Monday, January 21, 2013

Insurgents hit police facility in Afghan capital

(AP) ? Taliban insurgents wearing suicide vests attacked the Kabul traffic police headquarters before dawn Monday, police said, and eyewitnesses heard numerous explosions and a still-raging gun battle two hours later.

Police officer Mirza Mohammad said at least one insurgent blew himself up at the entrance to the compound and a number of others wearing suicide vests entered the building. Another police officer said at least three attackers entered the building and two were killed, possibly by detonating their vests. The officer, who could not be named because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said a gun battle was taking place inside the three-story building.

"There are still there are two or three suicide bombers inside the traffic department compound. They are still fighting," said Mohammad Zahir, the chief of the Kabul police investigation unit. He did not provide any information on casualties. Explosions could be heard inside the building.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in a text message to The Associated Press.

Gul Rahman, who owns a nearby shop, said he heard at least two explosions when the attack started just before dawn. An Associated Press reporter at the scene said a number of big explosions were heard in and around the building along with heavy gunfire.

Traffic police headquarters is located on square leading to the Afghan parliament and is next to the Kabul zoo. It is also next to the Afghan border police headquarters. The facility, usually teeming with civilians seeking to get drivers licenses and registrations for vehicles, was nearly empty at the time of the attack.

It was the second insurgent attack inside Kabul in less than a week.

Last Wednesday, six Taliban suicide bombers attacked the gates of the Afghan intelligence agency in downtown Kabul, killing one guard and wounding dozens. Security forces killed all the attackers. The insurgents carried out the attack by driving a minivan loaded with explosives into a gate of the intelligence agency compound in the capital at noon. The other five attackers wearing suicide vests were in a second minivan that was also loaded with explosives. They were shot and killed and security forces later defused the bomb in their minivan.

The attacks highlighted ongoing violence in Afghanistan and the determination of the insurgency to continue fighting even as President Hamid Karzai and the U.S. negotiate for a quicker pullout of American forces.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-20-Afghanistan/id-e8f9d41a31ce4b74853d93c97bb99639

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Obama says US ready to assist Algerian officials

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama said Saturday the U.S. stands ready to provide whatever assistance Algerian officials need in the aftermath of the deadly terrorist attack at a natural gas complex in the Sahara.

The four-day standoff appeared to end Saturday after Algerian special forces stormed the complex. The clash left at least 23 hostages dead and killed all 32 militants involved, the Algerian government said.

The State Department issued a travel warning Saturday night for Americans in or traveling to Algeria, citing credible threats of the kidnapping of Western nationals. The department also authorized the departure from Algeria of staff members' families if they choose to leave.

In a statement from the White House, Obama said the blame lay with the militants and that the United States condemns their actions.

"This attack is another reminder of the threat posed by al-Qaida and other violent extremist groups in North Africa," Obama said. "In the coming days, we will remain in close touch with the government of Algeria to gain a fuller understanding of what took place so that we can work together to prevent tragedies like this in the future."

Earlier Saturday, during a news conference in London with Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, British Defense Minister Philip Hammond called the loss of life appalling and unacceptable.

"It is the terrorists that bear the sole responsibility," Hammond told reporters.

Hammond didn't criticize Algeria's handling of the attack directly, but he appeared to reference the increased concern from world leaders about the lack of transparency in Algeria's anti-terror operation.

"Different countries have different approaches to dealing with these things," he said. "But the nature of collaboration in confronting a global threat is that we work with people sometimes who do things somewhat different, slightly differently from the way we do them ourselves."

Panetta said that "those who would wantonly attack our country and our people will have no place to hide."

"Just as we cannot accept terrorism attacks against our cities, we cannot accept attacks against our citizens and our interests abroad," he said.

___

Baldor reported from London.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-says-us-ready-assist-algerian-officials-230504866--politics.html

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How Do You Fend Off The Flu?

Copyright ? 2013 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

FLORA LICHTMAN, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman. The flu came on fast and furious this year. Deaths from flu so far are slightly above epidemic levels, according to the CDC. Besides getting the flu shot, is there anything you can do to avoid the virus? It seems like everybody has their own strategy, right?

Do you hold your breath as you walk past a cougher nearby? An informal poll found that SCIENCE FRIDAY employees are likely to do this. Are you that person that brings a napkin into the train rather than touching the subway poll? Maybe you go the hand sanitizer route. We want to know your rules for flu avoidance and your thoughts on flu etiquette.

What do you think? Do you think it's rude to get up if someone is coughing nearby, or just good judgment? We'll find out if there's a better way than moving your seat to avoid getting the flu, as well. Are new, speedier vaccines in the works? Call and tell us your flu story. Like, did you guilt someone into getting a flu shot this year? Are you secretly wishing your sniffly co-workers would stay home?

Give us a call: 1-800-989-TALK. That's 1-800-989-8255. Or tweet us @scifri. And we'll find out how well these strategies really work, because we have a flu expert in our studio with us to vet your flu avoidance tactics. Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. She joins us in our New York studios. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY, and thanks for coming in.

NICOLE BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Now tell us - introduce us to the flu. Let's do some basic flu biology first. What makes this virus different?

BOUVIER: So, influenza - the disease influenza is actually caused by, in humans, mainly three different strains. There's two strains of what we call influenza A. So there's the H1N1, which caused the pandemic a few years ago. You may remember hearing that. And then there's also H3N2, which is what's circulating right now. And then the third one is Influenza B. So any of those three viruses can cause what we know as clinical influenza.

Now, right now, what's circulating in most of North American is the H3N2 virus. And the reason this season is a bit unusual is partly because it's hit a little bit early. So we - usually, we don't see this many people getting the flu this early in the season. And it also - historically, the H3N2 strain has been associated with more what we call morbidity and mortality, basically more illness and more death.

And why that is, we actually don't know. But if you look back at seasons' worth of data from the CDC, years in which H3N2 predominates tends to be the years in which more people get into the hospital and more people die.

LICHTMAN: And what about that early onset this year? First of all, where does it go the rest of the year? And what explains an early presence this year?

BOUVIER: So, flu is actually in humans worldwide. There's also flu in animals. So, you know, we can occasionally get a pandemic from an animal source. But, in general, flu that's adapted to humans is circulating around the globe all year around. So when we're in the summer and not seeing a lot of flu, the Southern Hemisphere is actually in their winter, and they're seeing a lot of flu.

So when we're up here, you know, going to the beach, Australians are having the flu. So it continually circles around from hemisphere to hemisphere. And then, of course, in the tropics, it tends to be either a year-round phenomenon or, you know, there's more than one annual epidemic. So places like Hong Kong will see often two epidemics per year that are separated by months.

So it depends on, really, what climate you're in and what time of the year it is.

LICHTMAN: Well, what climate does flu like?

BOUVIER: So, it seems to not mind the tropics, because it's there. But what we've seen in the lab, at least, is that in temperate climates, it seems to like winter conditions - so, basically, cold and dry. And there's been some work done in animal models in - actually at Mount Sinai, showing that flu transmits between guinea pigs, which is a model that we use to study flu transmission, much better in a cold, dry environment than when you turn up the humidity or turn up the heat.

LICHTMAN: And how - what's its favorite way to travel?

BOUVIER: That's a good question, also, and it's something we don't fully have the answer to. Now, you can imagine many different ways for a respiratory virus like flu to transmit. It can transmit through the air, either because somebody coughs or sneezes a bunch of - you know, sprays on you, or because once the droplet dries out, it can hang in the air for hours and hours and hours, and you can maybe breathe it in later.

You could also imagine that if somebody rubs their nose and either shakes your hand, and then you touch your nose, or if they touch a doorknob that you subsequently touch and then touch your nose, that's a contact transmission. And probably, it transmits by all of these routes, but we actually don't know which one is the most important and which one is most common among humans.

LICHTMAN: Did you just say that it hangs in the air for hours and hours and hours?

BOUVIER: So we don't actually know, all right. That is a known method of transmission for something like measles or tuberculosis. So it's theoretically possible for flu. The thing about flu is that it's actually a quite delicate virus. It doesn't live forever. It's got a structure that, if it dries out, it dies. So it either has to be in some sort of, you know, viscous substance that's going to keep it sort of moist and alive, or if it desiccates, it dies.

So how long flu can survive hanging in the air is actually not really known.

LICHTMAN: Does that mean if the subway poll feels a little moist, I should avoid that part of it?

BOUVIER: Well, that's actually another interesting question, because, you know, there was some scientific study looking at how long flu lasts on different kinds of surfaces. And under lab conditions, if you put a droplet of flu on a stainless steel surface, it could be cultured - live virus could be cultured from swabs of that spot for up to 72 hours.

LICHTMAN: Wow.

BOUVIER: Now, that - take that with a grain of salt, because that was probably a whole lot more virus, and in a different consistency of medium than you would get if somebody rubbed their nose and touched the subway pole. What I can say is that studies that have been done in households, where one person has flu and then gives it to other people in the household, researchers have gone into those houses and swabbed various surfaces that you think would be touched frequently: doorknobs, phones, refrigerator handles, things like that.

And really, the results have not been very good. They can't really culture live flu viruses off of those surfaces. The one surface that seems to have a lot of flu virus, as you might imagine, are children's toys. So, you know, I wouldn't go putting your kids' toys near your nose. But, you know, the subway pole, I would say, is probably not the most likely place to get it, but use some hand sanitizer after you're holding onto it, and you can be extra sure.

LICHTMAN: Well, let's go to the phones. Gabe in Hadley, Massachusetts, welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

GABE: Hi. Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Do you have a question?

GABE: My question is: I'm a cashier at a supermarket, and I make contact with lots of people day in and day out. I recall, previously on this program, hearing something about ants and them licking each other if one ant is sick or an ant is dead. And I'd be curious to know, maybe it's surprising that I'm not getting sick more than I am, and if that may be attributed to my exposure to so many people on a daily basis and strengthening of the immune system.

BOUVIER: That could be the case. You know, if you're an otherwise healthy person, you are going to be more resistant to getting the flu than somebody else who has underlying health conditions or is older or, you know, younger, like less than two.

An interesting study that was done a while back was looking at swabbing flu from bank notes in Europe. And actually, you can swab live flu from bank notes. So it's possible you're exposing yourself to a lot of flu viruses by handling money. But because, if you have a healthy immune system, and you're not really inoculating yourself with enough to come down with a, you know, a case of the flu, you may actually be strengthening your immune system without even realizing it.

LICHTMAN: A sort of alter-vaccination. Thanks for calling, Gabe.

GABE: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Let's go to Gary in Wichita, Kansas.

GARY: Hi. I got the stomach flu on Christmas Day because I was on the naughty list this year. But I'm curious - I've gotten it before where I couldn't even tolerate liquids, even clear liquids. But I'm curious, because I hear so much about this flu, but the symptoms are much different than the stomach flues I've gotten. What are the scientific - what are the differences between the two? And I'll take my answer off the air.

LICHTMAN: Thank you.

BOUVIER: I'm really glad you asked that question, because stomach flu is a bit of a misnomer. Most viruses - well, in fact, all viruses that cause a typical kind of gastroenteritis like you had are not actually influenza viruses. So stomach flu is just a nickname that has nothing to do with influenza viruses.

So influenza viruses specifically are respiratory viruses. They only cause respiratory symptoms, except in children. Sometimes children do have vomiting or diarrhea with typical respiratory flu. But generally, adults don't have gastrointestinal symptoms. So you had a different virus, not a flu virus.

LICHTMAN: Norovirus is going around this year, right?

BOUVIER: Yeah, that's probably - it sounds like a norovirus, based on what you're describing. It sort of hits hard and fast and doesn't really make you feel bad for a long time. But that's what it sounds like.

LICHTMAN: Is sneezing a symptom of influenza?

BOUVIER: So, not as much as you might think. So, flu tends to be more coughing than sneezing. Common cold viruses, which are different from influenza viruses - they're things like rhinoviruses, coronaviruses, adenoviruses - which are different families and classes of viruses, cause the common cold. And they tend to be associated more with sneezing, which is sort of a nose phenomenon. In fact, rhinovirus comes from the word rhino, which means nose. Flu viruses tend to cause more sort of lower respiratory tract symptoms - things like coughing, sore throat, feeling like you've got, you know, a frog in your throat, that sort of thing. Sneezing - it's not to say it can't happen, but it's not as common with the flu as it would be with the common cold viruses.

LICHTMAN: Let's talk a little bit about the vaccine. It seemed to be a pretty good match this year, I read.

BOUVIER: Yeah. It's a very good match this year. I think of all of the flu isolates from around the country that the CDC has tested, 91 percent of them so far have been a very good match to the current flu vaccines. So it's a well-matched year.

LICHTMAN: How do they decide which viruses or virus fragments to put in a vaccine?

BOUVIER: It is part surveillance and part guessing. So what they tend to do is when they're looking at the Northern Hemisphere formulation, they'll look at what's circulating in the Southern Hemisphere during our summer. So, you know, they will be sampling viruses from Australia, from New Zealand, from South Africa and try to make an educated guess as to which of those strains are most likely to come up here at our hemisphere during the winter. And often, they get it right, like this year, and sometimes, they get it wrong. And that's the kind of season we have when we have a poorly match vaccine.

LICHTMAN: This year, there was news about a new vaccine that wasn't made with eggs or live virus. It was insect cells. Can you tell us a little bit about it?

BOUVIER: So the traditional flu vaccine is, basically, they take whatever strain they think is the best virus candidate and inoculate it into eggs - which, as you can imagine, you need a lot of hens laying a lot of eggs to make millions of vaccine doses. So this new technology is - relies on an insect virus called a baculovirus. And what you do is you engineer this virus to have the gene for the hemoglutinin protein of flu, and that's the protein that the flu uses to attach to cells that it wants to infect.

And it's the most immunogenic protein of flu, meaning it's the one that provokes the largest immune response. So what they do is they put the gene for the hemoglutinin protein into this insect virus. Then they use the insect virus to infect insect cells. And in the process of making its own proteins, the insect virus will also, as a byproduct, make the flu protein. Then they purify it out, and that becomes your vaccine.

LICHTMAN: Is it easier or faster to produce?

BOUVIER: It is faster because the insect cells, you can keep them in the freezer until you need them. And then you just take them out and you thaw them, and you do what we call expand them. You basically let them grow for a while, until you have a lot of them, then you just put a lot of cells with the insect virus in lots of vats and let - just let it go. So you don't have to worry about having lots of hens hanging around, just waiting to lay your eggs in the case of a pandemic.

LICHTMAN: You're listening to SCIENCE FRIDAY, on NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman talking with Dr. Bouvier about the flu. Let's go back to the phones, because people have some interesting things to say - Amy in Manhattan.

AMY: Hi.

LICHTMAN: Hi.

AMY: Well, in addition to all these other things, I try to keep a rule that, you know, my germs on one hand, and my - and other people's germs on the other hand, like the right hand. So I'll shake hands with my right hand, and I try not touch my face with my right hand. But, you know, if I need to scratch my nose or something, I'll use my left. And...

LICHTMAN: What do you think about that strategy?

BOUVIER: It's actually part of what has been studied under the heading of non-pharmaceutical interventions, and that's basically things you can do that are not drugs or vaccines to prevent yourself from getting the flu. And so what they've done is - in studies, you take a group of people who are told to just go about their normal lives and a group of people who are told, you know, wash your hands frequently. Do what we call hand awareness, meaning think about where your hands are and try not to touch your face. Do things like cover your sneezes with your elbow instead of with your hand, and sometimes even wearing facemasks. And of those studies, hand awareness and hand hygiene usually turns out to be one of the most effective ways of not giving yourself the flu. So...

AMY: A sense of ill-at-ease.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: Yes, it has been.

LICHTMAN: Thanks for calling, Amy.

AMY: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: What about the universal flu vaccine, the holy grail of seasonal influenza vaccines? How far are we from that?

BOUVIER: It's a little bit hard to say. I think we're inching closer. So one of the problems with the flu virus is that, for reasons that are kind of complicated, they're very good at subtly changing themselves year after year so that it doesn't affect how they infect or how they replicate, but it does affect how your immune system recognizes them sort of the second time around. And that's why we need to get annual flu vaccines. So it turns out that there are very few parts of the flu virus - we call them epitopes - which are so crucial, that their function is so important, that they cannot change.

If this part of the protein changes, it's going to result in a dead virus. And, you know, we have identified a couple of those, but it turns out that these epitopes do not stimulate a really good immune response when you get either a regular vaccine or when you get the flu. So what researchers are doing now, including my group at Mount Sinai, are looking at how we can alter these epitopes so we present them to the immune system in a different way, almost forcing the immune system to recognize these constant epitopes, make the antibodies against it.

And then, if you get infected with the flu, you have the antibodies to this constant region that can't change. So it's hard to say. There's a lot of strategies that are sort of underway, but I think it's possible. It's just we need some more work.

LICHTMAN: In about the minute we have left, do you have other tips for people who want to avoid getting flu? Let's say they've already gotten their flu shot. What should they do?

BOUVIER: OK. I have to say, if you haven't gotten your flu shot, get it, because I'm a doctor and I have to say that.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: But it depends on who you are. If you're someone who has certain comorbidity, certain diseases, if you're pregnant, you must get vaccinated. But other than that, I think the things that have shown to work best are things like hand-washing. And if you don't have access to a sink, you can use an alcohol-based sanitizer. You just have to put enough on so your hands are really wet, and you have to let it dry, and then that'll kill the flu virus on your hands.

You have to be aware of where your hands are. If you sneeze or cough, do it into your - in the crook of your elbow instead of in your hand. Try to avoid sharing utensils with people. If you know someone sick, try not to be in their orbit, because the closer you are to them, the more likely you can get flu from them. And they're mostly just commonsense things. But to various degrees, they have been shown to be effective.

LICHTMAN: You know, the hand sanitizer thing is interesting, and we really have like 15 seconds, because I - a cold, it doesn't work as well on, right?

BOUVIER: It does some of them, but some of them it doesn't. So flu, it does kill.

LICHTMAN: Good to know. Thank you for joining us today.

BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. And stay with us, because we have some astronomy news coming up.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

LICHTMAN: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR.

Copyright ? 2013 National Public Radio. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/01/18/169708755/how-do-you-fend-off-the-flu?ft=1&f=1007

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Relationship references should be required | Six Brown Chicks

Relationship references should be required

By A Comeaux

Good ole' rule-bending Comeaux is back at it with a question most may cringe at but we all need an answer to...

Why aren't references required for relationships?

Let's take a look at this:

Jobs ask for them whether you're a nurse or a nanny, a cashier or an executive, new employers would like to know who and where you came from and the reason you're no longer there...

You can't get credit unless your financial history is checked and approved. No such thing as a fluffy resume without names, numbers, and dates of your previous employment.

Now let's dissect this. Pertinent information about your past is required to vouch for your future credit worthiness and employability. Should you require such background checks for your heart? The background/credit check could induce a sense of anxiety in those who've made poop-piles in their trail before arriving to you.

Well, I'd like to think that my heart is just as valuable as a bank or place of employment. Isn?t yours?

Now here's the next step: To whom would you enlist to speak of your attributes? How many exes, how many past relationships can you approach for a reference?

I get it. It's frightening to even write this. Trust me.

My relations resume isn't flawless but I'm compelled to believe we MUST have some insight on those we trust our bodies, hearts, energy and life to.

Wouldn't it be beneficial to know the last three people were cheated on, lied to and left BEFORE you fall in love? Yes. We all make mistakes. Sure relationships falter. But I can't see how taboo this is when it makes complete sense to know from whence your new boo has come and what baggage he may possess.

Just as there are companies that offer credit as a second chance, these flawed lovers can also get a break! But knowledge is P O W E R and by the time we obtain pertinent info on our own, sacrifices have already been made and the love may already be in jeopardy.

I want to know if you're a nut case BEFORE I interpret your 'free spirit' as a cute and eclectic personality. I'd like to know of your legal rap sheet prior to having you over for dinner!

Now we ALL must agree to be transparent. And yes, there are some exes that would gladly sabotage the chance of you moving on peacefully. That's why three references should be required; the best of three.

Fair, right?

Now don't discredit my ambition here just because I'm single. I've got some glowing recommendations just as I have a few flawed ones. I'm okay with that.

This may be drastic. But it's real. And if impossible, then fault my heart. Friends, associates, and exes alike watch broken lovers dive nose deep in relationships with no remorse or recourse for the naive newbie on deck.

Listen, if you see me with someone you have some vital info on, that may help prevent stress and criminal charges, please tap me on my shoulder, Tweet or email me.

I'll give you mine, give me yours. Before I become your next, I'd like to check with the Ex!

Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/six-brown-chicks/2013/01/relationship-references-should-be-required/

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Armstrong must now confess under oath: USADA

(Reuters) - Lance Armstrong finally confessed his doping sins to talk show host Oprah Winfrey on Thursday but the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) has now challenged the disgraced cyclist to do the same under oath.

USADA, who exposed the seven-times Tour de France winner as a drug cheat, said in a statement that Armstrong's admission to a worldwide television audience was a good first step but that the 41-year-old needed to do more.

"Tonight, Lance Armstrong finally acknowledged that his cycling career was built on a powerful combination of doping and deceit," said USADA chief Travis Tygart in a statement released shortly after the gripping 90-minute interview.

"His admission that he doped throughout his career is a small step in the right direction.

"But if he is sincere in his desire to correct his past mistakes, he will testify under oath about the full extent of his doping activities."

Armstrong, who has been stripped of his seven Tour wins and a bronze medal from the 2000 Sydney Olympics, took Winfrey's quickfire, probing questions head on, owning up to the type of drug use that has tainted the sport he said he loves.

With cycling reeling from doping scandals and its place at the Olympics said to be under threat, Armstrong said he would do what he could, if called upon, to help rebuild its tattered image.

"I love cycling and I say that knowing that people see me as someone who disrespected the sport, the color yellow," Armstrong told Winfrey.

"If we can, and I stand on no moral platform here, if there was a truth and reconciliation commission, and I can't call for that, if they have it and I'm invited I'll be first man through the door."

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) also called on Armstrong this week to reveal under oath what he knows about doping in cycling.

(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/armstrong-must-now-confess-under-oath-usada-055224573--spt.html

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Wandsworth Mayor brings festive cheer to The Pines | Care Industry ...

The Mayor of Wandsworth, Councillor Adrian Knowles, joined the residents of a Putney care home recently for their annual festive party.

The Pines Care Home on West Hill was pleased to welcome Cllr. Knowles once more, having first hosted him for an afternoon of entertainment in the summer. On this occasion however, the focus was firmly on the recent festive period, with a final celebration before the Christmas decorations were taken down!

During his visit, Cllr. Knowles once more spent time with residents and care staff, learning more about daily life at the former family home and the events hosted involving the local community.

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Deputy Home Manager, Marissa Manio told us:

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?We met Cllr. Knowles back in July when he visited and it was wonderful that he could join us once more for our festive party. He is always keen to get into the spirit of our events.

Remaining an integral part of the community is an important part of life at Caring Homes, so it is always enjoyable for our residents to be able to talk to key figures within the local area.?

Located in vibrant Putney, The Pines provides residential and nursing care for up to 43 elderly residents. The home is run by the family-owned Caring Homes Group. Mother and son team Helena and Paul Jeffery founded Caring Homes in 1994 and the Group has grown to become a leading independent care provider in the UK.

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Tags: #featured, Councillor Adrian Knowles, Putney, The Pines Care Home, West Hill

Category: Activities in Care, Care Home News, Care Industry News, Care Operators, Elderly care, Elderly People, General Info

Source: http://www.careindustrynews.co.uk/2013/01/wandsworth-mayor-brings-festive-cheer-to-the-pines/

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Seeking Antarctica s Huddled Masses: Humans Make First Contact with Emperor Penguin Colony [Slide Show]

Explorers venture into uncharted territory to help scientists map Antarctica?s emperor penguin population from space


Emperor Penguins survive Antarctica?s freezing winters (where temperatures can dip below 45 degrees C) by huddling together in tightly packed clusters. The penguins slowly rotate positions in the huddle so that no one penguin has to be on the outside of the pack for too long. Image: International Polar Foundation

Alain Hubert slowly made his way down an icy crevasse on Antarctica?s Princess Rangnhild Coast to a large plain of snow and ice early last month.

Spread across the frozen tundra before him, 9,000 members of a never-before-visited colony of emperor penguins huddled together for warmth against the subzero temperatures of the world?s coldest continent.

Hubert, a Belgian expedition leader and engineer for the Princess Elisabeth Antarctica Polar Research Station, says he decided to go looking for the emperor penguin colony after coming across a satellite map estimating its location. ?I had noticed individual penguins along the coastline for years but had never come across a colony,? Hubert says. ?It was a miracle finding it in an area that is almost entirely unexplored.?

Scientists with the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) first uncovered evidence of the colony back in 2009 while scanning the white snow and ice of Antarctica by satellite. They noticed strange brown splotches they couldn?t initially identify. ?After a while, we came to the conclusion that it was guano from an emperor penguin colony,? says Phil Trathan, head of conservation biology for the survey group. ?We said ?Hey, if we can see this one, we can see others.??

View a slide show of the emperor penguin colony.

The BAS team located Hubert?s colony as well as six other previously unknown emperor penguin colonies that year. Since then Trathan and fellow BAS researchers have been busy locating and estimating the full population count of emperor penguins across Antarctica using the satellite scanning technique. Survey geographer Peter Fretwell says the team uses low- to medium-resolution satellite cameras to find distinctive brown regions of snow and ice that are evidence of a colony. Next, high-resolution cameras and a technique called pan-sharpening help to enhance ground resolution (the size of objects a satellite can depict from orbit) to around 50 centimeters. Fretwell says that resolution makes it possible to distinguish individual penguins separated from the group as well as small clusters of birds.

The researchers released a census of Antarctica?s penguins in April 2012 showing a total of 46 separate colonies with a combined population of almost 600,000 birds, nearly twice as many as were previously thought to live in Antarctica. Fretwell says the BAS is working with an international team of researchers and polar explorers including Hubert in Antarctica to adapt the satellite-mapping approach for long-term monitoring of the emperor population. Although the penguins are not endangered, rapidly rising temperatures in the region could wear away the ice that the one-meter-tall birds call home.

The researchers will need to collect three to four more years of satellite and ground data in order to develop a methodology robust enough to track emperor penguin numbers on local, regional and continental scales, Fretwell says. ?Ground counts corroborate our satellite data and help us improve our methods,? he says. ?But because of the extreme conditions in Antarctica, we have ground data from maybe two of the almost 50 colonies. So there is definitely a lot of work left to be done.?

Hubert, who is not affiliated with the BAS, trekked 50 kilometers from where he was working with Elisabeth Antarctica station glaciologists to visit the bird colony. He says he plans on sharing his observations with the survey when he returns to Europe.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0a014060d64f89cc02916fa233213330

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

What Is Facebook Graph Search?

Facebook's big announcement today was Graph Search. It's a deeply important step for Facebook. But it's also kind of unlike other search systems out there, and adds a bunch of new ways to use Facebook. Here's how it works. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/wUtJERk5qA4/what-is-facebook-graph-search

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Today's School Security - American School & University article

Apr 1, 2012 12:00 PM, By Mike Kennedy (mkennedy@asumag.com)

Improved technology and more effective prevention programs help schools and universities provide safer learning environments.

Security cameras at Wells Community Academy High School, Chicago, have stepped up safety efforts.Photo: CPS Office of Safety and Security

Security cameras at Wells Community Academy High School, Chicago, have stepped up safety efforts. Photo: CPS Office of Safety and Security

The month of April has a grim track record for deadly violence on school and university campuses. On April 20, 1999, students Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, armed with guns and bombs, launched an attack on teachers and fellow students at Columbine High School in Jefferson County, Colo. They killed 12 students and one teacher, and wounded 23 others before committing suicide. On April 16, 2007, Virginia Tech student Seung-Hui Cho carried out the most deadly shooting spree on a U.S. campus when he shot 32 people to death on the Blacksburg campus and then took his own life.

Now, April 2012 has a chapter in that disturbing legacy. On April 2, One L. Goh, a former student apparently embittered about his experience at Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., returned to the campus. He allegedly began shooting; a secretary and six students were killed, and three others were wounded.

Outbreaks of violence at education institutions typically do not rise to the horrific levels of Virginia Tech, Columbine or Oikos. But incidents that threaten school security?bullying, hazing, online harassment?take place in every month of the year and may occur in any classroom or campus from coast to coast. Schools and universities have taken numerous steps over the years to create safer learning environments, deter violence, detect troublesome behavior before it becomes life-threatening, and put plans in place to respond to emergencies. The efforts won?t eliminate violence and criminal behavior from schools, but every incident that befalls an education institution provides administrators with another opportunity to see what lessons can be learned to make the learning environment safer for students, staff members and visitors.

Keeping watch

Over the years, violent episodes have occurred at some education institutions when an intruder has been able to get inside a school. In response, schools have taken steps that make it more difficult for people to enter facilities without permission and make it easier to detect those who do get inside.

The federal government?s "Indicators of School Crime and Safety: 2011" says that in the 2009-10 school year, 99 percent of public schools require visitors to check in or sign in. Some schools have systems that conduct an immediate criminal background check on visitors before they are allowed in.

Other steps schools are using to maintain control of who is in their buildings:

?Controlled access to school buildings during school hours: 92 percent.

?Controlled access to school grounds during school hours: 46 percent.

?Students required to wear badges or photo identification: 7 percent.

?Faculty and staff required to wear badges or photo identification: 63 percent.

?Use of security cameras to monitor schools: 61 percent (at high schools, the figure rises to 84 percent).

?Random metal detector checks: 5 percent.

?Daily metal detector checks: 1 percent.

Caught on video

The likelihood of getting caught is a factor would-be troublemakers take into account before engaging in out-of-bounds behavior. On a spacious campus, in a large facility, where hundreds or thousands of students may go about their business in relative anonymity, school security staff may find it difficult to monitor all the potential trouble spots or those tempted to create problems.

The widespread availability of inexpensive, more powerful video technology has enabled education institutions to even the playing field in the battle for campus safety. People who know their actions may be recorded on a surveillance system may decide to rein in their inappropriate impulses, and many schools and universities have blanketed the inside and outside of their facilities with cameras so that few areas are beyond the reach of the watchful eyes of security officers.

The ability to transmit video images over an education institution?s computer network and to record images digitally rather than on bulky and space-eating tapes has made it possible for schools to monitor more locations in real time, gain access to images from remote locations, and track down archived video more quickly.

The extent of video surveillance on some school campuses has made some privacy advocates uneasy, but education administrators who have placed a high priority on campus safety have seen that the surveillance has improved the climate for learning in schools.

In Chicago, the school district began using security cameras in 1999 and now has more than 7,000 analog cameras in 268 of its more than 600 schools. In 2010-11, officials decided to step up security at one of its more crime-plagued high schools. After numerous high-definition cameras were installed at Fenger High School, administrators reported that misconduct cases declined 59 percent compared with the previous year, and the number of arrests dropped by 69 percent. The dropout rate at Fenger dropped from 19 percent to 5 percent.

Those numbers prompted officials to install the high-definition system at 14 more high schools that officials say have high numbers of misconduct, arrests or reports of crime. The system, now in place, has between 50 and 80 high-definition security cameras at the 14 schools.

"We need to provide instructional supports to help teachers and principals drive student growth in the classroom, and building a safer learning climate goes hand in hand with those efforts," says Chicago Schools CEO Jean-Claude Brizard. "We hope that (the) high schools benefitting from these security cameras will experience similar results to those that helped move Fenger in the right direction."


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Source: http://asumag.com/security/modern-school-security-201204/index.html?imw=Y

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Coca-Cola launches 'obesity ad'


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Fizzy-drink giant Coca-Cola has launched an advert addressing obesity for the first time on television.

The two-minute commercial highlights the firm?s record of making low-calorie drinks and reminds viewers all foods contain calories.

The ad, which aired on US cable networks on Monday, follows mounting pressure on the soft drinks industry.

New York City is preparing to ban large sugary drinks in restaurants, cinemas and stadiums.

Coca-Cola has said the video was not made in response to criticism of the soft drink industry, but is an effort to raise awareness.

It is not the first time the Atlanta-based firm has used advertising to address this issue, but it is a first for television.

?There?s an important conversation going on about obesity out there, and we want to be a part of the conversation,? Stuart Kronauge, general manager of sparkling beverages for Coca-Cola North America, told the Associated Press.

In the advert, a female narrator says Coca-Cola offers smaller portion sizes, is working to make better-tasting, low-calorie sweeteners and has voluntarily made lower-calorie drinks available at schools.

The video adds: ?All calories count, no matter where they come from.?

It says: ?If you eat and drink more calories than you burn off, you?ll gain weight.?

Another ad, which will air later this week, features activities that add up to burning off the ?140 happy calories? in a can of Coke.

But Mike Jacobson, executive director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said that if the company was serious about tackling obesity it would stop fighting a tax on its drinks.

?It looks like a page out of Damage Control 101,? he said. ?They?re trying to disarm the public.?

Industry tracker Beverage Digest has reported that consumption of fizzy drinks in the US has been declining steadily since 1998.

Source: http://www.ibn-tv.com/2013/01/coca-cola-launches-obesity-ad/

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Scientists find 'bipolar' marine bacteria, refuting 'everything is everywhere' idea

Scientists find 'bipolar' marine bacteria, refuting 'everything is everywhere' idea

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

In another blow to the "Everything is Everywhere" tenet of bacterial distribution in the ocean, scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) have found "bipolar" species of bacteria that occur in the Arctic and Antarctic, but nowhere else.

And, surprisingly, they found even fewer bipolar species than would turn up by chance if marine bacteria were randomly distributed everywhere. "That suggests that there are forces that are limiting the dispersal of bacteria in the ocean," says Linda Amaral-Zettler, a scientist in the MBL's Bay Paul Center and faculty member in the Brown-MBL Partnership.

The discovery is reported this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, with Amaral-Zettler as corresponding author.

"Our study shows that marine bacteria are not just homogenous populations in the ocean. They are more selective than that. Different bacteria prefer certain temperatures, levels of nutrients, light and salinity, " Amaral-Zettler says. "Understanding their distribution is really important because bacteria play crucial roles in the ocean ecosystem services we rely upon, such as providing food stocks, and in climate. As our environment changes, and temperatures become warmer, we have to pay attention to shifts in bacterial distributions, as well as those in animals and plants."

The study is one of many born from the gigantic database on marine microbes created during the International Census of Marine Microbes (ICoMM), a part of the Census of Marine Life. It also contains data from MIRADA-LTERS (Microbial Inventory Research Across Diverse Aquatic Long-Term Ecological Research Sites).

Over a six-year period (2004 to 2010), ICoMM scientists from many nations collected water samples and, crucially, related environmental data from a broad range of marine ecosystems, from open ocean to undersea volcanoes, densely populated coastlines to polar seas. MIRADA-LTERS also contributed to the census.

"One of the exciting things about ICoMM and MIRADA is that they gave us our first opportunity to even think about microbial biogeography (distributions) in a global way," Amaral-Zettler says. "Before, many people thought microbes distribute everywhere, so we don't have to worry if some disappear locally. But we are finding that, no, there is a biogeography of very small organisms, and there may be consequences to that."

Rather than buttressing what is known as the Baas-Becking tenet in microbial ecology ("Everything is everywhere, but the environment selects,") the present study suggests "dispersal limitation plays an important role in marine bacterial distributions before environmental selection makes a difference," the authors write.

What the barriers to dispersal of marine microbes may be is under investigation. A 2011 study issuing from ICoMM data found bacterial assemblages correlating to different water masses in the ocean (Agogu? et al, Mol. Ecol. 20: 258-74, 2010). "We think the water masses themselves may be potential barriers to microbial dispersal," Amaral-Zettler says. "The ocean currents that occur on the equator may be physical and in some cases geochemical barriers that limit the distribution of certain types of bacteria." This means a warming climate, which affects ocean temperature, salinity, pH levels, and circulation patterns, can significantly impact marine microbial distributions.

Mitchell Sogin, director of the MBL's Bay Paul Center, is a co-author of the present study. Sogin co-directed ICoMM; Amaral-Zettler was the project's program manager. Amaral-Zettler also led MIRADA-LTERS, which conducted a biodiversity survey across all 13 of the U.S. National Science Foundation's aquatic Long-Term Ecological Research sites.

Bacteria and other microbes are essential catalysts for all of the chemical reactions that shape planetary change and habitability, such as cycling of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, iron, and manganese through the environment. As an ICoMM summary states, "Marine microbes regulate the composition of the atmosphere, influence climate, recycle nutrients, and decompose pollutants. Without microbes, multicellular animals on Earth would not have evolved or persisted over the past 500 million years." (McIntyre AD, ed., Life in the Worlds Oceans [Blackwell Publishing: 2010], p. 223).

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Marine Biological Laboratory: http://www.mbl.edu

Thanks to Marine Biological Laboratory for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126284/Scientists_find__bipolar__marine_bacteria__refuting__everything_is_everywhere__idea

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Economics and Its Ethical Assumptions - Center for a Stateless Society

The following article was written by?Roderick T. Long?and published with the Mises University,?May 20, 2006.

When I was given the title ?Ethical Assumptions of Economics,? my first thought was to say, ?economics has no ethical assumptions.? But then I thought this might not be the best way to earn my keep here. So I?m going to talk about some senses in which economics might have implications for ethics.

There are these two terms that we often hear as characterizing Austrian economics. One is ?value-freedom,? or?Wertfreiheit.?Wertfreiheit?does not mean free in a valuable way; it just means a description that doesn?t involve evaluation. To be value-free is simply to describe things, to tell how things are, without advocating any particular point of view.

And closely related is this notion of ?value-subjectivism,? the notion that Austrian economics in some sense recognizes only subjective values, only the values to the participants whose actions are being described or explained, and doesn?t evaluate their actions.

Well, if Austrian economics is value-free and value-subjectivist, then it might seem as though it couldn?t have much in the way of implications for ethics. But there are several respects in which ethics and economics nevertheless interestingly interact.

First, it?s worth pointing out that economics is often?presented?in ways that are perhaps not completely value-free. For example, words like ?welfare? and ?property? and so forth tend to have value connotations. Now you can try to interpret them value-neutrally, but ordinarily when we say that such-and-such promotes social welfare, it sounds like we?re in favor of it ? since we are part of society, and we do care about our own welfare. And when we say that something is someone?s property, that often implies that it?s their?legitimate?property, and so calling something someone?s property might imply that they?ought?to have it, not just that they happen to possess it.

You might think this can be used to bias the discussion, but medicine?s a value-free science too; strictly speaking, in purely descriptive terms, medicine is indifferent between health and sickness ? it just wants to describe what causes what ? but since as a matter of fact practitioners of medicine are practicing it in order to promote health, naturally they?re going to describe it in such a way, where it?s understood that all the participants in the discussion agree that they?re trying to promote health rather than promoting sickness.

Objective Value

There?s perhaps a deeper worry that?s raised by the Greek philosopher Socrates in a couple of Socratic dialogues that are attributed to Plato (but it?s not clear whether they?re really by Plato or not), the?Hipparchus?and the?Eryxias, where he explores the meanings of certain economic concepts like ?wealth? and ?profit,? and gives something like an argument that these can?t really be value-neutral terms.

Socrates asks the person he?s talking with, ?how would you define profit?? And the person answers, ?getting more in exchange for less.? You put in a smaller amount, and you get back a greater return than you put in. That?s profit. (Now this doesn?t really distinguish between profit and interest, risk premium, and all that, but never mind.)

Socrates says ? translating his example into our money ? ?if I gave you one $10 bill, and you gave me three $1 bills back, I wouldn?t think I?d made a profit, even though I?d gotten more in exchange for less ? I?d given only one bill and I got three back.? So what matters is the?value?of the bills, and the fact that a $10 bill is more valuable than a $1 bill. You can?t just describe the exchange in terms of empirical mass quantities; you have to describe it in terms of value. You don?t really?profit?unless you?re getting something of greater value.

And of course Socrates wants to spin this into, ultimately, a?moral?argument that you don?t really benefit from what you get unless what you get really is of greater?real?value. So if I get a lot of money by cheating you, then since cheating you is a great harm to my soul and is not outweighed by the benefit of the money I get, I haven?t really profited.

It?s clear enough what someone like Mises would say to this. He?d say: well, it?s certainly true that you can?t define profit in terms of just getting more physical things in exchange for fewer physical things; but you don?t have to interpret it in terms of?objective?value ? you can interpret it in terms of?subjective?value. You get a profit, not if you get things that are genuinely objectively better in return, but if you get things you value?more?instead of what you value?less.

Part of the reason Socrates and Mises disagree here is that Socrates thinks that?valuing something more?involves?judging that it?s better, and these judgments can be true or false. And what you really want is not to get what you?think?is better; what you really want is to get whatever?is?better. And that whole way of thinking is something that Mises opposes, so they?re not really going to see eye to eye here.

Value Subjectivism

Is Austrian economics committed to rejecting any kind of objective morality?

We can distinguish between two kinds of value-subjectivism. You can have?explanatory?value-subjectivism, which simply means that in explaining someone?s actions, you appeal to their evaluations, not yours ? just as in explaining someone?s actions you appeal to their?beliefs?and not yours. If you see someone walking out on a bridge, and you know the bridge is unsafe and is likely to collapse, but they don?t know that, then in interpreting why they?re doing what they?re doing you shouldn?t attribute to them your belief that the bridge is unsafe if they don?t have that belief. If you try to explain their action by appealing to your belief that the bridge is unsafe, your explanation isn?t going to be any good.

So likewise, if you?re explaining their actions you also have to appeal to their?values. Suppose that you hate vanilla ice cream, and you see someone trying to get some. What they?re doing would make no sense if you assumed that they share your value. Instead, your evaluation of their taste in ice cream doesn?t make any difference to explaining ? whether they?re right or wrong to like vanilla ice cream, nevertheless the fact that they like it is what explains their going after it.

So explanatory value-subjectivism doesn?t say anything one way or the other about whether there is such a thing as objective value; it just says that if you?re going to explain people?s actions, you explain them in terms of their desires, not yours.

Normative?value-subjectivism, on the other hand, means that there are no objective values, that there is nothing?to?value over and above just whatever any person happens to want. There?s no right or wrong way to want things; you can?t be right or wrong about your ultimate desires.

So these are two different things, and you can see that at least it?s not obvious that explanatory value-subjectivism entails normative value-subjectivism.

Now Mises seems to have thought it did, and I think his reason for thinking this is?not?just that he somehow confused two kinds of subjectivism; I think there?s a deeper reason he thought this. The fact that Mises thinks that these two go together, and that both explanatory value-subjectivism and normative value-subjectivism are true, helps to explain why a lot of people interpret Austrian economics as being against any kind of objective value.

Rothbard, on the other hand, accepted?explanatory?value-subjectivism. He thought that in explaining people?s actions, or in trying to understand and describe economic behavior, you appeal to their beliefs and desires, not yours ? but he thought?normative?value-subjectivism was false. He thought that there was, on the basis of philosophical arguments ? the kinds of arguments he gives for example in his book?The Ethics of Liberty, where he tries to develop a libertarian theory of rights ? he thought you could give arguments to establish that certain values were objectively valid. But he thought those arguments didn?t make any difference to how you interpreted people?s economic behavior.

If economics is value-free in the sense that it doesn?t presuppose any particular values, as Mises and Rothbard both seem to agree about economics, you might wonder how economics can serve as a basis for advice. Economists are often called upon to give advice; how can they do that? Well, there are several different possibilities.

Mises?s view is that it?s impossible to give advice about ultimate goals ? except in terms of just saying, ?well, I like this goal, you should pursue that,? but you can?t really give any?reasons, Mises thinks, for ultimate goals. But?given?a certain ultimate goal, you can give reasons for adopting certain means to it. And economics is useful for that. Economics can tell us what sorts of actions tend to have what sorts of consequences. So if you happen to want to have, or want to avoid, certain consequences, then the economist can tell you what things to do that are likely to get you the consequences you want and to avoid the consequences you don?t want.

Although you might be in the field of medicine working on germ warfare, in which case you?re interested in causing sickness, most doctors, most of the time, are interested in curing disease, we hope, and so if you go to a doctor for advice, the doctor can just assume that what you want is what will promote health.

But of course it?s not part of the medical expertise to tell you whether health is a good thing. Nowhere in medical school can you learn any reason for thinking health is a good thing. That?s not a medical question. Mises would say it?s not an answerable question at all; others might say, well yes, maybe it is an answerable question, but at any rate it?s not a medical question ? maybe it?s a philosophical question or a theological question or something like that.

Socrates used to say that the doctor can tell you what?s likely to make you live or die, but the doctor can?t tell you whether you?d be better off alive or dead. That goes outside of the doctor?s area of expertise. The?philosopher?tells you whether your life is worth living or not: ?the unexamined life is not worth living,? so if you?re not examining your life, you?re better off dead. That?s what Dr. Socrates would say.

Mises thinks economics can tell us how to pursue the ends we happen to have, and given that most people prefer prosperity to poverty and cooperation to chaos, Mises thought that there?s some general, all-purpose advice that economists can give.

Rothbard went further. In the last chapter of?Power and Market, Rothbard says that although economics?per se?can?t give us?positive?ethical advice ? it can?t tell us what goals to aim at ? it can?criticize?certain goals as being incoherent. And although I say that Rothbard here is going beyond Mises, in a sense Rothbard would think of himself as continuing what Mises was doing, even if Mises didn?t call it this. So for example Mises argues that socialist calculation is impossible: you cannot rationally allocate resources in a socialist economy. Well, suppose that was your goal ? to rationally allocate resources in a socialist economy. It certainly seems relevant to find out that the goal is impossible. If the goal is impossible, then it seems like you don?t have any good reason to pursue it.

This is a way of criticizing ends: not criticizing ends on the grounds that they?re?bad, that it would be a bad thing to achieve this goal, but rather to argue that the goal can?t be achieved at all. So in the last chapter of?Power and Market, Rothbard runs through what he calls various positions of ?anti-market ethics,? and tries to refute various positions on the grounds that they posit goals that are somehow economically impossible, or logically incoherent, or in one way or another can be shown not to be possible. But he doesn?t think that economics can?per se?give us positive goals to aim at, or show us what is really worthwhile; he thinks you have to do philosophy for that. That?s why he only does this?criticism?of ethical theories in?Power and Market, and you have to go to?The Ethics of Liberty?to get his?positive?ethical arguments.

Positive Ethics

The question is: can economics or praxeology give us anything more than that? Can it give us any implications for positive ethical theorising? What more can it tell us about ethics? I?m going to explore some various possibilities. If you?re hoping that I?m going to derive an ethical system from the axioms of praxeology for you today, well ? we don?t have time for that! So I?m just going to give various suggestions about various issues.

First of all there?s this big dispute between Mises on the one hand and Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian School, on the other. Menger had a category of what he called ?imaginary goods.? He said that in order for something to be a good, it has to meet a certain number of criteria, one of which is that it has to be suitable for achieving certain goals or satisfying certain human needs. But, he says, there are some things that don?t really satisfy any human need, while you?think?they do ? like fake cures, things that are supposed to cure you but they don?t really work; he seems for some reason to have included?cosmetics?in this category; you might wonder about that. But anyway, he thinks various things that don?t really meet any human need are not real goods, they?re imaginary goods, because although they may be suitable means to certain goals, those goals are not in fact genuine human needs.

Mises thought this was a horrible mistake. Mises said the economist has no business pontificating about whether these are genuine needs or not; if you want to explain human behavior, what we think of the person?s desires is irrelevant. If you want to understand the market for horoscopes, or if you want to understand the market for something genuinely valid, it doesn?t make any difference. As long as people think horoscopes are valuable, then they?ll be willing to pay for them, and if they don?t think they?re valuable, then they won?t, regardless of whether they really are valuable or not. Mises thought this category was irrelevant for economics.

But he didn?t just think it was irrelevant for?economics, he thought it was irrelevant,?period. It wasn?t just that classifying something as an imaginary good was a job for the philosopher rather than for the economist; Mises thought that it wasn?t a job for anybody ? because he thought the only way we can make mistakes is about means. We can?t evaluate ends as right or wrong. Our ends are just whatever we want. If you want to justify what you?re doing, you have to appeal to some further end you have. Why am I walking over here? In order to get to the chair. Why do I want to get to the chair? In order to sit down. Why do I want to sit down? Well, at some point you just have to end with ?because I want to, and that?s that,? Mises thought.

Mises thought the ultimate goal is not capable of being rationally assessed. The only things you can criticize are people?s means. The only mistakes you can make are about the means to your ends, not about the ends themselves.

However, there?s a distinction which Mises doesn?t consider which might complicate this. It?s the distinction between?instrumental?means and?constitutive?means. And here?s a way of thinking about this. Suppose that I want to play the Moonlight Sonata; and so I save money to buy a piano, and to buy sheet music, and to take piano lessons and so forth, so that I?ll be able to play the Moonlight Sonata. These are all means to the end of playing the Moonlight Sonata; if you ask me why am I saving this money, why am I buying a piano,?etc., I would say these are all means to my ultimate goal, which is to play the Moonlight Sonata.

But now suppose you come upon me in the middle of playing the Moonlight Sonata, and I?m hitting a particular note. And you ask me: ?Why are you hitting that particular note? Is it just that you find that note valuable in and of itself?? And I would answer: ?No, I?m playing that note because I want to play the Moonlight Sonata, and I can?t play the Moonlight Sonata without playing that note at that point.? Well, in a sense, then, playing that note is a means to playing the Moonlight Sonata; but it?s not a means in the other way. It?s not a means that?s?external?to the end; it?s a means that?s?part?of the end.

When a means is external to or merely instrumental to an end, then it would make sense to say, ?I wish I could have the end without having to go through all these means.? I wish I could be at the top of the mountain without having to climb all this way up, or I wish I could play the Moonlight Sonata without having to save all this money to buy a piano. But it doesn?t make any sense to say, ?I wish I could play the Moonlight Sonata without having to play all these notes? ? because the Moonlight Sonata just is those notes in that order.

So there are cases where a means can be a constitutive part of the end rather than being an external means to it. And a lot of things that Mises considers ultimate ends you might think are really means, but they?re constitutive means rather than instrumental means. So then the question is: well, can we deliberate about constitutive means? How do we determine whether something is a constitutive means to an end? It seems it?s not a matter of cause and effect any more; it?s more a matter of logical or conceptual analysis.

Why does Mises think that if you?re an explanatory value-subjectivist, you have to be a normative value-subjectivist? I think that his reason comes in his two-step argument for why he thinks explanatory value-subjectivism implies?utilitarianism. (Both these steps, I think, are denied by Rothbard.) So first he thinks that explanatory value-subjectivism implies normative value-subjectivism: if you can only explain things in terms of people?s subjective values, then you have to give up the idea of there being any objective standard of value. I?ll say in a minute why I think he thinks that. Second, he thinks that that position in turn implies utilitarianism.

And you might think that?s very odd; because you might think that if someone says economics implies utilitarianism, it sounds like they think that economics implies a positive ethical theory ? because we usually think of utilitarianism as a particular ethical theory, a theory that says that certain things are objectively good. The standard versions of utilitarianism, like John Stuart Mill?s version, assert that a certain goal ? human welfare, happiness, pleasure, satisfaction ? is intrinsically valuable and worth pursuing, objectively so. And then our job is to pursue it.

Clearly Mises can?t mean?that. Since Mises thinks that there are no objective values, when Mises embraces utilitarianism he can?t be embracing the view that human welfare is an objective value. What Mises means by ?utilitarianism? is a little bit different from the kind of utilitarianism that people like John Stuart Mill advocate. By ?utilitarianism? Mises means something like simply giving people advice about how to achieve the goals they already have. So you?re not necessarily endorsing their goals, but utilitarianism says that really the only real role for any kind of evaluation is simply to talk about means to ends, because you can?t evaluate the ends.

And I think we can see?both?why he thinks explanatory value-subjectivism implies normative value-subjectivism, and why he thinks that in turn implies utilitarianism of his sort, in this quote from?Theory and History:

All nonutilitarian systems of ethics look upon the moral law as something outside the nexus of means and ends. The moral code has no reference to human well-being and happiness, to expediency, and to the mundane striving after ends. It is heteronomous, i.e., enjoined upon man by an agency that does not depend on human ideas and does not bother about human concerns.

So that?s the position that Mises thinks he?s attacking. He?s attacking the view that the proper moral code is completely independent of what actually makes people happy or what they actually happen to want.

And in a sort of slap at Kant, he calls this sort of thing ?heteronomous.? Now the term ?heteronomous,? which is supposed to be the opposite of ?autonomous? ? ?autonomous? means somehow governed by a law you give to yourself, and ?heteronomous? means governed by a law imposed on you from something else ? Kant had used the term ?heteronomous? to mean following your inclinations, which are external to and distinct from your rational will, and therefore you?re acting heteronomously when you obey your inclinations. Now Mises is sort of turning Kant?s terminology upside-down here.

But Mises thinks it?s presumptuous to tell people that they ought to be pursuing something completely unrelated to anything they actually happen to want, desire, or have any motivation or personal reason to pursue. Now I think the reason he thinks?that?is that if you think that all action, as praxeology teaches, is a matter of pursuing ends, and the ends you pursue are your own ? you can?t pursue someone else?s end unless it also happens to be your own end ? then it just doesn?t even make sense to demand of people that they pursue some end that they have no motivation for, no interest in, no personal reason to pursue.

So you might say that he?s relying on something like the ?ought implies can? principle ? that it doesn?t make sense to demand that you morally?ought?to do something unless you?can?do it. If I said, ?you are morally obligated all to fly up to the ceiling right now,? that wouldn?t make any sense, to say that you?ought?to do it or that you should feel?guilty?for not doing it, because you don?t have the choice, you don?t have any control over whether you do that or not. I think that Mises thinks that because our actions can only be actions aiming at ends that we?have?? we can?t perform an action without aiming at some end, and the end has to be an end we?ve?got?? it just doesn?t make any sense to demand of us that we act in accordance with some objective code of ethics.

However, I think that what he?s really arguing for here is better understood as a kind of ethical?internalism?rather than genuine normative value-subjectivism. Ethical internalism is the view that you can?t have any moral duties that you don?t have any motivation to pursue. Now that?s a broad family of theories, because according to some theories the moral duty just?gives?you a motivation, whereas for other theories, no, you?ve already got your motivations, and the moral duty can?t get its foot in the door unless you?ve already got one. Those are very different kinds of internalism. But still the internalists all agree that there are no moral duties without some corresponding motivation on your part. And I think that Mises is really arguing forthat. But it?s important to see that that?s not the same thing as normative value-subjectivism, because it might be that, given your motive, and given some appropriate story, the moral duty really is an?objective?one.

And likewise, the reason he thinks that this has to be purely utilitarian, that there can?t be any actions that are right or wrong in themselves, but only as part of promoting some further goal, is that he thinks all action has to have a means-end structure. But again, you can have a means that is constitutive rather than instrumental. If I?m playing this particular note because I want to play the Moonlight Sonata, then that note is a means to playing the entire sonata, but it?s not an external one. Likewise, people who say a certain action is morally right in and of itself might mean that it isn?t an external or instrumental means to some further goal, but is just?part?of, say, the good life.

The Goal of Happiness

Now something like Mises?s view was recently defended by Leland Yeager in a book called?Ethics As Social Science, where he accepts Mises?s view that ultimate goals cannot be rationally assessed. He says: therefore, ultimate goals are rationally arbitrary, but the means to those goals aren?t, and therefore the advantage of utilitarianism of Mises?s sort, which simply says, ?promote whatever satisfies human desires,? is that it?s the best theory because it minimises the amount of ethical arbitrariness. All that?s arbitrary is just this ultimate goal, happiness; but although it?s arbitrary, it?s not terribly controversial: most people are pro-happiness. Whereas if you add more intrinsic values in addition to happiness, things like moral duties and so forth, then you?re increasing the number of ultimate ends. And since ultimate ends are rationally arbitrary, your theory is getting?more arbitrary?the more of those you add.

I?m not so sure about that; if you really think the whole thing rests on an ultimate thing that?s arbitrary, I?m not sure that whether it?s one or many makes that much difference. But at any rate, the assumption that you can?t rationally assess ends is something that I?m not convinced of. There?s something called?reflective equilibration, which is the idea that you weigh various beliefs and values and judgments against each other and see whether they conflict with each other. If they conflict with each other then you revise them to make them not conflict. And so if you?ve got some ultimate end, you can?t assess it as a means to some further end, perhaps, but you can assess it by whether it fits in consistently with everything else. Now that?s a kind of assessment. You might think it?s a kind of wimpy assessment, but it?s an assessment.

We started off with Socrates, and Socrates has to come in again. There?s this tradition I call the eudaimonic tradition, from the Greek word for happiness or well-being,?eudaimonia. And this is a tradition that runs through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and it runs on through the medieval philosophers and the Scholastics, Aquinas and so forth; in fact it?s the dominant ethical tradition of the first 2,000 years of Western philosophy. It?s not until after the end of the Middle Ages that it begins to be whittled away by new theories. And this is the view according to which there is an ultimate good, which usually gets called ?happiness? ? but that can be somewhat misleading, because it?s not a pleasant feeling of satisfaction, although it may involve that ? but it?s a state of your life objectively going well, your life being an objective success, something like your being successful at living a good human life: that?s what?eudaimonia?is. That?s the ultimate good.

And morality is not just an instrumental means to that good; it?s actually part of it. Morality stands to the ultimate human good as playing one note stands to playing the whole sonata ? or actually, probably as playing two-thirds of the sonata stands to the whole sonata (or if you?re a Stoic, as playing the entire sonata stands to playing the entire sonata).

And there are some interesting connections between this tradition and Austrian economics, simply because Austrian economics in a way indirectly grows out of this tradition. The earliest forerunners of Austrian economics are the late Scholastics, who developed a subjective theory of value in the explanatory sense of ?subjective,? and they developed many of the early theories and early parts of what would later go on, running through the French School, finally to become the Austrian School. And if you look at Rothbard?s?History of Economic Thought, there?s a long section on how cool the Scholastics were. So from the fact that the Scholastics are forerunners of Austrian economics, and the Scholastics are coming at the tail end of this tradition that runs back to Socrates and Aristotle and so forth, I think it?s not that surprising that there are some commonalities.

For this tradition means-end analysis is central: we evaluate things in terms of their being means to ends. But each person has an ultimate end. And this ultimate end isn?t just feeling satisfied or something like that; it?s an objective state of human flourishing. And we can talk about wrong ends as well as wrong means, because those wrong ends are really misidentified constitutive means. So in other words, if you wrongly value something as an end, what?s really going on is that you are taking it to be a constitutive part of your ultimate good when it isn?t.

Now according to this tradition, why do they say that we have just?one?ultimate end? Why not say that we have lots, that there are lots of things we want: ice cream, fame, not being killed? We?ve got all these different things, but why suppose that they?re all constituents of some big super-end? Well, I think part of the reason they think this is: what happens when you make trade-offs? Suppose there are two ultimate ends you have: ice cream and fame. Those are two ultimate ends you have, and they come in degrees. (That?s why I didn?t use not being killed, because that?s less a matter of degree.) So you want more ice cream, and you want more fame. And sometimes those go together, like winning an ice-cream-eating contest. But still there are lots of cases where these goals might conflict, and so you have to do trade-offs, and decide between them.

If you?re deciding between them, that?s an action. Actions have to have a means-end structure, right? So if you?re trying to decide how to trade off between ice cream and fame, then doing that must be a means to some end. Well, what?is?the end? It can?t be the end of maximizing the ice cream, because you haven?t decided whether that?s what you?re going to do. It can?t be the end of maximizing fame, because you haven?t decided that. It can?t be the end of getting the maximization of both, because it?s a trade-off ? that?s impossible. Instead, you?re trying to maximize something of which these two are parts, some general, overall satisfaction ? that?s what you?re trying to maximize. You might wonder whether ?maximize? is even the right word, but anyway you?re trying to promote some good that includes both of these intrinsic good; these are intrinsic parts of your overall good. And it?s that sort of thing that leads the eudaimonists to think that whenever you?re acting, you?re always promoting some?ultimate?good of yours, some ultimate end or aim.

Why not just say that the ultimate aim you?re pursuing is some?psychological?state, like pleasure? We know how John Stuart Mill would have analyses this; he?d say, well, you like ice cream because ice cream isn?t really your final end, ice cream promotes?pleasure. And you like fame because it also gives you pleasure. And so it?s really pleasure that?s the ultimate goal, and ice cream and fame are simply means to that. And then your trade-off is just to determine which one will give you the most pleasure.

Or as Mises puts it, Mises talks about getting rid of?uneasiness. And sometimes he seems to mean this in a purely formal sense: simply getting something that satisfies you more instead of something that satisfies you less, getting something you prefer over something you ?dis-prefer,? to use a Stoic term. (Actually to misuse it, in this context.) But sometimes Mises talks as though there?s this?feeling?you get of uneasiness: which of the various things I can choose will make this feeling go away? Getting rid of that horrible feeling of uneasiness is the goal. Sometimes Mises sounds like that, sometimes he doesn?t.

At any rate, you might say: why not take that view? Why not say that our ultimate goal is some psychological feeling like pleasure, or decreasing felt uneasiness, or something like that, and that everything else we do is a means to that?

Well, here?s the problem with that view. Suppose I buy life insurance. And you ask me, why am I doing that? And I say: so that my loved ones will do well after my death. So it looks like I?m treating?buying life insurance?as a means to?my loved ones? doing well after my death. Now this is either an ultimate goal of mine, or it?s a means to some further goal. Well, whichever one it is, this is not a feeling. And it?s also not the cause of a feeling. Unless you?re assuming that you?re looking down from heaven after you?re dead ? or up, if things go worse ? but anyway you?re hanging around after death and seeing your loved ones doing well, and you?re getting a charge out of that. But it seems like you don?t have to assume that you?re actually going to experience your loved ones? doing well in order to buy life insurance. People who don?t believe in an afterlife, or people who believe in an afterlife where they?re off somewhere not being involved with human concerns, still buy life insurance. So it seems that this is something we do that is not a means to pleasure.

Now obviously someone could say: well, wait a second, you get pleasure out of the?thought?that your loved ones will do well after your death, right? Yeah, that?s true. So here?s something,?the belief that my loved ones will do well. And that causes pleasure. And maybe that?s?part?of my reason for buying life insurance. But is it really plausible to say it?s really that belief?rather than?their actually doing well? Because one isn?t a means to the other. Your loved ones? doing well in the future can?t be a cause of your belief that they?ll do well now, unless you believe in backward causation. So even if you believe that the belief is part of your goal, there?s still the goal of their actually doing well?too?? unless you think you don?t really have that goal at all, you really just have the belief as your goal.

Suppose I offer you a magic pill that costs half the cost of the life insurance. And this magic pill will make you believe that your loved ones will do well after you?re dead. And so you can either have the life insurance for $100, or this pill for $50. If all you care about is the belief that your loved ones will do well, then you?d take the pill over the life insurance. Well, from the fact that presumably at least a lot of people would buy the life insurance rather than the pill, that suggests that they care about their loved ones??actually?doing well.

And likewise Aristotle thinks that this is naturally the way we think. He raises the question: can people?s welfare be affected after they?re dead? And he didn?t believe in an afterlife, at least not a personal afterlife ? he thought there was some aspect of you that lived on, but it wasn?t your personal identity ? so he wasn?t talking about an afterlife. He thought that if there?s something you cared about, a loved one or some project, and right after you die the project either succeeded or failed, he thought that would make some difference to how we evaluate the success of your whole life.

So our ultimate good, according to this tradition, is not pleasure ? although pleasure?s part of it, pleasure?s one of the things we care about, relief from felt uneasiness is great, but it?s not the only thing that we actually pursue.

Aristotle would say that your life?s being an objective success?includes?the well-being of your friends. It?s not that the well-being of your friends?causes?you some jollies ? it does, sure, but that?s not all there is to it. In fact, he would say that the welfare of your friends causes you pleasure because it?s part of your good, not?vice versa?? that pleasure is a byproduct of getting what you think is good rather than the opposite.

Rights and Utility

Okay, let me finish up with a largely unrelated question ? though it?s not completely unrelated, because these all interconnect. The question is about the relation between rights and utility.

The question is whether rights derive from utility ? in other words, is the reason that we have rights the fact that rights are a strategy that?s most likely to promote either our personal self-interest or social welfare (you can take either an egoistic or a universalistic version of utilitarianism) ? is that the ultimate foundation of rights? Or are our rights completely?independent?of utility? There are those who think that our rights are completely based on utility, that the only grounding for rights is that they somehow are strategies for promoting human welfare, either one?s own or everybody?s. And in some sense Mises seems to think something like that. On the other hand, you might think rights are completely independent of utility, that rights just are what they are, regardless of their results. Maybe Walter Block thinks that, I?m not sure. Rothbard is often?said?to have thought that, but if you read?The Ethics of Liberty?it?s not so clear; there is some sort of eudaimonic thing going on in the background there, with the Aristotelian stuff in the early chapters.

I want to end by giving some quick reasons why I think that it?s a mistake to think either that rights depend wholly on utility or that rights are wholly independent of utility.

Here?s why I think rights can?t depend wholly on utility: because whatever we choose, we choose either as an ultimate end or as a means ? in economic terms, either as a producer?s good or a consumer?s good. Either you choose it as some ultimate thing you want for its own sake, or you choose it as a means to producing some further thing. So if any sort of utilitarianism is true, then morality is a producer?s good, not a consumer?s good. And it?s?solely?a producer?s good; I mean, everyone agrees that it?s?partly?a producer?s good. Everyone agrees that?one?of the things about morality that?s good is that it has good results. But if you?re a utilitarian, you have to think that morality is not a constitutive means to the good, it?s simply a purely instrumental means.

Why is that problematic? Well, nearly all sophisticated utilitarians ? and this definitely includes Mises ? think that it?s not a good strategy to promote human welfare to constantly be deciding everything on a case-by-case basis. Most sophisticated utilitarians are some kind of?rule-utilitarians, or?indirect?utilitarians. They think that you have to commit yourself to some general set of principles or values. You can?t just decide everything that comes up on a case-by-case basis. The best way to achieve long-term results of the kind you want is to commit yourself to acting in a principled fashion.

Here?s an example that John Hospers, a former Libertarian Party candidate for President, gives in one of his books. He says: suppose you?re an umpire in a game, or a referee, and you?re making decisions, making calls ? ?he?s safe,? ?he?s out,? ? and you suddenly begin to reflect philosophically while you?re standing out there, and you think, ?What?s the purpose? What?s my purpose here as a referee? Well, my purpose is to facilitate the game going well. What?s the purpose of the game?? And suppose that you conclude that the purpose of the game is to give pleasure to the spectators. I don?t know whether that?s the right story about the purpose of the game, but suppose that?s what you conclude. Then you might conclude: ?Well, then, when I give my calls and decide who?s safe and who?s out, I should make whatever call will be most pleasing to the spectators. And so I won?t pay any attention to the actual rules of the game; I?ll just consider: is it a home game or an away game? How happy are the people in the stands going to be with my ruling??

Now this might maximize spectator pleasure in the short run, but soon it?ll become obvious that winning or losing in this game no longer depends at all on the skill and abilities of the players. The players can just do any darn thing, and you?ll automatically rule in favor of team A if there are more people in the stands favoring team A. Once it turns out that you?re ruling in this manner, all the fun?s going to go out of the game for the spectators. If you?re constantly ruling with an attempt to please the spectators, that?s going to end up in the long run making the spectators very unhappy. You?re much more likely to please the spectators in the long run if you just stick to the rules of the game.

Likewise, most utilitarians think that you?re more likely to promote human welfare in the long run if you stick to definite rules. And?libertarian?utilitarians think these definite rules include rules of property rights and non-aggression and so forth, that sticking to those in the long run causes more happiness, because people can count on having their rights respected, they?re not constantly worried that suddenly their rights are going to be overridden for social utility, and so forth. So they?re going to be better off.

So what most utilitarians say is that you should behave?as if?you valued these rules for their own sake, even though you really value them just for the sake of utility. But my worry is: what does it mean to say that you should value something?as if?it were valuable for its own sake? I mean, either you value it for its own sake or you don?t. If you value it for its own sake, then you?ll choose it if it competes with some other value; if you don?t value it for its own sake, then you?ll give it up if you find some other way of promoting the same goal. If your only reason for respecting rights is to promote social utility, then you?d be irrational not to give up rights in any particular case when you could promote social utility otherwise. So my worry is that this rule-utilitarianism or indirect consequentialism or whatever you want to call it is praxeologically unstable.

However, I also think there are good praxeological reasons not to think that rights are completely independent of utility. And that?s because given precisely the view I discussed earlier, according to which whenever you?re doing trade-offs between different things, where you?ve got different ends, you have to regard them as different parts of an overarching end. Well, unless rights are the only thing you care about, the only value you have ? and I?ve sometimes told Walter that that?s his view (although it isn?t really, but it?s fun to say that) ? unless rights are the only values you have, then you have to say: here are a bunch of values, there?s the content of justice or rights, but there are also these other values, and they all have to fit together. And if all your values have to fit together, then it doesn?t really make sense to think that you can sort of separate one off and completely decide it without paying attention to any of the rest of them. I think each part of your value system has to have its content at least?responsive?to the other parts.

And this is what the Greeks called ?unity of virtue.? Now people often say that the unity of virtue just means that if you have one virtue, you have to have them all; but I think the real core of the view is that the content of any one virtue is partly determined by, or responsive to, the content of the other virtues. Your account of what justice requires can?t be completely independent of your account of what courage requires, or your account of what generosity requires, or your account of any other virtue.

Listen to the?archived media version?of this speech in?Mises Media.

Source: http://c4ss.org/content/16325

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