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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Cancer treatment: where DNA, stem cells and cell immortality meet – News – The University of Sydney

Posted: September 4, 2021 at 6:00 am

Associate Professor Tony Cesare with members of his lab team at CMRI. Follow the lab on Twitter @TheCesareLab

The immortals we all carry are stem cells that are like universal patches that convert into whatever cells are needed at that moment skin cells, bone, hair, gut. Stem cells must be ever ready, so their telomeres are kept permanently long by an enzyme called telomerase. Stem cells are the only cells in the body that get this telomerase attention.

That means, once a stem cell becomes a specific type of cell, it no longer has a way to keep its telomeres long, says Cesare. From then on, the telomeres shorten every time it divides.

The internet snake oil sellers have grabbed onto the telomerase enzyme as a possible doorway to health and extended longevity, recommending it as a supplement to keep telomeres long, but as one of the worlds most knowledgeable people on the subject, Cesare advises against.

By giving a cell telomerase, and artificially extending its life, you're interfering in how telomeres prevent damaged cells multiplying and how they prevent tumours from happening, he says. Use telomerase in this way, and I believe the result could be cancer. To underscore the point, consider this: there is one other group of cells unexpectedly kept immortal by telomerase: cancer cells.

Cancer is a wily adversary: evading the immune system; hijacking the bodys nutrition sources to feed itself; riding the bloodstream to other parts of the body. And yes, cancer tricks telomerase into elongating telomeres, thereby allowing its cells to replicate ad infinitum.

We don't study specifics like pancreatic cancer or breast cancer, says Cesare. We're interested in what damage occurs with the DNA that allows a cell to become cancerous, to become immortal.

The crossroads of telomerase, cancer and stem cells is proving to be a rich source of new insights, not just about cancer and longevity, but also for the burgeoning field of regenerative medicine; the idea being that if stem cells can transform into almost any other cell in the body, could they be used to generate body tissues for transplantation?

Much of Cesares research is now focused on how telomeres control the delicate balance between allowing and preventing cell division.

It is a strange contradiction of short telomeres that while they are associated with the conditions of aging, they are also critically important in preventing cancer. Cesare was the first to understand a critical step in this cancer prevention mechanism and how it relates to cell division.

When actual DNA is damaged (as opposed to the telomeres), a signal stops cell division from happening until the DNA is repaired. Then cell division starts again. Cesare found that short telomeres can turn on the damage signal to stop cell division, while also preventing repair from happening. In effect, permanently retiring the cell.

Allowing that cells with short telomeres are reaching the end of their usefulness, and may indeed be making poor copies of themselves, preventing these cells from multiplying reduces the possibility of cancers developing.

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BOOK EXTRACT: Sisonke Msimang on death and dying – Business Day

Posted: at 6:00 am

The last time they see each other, the night my mother dies, my daughter crawls into her lap and they cuddle on the big couch in front of the big TV downstairs in the big house that belongs to us all. This house has arms long enough to wrap around us all. Bedrooms and balconies and a kitchen big enough to sit in.

I notice that my mothers hands are puffy and her face is tired. I tell her to drink her medicine. Her arms squeeze her grandbaby and she says of course she will. She doesnt. The tragedy has already been scripted. We are living through the last lines of the book of her life and we do not yet know it. Hours later, cradled by her bathtub in the house she loves, surrounded by her children and their children, my mother dies.

My sadness at my mothers death is compounded by my daughters confusion. What do you call this? Sadness squared perhaps. But the two of us are not alone in our sense of abandonment. We are all bereft my sisters and our husbands and my father, who becomes a ghost of himself almost immediately. Heartache multiplied by infinity.

I never imagined what it might mean for my daughter to lose my mother. I thought only about her losing me. This is the problem with the calculus of risk; you never quite get the formula right.

Insurance policies ask what you will do in the event that both spouses die, but tragedys portfolio is complex. I never considered that I would lose my mother at the same time that my daughter would lose her grandmother; multiple losses embodied in one womans unexpected death.

The rituals that followed the vigils and the singing and condolences gave shape to our mourning. But after the early bursts of tears, after the praises have been spoken, and the good days remembered, and the lament cried, and the grave closed, there is no company in grief, says American author Ursula Le Guin. It is a burden borne alone.

After the mourning, as grief set in and hardened, there followed a time of utter desolation. Her death sent me into the territory of panic I had first encountered at 12. I was no longer 12, but I was still terrified by the knowledge that she had been claimed by what James Baldwin describes as the terrifying darkness from which we come and to which we shall return.

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This has been a pandemic of a year but still somehow this miraculous thing has happened to my daughters body. She has stretched and blossomed and suddenly there is this and she is in tears and does not want to grow up and we are staring at one another in shock and grief and wonder. I assume she can bear life and it makes me sad and strangely complete to know that one day I will have outlived my usefulness to the planet, and she will remember me, and, in this way, I too will live.

I had no more answers in the wake of my mothers death than I did when I lay shuddering in my bed in the months after the Challenger exploded. What I had what I have always had is an instinct to survive. And this instinct so clear in the very fact of my daughter and the need for me to keep her safe has been my saving grace.

As a child I wept at the sight of seven men and women burning on the television screen. As a young woman I cried at the sight of a plane crashing into sky and steel. In the months that followed, as war rained on innocents in the aftermath, I marched to mourn the deaths of strangers. In my forties I lost my mother and felt that I would die from the pain of it.

Through it all, I have been fearful and anxious and still I have stared death in the face. Lifes hardest moments do not require courage, they simply require accompaniment. And this I have had in abundance all the days of my life.

Sisonke Msimang is the author of Always Another Country: A Memoir of Exile and Home and The Resurrection of Winnie Mandela. Last week she won the Western Australian Writers Fellowship at the WA Premiers Book awards.

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NASA’s first lunar rover will scour the moon’s south pole for water in 2023 – Engadget

Posted: at 5:59 am

Once you get offworld, count water among your most valuable resources: drink it, wash in it, use it to power your spacecraft. This humble molecule is critical to space exploration and exoplanetary colonization which is why, ahead of an international effort to establish a permanent human presence on the Moon (aka the Artemis Program), NASA scientists plan to land the worlds first autonomous lunar rover there in search of dihydrogen-monoxide deposits worth their weight in gold.

Weve known that there is water ice on the Moons surface for nearly thirty years potentially hundreds of millions of gallons buried amid regolith at the poles thanks to the pioneering efforts of the Lunar Prospector, LCROSS, and SOFIA missions.

Every mission, no matter what type, whether roving or not, will be standing on the shoulders of what was learned by other missions before, Dan Andrews, VIPER project manager, told Engadget. Otherwise you're just throwing away really good learning.

However, we dont necessarily have a great understanding of how those frozen molecules are actually distributed or how to best extract them from the lunar soil and thats where the upcoming Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) mission comes in.

This golf cart-sized machine will be delivered to the Moons South Pole in late 2023 and spend its scheduled 100-day mission scouring the area for four ice stability regions surface regions where we might find ice just laying about, shallow regions where the ice is covered by 50 centimeters of regolith, deep regions where the ice is buried up to 100 centimeters, and dry regions where there is no ice present below 100 centimeters. Andrews notes that those regions exist all over the place in both the North and the South Pole. There's thousands of them.

As the VIPER trundles about, it will employ its Neutron Spectrometer System (NSS) to indirectly survey the soil around itself in search of water at depths up to three feet (.9m) by looking for the energy losses in cosmic rays (mostly in the form of neutrons) that occur when they strike hydrogen molecules. And where theres hydrogen, there could well be water.

NASA

Once the NSS finds a suitable concentration, the VIPER will deploy its meter-long TRIDENT (The Regolith and Ice Drill for Exploring New Terrains) to drill down and pull up soil samples for examination by the onboard Near-Infrared Volatiles Spectrometer System (NIRVSS pronounced nervous), which can identify the hydrogens form, whether thats free hydrogen atoms or slightly more complex hydroxyls. And even before the rover sets a wheel off its orbital delivery vehicle, the Mass Spectrometer Observing Lunar Operations (MSolo) will be sampling gases kicked up during landing in search of stray hydrogen atoms.

When the LCROSS mission slammed a probe into the moons surface, it measured and analyzed the resulting ejecta for water ice using variations of nine commercially available instruments that could be traced back to everything from NASCAR car instrumentation to manufacturing. The VIPER mission is taking a similar tack. While not directly a part of the mission itself, other units of the instruments that will land aboard VIPER will also be delivered to the Moon in both 2021 and 2022 as part of NASAs Commercial Lunar Payload Services program for use in various experiments. This will serve as a sort of shake-down cruise for the instruments, allowing the VIPER team to see how the gear theyre sending will operate under real-world conditions. If the instruments work beautifully, well great, Andrews said. If the instruments have a peculiar behavior that was unexpected, we can plan that in. And if they outright fail... we at least have the chance to try to diagnose why it did go wrong.

While it wont be the first wheeled vehicle to roll across the Moon, it will be the first autonomous vehicle to do so with a mission far more important than ferrying astronauts around. But the Moon is a harsh and unforgiving mistress, presenting an entirely unique set of challenges not faced by the larger rovers currently crawling over Mars. For one thing, Mars has an (albeit thin) atmosphere, the Moon has none, which means it gets really, really hot, and it gets really, really cold, Andrews said. There's no moderating atmosphere so that becomes a really strong design point for the rover.

Whats more, at the South Pole where the VIPER will be prowling the sun will rarely get more than 10 degrees above the horizon, which causes unbelievably long shadows, he continued. And since there's no atmosphere, the lighting conditions are such that it looks to be very, very bright and right next to it can be unbelievably dark and black, which can create havoc for visual navigation systems.

And then theres the regolith the moons razor-sharp, electrostatically-charged, insidiously-invasive soil. Created from eons of micrometeorite impacts, the stuff has built into berms and hills, lined craters and valleys across the lunar surface. Regolith can pile high and deep enough to bury the likes of a VIPER. So to ensure that the rover remains mobile, Andrews team taught it to swim.

NASA

Under typical conditions, the VIPERs wheels roll conventionally at the ends of a rocker-bogie suspension system at speeds approaching a blistering half-mile-per-hour (thats 20cm/s). Since the rover is powered exclusively through solar energy with a 450W battery, rather than a handy radioactive core, we need to be able to move in any direction at any time, independent of how [VIPER is] pointed, Andrews explained. That means we need to be able to crab walk. So, each of our four wheels has the ability to independently be steered.

And when the rover finds itself mired in regolith, it can turn these wheels sideways acting as scoops to drag itself forward. Whats more, the suspension setup enables the rover to lift each wheel independently, like a foot. Combining the vertical movements with dragging action somehow resulted in the Shaq-esque shimmy.

We know we're going in and out of craters and in fact we want to, because some of the areas where the water that can be found are going to be in very dark permanently shadowed craters and because no robot or human has been down there, we don't exactly know what it's going to be like, Andrews said. So we needed to improve the capabilities of the rover to handle a lot of the unknown.

The VIPER will not be driving blind, mind you. NASA is already hard at work producing a lunar road map to help guide the rover on its journey. The 3D, meter-scale maps were created using NASAs open source Stereo Pipeline software tool alongside its Pleiades supercomputer to assemble satellite images captured by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter using a technique known as photoclinometry. With them, the VIPER will be less likely to fall into craters or tip head over wheels trying to climb a too-steep incline.

Unlike its Mars-based cousins, VIPER wont have to rely nearly as heavily on automation thanks to its drastically shorter signal lag time 6-10 seconds compared to the 15-20 minutes needed to talk to Mars. Thats still too long a delay to take control of the VIPER directly from Earth, but it will allow Mission Control to plot a series of incremental 15-foot-long navigational waypoints. Once we pick the landing site... which will be in October, Andrews said. We're going to pick the optimal traverse plan for the rover to get as much science as we can out of it.

After VIPER completes its mission, NASA researchers should have a much broader and more detailed view of where water deposits are located in the region. But what will happen to VIPER itself once its duties are done?

While the decision on that subject is still being debated by the VIPER team, Andrews points to two possible outcomes. We could drive the rover into the deepest, darkest crater it can find, consequences be damned, to see just what the heck is down there (maybe ghosts!). The other option would be to park it on the highest and best-lit mound of regolith we can find and hope that the rover can be revived after the region sinks into 6 to 9 months of complete darkness.

NASA would then have to decide if it is worth them keeping the team going for that amount of time, Andrews conceded, so when the South Pole comes back into the sun, to try to somehow bring Viper back to life... Is it worth it to NASA, is it worth the money, to do that? Those are the trades that the agency is going to have to make.

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Elon Musk Reveals He Thought He Was Insane and ‘They Might Put Me Away’ – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Posted: at 5:59 am

Elon Musk has been called many things, including eccentric, weird, spontaneous, and brilliant. Many consider him a genius, but some think the Tesla and SpaceX founder is simply out of his mind. In fact, there was a time in his childhood when Musk doubted his own sanity and thought he might be sent to a mental institution. Why would a 6-year-old think that?

Musk might be many things, but the South African native has never been accused of mediocrity.

Notable for his sometimes outlandish behavior, Musk crashed a million-dollar car that wasnt insured and sent a Tesla into orbit around Mars.

He even smoked a joint with Joe Rogan on a live broadcast.

On that episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, Musk admitted to wondering if he were crazy when he was a young child.

It was not a happy childhood. I think when I was, I dont know, 5 or 6 or something, I thought I was insane.

When Rogan asked why, Musk explained that even as a youngster, he knew other peoples minds were not always exploding with ideas like his.

He added that he felt strange while hoping others wouldnt find out and put me away.

Not content with acting oddly, Musk has also made numerous bizarre statements. In 2015, he appeared on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. When the host asked if he was trying to save the world, Musk replied, Im trying to do useful things. He also noted that Mars is a fixer-upper of a planet that might be better suited to human colonization if we dropped thermonuclear weapons over the poles.

Scientists are skeptical that such a nuclear-powered plot would make Mars more Earth-like, CNN reports. Nonetheless, Musk repeated his assertion with a two-word Twitter post in 2019: Nuke Mars!

Theres a good chance Musk is not an arch-villain, a superhero, or a crazy genius. As he revealed to a global audience on Saturday Night Live this past May, Musk has a form of autism called Asperger syndrome. MSN reports that Musks place on the autism spectrum explains his sometimes seemingly odd behavior and interactions.

During his opening monologue, Musk said he was the only SNL host with autism. The New York Post corrected him while explaining that SNL alumnus Bill Murray has also been diagnosed with Aspergers.

To an outsider, it may seem that Musk lives a charmed life full of success and unimaginable wealth.

But according to his ex-wife and mother of most of his children, the future entrepreneurs formative years were the opposite of easy. His second wife, Talulah Riley, confirmed the SpaceX leader endured a brutal childhood and experienced night terrors during their time together, the Daily Mail reported.

And in a Life Stories by Goalcast clip, Musks first wife, Justine, revealed much about her ex-husbands difficult childhood in South Africa. The erstwhile Mrs. Musk explained that the future billionaire was bullied by can-tossing schoolmates who harassed the boy so much that he hated going to school.

Eventually, young Musk sought refuge in computer games, inspiring his interest in programming. Justine also noted that the bullies who threw cans at a young Musk dont do it anymore.

RELATED: Elon Musk Has No Chill

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Futuristic bionic arm helps amputees feel the sensation of touch and movement – CNET

Posted: at 5:57 am

The research group at Cleveland Clinic's Laboratory for Bionic Integration looks at the inside of the touch robot system. Each small black box provides individual finger sensation to the user through a neural-machine interface.

Dreaming of a future where Luke Skywalker's replacement hand is more than a sci-fi fantasy, scientists have designed a "bionic arm" that enlists help from tiny robots to re-create the vital sensations forfeited when one loses an upper limb. The bots do that by safely vibrating muscles at the amputation site.

By 2028, the global prosthetics and orthotics market is expected to reach over $8 billion, according to a 2021 report from Grand View Research, but artificial limbs have hit a mechanical roadblock. They can't really account for many intuitive sensations that help us in our everyday lives, such as the way it feels to open and close our hands.

A study subject tests the team's bionic arm.

"We're still using technology that kind of reached its zenith around World War II," explained Paul Marasco, an associate professor in the Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute's Department of Biomedical Engineering and lead author of a study on the new bionic arm published Wednesdayin the journal Science Robotics.

Enter the bionic arm, a hybrid of metal and realistic skin tones.

Though there are several other teams working on bionic arms, such as the groups behind popular cyberpunk video game Deus Ex and Metal Gear Solid, Marasco touts a few advantages of his version.

The sci-fi-looking device translates information directly to and from the brain via powerful robots about half the size of a standard matchbox. While turning thoughts into action, the arm can simultaneously contact the brain to deliver sensations corresponding to that intended action.

Not only does the artificial limb appear to be the first bionic arm to simultaneously test several metrics of its benefits over typical prosthetics, those metrics indicate that it replicates the mechanics of natural arms precisely enough to restore unconscious reflexes in amputees who use it.

We rely on such reflexes every day. For instance, when we pick up a cup of coffee, our hand finds the mug on the table, grips the handle with the right level of firmness and lets go at the perfect time to prevent spills. We can achieve this task thoughtlessly even on the groggiest of mornings because nerves in our arm muscles automatically respond to our choices -- in this case, "I must drink that coffee."

Now playing: Watch this: This bionic arm looks like something out of sci-fi

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Traditional prosthetic limbs can't re-create such seamless movement because they run in manual drive -- amputees have to keep their eyes on them at all times and worry about things a nondisabled person usually chalks up to intuition.

After testing the device on two study subjects and using unprecedented analytic tools, the team was excited to discover that the subjects reverted back to reflexive behaviors from before their amputation, including intuitive grip and natural eye movements -- they could focus their sight away from the limb.

From the lab to your inbox. Get the latest science stories from CNET every week.

The metallic arm requires three components: realignment of nerve endings, mini-robots that work as a sort of control center and the bionic arm itself.

First, a surgical procedure takes an amputee's unused nerve endings within the healthy part of the arm -- those that used to be dedicated to removed parts, such as fingertips -- and "plugs" them into the site of amputation.

"Your brain is like, 'My fingers are connected to a muscle,' [it just doesn't] know that it's a muscle on your shoulder versus a muscle down in your forearm," Marasco explained.

The bionic arm is placed onto the amputation site and little robots are fit into the socket. Those robots press on relevant areas of the site, stimulating the nerve endings that are now attached, when the patient engages the arm.

"You can buzz their muscles and generate these really kind of interesting things -- these perceptual illusions of complex hand movement," Marasco said.

The researchers modified off-the-shelf prosthetic limbs rather than starting from scratch, hoping to fast-track the devices to rehabilitation clinics and make them more cost-effective than traditional prosthetics. People who use those less advanced artificial limbs often overuse the side of their body without an amputation, leading to back or shoulder problems that ultimately require costly medical care.

"These advanced systems are more expensive to fit to start with, but if you use them, they don't injure you, because you don't have to account for them," Marasco said. "This is going to be something that's going to cost less money in the future."

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Take notes the futuristic way with this digital highlighter on sale – Mashable

Posted: at 5:57 am

Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

TL;DR: Take your note-taking to the next level with the Scanmarker Air Digital Highlighter, on sale for 20% off. As of Sept. 1, pick one up for only $110.

School's back in session, which means note-taking is back on the agenda. But with everything else in your life going digital, scribbling notes longhand with a pad of paper and pencil, or trying to keep up your WPM without missing a beat just seems outdated. Instead, what if you could make the note-taking process much faster? Thats where the Scanmarker Air Digital Highlighter comes into play.

The Scanmarker Air bridges the divide between old school and new school note-taking by wirelessly transferring printed text into an app or web browser 30 times faster than if you were to type it up yourself. You simply highlight words the same way you would normally with a highlighter, but in seconds the Scanmarker will read it and transport it to Microsoft Word, Excel, Gmail, Facebook, and more. It can also translate your text into over 50 different languages and read it back to you as it scans.

Whether youre studying for a test, putting together a report, or extracting quotes for an essay, the Scanmarker Air can make your life easier. Like most of your other gadgets and gizmos, it actually helps you work smarter, not harder. With the ability to scan 3,000 characters per minute or a full line of text within a second, your study habits this semester are about to improve substantially. Theres even a dictionary feature that lets you look up words on the spot.

Basically the same size as a regular highlighter, itll be easy to tote around the Scanmarker from class to class, the library, a local coffee shop, etc. It works seamlessly (and wirelessly) with Mac, Windows, Android, and iOS devices. Plus, itll never run out of ink.

While you're gathering school supplies for the semester, be sure to snag the Scanmarker Air Digital Highlighter and bring your note-taking into the 21st century. It's usually $139, but you can save 20% for a limited time and get it for just $110.

Credit: Scanmarker

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Polaroid Now+ instant camera bridges the gap between classic and futuristic – SlashGear

Posted: at 5:57 am

Last year saw the release of the Polaroid Now, an instant camera reminiscent of the Polaroid cameras from the 1970s with some modern upgrades. The Polaroid Now camera was apparently a hit because today were seeing Polaroid announce and release a follow-up to it. The new camera dubbed the Polaroid Now+ offers the same instant camera functionality as its predecessor, but this time, photographers have more options when it comes to making their pictures unique.

Thats at least partially thanks to connectivity with the Polaroid app. Yes, while the camera is still an analog one that uses instant film, the Now+ can connect to the Polaroid app to offer more shooting modes. Users will find several shooting modes in the app, including light painting, double exposure, and manual mode. The app also offers aperture priority and tripod modes, which Polaroid says will help photographers snap photos with depth of field or long exposure times.

If you want the full analog experience, Polaroid has included five snap-on lens filters that allow you to give your photos new effects without having to bust out the app. The five lenses include orange, blue, and yellow filters along with special red vignette and starburst filters.

Polaroid assures that core features included in the original Now are also present in the Now+. Some of the returning features Polaroid calls out specifically include autofocus, dynamic flash, and a self-timer for taking old-school selfies. As alluded to by the cameras tripod mode, the Polaroid Now+ also comes with a tripod mount.

All in all, the Polaroid Now+ sounds like a sizable upgrade for those who want more options when shooting their instant pictures. That said, it is worth pointing out that at $149.99, the Now+ costs a fair bit more than its $99 predecessor. The camera is available today in blue-gray, black, and white color schemes from Polaroids website.

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New Baojun KiWi EV Hits the Chinese Market, Wants to Be Trendy and Futuristic – autoevolution

Posted: at 5:57 am

Measuring just 9.4 ft (2,894 mm) in length, 5.4 ft (1,655 mm) in width, 5.2 ft (1,595 mm) in height, and with a 6.6-ft (2,020 mm) wheelbase, the new Baojun is presented as a trendy four-seater aiming to appeal to younger customers.

The electric minicar is based on the Baojun E300 Plus, sharing that same bizarre design that isnt necessarily eye-catching, although SAIC-GM-Wulings insists that the car has a futuristic-looking, two-tone avant-garde split body styling to it.

Setting aside the odd suspended cab design, the EV is available in six exterior colors meant to please a wide range of tastes: Rouge, Sable, Emerald, Azure, Cream, and Mint. Regardless of the color you opt for, combinations of three body tones are used with contrasting accents on the roof, grille, mirrors, trim, and wheels.

But even though the KiWi EV may not make the best first impression based on its looks alone, at least it proves to be reliable enough once you get behind the wheel. It also packs in some nice, hi-tech features under the hood. The new Baojun minicar also boasts of delivering comfortable rides, with its McPherson independent suspension and double wishbone independent suspension design.

The rear axle-mounted motor of the KiWi EV generates 40kW of maximum power and 150 Nm of maximum torque. It has a top speed of 62 mph (100 kph), but then again, the KiWi was designed to be rather trendy and useful, not a speedster.

Range-wise, the car offers up to 190 miles (305 km) on a charge. Thanks to its DC fast charging feature, you can fully recharge the battery in one hour.

Baojuns latest telematics comes with AI (artificial intelligence) voice interaction, voice-controlled WeChat function, and real-time navigation.

There are two trim levels available with the Baojun KiWi EV. The Designer variant is priced at approximately $10,800 (69,800 CNY), while the Artist trim goes for around $12,200 (78,800 CNY).

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Trapped in the self Catholic Philly – CatholicPhilly.com

Posted: at 5:52 am

Richard Doerflinger

By Richard Doerflinger Catholic News Service Posted September 3, 2021

Recently Ive seen television footage of two protests against vaccine and mask mandates. In my home state of Washington, a protester held up a large sign saying, My Body My Choice. A protest in Louisiana featured the slogan Freedom of Choice.

These, of course, have been mantras of the pro-abortion movement: Whatever I choose regarding myself is valid and beyond reproach, simply because its my choice.

Of course ones choices about abortion and the pandemic affect more bodies than ones own, devastatingly so in the former case. But some protesters were probably staunchly pro-life, objecting to vaccines that were developed (or later tested) using a cell line from an abortion performed decades ago. How must they have felt, seeing those slogans?

For me, that question leads to political, cultural and even spiritual reflections.

Libertarianism emphasizing individual freedom and some distrust of government power has always been part of American politics.

In recent decades, both major parties have embraced it to some extent, applying it differently: Democrats favored a strong government in economic matters but maximum freedom on moral issues of life and sexuality; Republicans favored the free market economy but defended traditional norms on the social issues.

That seems to be breaking down. Corporate America promotes the freedom to choose ones sexual orientation and even ones gender; and formerly pro-choice Democratic politicians work to force others to fund and even perform abortions.

Culturally this has been a long time coming. Social commentators once called the baby boom generation, born during the prosperity after World War II, the Me Generation. But some of the boomers descendants make them look socially responsible by comparison.

In the 1980s, sociologist Robert Bellah and philosopher Charles Taylor called the dominant worldview of our time expressive individualism. It sees persons as atomized individuals, who fulfill themselves by expressing their inner truth so they can invent their own destiny and even identity. Personal autonomy is the core of the person.

Law professor O. Carter Snead points out in his impressive new book What It Means To Be Human that on matters of life, death and procreation, this tends to reduce human relationships to contracts for mutual benefit, discarded when they no longer serve ones personal goals.

Even the human body becomes a mere instrument for achieving those goals and vulnerable people at the beginning and end of life who cannot freely express and pursue such goals may not be persons at all.

Snead shows that this ignores fundamental aspects of the human condition. We are embodied beings, not sovereign wills trapped in prisons of flesh. Our very existence depends on the love and care of others, beginning with our parents, and our flourishing depends on our learning to give and receive love.

What does expressive individualism make of religion? It can accept being spiritual but not religious spiritual wayfaring can be yet another way to advance oneself, and there is no religious authority to contradict that. But it has a serious problem with the Judeo-Christian claim that human flourishing comes from my loving God above all, and my neighbor as myself.

As Bishop Robert E. Barron says, Your life is not about you is a central Christian message. Jesus says to take up our cross and follow him, that we must lose our life to save it. Explaining the Sign of the Cross, Msgr. Ronald Knox used to say that its vertical gesture spells I and its second gesture crosses that out.

Nothing could be more alien to the self-absorption typical of our culture. Which means that nothing is more desperately needed.

***

Doerflinger worked for 36 years in the Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. He writes from Washington state.

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Trapped in the self Catholic Philly - CatholicPhilly.com

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Federal Judge Hands a Big Victory to Prospective Third-Party, Independent Candidates in Georgia Peach Pundit – Peach Pundit

Posted: at 5:52 am

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is now prohibited from enforcing the 5 percent petition requirement for certain candidates seeking office in Georgia, handing a victory to the Libertarian Party of Georgia and any potential candidate who wishes to seek office as an independent.

Because the Libertarian Party of Georgia isnt a political party under state law and is instead considered a political body, a candidate must receive the signatures of 5 percent of registered voters in the district in which he or she wants to run. The same threshold applies to independent candidates. The Libertarian Party is, to this authors knowledge, the only entity to gain ballot access as a political body.

As a result of Georgias restrictive ballot access lawsoften criticized as being among the most restrictive in the countryno independent or third-party candidate has made it on the ballot for a U.S. House seat since 1964. In March, Judge Lanier Anderson issued an opinion in which he wrote that Georgias ballot access requirements violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the 5 percent signature requirement was adopted with a discriminatory purpose.

The opinion issued today by Judge Leigh May Martin, who serves on the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, prohibits Secretary Raffensperger from enforcing the 5 percent petition requirement. Instead, only 1 percent will be required. This 1 percent petition requirement is equal to the requirement necessary for an entity to gain status as a political body under Georgia law.

Until the Georgia General Assembly enacts a permanent measure, a candidate to whom this signature requirement applies may access the ballot by submitting a nomination petition signed by a number of voters equal to one percent of the total number of registered voters eligible to vote in the last election for the office the candidate is seeking, Martin wrote, and the signers of such petition shall be registered and eligible to vote in the election at which such candidate seeks to be elected.

The opinion can be found here.

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Federal Judge Hands a Big Victory to Prospective Third-Party, Independent Candidates in Georgia Peach Pundit - Peach Pundit

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