College Disciplinary Boards Impose Slight Penalties For Serious Crimes

The University of Toledo found a student responsible for his role in the stabbing death of his roommate, but he wasn’t expelled from the school or charged criminally.

The University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh found a student responsible for sexual assault and gave him a written reprimand, kicked him out of his dorm for a month and ordered him not to have any minors as guests.

After Miami University found a student responsible for assaulting one woman and stealing another woman’s pizza on the southwestern Ohio campus, it placed him on probation and ordered him to write an essay.

Colleges across the country use campus disciplinary boards to pass judgment on students accused of violent crimes, including rape and assault. Sometimes, schools handle crime and punishment without ever reporting violations to police. Most cases never go to court.

Let's Make Bitcoin The Biggest Humanitarian Tool The World Has Ever Seen

News junkies of the world may be forgiven for becoming the latest tech skeptics this Cyber Monday: 2014 has been a year of global mayhem.

Instead of creating a connected civic safety net, it seems like tech platforms simply amplified messages and images from ungovernable parts of the world. Boko Haram kidnapped girls in Nigeria, and we fought back with mostly futile hashtags. ISIS broadcast its brutality with regular video updates. Russian leader Vladimir Putin perfected networked information warfare in Crimea. Online drug lords distributed their contraband, tarnishing the image of bitcoin — the first global peer-to-peer financial system.

In the midst of these discouraging activities, however, a number of social-platform successes have occurred that garnered less attention, such as the “Umbrella Revolution” in Hong Kong or Kenya’s Election Hub. Similarly, dissidents in Iran have been using cryptographic platforms to communicate with each other for years.

As the information revolution continues to redistribute power from centralized hierarchies to individuals and communities, the impact of this redistribution is often unpredictable, with local public institutions often either non-existent or otherwise unable to adapt, compete or function effectively enough to prevent violence. The Iraqi government and Mexico’s inept law enforcement come to mind.

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Yet, there is a reason to take heart. Despite fear and life-threatening circumstances, individuals continue to create civil society in the midst of destruction. Doctors in Aleppo, Syria, have moved their hospitals underground to escape targeting and continue to serve patients. Syrian women negotiate humanitarian access to ceasefires. An island of relative peace, the Kurdistan region of Iraq has accepted hundreds of thousands of refugees.

For those of us who want to see new technologies used to expand free association and improve the human condition, it’s time to step back and assess: How do we make the next decade one of technological development that builds more resilient communities from the bottom up? How might we route around bureaucratic dysfunction? Finally, how can we best support individuals who navigate disruption successfully and then help them rebuild?

What many may not realize is that Bitcoin can help. In many ways it already is. The bitcoin ecosystem has already discovered ways to become a crucial part of the global humanitarian community that assists these efforts and fills the civic gap that occurs in the midst of ubiquitous threats like violent conflict, weather-related disasters and exported extremism and disease. This may be bitcoin’s most important role to date.

The current gap in global governance is an opportunity for blockchain technologies. While large institutions work to overcome their outdated practices, Bitcoin can build bridges between peers in a decentralized, iterative and accountable fashion. It can crowdsource action and match expertise to bring individuals together to create a more timely and effective response to crises.

These efforts are still in their infancy and there is much more work to do. There is enormous potential in the power of the blockchain technology to improve lives around the world if the response to these situations is addressed — and financed — collaboratively.

Humanitarian organizations that utilize the bitcoin network can make the Silk Road narrative a side show by demonstrating that humanitarianism is mission critical for successful long-term global finance. First, we bitcoin fans have to walk our talk. We need to model a vision of global civics, one that shows how the best results can be achieved when rights and responsibilities are decentralized, not the result of an onerous top-down power structure.

Bitcoin is an agile, safe and real-time financing tool for rapid response. These qualities make it ideal for assisting refugees whose lives are shattered and dislocated by war.

Organizations like TentEd are a great example of how this idea is being implemented. TentEd is a rapid impact project for refugee children in the Kurdistan region. Founded by three Iraq war veterans who volunteer their time, this project equips schools based on immediate and local needs assessments. It had a successful first run last summer and is set to return this month.

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The Kurdistan region is home to hundreds of thousands of war-displaced Syrians and Iraqi religious minorities seeking refuge from the so-called “Islamic State.” Since 2012, nearly half of Syria’s population has been displaced.

There are countless examples of people building resilience and you can help any of them achieve real world results with bitcoin donations. TentEd leverages relatively little money with huge social capital. Like a software development design sprint, the project is led with focused teamwork and builds continual feedback and relationships into the implementation. In June, the project served hundreds of refugee children by equipping them with transportation, books, uniforms, shoes, and other classroom essentials that will create a safe, stable learning environment.

Humanitarian organizations can make larger impacts utilizing the bitcoin model. TentEd shares many bitcoin characteristics: It is nonhierarchical, immediate, collaborative, peer-driven, transactionally transparent and accountable. Moreover, its success is based on trust and a record of commitment. In this way, the project models valuable information management rules for today’s world, where it is getting increasingly difficult to sort the signal from the noise.

Note: This article was co-authored by Matthew McKibbin and first appeared in TechCrunch . TentEd is a project of the Education for Peace in Iraq Center.

Naked Yoga YYC: Leaving Nothing Between You And Your Practice

Yoga is so trendy nowadays, studios almost need to gimmick to get people
to set foot into their studio. After all, when they’re a dime a dozen,
the competition between similar businesses is steep. In order to
differentiate themselves from the other studio across the block, some
have started marketing themselves by their specialty. Apparently though,
to really draw the attention of prospective yogis, studios have to
follow in the footsteps of the latest controversial yoga business.

How would you change the Razer Blade (14-inch, 2013)?

Like its charismatic CEO, Razer is a company that’s always on the go. Less than six months after we reviewed the 2013 Razer Blade, it’d been replaced with a fourth-generation edition. When our Sean Buckley reviewed the hardware, he found that it was …

U.S. Air Base In South Korea On Lockdown Over Shooting

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — A U.S. military spokesman says Osan Air Base in South Korea is on lockdown because of reports of an active shooter at a high school on the base

Tech. Sgt. Stacy Foster at Osan said Monday that people on the base had been told to stay in their quarters until further notice. He had no other details. Another official confirmed the lockdown and reports of a shooter.

Osan Air Base is located south of Seoul. It is home to some of the 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea as a deterrent to North Korea, whose 1950 attack started the Korean War.

Janay Rice Says NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell Not Honest In Ray Rice Case

Janay Rice says NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell wasn’t being honest when he said Ray Rice was “ambiguous” about hitting her in a casino elevator.

“I know for a fact … that Ray told the honest truth that he’s been telling from February,” Janay Rice told NBC’s “Today” show in an interview that will be broadcast Monday. A second segment will be shown Tuesday. As for Goodell, she said: “I can’t say he’s telling the truth.”

An arbitrator Friday threw out Ray Rice’s indefinite suspension, making the former Baltimore Ravens running back a free agent. Former U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones called Goodell’s decision in September to change Rice’s original suspension from two games to indefinite “arbitrary” and an “abuse of discretion.”

The Rices met with Goodell in June. He then issued a two-game suspension but increased it to indefinite after an in-elevator video of Rice striking his then-fiancee in February was made public. The Ravens released Rice that day.

“I think they did what they had to do for themselves,” Janay Rice said, referring to the NFL.

Goodell started Rice’s appeal hearing on Nov. 5 with more than two hours of testimony. Ray and Janay Rice testified the following day.

Jones wrote: “Because Rice did not mislead the commissioner and because there were no new facts on which the commissioner could base his increased suspension, I find that the imposition of the indefinite suspension was arbitrary. I therefore vacate the second penalty imposed on Rice.”

In her interview with “Today” host Matt Lauer, Janay Rice said she was furious with Ray but never considered leaving him.

“Of course, in the back of my mind and in my heart I knew that our relationship wouldn’t be over because I know that this isn’t us, and it’s not him,” she said.

Rice, a three-time Pro Bowl player during six seasons with the Ravens, hopes to return to the NFL. It’s uncertain whether a team will sign him this late in the season. Rice, who turns 28 in January, had his worst season as a pro in 2013. He averaged a career-low 3.1 yards per carry and ran for 660 yards, ending a string of four consecutive seasons over 1,000 yards.

In discussing her husband’s chances of landing with a team, Janay Rice said “it’s going to take some work.”

“For them to look past this situation, which I know is going to be hard,” she added. “But at the end of the day he’s a football player and that’s what they should be really focused on because he’s proven himself as a football player for seven years. There’s never been a question on what he can do on the field.”

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AP NFL websites: www.pro32.ap.org and www.twitter.com/AP_NFL

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Follow Rob Maaddi on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_RobMaaddi

One Hug Does Not End Racism: An Advent Message

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Photo Credit: Johnny Nguyen via AP

Love without justice is pure sentimentality. Our Christian Advent message, by contrast, needs to be about the complex and difficult relationship between love and justice, as challenging as that may be to preach and to hear.

This photo of Sgt. Bret Barnum hugging 12-year-old Devonte Hart during a Ferguson rally in Portland, Oregon on November 25, 2014 has gone viral.

It is called “the hug that was shared around the world.”

This touching encounter can seem tailor-made for the Christian season of Advent, the preparation for the birth of the Christ child, and for a message of hope for humanity. White Americans in particular love the hug since it seems to convey the spiritual message that “all will be well” in our racial relations because “Love Conquers All.”

No.

Without some additional biblical and theological work, the “hug” can just “hook” white Americans like me, creating an opportunity to feel good without doing the far more difficult and challenging work of changing the systems of racial injustice that gave rise to the demonstration in Portland, Oregon to begin with.

Individual acts of kindness are necessary, but not sufficient to address the deeply rooted, and widespread pattern of racism that results in lethal violence against unarmed teenagers, as well as in a lack of prosecution of police who kill unarmed teenagers. It is necessary but not sufficient to address the thousands and thousands of micro-aggressions with which African Americans have to live on a daily basis, as Kiese Laymon, a Vassar professor, writes so powerfully.

Let us consider that the Christian season of Advent, the “getting ready” for the birth of the Christ child, really begins with “Mary’s Song,” when Jesus’ mother Mary sings about what her pregnancy means for the world.

The song is not what we might expect from a young woman happy because she is pregnant. It is structured around the judgment of God on injustice. The “Mighty One” has “brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly.” God has “filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty.” (Luke 1: 52-53)

Mary, the mother of Jesus, announces the birth of Jesus with a trenchant critique of unjust political and economic power.

Racism is a delivery system for unjust political and economic power. Racism, defined as racial prejudice allied with political and economic power, is a widespread, historically rooted system.

Racism as a system of prejudice backed up with power is how white Americans have accrued economic privilege, and sustained that privilege through divisive politics. Ironically enough, many white Americans fail to see that this racist political privilege mostly delivers economic benefits to the actual “powerful on their thrones” and facilitates a economic strangle-hold on everybody else. But with “everybody else” divided by race and class, no coherent political challenge can be mounted.

This whole system is challenged by the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, the incarnation of the justice and peace of God.

The “powerful” and the “proud,” sitting on their thrones, are threatened by the challenge to entrenched and unjust political power the birth of Jesus portends. They are so threatened, in fact, that in another Advent text, we learn that when King Herod hears of the impending birth of Jesus, he “was frightened” and he sent “Wise Men” to find out exactly where and when Jesus would be born so he could kill him. Don’t get distracted by the glittery gold presents (or the frankincense and myrrh). Remember this was a disguised death threat, and the wise men wisely do not return to Herod. Herod, not to be deterred in his lethal grip on power, kills a large number of children. (Matt. 2: 1-18)

There are good people in every walk of life. The “Wise Men,” for example, were good people and they did not return to Herod and reveal where Jesus and his family could be found. Thank God. But individual acts of kindness do not end the murderous system of unjust rule. Many, many children were still killed according to our Christmas texts.

Celebrate an individual act of kindness by a Portland, Oregon police officer. But don’t fail to ask yourself, “Why is that African American child crying?”

Jesus came as a child whose life was immediately placed at risk by abusive political power. Jesus announced God’s reign of Justice and Mercy.

Preach and hear both messages this Advent, and then we will truly have hope.

Louisiana wood pellet plants will cater to Europe's energy needs

(This article was published in “The Louisiana Weekly” in the Nov. 24, 2014 edition.)

Louisiana, an oil-and-gas state, is half covered by timber, making forest products a big business. Companies including Drax Biomass, Biomass Secure Power and German Pellets GmbH plan to churn out wood pellets from new plants here to meet Europe’s need for electricity and heat provided by renewable fuels. With its trees, waterways and ports, Louisiana can help quench a growing pellet thirst without deforesting the state, industry members said last week.

U.S. pellet exports nearly doubled last year to 3.2 million short tons and headed mostly to Europe, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Made from wood shavings, sawdust and chips, these cylindrical nuggets are shipped from the Southern, Southeastern and lower Mid-Atlantic states.

“Some people don’t like the idea of power plants in the U.K. burning American wood,” Buck Vandersteen, executive director of the Louisiana Forestry Association, said last week. “But our industry didn’t ask for this. Demand is driven by policy decisions in Europe.” Those directives will spur the need for at least one million tons of Louisiana pellets annually after similar business was lost when two of the state’s paper mills closed in the last decade, he said.

“These plants will use wood that will be mostly thinnings and residues, following the harvest of higher-valued saw timber from sustainably managed forests,” Vandersteen said.

European nations, particularly the United Kingdom, are using wood pellets to replace coal for electricity generation and heating. Under 2009 legislation, the European Union by 2020 plans to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent from 1990 levels and to expand renewable fuels in its energy usage by 20 percent.

Companies building pellet plants in Louisiana are sourcing wood and hiring now. Drax Biomass, a U.S. subsidiary of UK electricity generator Drax Group Plc, expects to start up its Morehouse Parish, La. plant in the second quarter of next year. Before that, Drax early next year will begin operating a new Amite, Miss. pellet facility. After they open, both plants should reach full capacity six months later, Drax spokeswoman Sarah Grazier in New Hampshire said last week. “These two plants are designed to produce 450,000 metric tons of wood pellets per year each, using fiber from actively and sustainably managed forests,” she said. Job fairs to attract local applicants were held. “We have fully hired our operations staff of about 50 employees at each facility,” she said.

Kelsey Short, Louisiana Economic Development’s executive director of business expansion, said the state was able to attract Drax Biomass to Morehouse Parish, which suffered when International Paper shut its Bastrop mill in 2009. Hundreds of jobs were lost then. “The new wood pellet project increases capital investment, employment and business spending locally, without jeopardizing the area’s raw material supplies,” he said. Other states had hoped to land the plant, and LED gave the company competitive incentives. “Drax chose a site in a rural area that required state support for infrastructure,” Short said.

Drax and other pellet producers have been offered incentives under the state’s Industrial Tax Exemption and Quality Jobs programs. “Drax, which has a big logistics component with storage and shipping facilities at the Port of Greater Baton Rouge, was the first major prospect in this sector to fully commit to capital investment and job creation in the state,” Short said. “We assisted them in a substantial way, reflecting their desire to create development in Morehouse Parish.”

Jim Carroll, president of Biomass Secure Power Inc. in British Columbia, said his company plans to start building its Natchitoches Parish Port plant on the Red River in the first quarter of next year, with operations to begin a year later. A 30-year lease for the 75-acre site was signed by the company’s Biomass Power Louisiana subsidiary. “Our annual production goal is one million metric tons,” Carroll said. “But it may take us one to two years to hit that target because of a shortage of local forest-industry workers.” The plant will need 92 full-time employees and up to 500 people in indirect jobs, including loggers, foresters and truck drivers.

Carroll said his company will keep records showing that all the fiber it uses for pellet production is from sustainable sources. “Our end-users have contractual rights that will allow them to audit and verify the sustainability of our fiber supply,” he said.

Pellets produced by Biomass Power Louisiana will be transported from the plant by a more than mile-long conveyor and then will head in covered barges to the Port of New Orleans, where they’ll be transferred to ocean-going freighters for Europe. “Initially, all our production will go to Europe, and we also have several active inquiries from Asia that we’re considering,” Carroll said. As for the expanded Panama Canal, “we’ve discussed the canal, and if we complete an agreement with a company in Asia, we’ll use it,” he said.

Meanwhile, German Pellets GmbH, a top pellet maker based in Mecklenburg, Germany, is building a 1.1 million-ton capacity plant in Urania in La Salle Parish. Infrastructure is already in place from a Georgia-Pacific plywood and particleboard facility that shut there over a decade ago. Under the firm’s first phase in Urania, operations were scheduled to begin late this year, with a second phase to be completed by third-quarter 2015. Last week, however, the company didn’t respond to inquiries about its start-up date. The new site is slated to create nearly 500 direct and indirect jobs.

In 2013, German Pellets opened a 500,000-metric-ton plant in Woodville, Texas, shipping from Port Arthur. In addition to supplying power plants, the company fills heating needs for pellets from Europe’s private customers, industrial and commercial sites, hospitals and schools.

Richard Vlosky, director of forest sector business development at LSU AgCenter in Baton Rouge, is optimistic about Louisiana’s pellet exports. “As long as European Union mandates increase usage of renewable fuels, pellet production in the United States and elsewhere will continue growing,” he said last week. “The latest EU mandates have renewable sources supplying 27 percent of the region’s energy use by 2030.” The European Council set a target of at least 27 percent in October.

“Only about 5 percent of U.S. pellet production is for domestic use, with the rest exported,” Vlosky said. “The U.S. South is the nation’s wood basket, and it’s where further, large-scale pellet manufacturing will continue.” About two-fifths of the nation’s timberland is in the South.

Wood pellet output in North America, including Canada, swelled from less than a million tons in 2003 to 9.3 million last year, according to combined government data. And production capacity continues to grow.

Vandersteen said Louisiana won’t be deforested by pellet producers. The state’s annual tree growth exceeds harvesting, according to the U.S. Forest Service, he noted. New pellet plants provide markets for forest landowners, who have watched other facilities using wood close in the last decade or so. “Market incentives are critical for landowners so that they continue to earn income and invest in and care for their timberland,” Vandersteen said. Without forests, rural areas could be turned into shopping centers and other developments. Moreover, “the jobs created by these pellet operations will be substantial from the logging standpoint and for people handling wood at plants and ports,” he said.

When growth in trees surpasses removals, timberland is considered sustainable, though that measure must be viewed along with the quality of stands and with biodiversity, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

“Most of the Southern wood fiber required for pellets will be supplied by low-grade materials, including forest cull, pulpwood, thinnings, dead stock, fire-damaged stock and insect-infected materials,” Andy Burns, vice president at Biomass Secure Power, said last week. “A reduction in small, stunted, diseased and deformed wood materials promotes the health of the remaining stand,” he said. “As the market for wood pellets grows, the quality of Southern U.S. stands is expected to gradually improve.” end

World's Biggest LAN Party Had Over 22,000 Computers, Looked Awesome

World's Biggest LAN Party Had Over 22,000 Computers, Looked Awesome

Over the weekend, Dreamhack Winter went down. Beginning in 1994 with a couple of Swedish dudes who rented out a school hall to play some video games, it’s now the world’s biggest LAN party, bringing over 25,000 PC gamers together in the one spot for some games, music, cosplay and sweating.

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Ralph McQuarrie Is Star Wars, and This Mini Doc Proves It

Ralph McQuarrie Is Star Wars, and This Mini Doc Proves It

The internet is understandably excited about the new Star Wars trailer. I have no problems considering myself a mega ultra super fan. I’ve made pilgrimages to conventions around the country and seeing new live-action Star Wars footage that isn’t the prequels is really exciting. But there’s one name that’s been woefully absent during the internet’s long discussions about the plausibility of lightsabers and that really cool x-wing scene—Ralph McQuarrie.

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