25 Tips and Tricks for Smart Home Nerdvana

The Internet of Things, or IoT, is a great little buzz word for Internet-controlled home automation equipment. Sensors and chips to control electronics have gotten so small and cheap that they can now be put into most electronics around the house. And apps on phones and tablets have gotten so smart that they can now sense those devices without special hardware. This convergence has led to more options for home automation than ever before.

I am automating my third home. I’m not entirely sure if this makes me insane or not, but I can’t help but think about how much the home automation industry as a whole has changed since the first few years of this century. The first time I dealt with home automation, the focus was on home entertainment systems and walkway lights. The systems were terribly complex and took forever to get the basics setup. There are way more options today, but home entertainment and lights are still the two most common items I see automated, with a much larger emphasis put on HVAC these days than originally.

Along the path of insanity that has led to me begging HAL to please, please just turn the bathroom light off upstairs so I don’t have to walk up there and do it myself, I’ve learned a few tips or tricks that might just help others looking to automate a home or office. If you’re thinking of getting started with home automation, new to automation, or in the midst of upgrading a system, here are ___ tips that should help you along the path to home automation enlightenment:

  1. You can probably do this yourself. Yup. There are elements of setting up home automation doodads that might be a bit complicated, but if you do it right, the complication will be in logistics, not technology. For example, you can choose to screw in a lightbulb and be able to control that device. Or you can choose to replace a light switch with a dimmer that you can control. Replacing a dimmer is a bit more of a challenge to those who don’t know their way a traveler or a circuit breaker. You can also choose to replace a door lock or you can choose to just install a device onto an existing lock without touching a screwdriver. You can also choose to install a simple, do-it-yourself solution, such as a Wink, or you can go much more professional-grade and use a Crestron or Control4 type of solution. Either way, these days there are so many options; don’t be intimidated!
  2. The biggest money saver for many is likely to be a smart thermostat. Controlling lights with an app is awesome. But for most, especially in areas where the temperature can get extra cold or extra hot, you can actually save a pretty big chunk of change by simply replacing a thermostat. I went from spending almost500 per month when I first moved to Minnesota from Los Angeles, to spending less than200. That’s right, about a two week positive return on that investment, that continues paying itself off, month after month. My first automated thermostat was a generic Z-wave. These days, I use the Nest, as I like how it integrates with dozens of cloud services.
  3. There are so many thermostats in homes. If you have an older analog thermostat, make sure your thermostat has a power cable before you install a smart thermostat. Otherwise you might go through a pair of AA batteries every other hour. You can always pull a new wire through the wall by tying it to the old wire. But fishing wires through walls for the first time can be intimidating. Especially when there are weird twists and turns that can knock the tied wire off. If you need to call someone for this kind of task, call an electrician. But chances are you won’t have to, except in older houses.
  4. Installing smart light switches is usually better than installing smart light bulbs. The most notable reason for this is that if you install a smart light bulb (e.g. Philips Hue, LIFX, Ilumi, etc) then the light switch needs to be on for the bulb to work. If there’s no power flowing to a bulb, the bulb cannot be turned on. Having said this, I’ve had situations where various smart switches and dimmers won’t power a light fixture or work with older wiring in my homes. In these cases, it’s much less expensive to replace a light bulb than to buy a new fixture, new dimmer, and pull new wiring. But if you use bulbs instead of switches, just make sure to tell your company you have to turn the switch off and on again if they don’t use the app or voice control. Saves for getting woken up in the middle of the night by frightened parents who think your house has been possessed (it has, just by Alexa).
  5. IFTTT is your friend. Before you buy a system, check that it’s compatible with the site IFTTT. IFTTT (short for If This, Then That) links together a number of different cloud systems. You can use IFTTT to run workflows on files when they’re dropped into a folder on Box, and other businessy tasks. Or you can trigger workflows on home automation systems that aren’t supported by one another. Harmony, Alexa, Belkin, Nest, Honeywell, Hunter Douglas, Lightwave, Withings, D-Link, Philips, GE, HomeSeer, Lutron, and even BMW support IFTTT workflows. You can link all these things together to push the limits of your home beyond the boundaries of what the imagination of the vendors of the devices.
  6. Don’t be afraid to string workflows together. Let’s say you tried using Belkin WeMo but switched to a Wink, and still have some devices on an older Vera. Now you can have IFTTT link them all together. But keep things simple. For example, don’t daisy chain workflows together. Instead try to link them all directly to the one place where you want to control them. For me, that’s become my Amazon Echo. Before I got there, though, I had a bunch of workflows that would call other workflows, just so I could try and use one app. Then when the workflows failed I lost trust in them and went back to doing things manually around the house. Keeping everything simple allows the workflows to complete with a higher rate of accuracy as there are fewer moving parts.
  7. Make sure you can return things if they don’t work together. Buying these things retail can mean paying a good 20% more than if you purchased them online. And buying them on eBay can mean paying almost nothing. But almost nothing is still too much if the items don’t work for you. Not all of the systems can work with one another. For example, my garage door opener wouldn’t work with a GoControl (which has the best GUI of a garage opening app out there) so I had to get a Chamberlain. Standards are few and far between. I like to start with a hub, like a Wink or a Vera, and then use their compatibility page to verify other items will work together.
  8. The virtual can talk to the physical world. When most people think of Smart Homes, they think of controlling electrical things. But sensors, controls, and robotics are helping us to bridge the virtual to the physical world. You can activate a Samsung Vacuum, sense physical movement, open and close blinds with Lutron mechanized blinds, open and close deadbolts, and even sense the water in your plants using a Parrot Flower Power. Yes, changing the channel or turning off your lights using a voice command is cool, but when suddenly little robots are running around the house doing your bidding, you start feeling like you have an army of minions doing your chores! And you can automate scenes that can help you wake up more gracefully and have a better overall quality of life.
  9. Your physical pet can set off your virtual workflows. Sensors are great. They can turn lights on when I enter a room and turn them off if I haven’t been in the room for awhile. I have four HVAC zones, so if no one is in a part of the house, I turn the HVAC off. But when the dog or cat went back there, the lights would come on. Poltergeists. A friend had a motion sensor above his computer that emailed him every time something moved. He had a leak one night and got about 1,000 emails by morning.
  10. Automated lights are not much of a money saver. Remember when your parents used to tell you to turn off the lights because you were running up the electricity bill? An LED light costs less than2 per year to operate under normal usage. Save the world a little natural gas and some real electricity and replace that old thermostat with a smart one first.
  11. Check on energy credits and rebates. Many power companies will provide energy credits for buying smart thermostats and sometimes even supported home automation systems. I’ve had friends who basically got free Nest thermostats. Credits and rebates have kicked off many an unhealthy addiction to home automation.
  12. You might not use this stuff forever. When I bought my first hub, it was over2,000. The last one was70 (and I used a50 gift card so picked it up for a whopping20). I switched because my old system didn’t work with Alexa, and I wanted to tinker with voice control. Once you put something in the wall, chances are you won’t want to take it back out. But the hubs and bulbs and things like that will be out of your life in a few years, if that.
  13. There’s always something better, right around the corner. Yes, I said that you’ll likely replace your hub in a few years. But that doesn’t mean you should wait. All of my dimmers that I have installed in the past decade work with practically every modern system. And I’ve been saving on heating and cooling bills the whole time. There are more and more options. There’s an update to Apple’s HomeKit right around the corner, according to rumor mills. Right after that, Amazon is likely to update Alexa. And after that, there’s probably going to be a substantial update to Wink. And rumor has it that… If you are always waiting for the next thing, you’ll never get to reaping the rewards of the systems you can buy today.
  14. If at first you don’t succeed, Google it. Devices come with instructions. Sometimes the words on the screen change faster than the poor tech writers can get new directions printed up and in the box. If you get confused, just Google how to do what you need (want) to get done. The other day I rebuilt the carburetor on my lawn mower. Why? Because I was searching for an authorized dealer to fix the mower and found a video on how to do it. The Internets are beautiful things (when you have Google Safe Search turned on that is).
  15. The Internet can help you find lots of things, but some of the tasks you’d like to automate might not be automatable. I have an Apple TV in every room in the house. I have Harmony remotes and hubs, with IR blasters. With these, I can turn an Apple TV on, unpause or pause things that are happening on the Apple TV, but I can’t shuffle my music or play movies. And that’s OK. When Buck Rogers wakes up, I’ll be able to control everything. Until then, yes, I might have to pick up a remote and hit a button so Siri can do a task for me instead of Alexa…
  16. Voice control is the coolest thing ever ever ever. I’ve been using various home automation systems for years. But the inspiration to write this article was from buying an Amazon Echo and suddenly not needing to pull my phone out of my pocket to invoke a scene, workflow, or just turn on a light. It’s still quicker when you’re walking by a switch to just hit the button. But now I can just tell the system to turn off all the lights in the house and viola, without getting out of bed or putting my iPad down, I’m ready to smack my knee on the dresser while going to brush my teeth.
  17. Don’t worry about the garage door any more. When you leave for work in the morning, you are often half-asleep (despite the best laid plans of your automated coffee maker). There are times when I get to work and worry all day that someone is going to help themselves to the bike in my garage. No more. Now, I can just look at an app. The same goes for piece of mind with a variety of things around my home, including whether or not my grill has enough gas to cook up salmon for my guests.
  18. Scan for leaks in problem areas of your home. In Minnesota, we have ice dams, where water backs up behind ice that forms, which then seeps between your shingles and leaks into your home. If caught quickly, they can be fixed by tossing a salt pellet up on the roof. If not caught quickly, they can cause the ceiling to collapse, or worse. I now have water sensors in the spots that are a problem. While insured, I no longer have to worry about paying the deductible and driving my home owner’s insurance rates sky high.
  19. Experiment. When I first got my Amazon Echo, my daughter said “Alexa, I like you.” To be eight again! To her delight, Alexa said “I like you too.” Later, I programmed my Excho to learn my commute to work. Now I ask about it while I’m in the shower (to wash the hair or not to wash the hair, that is the question). Sometimes the smallest feature you don’t think will be cool, ends up changing how you go about life.
  20. Automated door locks can save you from freezing your butt off. I live in Minnesota. It can get super-cold here (can anyone say hypothermia in 7 minutes). Fumbling for keys sucks. Bluetooth and key-code locks can save you boatloads of time. Sure, it’s 5 seconds, but it seems like much, much longer when ice is forming along your nose hairs!
  21. You don’t have to be home to let people in your house any more. There are a number of doorbells with cameras on them these days. When the doorbell rings, you can get an alert on your Apple Watch, take out your phone, unlock the door, and then get an alert each time the door opens and closes. When someone who’s stopped by to water the plants or clean the house leaves, you can then lock the door again. Heck, you can also trigger a workflow in IFTTT that saves the in/out times into a spreadsheet, so you can know exactly how long they were in the house. And if you have cameras in the house, you can even keep tabs on them (and the dog) without leaving the comfort of your desk at work, or hammock from vacation.
  22. Not everything should be voice controllable all the time. My locks are automated. I love this in the winter months. If my garage goes up in the PM, my locks automatically unlock. But, in AM when the garage door goes down, my locks automatically lock (growing up in the country, I’m terrible about remembering to lock doors). But, when I hooked my locks up to Amazon via IFTTT, I realized I could tell the locks to unlock from outside the house. Amazon doesn’t discern between my voice, my daughter’s voice, or the voice of a neighbor kid looking to raid my liquor cabinet.
  23. Be mindful of the environment. Some building materials suck for wireless signals. Ever put a wireless access point in one room and been unable to connect in the next room? Ever had wireless drop off when running the microwave? Ever tried to get a Wi-Fi signal in the garage? Sometimes you just need a more robust network. If devices don’t connect, move the hub for their protocol right beside them and try again. If the device is able to connect to your network, you might end up needing to extend the Wi-Fi into that room.
  24. If things seem like too much money, they probably are. Wi-Fi enabled refrigerators aren’t there yet. Trust me, I’ve tried. Likewise, there are many things you can put in your home that just aren’t worth it. Like that sensor-laden hot water heater. Eventually you’ll be able to automate all the things. But for now, keep an eye on the price and note how that money will net you a return on your investment. In some cases, that return is in the form of energy savings; in other cases, that return is on your quality of life.
  25. Secure your network and accounts. Finally, keep in mind that movies like Eagle Eye could actually become a little bit of a reality if you aren’t careful. All these devices, all these accounts, video, locks, lights. Use good passwords, practice solid network security, and keep the firmware updated on your devices, so they have the latest security patches on them. And never give your password to anyone.

Have fun with this stuff. When I hit my target weight on my Fitbit scale, my stereo played “We Are The Champions.” A friend rigged up a speaker in a skull that glowed and said the name of the person who entered their code into his locks. Most of the home automation world should net you a nice little return on your investment. But it doesn’t have to. Sometimes, it just makes life a little bit better.

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A Weekend With Gronk, DeLoss, and Viola

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For many of us baby boomers, Chicano artist, Gronk, is a well familiar name. In the 70’s and 80’s, he played a key role in ASCO, a multidisciplinary art collective famous for provocative performances and happenings. “These street theater pieces were largely improvised with members of the group taking on various personas and using the city itself as their set.” With his new exhibition at Craft & Folk Art Museum, “Gronk’s Theater of Paint,” the artist presents a few decades-worth of projects showcasing his engagement with high-profile opera productions, as well as his “love for the low-brow aesthetic of B-movies.”

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For this exhibition, Gronk painted a series of murals on the museum walls, as well as covered the floor in one of the galleries with linoleum printed with his signature images. The moment you enter the exhibition, you swear you not only see, but also hear the monumental opera productions –a few of them –all at once. It’s completely over the top, and that’s exactly the way the artist wants it. And you millennials don’t want to miss the show either –I believe it’ll give you one hell of a high.

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If one had to choose one particular image to embody the art and philosophy of Gronk’s work, it would be his iconic Tormenta, an imposing female figure dressed elegantly in a formal black dress and gloves. But the intriguing thing is, she is walking away from us, and we can see her only from behind. It looks as if she’s on her way to the opera and somehow we’ve been invited to follow.

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A new exhibition at Couturier Gallery of works by painter, poet, and illustrator, DeLoss McGraw, evokes the memory of his award winning illustrations for Alice in Wonderland. In this exhibition of works on paper, DeLoss quotes from his poems and journals, with references to his childhood, his relationship with his mother, and the influence of music in his life and work.

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The palette in this new body of works –with DeLoss’ trademark silhouettes of children and animals –is more restricted than usual, but somehow the overall effect is even more dramatic. It’s always a mystery for me how this artist is able to combine in one work both a sense of innocence and sophistication.

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On Friday night, warned by a friend, I hurried over to Disney Hall for the amazing performance by LA Phil’s Orchestra, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. For me, the high point of the evening was seeing Inverted Birth, an 8:22 minute video by famous LA artist, Bill Viola. The video was projected on a gigantic vertical screen behind the orchestra in the center of the stage. It was shown between the orchestra’s performances of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 17 in G Major, and Arvo Pärt’s Symphony No. 4, “Los Angeles.” We watched a half-naked male figure in various stages of awakening and transformation. Drenched in thick black liquid at first, the man slowly gets “cleansed” as the liquid gradually becomes thinner and clearer. The concert became a rare experience of hearing great music along with seeing an outstanding work of visual art.

To learn about Edward’s Fine Art of Art Collecting Classes, please visit his website. You can also read The New York Times article about his classes here, or an Artillery Magazine article about Edward and his classes here.

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Edward Goldman is an art critic and the host of Art Talk, a program on art and culture for NPR affiliate KCRW 89.9 FM. To listen to the complete show and hear Edward’s charming Russian accent, click here.

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When You Tell Your Girlfriend You're Gay

Sooner or later, every gay man has to announce to the world that he is no longer interested in women. It is a time filled with anxiety, confusion, and increased spending on strong female pop vocalists.

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So one of the strangest experiences about coming out is when you have to tell your current/ former girlfriends. Here you are with this beautiful girl who is your best friend (in many cases you’re having sex with her) and after YEARS you just turn to her and say “oh, sorry- I guess I like men, L O L. sorry I was legit lying to you about my thoughts and feelings for a couple years. Hope you don’t spend too much on therapy, can we still be best friends? BYYYE!”.

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In this weeks’ episode Danny relives his own experience coming out! Watch below!

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Story Behind Photo Of Cop Asleep Next To Pup He Rescued Is Doggone Sweet

One officer demonstrated that there’s more to law enforcement than just fighting crime.   

A photo recently shared on social media features Officer Kareem Garibaldi and a pit bull-boxer mix pup, named Hope, both snoozing at SPCA Florida in Lakeland.

The officer had found the stray puppy under his car last Saturday and rescued it, according to a Facebook post from the Lakeland Police Department. After a 12-hour shift on day three of caring for the dog, the dedicated cop brought the pooch to the SPCA to get checked out and fell asleep by her side.

Hope found a forever home the very day the moving photo was shared. 

“It clearly was a selfless thing to do,” Connie Johnson, SPCA shelter safety net manager,  told the Dodo. “He wasn’t thinking about getting home to sleep. He was thinking about what he could do to help this puppy survive.”

Garibaldi initially saw the dog on the loose outside and looked around the neighborhood for its owner, the police department’s post explained. Unable to find the pup’s human, the officer took Hope back to the police department, where she stayed until the end of his shift when the pair went home together. 

The next day, Garibaldi spread the word about the pup on social media. On the third day, with no owner in sight, Garibaldi brought the pooch to the vet at the SPCA after his shift and stayed there for over three hours while the vet examined the dog. 

Johnson happened to spot Garibaldi, catching a nap, and snapped the now-famous photo. 

“It was one of those moments that just grab your heart. He was so determined to get her help.” Johnson told the Dodo. 

Hope found her happy ending, as the pooch found a home with a dispatcher from the police station. As for the officer, well, his deed didn’t go unnoticed. 

“Having worked a long weekend, Officer Garibaldi still found the energy at the end of his shift to help man’s best friend,” the department wrote on Facebook. 

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To the Right, to the Right, to the Right, to the Right

Since an overdue focus on the Syrian refugee crisis in global headlines, nations across Europe have experienced a steep rise in the popularity of far-right political parties. With many of the foundational ideals of such parties pointing inwards to directly and solely support especially native born citizens, it is clear that such politicians are rising in favor built off the rallying hate of innocent refugees.

According to the New York Times, the most recent election in Hungary garnered at least 65% of votes for the Fidesz-KDNP and Jobbik, two of the nation’s most radically right parties. Hungary has also garnered the second-most asylum applications per its population during 2015. Following only Serbia & Kosovo’s astounding 5,000 per 100,000 people, Hungary reported a still extremely high 2,400. It must be noted that Hungary’s numerical population is magnitudes larger than that of Serbia & Kosovo, so it truly is experiencing a frontload of demand in aiding the refugee crisis.

Yet Hungary’s reaction in political lashback is not alone. While nearly all European countries are witnessing this garnering wave of conservatism to some degree, noticeable stark surges are plaguing more than just a couple countries. Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Poland and Switzerland all retain their own share of close to or over a third of total votes supporting the radical right. To reiterate, this “right” does display diversity in its exact affiliation of strong conservative parties. Though while they range all the way from from “populist and nationalist to far-right neofascist,” many still maintain a common platform hinged at rebolstering national foundations from the inside out: which mean, essentially, keeping “the outside” out.

While a flight across the pond may seem to substantially separate Lady Liberty’s Home of the Brave and Land of the Fast food, such swinging attitudes are certainly embedded right here in our soil, too.

The obvious example of Donald Trump, who has essentially acquired enough to officially be named the 2016 GOP Candidate, only highlights the danger and power in hateful rhetoric against refugees, which has further fueled a chicken-and-egg relationship with Muslim, Middle-Eastern, and South Asian hate across the country.

It doesn’t require multiple colorful interactive data graphs on the New York Times website to acknowledge this similar nature into which America is falling – one that is predicated on assumptions and lies and one that feeds on hate and fear. Only more elections are set to unfold in Europe in the coming months; the very same can be said for the POTUS election here in the States – and the hateful rhetoric seems to be going just about nowhere.

The refugee crisis is one of absolute humanitarian atrocities. As the war heads into its fifth year of tragic headlines and as ISIS kindles even more chaos in the region, it must remain the duties of nations — those in fact founded apparently upon openness and happiness and hope for immigrants, particularly refugees — to offer home and haven out of basic human decency. The rise in conservative parties, whether across Europe or in the States, displays a regression into times marred by xenophobia and alarm for anything “different.” Yet differences and learning and growing from them are exactly what has come to define such nations over the decades, even centuries.

Again, hate is seen prevailing. Causes for hope and help, however, must only be fortified in these trying times. Racism cannot win.

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Michigan Education Reform Starts With HB 4552

A recent editorial in The Detroit News couldn’t make it clearer. Michigan’s education system needs reforming, and the business community must play a leading role in creating the change Michigan needs. That’s the message that will be made, time and time again, as Michigan’s policy leaders head to Mackinac Island to set the course for our state’s future.

Thanks to some forward thinking legislators, the future is already here. House Bill 4552 was created after Michigan business leaders told legislators they had good paying jobs, especially in skilled trades and manufacturing, but couldn’t find enough workers. One of the keys to keeping this sector of Michigan’s economy strong, they said, is to make sure school counselors know about the current career and college options available to Michigan students, especially the career opportunities that don’t require four years of college. In sharing this information with students and families, counselors will help students better understand the full menu of choices that await them after high school, and help them find one that meets their individual talents, interests and needs.

The idea behind the bill is simple. If students have a better understanding of the exciting possibilities that await them after high school, they’ll be motivated to do better work in high school. That’s why the bill is supported by businesses, skilled trade workers, retired military personnel, and law enforcement officers. Just like school counselors, they know that students with a goal are more motivated to succeed, and are more likely to succeed as a result.

The goal of House Bill 4552 is to help students, but they aren’t the only winners in this bill. Michigan employers who are now forced to look out of state and overseas to meet their talent needs will now be able to offer internships, on the job training, and even training scholarships to Michigan students. That’s what happened when a group of Michigan school counselors visited a plant last year, where they learned of an owner’s desire to help pay for the training of students who would be interested in coming to work for him. Students wouldn’t know about that chance if it weren’t for the counselors, and the counselors wouldn’t know about that chance if it weren’t for the tour. That’s effective professional development.

The bill also helps school counselors, who desperately need relief from the largest single challenge of their work–being overwhelmed. Too many students, too many duties unrelated to counseling, and too much teacher-based professional development makes it easy for school counselors to feel they aren’t given the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of their students. House Bill 4552 modifies counselors’ current professional development requirements by focusing part of their activities on staying current with career and counseling trends, the kind of information counselors say they need, and the kind surveys say parents and students want. The bill doesn’t require more time from counselors; it gives them the freedom to make better use of the time they already spend on learning how to best serve their students.

House Bill 4552 has passed the State House with bipartisan support, and is now before the Senate Education Committee. Chaired by Senator Phil Pavlov, the committee has already shown an interest in moving Michigan’s education landscape to a model that is more student-centered and responsive to local needs. Sending this bill to the Senate floor right after Mackinac would send a powerful message of leadership to all Michigan policy makers, all at no additional cost to taxpayers. It’s nice to talk about education reform, but passing House Bill 4552 before the June recess offers a rare chance at setting the tone of business-education partnership Michigan wants, and needs.

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Libertarian Candidate Austin Petersen Believes He Can Win with Fellow Millenials, Conservatives, Social Democrats

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Austin Petersen makes the “boy president” John F. Kennedy seem like an elder statesman. Petersen wasn’t even eligible to run when he announced his candidacy for the Libertarian Party’s Presidential Nomination (he’s since turned 35 and is fully eligible). As the first “millennial” candidate, Petersen believes he can not only attract young voters, but others across the political spectrum.

“I believe I can bring in not just libertarian voters, but I think I can bring in conservative voters and I think I can bring in social democratic voters because I embody those principles of economic freedom and personal liberty,” Petersen said.

Petersen does believe opponents Gary Johnson and John McAfee have a slight advantage in executive experience, having both run large businesses and in Johnson’s case, the New Mexico State Government for two four-year terms.

“It does put me at a disadvantage,” said Petersen, “but obviously my campaign slogan is I want to take over the government to leave people alone. So, the idea is not that I want to run things. I just want to let people run their own lives. So, do you really need to have been a former software billionaire or a former governor in order to be President of the United States? I would submit ‘no.’ If so, the founding fathers should have put that in the Constitution.”

Petersen believes he can distinguish himself as a voice or reason in the general election, even in a year where an angry electorate has seemed to prefer populist bomb-throwing over calm, intellectual messages.

“Honestly, when you put three ducks in a row and one of these kids is doing their own thing, sometimes the voice of reason wins out. And that’s simply because when there’s so much cacophony and noise, and background noise, sometimes a small, quiet voice can be heard,” said Petersen.

Like many of his opponents, Petersen faces almost as tough a challenge in winning the Libertarian Nomination as he would in the general election. Libertarians are known to be strict on ideological purity and Petersen has challenged the central libertarian principle of non-aggression as a guiding principle for government power.

“I’m willing to take even the most sacred cows and slaughter them for all to see, because I really kind of actually enjoy that,” quipped Petersen. He argues that children, for example, have positive rights and the non-aggression principle doesn’t adequately ensure them.

Outside the theoretical world, however, Petersen’s positions line up pretty closely to those of his opponents, any of which he said he would support if he were not to win the nomination.

You can watch the full video interview below. More information on Petersen’s campaign can be found at austinpetersen2016.com.

The final debate before the delegates vote for the nomination is tonight (Saturday May 28) at 8:00 PM EDT and will be carried live on CSPAN, Reason.com and several other media.

Tom Mullen is the author of Where Do Conservatives and Liberals Come From? And What Ever Happened to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness?

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Supreme Court Won't Touch This Legal Challenge to Ted Cruz's 'Natural Born' Status

The U.S. Supreme Court won’t review a Utah case questioning Ted Cruz‘s eligibility to be president, one of several similar challenges that have been brewing in lower courts and in which the Texas senator has largely prevailed.

Without explanation, the justices on Tuesday declined to review Wagner v. Cruz, an appeal brought by a retired lawyer who claims that Cruz isn’t a “natural born citizen” within the meaning of the Constitution.

A lower court dismissed the case on the basis that the lawyer, Walter Wagner, lacked standing to bring the challenge in federal court. The judge in the case said the alleged harm to Wagner from Cruz’s participation in the Republican presidential primary was “conjectural and hypothetical at best.” (Cruz was still in the race when the judge ruled in mid-March.)

Wagner appealed in the usual way, but while the case was pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit — which has yet to rule — he moved on to the Supreme Court under a rule that allows him to do so if the case is of “imperative public importance.”

Apparently Wagner didn’t meet that high bar.

Reached by phone on Tuesday, Wagner said claims against Cruz on the natural-born question aren’t moot and will have merit for “as long as he’s still alive.” The lawyer noted that presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump could drop dead tomorrow and then Cruz would certainly “be back in the race.”

Cruz’s legal team is due to submit briefs responding to Wagner’s appeal before the 10th Circuit by Thursday. After that, the court could issue a summary ruling upholding the dismissal of the case or decide to hold oral arguments and issue a more substantive ruling at a later date.

By and large, federal courts across the country have sidestepped ruling on whether Cruz is a natural-born citizen eligible to be president and have dismissed these cases on procedural grounds. Other state courts and administrative bodies have also sided with the senator.

“Basically it’s a cop-out,” Wagner said of some of those rulings. “They don’t like to make decisions if they don’t have to.”

While he awaits a final decision from the Denver-based appeals court, Wagner said he wouldn’t rule out making a second trip to the Supreme Court if he has to.

“Maybe they’ll amend the Constitution in the meanwhile,” Wagner said. “Don’t hold your breath on that one.”

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Cincinnati Gorilla Incident Prompts Criminal Investigation

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By Ginny McCabe

CINCINNATI (Reuters) – Police may bring criminal charges over a Cincinnati Zoo incident in which a gorilla was killed to rescue a 4-year-old boy who had fallen into its enclosure, a prosecutor said on Tuesday.

The death of Harambe, a 450-pound (200-kg) gorilla, also prompted the animal rights group Stop Animal Exploitation Now to file a negligence complaint on Tuesday against the zoo with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The group is seeking the maximum penalty of $10,000.

The group said in its complaint letter that the child’s ability to get past the barrier was proof the zoo was negligent and should be fined for a “clear and fatal violation of the Animal Welfare Act.”

Mounting outrage over Saturday’s killing of the Western lowland silverback, an endangered species, sparked criticism of both the zoo and the child’s parents. Online petitions at change.org drew more than 500,000 signatures demanding “Justice for Harambe.”

Cincinnati police are taking a second look at possible criminal charges in the incident after initially saying no one was charged. There was no indication of whether the investigation would focus on the zoo or the child’s parents.

“Once their investigation is concluded, they will confer with our office on possible criminal charges,” Hamilton County Prosecutor Joseph Deters said in a statement.

Witnesses said the child had expressed a desire to get into the enclosure and climbed over a 3-foot (1-meter) barrier, falling 15 feet (4.6 m) into a moat. Zookeepers took down the 17-year-old ape after he violently dragged and tossed the child, officials said.

The boy’s mother said on Facebook that the boy suffered a concussion and scrapes but was otherwise fine.

Thane Maynard, director of the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Gardens, on Monday stood by the decision to shoot Harambe, saying he was not simply endangering the child but actually hurting him.

Zoo officials were not immediately available for comment on either the negligence complaint or the police investigation but said on Monday the exhibit was safe and exceeded required protocols.

The Gorilla World exhibit has been closed since the incident and will reopen on Saturday.

Looking at the incident through Harambe’s eyes, his former caretaker, Jerry Stones, said in a CNN interview that the breach of his habitat was likely confusing.

“Here is this animal that has this strange thing in his house,” Stones said on CNN. “He knew what adult people were but he’d never been around children. It smells similar, it looks similar but ‘What is it? Do I play with it? Am I supposed to be afraid of it? What do I do?'”

Even Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump jumped into the fray at a news conference, saying, “The way he held that child, it was almost like a mother holding a baby … It was so beautiful to watch that powerful, almost 500-pound gorilla, the way he dealt with that little boy. But it just takes one second … one little flick of his finger.”

In the wild, adult male silverbacks such as Harambe are leaders of groups of gorillas known as troops. They develop the silver patch on their coats as they mature.

(Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Gina Cherelus in New York; Editing by Bill Trott)

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Hitting the Button on Depression

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To most teachers the phrase “hit the button” has a very specific meaning, referring to the button in every classroom used to call the office if assistance is required. Teachers routinely manage all kinds of issues that arise from having roughly 120 young people — each with unique academic, social and emotional concerns — rotate through their classrooms daily, but sometimes circumstances warrant a call for support. Hitting the button is an option reserved for the most serious situations. It might be a student becoming very ill in class, or a student hitting a classmate or even, say, a student threatening to kill the teacher because the teacher told her to open her literature book. (Okay, she didn’t actually threaten to kill me herself; she merely said she would be happy to see me dead. Um, a bit disturbing.)

I no longer teach in a middle school classroom, but this morning I hit the button — on myself. Just as a teacher tries to handle classroom issues on her own, I have tried very hard to handle my issues of sadness and grief on my own. Like a good teacher, I have employed various strategies to keep the constant low grade depression, triggered by losing both my mother and sister within an 18-month span, from erupting to a fever pitch and completely consuming me. I have dug deep and rallied every ounce of my will and energy to present the face that the world has come to expect of me — my smiling, social, high-spirited face. No one but those closest to me would ever suspect this has been largely an act for some time now. But I am so tired and can sustain the effort no longer. Today I faced the fact that it was time to call for back up. I hit the button and made an appointment with a therapist.

Twice in my life I have suffered fairly severe episodes of clinical depression, both after prolonged periods of personal upheaval and trauma. And twice in my life I have been treated with great success — not to mention gratitude and relief — through a combination of talk therapy and some pharmaceutical support. And even knowing this, I still delayed asking for help this time around. I would never have hesitated to ask for help in preventing a dicey classroom situation from escalating to a dangerous level, so why did I drag my feet when I my own mental and emotional well being were at stake? Why did I let the misery get this far?

I am ashamed to say I think it’s because at some deep level depression still registers as some kind of moral or character weakness, something I should be able to navigate and “get over.” Despite my clear intellectual understanding that this interpretation of depression is patently false, and as much as I would scold — er, educate — someone else who expressed such an ill-informed opinion, I still struggle with owning my need for help. I know this dark landscape well and I know where the exit is, yet I stubbornly insisted on going down dead ends. Until this morning. This morning I said, “Enough, I am ready to feel better,” and I hit the button.

If you feel the darkness of depression closing in on you, please know there is help available. Depression is a very real medical condition and you can’t wish or pretend it away, no matter how hard you try. I know. There are so many treatment options now — if one doesn’t work, try another approach until you get the relief you deserve. Don’t be hard-headed and mired in denial like I was for so long. There is nothing to gained by procrastinating. When you need help, reach out and hit the button!

Photo: lineartespilot via depositphotos

This post originally appeared on www.leegaitan.com

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If you — or someone you know — need help, please call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. If you are outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention for a database of international resources.

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