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2 years ago
...Waiting for the fish to bite or waiting for wind to fly a kite. Or waiting around for Friday night or waiting perhaps for their Uncle Jake or a pot to boil or a better break or a string of pearls or a pair of pants or a wig with curls or another chance. Everyone is just waiting...
-Dr. Seuss
On any given night in Los Angeles County, 73,000 people are homeless. Over 10,000 are children under the age of 18. Almost 8,500 are veterans. There's no doubt: these statistics are disturbing. Yet, knowing the numbers is a crucial tool in our work to end homelessness. But how do we know these numbers? Where do they come from?
Every two years, LAHSA coordinates a study about homelessness in the City & County of Los Angeles. We need to find updated data about what homelessness looks like in our communities. How many homeless people are there? How did they become homeless? What do they need to obtain stable, permanent housing?
Much of our data is collected by volunteers, who donate one evening to help end homelessness. The 2009 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count is coming up in January. Will you join us?
New tools equal new perceptions.
Through science we create technology and in using our new tools we recreate ourselves. But until very recently in our history, no democratic populace, no legislative body, ever indicated by choice, by vote, how this process should play out.
Nobody ever voted for printing. Nobody ever voted for electricity. Nobody ever voted for radio, the telephone, the automobile, the airplane, television. Nobody ever voted for penicillin, antibiotics, the pill. Nobody ever voted for space travel, massively parallel computing, nuclear power, the personal computer, the Internet, email, cell phones, the Web, Google, cloning, sequencing the entire human genome. We are moving towards the redefinition of life, to the edge of creating life itself. While science may or may not be the only news, it is the news that stays news.
And our politicians, our governments? Always years behind, the best they can do is play catch up.
Nobel laureate James Watson, who discovered the DNA double helix, and genomics pioneer J. Craig Venter, recently were awarded Double Helix Awards from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory for being the founding fathers of human genome sequencing. They are the first two human beings to have their complete genetic information decoded.
Watson noted during his acceptance speech that he doesn't want government involved in decisions concerning how people choose to handle information about their personal genomes.
Venter is on the brink of creating the first artificial life form on Earth. He has already announced transplanting the information from one genome into another. In other words, your dog becomes your cat. He has privately alluded to important scientific progress in his lab, the result of which, if and when realized, will change everything.
WHAT WILL CHANGE EVERYTHING?
"What game-changing scientific ideas and developments do you expect to live to see?"
—John Brockman
Editor and Publisher
"Mejia was the first person to die in Riverside County this year, coroner officials said." --CBS News
Coroner’s File Number: 2009-00001
Name of Deceased: MEJIA, Edward
Sex/Age of Deceased: 17 yr. old male
City of Residence: Riverside
Date/Time of Death: 01/01/09 at 0110 hours
Location of Death: N/B I-215, Just N. of Van Buren Blvd., Riverside
Date/Time of Injury: 01/01/09 at 0058 hours
Location of Injury: N/B I-215, Just N. of Van Buren Blvd., Riverside
Next of Kin Notified (Y/N): Yes
Agency Investigating: CHP - Riverside
Comments: Operator of pick-up truck that struck a sedan, was ejected and then struck by another sedan.
Date/Time Posted: 01/01/09 09:36 AM