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The Case: They found a great article that says exactly what it should- that Gitmo can be transformed
into a biomedical research facility that yields productive research. What it doesn't say is that this
facility would be a US/Cuban joint venture. Rather, the author (Hotez) just wants an international
research facility. Whether Cuba is involved or not is entirely inconsequential to case. Hence, the strat-
The Strat:
1. Topicality: Plan is untopical because it imposes no condition on Cuba, nor is Cuba the target of
conditions. Essentially, plan is untopical because it's not exclusive to Cuba.
2. Vagueness: It's uncertain how case is implemented. Do its mandates only involve Cuba? If they
don't, you win Topicality. If they do, the CP will solve best. No matter what, though, case claims a lot
of solvency for things that are nowhere in plan text. Like vaccine distribution, policy reformation from
research, etc. Vagueness is needed to shut them down from accessing this stuff.
3. Counterplan: Do the Hotez plan WITHOUT Cuba, and specify mandates that solve better. Hotez
says you can do plan with any number of countries. There's a solvency PMN on gendered research that
CP uniquely solves, plus CP provides policy recommendations and vaccine distribution that case
doesn't. PULL THE GROUND STANDARD ON TOPICALITY TO GAIN LEGITIMACY FOR
RUNNING THIS POSITION.
4. Case press: If you run everything else here, cover case with some quick points. You'll spread them
out of the round. There's no way they can cover all of this without dropping at least one advantage
cold.
a. Inherency: Their author couldn't speak in more glowing terms about our current research. He
calls this "A New Rennaissance in tropical disease research." Moreover, Cuba is already awesome at
all this stuff. They don't need US coop.
b. Solvency: Press the stuff brought up in the Vagueness position and in the CP solvency. Plan
doesn't have the mandates to solve, but CP does.
NOTE: Watch for cards they might label "Cuba wants plan" or "Cuba's research would benefit the
US." None of these cards are talking about their plan. Additionally, the CP's solvency ev explicitly
says it would function with other countries instead of Cuba.
Good luck!
Topicality ______________________________________________________________1
Vagueness _____________________________________________________________2
Counterplan ____________________________________________________________3-5
Solvency ______________________________________________________________6
Inherency _____________________________________________________________8-
A. Interpretation
1. CE
Crocker 89 [Chester A. Crocker, Former Assistant Secretary for African Affairs at the Department of
State, Fall 1989, Foreign Affairs, p. 144, “Southern Africa: Eight Years Later”]
Regarding South Africa, constructive engagement was by definition a conditional concept: in exchange
for Pretoria's cooperation on achieving Namibia's independence, we would work to restructure the
independence settlement to address our shared interest in reversing the Soviet-Cuban adventure in
Angola; in exchange for reduced rhetorical flagellation and minor adjustments in certain bilateral fields
(e.g., civilian export controls), we would hold Pretoria to its self-proclaimed commitment to domestic
reform. There would be a change of tone toward reciprocity and even-handedness. But there would be
no change in basic policy parameters on such matters as the U.S. opposition to South African apartheid
laws and institutions or bilateral security ties -- no "rewriting of the past 20 years of U.S. diplomacy,"
as the 1980 article put it -- in the absence of fundamental internal change.
2. With
The phrase "with Cuba" immediately follows our resolutional wording, signifying it as the target of
conditions.
B. Violation
The affirmative's plan does not come with conditions, nor is its exclusive target Cuba, making it a
failed interpretation of "constructive engagement with Cuba."
C. Standards
1. Etymological Precision - My evidence comes directly from the author who coined the phrase. Any
other interpretations are either copy cats or bastardization of the true meaning of the phrase.
2. Framers Intent – When selecting the wording of the resolution the framers deliberately choose the
term constructive engagement. If the framers had intended for us to debate unconditional engagement
then they wouldn't have selected a word that was invented to describe the exact opposite. They could
have easily selected an alternative phrase without the history of unconditional engagement.
3. Ground- By not targetting Cuba, the Aff case forces Negatives into ground that deals only with
issues of global or regional implementation.
4. Exclusion Test- Plan's actionable mandates ought only operate with Cuba's consideration. If plan's
actionable mandates can function without Cuba, then plan relies on nonresolutional advocacy.
D. Voters
Topicality is a prima facia burden. It serves to test the resolutional sufficiency of the aff as a
precondition of whether it is evaluable via an affirmative ballot.
Vagueness
A. Plan text uses a multinational research facility as its agent of enforcement. Details of its
composition, charter of standards, paradigm of study, agenda-setting measures of preferred research,
technological supply, methods of presenting results or translating them into tangible policy or product,
and dispute resolution processes among researchers are all wholly absent from plan text.
2. Jurisdictional reasons require details- If plan lacks information required to formulate a policy,
plan is simply unpassable as a policy. In a policy debate, we look to standards of passable policies.
The exeplained particulars above have actual policy implications that are never resolved and that will
be pressed, AND UNANSWERED, later on the flow.
3. Fiat abuse- Cases can't simply say, "We pass plan through what is assumed the easiest, least
politically volatile, and most scientifically rigorous means." We can only fiat passage of plan texts.
4. Advocacy shift is an instand Decision ruling- If my opponent deviates from the written plan text,
this is uniquely abusive as my entire 1NC is predicated upon the advocay of the 1AC's plan text.
5. Prima Facia Delinquency is time abuse- They will insist that vagueness is checked by my ability
to try and figure out what they intend for their plan to be composed of. This sets a denagerous
precedent for the duties of affirmatives and makes it my burden to ask them what plan is in my speech
time and in CX.
CP
In light of the advocacy problems already explained in case, I propose the following counterplan to test
the Aff plan's advocacy.
Text:
The USFG shall establish a multinational biomedical research facility at Guantanamo Bay without the
inclusion of Cuba. Research conducted shall operate with focus on NTD transmission, preventative
approaches, and policy advisory methods. This research shall incorporate gender perspective in
methodology and technique according to the Kitts and Roberts checklist.
C. CP is net beneficial: It avoids all of the theoretical implications mentioned elsewhere while giving
the most effective solvency.
THE HOTEZ CENTER COULD COLLABORATE WITH ARGENTINA, BRAZIL, AND MEXICO
TO SOLVE
Hotez, 2008.
"Reinventing Guantanamo: From Detainee Facility to Center for Research on Neglected Diseases of
Poverty in the Americas."
http://www.plosntds.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000201
The neglected tropical diseases represent some of the most important poverty-promoting disease
conditions [13]. By establishing a center of excellence on the diseases of poor, at Guantanamo, the
United States Government would directly address poverty and health disparities in the worst-off
nations in Central and South America and the Caribbean. Such a center could conduct translational
research to develop new drugs and vaccines for neglected diseases, possibly in collaboration with
research institutes and public sector pharmaceutical manufacturers in some of Latin America's so-called
innovative developing countries, such as Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, and Mexico [14]. It could also
promote clinical research and take on the control of some of the more pressing public health threats in
the Caribbean region, including vector-borne diseases such as dengue [9]. It would serve as a vital
resource for training physicians, scientists, and public health experts, and meet an important demand
for training in applying appropriate technology to global public health practice [15].
Janet Hatcher Roberts is a health-policy specialist in the Program Branch of IDRC. Formerly the Deputy Director of Research and Evaluation at the Canadian Royal
Commission on New Reproductive Technologies, her main interests involve creating and ensuring links between research and strategic policy development. ]
http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-27486-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
Various obstacles hinder the adoption of a gender perspective in health research. There is sometimes a
lack of institutional and financial support for gender and health research, and many researchers lack the
necessary research tools. In some cases, recent publications, good research, and bibliographies are
difficult to access. In Latin America, researchers have difficulty obtaining resources in the Spanish
language. The dearth of health research that incorporates a gender perspective, for example, in tropical
disease research and the study of occupational health and safety, represents another barrier to research.
There is also a need for in-depth training with regard to methodologies, techniques, and specific
instruments for studying gender dimensions and for some form of a "checklist" that could be followed
to ensure that research is gender-sensitive.
Beyond these barriers, it can take great efforts to overcome a "masculine-oriented perspective" (Lange
et al. 1994). For example, Ilta Lange, in her research on health monitors in Santiago, Chile, found that
masculine language dominated the research process. The Spanish word "monitores" was always used,
instead of "monitoras," the feminine version of the word. Although all the health monitors studied were women, Lange said
researchers persisted in using the masculine form of the word.
Finally, community resistance to certain types of research can also be an obstacle. Pino et al. (1994) reported that parents and teachers in Santiago, Chile, tried to
prevent research that involved the study of adolescents and early sexual behaviour. Such barriers must be overcome. Research in this area is needed to help design
sound programs and policies aimed at reducing the number of unwanted pregnancies and the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS, among
adolescents.
A gender perspective cannot simply be added to a study as an afterthought. It must be fully integrated
into the research protocol as it is conceived, carried out, analyzed, and disseminated. A gender
perspective also involves much more than sex disaggregation. At the very least, however, "sex should
be a variable taken into account in ... studies, even where understanding sex differences as such are not
inherent to the study objectives" (Vlassoff 1994, p. 1256). The existing lack of sex-disaggregated data
and information hinders the ability of decision-makers to develop effective women's health programs
and policies.
In addition to providing information on the sex of respondents and why they were selected, studies
should furnish information "on the social structural and cultural context in the society under
investigation" (Vlassoff 1994, p. 1257). Ideally, health research should address differential female and
male roles; responsibilities; knowledge bases; positions and status within society; attitudes and
perception; access to and use of resources and information; and participation in decision-making; as
well as social codes and attitudes governing female and male behaviour.
Because women and men often have different roles and responsibilities, their "environmental life spaces" within and outside the home can be quite different. The
impact of these differing environments on health should be addressed.
Interdisciplinary research teams, which, for example, include researchers with medical backgrounds and social scientists, may facilitate the adoption of a gender
perspective. It is impossible for any single discipline or type of specialist to "have the requisite expertise to identify the critical socio-biomedical factors determining
women's health risks and needs" (Paolisso and Leslie 1995, p. 55). However, interdisciplinary teams are not always feasible because of insufficient resources.
Because of this constraint, cross-disciplinary training, for example, highlighting social science issues and techniques in the medical school curriculum, and vice
versa, is increasingly being carried out. However, researchers with scientific and medical backgrounds, even without social science training, can learn to look at their
data from a new perspective. As human beings, medical researchers can uncover the human dimension and carry out social science research.
The challenge is to find ways of ensuring that health studies are designed to take into account all the
determinants of health and disease in any society so that gender differentials become visible to
policymakers. Where does a man or a woman, a girl or a boy, a female baby or a male baby, stand 24
hours of the day? Men's and women's life spaces are different and this may lead to differential exposure
to diseases and illnesses, including tropical diseases. This is tied to the gender division of labour. For
example, who does the animal herding? Who picks up the cow dung? Who slaughters the animals?
Who cleans the clothes and utensils in the river? Researchers could look at how many hours members
of the population being studied spend each day at the office, in the field, at home, and so on. How often
is the population exposed to certain hazards? If the community lives near a toxic waste dump, which
community members -- men, women, or children -- are at home all day and most exposed to the
dump?
Having a gender perspective means being aware of, and accounting for, the plethora of gender-related
factors that may affect the collection of research data. Researchers should be aware, for example, that
women may have different notions of health and illness than men. Women, and in particular, poor
women, may take a certain amount of aches and pain for granted. They may not report backaches as a
health problem because they have a high threshold of pain, and view them as normal. "Women tend to
suffer in silence ... the threshold of illness recognized by the society on the illness-health continuum is
so high for women that they endure so much in order not to disrupt household organization" (Okojie
1994, p. 1237).
Janet Hatcher Roberts is a health-policy specialist in the Program Branch of IDRC. Formerly the Deputy Director of Research and Evaluation at the Canadian Royal
Commission on New Reproductive Technologies, her main interests involve creating and ensuring links between research and strategic policy development. ]
http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-27486-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
State-of-the-art research data on women's health issues is often not integrated into public policy and
health interventions. Atai-Okei (1994, pp. 205-206), for example, expressed frustration concerning the
extent to which health research has failed to reach the local populations that it is meant to serve.
Results from research are often not "put into practice in ... hospitals or in rural medical clinics."
Information obtained as a result of research must serve to empower women, and the communities to
which the research applies, to foster the process of change (AbouZahr 1994, p. 6).
All research on women's perceptions and needs in health should be designed and implemented with the
express objective of developing interventions arising from the analysis of research results. Such
interventions should be applied to extend health-care services into the community, improve the quality
of health care available to women, and have an impact on women's health status.
Although there have been a number of health conferences, seminars, and workshops organized in the
name of women's health in Uganda, little has been accomplished to date in terms of measurable
improvement in the status of women's health or in the accessibility of health care to women.
Solvency-
AT THE TOP OF THE SOLVENCY FLOW- DRAW A BOX- WRITE "WATCH FOR NEW
MANDATES" I want you to be looking for new mandates or new clarifications of mandates that are
articulated in new speeches to explain the workability of plan.
5. X-Apply Kitts and Roberts- Research without gender data prevents effective disease prevention
methods from arising.
Disease-
Threshold
Answered on solvency
CP Solves best
Poverty-
Threshold
A. Cuba pays to participate--- These funds further drive them into debt and perpetuate poverty
or
CP solves best
Inherency-
"Cuba: Conquering vaccines - and their markets." TWN Info Service on Health Issues (December
06/06)
12 December 2006
http://www.twnside.org.sg/title2/health.info/twninfohealth058.htm
Deliberately putting human health before economic considerations, according to local experts, Cuba
has launched full-tilt into the vaccine industry to compete on the international market with its products,
some of which are unique.
Cuban scientists are devoting themselves to investigating therapeutic products against cancer, malaria
and cholera, diseases that ravage the people of poor nations.
However, the first destination of every new pharmaceutical is the Cuban market and the national
hospital network. Medical sources indicated that eight of the 13 vaccines included in the national
immunisation programme are produced locally.
"Half of our research projects deal with vaccines, which are financially unattractive to the big
pharmaceutical companies," Carlos Borroto, deputy director of the Genetic Engineering and
Biotechnology Research Centre (CIGB), told IPS.
In the early 1980s, the Fidel Castro administration made biotechnology a priority area for the country's social and economic development. The financial support
granted to the sector was maintained even during the crisis of the 1990s, triggered by the break-up of the Soviet Union, Cuba's main trading partner.
Spokespersons for the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) reported that Cuba, together with Mexico and Brazil, are among the countries which made
significant investments in installations and capacity-building for producing vaccines and other medicines between 1980 and 2000.
Cuba devotes 1.7% of its gross domestic product (GDP) to science and technological innovation, a
proportion that is higher than that of Latin America as a whole, which invests an average of 0.7% of GDP, according to the
Ministry of Science, Technology and the Environment.
This Caribbean island nation possesses 222 scientific research centres, employing 31,000 people, although only the six main institutes conduct the complete cycle:
research, production and marketing.
The "West Havana Scientific Pole" is made up of the CIGB, the Finlay Institute for Serum and
Vaccines, the Centre of Molecular Immunology, the National Centre for Scientific Research and the
National Bio-preparations Centre.
Instead of competing with each other, as might be supposed, the Pole institutions work on the basis of
cooperation, and each project usually involves more than one unit.
"Nearly all the products are a result of integration, which is something that gives us an advantage over
other countries," CIGB's director of Regulatory Affairs and Clinical Trials, Pedro Lopez-Saura, told
IPS.
CIGB was the first institute to link up with a marketing company, Hebert Biotec, founded in 1991, which was seen as a milestone in its development. At present, each
of the units is associated with a company that handles export sales, although they are all financed by the state.
CIGB, the leading institute in Cuban scientific development, has just celebrated the 20th anniversary of its foundation. Its laboratories were responsible for producing
an effective vaccine against hepatitis B, a liver disease that causes 520,000 deaths a year worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Heberbiovac HB, the first vaccine obtained in Cuba using molecular biology techniques, is now exported to some 20 countries, and has contributed to a considerable
reduction in the incidence of the disease among Cuba's 11.2 million people.
Hepatitis B cases have fallen from over 2,000 a year before vaccination began in 1992, to less than 50 a year at present. Medical sources reported that the decline is
continuing, and that the disease is likely to be eliminated.
But in Latin America, the most widely-used Cuban vaccine is VAMENGOC-BC, the only vaccine in the world against meningitis caused by serotype B bacteria,
which is the predominant strain in the region.
The Finlay Institute is currently developing a vaccine against cholera bacteria, based on a Cuban attenuated strain (Tor 638) which has been genetically engineered in
a novel way.
The strain has been modified so that it is still capable of generating a protective immune response, but not of causing the disease itself. The new product is
administered orally in a single dose, and is now at the clinical trial stage in healthy volunteers, for safety evaluation.
Two other cholera vaccines are being developed in the Finlay Institute. One is based on inactivated strains, and the other on sub-fractions of the cholera bacterium,
applying innovative molecular biology techniques. The second project is in the research and process development phase.
Other Cuban biotechnology research projects include producing vaccines against the viruses that cause hepatitis A, dengue and AIDS, the parasites causing malaria,
and leptospirosis bacteria.
Exchange agreements with various countries channel the transfer of technology for producing vaccines
like Heberbiovac HB and VAMENGOC-BC, thus avoiding the high prices charged by transnational
laboratories.
For example, cooperation with Brazil will enable Cuba to export meningitis vaccine for mass immunisation in Africa "at competitive prices," Marcel Biato, minister
counsellor of the Brazilian embassy in Havana, told IPS.
One of the latest trends in the vaccine industry, in Cuba and worldwide, is formulating combined products for immunisation. Here, the active principles of two or
more vaccines already available on the market are mixed into one preparation, so that fewer injections are needed for prevention of multiple diseases.
The Finlay Institute and CIGB took up the challenge and achieved a combined vaccine against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and hepatitis B, which has been
introduced with good results in the National Vaccination Programme.
Since September, Cuban children have been receiving pentavalent vaccine, which protects against the four diseases named above, plus a type of bacterial meningitis
caused by Haemophilus influenzae type B.
According to experts, this is the second vaccine of its kind in the world after one developed in France, and its safety has been demonstrated in trials involving 500
infants aged between six and 10 weeks.
Meanwhile, the Molecular Immunology Centre is working on eight projects to produce therapeutic agents against different types of cancer. Three of the projects are
undergoing phase III clinical trials.
Phase III trials are carried out after establishing that a product has a reasonable probability of effectiveness, and the aim is to glean additional information about its
effectiveness for specific indications, and more detailed knowledge of the adverse reactions associated with its use.
Nurses are key to hospital success and hospitals account for a huge portion
of the economy
OCIS (Office of the Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman) Dec 5, 2008 “improving the processing
of “schedule a” nurse visas” <http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/cisomb_ead_recommendation_36.pdf>
RNs have a variety of employers, including public health facilities, long-term care facilities, and hospitals. They
provide invaluable services to an aging U.S. population. The American Hospital Association (AHA) reported on
the impact that hospitals alone have on the United States’ health care and economy: there are over 35 million people
admitted, nearly 118 million people treated in emergency rooms, over 4 million babies delivered, and over 481 million outpatients treated each year.6
Furthermore , hospitals are one of the largest private sector employers, employing more than five million people,
and stimulating economic productivity.7 According to the report, “[w]hen also accounting for hospital purchases
of goods and services from other businesses, hospitals support one of every 10 jobs in the [United States] and
$1.9 trillion dollars of economic activity.”8 RNs9 are a significant factor in the success of hospitals and the health
care industry. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that RNs held approximately 2.5 million jobs in 200610 with the majority of RN positions
filled in hospitals.11
According to AACN's report on 2007-2008 Enrollment and Graduations in Baccalaureate and Graduate
Programs in Nursing, U.S. nursing schools turned away 40,285 qualified applicants from baccalaureate and
graduate nursing programs in 2007 due to insufficient number of faculty, clinical sites, classroom space, clinical
preceptors, and budget constraints. Almost three quarters (71.4%) of the nursing schools responding to the 2007
survey pointed to faculty shortages as a reason for not accepting all qualified applicants into entry-level nursing
programs.
Huey-Ming Tzeng. Department of Nursing, I-Shou University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Journal of Nursing
Care. October/December 2005. “Promoting a Safer Practice Environment as Related to Occupational
Tuberculosis: A Nursing Care Quality Issue in Taiwan” Quality:Volume 20(4) p 356-363
As a result of a recent cluster of tuberculosis (TB) transmission among healthcare providers in a regional
teaching hospital in Taipei, Taiwan, there has been growing concern about occupational health hazards,
especially of communicable diseases, faced by our nurses in practice. Tuberculosis is an invisible killer of nurses
in the process of nursing care delivery. This descriptive article briefly reviews the epidemiology of TB in Taiwan, discusses the recent
cluster of TB transmission in Taipei, and reviews relevant studies of occupational hazards. This article also focuses nurses' attention on relevant
legislation and hospital policies related to occupational hazards in Taiwan. Suggestions and practice implications are discussed.
Nursing colleges and universities are also forming strategic partnerships and seeking private support to help
expand student capacity and strengthen the nursing workforce. For example, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Florida donated $600,000 in funding to both the University of North Florida and the University of Florida in an
effort to address critical issues in nursing education. The State of Florida matched each gift at $420,000. In
September 2005, the Osteopathic Heritage Society awarded almost $1 million in funding to five Columbus, Ohio
area schools of nursing to recruit more faculty and equip more training facilities. In June 2005, Georgia Baptist
College of Nursing is partnering with Piedmont Healthcare in Atlanta to help recruit, educate and ultimately place
more nurses in the health system and the community at large
EVEN THOUGH THERE WERE SOME INCREASES IN NURSES, THERE IS
STILL A SHORTAGE
American Association of Colleges of Nursing September 2008 “Nursing Shortage Fact Sheet”
<http://www.aacn.nche.edu/Media/FactSheets/NursingShortage.htm>
According to a report released by the American Hospital Association in July 2007, U.S.
hospitals need approximately 116,000 RNs to
fill vacant positions nationwide. This translates into a national RN vacancy rate of 8.1%. The report, titled The 2007 State
of America's Hospitals - Taking the Pulse, also found that 44% of hospital CEOs had more difficulty recruiting RNs in 2006 than in 2005.
Nursing care in America's hospitals has reached a critical shortage -- the worst in 50 years, according to Peter
Buerhaus, the assistant dean of Vanderbilt School of Nursing, who has studied the problem. To make matters worse,
just as there are fewer nurses, the population is aging and in need of more medical care.
Hartman said she didn't sue for the money. "I wanted them, as I wheeled my mother into that courtroom, to see what their decision to run the hospital
shorthanded cost somebody," she said. So far, it is the only successful malpractice lawsuit against a hospital citing inadequate nursing. But amid an
ongoing staffing shortage, it may not be the last.
LINK - SHIFTING NURSES AROUND THE WORLD EXACERBATES THE
NURSING SHORTAGE PROBLEM
John Daly. Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery. International Journal of Nursing Studies. August 2008.
“The Global Alliance for Nursing Education and Scholarship: Delivering a vision for nursing education” 45 (2008)
1115–1117
Nursing shortages and the need to meet health needs of populations worldwide is high on many government
agendas. However, these shortages cannot be addressed unless there are sufficient appropriate nurse
education programs in place. Global migration of nurses around the world is not solving the nursing shortage
(McElmurray et al., 2006). On the contrary, it is exacerbating the problem and increasing the unequal distribution (Cowan
and Wilson-Barnett, 2006; Lu et al., 2005; WHO, 2006). Importantly, many health issues are global and no longer isolated to individual countries (e.g.
SARS, pandemic flu, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis) creating the need to establish common nursing educational approaches. These approaches need to be
respectful of both unique cultural needs within a country, and preparing nurses to provide care across multi-cultural groups (Davidson et al., 2003)
Hospitals are under pressure to keep control of their bottom lines, and nurses account for a large part of their budgets. But a recent study published in
the Health Affairs medical journal found hiring more nurses could actually save a hospital money in the long run. The study found 6,700
patient deaths and 4 million days of hospital care could be avoided each year by increasing staff of registered
nurses.
However, training new nurses is the problem. Last year, nursing schools had to turn away 125,000 applicants
because they didn't have enough faculty to teach them. Many nursing professors are retiring just when they're
needed most.