is somehow sacred. The logic seems to be: if something is sacred, then having a whole lot more of it must be a good thing.

Is that right? Intelligence feels special to us because intelligence is our thing if they could articulate it, cheetahs would surely tell us that their speed was sacred, fruit flies that their wings were sacred. A truer way of thinking about human intelligence would be to see it as just a strategy DNA developed to make more DNA.

This is important, because if we see intelligence in its evolutionary context its not obvious that we would want to expand it a millionfold. Perhaps the present levels of human intelligence, within todays parameters of IQ variance, are the right levels. A giraffes neck enables it to feast on the tastiest topmost leaves, but it doesnt follow that a giraffe with a neck a hundred times as long would be a hundred times the better giraffe. On the contrary, such a sudden cervical expansion would kill it. Maybe a sudden huge magnification of human intelligence would collapse rather than augment our humanity, drive us mad or catatonic. Maybe, as in Kurt Vonneguts 1985 novel Galpagos, intelligence is something we would actually be better off with less of.

If the Singularitys arrival is as inevitable as Kurzweil suggests, such concerns may be irrelevant. As the Titanic sank the band played Nearer, My God, to Thee. Kurzweils ever nearer Singularity approaches, like a huge, glimmering iceberg. Dive in, he says, the waters lovely. I have my doubts.

The Singularity Is Nearer: When We Merge with AI by Ray Kurzweil (Bodley Head 25 pp432). To order a copy go to timesbookshop.co.uk. Free UK standard P&P on orders over 25. Special discount available for Times+ members

The granddaddy of futurist prediction is this bestseller, which marked a shift from HG Wells predicting the to-come via science fiction like The Time Machine (1895) and When the Sleeper Wakes (1899) to predicting it as fact, a practice that came to increasingly dominate his writing. Anticipations correctly predicts individual mass transit with everyone owning cars and the practice of commuting stretching home from walking-distance to hundreds of miles. It also anticipates the growth of cities, the rise of a managerial class, aerial warfare (two years before the Wright Brothers) and sexual liberalisation. It incorrectly predicted the coming of a world state and eugenics. A mixed bag.

A runaway bestseller in the 1970s, this book popularised the idea not just that times were changing, but that the pace of change was accelerating exponentially, such that the future would be radically, disorientatingly different to the now. The shock of the title is too much change in too short a period of time. The Tofflers predicted built-in obsolescence of commodities, postindustrial economies, the death of permanence and what they called information overload. This was perceptive, although the book also predicts underwater cities, mass ownership of spaceships and disposable paper clothing becoming commonplace. So not entirely a bullseye, prediction-wise.

Theres no shortage of doom and gloom when it comes to predicting the climate future, and Kim Stanley Robinsons powerful novel does not evade the direction of global heating and environmental-collapse upon which humanity seems fixed. But this, his most recent, and it seems last, novel also predicts a raft of future strategies for reversing the damage and saving the planet. Some are practical (interventions to stop glaciers slide and melt and avoid raising ocean levels), some matters of political policy (carbon strategies for industry, transport, land use, buildings and transportation) and some financial, for example, turning all the banks into co-ops with profits divided three ways between employee-owners, environmental capital improvements and a third given to charities chosen by the employees.

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The Singularity Is Nearer by Ray Kurzweil review the coming AI revolution - The Times

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Private Paradise: You Could Own This Michigan Island with Historic Lighthouse – 97.9 WGRD

Posted: at 11:38 pm

A beautiful, private island in Michigan? Sign. Me. Up.

Middle Island, a 227 acre island in Lake Huron is on the market!

READ MORE: Stunning Beachfront Mansion For Sale in South Haven

It's called Middle Island because it'ssituated almost exactly midway between Thunder Bay Island and Presque Isle Harbor,off the coast of Alpena.

A working, historic lighthouse is included!TheMiddle Island Light Stationwas built in 1905. It standsseventy-six-feet-tall, and the light has a 14-mile range.

Nate Graham, Graham Real Estate

It's maintained by the Coast Guard and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. Check out that view!

According to thelisting, "views from the lighthouse are unobstructed 360 degrees above of Lake Huron."

Nate Graham, Graham Real Estate

As far as lodging, there's a Lighthouse keepers two-story red brick double dwelling with a new roof and 12 rooms at various stages of renovation - so yes, it needs some work... but still, that's a lot of space!

UP NEXT: Unique Bank House For Sale in Traverse City

In addition, the Fog Signal building has been converted intoa lodge that sleeps 10.

Other cool features of the property are a 380-footpermanent break wall/dock, a hunting blind, and observation tower!

Two track circles the island and provides access to the lighthouse.

So how much are we talking for this private island paradise?

Middle Island is on the market for $3.9 million. Check out photos in the gallery below!

Gallery Credit: Janna

Here are even more Michigan islands that have been on the market recently:

Island living in Michigan can be your reality with this Battle Creek 2 home package. On land, you'll have a lakeside 1000-square-foot home as "basecamp" complete with 6 car garage for storing all those water toys. Hop on one of your docked boats and head out to your own private 2.5-acre island to settle into your 5000-square-foot home for some island fun with plenty of room for guests. Inside awaits 4 bedrooms, 4 1/2 bathrooms, and plenty of space to entertain with gorgeous panoramic views from every room. The current owners are willing to sell turn-key with water toys and boats included. Take a look!

Gallery Credit: Zillow

No, it's not Montana or even the set of "Yellowstone". This breathtaking million-dollar retreat is located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan near the Wisconsin border and is everything a nature lover has dreamt of. With its 16 acres of wilderness and lakeside beauty, any fisherman or someone looking to escape from it all would simply love it. Over 10,000 square feet of space with 7 bedrooms and 9 bathrooms, this log home Island family retreat on the famous Cisco Chain of Lakes is meant for large family get-togethers and big gatherings.

Take a look at what tranquility and heaven on earth really look like.

Gallery Credit: Zillow

A private island, with a home included, is now listed for sale in Eau Claire, Michigan

Gallery Credit: Zillow

For $575,000 you could own Frying Pan Island, a 3-acre island that sits in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

Gallery Credit: Zillow

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Private Paradise: You Could Own This Michigan Island with Historic Lighthouse - 97.9 WGRD

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Retreat to a Private Island with These MICHELIN Guide Hotels in Asia – MICHELIN Guide

Posted: at 11:38 pm

When it comes to the crme de la crme of luxury travel, private island resorts often reign supreme especially for those who wish to experience real seclusion, intimacy, and exclusivity.

Accessible by speedboat or seaplane, these private islands boast unspoiled beauty and offer a sanctuary far removed from the everyday. If you want to get away from it all, book yourself into these five remote resorts that are the epitome of a tropical paradise:

Tucked away on the serene island of Pamalican, this luxury resort comes with powdery white sands and vibrant coral gardens. Designed by the celebrated Filipino architect Francisco Maosa, the resort features just 42 Casitas and 18 Villas, each a masterpiece of tropical elegance. If you're fortunate, you may even witness the magical sight of green and hawksbill turtle hatchlings making their journey under the moonlit sky to the vast ocean during nesting season from March to October.

Book Amanpulo on the MICHELIN Guide

The private luxury island getaway features 141 sea-view rooms, suites, beachfront, and overwater pool villas, alongside an impressive 800 metres of golden shoreline. With amenities like a surf pool, VIP cinema, bowling alley, mini golf course, and a world-class spa, guests will find endless activities to enjoy. It's also a family-friendly resort, ensuring kids have a blast with a variety of exciting and enjoyable activities available on the island every day, including arts and crafts, cooking classes, and even billiards.

Book Banana Island Resort Doha by Anantara on the MICHELIN Guide

Located on the remote Thaa Atoll in the Maldives, the wellness-oriented resort is just a 60-minute seaplane ride from Mal, offering a scenic journey over the region's stunning array of atolls. Tropical minimalism sets the tone at this resort, characterised by thatched roofs and shades of blue, where encounters with marine life are a daily delight from snorkelling among colourful fish and exploring vibrant coral reefs, to leisurely dolphin cruises and spotting turtles and friendly sharks near the restaurant at sunset. It's a remarkable and secluded getaway, with an option for added privacy: booking a fully catered picnic on a smaller, nearby private island arranged by the resort.

Book COMO Maalifushi on the MICHELIN Guide

Song Saa Private Island, nestled in Cambodia's Koh Rong archipelago, effortlessly encapsulates this natural beauty with its overwater villas on stilts and an array of water-based experiences.The brainchild of Australian couple Rory and Melita Hunter, the resort is also committed to supporting local communities, monitoring coral reefs, providing medical care, promoting effective waste management, and launching educational programmes. Now, sit back, relax, and soak it all in.

Book Song Saa Private Island on the MICHELIN Guide

Since its debut in 2021 as the Singaporean hotel groups inaugural venture in India, this property has been a resounding success. Spanning 21 acres on a lush island teeming with birdlife and exotic flora, the resort offers spacious rooms and suites that seamlessly blend Indian and European influences. Some accommodations feature private pools and gardens, providing a tranquil retreat with panoramic vistas of the Baroque garden and the lake. Expect to spend your days lounging by the pool, playing rounds of golf and cricket, or pampering yourself with the luxurious amenities of the 12,000 square foot spa.

Book Raffles Udaipur on the MICHELIN Guide

These five-star resorts promise an unforgettable stay, where the soothing sounds of the sea, gentle breezes, and rustling palm leaves create a symphony of serenity.

Written by Faye Bradley

Faye Bradley is a Hong Kong-based food, travel, and lifestyle writer who contributes to several local and international publications. With a passion for discovering new places, Faye is always on the lookout for hot openings and up-and-coming destinations steeped in culture, history, and heritage with her compass often being guided by the aromatic allure of culinary experiences.

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Retreat to a Private Island with These MICHELIN Guide Hotels in Asia - MICHELIN Guide

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Private island site no excuse for not fencing swimming pool in Far North – New Zealand Herald

Posted: at 11:38 pm

The pool was thought to have been built between 2003 and 2007 but had no building consent, nor was it registered with the council as required.

The council found out about the pool in 2020 and a site visit in November 2020 confirmed the lack of fencing.

Between November 2020 and July 2024, the council issued five Notices to Fix for the fencing, said Kevin Johnson, council group manager for delivery and operations. A Notice to Fix is a legal document requiring work to be done.

The owners applied to the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment for an exemption to the rules, arguing the barrier was impractical at this unique location.

They argued the pool is on a remote, offshore island with no unannounced visitors; there are durability issues for fencing as the pool gets washed by seawater; the pool is a holding tank for fire protection and a fence could inhibit this; and that the sea right next to the pool creates a greater risk for children.

The owners said they and their teenage children had only visited the island once in two years, and 99.9% of the time the island is occupied only by the caretaker and their partner.

But in a decision just released by the ministry, principal adviser for determinations Andrew Eames found the law is clear that every residential pool must have barriers to stop access by unsupervised children under 5.

While he acknowledged the location of the pool on an offshore private island close to the sea is somewhat unique, he said the lack of fencing would significantly increase the risk of injury or death.

Eames decided that while the current owners do not have any young children, children were likely to visit at some time during the life of the building.

He also found concerns about durability and the pool being part of a fire protection plan and were not enough to void the fencing requirement.

The decision requiring the fencing has been backed by Water Safety New Zealand, which said 38 children under 5 have drowned in home pools in the last 20 years, including 12 deaths in pools with no fencing at all.

Chief executive Daniel Gerrard said pools remain the most common location for drownings of children under 5.

Strong regulatory interventions that require proven physical safety mechanisms are the only recognised, and irreplaceable, measures that will protect children around water.

While Gerrard recognised New Zealand has significant water hazards, people are more likely to ease supervision in a home, due to being relaxed in that situation.

This is supported by the data: while 38 children drowned in pools in the last 20 years, 14 drowned in rivers and two drowned at beaches.

Fencing around pools has been enforced in New Zealand since 1987 and has reduced child pool deaths by 79% since the 1980s, Gerrard said.

Compliance with the fencing rules has been shown to be higher in areas where councils proactively and regularly monitor compliance, he explained.

Local hap Ngti Kura has long fought for ownership of Motukawaiti, including trying to overturn the original sale in 1912 and more recently filing a claim with the Waitangi Tribunal.

The islands ownership was also subject to a five-year investigation by the Overseas Investment Office, after ownership was surrendered to Chinese citizen Jun Zhang in 2013 as part of a loan default, despite him not getting government approval to buy the island.

The Overseas Investment Office eventually found there was insufficient evidence to prosecute.

From 2014-22, the island was marketed for sale on and off, starting with a price tag of $30m. The price was later dropped to $22m and eventually reduced to $10.6m after squatters ruined the property while the owner was overseas.

When Trustee Services bought the island in 2022, the family said they would work with Ngti Kura for advice on planting and protecting the surrounding marine environment.

Denise Piper is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, focusing on health and business. She has more than 20 years in journalism and is passionate about covering stories that make a difference.

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An elegy for the American Dream It’s time conservatives rejected libertarianism and stood up for what matters – UnHerd

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Freshly annointed as Trumps VP, JD Vance. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

This piece was first published in 2019.

My book Hillbilly Elegy is really an exploration of the American Dream as it was experienced by me and my family and the broader community in which I lived.

It chronicled a real decline in the American Dream, not because people werent consuming as much as they have in the past if you look at the trend lines, were certainly able to buy more stuff today than we ever have been able to. Its a story about family decline, childhood trauma, opioid abuse, community decline, decline of the manufacturing sector, and all these senses of dignity and purpose and meaning that comes along with it.

When I was growing up, what the American Dream meant to me was that I had a decent enough job to support my family, and I could be a good husband and a good father. Thats what I most wanted out of my life. It wasnt the American Dream of the striver. It wasnt the American Dream, frankly, that I think animates much of Washington DC. I didnt care if I went to Ivy League law school, I didnt care if I got a best-selling book, I didnt care if I had a lot of money. What I wanted was to be able to give my family and my children the things I hadnt had as a kid.

That was the sense in which the American Dream mattered most to me. Now, that American Dream is undoubtedly in decline, what should a conservative politics do in response? I think a first and preliminary step is that we have to distinguish between conservative politics and libertarian politics.

I dont mean to criticise libertarianism. I first learned about conservatism as an idea from Friedrich Hayek The Road to Serfdom is one of the best books that Ive ever read about conservative thought. But I believe that conservatives have outsourced our economic and domestic policy thinking to libertarians, and because thats such a loaded word, and because labels mean different things to different people, I want to define it as precisely as I can.

The question conservatives confront at this key moment is this: Whom do we serve?

What Im going after is this view that so long as public outcomes and social goods are produced by free individual choices, we shouldnt be too concerned about what those goods ultimately produce. An example: in Silicon Valley, it is common for neuroscientists to make much more at technology companies like Apple or Facebook, where I think they quite literally are making money addicting our children to devices and applications that warp their brains, than folks who are neuroscientists trying to cure Alzheimers. I know a lot of Libertarians who will say Well, that is the consequence of free choices. That is the consequence of people buying and selling labour on an open market, and so long as there isnt any government coercion in that relationship, we shouldnt be so concerned about it.

What Im arguing is that conservatives should be concerned about it. We should be concerned that our economy is geared more towards the development of applications than curing terrible diseases, and we should care about a whole host of public goods, in addition to that, and actually be willing to use politics and political power to accomplish some of those public goods.

I want to tell a story, one of the most heartbreaking stories Ive heard since my book came out. A woman I met in southeastern Ohio which is really ground zero for the opioid problem and so many other social problems that all of us care about in this country was telling me about a young patient she had who had become addicted to opioids. He was eight years old and he was already addicted to Percocets. The way that this kid became addicted to opioids is that he would do drug runs for his family. Because they didnt have a lot of money, if he made a successful drug run, they would actually give him a Percocet as a reward. That was how this kid, at the tender age of eight, became addicted to opioids.

I think theres a tendency in our politics on the right to look at this kid and say You know, its a tragedy whats happened to him, but its fundamentally a tragedy that political power cant touch. Parents need to make better decisions. This child, God willing, needs to make better decision when he grows up.

I think that ignores the way in which human beings actually live their lives the cultural, economic, and environmental contexts in which this kid grows up. It ignores the fact that this kid lives in a community that has too few spare dollars to spend and too many spare opioids. That is a political problem. That is something that we decided to do using political power. We allowed commercial actors to sell these drugs in our communities. We allowed our regulatory state to approve these drugs and to do nothing when it was very clear that these substances were starting to affect our communities. That was a political choice and political power can actually fix it.

That kid lives in a community where even if he makes good choices later on in life, he lives in a place where there are virtually no good jobs for a kid of his educational status and his social class. If he wants to earn a decent wage, if he wants to work at a good job, those jobs in his community have largely gone overseas thanks to forces of globalisation that we unleashed because of political choices. We made the choice that we wanted that kid to be able to buy cheaper consumer goods at Walmart instead of having access to a good job. And maybe that was a defensible choice I dont think it was but it was a choice and we have to stop pretending that it wasnt.

Ive been blown away by some of the research that Ive seen in the past year about the way in which pornography warps young adults minds, and how they interact with their environment, and how they interact with their own sexuality. We know that young adults are marrying less theyre having less children. Theyre engaging in healthier and productive relationships less and less, and we know that at least one of the causes of this is that we have allowed under the guise of libertarianism pornography to seep even into our youngest minds through the channels of the Internet.

Again, we made a political choice that the freedom to consume pornography was more important than public goods like marriage and family and happiness. We cant ignore the fact that we made that choice, and we shouldnt shy away from the fact that we can make new choices in the future.

And even if this kid marches through an opioid epidemic in an environment and a community where there are very few good jobs, and even if he finds himself in a healthy relationship and wants to do the thing that I most defined as core to my American Dream start a family and have happy, healthy children he will confront a society and a culture and a market economy that is more hostile to people having children than maybe at any period in American history.

There are a lot of ways to measure a healthy society, but the way that I measure a healthy society, or I think the most important way to measure healthy society, is whether a nation whether the American nation is having enough children to replace itself.

Do people look to the future and see a place thats worth having children? Do they have good enough jobs so that they can make the necessary sacrifices so that one of the parents can be home with that kid most of the time? Do they have economic prospects and the expectation that theyre going to be able to put a roof over their kids head, put food on the table and provide that child with a good education?

By every statistic that we have, what we see is that people are answering No to all of those questions. For the first extended period in the history of the American nation, our people arent having enough children to replace themselves. That should bother us. Now I know some libertarians will say Well, that choice comes from free individuals. If people are choosing not to have children, if theyre choosing to spend their money on vacations or nicer cars or nicer apartments, then we should be okay with that.

I think there is a good libertarian sympathetic response to that. We can point out, for example, that areas of the world and areas of the country with fewer children are less dynamic. We can point out that we have a social safety net thats entirely built on the idea that you will have more workers and more people coming into the system than retire, and to do that, you need to have children being born. But I think to make this about economics is to concede too much of a premise that we dont want to concede.

When I think about my own life, the thing that has made my life best is the fact that I am the father of a two year-old son. When I think about the demons of my own childhood, and a way that those demons have melted away in the love and laughter of my eldest son; when I see friends of mine whove grown up in tough circumstances and whove become fathers and have become more connected to their communities, to their families, to their faith, because of the role of their own children, I say we want babies not just because theyre economically useful. We want more babies because children are good.

Libertarians arent heartless, and I dont mean to suggest that they are. I think they also recognise many of the same problems that we recognise. But they are so uncomfortable with political power, or so skeptical of whether political power can accomplish anything, that they dont want to actually use it to solve or even to try to help address some of these problems.

If people are spending too much time addicted to devices that are designed to addict them, we cant just blame consumer choice. We have to blame ourselves for not doing something to stop it. If people are killing themselves because theyre being bullied in online chatrooms, we cant just say parents need to exercise more responsibility. You have to accept that parents live and swim in the same cultural pond as the rest of us.

It is one thing to be a good parent who monitors your kids screen time. It is another thing to tell a kid whose entire environment, whose school friends, whose school bullies, whose teachers, whose work friends all use these technologies and use them in a way that is increasingly causing social problems and say, we cant do anything about that other than let our parents be better about screen time. We live in an environment and in a culture that is shaped by our laws and public policy, and we cant hide from that fact anymore.

The question conservatives confront at this key moment is this: Whom do we serve? Do we serve pure, unfettered commercial freedom? Do we serve commerce at the expense of the public good? Or do we serve something higher? And are we willing to use political power to actually accomplish these things?

I serve my child, and it has become abundantly clear that I cannot serve two masters. I cannot defend commerce when it is used to addict his toddler brain to screens, and it will be used to addict his adolescent brain to pornography. I cannot defend the rights of drug companies to sell poison to his neighbours without any consequence, because those people chose to take those drugs.

It is time, as Ronald Reagan once said, for choosing, and I choose my son. I choose the civic constitution necessary to support and sustain a good life for him, and I choose a healthy American nation so necessary to defend and support that civic constitution.

This is an edited version of a speech entitled Beyond Libertarianism, delivered by JD Vance at the National Conservatism: Founding Conference in Washington DC on 16 July

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An elegy for the American Dream It's time conservatives rejected libertarianism and stood up for what matters - UnHerd

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Colorado Libertarians, GOP money part of nationwide spoiler campaigns of Kennedy, others – Sentinel Colorado

Posted: at 11:38 pm

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WASHINGTON | Libertarians in Colorado want to put Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on the ballot to create chaos.

Petition drives for Cornel West in Virginia and North Carolina are being run by groups with Republican ties.

And in Arizona, a convicted fraudster whos been repeatedly investigated for using deceptive tactics to gather signatures for conservative groups is also working on Wests behalf.

With early voting for the November presidential election set to begin in late September in some states, there are signs across the country that groups are trying to affect the outcome by using deceptive means and in most cases in ways that would benefit Republican Donald Trump. Their aim is to to whittle away President Joe Bidens standing with the Democratic Partys base by offering left-leaning, third-party alternatives who could siphon off a few thousand protest votes in close swing state contests.

Spoiler candidates are as old as representative democracy. But in a polarized country in which many Americans have voiced disapproval for both Biden and Trump, the zeal with which Trumps supporters and allies have lent assistance to third-party candidacies adds a new dimension thats deeply troubling to Democrats.

Since his 2016 campaign, Trump has railed against the specter of voter fraud and falsely accused Democrats of rigging elections, which he blames for his 2020 loss, a claim rejected in more than 60 court cases and by his own attorney general. Now, its his allies who are pushing questionable ways to tilt the vote in his favor.

Weve known for years that Donald Trump cant get 50% of the vote. His people know that. And they know they need to find ways to win. One way to do that is propping up third-party candidates, said Josh Schwerin, a spokesman for Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign, which many Democrats believe she lost because the Green Party played spoiler.

Wests campaign did not respond to an email seeking comment. The Trump and Kennedy campaigns also did not respond to inquiries.

Democrats have focused closely this year on the threat of third-party candidates, intent on avoiding Clintons fate. Indicators of Republican involvement were quick to surface.

In April, The Washington Post reported pro-Trump activist Scott Presler was gathering signatures for West outside a Trump rally in North Carolina. In a video posted online, Presler described West, an academic, as a far-left Marxist who if we get him on the ballot he could take a percentage point away from Biden.

But Republican involvement in getting West and his Justice For All party on the state ballot runs far deeper.

At the beginning of June, West had been largely absent from the campaign trail and his political operation was $30,000 in debt, disclosures show. He had spent just $2,400 this year to gather the signatures needed to qualify for the ballot in states across the U.S.

But then, Justice For All submitted well over the 13,000 signatures needed. State government emails obtained by The Associated Press show current and former employees of Blitz Canvassing, a Republican firm that earned millions of dollars doing work for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, helped West pull off the feat. The emails, previously reported by NBC News, show the employees affiliated with Blitz Canvassing were the designated representatives to pick up and drop off petitions for Wests campaign.

Its unclear who paid the firm, which isnt listed as a paid vendor in Wests campaign finance reports. Representatives for Blitz Canvassing didnt respond to requests for comment.

The GOP-linked signature collection effort on Wests behalf isnt limited to North Carolina.

Signature gatherers in suburban Washington were witnessed asking people in a Target parking lot to sign a petition to get Donald Trump off the ballot, NBC4 reported. The signatures were actually being collected to help get West on the Virginia ballot, and one of the workers said they would be handed off to the state GOP, the TV station reported.

Last month, more than 80 paid out-of-state signature gathers descended on the pivotal battleground of Arizona to collect signatures for West, state records show. Many of the workers listed Wells Marketing, a mysterious Missouri limited liability company, as their employer.

The company, which didnt respond to a request for comment, is closely affiliated with Mark Jacoby, a signature gathering operative from California with a longstanding reputation for using deceptive tactics and who was convicted in 2009 of voter registration fraud, court records show.

In 2020, Jacoby worked to gather signatures to place the rapper Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, on the ballot. Yes quixotic presidential campaign was widely viewed by Democrats as an effort to dilute Bidens popularity with Black voters.

Jacobys firm, Let the Voters Decide, was investigated for using dubious signature gathering tactics during a 2020 petition drive in Michigan that sought to roll back some of Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmers emergency powers during the coronavirus pandemic. No charges came of the investigation, though, in a report, state Attorney General Dana Nessel said investigators found evidence of sleazy practices and shady activity.

For Jacoby, it was nothing new.

He was accused in 2008 of tricking voters into registering with the California Republican Party by telling them they were signing an initiative to strengthen penalties for child molesters, the Los Angeles Times reported.

In 2006, signature gatherers told Massachusetts lawmakers that Jacoby instructed them to use deceptive tactics, like asking people to sign a petition to allow for the sale of wine in grocery stores. They were actually gathering signatures to roll back the states historic gay marriage court ruling, the workers testified during a hearing.

Legal experts say Wests reliance on an army of paid signature gatherers financed by an outside party could cause him legal trouble because it could be viewed as an in-kind contribution to his campaign.

The short answer is, yes, there is a potential issue, said Adav Noti, a former Federal Election Commission attorney whos now executive director of the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center in Washington. Noti added, however, that its complicated and the success of any campaign finance complaint would heavily depend on specifics because the law on this issue is really messy.

West is hardly Democrats only concern.

Kennedy, a scion of one of Americas most storied political families, may have entered the race as a Democrat challenging Biden. But even before his break with the party deeply intertwined with his family name, he drew an inordinate amount of attention from Republicans.

Republican megadonor Timothy Mellon, himself the heir to a storied Gilded Age fortune, donated $25 million to a super political action committee supporting Kennedy, records show. Other major pro-Trump donors have followed suit, including Leila Centner, who donated $1 million to the Kennedy super PAC, as well as arch conservative donor Elizabeth Uihlein, who gave $3,300 to his campaign.

Kennedy, an avowed environmentalist, has long been a champion of liberal causes. But he also has been a leading proponent of vaccine conspiracy theories, which helped him rise to greater prominence during the pandemic and earned him admiration from conservatives like former Fox News Channel host Tucker Carlson.

Democrats are worried Kennedy still has enough left-wing star appeal that he could peel off voters from Biden. And that appears to have been part of the calculus when Colorados Libertarian Party reached an agreement to let him use its ballot line.

Hannah Goodman, the chairwoman for the Colorado Libertarians, did not respond to a request for comment. But in interviews posted to YouTube, Goodman, who has said she intends to vote for Trump, expressed disdain for Democrats and said she would like to give them a taste of that medicine.

The idea is we could essentially leverage this to make a swing state situation and become real viable players, Goodman said in an interview with the website Free State Colorado. I am tired of living under a Democratic monopoly.

Legal experts say elections will continue to be susceptible to dirty tricks and chicanery unless the more states adopt different methods of casting a ballot, like ranked choice voting, which allows voters to weight their candidate preferences.

Unfortunately, we obviously cannot put in place a better electoral system for this years election, and thus have to hope that no third-party or independent candidate acts as a spoiler, said Edward Foley, a law professor at the Ohio State University who specializes in elections.

Follow the APs coverage of the 2024 election at https://apnews.com/hub/election-2024.

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Libertarians Back Florida Cannabis Legalization, $5M From Hemp Execs To GOP: Green Waves In Red States – Benzinga

Posted: at 11:38 pm

A recent report by Beacon Securities, on the cannabis industry in Florida provides insights into campaign donations, political endorsements, market competition, and financial forecasts.

According to the report the Libertarian Party of Florida has formally endorsed the adult-use legalization measure. This endorsement could signal a shift in voter sentiment, as the party advocates for personal freedom regarding cannabis use. The growing political support from various parties highlights the increasing acceptance of cannabis legalization.

CBS News reported that hemp executives pledged $5M in donations to Floridas Republican Party after Governor DeSantis vetoed a bill that would have negatively impacted the hemp industry.

The report indicated that the veto was seen as a strategic move, with WhatsApp messages from the group Save Florida Hemp suggesting the veto secured the hemp industry's alignment with Governor DeSantis against the adult-use legalization measure on the November ballot.

Read Also:Ron DeSantis, Florida's GOP And Hemp Industry Pile On To Defeat Marijuana Legalization

Trulieve Cannabis TCNNF, leading the market with 140 locations, continues to expand, recently opening a new dispensary in Gulf Breeze. Verano Holdings follows with 77 locations, aiming to increase its market presence.

The competition among major players like Trulieve, Curaleaf CURLF, and Verano VRNOF is intensifying, with each company employing strategies to capture more market share.

Data from the Florida Department of Health shows that these companies are driving significant sales of both flower and oil-based products, as per Beacons report.

Verano Holdings and Curaleaf Holdings are expected to report their Q2 results on August 7th, with Verano forecasting revenue and adjusted EBITDA at the lower end of estimates.

Rescheduling and elimination of 280E tax penalties are anticipated to substantially boost operating cash flow and free cash flow for these companies.

Read Next:How A Trump Return Could Reshape Marijuana Policy

These issues will be a hot topicat the upcoming Benzinga Cannabis Capital Conference in Chicago this Oct. 8-9. Join us to get more insight into what the wave of weed legalization means for the future of investing in theindustry. Hear directly from top executives, investors, advocates, and policymakers.Get your tickets nowbefore prices go up by followingthis link.

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Challenges to books by Bill O’Reilly, Ayn Rand, Dean Koontz: What did the school board do? – AOL

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Palm Beach County school board leaders decided Wednesday to deny three challenges to books by Bill O'Reilly, Ayn Rand and Dean Koontz on the library shelves at Park Vista High School.

The person who challenged the books called them lessons in "hypocrisy" as they were written by two authors with ties to candidates who have supported Florida's book restrictions but whose own works include graphic sexual content.

The books in question were "The O'Reilly Factor for Kids: A Survival Guide for America's Families" by O'Reilly, "The Fountainhead" by Rand and "The Taking" by Koontz.

Kenneth Derrick, who is not a parent of a child at Park Vista, was not pushing for the books to be removed from the library.

Instead, he suggested the school district affix an advisory label to the books that calls out authors who support book challenges but include sexual content in their own novels.

The board voted unanimously to deny his request to add the labels to the books.

"This request by the challenger is kind of outside the Florida statute. It's outside of our policies and procedures as a school district," Superintendent Mike Burke said. "I would just caution the board that we have over 2 million books in Palm Beach County schools. I'd be concerned about if we start going down the path of advisory labels, that could be a subjective process. I'm concerned about his proposal."

Derrick did not attend the school board's hearing.

Florida law allows parents of students in the school system and county residents to challenge books they believe are pornographic or not age-appropriate for the students who can access them.

Derrick's challenges to the three books were denied by Park Vista's school materials review committee, its principal and Burke. The denials cited the committee's finding that the books are age-appropriate and that the school district does not typically add warning labels to books.

The three books are the second, third and fourth formal challenges in the past year to be appealed all the way to a school board hearing. Last July, a parent unsuccessfully challenged the Bible's availability to students at Olympic Heights High.

More: Palm Beach County school leaders vote to keep Bible in libraries after parent challenge

Of "The O'Reilly Factor: A Survival Guide for America's Families," Derrick pointed to descriptions of sexual conduct in the book's chapter titled "Sex" as the reason for his challenge.

"For example, on pg. 72: 'And according to many experts and studies, quite a few of you like to pretend that you're in the Clinton White House. I mean, you casually practice oral sex, even in your early teens,'" Derrick wrote in his challenge, along with other examples from the book's chapter.

He suggested a label be placed on the book that highlights the book's author supported Florida's laws "restricting the content of books in school classrooms and libraries, but he became angry when his books were removed for inappropriate content."

O'Reilly, a conservative television commentator and former Fox News host, reportedly became "furious" in January after two of his books were removed by Escambia County's school district. He previously supported the book challenge laws in Florida, which he said were necessary to "protect children" from a far-left agenda.

Derrick also challenged "The Fountainhead" for a description of what appears to be a sexual assault. The book was written by Alice O'Connor, using the pen name Ayn Rand, and published in 1943. Derrick says in his challenge that "many individuals who support Florida laws restricting the content of books in school classrooms and libraries often recommend that young people read this book."

Public schools in Orange County removed the book from libraries last year, according to The Orlando Sentinel.

Finally, Derrick challenged "The Taking" for descriptions of violent sexual conduct, including pornography and sexual assault committed by gangs. The novel was written by self-labeled conservative and Catholic horror novelist Dean Koontz and published in 2004.

Derrick argues that Koontz has "donated money to politicians who support laws restricting the content of books in school classrooms and libraries." Campaign finance records show that Koontz has donated to several Republican candidates for Congress in California over the past four years. None of those candidates appears to be connected to Florida.

Katherine Kokal is a journalist covering education at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at kkokal@pbpost.com. Help support our work; subscribe today!

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Books by Bill O'Reilly, Dean Koontz challenged in school: What happened?

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Defying death and time: How the rich are freezing themselves in hopes of waking up hundreds of years later – Business Today

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Imagine waking up in a future where medical technology has advanced so far that diseases like cancer are relics of the past, and aging is a curable condition. Unfortunately,humanity may not reach such a reality, especially in our lifetimes. But what if we tell you there is a company that is willing to put you to sleep, only to wake you up decades or hundreds of years later? At a time when doctors can stop aging and dodge death.This is thevision of Alcor Life Extension Foundation. This US-based company claims to betheleading cryonics company in the world, where people are currently being preserved with the hope of one day experiencing that incredible future.

Most of us may believe this is a pipe dream or a very distant future. But you'd be surprised to know that Alcor has already frozen 233 patients in the hopes of reviving them years later.

The science behind this unique businessis called cryonics, a process that preserves human bodies at extremely low temperatures. The aim? To keep them intact until future medical advancements can potentially revive and cure them. This cutting-edge procedure, known as vitrification, involves replacing the body's blood with a cryoprotectant solution to prevent ice crystal formation, which can damage cells and tissues. Once vitrification is complete, the body is gradually cooled to -196 degrees Celsius and stored in a vacuum-insulated metal container filled with liquid nitrogen.

The big question: Revival uncertainty

According to the Department of Anatomy at AIIMS Rajkot, the hope is that future medical technology will advance to a point where it is possible to repair the damage caused by the preservation process and the underlying causes of death. However, current medical science does not have the means to reverse the cryopreservation process or repair the cellular damage that might occur. Alcor and its supporters are banking on future breakthroughs in nanotechnology and regenerative medicine to make revival possible.

Why freeze without a guarantee?

So why do people opt for cryonics despite the uncertainty? For many, it's about the possibility of extending life and witnessing future advancements. Cryonics represents a hope that terminal illnesses and aging might one day be curable. Alcor provides this hope, albeit with no promises or timelines.

Immortality for the wealthy?

As expected, any technology that offers the faintest possibility of immortality will attract millionaires and billionaires. But how can they ensure payments after death? Alcor uses a trust fund system to make sure there's enough money to care for cryopreserved bodies for many decades, even indefinitely.

When you sign up for cryopreservation, a significant portion of your funding is allocated to the Alcor Patient Care Trust. For whole body preservation, $115,000 is put into this trust. For neuro preservation (just the head), $25,000 is allocated. The company also offers membership. First, there are monthly membership dues ranging from $17 to $100, depending on your age. If you want to include a child, it costs an additional $60 per year for each child.

Ethical and scientific debate

The practice of cryonics raises ethical and scientific questions. Critics argue that without a clear path to revival, cryonics may be giving people false hope. The Department of Anatomy at AIIMS Rajkot highlights several critical questions: how to ensure that frozen tissues do not deteriorate over time, how to reverse the freezing process without causing further harm, and how to restore the personality, memories, and identity of revived individuals. These challenges underscore the speculative nature of cryonics.

While the science of revival is still speculative at best, the efforts of companies like Alcorcontinue to push the boundaries of what might one day be possible.

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Rich People Who Get Cryogenically Frozen Are Hoarding Their Money for When They Get Thawed Out – Futurism

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Despite science only having the freezing part of the cryogenic process down, attorneys for uber-rich anti-death advocates have invented a new type of trust aimed at hoarding their wealth for when they finally exit suspended animation.

AsBloomberg Law reports, estate planners are hard at work creating so-called "revival trusts" for rich people who get frozen after their deaths, so that if cryonic revival technology ever actually becomes viable, they can access their wealth hundreds of years after they die.

"The idea of cryopreservation has gone from crackpot to merely eccentric," explained Mark House, an estate lawyer who works with the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, a cryonics facility that boasts 230 people already on ice. "Now that its eccentric, its kind of in vogue to be interested in it."

While that assessment is likely in the eye of the beholder, Alcor, which is billed as the largest such facility in the world, has about 1,400 paying members preparing to be cryogenically frozen upon their deaths.

With thousands of people around the world either planning to enter "cryosleep" or having already had their corpses placed in such facilities, there's money to be made in the business of body-freezing right now even if nobody knows how to actually revive frozen bodies from the dead.

Indeed, industrious estate attorneys like House require clients to have at least $500,000 to place in their cryonics trusts so that fees don't drain them over time. Like with all dynasty trusts that are passed down through multiple generations, beneficiaries and executors are named for these revival trusts, too.

As yet, though, there's legal red tape in the way of extending the wealth of the wealthy. Because resurrection from cryosleep is not a thing that exists yet, there isn't yet any legal way to reverse a death certificate if is revived from the ice, either.

To work around this glaring logistical issue, estate planners working in this burgeoning field advise that the person creating these funds name a trust protector be it an individual, an organization, or some other entity who has the power to determine whether they've been revived or not.

And what constitutes revival, exactly?

"Some people will say they consider revival only if theyre the same person they are today with all their memory intact," Peggy Hoyt, a Florida-based estate planner, told Bloomberg. "Some people are content to say that a human clone would be equivalent of revival. Others said they dont care if they have a body if their brain is uploaded to a computer."

Epistemology aside, the people paying for these services have high hopes for the future of their wealth.

"I really want to figure out a solution," enthused Steve LeBel, a retired hospital executive in Michigan who toldBloomberg that he's actively looking for ways to access his money after his natural death. "Otherwise Ill be in there with my fingers crossed, hoping theres money left over, 200 years from now, to pay for the resurrection process."

What the world will look like in 200 years is anyone's guess folks rich enough to shell out for cryosleep and revival trust planning are clearly hopeful they'll enjoy the best of what it offers.

More on wealthy shenanigans: Billionaire Promised Crew Free Flights Around Moon, Then Dashed Their Dreams

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