Page 3,655«..1020..3,6543,6553,6563,657..3,6603,670..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

Ron Paul: Anytime US gives intl aid it takes money from poor at home and gives it to rich abroad – Video

Posted: April 10, 2014 at 3:48 am


Ron Paul: Anytime US gives intl aid it takes money from poor at home and gives it to rich abroad
A former US Congressman, presidential candidate, and a man with nationwide support for his views on what government should be. A legend of American politics,...

By: RT

Go here to see the original:
Ron Paul: Anytime US gives intl aid it takes money from poor at home and gives it to rich abroad - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul: Anytime US gives intl aid it takes money from poor at home and gives it to rich abroad – Video

Ron Paul I’m Not Even A Fan Of NATO! They Want Prices To Go Up On Energy! They Want Taxes – Video

Posted: at 3:48 am


Ron Paul I #39;m Not Even A Fan Of NATO! They Want Prices To Go Up On Energy! They Want Taxes
April 07, 2014 Russia Today News ONE TIME ONLY DONATION.

By: Josept Aron

Read more:
Ron Paul I'm Not Even A Fan Of NATO! They Want Prices To Go Up On Energy! They Want Taxes - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul I’m Not Even A Fan Of NATO! They Want Prices To Go Up On Energy! They Want Taxes – Video

Ron Paul defines 'liberty' at Cal State East Bay

Posted: at 3:48 am

Ron Paul, former 12-term congressman and three-time presidential candidate, speaks in the university theater at California State University, East Bay in Hayward, Calif., Wednesday, April 9, 2014. Paul's appearance was sponsored by The Smith Center for Private Enterprise Studies and The Independent Institute. The subject of his speech is "Liberty Defined: The Future of Freedom. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)

HAYWARD -- Ron Paul's glass is half full AND half empty.

On one hand, the former 12-term congressman and three-time presidential candidate from Texas believes America is on the edge of economic collapse and totalitarianism, a teetering empire that boldly pokes its nose into the lives of its own citizens and the affairs of other nations.

On the other hand, "I am optimistic enough to believe that we are moving in the right direction," he told an overflowing audience of about 600 on Wednesday at Cal State East Bay. "We're overcoming that propaganda machine of the government and the media."

More Americans -- especially young Americans -- are taking to the Internet and to the streets to question the government and stand up for their liberty and privacy, he said. And to paraphrase Victor Hugo, "you cannot stop an idea whose time has come."

One of Paul's sons, Rand Paul, is the junior U.S. Senator from Kentucky, and is considering whether to seek the Republican presidential nomination in 2016.

The elder Paul's hourlong speech shared a title with his 2011 book, "Liberty Defined: The Future of Freedom," and covered almost as many topics; the crowd welcomed each of his axioms with applause and shouts of encouragement. Among those spotted in the audience were a woman wielding one of Paul's 2012 presidential campaign signs, and a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask of the type popularized in civil protests of recent years.

Repeating his signature criticisms of income taxes and the Federal Reserve System, Paul said politicians -- however good their intentions -- who legislate away individual freedoms "believe that you are incapable of doing what is best for your life" and will redistribute wealth based on "envy."

Liberty means letting people make and be responsible for their own mistakes, he said, citing drugs as an example. "If governments decide that vices are bad and are crimes, we end up with the situation we have today," he said. "Look at the harm done by the drug war over these many decades."

Paul called for noninterventionist foreign policy in which America stays out of places like Iraq and Syria, and avoids confrontations with nations like Russia, unless its own security is directly threatened. "There's nothing wrong with a foreign policy ... of the Golden Rule: Never do to another country anything that we don't want them to do to us."

See the rest here:
Ron Paul defines 'liberty' at Cal State East Bay

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul defines 'liberty' at Cal State East Bay

Libertarianism isn't an alternative to the Republican Party

Posted: at 3:48 am

Libertarianism the political ideology of the live and let live is enjoying a surge in popularity. Some believe its hour has finally arrived and it can truly become an alternative to the Republican Party.

I understand its appeal. I like libertarians, and can read Ludwig Von Mises and listen to Murray Rothbard all day long. But it isn't an alternative. It's an electoral distraction.

Diehard libertarians disagree, of course. Last week the Libertarian Party's 2012 presidential nominee, Gary Johnson, visited Alabama on a fund-raising tour. The former two-term governor of New Mexico made stops in Mobile, Montgomery and Birmingham touting his party's message of civil liberties and personal responsibility. He probably met receptive audiences since more voters are identifying themselves as libertarians now than at anytime in recent memory.

This trend should worry conservatives, especially since the libertarian candidate cost the GOP votes and victory in last year's gubernatorial election in Virginia.

But how many of these new libertarians really support what the Libertarian Party stands for?

Many call themselves libertarians because of a single issue pot. When comedian, drug legalization activist and self-identified libertarian Bill Maher attended one of conservative Grover Norquist's policy discussions, he rattled off a list of things the government should be doing and how taxes should increase as well. Norquist laughed, and then asked if he represented the big government wing of the Libertarian Party. Maher didn't get the joke.

Some identify with libertarians until they scratch beyond the surface of "Hey, freedom, baby!" and learn about the party's actual positions. Others just don't want to be called conservatives, much less Republicans.

There are certainly true believers who bear the scars of a generational battle with conservatives. William F. Buckley drummed them out of the Republican Party decades ago and they've been building a 50-state network ever since. Their sincerity is beyond doubt, but their judgment remains in serious question.

"It's the libertarian principles that matter," wrote a good friend while debating the issue over email recently. However, their beliefs seem more like doctrine than principles. Conservatives believe in principles limited government, individual liberty, free enterprise and apply them to unique problems while guided by tradition and morality. We have flexibility to make judgments.

Libertarianism, as far as I can tell, demands consistent application of its beliefs, regardless of their impact. Responses to an issue must always be X, no matter if X is harmful or unwanted. Consistency isn't a virtue in government; its application will eventually end in tyranny or chaos.

Read the original here:
Libertarianism isn't an alternative to the Republican Party

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on Libertarianism isn't an alternative to the Republican Party

Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? (with Timothy B. Lee) – Video

Posted: at 3:48 am


Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? (with Timothy B. Lee)
Everyone seems to be talking about Bitcoin these days. But just what is Bitcoinand what are cryptocurrencies in general? How do they work? Are they money? W...

By: Libertarianism.org

See original here:
Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? (with Timothy B. Lee) - Video

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? (with Timothy B. Lee) – Video

Gene therapy successfully regenerates an old organ inside a living animal

Posted: at 3:47 am

In a landmark study sure to provoke interest, researchers from the University of Edinburgh have regenerated an aged organ in vivo, inside a living animal to its youthful state though noninvasive manipulation of genes. Its a breakthrough that not only brings hope for a wide variety of age-related ailments, but which fundamentally challenges our idea of what aging is. This study treats the natural impacts of of time like symptoms of a disease and by treating those symptoms it seems to have tracked the cells back to their pre-disease (youthful) state.

The organ in question is the thymus, a small immune node that sits near the heart. It produces T-cells, one of the bodys most important immune response units, but over the course of a lifetime the thymus shrinks and T-cell production slows. This is thought to be one big reason (one of many) that elderly people suffer decreased immune response relative to younger people. This study used1- and 2-year old mice, and saw the typical drop in both thymus size and T-cell production with age.

The thymus is one of the most important parts of the immune system, especially in younger people.

Prior research had already identified a protein called FOXN1 as likely linked to thymus degeneration; its expression levels in the thymus seem linked to that organs fate. The mice in this study were bred with a specific genetic sensitivity, however, so that when exposed to the drug tamoxifen they would begin producing fully youthful levels of FOXN1, regardless of their actual age. It should be pointed out that the fact that these were genetically engineered mice is more crucial to the experimental setup than the therapeutic one; without the need to control for variables, scientists could plausibly increase FOXN1 levels through less convoluted measures.

The results? Mutant mice treated with tamoxifen showed total or near-total regeneration of their youthful thymus, while control mice also given tamoxifen showed predictable thymus function for their age. This held true for both the size of the organ itself and the abundance of the T-cells it produces. The regeneration seems to arise from the fact that FOXN1 is a transcription factor that controls expression of several other genes, and that these genes activate stem cell-like action in some thymus cells. By restoring FOXN1 levels, the researchers seem to have convinced the thymus to de-age itself at least, in this one very specific way.[DOI:10.1242/dev.103614]

The researchers are quick to point out the possible benefits to elderly people, or those afflicted by immune diseases. Increasing the ability to fight infection could also revolutionize hospital medicine, helping vulnerable patients fight infection by overclocking the thymus to produce a boost of white blood cells. Restoring the immune response of sick and elderly people would be, without an ounce of hyperbole, one of the most important medical advances in all of human history.

A separate study found that improper FOXN1 function causes a wasting immune disease. Sad

But this study is a far cry from proof that such utility could actually exist. If nothing else, it stands as an uncomfortable challenge to our ideas about just what agingis. Has the thymus really been regenerated or is it simply bigger and more active than it used to be?We do have a few relatively non-arbitrary measures of cell age, in particular measurements of telomere decay. Telomeres are long stretches of inactive DNA that cap our chromosomes on either end, and which seem to fray and shorten as cells live and replicate. A functional regeneration such as this one, coupled with genetic implants to re-lengthen telomeres and undo other sources of aging damage, could be difficult to distinguish from literal reversal of the aging process. (Read:What is transhumanism, or, what does it mean to be human?)

Thats a long way out, however. In the extreme long term, patchwork replacement of organs and body parts is even prophesied to allow immortality, and this study shows that we might be able to supplement grown organs with regenerated ones. Theres no telling how many tissues might be usefully regenerated with such a simple molecular switch but theres also currently no telling if these regenerated thymuses will continue to function well, or if such manipulation could cause unintended side-effects.

A lot more research is needed before human applications could even be discussed, but its an enticing goal. Any tool that could maintain the bodys own immune system could end up saving both lives and healthcare costs immensely of course, as weve discussed previously though, there could be some massive problems if we all start living to 100 or more.

Go here to see the original:
Gene therapy successfully regenerates an old organ inside a living animal

Posted in Immortality Medicine | Comments Off on Gene therapy successfully regenerates an old organ inside a living animal

NASA plans: Throwing asteroid at moon, sending people to Mars

Posted: at 3:47 am

Screenshot from the video from the Huffington Post

At a US Senate hearing focused on intermediate space missions, NASA disclosed some of its ambitious plans, including the goal to send human missions to Mars and a manned spacecraft to the asteroid, the Huffington Post reported April 9. "Our architecture is designed for long-term human exploration of our solar system, including the goal of human missions to Mars," William Gerstenmaier, an associate administrator at NASA, was quoted as saying during testimony before the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Science and Space. "We're going to grab a piece of the solar system, we're going to deflect it around the moon and insert it into a distant retrograde orbit around the moon where our crews can go visit." NASA hopes to have the Mars trip by 2030s.

Read the full story on the Huffington Post

Read more here:
NASA plans: Throwing asteroid at moon, sending people to Mars

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on NASA plans: Throwing asteroid at moon, sending people to Mars

UN picks for Palestinian post allegedly anti-Semitic

Posted: at 3:47 am

Makarim Wibisono of Indonesia (l.) and Christine Chinkin, a professor at the London School of Economics, both have a history of anti-Semitic statements.Reuters

Under pressure from Arab nations, the United Nations Human Rights Council has rejected a U.S.-backed choice to replace its outgoing point man on Palestine, and is now eyeing two candidates who share a long history of alleged anti-Israel bias.

The current front-runner to replace Richard Falk, a 9/11 truther who once praised Ayatollah Khomeinei and was reliably anti-Israel while serving as the council's special rapporteur on Palestinian rights, is Christine Chinkin, a law professor at the London School of Economics. Chinkin authored the Goldstone report, an infamous UN study on the Gaza conflict that was repudiated by Israel. A dark horse candidate is Indonesias former UN envoy, Makarim Wibisono, who has long been an outspoken critic who has a history of making one-sided remarks on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Either choice will ensure the 47-member council employs a monitor with a built-in, anti-Israel bias, said UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer.

"The real issue is not the nominees, but the biased position itself," Neuer said. "This is the only council mandate that requires the examination not of a given region, but of only one side, with the specific instruction to investigate 'Israel's violations of international law' in the territories, while completely disregarding human rights abuses against women, Christians and dissidents that are being committed by Hamas, Fatah, Islamic Jihad or others."

Georgetown Law Prof. Christina Cerna, who the U.S. backed for the job, was rejected after several Arab nations balked. Neuer said they sent letters to UNHRC President Remigiusz Henczel objecting to her candidacy. Critics of Cerna -- who received a unanimous recommendation from the councils five-member vetting panel -- said she had not been on record in the past with any statements on Palestinian issues.

The impartiality of Chinkin, who has accused Israel of war crimes, was questioned by foreign policy academics as well as then-Human Rights Committee Chair Sir Nigel Rodley.

The panel also is believed to be considering Wibisono, who has long been an outspoken critic who has a history of making one-sided remarks on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Neuer's group said Wibisono should be excluded from consideration because of a 2010 trip to Gaza, where he allegedly met with the leader of Hamas, and several past statements. Wibisono has accused Israel of unconscionable use of force against the Palestinians, "untenable acts of aggression," and of having a "policy of retribution against the entire Palestinian nation. In addition, he has often and openly supported what he calls the sacred Palestinian cause.

Appointments of all special rapporteurs have been postponed another month. Falk, an 83-year-old Princeton University professor, is set to leave May 1. Falk has accused Israel of of slouching toward nothing less than a Palestinian Holocaust. Last month, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power left no doubt about how the White House feels about Falk.

"The United States welcomes Mr. Falk's departure, which is long overdue," Power said in a statement. "Falk's relentless anti-Israeli bias, his noxious and outrageous perpetuation of 9/11 conspiracy theories [and] his publication of bizarre and insulting material has tarnished the U.N.'s reputation and undermined the effectiveness of the Human Rights Council.

Read this article:
UN picks for Palestinian post allegedly anti-Semitic

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on UN picks for Palestinian post allegedly anti-Semitic

Future-University Futurology Futures-Studies Futurism – The Big Thing (part 2) – Video

Posted: at 3:47 am


Future-University Futurology Futures-Studies Futurism - The Big Thing (part 2)
all about futures-sciences to science-fiction.

By: Roman Retzbach

Visit link:
Future-University Futurology Futures-Studies Futurism - The Big Thing (part 2) - Video

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on Future-University Futurology Futures-Studies Futurism – The Big Thing (part 2) – Video

"Gaia Hypothesis" Originator James Lovelock Reflects on His Career

Posted: at 3:46 am

The scientist and futurist talks about self-regulating Gaia, climate change and peer review, as an exhibition featuring him opens April 9 in London

The new exhibition features some of scientist James Lovelock's inventions, including this homemade gas chromatography device. Credit:Bruno Comby via Wikimedia Commons

A new exhibition at the Science Museum in London features the personal archives of one of the most influential modern scientists; James Lovelock. Unlocking Lovelock: Scientist, Inventor, Maverick tells the story of the British scientist's work in medicine, environmental science and planetary science, and displays documents ranging from childhood stories, doodle-strewn lab notebooks and patents to letters from dignitaries such as former UK prime minister (and chemist) Margaret Thatcher. Also included are several of Lovelocks inventions, such as the electron-capture detector that enabled the measuring of ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons in the atmosphere in the 1970s.

Lovelock, born in 1919, is best known for the Gaia hypothesis, which proposes that the Earth functions as a self-regulating system, similar to a living organism. The idea sparked controversy when Lovelock and microbiologist Lynn Margulis proposed it in the 1970s, but environmental and Earth scientists now accept many of its basic principles. In 2006, his bookThe Revenge of Gaiapredicted disastrous effects from climate change within just a few decades, writing that only a handful of the teeming billions now alive will survive.

This week Lovelock spoke toNatureabout his career, his earlier predictions and his new book,A Rough Ride to the Future(reviewed last week inNature).

Is climate change going to be less extreme than you previously thought?

The Revenge of Gaiawas over the top, but we were all so taken in by the perfect correlation between temperature and CO2in the ice-core analyses [from the ice-sheets of Greenland and Antarctica, studied since the 1980s]. You could draw a straight line relating temperature and CO2, and it was such a temptation for everyone to say, Well, with CO2rising we can say in such and such a year it will be this hot. It was a mistake we all made.

We shouldnt have forgotten that the system has a lot of inertia and were not going to shift it very quickly. The thing weve all forgotten is the heat storage of the ocean its a thousand times greater than the atmosphere and the surface. You cant change that very rapidly.

But being an independent scientist, it is much easier to say you made a mistake than if you are a government department or an employee or anything like that.

So what will the next 100 years look like?

See the original post here:
"Gaia Hypothesis" Originator James Lovelock Reflects on His Career

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on "Gaia Hypothesis" Originator James Lovelock Reflects on His Career

Page 3,655«..1020..3,6543,6553,6563,657..3,6603,670..»