These are two stories that I may or may not submit based on upcoming electoral events:
Congressman John Culberson is a driving force behind the Europa Clipper mission, and an SLS proponent. He may lose his re-election bid this November. This could have a significant impact on the mission. Or not, who knows?
Could November elections scramble a controversial U.S. mission to a frozen moon?
Here is an in-depth story about Culberson's Europa obsession: Inside NASA’s daring $8 billion plan to finally find extraterrestrial life
And a follow-up: The billion-dollar question: How does the Clipper mission get to Europa?
FiveThirtyEight currently forecasts a slight chance of Culberson losing, but it's essentially a coin toss.
This is a Denver local ballot initiative to decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms. It won't be on the ballot in November. They are collecting signatures so that it can be on the ballot in May 2019. 4,726 signatures must be collected by January 7th:
Denver, Colorado, Psilocybin Mushroom Initiative (November 2018)
After the success of cannabis legalization in Denver, could mushrooms be next?
No Magic Mushrooms On The Denver Ballot This Year. Supporters Are Looking To 2019
Denver’s Psilocybin Initiative Moves Forward to Signature Gathering Phase
If you live in Denver, go and sign the petition.
Here is the big list of 2018 ballot measures, amendments, etc.. And here's a few that may be of interest:
California Proposition 12, Farm Animal Confinement Initiative (2018)
Colorado Amendment 74, Compensation to Owners for Decreased Property Value Due to State Regulation Initiative (2018)
Florida Amendment 3, Voter Approval of Casino Gambling Initiative (2018)
Florida Amendment 4, Voting Rights Restoration for Felons Initiative (2018)
Massachusetts Question 3, Gender Identity Anti-Discrimination Veto Referendum (2018)
Michigan Proposal 1, Marijuana Legalization Initiative (2018)
Missouri has two amendments and one proposition regarding medical cannabis that are in conflict:
If two conflicting constitutional amendments, such as Amendment 2 and Amendment 3, are approved, the one receiving the most affirmative votes prevails. State law does provide a protocol for when voters approve statutes, such as Proposition C, and amendments, such as Amendment 2 and Amendment 3, that are in conflict. Speaking to a similar issue regarding tobacco tax initiatives in 2016, the attorney general's office said the issue would need to be decided in court.
Missouri Amendment 2, Medical Marijuana and Veteran Healthcare Services Initiative (2018)
Missouri Amendment 3, Medical Marijuana and Biomedical Research and Drug Development Institute Initiative (2018)
Missouri Proposition C, Medical Marijuana and Veterans Healthcare Services, Education, Drug Treatment, and Public Safety Initiative (2018)
Amendment 2 taxes cannabis at 4%, Amendment 3 taxes it at 15%, Proposition C taxes it at 2%.
North Dakota Measure 3, Marijuana Legalization and Automatic Expungement Initiative (2018)
Ohio Issue 1, Drug and Criminal Justice Policies Initiative (2018)
Oregon Measure 106, Ban Public Funds for Abortions Initiative (2018)
Utah Proposition 2, Medical Marijuana Initiative (2018)
Washington Initiative 940, Police Training and Criminal Liability in Cases of Deadly Force Measure (2018)
Legislative and automatic referrals
Alabama Amendment 1, Ten Commandments Amendment (2018)
California Proposition 2, Use Millionaire's Tax Revenue for Homelessness Prevention Housing Bonds Measure (2018)
California Proposition 7, Permanent Daylight Saving Time Measure (2018)
Hey look, it's Kanye's issue: Colorado Amendment A, Removal of Exception to Slavery Prohibition for Criminals Amendment (2018)
Colorado Amendment X, Definition of Industrial Hemp Amendment (2018)
I think one of our ACs complained about this mess: Florida Amendment 11, Repeal Prohibition on Aliens’ Property Ownership, Delete Obsolete Provision on High-Speed Rail, and Repeal of Criminal Statutes' Effect on Prosecution Amendment (2018)
Hawaii Constitutional Convention Question (2018)
Louisiana Amendment 1, Felons Disqualified to Run for Office for Five Years Amendment (2018)
Nevada Question 2, Sales Tax Exemption for Feminine Hygiene Products Measure (2018)
New Hampshire Question 2, Right to Live Free from Governmental Intrusion in Private and Personal Information Amendment (2018)
South Dakota Constitutional Amendment X, Constitutional Amendments Require a 55 Percent Supermajority (2018)
South Dakota Constitutional Amendment Z, Single-Subject Rule for Constitutional Amendments (2018)
West Virginia Amendment 1, No Right to Abortion in Constitution Measure (2018)
I plan to submit a story focusing only on ballot initiatives, measures, propositions, amendments, etc. Last time around, I submitted a story before the election. This time, I think I will do it after the results are in so we can see what succeeded and what failed.
If there's a specific ballot measure you want to see mentioned, please let me know below in the comments.
Russian Orthodox Church severs links with Constantinople
In a major religious split, the Russian Orthodox Church has cut ties with the body seen as the spiritual authority of the world's Orthodox Christians.
The break came after the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople recognised the independence of the Ukrainian Church from Moscow.
The row is being described as the greatest Orthodox split since the schism with Catholicism in 1054.
Relations soured after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.
Many Ukrainians accuse the Russian Church of siding with Russia-backed separatists in the east.
Russia sees Kiev as the historic cradle of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Church now fears losing many of its 12,000 parishes in Ukraine.
Constantinople holds sway over more than 300 million Orthodox Christians across the world. The Russian Orthodox Church is by far the biggest.
Also at Reuters and The Guardian.
See also: Archbishop’s defiance threatens Putin’s vision of Russian greatness
China’s Media Crackdown Spreads to Hong Kong
Hong Kong’s expulsion of a British journalist after he led a foreign correspondents’ meeting with a pro-independence activist is, first and foremost, an attempt by Beijing to tamp down any dissent in the former British colony.
Hong Kong officials have not given a reason for rejecting a journalist visa for Victor Mallet, the Asia news editor for The Financial Times. China’s only comment has been that Hong Kong authorities are within their right to do so. But that’s the typical legalistic evasiveness of authoritarian regimes when they do something they know is hard and embarrassing to defend.
The authorities have never criticized Mr. Mallet’s reporting. But he was the main spokesman for the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents’ Club in August when it hosted a talk by Andy Chan, head of a political party that called for Hong Kong’s independence from China. Hong Kong and Beijing officials blasted the event in advance and subsequently banned the party.
Beijing took back control of Hong Kong from the British in 1997 after nearly a century of colonial rule, and agitation toward independence has never pleased China’s leadership. Hong Kong as an “inalienable” part of China is written into the territory’s Basic Law.
UK says Hong Kong rejection of FT journalist visa politically motivated
Tennessee death row inmate wants electric chair as 'lesser of two evils'
A condemned Tennessee inmate wants to die in the electric chair, rather than by lethal injection, calling electrocution the “lesser of two evils,” his lawyer said.
Edmund George Zagorski, 63, is set to pay the ultimate price on Thursday for the 1983 slayings of John Dotson and Jimmy Porter — 35-year-old victims who were planning to buy 100 pounds of marijuana from Zagorski.
Lethal injection is the primary form of execution in Tennessee, but inmates whose offenses happened before January 1999 may opt for the electric chair.
The Volunteer State is one of nine that still includes the electric chair as a form of execution.
Kelley Henry, Zagorki's defense lawyer, said lethal injection is a long, brutal process that can take up to 18 minutes.
“Faced with the choice of two unconstitutional methods of execution, Mr. Zagorski has indicated that if his execution is to move forward, he believes that the electric chair is the lesser of two evils,” Henry said. “Ten to 18 minutes of drowning, suffocation and chemical burning is unspeakable.”
Use of the electric chair is rare, with just 14 of the 871 executions happening via electrocution since 2000, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. The last electrocution was in Virginia in January 2013.
Rumor: New PlayStation 5 Feature Revealed
Earlier this week, a new patent filed by Sony suggested that it is planning on adding backwards compatibility to the PlayStation 5. Now, another patent has surfaced revealing possibly another feature the system will have.
Filed back in May by Sony Interactive Entertainment, and approved just a few days ago, the patent appears to suggest that hardware V-Sync will ship with the next Sony console.
Titled "Video Frame Rate Compensation Through Adjustment of Vertical Blanking," the patent is pretty extensive, but in short, it should help games run better on the system.
Great, patents for backward compatibility and V-Sync. WTF?
Elon Musk’s Ultimatum to Tesla: Fight the S.E.C., or I Quit
The SEC’s “Punishment” of Elon Musk Is Exactly What Tesla Needed
Tesla Is 2 Years Ahead Of Schedule On Gigafactory 1
Tesla will screen 'Cars 3' at Gigafactory as thank you to employees
The Future We Need — From The Tesla Gigafactory To A Chain Of Terafactories
Thrown in here to avoid Tesla fatigue.
Three weeks ago, I got a call from my brother. He said that Mom had fallen and that my Mom's roommate wanted to call an ambulance. I didn't think too much of it. Maybe a broken bone at worst. Anyways, the ambulance took her to the hospital. I called the Emergency department at the hospital an hour later and they said that they think she had a stroke and that I should get there ASAP.
I live close to the hospital, so I was able to get there in about 10 minutes. I was rushed in and was sat down by a doctor who explained that my Mom had a pretty severe stroke caused by a blood clot blocking the artery delivering blood to the right side of the brain (affecting the left side of her body).
The doctor was a researcher and said that he was working on some sort of medicine that (as I understand it) messes with the cell death process with the hope of keeping more of the brain alive that would otherwise have survived without the drug. It was still in trials, so it was a double-blind test and we wouldn't even know if my mom got the drug or a saline solution until some time next year.
Anyways, we (my siblings and I) decided to try it out. It was weird to be deciding something like that on behalf of my Mom. Hopefully we decided right. During all of this, my mom was in surgery to remove the clot. They were able to successfully remove it and she was moved to the acute stroke unit.
It was jarring to see my mom in that condition. She acted like she was pretty heavily sedated, although she was not. While she was able to move the left side of her body (hands and feet), she was extremely weak. She could not hold her arm up for more than a couple seconds. Her face was droopy and it was hard to understand her.
It's been three weeks now since that night. She has since been moved to a short-medium term care facility that feels like a nursing home. They take excellent care of her there and she has been recovering well. She can walk unassisted for very short distances (like 20ft) and further with a walker.
I think that she will be able to mostly recover in the coming weeks and months and should be able to go back to living alone at home.
I am noticing some changes though other than the expected weakness in the left half of her body. She seems to be laking emotion. I don't know how to describe it, but she just seems flat. I don't think she has laughed once since the stroke. She smiles, but it doesn't seem to be a genuine smile. I don't think she has cried despite the life changing event.
My siblings and I all agree though that she has gotten funnier. It's like a little bit of that filter is gone, so the makes some quite funny observations.
I am SO SO SO thankful for our Canadian health care. The doctors and nurses have all been amazing and patient. They took the time to make sure I knew what was going on despite them probably telling the same thing to my brother/sister earlier that day. The nurses have been caring and kind. The hospital stay, operation, drugs, short-term care facility, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, meals, and nursing care is all covered. The only thing we have had to pay for is parking. We are very fortunate.
So, that's why I've been kinda missing here the last few weeks.