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Tag: barrett

  • Amy Coney Barrett visits SoCal a day after the Supreme Court’s immigration raid ruling

    Jadyn Winsett twisted her new engagement ring around her finger, scanning the sea of navy sport coats, sailor stripes and string pearls at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library for a glimpse of a Supreme Court justice.

    Across the room stood Amy Coney Barrett, the high court’s youngest member, who could hardly have picked a more dramatic moment to turn up.

    A day earlier, Barrett joined the conservative majority in a decision that cleared federal immigration agents to detain people in Southern California simply because they have brown skin or speak Spanish.

    The response across much of Los Angeles was outrage and concern that the 4th Amendment has been trampled.

    But at the Reagan Library, the mood was triumphant.

    Winsett, 23, and her fiance were among the admirers who gathered to hear Barrett speak about her new memoir, “Listening to the Law.” For the supporters who turned up, Barrett evokes values cherished by President Trump’s faith-driven acolytes: beatific motherhood, Southern charm, Christian piety and steadfast constitutional originalism.

    A Texas native, Winsett’s partner had popped the question two days before at Yosemite National Park. She said the proposal was the highlight of the couple’s California holiday. But the chance to meet Barrett at Reagan’s final resting place was a close second.

    “I sent [my fiance] so many text messages in the span of a couple minutes just being excited that this event was going on, and we had to come,” Winsett said. “I’m a really big fan of Justice Scalia … so knowing [Barrett’s] book is supposed to bit of an expansion on Justice Scalia’s ‘Reading Law,’ that’s gonna be really cool. “

    Jadyn Winsett, left, and Reese Johnson, a newly engaged couple from Texas, planned their trip to attend the justice’s book launch.

    (Al Seib / For The Times)

    Barrett said almost nothing about her controversial rise to the court or the jurisprudence behind her most contested decisions during Tuesday’s event, instead dishing out details about Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh’s race with the Nationals’ foam-headed Lincoln and Roosevelt mascots and how she’d brought Starbucks coffee to the Supreme Court cafeteria.

    But the previous day’s immigration raid ruling still hovered in the air.

    When asked to explain the court’s “shadow docket”, she ad-libbed a hypothetical all but identical to Monday’s real decision.

    “Let’s say that some policy of the administration has been enjoined,” Barrett said. “The administration might say, ‘While we are litigating this case, having this injunction in place is irreparably harming us in a way we can’t recover from, so in the interim, please stay this injunction.’”

    A packed room listens and watches monitors

    A packed room listens and watches monitors as Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett takes questions at the launch of her new book.

    (Al Seib / For The Times)

    Later, when asked about constitutional interpretation, she opined about the slippery text of the 4th Amendment, the same amendment implicated in Monday’s unsigned order.

    “[Look at] the protection against unreasonable search and seizures,” she invited the audience.

    “When you have a word like that, ‘unreasonable,’ there’ll be a range where everybody will say, outside of this, we all agree this is unreasonable,” Barrett explained. “Then, there’s a range right here where we all say this is reasonable. But then there’s going to be a band where there’s room for disagreement. One of the great things about the Constitution is that it leaves some of that play in the joints.”

    People line up near sundown at the Reagan Library.

    People line up to get their book signed at the Reagan Library.

    (Al Seib / For The Times)

    Earlier in the evening, Barrett and her husband, Jesse, had paid their respects at the Reagan Memorial and briefly admired the chunk of Berlin Wall, flanked by a coterie of federal agents while protests raged outside.

    Many in the crowd said they, like the Catholic justice, were devout Christian believers and credited her with casting the decisive vote to end abortion as a constitutional right in the United States.

    “I’m a born-again Christian and I believe it was the hand of God that put her on the court … to be able to overturn Roe vs. Wade,” said Glovioell Dixon of Pasadena, who’d arrived hours before the program to beat the crowds.

    Others were taken with Barrett’s command of the law — several mentioned the fact she’d barely used notes at her confirmation hearing — and her poise under pressure.

    “She’s one of the smartest people I’ve ever observed,” said Elizabeth Pierce of Newbury Park, the lone red baseball cap in a field of cognac loafers and Chanel-inspired skirt suits. “This is the chance of a lifetime.”

    A few even credited the justice for realizing their American dream.

    Sean Chen, 52, of East Los Angeles said he’d just attended his daughter’s medical school white coat ceremony and praised Barrett’s 2023 ruling to strike down race-based affirmative action in the case Fair Admissions vs. Harvard.

    “That’s directly related to the future of my kids,” Chen said. “Without the work from the Supreme Court [overturning affirmative action], maybe I wouldn’t even have that chance.”

    A Chinese immigrant, Chen called the opportunity to learn from one of the nation’s nine law-givers part of his journey to becoming “spiritually American.”

    Barrett divulged little Tuesday about her memoir, for which she was paid $425,000 in 2021, the first tranche of a reported $2-million advance, according to financial disclosures.

    “We’re gonna pray we’re gonna get our books signed!” an event coordinator encouraged those near the back of the line as the sun set over the golden hills.

    Die-hard fans were reminded not to try to snap selfies, though keepsake photos would be taken and could be purchased after the event.

    Two women smile together.

    Julia Quiroz, 23, left, and her mom, Gaby Quiroz, in line waiting to get their book signed by the Supreme Court justice.

    (Al Seib / For The Times)

    Julia Quiroz, 23, waited with her mother to have her book signed.

    “I see her as exemplary in her vocation as a mother,” Quiroz said of Barrett.

    Her mom, Gaby, agreed — mostly.

    As a Catholic, Quiroz said she agrees with Barrett’s rulings on abortion, but despaired of realizing the family’s dream of ending the procedure from coast to coast.

    “She’s going to do the right thing for the country and the law,” Gaby Quiroz said. “I don’t know that her decisions will always align with ours.”

    Other attendees said they were in lockstep with Barrett and her rulings in support of the president’s agenda — whatever its impact on their neighbors.

    “I’m very happy,” said Kevin Rivero of Palmdale. “She is ensuring the president has the power to do what the executive branch is empowered to do. As an L.A. citizen, I’m for it.”

    Dixon, the Pasadena Christian, said she agreed with the Supreme Court’s ruling on immigration raids even though her ex-husband was once an undocumented immigrant, who could have faced deportation had they not gotten married.

    “America’s for everyone. We’re a welcoming country, you know?” Dixon said. “Bring us your poor — what was that saying on the Statue of Liberty? That line? I’m all for that. But do it in a way that honors our country.”

    Sonja Sharp

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  • With their home nestled in the bluffs, this Winona area couple loves its state park feel

    Aug. 21—HOMER, Minn. — Craig Adams and Trina Barrett would love some stories to fill in their imaginations about their property near Winona.

    While they’ve walked and sledded on the horse trails built by a previous owner, Barrett wishes they knew more to the property’s history. Perhaps the farm property could have had a smaller farmhouse cottage or another outbuilding marked by a rock foundation piece today. The abstract starts in 1855 with the current home at 36415 Homer Valley Lane built in 1973.

    “We’d learned that this was an old riding school and that she used to have all these children come and they’d ride,” Adams said. “It’s as though it soaked up all of that laughter and joy and that’s … kind of a spiritual thing, I think. But it’s almost like it just soaked it all up and that’s what it became. It’s just felt very friendly like this is where you’re supposed to have fun and relax.”

    The friendly atmosphere welcomed their sheep, about six or seven ewes, while the couple raised their family. Adams said it was like a dream to see the ram come gently nose to nose with their 1-year-old son. They enjoyed lamb dinners too. The picturesque country property also takes daily work in raising animals and caring for the property.

    “We can buy country properties almost anywhere. But the one thing that’s sad about the world is our country is escaping us, right? And it seems like you have to drive farther and farther to get into the country,” said Century 21 Realtor Sarah Hemker. She added the Homer property is close to Winona, commuting to Rochester and La Crosse or traveling on weekends from the Twin Cities. “… When you’re at the property, you truly feel like you’re 100 miles away.”

    The bluff-surrounded home is set in the natural beauty of the Driftless area on 51.21 acres. They quickly fell in love with the land — only managing to spend a few minutes in the home before deciding this place would be home. They returned to the property as spring dawned, from the apple trees blossoming to the grapevine on the silo and the water of an artisan spring falling over the rocks.

    Adams said “you think of the most beautiful state park you could and then just make it private.” Or reflect on the cottages tucked in the hills of England where he grew up.

    “For me, it had a really calm feeling about it and the way that the bluffs hug the property. They’re not overbearing, they’re not close to you but it just felt like you were so protected,” Adams said. The Mississippi River is also visible from the top of the bluff.

    On the 5 miles of horse trails and looking into the valley, Barrett said most every landscape is stunning. They’ve enjoyed go-kart races, picking mushrooms, running down the bluff, hiding Easter eggs in the gorge and their sons relaxing around their self-built firepit. Hemker said “it’s just absolutely beautiful back in that valley.”

    “We’ll stop and we’ll look around like, ‘this is probably the best spot.’ And then we’ll go and then you know another 20 feet and we’re thinking, ‘well look remember this one, this is really nice too,’” Barrett said. “It’s just that they’re all different in different times of year and for their own reasons.”

    With the land as their first love on the property, Barrett and Adams created their favorite interior home spaces through project after project starting in 2021. They arranged the rooms, such as the kitchen where the living room previously was, for usability and creating a cozy home. The primary bedroom also became a family room.

    “There wasn’t like any really old things left to bring back to life. It had been rebuilt in the 70s with the upstairs level being done in the early 2000s,” Barrett said of the five-bedroom and three-bathroom home. “We weren’t finding wood floors underneath anything.”

    Barrett said “there were times we couldn’t even walk through the house without moving like a table saw.” The main level flooring tied in wood from old barns and cottages and wood stoves brought in warmth. Adams said “we wanted to bring in things like brick and stone and the hardwoods.”

    While guessing at how to layout the rooms, Hemker said the “heart of course is the kitchen” which is a “beautiful, quaint country kitchen.” The kitchen includes a wood stove surrounded by bricks and their main dining spot. There is also a separate dining room.

    “You’ve got this beautiful bank of windows over your kitchen sink that look out to the back pasture and the prairie,” Hemker said. “It’s amazing.”

    It’s also where they soak in the views of dragonflies, wildflowers, butterflies and fireflies. Adams said “it’s just fantastic to see it all come together as nature would have intended” without pesticides.

    After long raising horses, Hemker would delight in horses returning to the property. People could train horses and ride them in the bluffs much like she loves on her farm property in Wisconsin. The property is listed for $1,175,000.

    “If anybody gets the experience to live with their animals, even their dogs, their cats, like we look at them in a different light because they all have such unique personalities and horses are the same way,” Hemker said. “I have jokester horses, I have serious horses. … It’s just funny to see how their personalities develop and how they interact with people too.”

    Though the story of horses at the Homer Valley home is currently a history, Adams and Barrett have added to the legacy of joy with animals and pausing in the beauty.

    “When I looked at this property like just driving through the bluffs there off the river, you come into the valley and you see just the beautiful bluffs, the old barn which was turned into a horse barn. It’s a really nice horse facility for people with box stalls and tie stalls and a tack room,” Hemker said. “It takes you to a different time of life … when I drive on Homer Lane.”

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  • 13 More Things We Just Learned About Final Fantasy VII Rebirth

    13 More Things We Just Learned About Final Fantasy VII Rebirth

    A giant batch of new Final Fantasy VII Rebirth interviews and previews just dropped to kickoff Tokyo Game Show 2023 and the sequel is sounding more promising than ever. Here’s everything we’re learning from Square Enix’s latest marketing bonanza around the upcoming timed PlayStation 5 exclusive.

    The new round of hands-on impressions come from two demos, one taking place during the Nibelheim incident flashback that sees Cloud fighting alongside Sephiroth, and another showing off open-world exploration around the outskirts of Junon, the sea-side military city with a giant gun mounted on it. Writers at IGN, Polygon, GameSpot, and more came away impressed by how the sequel expands on Final Fantasy VII Remake’s world and mechanics, though many are still eager to find out more about how Rebirth will deviate from the original 1997 PlayStation game’s story.

    “As with the previous game, we have strived for the right balance between old and new scenes in Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, but we also tried to take on more new challenges than we did in Final Fantasy VII Remake with some of the new scenes,” producer Yoshinori Kitase told the PlayStation Blog last week. “I am confident these new scenes will be wildly enjoyable for fans and newcomers alike.” Time will tell. For now, here are a bunch of interesting new details going around in today’s previews.

    Pre-order Final Fantasy VII Rebirth: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop


    At 150GB, Rebirth is huge, but you won’t be swapping between two discs

    Image: Square Enix

    Director Naoki Hamaguchi confirmed to Game Informer that the total size of the game on PS5 is 150GB, with 100GB on the first disc and 50GB on the second. Unlike the PS1 version, however, players won’t be swapping discs midway through. Instead, they’ll download the whole thing at once and then be able to play the entire game with either disc inserted.

    The game ends after the Forgotten City

    Aerith unleashes a thunder bolt.

    Image: Square Enix

    Creative director Tetsuya Nomura also confirmed to Game Informer that Rebirth will go up to and include the end of the Forgotten Capital, known as the City of Ancients in the original game. That’s where Aerith dies in the 1997 version, but given how the remake trilogy is messing with the canon, anything could happen this time around.

    You can go on monster hunts

    Cloud looks for monsters at Cosmo Canyon.

    Image: Square Enix

    Like Final Fantasy XII, XV, and XVI, Rebirth will have special enemy hunts out in the sequel’s much more expansive, semi-open world. According to Polygon, players will encounter extra difficult monster variants while exploring that can be defeated in specific ways to earn extra rewards. Hopefully the game uses this to showcase some deep cuts from Final Fantasy VII’s bestiary.

    Synergy Skills and Abilities are like combo techniques from Chrono Trigger

    Barrett and Yuffie unleash a synergy attack.

    Image: Square Enix

    Revealed in the most recent State of Play trailer, party members this time around will have an extra slate of attacks called Synergy Skills. These open up while blocking and allow multiple characters to work together, like Cloud knocking Barrett’s gun fire into nearby enemies. Synergy Abilities are even stronger, and GameSpot likens them to Chrono Trigger’s combo techniques. They basically combine multiple characters’ limit breaks into an extra powerful finisher.

    There’s crafting

    Cloud searches for crafting materials outside Junon.

    Image: Square Enix

    Fortunately, it doesn’t look too menacing. Players can pick up random materials while out in the world and use them to make phoenix downs and other recovery items. It’s not clear how extensive the system will be, but it probably beats running back to town when you run out of potions.

    Sephiroth is playable

    Sephiroth beckons.

    Image: Square Enix

    Players could command Sephiroth for a short bit during the original game’s Nibelheim flashback, and the new demos confirm that’s the case in Rebirth as well. There’s apparently even an extended sequence where he and Cloud team up to fight through enemy hordes, with players able to control the super SOLDIER as he unleashes hell with his giant Masamune blade.

    Vincent is not, but he’ll still fight with you

    Vincent confronts the party.

    Image: Square Enix

    Teased during the latest trailer, IGN confirms the former Turk turned shapeshifting gunslinger can’t be controlled but he’ll still accompany players in the late part of the game as Red XIII did near the end of Remake. Nomura hinted to Game Informer that Vincent may join the player’s party for real by the final game in the trilogy.

    Nobody’s seen Cid yet

    1997 Cid lights a stick of dynamite.

    Image: Square Enix

    The cigarette-smoking, curse-spewing pilot was absent from the latest round of demos. That doesn’t mean he won’t be in the game at all. In the 1997 version’s timeline, Cid joins the crew long before they make it to the City of Ancients. Rebirth has a ton of ground to cover, however. Either Cid is being held back for a later reveal or his content has been moved to a later part of the trilogy’s story.

    Cloud can swim

    Players can get some laps in around Junon if they want, the demos confirmed. Whether there will be anything to discover or fight in the water remains to be seen. Will the spikey-haired punk get an alternate speedo costume? He’d better.

    The Junon dolphin is back

    Swimming will also be crucial for one of the most memorable scenes from the early part of Final Fantasy VII: riding a dolphin to the upper layer of the Junon military base. Simply called Mr. Dolphin in the original, he looks great in 4K and his return shows Square Enix isn’t shying away from the 1997 version’s absurd mini-games.

    Here’s Red XIII riding a chocobo

    I can’t believe this is real.

    You can pet the baby chocobo chicks

    Chocobo breeding returns in Rebirth, complete with blue, green, and golden chocobos. But there are also chocobo chicks, they are adorable, and Cloud can pet them. It’s a beautiful Kodak moment before he hauls them off to the Gold Saucer racetrack.

    Zack will get an entire episode to himself

    Zack holds out for his breakout role.

    Image: Square Enix

    Cloud’s First Class SOLDIER friend had a very minor role in the 1997 game but it expanded significantly in subsequent adaptations and spin-offs, most notably Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core. Kitase told IGN that the black-haired swordsman will be getting a lot more facetime in Rebirth. “There will be a new episode with Zack, that will contain even more of him than the Remake,” he said. “I’m not able to say much more than this as I would like for players to play and experience this with it in their own hands.”

    Pre-order Final Fantasy VII Rebirth: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop

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    Ethan Gach

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  • Adults With Chronic Acid Reflux Rarely Get Recommended Test

    Adults With Chronic Acid Reflux Rarely Get Recommended Test

    Oct. 27, 2022 — Adults who have chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and their primary care doctors may not know they need to be screened for a condition called Barrett’s esophagus, a precursor to cancer of the esophagus. 

    People with GERD are at risk for Barrett’s and cancer of the esophagus. Yet in a survey of 472 adults with GERD, only 13% had ever been advised by their doctor to undergo screening endoscopy and even fewer actually had the imaging test. 

    “These results make it clear that screening is rarely done,” says Jennifer Kolb, MD, with UCLA School of Medicine, who worked on the survey.

    About 20% of people in the United States have GERD, which happens when stomach acid repeatedly flows back into the esophagus, the tube connecting the mouth and stomach. This backflow (acid reflux) can irritate the lining of the esophagus.

    People with GERD may have heartburn, a burning sensation in the back of the throat, chronic cough, laryngitis, and nausea. 

    About 1 in 10 adults with chronic GERD symptoms will develop Barrett’s esophagus – a condition in which the lining of the esophagus becomes damaged by acid reflux. Barrett’s esophagus is associated with a small increased risk of developing cancer of the esophagus. 

    Current guidelines recommend screening for Barrett’s esophagus using endoscopy – in which a long, thin tube is inserted into the body to look for problems — for those at risk, which includes people with chronic GERD along with other risk factors such as being over 50 years old, being male or white, smokers, people with obesity, and those with family history of Barrett’s or cancer of the esophagus. 

    But the current survey shows a clear lack of knowledge about risk factors and indications for Barrett’s screening among adults with GERD. 

    Only about two-thirds correctly identified Barrett’s risk factors and only about 20% believed screening was necessary with GERD. 

    “If you have three or more risk factors, screening should definitely be discussed and considered,” says Prasad Iyer, MD, with Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN.

    Yet this survey shows that patients with GERD “don’t have the knowledge of when they should get medical attention and possibly endoscopy,” adds Seth Gross, MD, with NYU Langone Health in New York City.

    People of color with GERD appear to be most worried about developing Barrett’s but have the highest barriers to completing screening.

    For some people, fear of discomfort with endoscopy is a barrier to getting the test.  

    To perform an endoscopy, a doctor inserts a long, flexible tube with a camera attached down the throat and into the esophagus after giving the patient a sedative. Once the tube is inserted, the doctor can visually inspect the lining of the esophagus and remove a small sample of tissue toconfirm a diagnosis of Barrett’s. 

    However, newer, less invasive screening options are increasingly available or in development.

    One is the so-called Cytosponge, a small, capsule-shaped device the size of a multivitamin. A thin string is connected to a sponge inside the capsule. 

    When swallowed, the capsule dissolves and the sponge expands. The string is then gently pulled to remove the sponge. As it’s removed, the sponge collects cells from the entire length of your esophagus, which are used to make a diagnosis of Barrett’s. 

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