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Category Archives: Transhuman News

DUP and Sinn Fein urged to keep powersharing show on the road – TheJournal.ie

Posted: June 2, 2021 at 5:32 am

THE NEW LEADER of the Ulster Unionist Party has urged the DUP and Sinn Fein to keep the show on the road in terms of the powersharing government in Northern Ireland.

Days ahead of DUP leader Edwin Poots expected unveiling of his new ministerial team, and amid speculation over whether Sinn Fein will support the nomination of new ministers without a commitment over Irish language legislation, Doug Beattie said the Executive has to last.

There is also speculation that the next Assembly elections may be called before they are due to take place in May 2022.

It (the Executive) has to last, it has got to last for the people of this part of the United Kingdom, our Executive needs to keep going, Mr Beattie told RTEs The Week In Politics programme.

So theres an onus on the DUP, and there is an onus on Sinn Fein also to be generous with this because we are in a degree of instability, and they need to carry on and keep the Executive on the tracks until the elections in May next year.

Then in May next year people will be able to vote as to what way they want to go forward from that moment onwards. But the last thing we need is for the Executive to collapse, for there to be even more instability here in Northern Ireland.

Our people have suffered enough, its time politicians just held their ground, gave a little bit to each other, were a little bit more gracious and just make sure that we can provide for the people of Northern Ireland, particularly that we are coming off a pandemic which has absolutely decimated our lives.

The DUP and Sinn Fein really need to do a bit of mature politics here and just keep this show on the road.

DUP leader Edwin Poots with Ian Paisley Jnr Source: Brian Lawless/PA

Mr Beattie described a tumultuous couple of weeks in unionism but said the UUP had gone about their leadership handover in a very different way to the DUP.

We have done everything face to face with our previous leader and then we have gone out to the media and weve put our message across, he said.

We have done a smooth transition.

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Unfortunately with the DUP it has been a bit more fractious and thats not good for Northern Ireland we need stability here more than anything else.

As for anybody who wants to come to the Ulster Unionist Party we are an open party, we are a welcoming party but its not a home for people who just have a different view, or want to come and settle in here. You have to share our vision for the future, you have to share our values.

But Ill not take anyone on board just as a home because they are disgruntled with the DUP.

Mr Beattie said he will speak to everyone, including the Irish Government, the EU and the UK Government.

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Friends: Body Shaming, Gay Jokes To Sociopaths, B*tchy Leads How The Show Turned Irreverently Iconic – Koimoi

Posted: at 5:32 am

Friends & The Art Of Being Irreverently Iconic (Photo Credit: IMDb)

You would find plenty of warts about Friends, even at a casual glance. Its about guys and girls in a couple of New York City apartments theyd probably be hard-pressed to afford, given their economic conditions over most of the shows 10-year run. Their sole problem in life seems to be falling in and out of love. The storyline you got over a decade could well be capsuled into a two-hour Hollywood rom-com.

The show has been accused of body shaming, gay jokes and, lately, non-inclusivity, and its lead players of being sociopaths, unrealistic, philanderers and, at least one of them, selfish indecisive b***h.

Lifes like that, isnt it full of warts and often politically incorrect. Friends chose to show it all with abundant humour that never failed to be funny, serving the silly with a twist of the irreverent. Its the reason the show survived all of the above.

The May 27 special, Friends: The Reunion, underlined that the 17 years that have passed since the last episode aired in 2004 have been more than just about survival in fan psyche. The complete absence of any fresh on-screen activity on the part of Rachel, Monica, Phoebe, Joey, Chandler and Ross coupled with gossip about the actors that bring them alive, involving everything from Botox to drugs to inability handle fame only heightened the lure of the show, adding to the hysteria as it quietly kept building over the years.

In India, for the record, the unscripted special clocked one million views within hours across the country. For a country that had hardly found any representation in the fictional world that the show set up over a decade, thats a staggering statistic. Most social media reactions coming out of India, just as the rest of the world, have mirrored the sentimental frenzy that the show has built for itself. It shows the legend of Friends has only grown over 17 years cutting across demographic lines.

There is a pattern that pop culture follows. First comes the success, and only if the success sustains over a period of time does it pave way for an iconic stature. Notably, despite success, mainstream entertainment is often trivialised by those who look for finer sensibility even in what is meant to be served as mass entertainment. Friends did have to contend with as much during its decade-long run.

But the series faced a second problem the fact that it was a comedy. The genre finds an instant fan base but it is prone to get dated soon enough, too, because comedy is thought to lack the essential heft to be taken seriously in the long run as, say, political drama, or biographical and historical fiction.

It would be simplistic to say the series managed to survive these challenges only because it has doled out a brand of humour that was down to earth, and in some way or the other delivered the lessons of life. Even today, after having watched the show a zillion times, one doesnt exactly sit down to watch the odd episode to draw life lessons from Friends.

The secret for the show crafting and sustaining an iconic stature lies in the fact that it continues to make the nineties and the noughties look happier than they probably were. Add to that the youth factor, which never fails to appeal. It is something that continues to set apart Friends from every other commercial entertainer of its era that might have also been mega-successful.

With Lisa Kudrow resolutely over-ruling any chance of a Friends revival towards the end of the reunion special, the popular sentiment for the original series only grows stronger. It gives an added incentive for fans to romance what they have already seen many times. Kudrow and her co-stars Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer would be aware of the fact. If the shows slant at iconic irreverence ensures it will never go out of vogue, that is the casts ticket to television immortality.

Must Read: Friends Earned Whopping $1.4 Billion Over The Years But Can You Guess How Much Jennifer Aniston, Matt LeBlanc & The Cast Made?

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Friends: Body Shaming, Gay Jokes To Sociopaths, B*tchy Leads How The Show Turned Irreverently Iconic - Koimoi

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Cork teen: Why you should support the vote at 16 – Echo Live

Posted: at 5:32 am

POLITICS affects us all, but currently not all of us can affect politics.

The recent legislative moves to allow 16 and 17 year olds to vote aim to change this.

The usual argument against lowering the voting age seems to be that 16-year-olds are simply too immature and ill informed to be granted the right to vote. However, through my experience in youth activism, Ive worked with teenagers who have presented to cabinet members, who have organised worldwide protests, and who have published reports in conjecture with the ESRI.

These 16 and 17 year olds are far more politically engaged than the average adult.

At 16 years old you can pay taxes, consent to medical treatment, begin to work and finish school, yet you are forbidden from participating in the most fundamental democratic institutions: voting for your leaders.

From student council members to the national executive staff of the Irish Second Level Students Union, 16-years-olds are integral to the political fabric of this country.

Well, almost integral, despite the fact that politically involved teenagers tirelessly work to improve our society, we refuse to let them vote. By doing this we deny them the political representation they deserve and effectively attempt to silence their voices.

Of course, there are some teenagers who have no interest in governmental affairs and this is understandable.

Why on earth should they care about the leaders they didnt choose? About the policies they didnt vote for? If we want our young people to become active citizens, it is imperative we let them vote.

Moreover, The culture pervaded by partisan politics and democracy as a whole means that elected officials cater to those who can vote. This makes sense if you dont get the votes, you dont get a chance to change anything. Unfortunately, this results in the needs of people who cannot vote being ignored.

The vast majority of 16 and 17 year olds are seen by politicians as little more than a photo opportunity.

These teenagers have minds of their own and ideas of how to improve the country. Yet, until they are given the right to vote they will never be taken seriously.

Much of the issues that affect young people are decided by those who are far older than them. Take education for example, in 2018 Ireland spent only 3.5% of its GDP on education, the second lowest in the OECD. The government is able to invest so poorly in students because the vast majority cannot vote and therefore have very little political capital.

I worked on the ISSUs 2021 Senior Cycle reform survey and report. We received responses from thousands of teenagers who were astutely able to spot the flaws in the Senior Cycle System and how they could be improved. Yet, because 16 and 17 year olds lack the right to vote, their proposals and opinions are continually ignored.

The future leaders of this country are 16 right now. However, if we continue to deny 16 years olds the right to vote, they will simply become disinterested in politics. This severely limits the pool of potential candidates for election and could lead to the eventual breakdown of our democratic system.

Irelands voter turnout rates are dropping, especially in European elections. Its incredibly frustrating to see adults squandering their chance to make a difference in their society when adolescents would love to to have this opportunity. Those aged 16 and 17 have a higher voter turnout rate than any other generation, with 75% voting and 97% saying they would vote in future elections. The patterns formed at age 16 will continue into the future. By allowing adolescents to vote we are creating a generation of active citizens. This will allow Irish democracy to thrive.

I have spent this article so far praising young people. However Im not going to sit here and tell you that all 16 and 17 year olds are highly politically aware and will use their vote maturely and responsibly. But lets be honest, there are a fair few adults that dont use their vote wisely either. In every election, some spoil their ballots or cast their votes for joke candidates. Its incorrect to argue that 16 year olds cannot be given the right to vote because they would use it irresponsibly when legal adults are exhibiting theat very behaviours.

If we are to create a generation of politically aware and active citizens we cant stop at granting 16 year olds the right to vote.

We also need to seriously improve the level of political education in secondary schools. Junior Cycle CSPE is seen as little more than a joke.

The Leaving Cert equivalent: politics and society is not available to all students. 16 year olds deserve not just the right to vote but also the knowledge on how to vote in a politically astute manner.

ABOUT THE ISSU

The Irish Second-Level Students Union (ISSU) is the national representative body for second-level school students in the Republic of Ireland.

The ISSU works towards an education system in which the views, opinions and contributions of students are respected and in which students are recognised as an official partner in creating an education that is centered around and caters best for students.

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The Difference Between Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism

Posted: May 31, 2021 at 2:28 am

I recently wrote a well-received piece about the political positions of the Intellectual Dark Web (IDW), and a ferocious discussion erupted in the comments regarding Dave Rubins political philosophy.

To a modern liberal, Libertarian basically means someone who cares only about themselves.

Rubin calls himself a Classical Liberal, but it turns out that people on Twitter and Reddit arent sure exactly what that means. Rubin himself says hes undergone a Conservative Transformation lately, leading many liberals to claim hes simply become a Libertarian. Meanwhile, Libertarians are saying those are completely different things.

I was confused myself.

A cursory look at the definitions of Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism had them looking nearly identical. So I decided to do a deep dive on the differences. Heres what I found, combined with my analysis of the situation.

Classical liberalism is the philosophy of political liberty from the perspective of a vast history of thought. Libertarianism is the philosophy of liberty from the perspective of its modern revival from the late sixties-early seventies on.

Mario Rizzo

Over the last week or so I watched a ton of Dave Rubin videos, and what I found will likely upset readers both on the left and the right.

First, I dont think Rubin is being academically or politically accurate in branding himself as a Classical Liberal. And from what Ive seen, he isnt actually claiming this.

Dave is a bit confused right now, but you probably would be too if you were gay, Jewish, previously liberal, and were currently going through a conservative awakening.

Hes not a Conservative in the common use of the word, and he doesnt want to use the term Libertarian because it has negative connotations. So I think hes reached back into history for a loftier-sounding synonym that doesnt make him feel as uncomfortable.

I make an argument here that the IDW is basically a collection of upset liberals looking for honest conversation.

Thats the part that will upset readers on the right. The part that will upset readers on the left is that Ive yet to find evidence of actual hatred or malice in his videos. Yes, he gives props to Trumpwho I cannot standand yes, hes all over the place on healthcare and climate change. But to me he is behaving exactly like a liberal with a severe case of PTSDnot like an evil or hateful person. I see him as good-natured and wrong, which is much different than someone like Rush Limbaugh or Trump.

Rubin is using Classical Liberalism because it gives liberals a tiny moment of confusion before they attack, but its really just new packaging for his individualand very fluidbrand of Libertarianism.

In short, Classical Liberalism is being used by some on the right today as a somewhat pseudo-intellectual way of claiming that their unwillingness to use taxation and government programs to help the ailing and unfortunate masses is somehow a superior policy because 1), the phrase is old, and 2) because the liber in Classical Liberalism (insert Kung-fu here) means freedom.

(eagle sound)

So its not that theyre selfish or uncaringits just that they value freedom from government more than they value helping people they dont know (and who should be helping themselves anyway).

But dont call them Libertarians. Theyre Classical Liberals.

(wink)

Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism came from different times, and had different catalysts. The former was removing the oppression of theocracies, monarchies, and the very notion of it being permissible for a small group to rule over the masses, while the latter is addressing the overreaches of imperialism, bureaucracy, and progressivism.

The similarity is that both are movements to reduce the influence of powerful, centralized authorities over individualswhich is why both of them have freedom- (liber) at their center.

The issue is that not all centralized authorities are equally good or bad. While it might be great to be free of the King of England, thats not the same as desiring to be free of taxes to pay for public health and education.

Both terms are colored by perspective and context. Gaining freedom from something implies that its bad, but that judgment depends on who you ask. For some, taxation is a path to an ideal society, and for others its legalized government oppression.

Rubin is attempting to borrow the righteousness of the term Classical Liberalism to fight modern battles. They dont agree with how tax money is being spent in modern, 21st-century societies, and instead of calling themselves Libertarians (which makes them sound selfish), they prefer to be Classical Liberals.

Its as if the term will somehow remove the stain of selfishness, and replace it with the heroism of musketeers opposing the British.

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The Difference Between Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism

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Bubba Horwitz: Crypto Is The Currency Of The Libertarian And Free Markets The Daily Dive – The Deep Dive

Posted: at 2:28 am

For the final episode of The Daily Dive for the trading week, we sit down with Todd Bubba Horwitz of BubbaTrading.com. Bubba joins us this afternoon to discuss the latest in the crypto space including recent comments by Elon Musk and the current regulatory risk as well as the topics of hot commodities and recent action or inaction by the Fed.

The founder and chief strategist of BubbaTrading.com, Todd has spent nearly four decades in the financial industry. An original market maker in the OEX Trading Pit at the Chicago Board of Options Exchange, he comes highly experienced in the world of trading. Now, Bubba looks to provide mentorship and education to all levels of traders and investors by teaching them the ins and outs of professional trading.

You can catch more of Bubba atBubbaTrading.com, where he provides daily market content, as well as on Twitter,@Bubba_Tradingand YouTube,@The Bubba Show.

The author has no securities or affiliations related to any organization mentioned. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.

As the founder of The Deep Dive, Jay is focused on all aspects of the firm. This includes operations, as well as acting as the primary writer for The Deep Dives stock analysis. In addition to The Deep Dive, Jay performs freelance writing for a number of firms and has been published on Stockhouse.com and CannaInvestor Magazine among others.

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Bubba Horwitz: Crypto Is The Currency Of The Libertarian And Free Markets The Daily Dive - The Deep Dive

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What ‘The Enduring Tension’ Can Teach Us about the Core Institutions of Our Civilization | Richard Morrison – Foundation for Economic Education

Posted: at 2:28 am

Don Devines ambitious new volume is that rare published work that delivers an even larger and broader message than its title promises. A focus on the practice, history, and ethics of capitalism would itself be enough for several volumes, but Devines work is nothing less than a history of Western civilization, including the origins of human society, religion, and morality itself. Readers looking for a digestible survey of business ethics or a mere guide to socially responsible investing will quickly find themselves in over their heads.

As the titles tensionand the covers bold half-orange, half-silver designsuggests, we are in for a study of dichotomies, in which twin opposing visions struggle for dominance. Starting his narrative in ancient times, Devine describes the early cosmological societies, like ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Persia, in which religious belief and civic life were seamlessly combined. These societies were challenged by the rise of Christianity, which emphasized the importance of individual belief and acknowledged the distinction, and occasional antagonism, between religious and civil authority.

The Reformation presents another great dichotomy of religious and political legitimacy. Martin Luther launched a revolution against the authority of the Roman Catholic Church, but did not attempt to turn his theology into a systematic anti-Catholic movement. As Devine writes, some of Luthers followers wanted to go further than he, including in endorsing radical social and religious changes that horrified Luther himself. By analogy, Luther is more like Americas Founding Fathers, while the Anabaptists, who wanted to abolish private property, were more like the Jacobins of the French Revolution.

More familiar to students of American political theory is the dichotomy to which Devine pays the most attentionthat between John Locke and Edmund Burke on one side and Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Voltaire on the other. Locke and Burke, and their intellectual offspring, believed in a practical approach to morality and politics that encompasses both reasoned analysis and a respect for tradition, while the Rousseauians insisted on a rigidly rational system in which any competing source of legitimacy, including religion and tradition, must be attacked and excluded.

With this philosophical dichotomy established, most of modern political history can be fitted into one or the other side of the aisle, however imperfectly. The Lockeans are mostly conservatives and centrists, while the rationalists are mostly socialists, progressives, fascists, and most contemporary leftists. This framing is not unique to Devines work, even in recent conservative writing. Thomas Sowells A Conflict of Visions (1987, 2007) and The Vision of the Anointed (1995) are informed by a similar philosophical dichotomy, which Sowell refers to as an antagonism between the Lockean constrained vision of politics and the Voltaire-ish unconstrained vision. (Ironically, Steven Pinker, whom Devine criticizes as a materialist intellectual who undervalues religious faith, described a version of Sowells constrained vs. unconstrained tensionas tragic vs. utopianin his own 2002 book, The Blank Slate.)

Devines impressive career is on full display, as he makes several references to his tenure leading the Office of Personnel Management under Ronald Reagan and the almost-half century anniversary of his Nixon-era analysis The Political Culture of the United States: The Influence of Member Values on Regime Maintenance (1972). Devine moves confidently between the original texts of early modern and Enlightenment figures like Locke, Montesquieu, and Burke, to more recent writers like Leo Strauss, Eric Voegelin, and Friedrich Hayek, to contemporary political authors, including Jonah Goldberg, Charles C.W. Cooke, and Yuval Levin, connecting them, for the most part, to one of the two main sides of the political philosophy divide.

That said, Devines wide-ranging mastery of political theory and public policy may also be one of the books few drawbacks. The Enduring Tension jumps between discussions of the origins of social cooperation in prehistoric times and the metaphysical nature of the human soul to skeptical assessments of anti-discrimination statutes, civil service reform, and common core curriculum standards. Conservative and libertarian readers will likely experience few disagreements, but the rollercoaster of emphasis from the eternal and sublime to the recent and specific will likely cause some readers whiplash.

The citations also seem to cover everything that has crossed Devines desk in the last several decades, including much of his own published work. The index starts with Thomas Paines Age of Reason, Friedrich Nietzsches The Anti-Christ, and several references to Aristotle, but also includes plenty of works by modern pundits like Juan Williams and Fareed Zakaria, and even several of Devines own columns for Newsmax. This isnt a dissertation, of course, but the range of sources is certainly heterogeneous, to say the least.

Putting aside the authorsoccasionally fascinatingside excursions into topics from musical theory to the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, however, his championing of the Lockean view of political theory is relatively straightforward. A free and prosperous society needs more of the things that made the nation great in the first place: limited government, free markets, and individual rightsand a belief in a creator that is the ultimate source of those rights.

There is a long list of ways in which attacks on those institutions have produced misery and failure. Devine covers many of them, but pays little attention to attacks on the market economy itselfa surprising lack of emphasis for a book with the word capitalism in the title. Progressive critics of markets have long sought to undermine the private control of capital and bring the alleged robber barons of the industrial world to heel under the guidance of enlightened expert opinion. But we dont hear about many of those developments.

From the New Deal to the birth of the corporate social responsibility movement in the 1950s to the rise of anti-capitalist environmentalism in the 1970s and the emergence of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) theory in the mid-2000s, shareholders rights of property, speech, and association have been under assault for some time. Those efforts, including new statutes, regulations, and guidelines from quasi-governmental institutions, have aimed at eroding the right to dispose of ones property and subjecting economic activity to supervision and approval by supposed expert officials.

Developments like these may be less grand in scope than our eroding national commitment to Enlightenment values in general, but they would arguably fit better in a book about the tension between capitalism and morality than some of the (admittedly persuasive) examples of economic and social policy failure that Devine includes.

The rationalistic progressive assumption that all will basically agree in the end is simply wrong.

Several other contemporary authors have written books more closely focused on defending the moral status of capitalism per se. The late economist David Henderson championed the traditional understanding of property against leftist bureaucracy in Misguided Virtue: False Notions of Corporate Social Responsibility (2001) and The Role of Business in the Modern World (2004). The University of Notre Dames James Otteson presented a traditional, Adam Smith-focused defense of modern capitalism in Honorable Business: A Framework for Business in a Just and Humane Society (2019). More recently (and more didactically), finance professional and political commentator Steve Soukup has taken on the socialization of corporate America in The Dictatorship of Woke Capital: How Political Correctness Captured Big Business (2021), covering some of the same intellectual developments as Devine, from Rousseau to Marx to Woodrow Wilson and the modern administrative state.

The Enduring Tension is fascinating, informative, substantive, and entertaining, though it covers so much territory that it is difficult to properly categorize. Yet, it is worth the price of admission for a few deep passages alone. For example, Devine strikes at the condescension of much leftist posturing when he writes, Americans disagree about moral values and governance. The rationalistic progressive assumption that all will basically agree in the end is simply wrong. He also gives a good summary of fusionism when he says, Something distinguishes both conservatives and libertarians from the progressive Left: they do not insist on telling people hundreds or thousands of miles away how to go about their lives.

Finally, though, it is his emphasis on the core institutions of our civilization that contains his most vital message: The moral assumptions of the Western traditional mythos, in which individuals have been created free and equal, are indispensable to legitimizing a pluralist, federalist, traditionalist, capitalist society with free markets and localized powers under a limited central statea society where liberty and order coexist in a creative tension. Our forefathers bequeathed this heritage to us. Lets hope, even at this late date, that we can keep it.

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International Space Station will now host TV shows and Films – PINKVILLA

Posted: at 2:24 am

We may very soon watch the first TV show or movie shot entirely in space.

Interstellar, Gravity, The Martian are some of the highly acclaimed movies. All of these movies are around space. There are a select few who have experienced spaced. To the majority of us, space is still a fairytale life. Hence we are drawn towards space exploration, Moon Explorations, Mars Colonization and International Space Station. The thought of a habitable Mars might still be a distant future. But what if you can visit the international space station sooner and even have TV shows or movies shot on the international space station.

NASA is now opening doors to people willing to shell out a few million and have their own private space experience. Ms Dana Weigel, Deputy Manager at the space station for NASA said, "Were finally able to open our doors to private citizens and allow others to experience the magic of living and working in space. The dream is really to allow everyone access to space, and this is a pretty exciting starting point here. "

"Who Wants to be an Astronaut", a new TV show by Discovery, is planning to send a winner onboard the second Axiom mission to the space station. The second Axiom mission is expected to launch six to seven months after the first Axiom mission, the details of which are yet to be shared. The agreement between NASA and Discovery is yet to be finalised and will be closed soon.

NASA led missions are to the International Space Station will accommodate two private astronauts each year. Because NASA has decided to accommodate private astronauts, many private companies have started showing interest in the private space program. With the new garnered interest from private firms, Ms Dana Weigel said, "We are seeing a lot of interest in private astronaut missions, even outside of Axiom. At this point, the demand exceeds what we actually believe the opportunities on the station will be.

On the 25th of May 2021, Axiom announced the two astronauts for the second Axiom mission. The first is Peggy Whitson, currently holding the record for the most cumulative time in space by a NASA astronaut(665days). The Axiom mission will add more days to her existing record. Peggy will be the commander onboard the Axiom. The second person is John Shoffner, who will be paying for his seat. John heads of a company that manufactures conduits for fibre optic cables and will be the pilot for Axiom's second mission.

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Space Station May Host Wave of TV Shows and Films – The New York Times

Posted: May 27, 2021 at 8:03 am

Were finally able to open our doors to private citizens and allow others to experience the magic of living and working in space, said Dana Weigel, deputy manager for the space station at NASA. The dream is really to allow everyone access to space, and this is a pretty exciting starting point here.

Producers of Discoverys Who Wants to Be an Astronaut expect the winner to be on board for the second Axiom mission to the space station, which might take off six or seven months after the first one. For now, an agreement between the Discovery team and Axiom has not been finalized, and NASA has yet to choose Axiom to conduct the second private space tourism flight.

The NASA-led part of the station could accommodate two private astronaut missions a year, space agency officials have said, and other companies are also interested in participating.

We are seeing a lot of interest in private astronaut missions, even outside of Axiom, Ms. Weigel said. At this point, the demand exceeds what we actually believe the opportunities on station will be.

Still, on Tuesday, Axiom announced two people who would be in the seats for that second mission: Peggy Whitson, a former NASA astronaut who now works for Axiom, will be the commander, and John Shoffner, a paying passenger who made his fortune as head of a company that manufactures conduits for fiber optic cables, will serve as pilot for the mission.

Dr. Whitson, who holds the record for the most cumulative time in space by a NASA astronaut 665 days joined Axiom as a consultant a year ago, in hopes of getting to space again and adding to her record. Yes, most definitely, she said. That was the carrot.

Mr. Peterson said plans for the Discovery show grew out of discussions with Axiom early in 2020 and that it would be a premium documentary and less like Survivor or other ruthless reality television competitions.

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UltraSight Selected to Conduct a Study Onboard the International Space Station – PRNewswire

Posted: at 8:03 am

TEL AVIV, Israel, May 25, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --UltraSight, a digital health pioneer, transforming cardiac imaging through the power of AI, announced that it will conduct a study as part of the upcoming 'Rakia' space mission. UltraSight was selected by the Israel Space Agency in collaboration with The Ramon Foundation to conduct a study as part of the upcoming 'Rakia' space mission. The study will be held in collaboration with the Israeli Aerospace Medicine Institute (IAMI).

"Research has shown that the space environment negatively impacts the human cardiovascular system of astronauts spending long durations in space," said Eran Schenker, MD, Chief Innovation Medical Officer, IAMI. "Providing easy access to cardiac diagnostic information, for ongoing cardiac monitoring or for emergency medical interventions is of critical importance."

UltraSight's AI software platform pairs with handheld ultrasound devices to conduct sonography at the point- of care, whether in space or in primary care settings, helping more patients to be accurately diagnosed and treated. UltraSight offers users with no sonography training, real-time guidance and assessment, in order to easily acquire diagnostic quality images. This novel solution holds great potential to provide critical medical information of crewmembers during flight even without a trained sonographer on board or in the mission control center.

During the upcoming space mission, Col. (res.) Eytan Stibbe, will operate a handheld ultrasound device and acquire cardiac ultrasound images using UltraSight's real-time guidance. By acquiring cardiac images several times throughout the space mission, the study aims to monitor changes in heart anatomy during long stays in a microgravity environment. Furthermore, the study will provide additional validation for the ability to introduce cardiac ultrasound to rural and underserved communities.

"Our goal in the upcoming space study is to prove that with UltraSight's real-time guidance, any astronaut can acquire quality cardiac images, simply and independently of ground mission control or trained medical professionals," said Davidi Vortman, CEO of UltraSight. "Our novel technology carries the potential of increasing patient access to cardiac imaging and better care," he added.

About UltraSight

UltraSight aims to revolutionize cardiac sonography through the power of machine learning to enable more accurate and timely clinical decisions. The UltraSight automated guidance system and advanced usability features help bring the benefits of cardiac imaging to more healthcare professionals in new care settings, allowing patients access to ultrasound anywhere.

UltraSight won the TCT 2020 Innovation Competition which took place during the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics world conference.

Media Contact Luna Newton [emailprotected]+1-(917)-755-1655

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Ever wonder what it’s like to walk in space? Astronauts tell all – WAPT Jackson

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When astronauts venture outside of the International Space Station to go on spacewalks, the most important thing they have to do is focus.This may sound simple, but imagine trying to focus on a memorized set of tasks while stepping out of an airlock and wearing a 300-pound spacesuit with the glow of planet Earth and the sun and the dark void of the universe all around you. A tether connects you to the space station, and the absence of gravity keeps you from falling."There's a lot of things that you really need to do, one of which is just keep your focus, even though it's amazing out there," said NASA astronaut Mike Fincke. "It's really truly breathtaking. The only thing between you and the rest of the universe, seeing the whole cosmos of creation, is the glass faceplate of your visor on your helmet, and it's just awe-inspiring."Depending on the orientation of the space station, which completes 16 orbits of the Earth each day while moving at 17,500 miles per hour, our planet can appear above or below the astronauts.Fincke is a veteran of spaceflight. He's spent 382 days in space, and he's gone on nine spacewalks in Russian and American spacesuits. Fincke is training in Texas for his fourth spaceflight and will launch to the space station later this year on the first crewed experimental test flight of Boeing's Starliner.More than 550 people have been to space and about half of them have been on a spacewalk, Fincke said. Spacewalks are often referred to as EVAs, or extravehicular activities.The first spacewalk by an American astronaut was conducted by NASA astronaut Ed White on June 3, 1965. He left the Gemini 4 capsule at 3:45 p.m. ET and remained outside of it for 23 minutes. (Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei A. Leonov completed the world's first spacewalk on March 18 of that year.)Gemini 4 circled the Earth 66 times in four days. During the spacewalk, White began over the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii and went back inside the capsule as they flew over the Gulf of Mexico.He exited the spacecraft using a hand-held oxygen-jet gun to push himself out, attached to a 25-foot safety tether. NASA astronaut James McDivitt, on the mission with White, took photos of White in space from inside the capsule.White later said the spacewalk was the most comfortable part of the mission, and said the order to end it was the "saddest moment" of his life, according to NASA.Spacewalks: Part of the jobSpacewalks are part of life on the space station. The orbiting laboratory, which has served as a home away from home in low-Earth orbit for astronauts over the past 20 years, requires routine maintenance, upgrades and sometimes, emergency repairs.These walks usually involve two astronauts working outside of the station for about six-and-a-half hours.But countless hours of training and preparation precede any spacewalk experience to keep astronauts safe."A spacewalk is probably the most dangerous thing that we do," Fincke said. "I think it's more dangerous than launching and landing, even though those are really tricky things. If we become separated from the International Space Station, it's super dangerous. Now we have ways to prevent that because it is dangerous, but going outside is an extremely dangerous thing to do."Spacewalks are also incredibly hard and physically demanding, despite the fact that gravity isn't weighing them down."You have to remember a lot of things, you have to memorize a lot of things, you have to think in real time, and, by the way, you're moving that 300-pound piece of equipment around your body and every movement that you make is physically demanding," he said. "And to be able to do that in a calm, cool and collected way while breathing pure oxygen that's only 1/3 or 1/4 of the atmospheric pressure of planet Earth with everybody's eyes on you and trying to make sure you do the job. That is a really tough day."All of the hard work pays off. So far, every spacewalk has been conducted safely.Preparing to walk in spaceTraining on the ground before spaceflight helps astronauts focus on knowing their spacesuits, tools and understanding the tasks they'll be asked to perform."Each spacesuit is its own little spaceship," Fincke said. "It has its own electrical power and thermal control system, oxygen and everything you need to survive for six to eight hours. We have to know our equipment just like anybody who goes on an expedition mountain climbing or underwater. It's what keeps you alive, so we need to know our equipment very well."Understanding how to maneuver in the suit can also help astronauts prepare for what it's like to handle tools in space while wearing big, thick gloves in a pressurized suit.Additionally, there's a choreography to planning the movements of two people working outside of the space station, at times together and other times on separate tasks.But how can astronauts possibly prepare for a spacewalk on Earth?Pool timeThey do it by plunging into the deep end of the pool otherwise known as NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory in Houston. It's similar for crew training in Russia as well at the Hydrolab."The reason why we train underwater is because we actually wear real spacesuits, we do real tasks and we feel like we are weightless when actually we're just neutrally buoyant so we're floating," Fincke said.Neutral buoyancy means they aren't at the top or the bottom of the pool, so for astronauts, it feels like they're outside in space. Fincke said training in this kind of lab prepared him so well for his first spacewalk that it felt almost exactly the same. The training is that intensive and comprehensive, he said.Naturally, some things can't be simulated, such as the light and temperature changes astronauts experience during their spacewalks. The station's orbit around Earth can expose the astronauts to blinding, hot light from the sun or plunge them into cold darkness, moving from one extreme to the other. While the spacesuits protect them from extreme temperatures, the astronauts can still feel a shift.Spacewalk veterans can act as instructor astronauts to those in training. One thing Fincke often shares with astronauts preparing for spacewalks is understanding their spacesuits inside and out.Exiting the space station's airlock and going outside isn't a quick process; astronauts have to breathe pure oxygen for a while beforehand to avoid decompression sickness, or "the bends."During Fincke's first spacewalk, he breathed pure oxygen at a high rate for 30 minutes, closed his valve and went outside. But the valve didn't actually close, causing him to rapidly lose oxygen and the spacewalk was cut short."Had I been listening or had I understood my suit more, I could have actually heard the oxygen flow in at a slightly higher rate," Fincke said. "Sometimes it's those little things that you hear that can make make a difference."They figured out a solution and completed the walk a few days later. This whole scenario is actually part of an episode of the children's show "Arthur." Fincke appeared as an animated version of himself in an episode called "Buster Spaces Out" as an example to kids about working together to come up with a solution.Ground controlThe ideal amount of time to plan a spacewalk is six months, according to Sarah Korona, EVA flight controller at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. Of course, there are extremes, like a spacewalk she worked on planning for two years while they waited for a piece of hardware to launch, or two days if there's an emergency outside of the space station.If you've ever watched a spacewalk, she's one of the people you'll see sitting in what's called the "front room" on the ground. That's because there are many people working behind the scenes in backrooms to monitor every aspect of the space station, astronauts and spacewalk to provide support. Flight controlling is truly a team effort, she said.Korona and her EVA team build relationships with the astronauts and even get to know their mannerisms because they work together on the ground for years in training. When the flight controllers learn that something outside the space station needs to be fixed, removed, replaced or installed, they plan what hardware is needed, determine the tools required and begin choreographing a plan to accomplish the tasks.The plan is run in the Neutral Buoyancy Lab and crew members provide feedback to ensure that they've created the most efficient spacewalk.There's a flurry of activity on the ground and the space station the week leading up to a spacewalk. On the station, the astronauts prepare their suits, life support systems and tools. They have video conferences with the ground teams to go over every detail of the task plan.The American spacesuits essentially come in parts, so the astronauts can customize them for the best fit. On spacewalk day, they get up early and their fellow crew members on the space station help them suit up. These crew members will also monitor them from inside the space station during the walk.The ground team works in multiple shifts to ensure that every aspect leading up to and after the spacewalk is covered. A normal shift for a flight controller is about nine hours and it's very taxing, Korona said. Flight controllers follow a plan of procedures about 30-pages thick for the astronauts step by step, but there are also contingency plans in case anything goes wrong.Video views from the helmet cameras and those outside of the space station help the flight controllers monitor what's happening.About every 90 minutes, the astronauts check their gloves and helmet absorption pad, or HAP, to make sure there is no water inside their helmets or tears in the gloves. Teams also monitor the astronauts' consumables oxygen, water for cooling, battery power and carbon dioxide removal.This can determine the length of the spacewalk if these start to run out.Spacewalks of the futureSpacewalks are crucial to maintain the space station, but the knowledge gained during these outings can inform the way astronauts approach repairs to their own spacecraft as we push the boundaries of exploration.With NASA's Artemis program, which aims to land the first woman and next man near the lunar south pole by 2024, humans will be staying on the moon for longer than the short visits Apollo astronauts experienced. As we explore the moon and eventually Mars, astronauts will need to be able to repair and maintain their suits, spacecraft and habitats.With Fincke's upcoming mission, he hopes to add another spacewalk to his already impressive list. He said each of his own spacewalks has been memorable, but some moments tend to stand out more than others.During one of his spacewalks, the two crew members finished solving a problem outside of the station and asked teams on the ground what they should do with their remaining time outside. They were asked to take photographs outside of the station because it's impacted by micrometeorites and other things in space something the ground team wanted to track.Fincke took pictures of the space station until it grew dark as they moved into an orbital nighttime. Unable to take photos, Fincke securely clamped himself to the outside of the station and watched as they flew over the dark side of Earth. The universe was his scenery.Astronauts have such a packed schedule of tasks when they exit the space station that there are really only seconds or moments when they can stop and appreciate the view.Fincke said he'll never forget those 23 minutes for the rest of his life.

When astronauts venture outside of the International Space Station to go on spacewalks, the most important thing they have to do is focus.

This may sound simple, but imagine trying to focus on a memorized set of tasks while stepping out of an airlock and wearing a 300-pound spacesuit with the glow of planet Earth and the sun and the dark void of the universe all around you. A tether connects you to the space station, and the absence of gravity keeps you from falling.

"There's a lot of things that you really need to do, one of which is just keep your focus, even though it's amazing out there," said NASA astronaut Mike Fincke. "It's really truly breathtaking. The only thing between you and the rest of the universe, seeing the whole cosmos of creation, is the glass faceplate of your visor on your helmet, and it's just awe-inspiring."

Depending on the orientation of the space station, which completes 16 orbits of the Earth each day while moving at 17,500 miles per hour, our planet can appear above or below the astronauts.

Fincke is a veteran of spaceflight. He's spent 382 days in space, and he's gone on nine spacewalks in Russian and American spacesuits. Fincke is training in Texas for his fourth spaceflight and will launch to the space station later this year on the first crewed experimental test flight of Boeing's Starliner.

More than 550 people have been to space and about half of them have been on a spacewalk, Fincke said. Spacewalks are often referred to as EVAs, or extravehicular activities.

The first spacewalk by an American astronaut was conducted by NASA astronaut Ed White on June 3, 1965. He left the Gemini 4 capsule at 3:45 p.m. ET and remained outside of it for 23 minutes. (Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei A. Leonov completed the world's first spacewalk on March 18 of that year.)

Gemini 4 circled the Earth 66 times in four days. During the spacewalk, White began over the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii and went back inside the capsule as they flew over the Gulf of Mexico.

He exited the spacecraft using a hand-held oxygen-jet gun to push himself out, attached to a 25-foot safety tether. NASA astronaut James McDivitt, on the mission with White, took photos of White in space from inside the capsule.

White later said the spacewalk was the most comfortable part of the mission, and said the order to end it was the "saddest moment" of his life, according to NASA.

Spacewalks are part of life on the space station. The orbiting laboratory, which has served as a home away from home in low-Earth orbit for astronauts over the past 20 years, requires routine maintenance, upgrades and sometimes, emergency repairs.

NASA

These walks usually involve two astronauts working outside of the station for about six-and-a-half hours.

But countless hours of training and preparation precede any spacewalk experience to keep astronauts safe.

"A spacewalk is probably the most dangerous thing that we do," Fincke said. "I think it's more dangerous than launching and landing, even though those are really tricky things. If we become separated from the International Space Station, it's super dangerous. Now we have ways to prevent that because it is dangerous, but going outside is an extremely dangerous thing to do."

Spacewalks are also incredibly hard and physically demanding, despite the fact that gravity isn't weighing them down.

"You have to remember a lot of things, you have to memorize a lot of things, you have to think in real time, and, by the way, you're moving that 300-pound piece of equipment around your body and every movement that you make is physically demanding," he said. "And to be able to do that in a calm, cool and collected way while breathing pure oxygen that's only 1/3 or 1/4 of the atmospheric pressure of planet Earth with everybody's eyes on you and trying to make sure you do the job. That is a really tough day."

All of the hard work pays off. So far, every spacewalk has been conducted safely.

Training on the ground before spaceflight helps astronauts focus on knowing their spacesuits, tools and understanding the tasks they'll be asked to perform.

"Each spacesuit is its own little spaceship," Fincke said. "It has its own electrical power and thermal control system, oxygen and everything you need to survive for six to eight hours. We have to know our equipment just like anybody who goes on an expedition mountain climbing or underwater. It's what keeps you alive, so we need to know our equipment very well."

Understanding how to maneuver in the suit can also help astronauts prepare for what it's like to handle tools in space while wearing big, thick gloves in a pressurized suit.

Additionally, there's a choreography to planning the movements of two people working outside of the space station, at times together and other times on separate tasks.

But how can astronauts possibly prepare for a spacewalk on Earth?

They do it by plunging into the deep end of the pool otherwise known as NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory in Houston. It's similar for crew training in Russia as well at the Hydrolab.

"The reason why we train underwater is because we actually wear real spacesuits, we do real tasks and we feel like we are weightless when actually we're just neutrally buoyant so we're floating," Fincke said.

Neutral buoyancy means they aren't at the top or the bottom of the pool, so for astronauts, it feels like they're outside in space. Fincke said training in this kind of lab prepared him so well for his first spacewalk that it felt almost exactly the same. The training is that intensive and comprehensive, he said.

Naturally, some things can't be simulated, such as the light and temperature changes astronauts experience during their spacewalks. The station's orbit around Earth can expose the astronauts to blinding, hot light from the sun or plunge them into cold darkness, moving from one extreme to the other. While the spacesuits protect them from extreme temperatures, the astronauts can still feel a shift.

Spacewalk veterans can act as instructor astronauts to those in training. One thing Fincke often shares with astronauts preparing for spacewalks is understanding their spacesuits inside and out.

Exiting the space station's airlock and going outside isn't a quick process; astronauts have to breathe pure oxygen for a while beforehand to avoid decompression sickness, or "the bends."

During Fincke's first spacewalk, he breathed pure oxygen at a high rate for 30 minutes, closed his valve and went outside. But the valve didn't actually close, causing him to rapidly lose oxygen and the spacewalk was cut short.

"Had I been listening or had I understood my suit more, I could have actually heard the oxygen flow in at a slightly higher rate," Fincke said. "Sometimes it's those little things that you hear that can make make a difference."

They figured out a solution and completed the walk a few days later. This whole scenario is actually part of an episode of the children's show "Arthur." Fincke appeared as an animated version of himself in an episode called "Buster Spaces Out" as an example to kids about working together to come up with a solution.

The ideal amount of time to plan a spacewalk is six months, according to Sarah Korona, EVA flight controller at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. Of course, there are extremes, like a spacewalk she worked on planning for two years while they waited for a piece of hardware to launch, or two days if there's an emergency outside of the space station.

If you've ever watched a spacewalk, she's one of the people you'll see sitting in what's called the "front room" on the ground. That's because there are many people working behind the scenes in backrooms to monitor every aspect of the space station, astronauts and spacewalk to provide support. Flight controlling is truly a team effort, she said.

Korona and her EVA team build relationships with the astronauts and even get to know their mannerisms because they work together on the ground for years in training. When the flight controllers learn that something outside the space station needs to be fixed, removed, replaced or installed, they plan what hardware is needed, determine the tools required and begin choreographing a plan to accomplish the tasks.

The plan is run in the Neutral Buoyancy Lab and crew members provide feedback to ensure that they've created the most efficient spacewalk.

There's a flurry of activity on the ground and the space station the week leading up to a spacewalk. On the station, the astronauts prepare their suits, life support systems and tools. They have video conferences with the ground teams to go over every detail of the task plan.

The American spacesuits essentially come in parts, so the astronauts can customize them for the best fit. On spacewalk day, they get up early and their fellow crew members on the space station help them suit up. These crew members will also monitor them from inside the space station during the walk.

The ground team works in multiple shifts to ensure that every aspect leading up to and after the spacewalk is covered. A normal shift for a flight controller is about nine hours and it's very taxing, Korona said. Flight controllers follow a plan of procedures about 30-pages thick for the astronauts step by step, but there are also contingency plans in case anything goes wrong.

Video views from the helmet cameras and those outside of the space station help the flight controllers monitor what's happening.

About every 90 minutes, the astronauts check their gloves and helmet absorption pad, or HAP, to make sure there is no water inside their helmets or tears in the gloves. Teams also monitor the astronauts' consumables oxygen, water for cooling, battery power and carbon dioxide removal.

This can determine the length of the spacewalk if these start to run out.

Spacewalks are crucial to maintain the space station, but the knowledge gained during these outings can inform the way astronauts approach repairs to their own spacecraft as we push the boundaries of exploration.

With NASA's Artemis program, which aims to land the first woman and next man near the lunar south pole by 2024, humans will be staying on the moon for longer than the short visits Apollo astronauts experienced. As we explore the moon and eventually Mars, astronauts will need to be able to repair and maintain their suits, spacecraft and habitats.

With Fincke's upcoming mission, he hopes to add another spacewalk to his already impressive list. He said each of his own spacewalks has been memorable, but some moments tend to stand out more than others.

During one of his spacewalks, the two crew members finished solving a problem outside of the station and asked teams on the ground what they should do with their remaining time outside. They were asked to take photographs outside of the station because it's impacted by micrometeorites and other things in space something the ground team wanted to track.

Fincke took pictures of the space station until it grew dark as they moved into an orbital nighttime. Unable to take photos, Fincke securely clamped himself to the outside of the station and watched as they flew over the dark side of Earth. The universe was his scenery.

Astronauts have such a packed schedule of tasks when they exit the space station that there are really only seconds or moments when they can stop and appreciate the view.

Fincke said he'll never forget those 23 minutes for the rest of his life.

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Ever wonder what it's like to walk in space? Astronauts tell all - WAPT Jackson

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on Ever wonder what it’s like to walk in space? Astronauts tell all – WAPT Jackson

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