Society's Child
So why is cyberbullying on the rise?
Brain image studies from neuroscientist Molly Crockett's psychology lab showed that the reward center in people's brains shifts to high gear when they respond to moral outrage. The behavior makes them feel good, so people tend to express moral outrage again. Challenging social norms entails risks because people may direct their anger on the attacker. But Crockett's lab found that it also boosts the attacker's reputation.
Senate Bill 63 would expand the state's ban on tobacco use in government-owned spaces to include the interior and immediate exterior of many businesses.
The Alaska Senate approved S.B. 63 in March 2017. The state's lower chamber approved the bill in May 2018 and sent it to Gov. Bill Walker for consideration.
Lost in the Smoke
Ninos Malek, a professor of economics at De Anza College, says the rights of property owners typically get ignored in debates about smoking bans.

US Air Force F-16 fighter jets take part in a joint drills at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea last December. The war games are set to end, but will the US fully withdraw from the peninsula?
The Trump-Kim geopolitical reality-TV show - surreal for some - offered unparalleled entries to the annals of international diplomacy. It will be tough to upstage the US President pulling an iPad and showing Kim Jong-un the cheesy trailer of a straight-to-video 1980s B-grade action movie - complete with a Sylvester Stallone cameo - casting the two leaders as heroes destined to save the world's 7 billion people.
Away from the TV, the former "Rocket Man", now respectfully recast in Trump terminology as "Chairman Kim", did strike a formidable coup by completely erasing the dreaded acronym CVID - or "complete, verifiable, irreversible denuclearization" - from the final text of the Singapore joint statement.
If a majority of voters who cast ballots agree, a long and contentious process would begin for three separate states to take the place of California, with one primarily centered around Los Angeles and the other two divvying up the counties to the north and south. Completion of the radical plan - far from certain, given its many hurdles at judicial, state and federal levels - would make history.
It would be the first division of an existing U.S. state since the creation of West Virginia in 1863.
The nationwide operation, dubbed "Broken Heart," ended in May. Conducted by Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) taskforces working in all 50 states, the operation was carried out by more than 4,500 law enforcement agencies at federal, state, local and tribal levels.
The operation targeted individuals suspected of producing or possessing child pornography, engaging in online enticement of children for sexual purposes, sex trafficking of children, and traveling across state lines or to foreign countries to sexually abuse children.
"I don't feel neglected today. I don't know who put that Wiki page up, but I think whoever did will have to rethink that," he laughs. "I was shocked. I had completely given up hope that I was going to win it. But I'm over the shock now and enjoying myself - very much."
The International Dublin literary award, previously known as the Impac, operates with a slight air of mystery: a ridiculously long longlist (150 books this year) is picked by librarians around the world, from Barbados to Estonia, who hand their selection over to a panel of authors to bestow the grand boon on one unsuspecting writer.

Beck Dorey-Stein, who admits she had a fling with a White House staffer Jason Wolf, who broke her heart
After answering an Obama administration's Craigslist ad for a stenographer, the then-25-year-old Dorey-Stein quit her five part-time jobs after she was hired to work in the White House in 2012 - joining a pool of 13 reporters from the White House press corps to travel with the president, recording everything he said and then transcribing it for the press office and presidential archive.
'Traveling with the president is like summer camp on steroids - a week on the road is like a year at home', Dorey-Stein writes.
Hundreds of horrified travelers held hands believing they were about to die as the aircraft suddenly dropped over the Pacific Ocean on Sunday.
The dramatic ordeal afflicting passengers on the QF94 from Los Angeles to Melbourne is understood to have been caused by the vortex, or "wake turbulence" caused by another aircraft which took off just two minutes earlier.
QF94 passenger Janelle Wilson told The Australian the "three-quarters-full" plane suddenly entered a "free fall nosedive ... a direct decline towards the ocean" for about 10 seconds.
"It was between 1½ and two hours after we left LA and all of a sudden the plane went through a violent turbulence and then completely up-ended and we were nosediving," Wilson told the newspaper yesterday.
The IDF's actions "highlight the need for the International Criminal Court to open a formal investigation into the situation in Palestine," the New-York-based global human rights watchdog said in a statement on Wednesday.
HRW's call came shortly before the UN General Assembly adopted a nonbinding resolution that condemns Israel's use of excessive force and calls for measures to protect Palestinians in Gaza.
Comment:
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Tamara Pletnyova, head of the family, women and children's affairs committee, argued that even if these relationships led to marriage, women or their children would inevitably be taken abroad by the man.
"Even if they get married, they'll take them away, then she doesn't know how to get back," Ms Pletnyova said on radio station Govorit Moskva. "Then they come to me in the committee, girls crying that their baby was taken away, was taken, and so on.
"I'd like people in our country to marry for love, no matter what nationality as long as they are Russian citizens who will build a family, live peacefully, have children and raise them."
She said women who had babies with foreigners around the time of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow often "suffered" as single mothers.
"It's good if it's one race, but if it's another race, then they really did. We should have our own babies," Ms Pletnyova said.
Comment: The Chairman of the State Duma Committee for Sports, Tourism and Youth, Mikhail Degtyarev, contradicted Pletnyova:
"The more World Cup love stories we have, the more people from different countries will fall in love with that game," Degtyarev said, according to Moskva Agency.
"The more children will be born [from that love], the better. Because many years from now, those children will remember that their parents' love story started here in Russia during the 2018 World Cup. Let's hope that the World Cup will give us many love stories, interracial couples and children."













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