Monday, July 25, 2022

LIVING LONGER...Let's see what that would like

 Ready?

What a Body Built to Last 100 Years Would Look Like

We would look a lot different if evolution had designed the human body to work well for a century or more

Scientific American

Read when you’ve got time to spare.

person on skateboard being pulled by dog

Photo by Malte Mueller/Getty Images

  • The process of human evolution has resulted in bodies that are optimized for successful reproduction and child-rearing but are not necessarily designed for healthy, long lives.
  • Medical problems associated with aging are often described as diseases that are our own fault, but it is unfair to blame people for inheriting bodies that were not designed for extended use. We can shorten our lives, but not prolong them indefinitely.
  • If humans were built primarily for longevity and perpetual health, our anatomies and even our bodies' molecular processes would look very different than they currently do.
  • The single-minded pursuit of life extension could actually be harmful to our species' long-term survival.

Bulging disks, fragile bones, fractured hips, torn ligaments, varicose veins, cataracts, hearing loss, hernias and hemorrhoids: the list of bodily malfunctions that plague us as we age is long and all too familiar. Why do we fall apart just as we reach what should be the prime of life?

The living machines we call our bodies deteriorate because they were not designed for extended operation and because we now push them to function long past their warranty period. The human body is artistically beautiful and worthy of all the wonder and amazement it evokes. But from an engineer's perspective, it is a complex network of bones, muscles, tendons, valves and joints that are directly analogous to the fallible pulleys, pumps, levers and hinges in machines. As we plunge further into our postreproductive years, our joints and other anatomical features that serve us well or cause no problems at younger ages reveal their imperfections. They wear out or otherwise contribute to the health problems that become common in the later years.

In evolutionary terms, we harbor flaws because natural selection, the force that molds our genetically controlled traits, does not aim for perfection or endless good health. If a body plan allows individuals to survive long enough to reproduce (and, in humans and various other organisms, to raise their young), then that plan will be selected. That is, individuals robust enough to reproduce will pass their genes—and therefore their body design—to the next generation. Designs that seriously hamper survival in youth will be weeded out (selected against) because most affected individuals will die before having a chance to produce offspring. More important, anatomical and physiological quirks that become disabling only after someone has reproduced will spread. For example, if a body plan leads to total collapse at age 50 but does not interfere with earlier reproduction, the arrangement will get passed along despite the harmful consequences late in life.

Had we been crafted for extended operation, we would have fewer flaws capable of making us miserable in our later days. Evolution does not work that way, however. Instead it cobbles together new features by tinkering with existing ones in a way that would have made Rube Goldberg proud.

The upright posture of humans is a case in point. It was adapted from a body plan that had mammals walking on all fours. This tinkering undoubtedly aided our early hominid ancestors: standing on our own two feet is thought to have promoted everything from food gathering and tool use to enhanced intelligence. Our backbone has since adapted somewhat to the awkward change: the lower vertebrae have grown bigger to cope with the increased vertical pressure, and our spine has curved a bit to keep us from toppling over. Yet these fixes do not ward off an array of problems that arise from our bipedal stance.


What If?
The three of us have pondered what the human body would look like had it been constructed specifically for a healthy long life. The anatomical revisions depicted on these pages are fanciful and incomplete. Nevertheless, we present them to draw attention to a serious point. Aging is frequently described as a disease that can be reversed or eliminated. Indeed, many purveyors of youth-in-a-bottle would have us believe that the medical problems associated with aging are our own fault, arising primarily from our decadent lifestyles. Certainly any fool can shorten his or her life. But it is grossly unfair to blame people for the health consequences of inheriting a body that lacks perfect maintenance and repair systems and was not built for extended use or perpetual health. Our bodies would still wear out over time even if some mythical, ideal lifestyle could be identified and adopted.

This reality means that aging and many of its accompanying disorders are neither unnatural nor avoidable. No simple interventions can make up for the countless imperfections that permeate our anatomy and are revealed by the passage of time. We are confident, however, that researchers will be able to ease some of the maladies of aging. Investigators are rapidly identifying (and discerning the function of) our myriad genes, developing pharmaceuticals to control them, and learning how to harness and enhance the extraordinary repair capabilities that already exist inside our bodies. These profound advances will eventually help compensate for many of the design flaws contained within us all.


Health and Longevity
Our research interest in redesigning the Homo sapiens body is a reaction to the health and mortality consequences of growing old. We focus on anatomical “oddities” and “design flaws” not only because they would be familiar to most readers, but because they represent a small sample of lethal and disabling conditions that threaten the length and quality of life. It is important to recognize that we live in a world in which human ingenuity has made it possible for an unprecedented number of people to grow old. Our redesign goal is thus to draw attention to the health consequences associated with the aging of individuals and populations.

Even the term “flaw” requires clarification. Living things, and everything they make, eventually fail. The cause of failure is a flaw only when the failure is premature. A race car that fails beyond the end of the race has no engineering flaws. In the same way, bodies that fail in the postreproductive span of life may contain numerous design oddities, but they have no design flaws as far as evolution goes.

There are countless other aspects of human biology that would merit modification if health and longevity were nature's primary objective. For example, gerontologists theorize that aging is caused, in part, by a combination of the molecular damage that inevitably arises from operating the machinery of life within cells and the imperfect mechanisms for molecular surveillance, maintenance and repair that permit damage to accumulate over time. If this view of the aging process is correct, then modifying these molecular processes to lessen the severity or accumulation of damage, or to enhance the maintenance and repair processes, should have a beneficial impact on health and longevity. These wondrous modifications, however, would have little effect unless the common sense that is needed to avoid destructive lifestyles becomes more widespread among people.

Living things are exceedingly complex, and experience teaches us that undesirable consequences invariably arise whenever humans have taken over the reins of evolution to modify organisms (microbes, plants and animals) to suit their purposes. The most worrisome trade-off for genetic manipulation directed toward living longer would be an extension of frailty and disability rather than an extension of youthful health and vitality.

Though cobbled together by the blind eye of evolution, humans have proved to be a remarkably successful species. We have outcompeted almost every organism that we have encountered, with the notable exception of microbes. We have blanketed the earth and even walked on the moon. We have even figured out how to escape premature death and survive to old age.

At this point in history, we need to exploit our expanding knowledge of evolution to enhance the quality of our lives as we grow older because the single-minded pursuit of life extension without considering health extension could be disastrous.

Our fanciful designs of anatomically “fixed” humans are not intended as a realistic exercise in biomechanical engineering. Given what is known today about human aging, if the task of designing a healthy, long-lived human from scratch were given to a team comprising the father of evolution, Charles Darwin, the great painter Michelangelo, and the master engineer and scientist Leonardo da Vinci, they most certainly would have fashioned a living machine that differs from the one we now occupy. Indeed, anyone who tries his hand at redesign would probably construct a human body that would look unlike the ones we have created on these pages. Yet we invoke this approach as an instructive way of communicating the important message from evolutionary theory that, to a significant degree, the potential length of our lives and, to a lesser degree, the duration of health and vitality are genetic legacies from our ancient ancestors, who needed to mature quickly to produce children before they were killed by the hostile forces of nature.


S. Jay Olshansky, Bruce A. Carnes and the late Robert N. Butler shared an enduring interest in the processes that underlie human aging. Olshansky is professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Carnes is professor in the Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatric Medicine at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. Butler, who died in 2010, was president of the International Longevity Center in New York City and founding director of the National Institute on Aging.

Aging: A Natural History. Robert E. Ricklefs and Caleb E. Finch. Scientific American Library, W. H. Freeman, 1995.

Cheating Time: Science, Sex, and Aging. Roger Gosden. W. H. Freeman, 1996.

A Means to an End: The Biological Basis of Aging and Death. William R. Clark. Oxford University Press, 1999.

Aging: The Paradox of Life. Robin Holliday. Springer, 2007.

How Long Must Humans Live? Bruce A. Carnes and T. M. Witten in , Vol. 69, No. 8, pages 965–970; August 2014. Journals of Gerontology: Biological Sciences

BUYING LOCATION DATA IN BULK (Report today in Techdirt)

 

Thanks To ACLU FOIA Requests, We Now Have More Details On The DHS’s Warrantless Acquisition Of Location Data

from the keep-those-'narrow-holdings'-coming,-SCOTUS! dept

Four years ago, the Supreme Court took a long look at the wealth of data generated by cell phones and made a good call. It said warrantless access to months of cell site location data was an unreasonable search. If cops wanted weeks or months of cell site location info, they’d need a warrant going forward.

But the holding was case-specific. While other courts have read the Supreme Court decision to have altered the contours of the Third Party Doctrine, the SCOTUS ruling limited itself to historical collections. It did not address near real-time collection via tower dumps, ping orders, or the misuse of trace/trace orders to obtain location info.

Law enforcement agencies saw the things they liked about this narrow holding and ran with them. The ruling only seemed to apply to obtaining cell site location info from cell service providers. Left unaddressed was the market created by data brokers who obtain location info from cell phone apps and provide bulk access to law enforcement agencies.

Who needs a warrant when you have willing private sector suppliers? That’s the thought process governing federal agencies’ continuous (and ever-expanding) utilization of third-party services hoovering data from other third party services to help government employees evade warrant requirements by giving them access to information they’re at least two steps removed from accessing directly.

Federal agencies love this unregulated, un-court-tested source of location data. CBP, ICE, the US Secret Service, the Department of Defense, and (somewhat disturbingly given the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade) the CDC have all purchased data from data brokers.

DHS components have already expressed their love for this constitutional workaround. Here’s one more to add to the list, as reported by Joseph Cox for Motherboard.

Recently released documents show in new detail how parts of the Department of Homeland Security have been using surveillance tools built on smartphone location data as part of investigations across the United States, including in multiple field offices and for a variety of different crimes.

The documents, obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) as part of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit, provide the clearest picture yet of where, and why, law enforcement agencies have used tools like Venntel and Locate X, which are based on location data harvested from ordinary smartphone apps installed on peoples’ phones. The documents also show that some parts of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) have used one of the tools to help state and local law enforcement.

HSI, like other government agencies, apparently has no problem doing business with a company currently facing a congressional investigation. According to the communications obtained by the ACLU, HSI uses the data to pursue criminal investigations related to smuggling (of humans or other contraband). The emails also indicate third-party location data obtained from brokers is of limited utility since it usually takes another round of searches (and a subpoena) to obtain identifying info.

But, more worryingly/interestingly, internal communications show HSI agents weren’t entirely sure this skirting of warrant requirements was actually legal. This is from the ACLU’s roundup of its latest release of FOIA’ed documents:

In scattered emails, some DHS employees raised concerns, with internal briefing documents even acknowledging that “[l]egal, policy, and privacy reviews have not always kept pace with the new and evolving technologies.” Indeed, in one internal email, a senior director of privacy compliance flagged that the DHS Office of Science & Technology appeared to have purchased access to Venntel even though a required Privacy Threshold Assessment was never approved. Several email threads highlight internal confusion in the agency’s privacy office and potential oversight gaps in the use of this data — to the extent that all projects involving Venntel data were temporarily halted because of unanswered privacy and legal questions.

Not that this minor internal crisis of constitutionality mattered. The documents make it clear DHS ignored these concerns to continue buying location data in bulk. And bulky, it was. A spreadsheet obtained by the ACLU shows CBP (just one DHS agency buying location data) obtained 113,654 location points covering a three day span in 2018: more than 26 location points per minute. And that was just from one area in the Southwest United States. DHS and its components have access (via data brokers) to location data covering the entire nation, as well as data points gathered beyond our borders.

Data brokers aren’t going to stop data brokering. Government agencies aren’t going to stop finding ways to route around minor inconveniences like Supreme Court precedent or the US Constitution. That leaves it up to Congress to fix it. There’s work being done on that end, at least, but we have a long way to go before this unaddressed location data loophole will stop being exploited by agencies who feel the best use of taxpayers dollars is to seek ways to bypass protections handed to citizens by other branches of the government.

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Latter-Day Government: 'Saints-and-Sinners' Expand Their Holdings in Finance, Insurance & Real Estate

It might have started in Salt Lake City in the 19th Century but it didn't stay there.
Six or seven generations later, the quest to establish The Kingdom of Deseret and The New Zion has morphed into a massive expansion using control of local governments and municipal resources as a springboard for expansion annexing more land all the time and/or gaining entitlements and development rights to extensive acres of land and more territory over time.
Here in Arizona it's The East Valley.
_________________________________________________________________________
Back in 2012 there was a short Photo Essay
Here's the link to the source https://www.bloomberg.com/news/photo-essays
Visions of America
The Mormon Global Business Empire
Holy Holdings
"Mormons make up only 1.4 percent of the U.S. population, but the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is remarkable for its varied business interests, which include cattle ranches, radio stations, an insurance business, a mall, sewage treatment, and a Polynesian theme park."
Agriculture
The Mormon Church reportedly owns over 1 million acres in continental America on which it runs farms, ranches, orchards, and hunting preserves. It also owns farmland in Australia, the U.K., Brazil, Canada, Argentina, and Mexico. The fruit orchards in Utah's Capitol Reef National Park (pictured) were planted by Mormon pioneers in the 1880s
Deseret Ranch
The 290,000-acre Deseret Ranch in Florida keeps 44,000 cows and 1,300 bulls. It also includes 1,700 acres of citrus trees, as well as timber, sod, and a fossilized-seashell business
City Creek Center
This March, the Mormon Church opened a megamall across the street from its neo-Gothic temple in Salt Lake City. The estimated cost of the emporium, which features a retractable glass roof and fountains that spew choreographed bouts of water and fire, is $2 billion.
Real Estate
Besides malls, the church's businesses include owning and managing office parks, residential buildings, parking lots, and more
Hawaii Reserves
One of its for-profit arms, Hawaii Reserves, even runs a water management company, sewage treatment works, and two cemeteries.
Insurance
The church's Beneficial Life Insurance Company in 2010 had assets worth $3.3 billion and a net income of $17 million, according to the State of Utah Insurance Department.
Media
The church holding company, Deseret Management, owns several media subsidiaries that run a newspaper, a TV station, 11 radio stations, a publishing and distribution company, and more. Last year, the church sold 17 radio stations for $505 million to better focus on Internet ventures
Ensign Peak Advisors
Ensign Peak Advisors is an investment fund of the Mormon Church. According to profiles on LinkedIn, managers at Ensign Peak specialize in international equities, cash management, fixed income, quantitative investment, and emerging markets. One of Ensign Peak's vice presidents in 2006 told the Deseret News that "billions of dollars change hands every day."
_________________________________________________________________________
Latter-Day Government in at least one municipality here in Arizona got over-ruled yesterday by a higher authority - the United States 9th Circuit Court, established in 1891.
The government offered testimony to argue that the church ran the government and the government was part of the church.
In its appeal, Colorado City argued that the government could not be found guilty absent a showing that the town was liable for the actions of its officers and agents. That was denied.
_________________________________________________________________________
“The plain text of (the law) shows that any government agent who engages in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives persons of their constitutional rights violates (the law),” . . . it was clear that Congress, in enacting the law, intended for local governments to be held liable when their employees act in unconstitutional ways."
_________________________________________________________________________________
BLOGGER NOTE: The court clearly found that the city's government [and government agents] engaged in a pattern or practice of conduct  of discrimination based on religion.
Let's give that a name: Latter-Day Government
In essence, the 9th Circuit Court said that the governments functioned as an arm of the church and used municipal resources to advance church interests.
> City leaders who didn't follow order were 'excommunicated'.
> The church determined who would be mayor and council members
> The church ran the government and the government was part of the church.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THIS???...Southeast Mesa's New Suburban Main Street: Gallery Park

It's called 'a New Urban Village' where a projected 3,000 residents can Live Work & Play on 60 acres located at Power and Ray roads and the Loop 202 freeway at the edge of Gilbert near the near Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport. Phoenix-based VIVO Partners wants to bring retail, residential, offices and logistics space to the Gallery Park development. The proposed development requires Mesa to annex the currently unincorporated land and rezone it from agriculture to commercial use.
Another way to look at the proposal is to call it 'An inspired urban lifestyle experience' . Looks like it could be everything that hasn't been made to happen in Downtown Mesa that's going to get transplanted to Suburbia:
Gallery Park’s Art Program makes this mixed-use development unlike any in the Valley. The development team’s vision is to expose residents to the arts by showcasing an eclectic art-walk experience which includes wall murals, exterior fixed and interactive art installations, and revolving art displays featuring emerging local artists creating their new pieces live, on site. Gallery Park will also require each office building, and encourage the hotels, to display art within their entry lobbies. Restaurants will also be strongly encouraged to participate by displaying artwork compatible with their unique identities.

Vivo Partners plans massive million-square-foot development in Mesa
Real Estate | 26 Nov, 2018 |
Gallery Park will include approximately 400,000 square feet of Class A office, two hotels, 420 luxury apartment units and condos situated above restaurant/retail space and a movie theater, or other entertainment uses. At full build-out, it is expected to be home to more than 3,000 employees and residents.
“Location is key when selecting a site for projects, and Mesa’s Gateway Area is ideal for Gallery Park,” Mayor John Giles said. “Southeast Mesa is still growing fast and bringing an entire, 40-acre, community with jobs, homes, entertainment and art that focuses on placemaking is a great fit.” 
With easy-access and visibility from Loop 202, Gallery Park is within a five-mile radius of more than 223,000 consumers with a household income of more than $101,000. Within a 10-mile radius are more than 920,000 people. The development is minutes from the Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport and Arizona State University’s Polytechnic Campus.



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Here's what
“I have friends, family and two business partners who all live in the Southeast Valley and are tired of driving 30 to 60 minutes to find culinary-inspired places to eat next to great, energetic gathering spaces.” said Jose Pombo, Development Partner at VIVO Partners. “Gallery Park will be a first-of-its-kind social destination that weaves art within a curated mix of tenants to create a genuinely cool vibe that Southeast Valley residents have been craving.”
 

Report from The Nation

 

The Arizona Prison System Is Censoring The Nation. We’re Doing Something About It.

Arizona prison authorities are stopping incarcerated people from reading The Nation. We’re working with the ACLU’s National Prison Project to assert their First Amendment rights.

Unless you are a publisher—or happen to be reading this in prison—you may be unfamiliar with the “Exclusion Notice” that prison authorities use to justify the withholding of magazines and other printed matter from incarcerated subscribers. Over the past several months, we at The Nation have received a number of these notices from the Office of Publication Review (OPR) at the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation, and Reentry. True to its Orwellian name, the explanations the OPR provides for banning a given issue are always vague and lacking any specific citation of allegedly offending material. Our April 5/12, 2021, issue, for example, was suppressed because it allegedly “Promotes Superiority of One Group Over Another, Racism, Degradation” and “Acts of Violence.” Since they gave no further detail, we can only assume the authorities objected to the cover story, “Black Immigrants Matter.” Our July 26/August 2, 2021, issue, devoted to “This Way to Utopia: Dreams of a Better World,” was excluded on the grounds that it might “Encourage Sexual or Hostile Behaviors.” The June 13/20, 2022, issue, with a cover story profiling former Maine governor Paul LePage, was also banned for alleged racism. As a one-off, such egregious misreading might be funny. Almost. But Malcolm X says in his Autobiography that reading in prison “changed forever the course of my life”—as it has for countless other prisoners. So when the notices kept coming, we decided to do something about it.

Working with the ACLU’s National Prison Project, we’ve asked the Arizona authorities to release the suppressed issues, and to ensure that administrators at each prison understand that publications such as The Nation “may not be banned simply because they are reporting acts of current or historic racism.” The ACLU’s letter also demands “continued respect for the First Amendment rights of incarcerated persons and those on the outside who wish to communicate with them.”

“The freedom to read is essential to our democracy,” proclaims the American Library Association. We couldn’t agree more—and invite any other organizations or publishers who share that view to join our fight.

Stop and think if anyone ever says this

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