21 Photos of Baby Animals that Literally Fit In the Palm of Your Hand

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Today’s dose of adorable comes in handfuls–handfuls of baby animals, that is. From a discontented kitten, to a puppy that is literally a handful, to a fistful of newborn ferrets, these 21 baby animals from the 500px archives quite literally fit “in the palm of your hand”… and melt your heart while they’re at it.

Scroll down to see them all, and beware of AWWWWW:

For more animal photography–of the baby or grownup variety–check out the Animals category on 500px by clicking here. And if you have a photo of a fistful of cuteness somewhere in your archives, upload it to 500px and drop a link in the comments!

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Think Millennials Will Abandon Hillary? Don't Bet on It

We should not be surprised when Beltway reporters stop the presses to reveal that millennials might abandon Hillary Clinton.

We also shouldn’t believe it.

Washington journalists and lobbyists alike have a vested interest in portraying millennial voters as the ultimate political wildcard. Reporters desperate for Internet clicks make presidential elections seem unpredictable and exciting by suggesting America’s largest generation is there for the taking by either political party. At the same time, influence peddlers who like to play both sides advance their status quo policy goals by painting millennials as a centrist generation. As a result, reporters and think tanks latch onto ambiguous surveys and studies to sell Washington on a narrative of the independent millennials.

Practically since the day after Barack Obama won the presidential election in 2008–largely on the strength of millennial voters–Beltway pundits claimed that those same millennials had become disillusioned with Obama and the Democratic Party, and were up for grabs in American elections.

In the run-up to 2012, poll results like this one from the Harvard Institute of Politics and this one from the Pew Research Center prompted a flurry of news items and analysis signaling a collapse of support for the president among millennials, and a blinking-red danger sign to his prospects for reelection. But millennials’ actual voting patterns suggested otherwise. While Obama’s margin among 18-to-29-year-old voters did decrease slightly from the whopping 66-32 advantage he enjoyed over John McCain in 2008, he still beat Romney among millennials by a commanding 60-37 percent four years later.

Soon, however, the irresistible meme of millennials’ evaporating support for Obama returned. In 2014, the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank attempted to explain “Why millennials have abandoned Obama,” suggesting the result could be “fatal” for the Affordable Care Act and, with it, Obama’s entire presidency. Writing a week before the March 31 Obamacare enrollment deadline in 2014, CNN columnist Julian Zelizer analyzed “Why Obama is losing millennials.” Zelizer rested his entire premise on the lack of millennial signups for Obamacare, ignoring young people’s tendency to procrastinate with everything. After millennials did in fact sign up at the last minute in the expected proportions–exactly as they had done in Massachusetts in 2007 under the similar “RomneyCare” health reform plan–Zelizer failed to retract or correct his mistaken thesis.

A week before the 2014 midterms, the headline for another Harvard poll declared, “Likely Millennial Voters Up-for-Grabs in Upcoming Midterm Elections.” The poll showed likely millennial voters favoring Republicans 51-47 percent. And while low turnout among millennial and minority voters doomed Democrats in 2014, the millennials who did turn out actually voted in favor of Democrats 54-43. This was consistent with millennials’ 55-42 percent preference for Democrats in the 2010 midterms. Although these margins were certainly lower than Obama’s advantage among millennials in the 2012 and 2008 presidential elections, as well as Democrats’ 60-38 edge in the 2006 midterms, this track record of actual voting behavior makes clear millennials are hardly “up for grabs.”

The centrist think tank Third Way won the prize, however, for 2014’s most self-serving millennial propaganda. Armed with survey data measuring millennial attitudes on today’s top policy questions (spoiler: millennials are progressive on every single one), author Michelle Diggles went to great lengths to shoehorn the findings into a preordained conclusion–that freelancing millennials are a perpetual wildcard in American politics, and amazingly, the centrist policies of Third Way are the answer to both parties’ prayers! Ron Fournier of National Journal dutifully transcribed the pronouncement under the banner, “Millennial Madness: What Happens If Young Voters Bolt Both Parties?”

In describing millennial attitudes on marriage equality, abortion, family structure, marijuana legalization, immigration, and foreign policy, the study practically spells out the modern Democratic Party platform. Yet it concludes, bizarrely, that “as millennials eschew partisan labels, they are much more likely to switch the party they support from election to election.”

Huh?

Third Way’s theory is that in today’s world of unlimited consumer choice, millennials will reject the two-party system, and instead take an à la carte approach to politics. This sounds reasonable–clever even. But it collides with millennials’ actual voting behavior, and it is premised on a fundamental misunderstanding of how generational change drives political realignments in America.

The study declares, “millennial voters are unlikely to align with a political party that expects blind faith in large institutions–either governmental or nongovernmental.” The flaw inherent in this interpretation, though, is the assumption that millennial voters will continue to react passively to a static political environment constructed by their Boomer parents.

It is true that millennials’ trust in large institutions like Congress, the courts, and the police remains historically low. But when members of older generations like the Boomers learn that millennials are less trustful of big institutions–including political parties–they tend to interpret the meaning through their own generational prism. Thus, the individualistic and sanctifying Boomers perceive millennials’ rejection of institutions today as Boomers saw their own experiences in the 1960s and 70s. But millennials are a civic generation, similar to their GI grandparents. A hallmark of civic generations is that when they lose faith in social institutions, they seize the reins of leadership and rebuild institutions to suit their own needs and worldview.

This explains why millennials–who have borne the brunt of economic hardship in the Great Recession and entered adulthood with sunken levels of social trust–are still more optimistic and civically engaged than older generations. Recent Pew surveys illustrate that millennials are not only more confident than their parents about their own financial futures, they’re also more optimistic that their children will be better off still. Millennials are currently the most bullish generation on America’s future; 40 years ago, it was the other way around–young Boomers were considerably less optimistic about the direction of the country than older generations. In addition, millennials are more likely than their elders to participate in volunteer service activities, and they express greater support for an active government role in guaranteeing necessities for citizens like housing, health insurance, education, and a living wage.

Today, Hillary Clinton is practically a shoo-in to be the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016. In a general election matchup against Jeb Bush (or whichever Republican is nominated), she will enjoy a decided demographic advantage among millennials, people of color, and unmarried women–all growing segments of the electorate. Nonwhites, who vote consistently Democratic and went 80 percent for Obama in 2008 and 2012, will increase by 2 percentage points as a share of the electorate, accounting for 30 percent of all voters in 2016. Likewise, about 4 million new millennials are joining the electorate every year, and by 2016 experts estimate they will comprise about 36 percent of eligible voters and a third of actual voters. By 2020–the first presidential election in which all millennials will be 18 or older–the millennial generation will be 103 million strong. Political demographer Ruy Teixeira calculates that about 90 million of them will be eligible to vote, comprising nearly 40 percent of America’s eligible voter pool. Meanwhile, older white voters, on whom the Republican Party now pins practically all its hope, constitute a shrinking slice of the electoral pie.

Oddly, these demographic realities might make it all the more tempting for reporters to give the 2016 election the veneer of drama by implying that millennials just aren’t “ready for Hillary.” After all, in the epic nomination battle in 2008, millennials clearly favored the younger, fresher Obama over Hillary. But that was then, and 2008 was an inter-family fight within the Democratic Party. This is now, and in 2016, the alternative will be a Republican.

Unlike her husband’s strategy of triangulation in the 1990s, Hillary’s approach thus far suggests she and her team realize that 20 years of demographic shifts in a progressive direction discredits the tired Beltway trope that “elections are won in the middle.” Sure, the less thoughtful journalists and political hacks still talk about general elections for President of the United States like they’re high school student council popularity contests. But smarter observers know that economic fundamentals and demographics largely determine the outcome, especially among an increasingly polarized electorate.

Surveys suggest partisan self-identification among American voters is declining; however, actual voting behavior indicates the opposite–swing voters have all but vanished, and straight ticket voting is increasingly the norm. Many voters simply prefer to see themselves as “independent” thinkers, while others are unhappy with their political party, sometimes even because they feel the party is not partisan enough. But so long as the Republican Party is beholden to the ultra-conservative white base it has cultivated since Richard Nixon employed his ‘Southern Strategy’ nearly 50 years ago, most millennials will likely find themselves voting straight ticket, too–for Democrats.

Hillary no doubt recognizes the increasing importance of political party, and the degree to which the millennial generation has moved the Democratic Party in a progressive direction since the 1990s. She has embraced progressive ideas like a constitutional amendment to regulate campaign finance, a constitutional right to same-sex marriage, a path to citizenship for DREAMers and their parents, drivers’ licenses for undocumented immigrants, and a substantial increase in the minimum wage.

Without question, millennials want to make wholesale changes to our civic institutions as well. Millennial experts Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais preview these reforms in their recent book, Millennial Momentum: How a New Generation is Remaking America. The Executive branch under Obama is more transparent and accessible than ever (but sorry, millennials–President Obama is officially not going to build a Death Star). The youngest Members of Congress now host Google hangouts to solicit constituent input on legislation. In business and government, bottom-up organizational structures powered by millennials are thriving, while top-down approaches seem like dinosaurs destined for extinction.

Millennials are learning, however, that we cannot achieve meaningful political reform in the United States until we significantly curb the corrupting influence of money in politics. This means overturning the U.S. Supreme Court’s repugnant Citizens United decision from 2010, which has opened the floodgates for undisclosed and unlimited corporate spending in political campaigns under the guise of free speech. Whether millennials accomplish this lofty goal by gradually shifting the political balance of the Court, or by amending the U.S. Constitution itself, this will remain their greatest civic endeavor. If we succeed, many other reforms become possible. If we don’t, even the Democratic Party will be forced to operate as little more than a money-laundering machine.

At any rate, supporting Hillary is a no-brainer for millennials. For all of their disappointment with a political system poisoned by secret campaign cash, millennials know that putting a Republican in the White House is hardly the way to reform our criminal justice system, address global climate change, install a more just immigration system, advance LGBT rights, or lessen the Supreme Court’s corporate protectionism.

Of course millennials are not about to embrace the “traditional liberalism” of the New Deal, or view racial and ethnic struggles through the lens of the 1960s Civil Rights movement. Those Democratic programs flowed from coalitions of voters long since disintegrated. But with fresh perspective, new technology and a bold sense of civic purpose, millennials are poised to reshape the party of Barack Obama–and Hillary Clinton–to our liking over the next several decades. In the process, we will reset the conversation on America’s civic ethos on our own terms.

Note: This essay builds on a previous post which originally appeared on the millennial blog mikeandmorley.com hosted by Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais.

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This Striking Image Of A Black Man Hanging A Klansman Shows A Different Side Of America's Racist History

When photographer Terry Shields captured the provocative photo of a naked black man hanging a white Klansman from a tree branch, he considered his work a significant achievement.

However, when he chose to widely share the image, his friends expressed caution. They said it was “too much” — but Shields merely batted away their worries.

“I’ve been wanting to do this series for a while,” Shields told The Huffington Post. “I’ve had this image in my head forever.”

There is no doubt the image itself is jarring. It has the power to evoke many emotions, some of which may align with the discomfort expressed by family and friends who were reluctant to have it released.

It shows a naked black man standing in muddy water and using his might to hold one end of a rope that hangs over a tree branch with the other end tied as a noose around the neck of a white Klansman whose body hangs limply. It’s a provocative photo and one that harks back to a dark time in history when black lives were devalued, disrespected and disposed of without repercussion.

In many ways, the parallels to today’s issues are hard to ignore. The recent deaths of Michael Brown, Freddie Gray and Natasha McKenna serve as harsh examples of what activists say is ongoing unjust treatment of black individuals in America.

Shields said these perceptions of race were the focus of his work and he aimed to deconstruct them through imagery that reflected a striking role-reversal. Not only do the individuals in this particular lynching image reflect a distinct moment or period in history, they are positioned as opposing players in a way that delivers a different message than those previously shared.

“It’s haunting; it’s shocking,” Shields said. “It humanizes the situation in a very strange way.”

To put it simply, Shields says, his photos relay one key message: Treat others how you would want to be treated. “It’s the golden rule,” he said.

lynching

The image is just one of 23 that Shields has included in his latest project, “Historical Fiction.” The project’s photos reflect some of the most traumatic events in America’s history. Many of those included are set during the civil rights era but not all deal directly with race. There are reflections of 9/11 and the deaths of Martin Luther King Jr., John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe. Through each picture, Shields said, he attempted to portray the perspective of those who witnessed such tragic events rather than those who fell victim to them.

For Shields, a 33-year-old white resident of Jacksonville, Florida, racially charged instances seemed to occur all too frequently so he decided to tell various interpretations of them. Although the other photos aren’t as shocking as the lynching one, Shields said some others also expose a duality in the discussion of race in America and how it is perceived. Perhaps this explains why more than 4,000 people attended the debut of Shields’ display at the Andrew Weiss Gallery in Santa Monica, California, on Saturday — and it is likely his work will draw many more viewers over the coming weeks.

“I was interested in seeing what it was like during that time for other people,” Shields said. “I was interested in the reaction.”

Shields’ work has prompted a series of reactions of its own. He shared that a Klansman wrote him a letter to express his disapproval while others criticized the imagery for being too harsh.

These criticisms are similar to those Shields received from the release of some of his previous work. Shields has earned notoriety over the years for producing controversial imagery that has provided commentary, whether intentionally or not, on many political and civil topics such as animal cruelty and domestic violence. He touched on the latter in a series of photos he released in September 2011 showing a bruised-up Heather Morris, of “Glee” fame, posing for images that were intended to denounce domestic violence. Instead, they were condemned by many — and by HuffPost too — who criticized Shields for missing the mark.

“Looking at the images of the TV show’s ditzy blonde Britney with a bruised eye and hands tied up in a plastic cord felt like being confronted with some glamorous-looking domestic abuse,” Ellie Krupnick previously wrote.

Shields claims he “doesn’t follow politics,” yet his work reflects various sorts of political statements that are ripe for debate and dissection. While he said many have praised his latest work for evoking emotion — no matter how dark or ugly it may seem — others have lambasted it for failing to display due respect and delicacy while tackling such sensitive topics.

His latest collection is susceptible to some of the same criticisms, but so far, viewers have been widely receptive. Shields is more than satisfied with his work — and he won’t let the critiques or calls for caution hinder his creativity.

“I don’t regret anything. I’m very happy that I trusted myself and didn’t listen to people who tried to tell me not to do it,” Shields said. “People will want to see this.”

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10th Bourbon Thief Nabbed In Unraveling Conspiracy Tied To Pappy Van Winkle Heist

A bourbon-stealing syndicate that boosted barrels and cases of Buffalo Trace, Wild Turkey and the very expensive Pappy Van Winkle continues to unravel.

On Tuesday, a former security guard for the Kentucky-based Buffalo Trace distillery became the tenth person to be charged in a theft ring that may stretch back to 2008.

Leslie M. Wright, 34, was indicted for complicity in receiving stolen property worth over $10,000, the Louisville Courier-Journal reports. Zachary Becker, an assistant commonwealth’s attorney, said Wright had admitted receiving $800 for looking the other way as barrels from the distillery went missing, according to the paper.

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Recovered bottles of Pappy Van Winkle and Eagle Rare bourbon are shown at the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office on April 21, 2015.

Nine other people were charged in April with engaging in organized crime as part of the theft ring. Among those ensnared were at least two Buffalo Trace distillery workers, one Wild Turkey distillery worker and a now-former Frankfort, Kentucky, police officer.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Larry Cleveland of Franklin County told The Associated Press in April that the estimated value of the recovered bourbon was at least $100,000 — or, as he put it, “more than I could imagine one person drinking in a lifetime.”

Kentucky authorities had a major breakthrough in the investigation earlier this year when an anonymous tip led them to the home of Buffalo Trace distillery worker Gilbert “Toby” Curtsinger, where five stolen barrels of bourbon were stashed behind a shed. Police also recovered 18 guns, $3,000 in cash and a stash of steroids at Curtsinger’s home, The Washington Post reports.

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Evidence tags mark recovered bottles of Pappy Van Winkle bourbon at the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office on April 21, 2015.

In 2013, 65 cases of Pappy Van Winkle had gone missing from a Buffalo Trace warehouse in Frankfort. (Pappy Van Winkle and Eagle Rare bourbon are both produced at Buffalo Trace’s distillery.) The disappearance made national headlines with The New York Times noting that the brand is among the nation’s most expensive and sought-after bourbons: A two-ounce shot of 20-year-old Pappy Van Winkle can cost about $65 at a bar, while a bottle has the suggested retail price of $130.

Investigators eventually tied the Pappy heist to other Buffalo Trace and Wild Turkey thefts.

Becker told The Huffington Post on Tuesday that some 25 bottles of Pappy Van Winkle, about 17 wooden barrels of bourbon and a number of stainless steel barrels have been recovered. At least one stainless steel barrel of Eagle Rare 17-year-old bourbon is valued at $11,000.

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Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Zachary Becker speaks at a news conference at the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office on April 21, 2015.

NPR wrote in April that the recovered bourbon is roughly one-tenth of what went missing. Asked if investigators are optimistic about recovering the rest, Becker said, “We’re trying our best.”

“Just when you think you’ve got it, something else pops up,” Becker said.

NPR had noted the troubling possibility that despite recovering some of the hooch intact, law enforcement may be required to destroy the stolen goods.

“That’s still up in the air,” Becker said. “We still have a long way to go until we get to that point.”

He said he anticipates more indictments in the ongoing investigation.

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What Does the Future Hold for Media?

Today, media reaches into every corner of the world and is becoming increasingly important, particularly in the West. Universities, think tanks and research centers are producing a complex body of knowledge about the current news-making process.

When projecting the future of media, a good starting point is the following quote from Moisés Naim’s 2013 bestseller The End of Power, in which the author highlights three major factors that are changing every field of human endeavor, including the journalist-readership relationship.

  • More revolution: characterized by increases in everything from the number of countries to population size, standards of living, literacy rates and quantity of products on the market.
  • Mobility revolution: has set people, goods, money, ideas and values moving at hitherto unimagined rates towards every corner of the planet (including those that were once remote and inaccessible).
  • Mentality revolution: reflects the major changes in mindsets, expectations, and aspirations that have accompanied these shifts.

It is widely known that the Internet has been a game-changer in this “mentality revolution”, and even more so in the information field. Today, billions of people are online and mobile devices enable them to record and share news and multimedia content with a global audience. This is especially true for English-speaking outlets.

This trend towards fast-moving news is partially responsible for the crisis among major printed publications, as recently highlighted by the Newspaper Association of America among other sources. While throughout the 1970s newspaper sales had some ups and downs (but with generally stable figures), since the 1980s the dominant US media companies shrunk in number from about 50 to about five in early 2000s.

On the other hand, both audiences and revenues are skyrocketing in the digital arena, and more and more readers get their daily news via smartphones and tablets. However, old media is producing mixed signals: some outlets are struggling to keep up with this digital revolution, while others are fully embracing the unexpected shift.

Obviously the approach chosen by new media and “digital native” outlets is less problematic, given its complete reliance on social-media channels and mobile apps — even if it attracts some criticism for low-quality content and lack of journalism standards.

Besides a growing generational divide in many U.S. newsrooms, this picture shows the need for quick adjustments to an ever-changing wave of online innovations for both traditional and new media environments. Indeed, in the last few years many old-school reporters have moved their quality and expertise in the digital realm, while traditional enterprises are making room for new jobs: social discovery specialist, data scientist, community manager, social advertising analyst, and many more.

The result is an eclectic collection of hybrid newsrooms, where 100-year-old newspapers are in direct competition with websites launched just a few years ago. Some outlets were brewed in prestigious university media departments, while others are simply one of the many Silicon Valley achievements.

Obviously the overall role of journalism is rapidly changing: is it better stick to old news reporting or create click-baits? Should we aim at “former readers” or consumers? The reality is that today’s online business model is largely dependent on advertising and requires huge traffic levels to produce good revenues. Therefore any addition to a “conventional” story – direct comments, social-network discussions, mobile-app presence – becomes a vital part of a larger process aimed at attracting more users.

Similarly fluid dynamics are at play within the traditional corporate world, where, for instance, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post for $250 million in cash and pushed its gradual redesign towards tablets and mobile devices, rather than to a newspaper “to be read on the web”. And even if the recent acquisition of AOL by telecom heavyweight Verizon (for $4.4 billion) is mostly due to its advertising technology assets, many are expecting big changes for AOL-owned TechCrunch, Patch and especially the many national editions of The Huffington Post.

Another giant clash underway includes top online actors such as Google and Facebook, both strongly pursuing a variety of agreements with online publishing enterprises. For example, the former has created a fund of $150 million to help traditional EU media to fully jump into the digital domain, while Facebook has set up partnerships with many news outlets – in its new Facebook Instant Articles program we can already count the New York Times and Buzzfeed, among others. As explained by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., publisher and CEO of The New York Times: “We have a long tradition of meeting readers where they are, and that means being available not just on our own sites, but on the social platforms frequented by many current and potential Times users”.

It is a landscape further complicated by the great success of instant-messaging apps such as WhatsApp, which has more than 800 million users and was bought for $22 billion by Facebook in February 2014, and the arrival of players with very different business models and editorial goals. These include Anthony de Rosa’s Circa, which focused on breaking news and bullet points; Vice News, now expanding its current news offering with high-quality video content; and Medium, a participatory platform established by Twitter co-founders Evan Williams and Biz Stone in August 2012, which has evolved into a hybrid of non-professional contributions and paid professional contributions, and is a successful example of social journalism. Today Medium hosts stories by renowned journalists such as Steven Levy, editor of the BackChannel section, or intriguing sections such as Eidolon, with a fascinating tagline: “A modern way to write about the ancient world.” Also worth a mention is Quartz, a digital native news outlet that relies on veteran and young reporters for economic and world news aimed at mobile devices, with a main office in New York City and correspondents in several cities around the world.

In addressing this evolving landscape, Gianni Riotta of Princeton University, a big fan of new technologies, had this to say in a recent commentary for Italian newspaper La Stampa:

“We tend to judge the cultural impact of new tools according to the old paradigm. For instance, Socrates hated writing because it would eliminate the only way to reason he loved: dialogue and conversation. It is true that we lost for ever such noble traditions as oral culture or the epic tales recited by heart to the sound of the zither, but later we realized how much we gained by moving to a writing culture […] The truth is that new tools force us to think, write and create in a very different way. Therefore, we are always facing a cultural revolution, not a technological one. And we must adapt to succeed.”

To find out what the future holds for the media, we must first understand today’s cultural transformation. As pointed out by the late New York Times columnist David Carr, we should see the inevitable crisis of traditional media as an opportunity for positive change. “I think that being a journalist a few years back was a much easier or comfortable job,” he said, “but we have to deal with our current situation, not with something lost in the past or a wishful thinking. I believe these are truly exciting times for the media world.”

Our planet is undergoing deep transformations at social, political and cultural levels, and online news reporting does (and must) reflect this. We should embrace and develop the landscape outlined above, with its many different players, models and approaches. After all, change in media is the daily business, not an exception – and talking about it could easily become yesterday’s news.

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Death Penalty for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev: A Call for Radical Mercy

It’s hard to have mercy for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

It was Jesus who said, “Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy.” And he certainly demonstrates that mercy on the cross as he forgives the people nailing him to it. But as a follower of Christ, mercy seems like an audacious thing to ask of us.

His guilt is clear. He posted offensive, arrogant messages all over the Internet. He carved a manifesto of revenge into the boat where he hid as police captured him. He flipped the bird at the camera in his jail cell.

The evil he is responsible for is horrific. Over 250 people injured; sixteen people lost their limbs; three people died — one of them eight years old.

It’s no surprise a jury found him guilty, and still no surprise that they sentenced him to death.

What’s remarkable is the lack of enthusiasm that accompanied Tsarnaev’s death sentence. One person after another had mercy on their lips — from victims of the Boston bombing to the legendary Sr. Helen Prejean who met with Dzhokhar and spoke of his heartfelt remorse.

It comes at a time when support for the death penalty is waning. In 2014 death sentences hit a 40-year low and executions hit a 20 year low — and most of those were in only three states. 2015 is set to break that record, with only a few executions scheduled in the rest of the year.

Massachusetts abolished the death penalty over 30 years ago and is one of the 18 abolitionist states — so a federal jury’s death sentence for a crime in Boston isn’t exactly given a warm reception. A Boston Globe poll showed less than a third of Boston residents in favor of the death penalty for Tsarnaev.

But it isn’t just the progressive mecca of New England. All over the country, enthusiasm for the death penalty is hitting a record low.

On the same day as the Tsarnaev death sentence was announced, Nebraska legislators voted 30-16 to repeal the death penalty. It would be the first state where conservatives have led the way to abolition. The Tsarnaev death sentence seemed to go against the current of anti-death sentiment sweeping our country.

Perhaps we have what ethicist David Gushee has called “death fatigue.”

Could it be that we are growing tired of death?

Even the families of the Boston bombing victims shared their opposition to the death sentence… evidence of the hundreds of murder victims’ family members who believe that there are better forms of justice than execution, but rarely make headlines.

The family of eight-year-old Martin Richards released a 500 word statement detailing their opposition.

And these are the words of Jennifer Lemmerman, the sister of slain MIT police officer: “Whenever someone speaks out against the death penalty, they are challenged to imagine how they would feel if someone they love were killed. I’ve been given that horrible perspective and I can say that my position has only strengthened.” She went on to say, “I also can’t imagine that killing in response to killing would ever bring me peace or justice… I choose to remember Sean for the light that he brought. No more darkness.”

Jessica Knesky and Patrick Downes, a newlywed couple who each lost limbs in the attack also asked prosecutors to take the death penalty off the table: “In our darkest moments and deepest sadness, we think of inflicting the same types of harm on him,” they confessed. But then they went on, “However, we must overcome the impulse for vengeance.”

Maybe we shouldn’t be so surprised that the victims of violence don’t want to see another person killed – even justifiably. After all, violence is the disease not the cure.

It is not unusual after traumatic events for the survivors of horror to insist that death is the problem, not the solution.

It happened after the fall of Apartheid in South Africa. When Apartheid fell, the death penalty fell with it. The newly established government abolished the death penalty, recognizing execution was a relic of the old regime and had no place in the new world. It happened after the Holocaust – where a death-weary Europe abolished execution across the board. The state of Israel had a fatigue and suspicion of state-killing that led it to be an abolitionist country. Rwanda, after the genocide declared in Truth and Reconciliation Commissions that there are better forms of justice than execution, insisting that when we kill those who kill we exacerbate the wounds and continue to glorify death.

And it happened this past week in Boston as the families of the murdered declared their opposition to the death penalty.

One of the people who traveled to Boston this week to stand against death is a man who is has become a champion of mercy — Bud Welch. Bud lost his 23-year-old daughter in the Oklahoma City bombing that claimed the lives of 168 people 20 years ago.

Initially, Bud felt what any father would feel – outrage. “I wanted Timothy McVeigh to fry,” Bud says — “I’d have killed him myself if I’d had the chance.”

But then he began to think of Julie and how she said: “Execution teaches hatred”. Eventually, Bud’s heart began to change. He recognized that it was vengeance and hatred that drove Timothy to kill. In Bud’s words: “It was hatred and revenge that made me want to see him dead and those two things were the very reason that Julie and 167 others were dead,” He began to steer his anger and grief in a new direction. Before long he became a friend to Bill McVeigh, Timothy’s dad, in whose eyes he recognized a familiar agony… of a father losing his child. He realized the pain of the McVeigh family was even more excruciating than his own. At least Bud could delight in all the good his daughter Julie did in the world, but Timothy McVeigh would be remembered as a monster by many, and the McVeigh family would carry the weight of that shame. Bud Welch and Bill McVeigh became unlikely partners as they grieved together and walked through the valley of death.

As Timothy McVeigh was strapped to the gurney for his execution, Bud Welch was one of the loudest voices of protest. Welch points out that after the bombing, a poll taken in Oklahoma City showed that 85 percent of the survivors wanted the death penalty for Timothy McVeigh. But several years later the figure dropped to nearly half, and now many of those who supported the execution have come to believe it was a mistake.

It is understandable that immediately after an incident like the bombing in Oklahoma City or Boston, execution can feel like the most adequate response. But it also makes sense that yet another death does not ever bring true healing. The cure is as bad as the disease.

Timothy McVeigh is one of only three people executed by the federal government in the past 50 years. He was killed in 2001 as Bud Welch protested in the streets.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev will be the fourth person killed by the federal government, in spite of the death fatigue sweeping our country. And it seems very likely that when federal government kills Tsarnaev in the name of the victims, some of those victims will be protesting outside the execution… just as Bud Welch did.

As for myself, I am a Christian trying to follow the one who said: “Blessed are the merciful for they shall be shown mercy.” The heroic courage of murder victims’ families against execution inspires me. And deep down, I know that one of the core truths at the heart of my faith is the belief that death has lost its sting. That’s a line penned by the apostle Paul in his letter to the Corinthians (I Corinthians 15:55). Paul himself was a former religious extremist, a cold-blooded killer who had such a radical conversion that he changed his name from Saul to Paul and went on to write half the New Testament. So I know that murderers can be transformed.

But I admit — I find it hard to find mercy in my heart for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. I guess that is why it is called “faith”. God is daring us to believe in the miracle of grace. God is calling us to believe that every person is made in the divine image – even Timothy McVeigh and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

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Happy Birthday Head Start!

“We set out to make certain that poverty’s children would not be forevermore poverty’s captives…”

That is how President Lyndon Johnson described his vision of Head Start in the White House Rose Garden on May 18th, 1965.

In a time of great prosperity and boundless optimism, Head Start was a national commitment to provide a window of opportunity for our most at-risk children — a chance to realize the American Dream. And for 50 years since, the nation has been fulfilling that commitment in one neighborhood after another with family engagement and empowerment, innovative partnerships, and the dedicated support of community leaders and local organizations.

In 50 years, Head Start has changed the lives of more than 32 million children. But many more millions of vulnerable children remain unserved. Currently, only 15 percent of children in poverty under the age of five are enrolled in Head Start.

In recent years, our understanding of the development of the brain during the first few years of life has rapidly expanded. There is now broad agreement among research scientists that the beginning years of a child’s life are critical for building the foundation of health and wellness necessary for success through later life.

Our deepened understanding of these early years has led to calls for providing early learning for all children, especially for those whose families cannot afford it. Research has documented that for every dollar spent on providing a low-income child with high-quality early learning, seven dollars is returned to our economy every year of that child’s life. So, it seems clear that investments in high-quality early learning are the best human capital investments that our nation can make.

This week, on the 50th anniversary of President Johnson’s announcement, Head Start programs all over the country are planting rose bushes both as an appreciation for President Johnson’s and Congressional vision and commitment, and as a reminder to everyone who encounters a Head Start rose bush that Head Start programs are a viable and beautiful part of their communities. Every year the healthy rose bush produces blossoms that everyone can enjoy; and every year a Head Start program blooms eager, healthy, loved, and school-ready children who move on to successful lives. Why can’t we provide an opportunity for every child to bloom?

Today, our nation faces socio-economic circumstances very similar to those facing the United States in 1965. Notably, amidst great prosperity there remains great poverty. Today, 5 million low-income children need, but are unable to access, early learning opportunities. To reclaim the promise of the American Dream, our nation must recommit itself to providing high-quality early learning and comprehensive services.

When you see a rose bloom this spring, think about Head Start. Ask your colleagues, friends, co-workers if they attended Head Start. You might be surprised how many did! When you hear their stories, I bet you’ll understand why Head Start has been strongly supported in so many communities for 50 years and why our nation should fortify its investment in a strong future.

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47 Things I've Learned In My 40s

I recently celebrated my last birthday of my 40s. While most of my 30s was consumed with the non-stop pandemonium of four babies growing into toddlers growing into school-age boys, my 40s have given me more time for personal growth and even a little reflection. I’ve probably learned more about life in my 40s than at any other time. So, what wisdom and observations do I wish I could give to my younger self? Here are 47 things I’ve learned in my 40s.

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1. It’s OK to say no as long as you learn the art of doing so graciously.

2. Don’t waste time worrying and moaning about stuff you have no control over. Let it go.

3. Everything you see depends on how you look at it.

4. Stop comparing your insides to everyone else’s outsides.

5. Listening to someone — really listening — is one of the most important, respectful and rewarding things you can do.

6. It’s awesome to collect people throughout life, but you’re truly blessed if you have a handful of besties who will always, always have your back. Even if you don’t speak to them all that often, you know they’re there.

7. The morning after is rarely — if ever — worth the night before.

8. No one gives a crap if you go to the supermarket in sweats without makeup and your unwashed hair in a ponytail on top of your head.

9. Experiences are infinitely more memorable than stuff.

10. Confidence is beautiful and powerful.

11. Laugh lines are worth it.

12. It will always boggle your mind how some people will exceed the lowest imaginable depth of stupidity, incompetence and nastiness, while others will exceed the highest imaginable pinnacle of kindness, compassion and helpfulness.

13. Don’t live your life by anyone else’s expectations, taste, hopes or dreams.

14. If you rely on others for joy, you will never be joyful yourself.

15. Grudges aren’t worth it.

16. You’ll never regret going out of your way to brighten someone’s day.

17. “Please” and “thank you” are always appreciated and appropriate.

18. Tell the little self-sabotaging voice in your head to bug off.

19. The food doesn’t matter. The table settings don’t matter. All that matters is the company.

20. Being super-busy is not a badge of honor, importance, popularity or success. It’s perfectly OK — and actually healthier and preferable — to be not so busy.

21. Despite your delusions, you have absolutely no idea what’s happening behind other people’s doors.

22. Most bad behavior and bitterness is rooted in jealousy.

23. What makes you happy isn’t the elixir that will make someone else happy.

24. It’s not always someone else’s fault. Sometimes you have to look in the mirror.

25. You can disagree with someone’s opinions and beliefs, but it doesn’t make them wrong. And it’s probably best just not to go there when it has to do with religion, politics or love.

26. Friendships change over time. Sometimes they have an expiration date and they dissolve into fuzziness. And that’s OK.

27. Eye cream is your friend.

28. Stop waxing poetic about how good it used to be. Stop fantasizing about how good it might be in the future. Savor how good it is right now. Make your moments matter.

29. It’s nice to be thought of and remembered.

30. Sometimes you’ve gotta do stuff just because it’s the right thing to do. Often it’s uncomfortable. Usually it’s inconvenient. But it’s almost always worth it.

31. Elephants don’t belong in the room. Having the tough conversation is ultimately better than living with the energy-sapping misery of resentment or misunderstanding.

32. Some stuff just isn’t meant to be. The sooner you accept it and stop trying to force it to happen, the better off you’ll be.

33. The solution to someone else’s problem that seems so obvious to you is likely something they’ve already tried and it hasn’t worked.

34. A good night’s sleep is a gift from the heavens and can change everything.

35. People will make time for you if you’re important to them. And they pretty much won’t if you’re not.

36. Sometimes you need to suck it up hard in the name of love, peace and harmony.

37. Don’t let angry people get to you; instead, try to muster some compassion for them.

38. Stop worrying about what everyone else thinks. Stop wasting energy on stuff that isn’t your business. You just do you.

39. Accept, embrace and celebrate change.

40. Being polite and smiling genuinely can make a big difference.

41. Stillness is restorative and healing.

42. Take one day at a time, one step at a time. Break down challenges into small, do-able chunks. It will all get done.

43. Life is what happens while you’re waiting expectantly for the next big thing on the horizon to come to fruition. Savor the everyday.

44. If you push yourself and focus on what’s good rather than wallowing selfishly in the negative, things will almost always improve.

45. Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes it isn’t immediately apparent, but in time, and with reflection, the reason usually becomes clear. And often it’s so extraordinary and breathtaking, it’ll blow you away.

46. No matter how much you wish, you can’t will things to happen. But often, there’s a better and “righter” path that reveals itself if you keep your eyes and mind open.

47. Take a risk and have the guts to seize the opportunity, because it may not present itself again.

What are some things you’d tell your younger self?

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Awkward Prom: Business Lessons From Your 17-Year-Old Self

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Last weekend I found myself in a time machine of sorts: at an Olive Garden lobby, in a sea of high school students dressed to the nines. Between the whiffs of breadsticks and uninspired Italian dishes, the smell of youthful exuberance was alive and well. The girls wore fancy dresses while the boys sported the finest tuxedos money can rent paired with tennis shoes. Watching their excitement reminded me of life lessons I learned during that “glory days” era. Here are five-and-a-half professional tips we can learn from the 17-year-old versions of ourselves:

1. Have the courage to ask. I don’t think my sweat glands have ever worked as hard as they did when I asked my date to senior prom. And this is the sort of courage we need to have in the business world as well. As the old fundraising adage goes: “The number one reason people don’t give is because they weren’t asked.” The only way to get those sweat glands to settle down is by practicing, so go ahead and ask for what you want.

2. Be asked graciously. On the other side of the courageous asker is the pour soul being asked. Oh, what a stress that was! What if Smelly Billy asks you to the big dance and not Hot John? Laugh if you will, but in the real world, we have to use similar tact when one of our good friends comes to us with a horribly conceived real estate pyramid scheme. How we handle these situations can often be game changers in relationships.

3. Smart fiscal planning. This isn’t a news flash to parents with high schoolers, but the expenses of prom really add up. And even though we were making minimum wage, this was a time in our lives that we weren’t going to miss out on. We knew it would be expensive, so we worked extra shifts at Dairy Queen. Saving for the big day is a great lesson for any age.

4. Play nice with others. Oh, the politics of prom! Everybody wants to go to prom with Hot John, but there are only so many Hot John’s to go around. So this was the first time in our lives where we had to keep the hormones in check and deal with such disappointment. Even if you really wanted Jessie’s girl (and not just the song), navigating your feelings smoothly was important. After all, the prom king/queen votes might be tallied at the end of the night.

5. Negotiate. We all wanted complete freedom on our big night, including a limo and a stay at a fancy hotel — like “Days Inn” fancy. But for many of us, negotiating an extra 15- or 30-minute curfew was a victory. Negotiating is a give-and-take game, so the weeks leading up to prom were crucial. Master negotiators demonstrated consistent responsibility in order to get a few perks on the big day. And for those of us with a less than stellar record in this arena, maybe a little extra last-minute yard work helps the cause.

And five-and-a-half: For better or worse, beware of spiked punch. This is just as handy to know at the company holiday party as it was at the big dance. So sip smartly, my friends.

Jack Stahlmann is a corporate speaker and Huffington Post blogger. He can be reached at www.dontflinchguy.com

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The Well-Intentioned But Misguided Advice of Neil deGrasse Tyson: Why Allocating More Time for Reading Is the Wrong Approach for Dyslexics

Todd Grindal & Laura Schifter

It was one of those moments tailor made for the internet. An 8-year-old girl takes the mic in a crowded lecture hall and asks America’s best-known scientist if he has any colleagues with dyslexia. Neil deGrasse Tyson responds with his customary off-the-cuff sensibility and care, telling the young girl: There are many scientists with disabilities. These people have succeeded because they learned about their condition and then determined the best way to compensate for it. When successful people encounter a hurdle, they first seek to understand the nature of the challenge and then find a way to jump over it. The key to success for dyslexics, he advises the girl, is to simply allocate more time for reading.

This heartwarming exchange was shared widely on social media–populating hundreds of thousands of Facebook feeds with two minutes and forty-eight seconds of edifying inspiration.

The only problem: Dr. Tyson’s advice to ambitious dyslexics is terrible!

We are both dyslexic. We also each have masters and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. Dr. Tyson is correct that we faced many obstacles on our way. But the key to our success was not to spend more time doing the thing we are, by definition, not very good at doing–reading printed text.

Dyslexia is a common reading disability that affects between five and 17 percent of school-aged children. People with dyslexia experience difficulties connecting sounds to letters and decoding text. As a result, reading printed text is labor intensive, time consuming, and often extremely frustrating for people with dyslexia. Dyslexia does not impact a person’s intelligence or their ability to comprehend complex concepts or information.

For us, like many other dyslexics, the pathway to success lay in learning how to develop our strengths and getting information in other ways. Yes, we each received targeted supports to develop our reading skills. Certainly, these supports were critical as learning to read is an invaluable skill. But these interventions did not come at the expense of developing areas where we excelled. This is critical as students who are forced by schools to focus exclusively on their weaknesses often lose interest in learning and disconnect from school.

Developing strengths is important but there is no way around the fact that advanced degrees do require students to consume and produce a substantial amount of written material. A generation ago, dyslexic undergraduate and graduate students had little choice but to spend countless hours attempting to decipher printed text.
Today, this type of Herculean effort is no longer necessary. Voice-to-text and text-to-speech technologies are nearly ubiquitous. Whatever functions not built-in to computers and smartphones can be purchased for approximately the cost of a hardcover college textbook. Nearly all scholarly articles written in the last two decades are accessible in a readable format. Those books and other printed text that are not already digitized can be easily converted to readable text with a standard office capacity copy machine and minimal additional software.

With access to tools such as these, decoding printed text does not have to be a barrier to success. However, many educators and parents are not aware of these options, and students, all too often, are discouraged from using them because people do not perceive using supports such as these as “reading.” In recent debates regarding the use of read-aloud technology on the Common Core tests, one academic went so far as to call the use of such supports by students with reading disabilities “cheating.”

These beliefs are rooted in the assumption that if dyslexics spend more time reading or tried harder they could just overcome their disability. But dyslexia, like many other disabilities, doesn’t go away. We all recognize the absurdity of asking a student who is deaf to allocate more time to listening or asking a blind student to spend more time attempting to see. Why then do we expect students with reading disabilities to spend more time reading?

If a key goal of education is to prepare students to develop the higher-order skills necessary to compete in the 21st century workforce, educators should seek to remove unnecessary barriers rather than simply encouraging some children to try harder. The notion that students with dyslexia should simply allow more time for reading represents one of those unnecessary barriers.

We applaud Dr. Tyson for his comments regarding the value of diversity in the scientific workplace. But his comments show that when it comes to understanding how to best support people with learning disabilities, even the smartest and most well intentioned allies sometimes get it wrong. There is little benefit in forcing dyslexic students to attempt to jump over hurdles when a much more efficient path to success is possible.

Todd Grindal, Ed.D is a researcher with Abt Associates Inc, where he studies how public policies impact young children and children with disabilities. @Grindato

Laura A. Schifter, Ed.D is an Adjunct Lecturer at Harvard Graduate School of Education and recently co-authored How Did You Get Here? Students with Disabilities and Their Journeys to Harvard. @laschifter12

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