Become a junior scientist at Oxbow Eco-Center – TCPalm

Erick Gill, YourNews contributor 9:42 p.m. ET June 9, 2017

The Oxbow Eco-Center will partner with BioEYES this summer to kick-off the premier BioEYES summer camp on the Treasure Coast. This camp takes place 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. June 12-16 and is open to ages 7-14.(Photo: Erick Gill)

PORT ST. LUCIE The Oxbow Eco-Center will partner with BioEYES this summer to kick-off the premier BioEYES summer camp on the Treasure Coast.

This camp takes place from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. June 12-16 and is open to ages 7-14.

Participants get the exciting opportunity to participate in real science. The BioEYES program is a hands-on science project that transforms a static classroom into a scientific lab.

In the camp, children are appointed as junior scientists, then set off to explore live zebrafish and their life cycles. Campers will breed the fish and raise the resulting embryos until they hatch out as clear, free-swimming larvae with beating hearts that can be seen under our provided microscopes.

The camp also features activities, hikes and games that facilitate an understanding of fish habitats, watersheds and water quality and the life cycles of other species. This BioEYES camp offers children an opportunity to explore life science through real world applications. With this program activity, its curriculum covers biology, genetics, embryology and the scientific method.

The goal of BioEYES is to teach conceptual understanding of life science content and processing skills while exciting children with the thrill of scientific discovery. Currently, outreach programs have reached more than 100,000 students in Philadelphia; Baltimore; South Bend, Indiana; Melbourne, Australia; and the newest member, the Treasure Coast.

To learn more about BioEYES, visit BioEYES.org. For camp registration, please visit http://www.oxboweco.com or call 772-785-5833.

Managed by St. Lucie Countys Environmental Resources Department, the Oxbow Eco-Center is at 5400 N.E. St. James Drive in Port St. Lucie. The environmental learning center is open Tuesdays through Fridays from noon to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with more than two miles of hiking trails, which are open every day during daylight hours.

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Become a junior scientist at Oxbow Eco-Center - TCPalm

I had a ‘test-tube baby.’ Did I have to worry about health problems for … – Washington Post

By Amy Klein By Amy Klein June 10 at 8:00 AM

When I first visited a fertility doctor because of pregnancy problems, I had no idea that the in vitro fertilization, or IVF, he was suggesting to help me was actually the test-tube baby technique that Id heard about, an approach that had sounded scary, like something out of science fiction.

After I educated myself and started treatment, the concerns continued: Would the hormone-stimulating drugs have adverse effects on me? What would the drugs do to the fetus? And more important, would conceiving a child outside the womb (not actually in a test tube but in an embryology lab) have any long-term effects? Most important, would my child if I would be lucky enough to give birth to one be as physically and mentally healthy as naturally conceived children?

Articles and blogs fed into my worries not to mention the online mommy boards at pregnancy and fertility websites where women trade rumors, innuendoes and fears, often based on nothing more than a friends experience.

Since the first test-tube baby, Louise Brown, was born in England in 1978, about 6.5 million children have been born worldwide with the help of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) such as IVF. So there is now enough information to address my concerns. Overall, those findings leave me pretty confident that the risks are pretty small and well worth taking if, like me, you want to have a baby but cant.

Although taking fertility medications drove me crazy some hormones gave me nightmares, others kept me up at night, and the main ones made my mind race loopily looking at studies allowed me to conclude that IVF probably has no long-term bad effects.

For instance, a 2013 study of 21,646 women in Australia concluded that there is no evidence of an increased risk of ovarian cancer following IVF in women who give birth. Another study of 9,825 American women found no link between gonadotropins the drugs I was taking to increase my egg production and ovarian cancer for women who gave birth. There was one worrisome point: Both studies found an increased cancer risk for women with resistant infertility i.e., those who did not give birth although the researchers did not know why.

A recent study in the journal JAMA of about 25,000 women who had fertility treatments between 1980 and 1995 found that those who had gone through IVF had no greater risk of getting breast cancer in the subsequent 21 years than those who used other techniques.

Whew. I went through nine rounds of IVF before I got pregnant, which means I took a lot of ovary-stimulating drugs, so these studies are reassuring.

Numerous studies and opinions from [the American Society for Reproductive Medicine] confirm low risk for ovarian and breast cancer from the use of fertility drugs, regardless of the number of IVF cycles performed, said Jeffrey Braverman, founder and medical director at Braverman IVF & Reproductive Immunology in New York.

So how about risks to the baby? Would he or she be affected by her medically assisted conception?

Two studies have raised concerns.

A 2016 study in JAMA Pediatrics found increased risk for birth defects in babies conceived through ART. The study, which involved more than 4 million infants, found that singleton infants conceived using ART were 40 percent more likely to have a nonchromosomal birth defect (such as cleft lip and/or palate or a congenital heart defect) compared with all other singleton births.

The researchers acknowledged that the study did not account for some factors related to infertility that might explain the observed increases in risk for birth defects. In other words, IVF may not have caused the defects. They recommended further research.

A comprehensive review of a group of other studies suggested that the risk for developmental disabilities was greater with ART which, in addition to IVF, includes egg freezing and surrogacy than with natural childbirth. The review examined studies of IVF and autism, cerebral palsy, intellectual disability, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and sensory impairment, among others, and found conflicting information, no correlation or that the disabilities could have been caused by other factors such as preterm birth.

And a study published in March found an increased risk of neoplasms tumors that can be benign or malignant in children born through ART.

But I focused on a study that followed children conceived with ART into their teenage years. It offers a much more reassuring view. The study, published in January, compared 253 16- and 17-year-olds who were conceived with fertility treatments to a cohort of teenagers conceived naturally and found that no differences were detected in general and mental health of ART adolescents or cognitive ability, compared with the reference group. The researchers, who said this was the first long-term study of such children, concluded that their preliminary results provide reassurance that in the long run, health and functioning of ART-conceived adolescents is not compromised.

One of the researchers on the study, Mark Weiser, a psychiatry professor at Tel Aviv Universitys Sackler School of Medicine, said in an interview that the findings should be a relief to parents who used IVF and other assisted reproductive technology. We show there is nothing wrong with these kids when compared with children born naturally. This is a very positive message to parents who are not able to get pregnant on their own. If you look down the line, the kids are perfectly normal.

As for me: After an uneventful pregnancy, my daughter was born full term nearly two years ago at a healthy six pounds, six ounces, with all her fingers and toes and brown hair that would soon turn to curls. She is a delightful, chatty, feisty toddler. Every parent worries about their child, and I know that I will be no different. But for now it seems clear to me that the risks of having used IVF were minimal and the reward huge.

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I had a 'test-tube baby.' Did I have to worry about health problems for ... - Washington Post

Rethinking the 14 day rule – BioEdge

Policy analysts in the United States and UK are calling for a reconsideration of the decades-old 14-day embryo experimentation rule - a regulation that requires scientists to terminate any embryo in vitro before it reaches two weeks of development. New embryology research indicates that scientists can now grow embryos in a culture dish well past 14 days, permitting research into early human development and various diseases.

An article in this months Hastings Center Report calls for a new public discussion of the longstanding regulation, suggesting in particular that we take into account new scientific and social perspectives on embryo research. ...our understandings of responsible research have evolved to require greater public participation in decisions about science, writes University of Edinburgh bioethicist Sarah Chan. Broader public discourse must begin now.

Chan says that the 14-day rule was originally based on an arbitrary compromise between different viewpoints on the moral status of the embryo. We should be open to considering whether the public now wants to extend or restrict the limits we place on embryo research.

Baroness Mary Warnock, a moral philosopher and one of the original proponents of the rule, has cautioned against change. According to Warnock, the rule provides a way of allowing for embryo research, while still addressing slippery slope concerns: you cannot successfully block a slippery slope except by a fixed and invariable obstacle, which is what the 14-day rule provided.

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Rethinking the 14 day rule - BioEdge

Anatomy of an apology – Richmond Register

By the time you read this, this will be old news and the nation will most likely have already moved on to the next outrageous thing.

However, as Im writing this, Kathy Griffin is making headlines.

Who is Kathy Griffin (and why should you care)? Shes a 56-year-old comedian and self-identified D-list celebrity known for being abrasive, brash, crude and sarcastic.

Most recently she made the national news when she posed for a photo, holding up the fake, but realistic, bloody decapitated head of President Donald Trump.

Immediately, she experienced widespread backlash, and even lost a number of jobs, including a longstanding gig on CNN as their New Year's Eve in Times Square co-host.

Within hours, and with two lawyers at her side, she gave a tearful press conference apologizing for her artistic statement, as she called it.

Although no one but God really knows a persons heart, its not a stretch to say her apology may not have been heartfelt. She quickly went from, I went too far...I sincerely apologize, to, It is Trump who should apologize...for being the most woman-hating and tyrannical president in history, among other accusations.

In other words: Im sorry, but.

Whenever someone says, Im sorry, but you can bet that theyre not sorry. They may be sorry they got caught and sorry their actions caused them to suffer consequences, but the but is the real message.

Im sorry, but you deserved it.

Im sorry, but you made me do it.

Im sorry, but youve done worse.

Im sorry, but Id do it again.

Im sorry, but youll be even more sorry when Im done with you.

Chances are youve heard that from someone or thought it about or said it to someone else.

Im sorry, but.

In the book, The Five Languages of Apology, authors Gary Chapman and Jennifer Thomas describe five languages or ways people deliver and/or accept apologies: expressing regret (Im sorry), accepting responsibility (I was wrong), making restitution (What can I do do make it right?), genuinely repenting (Ill try not to do that again) and asking for forgiveness.

Chapman and Thomas write that not every person who has been wronged needs to hear all five from the person who has hurt them, but that can be true. It depends on the nature of the wrong, the damage it has caused and the individual emotional needs to the wronged person.

As an aside, the book includes a quiz to determine your language. Mine came out equally as expressing regret and accepting responsibility. So, if you wrong me in the future, I need you to own what you did and express true regret.

A gift card to Ulta or Panera is also acceptable.

The authors said the one universal aspect of an apology is that it cant contain a but. A person needs to take full responsibility, blame only him- or herself.

In a perfect world, there would be no need for apologies, Chapman and Thomas write. But because the world is imperfect, we cannot survive without them...Something within us cries out for reconciliation when wrongdoing has fractured a relationship. The desire for reconciliation is often more potent than the desire for justice, and the more intimate the relationship, the deeper the desire for reconciliation.

They go on to write, The need for apologies permeates all human relationships, and that without apologies, anger builds.

In the 1970 movie Love Story, after Oliver tells Jenny, Im sorry, Jenny replies, Love means never having to say youre sorry.

However, thats not only impossible for flawed humans, but its also not true. In fact, the opposite is true: Real love is humble enough to admit ones wrongs. Real love apologizes without a but and real love offers forgiveness in return.

Jesus told his followers: If you are about to place your gift on the altar and remember that someone is angry with you, leave your gift there.Make peace with that person, then come back and offer your gift to God (Matthew 5:23-24).

Is there someone you need to apologize to?

Ill pray for you, that God will give you the courage and the grace, the right timing and the best words to do it.

Even though doing the right thing is often difficult, its always good for the soul -- no if, ands or buts about it.

Nancy Kennedy is the author of Move Over, Victoria - I Know the Real Secret, Girl on a Swing, and her latest book, Lipstick Grace. She can be reached at 352-564-2927 or via email at nkennedy@chronicleonline.com.

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Anatomy of an apology - Richmond Register

Hat Grab: Cells Take Extreme Measures to Rescue Their DNA – Discovery Institute

Theres a famous scene in an Indiana Jones movie where the hero barely makes it under a closing gate descending on him in an underground tunnel. He rolls under the gate in the nick of time, but his signature fedora comes off. With fractions of a second to spare, he reaches his arm under the gate and snatches the hat.

Something like that happens in the cell. Sometimes, when chromosomes are being winched apart by the spindle into the daughter cells, fragments of DNA break off and become entangled in the spindles microtubules. Unless they are rescued and make it into the nuclei of the new cells, disaster could result. The resulting cells will become unstable, resulting in cancer or cell death. Time is of the essence! The cell is following a precisely choreographed screenplay, where thousands of actors must play their roles perfectly at the right time and place. Like the gate descending on Indiana Jones, the cleavage furrow is rapidly constricting the midpoint of the spindle, with those fragments stuck there. Can the cell rescue them in time?

This crisis happens daily in life. Like the city folk above ground, oblivious to Indiana Jones and his frantic brush with death under the streets, we hear and see nothing of the near-catastrophes happening inside our cells. But if it werent for the cells fast-acting hand, all would be lost. The dramatic true story is told in fascinating news from the University of California, Santa Cruz, under the title, Hail Mary mechanism can rescue cells with severely damaged chromosomes. The authors liken what happens to a quarterbacks all-or-nothing long pass in the last seconds of a critical football game. It calls for desperate plays.

William Sullivan calls this a worst case scenario for the cell. The potential consequences include cell death or a cancerous cell growing out of control. But Sullivan, a professor of molecular, cell, and developmental biology at UC Santa Cruz, has found that the cell still has one more trick up its sleeve to rescue the broken chromosome.

The latest findings from Sullivans lab, published in the June 5 issue of Journal of Cell Biology, reveal new aspects of a remarkable mechanism that carries broken chromosomes through the process of cell division so that they can be repaired and function normally in the daughter cells. [Emphasis added.]

Sullivans research team studied a strain of fruit flies that they mutated to increase the incidence of DNA fragmentation. By inserting fluorescent tags, they were able to witness this amazing mechanism, like a Hail Mary pass with time running out. What they saw was not unlike Indiana Joness arm reaching for his hat.

The mechanism involves the creation of a DNA tether which acts as a lifeline to keep the broken fragment connected to the chromosome.

Sullivans research has shown that chromosome fragments dont segregate with the rest of the chromosomes, but get pulled in later just before the newly forming nuclear membrane closes. The DNA tether seems to keep the nuclear envelope from closing, and then the chromosome fragment just glides right in at the last moment, Sullivan said.

Its a good thing this tether works most of the time. When it doesnt, the action-adventure movie turns into a horror flick.

If this mechanism fails, however, and the chromosome fragment gets left outside the nucleus, the consequences are dire. The fragment forms a micronucleus with its own membrane and becomes prone to extensive rearrangements of its genetic material, which can then be reincorporated into chromosomes during the next cell division. Micronuclei and genetic rearrangements are commonly seen in cancer cells.

Think about what is required for this trick to work. Genes have to construct the tether, and enzymes have to know where to attach it. This means that all the information to pull off this whole stunt has to be written into the script before the director calls, Action! Could evolution write a script like that? In the neo-Darwinist version, cells that did not have the tether would die or grow cancerous. The cost of selection would be enormous. All the players and their props would have to learn their roles by chance, figuring out by sheer dumb luck where to be and what to do before a cell could succeed at this stunt and survive. We dont think Sullivan or his funding agencies are relying on chance to pull that off.

We want to understand the mechanism that keeps that from happening, Sullivan said. We are currently identifying the genes responsible for generating the DNA tether, which could be promising novel targets for the next generation of cancer therapies.

Sullivan has just received a new four-year, $1.5 million grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences to continue this research.

The Hail Mary pass is just one of a whole catalog of strategies the cell can draw on to protect its genome. Heres another strategy announced at Rice University, where researchers determined that Biologys need for speed tolerates a few mistakes.

Biology must be in a hurry. In balancing speed and accuracy to duplicate DNA, produce proteins and carry out other processes, evolution has apparently determined that speed is of higher priority, according to Rice University researchers.

Rice scientists are challenging assumptions that perfectly accurate transcription and translation are critical to the success of biological systems. It turns out a few mistakes here and there arent critical as long as the great majority of the biopolymers produced are correct.

Although the researchers are evolutionists, we can see that what they really found is optimization at work (a form of intelligent design in action).

A new paper shows how nature has optimized two processes, DNA replication and protein translation, that are fundamental to life. By simultaneously analyzing the balance between speed and accuracy, the Rice team determined that naturally selected reaction rates optimize for speed as long as the error level is tolerable.

When you think about what a cell has to do before it divides, theres not much room for evolution in the mistakes. Millions of base pairs must be duplicated in a time crunch, while the molecular machinery is in operation. Its like duplicating a factory while the machinery is running! A smart manager will recognize that the cost of being too precise is not worth the delay if the results are adequate to meet the requirements. They use an analogy we are familiar with:

Kinetic proofreading is the biochemical process that allows enzymes, such as those responsible for protein and DNA production, to achieve better accuracy between chemically similar substrates. Sequences are compared to templates at multiple steps and are either approved or discarded, but each step requires time and energy resources and as a result various tradeoffs occur.

Additional checking processes slow down the system and consume extra energy, Banerjee said. Think of an airport security system that checks passengers. Higher security (accuracy) means a need for more personnel (energy), with longer waiting times for passengers (less speed).

Despite the one evolution reference, these researchers smell design:

That makes just as much sense for biology as it does for engineering, Igoshin said. Once youre accurate enough, you stop optimizing.

We see a similar optimization strategy in news from Brandeis University about double-stranded break (DSB) repair. When one strand of DNA breaks, thats bad. When both strands of DNA become separated, thats really bad. Specialized enzymes can inspect and repair these DSBs, but they also have to sacrifice accuracy for speed. The enzymes look for similar sequences to use as a template for the bandage that will re-join the strands.

But how perfect does the match have to be? Ranjith Anand, the first author on the Nature paper, said this was one of the central questions that the Haber lab wanted to answer.

They found that repair was still possible when every sixth base in a stretch of about 100 bases was different. Previous studies of RAD51 in the test tube had suggested that the protein had a much more stringent requirement for matching.

That one of the six base pairs could be a mismatch surprised the scientists. The process is permissive of mismatches during the repairing, says Anand.

We begin to see a kind of molecular triage going on, as if battlefield medics use whatever is on hand to keep the soldier from dying. Most damage gets accurately repaired, so the cell is unaffected, the article says. For somatic cells, imperfect bandages will probably cause no significant harm. Darwinism would require that the mistakes (1) become incorporated into the germline, and (2) provide functional innovations that are positively selected. And thus a wolf became a whale, and a dinosaur took flight into the skies.

Sensible viewers of these action adventures undoubtedly sense good directing, acting, and optimization behind them. Clifford Tabin expressed his amazement about lifes development in Phys.org back in 2013.

When I teach medical students, theyre more interested in the rare people who are born with birth defects, They want to understand embryology so they understand how things go awry, but Im more interested in the fact that for everyone sitting in my classroomall 200 of those medical students and dental students it went right! And every one of them has a heart on the left side and every one of them has two kidneys, and how the heck do you do that?

You are not just a ball of cells, he says; you are the result of mechanical principles that guide the growth of structures through many stages, subject to physical forces, that usually work. And that is indeed astonishing.

Photo: Hat from Indiana Jones movie, for sale at auction, by Deidre Willard (Indys hat) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons.

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Hat Grab: Cells Take Extreme Measures to Rescue Their DNA - Discovery Institute

Quick Hits: Biochemistry of sex, native martyrs, music & film – Catholic Culture

By Thomas V. Mirus (bio - articles - email) | Jun 09, 2017

There is so much we dont know about our own bodies, and none of it gets taught in sex ed. For example:

A man gets vasopressin, a bonding hormone, when he has sex with a woman. This is not up to him; whether he thinks it is no-strings sex or not, he is now hormonally bonded to that particular woman.

Women are automatically attracted by smell to men whose immune system is complementary to their own, but the Pill reverses this, making them attracted to men whose immune system is like their own, like their fathers or brothers (thus, not a biologically correct mate).

I learned this and much more amazing and important information in a recorded talk on the biochemistry of sex given at my alma mater by Project Rachel founder Vicki Thorn. Watch, and share with your teenage (or older) children.

Many Catholics know about the so-called North American Martyrs: saints like Isaac Jogues and Jean de Brebuf who preached the Gospel to the Indians in Canada. But we never hear about the Indian converts who were martyred around the same time. One of these, Joseph Chiwatenhwa, shed his blood for Christ even before Jogues and Brebuf were killed. In fact, he seems to be the first Catholic to have been martyred in North America.

Chiwatenhwa was the first lay administrator of the Catholic Church in Canada, and became a catechist among his Huron people, converting many friends and family members, translating hymns and prayers from French into Huron, and adapting some Huron traditions to the Catholic faith. He was a man of great zeal and loved God more than his own life. He was ultimately killed (whether by a Huron or an Iroquois is uncertain) for spreading the faith among the native peoples.

To learn more, read Friends of God: The Early Native Huron Church in Canada, a short and moving book written to further the cause of Joseph Chiwatenhwas canonization. (At one point in Friends of God there is a reference to St. Joseph wanting to divorce Mary because he thought she had been unfaithful to him, which I think is the wrong interpretation, but other than that the book is very good.)

Catholics shouldnt trust the mainstream media when it comes to foreign policy any more than they should on matters of religion. Andrew Bacevich recently raised 24 fundamental questions that must be answered for America to have a morally rational foreign policy. That virtually none of them are brought up by the mainstream media or politicians shows how truly impoverished the discussion on foreign policy is.

Two artistic discussions Ive enjoyed recently: Catholic conductor Manfred Honeck talks to the Catholic Artists Society about Faith in Music, with a particularly interesting look at the theological content of Mozarts Requiem. And philosopher Thomas Hibbs asks, Is Cinema Art? The answer is an obvious yes, but we learn more by pursuing the question. One fun bit of trivia I learned from Hibbs: T.S. Eliots favorite film was Kurosawas Throne of Blood.

Finally, Ive just profiled a New York-based Catholic sculptor, Christopher Alles, for The New Criterions blog. Enjoy!

Thomas V. Mirus is an administrative assistant and writer at CatholicCulture.org. A jazz pianist with a music degree, he often takes the lead in our commentary on the arts. See full bio.

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Quick Hits: Biochemistry of sex, native martyrs, music & film - Catholic Culture

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Firefighters Spinoff Probably Won’t Feature Original Cast Members – Moviefone

Get ready to see some new faces in Seattle! The planned "Grey's Anatomy" spinoff revolving around firefighters is going to feature all-new characters.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, none of the current regulars on "Grey's Anatomy" are likely to move over to the spinoff. Fans had speculated that Jason George, who plays resident Ben Warren, might star in the spinoff, since he worked closely with firefighters in the season finale. But it seems Shonda Rhimes is opting to focus on new faces.

While the news of the spinoff came as a surprise during ABC's upfronts presentation to advertisers, it's been in the works for some time.

"he discussions have been going on for a while earlier than this season. It was up to Shonda to tell us when she had inspiration for something that made sense, which was pretty recent," ABC Studios president Patrick Moran told THR.

"We talked about the elements of 'Grey's Anatomy' that seem to resonate with the audience emotional storytelling, deep human connection, a high-stakes environment and strong and empowered women and those elements will carry over to the spinoff."

The firefighters project is the second spinoff of "Grey's Anatomy," after "Private Practice." And Rhimes has had other spinoff ideas, like one about Owen Hunt (Kevin McKidd) and his history in the military.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Firefighters Spinoff Probably Won't Feature Original Cast Members - Moviefone

Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Anatomy of Suffering – Center for Research on Globalization

The Chiostro Del Bramante, a cloister-turned-gallery in the heart of Rome, is currently presenting Jean-Michel Basquiat: New York City a generous selection of work spanning the short, but immensely prolific, career of this extraordinary artist. The extensive exhibition includes nearly one hundred significant works on loan from the Mugrabi Collection, which includes acrylics and oils, as well as drawings, silkscreen prints, and ceramics completed between the years of 1981 and 1987.

Born in Brooklyn, New York to a Haitian father and Puerto Rican mother, Basquiats stunning and breathtakingly rapid ascent to fame and stardom was paralleled by few, if any, other artists in the twentieth century. At Sothebys recently, Basquiats painting of a skull, Untitled (1982) sold for $110.5 million a record price for an American painter, placing him in the art history pantheon alongside Pablo Picasso and Francis Bacon. We can be pleased that Yusaku Maezawa, the Japanese billionaire who bought the painting, intends to share his taste for art with the public. However, if we are to truly approach these works at all, it is necessary to get beyond the din of the market the screeching vultures as the late John Berger puts it and give our attention to the sophistication and wit of this painter, the sincerity and exuberance of his canvases.

Untitled, 1982 (Source: Sothebys New York via artnet News)

From the first early portraits in the exhibit, we see Basquiats confident and energetic line, which he used to tremendous expressive effect throughout his career. We also find Basquiats characteristic use of haloes; and most recognizably, the three-pronged gold crown, which he would use to establish the dignity and worth of something or someone, or simply as an assertion of the artists power.

The crown features prominently in Loin (1982), a painting of a horned bull alongside a bloody knife. On the one hand, we seem to have a sacrificial offering: loin as in a cut of beef, a tenderloin. On the other hand, a symbol of sacred strength and power (the bull was in fact one of Zeus divine manifestations, a form he took when he seduced and abducted Europa). In this case, the loin is the creative, generative potency of the artist himself, in what amounts to a kind of self-portrait. Similarly, Pablo Picasso, who influenced Basquiat greatly, depicted himself as a quadruped in his etching Minotauromachy (1935) and included an image of a bull in Guernica (1937), a painting which Basquiat credited as being among one of his all-time favorites.

Loin, 1982(Source: David Bird / Pinterest)

There is no escaping violence in Basquiat, and while it is sometimes presented upfront with the intention to arrest and confront the viewer there is often an indeterminate sense of menace. In Side View of an Oxens Jaw (1982) Basquiat may be invoking the story of Samson a Biblical figure who slew the masses of Philistines armed with only the jawbone of an ass. Basquiat would explicitly revisit Samson in one of his most successful paintings, Obnoxious Liberals (1982) identifying himself with the black hero/martyr that reappears in so much of his work.

Hand Anatomy (1982) brings our attention to one of the fundamental themes of the show and Basquiats work throughout his career. Basquiats knowledge of art history was apparently encyclopedic: he painted in dialogue with many of the masters who preceded him and his works are full of such references. Leonardo da Vinci looms large in this sense, not only as a painter (Basquiat seems to have regarded Da Vinci as among his favorite artists), but as a student of human anatomy and physiology. Da Vinci is known to have secretly dissected human cadavers (a practice widely condemned at the time) to understand more fully the inner workings and processes of the human body. Basquiat may have been attracted to this readiness to go underground, as it were; and like da Vinci, he had to escape and outmaneuver the conventions of ordinary social morality to bring to light something that we are almost afraid to see; something that by its very nature interrogates our tendency to conform to established modes of understanding and discourse.

The exhibition includes several works that Basquiat and Andy Warhol painted together. The two had a highly-publicized friendship which led to an exhibition of their collaborative works at the Tony Shafrazi Gallery in Soho in 1985. Warhol and Basquiat: Paintings was panned by the critics, a reception which contributed to the dissolution of their personal and professional relationship. In Thin Lips (c. 1984-1985) (which is to say, false promises) the two artists satirize Reaganomics. Basquiats work was political throughout, and sometimes his works are most-effectively political when the content is not explicitly so.

Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat (Source: WideWalls)

At his best, Basquiat can be viewed as an American shaman: an artist who brought meaning to a fragmented society by acting as a conduit to another realm of consciousness. In his appropriation of so-called primitive art and renaissance iconography especially the halo (which sometimes becomes a crown of thorns) he created a unique vocabulary that he developed as a way of exploring a broken world. Much like the writer William Burroughs, who was a profound influence on the painter, Basquiat is charting a kind of guide to the underworld employing Ancient Egyptian glyphs and petroglyphs, as well as hobo signs, in his mapping of the in-visible.

Basquiats art is inseparable from language that is, from the power and sometimes the impotency of names, lists and phrases: and even among his earliest pieces we find him charting words and letters in semi-incantatory ways. He saw the disintegration and brutality of everyday life in America: for Basquiat, the world is in tatters, and because of this, his work tends to lack a center as well as a privileged point of reference. If we could talk about the metaphysics of Basquiats world, then it was one of violent explosiveness he taps into the dehiscence of being to create something altogether unsettling, evocative, and distinct.

Basquiat does not abandon, but transforms, the project of high modernism inasmuch as his paintings are indeed an autobiographical search for wholeness. There is, we might say, a therapeutic intention underlying his work: he seemed to want (at least at times) to heal the self to repel ghosts (as one of his late works states).

Some of the later paintings seem to suggest that he saw the end was near: for example, the extraordinary painting Riding with Death (1988), or the final piece included in this show Gravestone (1987), a work which consists of three doors joined together and the word perishable partially blotted out at the top center. This was, on the one hand, a tribute to Andy Warhol (who died that year), and it evokes the painted panel altars of medieval and renaissance art. Like so much of his work, it represents Basquiats pattern of salvaging and resurrecting the rejected and discarded. But one must wonder if this piece could also be seen as a requiem for the artist himself, as he was coming to terms with his own self-destruction (he died in 1988 from a heroin overdose).

Gravestone, 1987 (Source:Cie Cefeg / Pinterest)

Much of this exhibition concerns, we might say, the anatomy of suffering, and at the same time the strength, resilience and protest that comes from the stripping down, the peeling away of the outer layers to reveal the blood vessels, the muscles and tendons, and the skeleton itself. In Rusting Red Car in Kuau (1984) with its engine (that is, its anatomy) visible, we are witness to another form of Basquiats self-portraiture.

Basquiats work remains immensely provocative, often disconcerting, barbed and defiant scathing in his critique of the racism, greed and moral apathy of American society. He takes a wrecking ball not only to false barriers between conceptualism and expressionism, painting and writing, improvisation, and composition; but to the various social, political, and artistic edifices we have built atop lies. As Berger observed, if Basquiat is an artist whose work is about seeing through lies, then we cannot deny his timeliness and the claim his work ultimately makes on us.

Sam Ben-Meir, PhD is an adjunct professor at Mercy College. His current research focuses on environmental ethics and animal studies.[emailprotected] Web: http://www.alonben-meir.com

Featured image: basquiat.com

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Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Anatomy of Suffering - Center for Research on Globalization

Anatomy of a social media ‘troll’ – Chicago Tribune

Jon Timowski has been described as a social media "troll."

In internet slang, a troll is a person who stirs the pot by purposely starting arguments, angering social media users, or posting inflammatory comments solely to provoke an emotional reaction from others.

"How do I respond to being called a troll? I really don't," said Timowski, 40, of Lowell. "It is and has been very typical, and telling, for the left to lash out to name calling."

Though he disregards such disparaging labels from his critics, Timowski views our polarized country as left versus right, liberals versus conservatives, Democrats versus Republicans. In his personal world, "snowflakes" have nothing to do with winter storms and everything to do with political storms.

In internet slang, the word snowflake is used by conservatives or Republicans to mock liberals or describe Democrats who feel they're unique when they're anything but unique. Another insulting connotation refers to snowflakes easily melting when confronted by opposing views. It's an overused insult, I say, even pass at this point.

Like most social media users, Timowski is convinced about his political and ideological convictions, which have become heightened since President Trump has been on the scene. Timowksi also is prolific with his hundreds of unrelenting comments on many people's Facebook pages, including on my public page.

For several months, Timowski has been commenting on my social media posts regarding political topics, typically with a bluster that rankles other readers. Only once did I have to tell Timowski to ease back with his name-calling or I'd have to ask him to avoid commenting on my posts. (I've told this to quite a few readers through the years.)

Timowski understood, which is more than I can say about a few other online readers.

Though Timowski and I disagree on most everything political, or so it seems, I enjoy reading his comments and sharing his impassioned voice with my online readers. I think it offers an attempt at a balance between clashing viewpoints, especially with my own viewpoints.

"My purpose for comments, especially to (readers) on the left, at first was to educate them why the right, or conservatives, look at them the way they do," Timowski told me. "It was to point out the flaws in thought and, more importantly, actions that were waking the sleeping and forgotten conservatives."

A Hammond native, Timowski is married with a son. He works in the field of safety and security with disaster planning, which restricts him from sharing his photo for this column, he said. He's been using social media since the days of MySpace which, in the fast-paced evolution of social media, certainly dates him.

On one of his recent Facebook posts on his own page, Timowski wrote, "I love how many people are against the government except on the 1st of the month."

Would you describe his post as inflammatory or informational? Purposeful or confrontational? Is it the work of a social media troll or a "conversation starter," as I've been called by some readers?

"I believe social media can be a way to debate and discuss everything under the sun," Timowski told me. "Unfortunately, it often brings out the worst in people."

This is the absolute truth, as any user has found out. This also is why I wanted to profile Timowski and others like him who have been labeled as a troll by others. I'm guessing that Timowski is not the person you may first think they are, according to his posts and comments. The same can be said for many other social media users, I believe.

It's become too easy to judge others based on only one thin slice of their life. In this case, their social media rhetoric or comments, which can be redundant to the point of exhaustion or aggravation.

For instance, I had Timowski pegged as a lifelong conservative, voting Republican in every election regardless of race or candidate. I was wrong.

"I have been a lifelong Democrat, only voting for two Republicans in a local election in my lifetime," said Timowski, who said he voted for Trump in November. "Every other race locally, state and federal have been for Democrats. I guess that means I don't affiliate, but I have leaned left throughout my lifetime thus far."

So why the change in political parties and viewpoints?

"As a lifelong Democrat, I was awakened at what area officials had let happen to my home city and others around it while the conservative areas prospered and made better financial decisions," he replied.

In the past, Timowski was, "active on liberal-leaning webpages, trying to shed light that the country was growing tired of poor behavior, violence, laziness and entitlement," he said. "I truly wanted to help the left that I had voted for my whole life to get away from these things."

"The constant corruption and indictments did not help," he added. "I began to see through, what I was told my whole life, that the rich and business leaders were the devil. After learning to let go of hatred for others' success, I decided I wanted the best business decision-makers running my tax dollars."

"While I disagree with conservative ideology on many subjects, I realize government is in fact a business and my personal life choices are to be done on a personal level away from government," Timowski said.

He also cites the "violence and ignorance" that America has witnessed this past year through so many protests and demonstrations.

"While the right, and namely Trump supporters, have shown ignorance and even some isolated cases of violence, the left has far outreached these cases with the masses," he said. "It's like much of the same results we see with Democratic stronghold areas when it comes to violent crimes. Much like my childhood city (Hammond) and northern Lake County."

Timowski and I agree on one thing.

"We all have a trillion thoughts, and speak a trillion words, but we will be judged on only a few opinions if people don't bother to learn about each other," he said.

jdavich@post-trib.com

Twitter@jdavich

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Anatomy of a social media 'troll' - Chicago Tribune

Anatomy of a clusterfuck: How ‘strong and stable’ Theresa May messed up so entirely – The Spinoff

What the hell just happened? The Guardians Richard Adams attempts to make sense of the shock UK election outcome.

The UK election result is the biggest upset of conventional wisdom since, well, last November. After Trump, the Brexit referendum, Leicester City winning the premier league and the 2015 UK general election result youd think wed be getting used to this. But no.

The Conservative partys decision to call a snap election has backfired: rather than winning the comfortable-to-huge majority predicted, the Tories have instead gone backwards. The party has held enough seats to govern in coalition with Northern Irelands Democratic Unionist party but it was a miserable effort in almost every other respect.

Nervous and ill-advised, Theresa May achieved the unthinkable: winning more than 42% of the popular vote but losing a swathe of seats in England. (In 2005 Tony Blair won 35% of the vote but a solid majority of MPs.) Labour under Jeremy Corbyn got around 40% and gained more than 30 seats. The Tories piled up wasted votes in safe seats and failed to go beyond their comfort zone to win votes in London and the east of England. And that in a nutshell is why May lost as she did.

Why did the Tories do so badly in its England heartland? Brexit the referendum to leave the European Union hung over this election like an embarrassing smell. The UK Independent Party (UKIP) collapsed as predicted, having won the EU exit it sought, but its voters didnt obediently file back to the Tories as the pundits expected. Enough perhaps 40% returned to Labour to make a difference.

And then there was the 18-30 youth vote. Largely pro-Labour but with a poor record of actually voting, this time the youth turned out in higher proportions, with the exact amount as yet unconfirmed. This is a major reason why so many polls got it so wrong: they assumed that voting behaviour wouldnt change much. But young people appeared more exercised by Brexit and Labours policies including the scrapping of student tuition fees that currently stand at 9000 a year.

The pollsters performance brings to mind the football pundit Alan Hansen, who once rubbished Manchester Uniteds chances of winning the English league: You cant win anything with kids. One of those kids was David Beckham, and we know what happened next.

But Labour under Jeremy Corbyn also did better than expected with older voters, thanks in part to returning UKIP voters and perhaps as a result of Theresa Mays overconfident campaign that offered its key base of supporters a dementia tax and downgraded pension protection.

The Conservative campaign overall was nightmarish, revolving around Mays strong and stable leadership backed by lurid excesses by the Daily Mail, Telegraph and Sun. As tactics go thats fine but May herself couldnt carry its weight. She refused to debate with Corbyn, was generally lacklustre and failed to offer any detail about how the Tories planned to negotiate Brexit. The single biggest political issue on the table and May ignored it to concentrate on domestic policies. This played into Labours hands, disastrously, by moving debate to Labours strengths: spending on health, education and social services.

Then the campaign was twice derailed by two terrorist attacks. The attack in Manchester came just as almost every newspaper was printing front pages deriding Mays dementia tax U-turn. They all changed overnight to describe the Manchester carnage.

But the later London Bridge attack may have eroded Mays image of competence. As Home Secretary for five years she had been responsible for policing and domestic security. After London a string of complaints appeared about how the attackers had been allowed to enter and remain in the UK, along with steep cuts in police numbers that also happened on Mays watch.

Although election campaigns rarely have a major effect on final results, the closeness of the UK result suggests too many voters were unimpressed by May and her team. Perhaps convinced by those polls predicting huge Conservative majorities, the Tory strategists played it safe. No hostages to fortune on Brexit, giving themselves plenty of room of taxes, and a readoption of some ancient Tory policies like bringing back fox hunting and grammar schools, when the result indicates that UKIP and potential Labour voters dont give a damn about either.

The other caveat about election campaigns is that they do help the profile of under-exposed leaders. In that sense the snap election was a relief for Jeremy Corbyn: it halted Labours infighting and allowed him to approach the public directly. He was helped, it seems, by the growth of left-wing activism on the web a Buzzfeed survey of Facebook found that aggressively pro-Corbyn and Labour news was shared far more widely than similar efforts for the Conservatives.

By avoiding Brexit discussion during the campaign, May gave Corbyn an opening that he rushed to fill with populist policies. The Conservatives offered nothing in response apart from slogans about stability and Brexit meaning Brexit. In her one major speech May even claimed that Brexit required a return to grammar schools (that is, schools reserved for the most able children as selected by an exam sat by 11-year-olds). It was, incredibly, perhaps her most concrete policy statement of the election.

Outside of England and Wales where Labour continued to dominate despite the nations huge pro-Brexit vote the Conservatives did much better. In Scotland the independence issue rivalled Brexit as a vote driver. In 2015 the pro-independence vote flocked to the SNP. This time it seems that the pro-Unionist vote coaleased in response around the Tories, hence their success. The SNPs meltdown will be one of the elections major political aftermaths.

But what happens next? Conventional wisdom would go like this: the Tories form a coalition with the DUP of Northern Ireland; May eventually steps down as PM to be replaced by Boris Johnson; the Tories present a populist Budget with tax cuts and NHS funding galore which gets voted down, followed by another snap election in, lets see, November? February?

But who knows? New Zealanders will recognise that governments can be sustained with slim majorities. The UK did just have five years of coalition government so its not so unlikely. Well all be finding out a lot more about the DUP, its policies and the foibles of Belfast and Ulster politics. Foxes are probably safe for the time being.

Meanwhile the clock ticks towards Brexit whatever Brexit means now.

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Anatomy of a clusterfuck: How 'strong and stable' Theresa May messed up so entirely - The Spinoff