Colorado Landlord Refuses to Rent to Trump Supporters

A landlord in Colorado refuses to rent his two-bedroom apartment to anyone who supports presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Mark Holmes placed an ad in The Nickel, a free paper in Grand Junction, that read, “For rent: Downtown apartment, 2 bedrooms. Includes organic garden space, hot tub, great backyard. You can bring your dogs if they have references as good as yours. If voting for Donald Trump, do not call.”

Holmes explained his reasoning behind the specific political requirement in his ad. He told the Daily Sentinel that he simply doesn’t know what to do anymore about the possibility of a Trump presidency; he does not want to share a roof with anyone who subscribes to Trump’s rhetoric, which includes controversial comments about Muslims, immigrants, and many other groups.

“I’m living in the top part of the house,” Holmes said. “I don’t want anybody that even thinks that Donald Trump can be a good president to live in my home.”

Holmes was very aware of the large presence of Trump supporters in Grand Junction. In August, Grand Junction featured a billboard that depicted Donald Trump as a knight in shining armor slaying a dragon labeled such things as “Libtards,” “NSA,” “Muslims,” “Iran,” “GLBT,” and many more.

In response to the advertisement, the landlord began receiving a number of angry phone calls regarding his blatant “discrimination,” one caller even claiming that Holmes was violating federal housing rules. However, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development stood up for the landlord, stating it is not illegal to discriminate against tenants because of political beliefs. Jerry Brown, spokesperson for the HUD, commented, “That has nothing to do with the Fair Housing Act. But that seems to be a first, and it’s original.”

While many liberal-minded individuals may have sympathy towards Holmes, completely understanding his frustration, some wonder if it’s messages such as this that are further pulling the country apart. The average American moves about 12 times in his or her life; with the political rift dividing states and even counties, how difficult will it be to comfortably move around the country in the future? Are the United States no longer united?

Texas Man Executed Despite Evidence of Mental Impairment

A Texas man was executed on Tuesday, March 22, despite his claim of mental illness.

Adam Kelly Ward had been on death row since 2007, convicted of shooting and killing a city worker over a dispute regarding piles of trash outside of his house in Commerce, Texas. Ward claimed he was defending himself, although code enforcement officer Michael Walker was unarmed while taking photos outside the home.

During his trial, Ward’s defense attorneys presented evidence of severe mental illness, arguing that he suffered from delusions, paranoia, and bipolar disorder. The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, however, rejected Ward’s appeal last week. He was executed by lethal injection on Tuesday night.

After his arrest in 2005, Ward claimed in a videotaped statement that Walker had been spying on him and his father for a long time. The Ward family had been cited for housing and zoning code violations several times prior to the incident.

“Only time any shots were fired on my behalf was when I was matching force with force,” Ward told the Associated Press. “I wish it never happened, but it did, and I have to live with what it is.”

Exceptions have been made for inmates on death row with mental illness or an IQ under 70. The American Civil Liberties Union states that there is “an increasing recognition that severe mental illness is a reason to spare people not from the responsibility of their crimes but from the ultimate sanction of death.” However, it is often ruled that if an inmate understands that he is about to die and the reasons for such punishment, then he is competent enough to receive that punishment.

Mental impairment can present itself in two different ways: intellectual disability or mental illness. Intellectual disability primarily refers to a person’s IQ and inability to perform basic tasks. The person may not understand his actions simply because the brain isn’t fully developed. Mental illness, on the other hand, disrupts a person’s thinking, mood, and ability to relate to others. Those who are mentally ill are often out of touch with reality and therefore do not understand right from wrong.

State attorneys claim that Ward had an IQ of up to 123, and was therefore fully capable of understanding his actions and his punishment. Professor Christopher Slobogin of Vanderbilt Law School has a different theory.

“Why would you go out and shoot an officer just because he was taking pictures of your home? There has to be some, to use a layman’s term, craziness there,” he says. Because mental illness cannot be determined by IQ, some believe that Ward was, in fact, mentally impaired, and that his execution was unethical.

There are no records indicating that Ward was undergoing treatment for mental illness. Estimates project that the nation’s overall spending on mental health is approximately $113 billion, or 5.6% of total medical costs, annually. However, mental illness is not always easy to identify, and often goes undiagnosed — and therefore untreated.

Ward became the ninth person to be executed in the U.S. in 2016.

Eiffel Tower Mirrors Belgian Flag in Sign of Solidarity

The Eiffel Tower on Tuesday, March 22, was illuminated in black, yellow, and red to represent the Belgian flag as a sign of solidarity following the deadly terror attacks in Brussels.

The Belgian capital was struck on Tuesday by a series of organized terrorist attacks. Suicide bombers at the airport and the metro station killed 31 people and injured an estimated 250.

The mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, said in a statement that the Eiffel Tower display was meant to pay homage to “the victims, their loved ones and all the people of Belgium.”

“Today Europe is targeted at her heart,” the mayor stated. “Once more it is basic values that are attacked: freedom, humanism, tolerance and unshakeable commitment to democracy.”

The act of solidarity comes four months after the Brussels Grand Place was illuminated with the colors of the French flag to honor the victims of the terror attacks in Paris.

Other cities around the world have also dedicated monuments to Brussels. Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate and the courthouse in Lyon, France, were also illuminated in black, yellow, and red. New York lit up One World Trade Center with Belgian colors Tuesday night, as well.

The Eiffel Tower is widely regarded as the national symbol of France, and while it is not the nearly the tallest structure in the world, it does stand proud at 984 feet tall, though it is a full six inches shorter in the winter as the steel contracts in the cold. A monument as big and awe-inspiring as the Eiffel Tower, glowing and illuminating the night with the colors of Belgium, is a strong image to behold and a strong message to the terrorists that Europe is united and unbreakable.

Bringing People Together With Glass

When most people hear the phrase “census data,” they automatically imagine statistics and graphs. Yet City Lab reports that Michigan artist Norwood Viviano has taken a more creative approach by translating urban population data into his glass art.

Viviano has 25 crystalline pieces currently hanging from the ceiling of the Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk, Virginia. Each one represents the population trajectory of an American city, tracing as far back as 400 years ago.

Beginning with 3-D computer models, each glass form was painstakingly hand-blown to ensure the correct proportions.

The length of each piece corresponds to the time since that city was founded, while the width represents the density of the population. Changes in color of the piece indicate some sort of historic shift at the time.

Viewing Viviano’s work against the stark white walls of the museum show some interesting trajectories in city populations.

For example, his New York piece almost resembles a Jellyfish because the population hasn’t stopped increasing since 1850. In contrast, cities like Flint and Detroit, Michigan who have experiences huge boosts and harsh falls in their economy in the past take on a diamond-like shape.

“Glass is this really nice material to talk about the fragility of something,” said Viviano. “The fact that these objects cannot stand on their own becomes almost a metaphor for the shifting nature of the economy, with the need to plan for the future.”

Rather than trying to convey a specific message through his art, Viviano wants viewers to put it into their own context.

According to the Fairfax County Times, overseas, another glass blowing artist is trying to raise awareness about communities with a more public showing of his glass artwork.

Martin Donlin, one of the world’s leading architectural glass artists, created a series of floor-to-ceiling glass panels at the Silver Line’s McLean Metro Station. The process was long and complex, taking Donlin since 2008 to complete it.

Donlin’s boldly colored glass panels are somewhat abstract but are meant to represent the endless variety of the train passengers.

The images also have poems etched into the surface from a number of poets from Virginia, each meant to emanate different moods that relate to the variety of the human condition.

While introducing Donlin at the McLean Project for the Arts (MPA) event to honor his work, Laurent Odde, the new Metro Arts in Transit program manager, said, “See how public art and art in general can bring community together… [and] add enjoyment to going to the station.”

Millennials Want in On Home Buying, But is it Feasible?

While baby boomers once dominated the housing market, aging Millennials are now taking over as the leaders of first-time home buying, the Memphis Business Journal reports.

Individuals between the ages of 20 and 30 currently make up the majority of home buyers in the United States, as shown by data from the National Association of REALTORS.

“Their buying power is huge,” said Jessica Lautz, NAR’s managing director of survey research.

Specifically, Millennials account for two-thirds of the estimated 618,000 single-family housing starts or newly constructed homes being built. Most Millennials are moving from metropolitan areas to the suburbs when looking for a new home.

Yet the recent increase in multifamily development has led developers to ask the question: when will these renters will officially become buyers? This is the result of student loan debt and slow income growth being major problems for this generation to overcome before moving from renting to buying.

“You have this huge demographic bubble of Millennials, and the big question is are they going to follow traditional generation trends and buy homes after a few years of renting? So far they aren’t, so that big question mark is will it have a big impact on the industry,” said Rick Haughey of the National Multifamily Housing Council.

However, as Haughy’s organization is on the lookout for increasing rents nationwide to drive more people towards buying homes, according to The M Report, a steady rise in rent may be doing just that.

A survey of 750 buyers from Redfin from the first quarter of 2016 found that 25% of home buyers are mainly influenced by a rise in rent, while another 29% blamed personal life events as the cause. The previous quarter, the shares were 21% and 25% respectively.

Unfortunately, a simultaneous rise in home prices has made affordability a concern for 25% of those surveyed, a 1% decrease from 26% in the fourth quarter of 2015.

Another 20% are worried over the availability of new homes as well, with 16% concerned over competition. About 9% had no concerns over buying a home.

Rising mortgage rates also caused unease with 67% of buyers noting mortgage rates as an important or very important factor in their to decision to buy.

Even so, home buyer sentiment remains positive, as 33% of respondents reported they are more inclined to purchase a home this year as compared to 2015. Fully 31% stated feeling urgency to buy before prices or mortgage rates rise significantly.

Minnesota Dentist’s License Temporarily Suspended After Fatal Wisdom Tooth Procedure

A Minnesota dentist has recently had his dental license temporarily suspended following the death of one of his patients, a teenage girl, as a result of her wisdom teeth removal.

Dr. Paul Tompach of Edina Oral and Maxillofacial was performing a routine wisdom teeth removal procedure on 17-year-old Sydney Galleger on June 9, 2015, when she began convulsing during the procedure.

According to WGNTV, Tompach was cited by the Minnesota Board of Dentistry for “imminent risk of harm” and for failing to manage a medical emergency for his patient. The Board also cited Tompach for employing a dental assistant who, despite being on-site during the procedure, had never completed the state certification requirements for administering anesthesia to a patient.

Galleger, who would have been a senior graduating from Eden Prairie High School this year, reportedly went into cardiac arrest after the convulsions began. She was taken to the hospital and was pronounced dead on June 15.

It should be noted that wisdom teeth removals aren’t typically considered to be dangerous procedures. Something like a dental implant procedure, which is even more invasive in some cases, has a success rate of 98%. The most common problem that patients face after a wisdom tooth removal is “dry socket,” but it has become so common that dentists can easily diagnose and treat it.

Convulsions and subsequent cardiac arrest simply aren’t commonplace during a routine wisdom teeth removal, and as the Star Tribune reported, the effects of this event were nothing short of devastating.

Galleger was an active athlete and was generally in good health, but her family stated that she had a slight heart abnormality and had signs of a viral infection on her brain. Although these conditions weren’t expected to cause cardiac arrest on their own, it seems that the slightest mistake in an anesthesia dosage could have done the trick.

Tompach has a strong history of practicing dentistry as well as cosmetic procedures. Nevertheless, the Board will be reviewing the case in detail in the coming weeks to determine if Tompach’s license should be revoked entirely.

No More Right Side Ads: Google Desktop Search Looks More Like Mobile Search

With half of all mobile searches done in the hope of finding local results, and 61% ending in a purchase, it’s no wonder that Google changed the layout of their platform to reflect the increased use of mobile devices to browse the Internet.

Just this week, Google made a serious shift in its bedrock search page. Ads on the right side were removed, and four ads above the unpaid or “organic” listings were added.

The change is seen as a push from Google to encourage advertisers to cater more towards handheld devices, where most searches now happen.

The more limited space for ads should drive up the prices of coveted spots for advertisers. Google’s share of revenue per search ad has decreased of late, so this latest move is also a bid for cash.

Shreya Kushari, SVP of search marketing for DigitalLBi, an ad agency, said “Our cost-per-clicks are going to go up because we’re going to bid aggressively to be on the first four.”

The changes were picked up on Friday by a few search blogs. Results with four ads went from around 2% of searches to one out of five, or 20%, says data from online marketing firm Moz.

Google has been testing search engine results pages with four ads for the last couple of months.

A Google representative confirmed that the right-side ads are out: “We’ll continue to make tweaks, but this is designed for highly commercial queries where the layout is able to provide more relevant results for people searching and better performance for advertisers.”

The right side of desktop searches will now be empty, except for the “Knowledge Panels”, which are Google’s own results for renowned people, places or things, and Product Listing Ads, which are commerce searches that trigger Google’s own comparative shopping service.

The removal of the right side ads do make mobile search and desktop results more similar, although Google normally shows two or three ads at the top of mobile search results.

Graffiti Discovered in Historic Apollo 11 Space Module

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, graffiti is the most common type of property vandalism, seen in 35% of all cases. In fact, it’s so common that apparently it’s even made its way to outer space.

Staff from the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. and the Smithsonian’s 3D Digitization Program have discovered writing on the interior of the walls of the Apollo 11 Command Module Columbia.

The astronaut graffiti, which as gone unseen for the last 50 years, was written by the crew on their historic mission to the moon in July of 1969. The writing on the walls gives a unique insight into that world changing mission, crewed by Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins

Allan Needell, curator of space history at the museum, commented about the module that “This isn’t just a piece of machinery, it’s a living artifact.”

Curators at the Space Museum have been working with the Smithsonian’s 3D Digitization Program to create a high resolution and interactive model of the entire spacecraft. The model will be used in an interactive display in the museum’s exhibition “Destination Moon,” which is scheduled to open in 2020.

The graffiti includes notes, figures and a calendar, and will allow the museum’s curators to compile a more accurate account of how the missions were conducted.

The Smithsonian 3D team brought in its technology partner, Autodesk Inc, to help with the production of the complicated and detailed scan. Autodesk used specially designed equipment to scan the space craft and processed the complex data from multiple 3D capture devices to create one highly detailed and accurate model.

Vince Rossi, a 3D imaging specialist with the Smithsonian, commented that “We want to allow anyone with an internet connection the ability to experience what it was like to sit in the cockpit of the Apollo Command Module.”

Gizmodo reports that the analysis is still ongoing, so it’s possible that the team may make more discoveries about Apollo 11 soon.

New Loan Program Offers San Francisco Residents $2 Million Mortgage With No Down Payment

San Francisco continues to prove itself as one of the least affordable cities in the country for the middle class and any individuals falling below that line. In early December, the San Francisco Federal Credit Union’s newest offering went live on their site. Called the “POPPYLOAN” (Proud Ownership Purchase Program for You), this loan is not for everyone — rather, it’s only right for people who can afford a monthly mortgage payment on a $2 million house.

Naturally, this excludes a great deal of people.

“We have programs to help low-income people, but for the vast majority of young professionals, there is no hope or no help for this middle-class band in San Francisco,” said Rebecca Reynolds Lytle, San Francisco Federal Credit Union’s senior vice president and chief lending officer. Currently, the credit union has 34,000 members.

In order to qualify for the loan, the borrows must have a job in either San Francisco or San Mateo County, and must be utilized for purchasing a primary residence.

Under its stipulations, it cannot be used for refinancing. Unlike other housing loans, there is no mortgage payment required. It is a 5/5 adjustable rate offering — this means it can only be adjusted every five years, unlike most that change annually.

Over the past decade or so, real estate in San Francisco has skyrocketed. According to cnbc.com, the median home price in San Francisco was $1.1 million, an 11% increase from just one year prior. Additionally, it is around five times the median of national value.

“What we would pay here for a down payment you could take to another market and pay cash for a house,” Lytle added.

But again, these loans are not for just anyone. Larger banks in the area have a larger and more diverse customer base, and offer products catered to lower-income demographics. There are also lending options, such as FHA K loans, that offer down payments as low as 3.5%.

Yet many San Franciscans would argue with the notion that their city has become largely unaffordable. In a recent San Francisco Examiner article, Peter Cohen and Fernando Marti argue that the city is experiencing the most massive urban construction era since the urban renewal. To boot, more than half of what is being built should be “affordable housing to keep up with job growth.”

They add, “According to the San Francisco General Plan Housing Element, about 4,100 total homes should be constructed annually to fully meet The City’s growing population needs at all income levels. Of that total, 57 percent of new homes (about 2,330 units per year) should be affordable to low- and moderate-income San Franciscans (aka, below market-rate).”

So whether you’re jonesing for a $2 million mortgage for a lender’s loan, or are seeking affordable housing, it seems there’s something for everyone popping up in San Francisco.

German Man Uses Wife’s Head Encased in Concrete to Drown Himself in Austria

Austrian authorities are still investigating a disturbing incident in which an elderly man murdered his wife and drowned himself using her remains.

According to DW.com, police believe a 72-year-old man had strangled and beheaded his 71-year-old wife before encasing her head in concrete and using it as a weight to drown himself.

The husband’s remains, along with the concrete block, were found outside of Gmunden, Austria in Traunsee Lake on Monday. Local residents found most of the wife’s dismembered body in a suitcase.

After citizens reported the woman’s remains to authorities, a police dive was organized to search for her missing head. The head of the woman, encased in cement, was found tethered to her husband’s arm.

A coroner said that the woman likely died between Christmas and New Year’s Day. The incident is believed to be a murder-suicide because the man’s body displayed no signs of violence or struggle.

Several Austrian media outlets have reported that the couple is from Frankfurt, Germany. However, police are still gathering more details before releasing such information to the public.

About one in five people who die from drowning are children 14 and younger, but this gruesome incident is one of several recent tragedies in the water that resulted in the death of an elderly person.

According to The Telegraph, an English man in his 70s drowned on New Year’s Day when he tried to retrieve a ball, which had floated out to sea, for the family dog.

A 50-year-old woman had waded through the crashing waves of Cornish cove to get her dog’s favorite ball when her mother’s elderly partner decided to help. The woman survived, but the man drowned after he could no longer stay afloat.

As for the couple in Austria, police have yet to establish a motive for the crime.