OPINION: The crisis in student loan debt offers a chance for reparations – The Hechinger Report

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Editors note: Black students are more likely than their peers to borrow money for college, struggle with repayment and default on student loans. With the debt problem for black students in particular reaching urgent levels, The Education Trust and The Hechinger Report have partnered on a series of op-eds to amplify the voices of people studying solutions to the black student debt crisis.

Here are some examples of why, after more than a decade of research into their involvement with slavery and the transatlantic slave trade, a handful of universities are beginning to consider reparations:

The first slave recorded in Massachusetts was owned by Harvards school master.

The first nine presidents of Princeton University owned slaves.

The personal physician of Dartmouth Colleges president boiled the body of a Black man named Cato to furnish a skeleton for anatomical study, and his skin was turned to leather at the campus tannery and fashioned into a medical instrument case.

One can still stroll upon sidewalks and past buildings built with bricks made by enslaved laborers at the University of Virginia.

It is well past time that colleges and universities begin to heal wounds, both old and new, and the black student loan-debt crisis may be one of the most efficient uses of their reparatory funds.

African Americans heavily rely upon higher education as the gateway to upward mobility. The combination of the wealth gap, rising tuition costs and reliance upon student loans, however, is now saddling black students with disproportionate amounts of debt.

Meanwhile, the black student loan-debt crisis needs urgent remedies.

For many, attempting to climb the economic ladder means trading one form of economic distress for another. For colleges interested in giving financial weight to their declarations of forgiveness and justice, reparations should not be restricted to direct descendants of those enslaved by universities because universities profited from countless slaves owned by others as well.

Like other institutions, dozens of U.S. colleges and universities have uncovered an overabundance of records documenting their culpability in slavery, Americas gravest sin.

Reparations offer a solution because simply providing preferential admissions to the direct descendants of the enslaved workers who built and maintained these institutions ignores the historical context in which universities benefited from chattel slavery. Universities benefited from what I refer to as an Atlantic plantation complex, where they profited from an intercontinental trade centered around slaves, the products they produced and the bequests bestowed by their owners who dotted that complex.

Many of the nations oldest and most prestigious colleges are coming to grips with the fact that enslavement generated the capital that led to their creation.

To fully grasp the extent of institutions liabilities, though, we must look beyond slavery because universities participation in racial injustice extended well beyond abolition.

Related: To pay for college, more students are offering a piece of their future to investors

For instance, universities in the Jim Crow era both in the North and the South excluded black students while taking in their tax dollars. College students and staff undoubtedly were participants in lynch law. The esteemed faculty of these institutions pumped out the bunk scientific racism that buttressed Jim Crow, cemented Social Darwinism and unleashed the scourge of eugenics. The consumption of, and participation in, blackface minstrelsy on and around campuses was almost a rite of passage for decades, and it lives on today through social media and frat parties.

Neither the abolition of slavery nor the end of segregation nor the election of President Barack Obama has stopped these institutions from engaging in, or tolerating, acts of racial aggression. Despite continued resistance by student activists, universities across the nation too often seem unable or unwilling to doggedly police acts of psychological or physical violence against minority students.

While colleges obviously have little control over the private actions of their students, they could do more to rein in university police officers who engage in racially biased behavior similar to that of non-university police forces. Officers working for some universities disproportionately stop and arrest black people, both students and non-students alike. Some university police officers are not averse to deploying unnecessary violent force against people of color, as demonstrated by filmed encounters involving police from Yale University, Barnard College, the University of Chicagoand Rice University. Worst of all, however, are the actions of Portland State and University of Cincinnati police officers, who have used lethal force against non-student black men.

The all-too-frequent interactions between university police forces and non-student African Americans are one symptom of the continued practice of urban campuses devouring working-class minority neighborhoods. With the help of university police and municipal tax breaks, colleges continue to gentrify these spaces in their attempts to attract and comfort wealthier (white) students, and in the process displace black residents through rising rents.

Universities should devote their reparation funds toward making higher education more affordable for black students.

Programs must consider past and future students alike.

For black former students, universities could refinance outstanding loan balances at zero percent interest. For future students, a combination of grants and reduced tuition would help to reduce the racial wealth gap and could eliminate the black-white student loan-debt gap as it stands approximately $4,000-$7,000.

The universities with the largest endowments often the same institutions with the longest legacies of racial exploitation should form partnerships with HBCUs to strengthen their financial footing and establish programs aimed at eliminating hiring and wage discrimination in the workplace.

Related:Debt without degree: The human cost of college debt that becomes purgatory

Institutions should not rely upon financial reserves alone to fund these initiatives. Universities should consider adopting a system similar to the one devised and approved by Georgetown student-activists and slave descendants: adding a small fee to students annual bills to defray a portion of the reparatory spending. Such measures would go a lot further in uplifting black students and achieving social justice than more spending on studies and conferences.

Removing racist imagery and changing the names of buildings are welcome gestures, but they do little to even the balance. Someone must take the lead in addressing the black student loan-debt crisis head on, and universities should use their financial and social capital to attempt to make amends through reparations.

This story about reparations and student loans was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education, in partnership with The Education Trust. Sign up here for Hechingers newsletter.

Luke Frederick is a doctoral student at Georgetown University, where his research focuses on the policing and incarceration of free blacks and enslaved workers in antebellum America, and research director for the Ohio Student Association.

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OPINION: The crisis in student loan debt offers a chance for reparations - The Hechinger Report

Spot signs of slavery and do something about it – Construction News

The construction sector employs a huge variety of people, from expert engineers to low-skilled labourers.

Tough competition and tight margins put extreme pressure on costs, tempting some to cut corners and ignore checks on who is actually doing the work. This is exploited by human traffickers, who profit from controlling the movements and wages of their victims.

Slavery is a growing worldwide epidemic with more than 40 million victims, including an estimated 136,000 in Britain.

Human trafficking gangs target vulnerable individuals suffering from homelessness, addictions or family break-up, making empty promises about the fresh start these victims crave and assuring them of work, shelter and an income. Victims are usually trafficked to a different location, often overseas, isolating them from everything they know. Initial promises become a distant memory as they are put to work and paid nothing, or a tiny sliver of what they deserve, with traffickers controlling their finances. Identity theft and benefit fraud is common, with gangs profiting still further from such abuse.

Victims are usually grouped together in atrocious conditions, crammed into squalid houses infested with rats, and fed the minimum required for survival. Traffickers use threats and violence to control their victims, who may be sold on to other gangs if they fail to yield enough profit.

We all have a responsibility to stop this suffering, but rooting it out remains a challenge. Victims are often too frightened to come forward, while the short-term nature of construction labour makes it hard to establish the relationships needed to spot warning signs. There are, however, universal indicators that should ring alarm bells.

There are universal indicators that should ring alarm bells

Labouring jobs are regularly filled by people with limited education or little command of English. This can make it difficult to articulate their needs. As a result, one warning sign of potential slavery is an unofficial, unqualified interpreter, especially one who speaks for a large group of individuals. Where possible, it is best to source an independent interpreter.

Another indicator of slavery is restricted freedom of movement. This may be apparent if an individual, or group of individuals, is always escorted to and from the site. Behaviour and appearance can also be very telling. Forced labourers will often be skittish, paranoid and introverted, avoiding eye contact or interaction while remaining incredibly productive. They may look dishevelled, in worn-out, dirty clothing, and show visible signs of abuse, such as bruising. These signs should never be ignored.

One further indicator, offering absolute certainty of exploitation, is a negotiated rate below the National Minimum Wage. At its very lowest this should be 4.35 an hour for those aged 16 to 18, increasing incrementally to reach 8.21 at 25. No worker can be legally employed at rates below these statutory minimums.

To guard against abuse, every business should implement a robust anti-slavery policy tailored to its own circumstances while reflecting wider industry practices. Compliance should cascade down through all subcontractors, with stringent due diligence when selecting third-party services. This requires a shift in industry thinking, placing ethics above economics. If a price seems too good to be true, it probably is. To wilfully ignore this is to become complicit.

Copies of identity documents should be checked, bearing in mind that legitimate documents can often be held by gangmasters. Knowledge should be tested to verify sector-specific documents, such as CSCS cards. Blindly trusting a supposedly reputable supplier is no guarantee in one of the largest modern slavery cases in the UK, a recruitment agency had been infiltrated by a gang member.

A vital first step is to carry out a gap analysis, to highlight vulnerable areas needing immediate improvement. Experts such as Slave-Free Alliance can offer guidance to ensure the exercise is both thorough and attuned to the psyche of traffickers, who are adapt at exploiting weak points of entry.

Adopting responsible processes will require investment, but the outlay will be cheap compared to the potential consequences of inaction. Irreparable reputational damage can result from the discovery of forced labour, potentially leading to loss of contracts and insolvency.

By taking proactive action, firms can protect not just the victims of forced labour but their own future as well.

Marc Stanton is director of Slave-Free Alliance, which passes all its profit to founding charity Hope for Justice

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Spot signs of slavery and do something about it - Construction News

1619 Project leader calls for UVa to take real action to amend for slavery’s legacy – The Daily Progress

New York Times Magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones spent Monday taking a tour of Charlottesvilles Confederate monuments and visiting Monticello before speaking to two crowds about a major project she leads.

Speaking first at the University of Virginia Rotunda, and later downtown at The Haven, Hannah-Jones discussed the 1619 Project and answered questions from UVa President Jim Ryan, New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie and community members.

The 1619 Project is an ongoing initiative of The New York Times Magazine that began as a special issue that was published last August, around the time of the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the first Africans in Virginia.

I wanted to force an acknowledgement of this day, as much as I could, to not allow it to be erased or diminished, but also not just acknowledgement of the day, because a lot of organizations did commemorations, Hannah-Jones said. I wanted to force that acknowledgement of what slavery brought, and the centrality of slavery and that this was not going to be a history. We were going to look at the ongoing, everyday legacy that we all live with.

This project is not about making white people feel guilty for something that you did not personally do, but you have to acknowledge that you are beneficiaries of the system, she said. If there is guilt to be felt, it should be about the ways that you continue to uphold these systems and actively partake in these systems.

Hannah-Jones said it was fitting to have the conversation in Charlottesville and at UVa, specifically in the Rotunda.

In some ways, its the perfect place to have this conversation because I feel like all of the hypocrisies and ideas that the project tries to lay bare, much of that begins right here, she said.

When Ryan asked what her recommendations are for universities grappling with their own history, Hannah-Jones said that the least UVa should do is give free tuition to descendants of the enslaved people who built the university.

If youre really uncomfortable with that notion, you really have to ask yourself why, she said. You really have to ask why you think it is a problem that the people who were forced to build this, their ancestors, because just as wealth is passed down, so is this legacy.

Ryan did not respond on the matter.

When asked about those who have criticized the project, Hannah-Jones said their criticism was not legitimate, and she did not sit down one day and decide to make things up, and has sources to back up the questions from historians.

It has also been said that the project is too pessimistic.

Thats a different perspective that you can have when all of this wasnt built on the back of the oppression of your people, she said. I cant have that view.

During a question and answer period, Myra Anderson asked how she can get her voice heard as a descendant of an enslaved laborer at UVa.

I often feel like I dont even have a seat at the table, or my voice doesnt count, she said.

Hannah-Jones said she was not an activist or community organizer, but that Anderson speaking out, like she was doing at the discussion, was a way to get things accomplished.

I also believe that being publicly shamed is the only way that powerful people are motivated to do the right thing, she said.

UVa student and local activist Zyahna Bryant asked how people can stop universities from exploiting black students, such as asking them to appear in photographs, while not supporting them.

Im going to have her hand the mic back to you, and you tell the university what to do, Hannah-Jones said.

Bryant said the university needs to fund the Office of African-American Affairs, have a real conversation about race, support black faculty and support UVas low-wage workers.

If were not going to really do things fully and to the standard of excellence that we like to claim about being the good and great university, then we can just stop it altogether, because in my opinion it does not help to do things halfway, she said.

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1619 Project leader calls for UVa to take real action to amend for slavery's legacy - The Daily Progress

American Women Won the Right to Vote After the Suffrage Movement Became More Diverse. Thats No Coincidence – TIME

When the woman suffrage movement first began in the mid-19th century, its champions had all become human-rights activists in the searing fires of the abolitionist movement. In 1838, Angelina Grimk, renegade daughter of South Carolina slave owners, laid down the basics of womens rights, in her book, Letters to Catherine Beecher: Whatever it is morally right for a man to do, it is morally right for a woman to do. I recognize no rights but human rights.

In the aftermath of Civil War, emancipation and the constitutional enfranchisement of African American men, this expansive alliance on behalf of human rights tragically faltered. Enraged at the exclusion of women from enfranchisement in the 15th Amendment, Elizabeth Cady Stanton insisted that, if political rights were not to be accorded to all citizens, then educated women, descendants of the Founding Fathers, should take precedence. Betraying her underlying elitism, she wrote in the womens rights periodical The Revolution, in December 1868, If woman find it hard to bear the oppressive laws of a few Saxon Fathers, of the best orders of manhood, what may she not be called to endure when all the lower orders, native and foreigners, Dutch, Irish, Chinese and African, legislate for her and her daughters?

From that point on, for the next 50 years, the major suffrage organizations and their most prominent leaders were white, middle-class women and their arguments rested on the allegedly lofty characteristics of women-as-women rather than on universal human rights. Yet by the turn of the century, national woman suffrage had still not been secured, and political realities were making the constitutional enfranchisement of women a distant dream.

The demand for woman suffrage could not succeed unless it came from a mass movement, reflecting the voices of a diverse and large portion of the nations women. Luckily for the generations of American women who followed, even during the frustrating decades when the previous, exclusionary formulation ruled, American suffragism had grown far beyond its origins.

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Certainly, once one looks past the top tiers of national suffrage leadership, the suffrage movement was not uniformly white. The determined, eager suffragism of African American women is impressive. The battle that had been fought to win and increasingly to protect the voting rights of African American men had affected them deeply. As early as 1874, African American activist Mary Ann Shadd Cary presented her case, as recorded in the official record of the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee: The colored women of this country though heretofore silent, in great measure upon the question of the right to vote have neither been indifferent to their own just claims nor to their demand for political representation.

By the late 19th century, just two generations out of slavery, and despite Jim Crow-era racist violence and segregation, many more African American women were realizing that political rights were crucial to their ability to protect their communities and to advance themselves as women. If white American women, with all their natural and acquired advantages, need the ballot, explained, Adele Hunt Logan of Alabama, in the pages of the Colored American Magazine in 1905, how much more do Black Americans, male and female need the strong defense of the vote to help secure them their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? At the national level, the southern-controlled Democratic Party was totally closed to African Americans. However, at the state level in the North and West, wherever African Americans had standing in local Republican parties, black women were well organized and politically sophisticated participants in the battle for the vote.

Nor was the movement solely the realm of wealthy, educated women. In the early 20th century, white immigrant working-class women also turned to the suffrage movement in great numbers. Working in factories, joining trade unions, moving freely through major cities, they helped to turn 20th century woman suffragism into a mass movement. First and second-generation Italian, Irish and Eastern European Jewish women were especially prominent in the ranks of the great suffrage parades of the 1910s in New York City; Chicago; San Francisco; Washington, D.C. and elsewhere.

Inspired by the spirit of Progressive Era social change, aware of new protective labor and housing laws, these working-class women recognized the importance of making their own political presence felt and influencing how these laws would be shaped and enforced. In researching my new book, Suffrage: Womens Long Battle for the Vote, I discovered this forceful 1907 statement by a British-born garment worker speaking before the New York legislature: Gentlemen, we need every help in the battle of life . To be left out by the State just sets up a prejudice against us. Bosses think and women come to think themselves that they dont count for so much as men.

The most famous womens labor event of these years, the Triangle Shirtwaist Strike of 1910-1911, highlighted the importance of working-class womens suffrage activism. New York City garment workers wore suffrage pins when they picketed their factories and noted that, if they had the right to vote, police would not be so quick to harass and arrest them. The famous heroine of the strike, garment worker Clara Lemlich, issued this challenge to New York legislatures: We are here Senators. We are 800,000 strong in New York State alone. The name of the organization behind the pamphlet that circulated her words is telling: the Wage Earners Suffrage League.

In the final years of the suffrage movement, this power of this unprecedented mass movement was clear. Though sometimes separated in their own organizations, black and white, rich and poor women were unified by their common exclusion from the political affairs of the nation. When the U.S. Constitution was finally amended to prohibit states from political discrimination on the grounds of sex, all celebrated their victory. Speaking before the final convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1920, its leader, Carrie Chapman Catt, declared that the suffragists of this country in the last half century, more than any other group of people in this land, have kept the flying flag of the principles of the Declaration of Independence, the principles of the constitution, and have held them before the people of this country.

However, looking back at the victory of the suffrage movement in her 1933 book, Women in the Twentieth Century, sociologist Sophonsiba Breckenridge insightfully observed that, much like at the end of the World War, the demobilization that began after 1920 was followed by the development of a diversification of aims and interest among and between those who had been united in the attack upon a common enemy.

As women of different politics, races and classes sought to make use of their new voting power, their differences reemerged. Many of those divisions are still an important factor in American politics a century later but they have been overcome before, and may be again. After all, the history of woman suffrage is not yet over.

Ellen Carol DuBois is the author of Suffrage: Womens Long Battle for the Vote, available Feb. 25 from Simon & Schuster.

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American Women Won the Right to Vote After the Suffrage Movement Became More Diverse. Thats No Coincidence - TIME

The UN set 17 sustainability goals. It needs fashion’s help meeting them – Vogue Business

Key takeaways:

The United Nations is calling on the fashion industry to help it achieve its Sustainable Development Goals, which include relevant topics like ending poverty and climate action.

In addition to lessening its impact, fashion is positioned to serve as an awareness platform for the public, the UN says.

At the core of fashions connection to the SDGs is the promotion of sustainable consumption, which involves moving away from selling more to consumers.

The evening before New York Fashion Week kicked off in February, guests gathered at an art space in Manhattan for an event unrelated to the runway shows. The art exhibition Arcadia Earth and the UN Office for Partnerships hosted representatives from Gucci, Theory and Mara Hoffman, along with influencers like Sierra Quitiquit and Marina Testino to discuss the connections between fashion and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

The UNs main message: Fashion has a responsibility and the creative leadership to help it achieve its sustainability goals, which were laid out in 2015 to benefit the planet and its inhabitants. Also known as the Global Goals or SDGs, they cover areas like ocean health, gender equality and sustainable consumption. While nonprofits and developmental agencies are closely tied to these goals, achieving what the UN has laid out will be impossible without participation from the private sector. Fashion ranks high among the industries that need to take action given its size and impact.

To Arcadia Earth founder Valentino Vettori, who spent two decades in fashion, the many touch points between fashion and the UNs goals are loud and clear. Should we talk about womens rights? Its obviously connected to that. Should we talk about slavery? Its obviously connected to that, he says. The industrys consumption and pollution of water might be the most conspicuous of all. It will become the most precious thing ever and we use 2,000 gallons of it to make a pair of jeans? I dont think so.

Fashion can improve its practices in all these areas, the UN believes, and it can also be a platform to reach more people regarding the substance of these challenges.

The UN is offering resources as it calls on fashion to do its part, through a combination of brand-specific efforts, cross-industry alliances and public service, to transform production habits while also putting the onus on consumers to make informed and responsible choices.

The fashion industry has incredible potential for us for advocacy, education, creativity. We need to better tell the UNs story on sustainability, and fashion is a great platform, says Lucie Brigham, chief of office, the UN Office for Partnerships. We need to engage the creative industry to help us educate customers.

Established to steer progress toward the UNs 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and designed to build on, and fill in gaps left by, the Millennium Development Goals, the SDGs are made up of calls for action like ending poverty, ocean conservation, climate change mitigation and ensuring quality education and clean water for all. Fashion is arguably most directly related to the no poverty; gender equality; decent work and economic growth; sustainable development and consumption; climate action; and partnerships goals.

The goals have helped some fashion and related companies set their priorities. A Kering spokesperson says the company used the SDGs when developing its 2025 strategy to ensure it was addressing the full suite of global challenges, from climate change to employees wellbeing. Textile Exchange, a nonprofit that works with brands and suppliers to shift to more sustainable fibres, has used the Global Goals as a framework for promoting organic and lower-impact fibres since 2016, saying they can serve not only as a risk management tool but also to drive innovation, and that investors and businesses are increasingly incorporating them into their risk and materiality assessments.

Attendees at Arcadia Earth's New York Fashion Week event in February 2020.

Arcadia Earth

Guidance from the UN can also help brands to set more ambitious goals, rather than simply meet the bare minimum. For brands already focused on issues covered by the goals, looking to the SDGs can help them solidify their priorities or shed light on areas they havent prioritised before.

UK bag and accessories brand Bottletop, founded in 2002, started exploring natural rubber as a material, says co-founder Cameron Saul, in pursuit of meeting Sustainable Development Goal 15: preserve life on land. The brand was chosen last year by the UN to produce bracelets to represent a larger public awareness campaign.

The UN came to us and said, Listen, were not going to achieve these goals unless people on the street are aware and empowered to deliver them, he recalls. According to Saul, the campaign has sold 55,000 bracelets, which are made out of upcycled illegal firearms and ocean plastic, and resulted in 900 million social impressions.

Saul argues that while awareness doesnt necessarily translate into action, it does represent the first step. The industry has enormous impacts on the planet. If you can transform that, were talking about a seismic impact on people and planet, but also fashion can be the cheerleader. It can carry people and voice in a way that nothing else can. We all relate to fashion.

#TOGETHERBAND (the bracelet that works with the UN to further advancing towards the global goals).

Bottletop

The Global Goals are also prompting companies to form partnerships to work collaboratively on an issue. The UN launched its Alliance for Sustainable Fashion last year to promote and coordinate such efforts from within the UN. The UN Office for Partnerships is trying to work with other organisations and sectors of the industry to increase these efforts, recognising that they wont necessarily happen on their own.

One initiative the UN has backed is One X One, led by Swarovski and the Slow Factory Foundation with support from the UN Office for Partnerships, which matches designers with scientists or advocates to explore solutions for various challenges; New York designer Mara Hoffman, for example, is working with workforce development programme Custom Collaborative to build a training programme for renewing garments.

The goals also raise areas to attention where the least progress is getting done. For Ayesha Barenblat, founder of the California nonprofit Remake, gender equality and opportunities for safe and inclusive employment with fair wages for all is where the fashion industry falls most short. Whether youre looking at aspiring designers or garment workers, its very unusual for an industry to be made up predominantly of women but run by men, she says. Were talking about a $3 trillion industry, but for the most part its built on degradation and poverty wages.

These issues have been documented. But Barenblat says large companies typically address them with little more than training sessions, which she calls window dressing rather than substantial change. Its more claiming the empowerment of women rather than getting to the structural issues, says Barenblat.

Some brands, though, are exploring ways to effectively address these issues, which are covered in the UN goals of gender equality, no poverty, and decent work and economic growth. US apparel and footwear brands Able and Nisolo have partnered on a campaign, the Lowest Wage Challenge, to encourage brands to share their lowest wages to boost transparency. Nudie Jeans has committed to paying workers a living wage, while apparel brand Alta Gracia runs a factory in the Dominican Republic certified by the Worker Rights Consortium to pay a living wage.

Ultimately, changing customer behaviour is necessary for many of the other efforts to succeed. Kevin Moss, global director of the nonprofit World Resources Institutes Business Center, says the goal of sustainable consumption sits at the intersection of nearly all the others. That to me is at the nexus of what people do, what people buy and the environment.

The UN describes sustainable consumption as filling peoples basic needs and improving quality of life while minimising emissions, waste, toxic materials and the use of natural resources in order to protect future generations. Its an issue that has been left out of many sustainability and development initiatives in the past. According to the international agency, worldwide material consumption reached 92.1 billion tons in 2017 a 254 per cent jump from 27 billion tons in 1970.

Jode Rodrigo de Araujo aka The Rubber Doctor in #TOGETHERBAND Voices, created by Andrew Morgan.

Andrew Morgan

The solution, he says, lies in finding models of growth that provide jobs and economic wellbeing that dont depend on selling more stuff to more people. That may include sales of more services rather than material goods; and more brands getting into resale and abandoning the model of selling only new items. Such steps will also require behaviour change on the part of consumers, but he thinks thats not unreasonable to expect, with some effort.

I don't think its innate human behaviour to want to possess more and more and more stuff. I think its been brands and industry [pushing] to make us want more, he says. Companies can play a role in shifting consumer behaviour to reverse that mentality while figuring out the business models to accommodate. If you change the model but not the behaviour, it can fail. If you change behaviour but not the business model, youll drive customers elsewhere. The trick for businesses is to be doing both at the same time. Not waiting though theyve got to do it now.

Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that Arcadia Earth is for-profit art exhibition, rather than a non-profit.

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The UN set 17 sustainability goals. It needs fashion's help meeting them - Vogue Business

Wage theft turns to truth theft – MacroBusiness

At Domain comes a freshly uploaded press release from some lobby or other:

The chief executives of two of the nations largest retail employers have blamed incorrectly configured software as a key cause of staff underpayments, arguing this issue also often leads to businesses overpaying workers.

Rob Scott, who heads up Bunnings, Kmart and Target owner Wesfarmers, and Anthony Heraghty, the managing director of Rebel Sports parent, Super Retail Group, both pinpointed software bought from offshore vendors and not configured for Australias relatively complex labour environment as a key factor in staff being underpaid.

Theres more from businomics moraliser, Jennifrer Hewitt, at the AFR:

the furore over what the ACTU likes to call wage theft is a bizarre example of the contradictions in Australias workplace culture and absurdly complicated industrial relations system of awards and entitlements. Now those contradictions are pushing employees and employers way back into last century instead of what was supposed to be a modern era of sensible, flexible work arrangements.

Theres plenty of blame to go around. Unlike New Zealand, Australias peculiar national skill has been to maintain and build on its arcane labyrinth of award classifications, minimum rates, overtime and penalty conditions. Its enough to confuse the sharpest mathematician, let alone a small business owner or even a corporate HR department.

Investment in payroll systems and technology and the human brain cant always keep up. Underpayment in corporate Australia is more often inadvertent than deliberate, insufficiently attentive about detail rather than overly greedy about profit.

Why do the errors always favour the employer? Hmmm

It seems everybody is using the same software, too, given Fair Work has identified one in five businesses are doing it.

This is all rubbish. Wage theft is not even a glitch in the system any more. It is the system.

Academic research finally caught up to this reality late last year. Below are key excepts fromChapter 13entitledTemporary migrant workers (TMWs), underpayment and predatory business models, written by Iain Campbell:

This chapter argues that the expansion of temporary labour migration is a significant development in Australia and that it has implications for wage stagnation

Three main facts about their presence in Australia are relevant to the discussion of wage stagnation. First, there are large numbers of TMWs in Australia, currently around 1.2 million persons. Second, those numbers have increased strongly over the past 15 years. Third, when employed, many TMWs are subject to exploitation, including wage payments that fall below sometimes well below the minimum levels specified in employment regulation

One link to slow wages growth, as highlighted by orthodox economics, stems from the simple fact of increased numbers, which add to labour supply and thereby help to moderate wages growth. This chapter argues, however, that the more salient point concerns the way many TMWs are mistreated within the workplace in industry sectors such as food services, horticulture, construction, personal services and cleaning. TMW underpayments, which appear both widespread in these sectors and systemic, offer insights into labour market dynamics that are also relevant to the general problem of slow wages growth

Official stock data indicate that the visa programmes for international students, temporary skilled workers and working holiday makers have tripled in numbers since the late 1990s In all, the total number of TMWs in Australia is around 1.2 million persons. If we include New Zealand citizens and permanent residents, who can enter Australia under a special subclass 444 visa, without time limits on their stay and with unrestricted work rights (though without access to most social security payments), then the total is close to 2 million persons TMWs now make up around 6% of the total Australian workforce

Decisions by the federal Coalition government under John Howard to introduce easier pathways to permanent residency for temporary visa holders, especially international students and temporary skilled workers, gave a major impetus to TMW visa programmes.

Most international students and temporary skilled workers, together with many working holiday makers, see themselves as involved in a project of staggered or multi-step migration, whereby they hope to leap from their present status into a more long-term visa status, ideally permanent residency. One result, as temporary migration expands while the permanent stream remains effectively capped, is a lengthening queue of onshore applicants for permanent residency

Though standard accounts describe Australian immigration as oriented to skilled labour, this characterisation stands at odds with the abundant evidence on expanding temporary migration and the character of TMW jobs. It is true that many TMWs, like their counterparts in the permanent stream, are highly qualified and in this sense skilled. However, the fact that their work is primarily in lower-skilled jobs suggests that it is more accurate, as several scholars point out, to speak of a shift in Australia towards ade facto low-skilled migration programme

A focus on raw numbers of TMWs may miss the main link to slow wages growth. It is the third point concerning underpayments and predatory business models that seems richest in implications. This point suggests, first and most obviously, added drag on wages growth in sectors where such underpayments and predatory business models have become embedded. If they become more widely practised, underpayments pull down average hourly wages. If a substantial number of firms in a specific labour market intensify strategies of labour cost minimisation by pushing wage rates below the legal floor, it can unleash a dynamic of competition around wage rates that foreshadows wage decline rather than wage growth for employees

Increases in labour supply allow employers in sectors already oriented to flexible and low-wage employment, such as horticulture and food services, to sustain and extend strategies of labour cost minimisation The arguments and evidence cited above suggest a spread of predatory business models within low-wage industries.37 They suggest an unfolding process of degradation in these labour markets

And below are extracts fromChapter 14, entitledIs there a wages crisis facing skilled temporary migrants?, byJoanna Howe:

Scarcely a day goes by without another headline of wage theft involving temporary migrant workers

In this chapter we explore a largely untold story in relation to temporary migrant workersit exposes a very real wages crisis facing workers on the Temporary Skill Shortage (TSS) visa (formerly the 457 visa) in Australia. This crisis has been precipitated by the federal governments decision to freeze the salary floor for temporary skilled migrant workers since 2013the government has chosen to put downward pressure on real wages for temporary skilled migrants, thereby surreptitiously allowing the TSS visa to be used in lower-paid jobs

In Australia, these workers are employed via the TSS visa and they must be paid no less than a salary floor. This salary floor is called the Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold (TSMIT). TSMIT was introduced in 2009 in response to widespread concerns during the Howard Government years of migrant worker exploitation. This protection was considered important because an independent review found that many 457 visa workers were not receiving wages equivalent to those received by Australian workers

In effect, TSMIT is intended to act as a proxy for the skill level of a particular occupation. It prevents unscrupulous employers misclassifying an occupation at a higher skill level in order to employ a TSS visa holder at a lower level

TSMITs protective ability is only as strong as the level at which it is set. In its original iteration back in 2009, it was set at A$45 220. This level was determined by reference to average weekly earnings for Australians, with the intention that TSMIT would be pegged to this because the Australian government considered it important that TSMIT keep pace with wage growth across the Australian labour market. This indexation occurred like clockwork for five years. But since 1 July 2013, TSMIT has been frozen at a level of A$53 900. ..

There is now a gap of more than A$26 000 between the salary floor for temporary skilled migrant workers and annual average salaries for Australian workers. This means that the TSS visa can increasingly be used to employ temporary migrant workers in occupations that attract a far lower salary than that earned by the average Australian worker. This begs the question is the erosion of TSMIT allowing the TSS visa to morph into a general labour supply visa rather than a visa restricted to filling labour market gaps in skilled, high-wage occupations?..

But why would employers go to all the effort of hiring a temporary migrant worker on a TSS visa over an Australian worker?

Renowned Australian demographer Graeme Hugo observed that employers will always have a demand for foreign workers if it results in a lowering of their costs. The simplistic notion that employers will only go to the trouble and expense of making a TSS visa application when they want to meet a skill shortage skims over a range of motives an employer may have for using the TSS visa. These could be a reluctance to invest in training for existing or prospective staff, or a desire to move towards a deunionised workforce. Additionally, for some employers, there could be a belief that, despite the requirement that TSS visa workers be employed on equivalent terms to locals, it is easier to avoid paying market salary rates and conditions for temporary migrant workers who have been recognised as being in a vulnerable labour market position. A recent example of this is the massive underpayments of chefs and cooks employed by Australias largest high-end restaurant business, Rockpool Dining Group, which found that visa holders were being paid at levels just above TSMIT but well below the award when taking into account the amount of overtime being done

Put simply,temporarydemand for migrant workers often creates apermanentneed for them in the labour market. Research shows that in industries whereemployers have turned to temporary migrants en masse, it erodes wages and conditions in these industries over time, making them less attractive to locals

A national survey of temporary migrant workers found that 24% of 457 visa holders who responded to the survey were paid less than A$18 an hour. Not only are these workers not being paid in according with TSMIT, but they are also receiving less than the minimum wage. A number of cases also expose creative attempts by employers to subvert TSMIT. Given the challenges many temporary migrants face in accessing legal remedies, these cases are likely only scratching the surface in terms of employer non-compliance with TSMIT

Combined, then, with the problems with enforcement and compliance, it is not hard to conclude that the failure to index TSMIT is contributing to a wages crisis for skilled temporary migrant workers So the failure to index the salary floor for skilled migrant workers is likely to affect wages growth for these workers, as well as to have broader implications for all workers in the Australian labour market.

The micro-economic evidence has been overwhelming for years:

I gave up listing is all eventually.

What we are seeing is the systemic rorting of Australian workers thanks to an out of control immigration system that has rendered industrial relations ungovernable.

It is loved by the Right because it delivers fat rentiers easier profits. It is loved by the Left because its not racist. It is loved by the media because it drives property listings. It is loved by Treasury because more warm bodies boost tax receipts. It is loved by the RBA because it doesnt have to account for its housing bubble.

Australias migrant slavery economy is the core of broader weak wages growth but that doesnt matter either. The macro-economic enabler is running mass immigration into material economic slack for the first time ever:

Its not just temporary visas. It is the entire mass immigration model:

These problems have been documented by MB for years (e.g.here,hereandhere).

The first best solution to Australias wage stagnation and theft is simple: cut-off the supply to cheap foreign labour by halving immigration.

He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.

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Wage theft turns to truth theft - MacroBusiness

NYU Professor Involved With Anti-Police Protests That Caused $100K In Damage – Blue Lives Matter

New York, NY The instigators behind the massive anti-cop subway fare protest in New York City on Jan. 31 are professors at New York University and the University of Buffalo.

The antifa group Decolonize This Place launched a social media campaign encouraging disruptive demonstrations in the New York City transit system on Jan. 31 as a reaction to the swearing in of 500 new subway cops who were sworn into the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) earlier in the month.

The streets are ours. The trains our ours. The walls are ours. This moment is ours. How will you and your crew build and f--k shit up for #FTP3 on #J31 (THIS FRIDAY)? Issa mothaf--kin' movement, @decolonize_this tweeted on Jan. 28.

At the urging of Decolonize This Place, the protesters vandalized subway turnstiles and bus windows, causing more than $100,000 in damage to city property, according to the New York Post.

Campus Reform recently reported that Decolonize This Place, the group behind the violent protests, was founded in 2016 by New York University (NYU) Professor Amin Husain and University of Buffalo Professor Nitasha Dhillon.

NYUs website said that Husain teaches a class on militant activism at the university, the New York Post reported.

Husain and Dhillon were both actively involved in the Occupy Wall Street movement.

In 2012, Husain spoke at an Al-Quds Day celebration in New York City and said he was from Palestine and had fought to free Gaza.

He talked about throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails at Israeli settlers and said that hed moved to the United States for an American Dream that didnt exist.

Husain talked about the same sort of violent uprisings in 2016 at a Pro-Palestinian rally in Times Square, the New York Post reported.

The Decolonize This Place website features revolutionary manuals and a diagram that explains how to How to Shut Down the City.

The guides discuss how to overpower an opponent and have thought bubbles with the words nails, glass bottles, and masks, the New York Post reported.

"For us, decolonization necessitates abolition, the Decolonize This Place website explained. But what does abolition demand? Not only does it demand the abolition of prisons and police, bosses and borders, but as Fred Moten and Stefano Harney write, its the abolition of a society that could have prisons, that could have slavery, that could have the wage, and therefore not abolition as the elimination of anything but abolition as the founding of a new society.

Husain led a protest in 2018 and 2019 that forced the resignation of a board member of the Whitney Museum of American Art after it was revealed that a company he owned manufactured the tear gas being used at the U.S.-Mexico border, the New York Post reported.

The NYU professor uses movements such as Occupy Wall Street and the Direct Action Front for Palestine as case studies for the course he teaches at NYU.

NYU appeared not to want a close association with Husain, the New York Post reported.

Our records reflect that he is one of the thousands of part-time faculty that are hired each year by schools and academic departments, NYU Spokesman John Beckman said when asked about the militant instructor.

Husains contact information was removed from the NYU website shortly after the New York Post contacted the university for comment.

The New York Post also reported that Husain had recently scrubbed his Twitter account and removed any references to his role in the incident on Jan. 31.

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NYU Professor Involved With Anti-Police Protests That Caused $100K In Damage - Blue Lives Matter

Class Domination, Social Hierarchy And The Fight For Equality – Scoop.co.nz

Tuesday, 18 February 2020, 9:25 amOpinion: Dr Nayvin Gordon

Class domination has not alwaysexisted in human society, but once established, socialhierarchy has deeply penetrated and permeated culture tocreate both implicit and explicit biases for social status,for hierarchy. Returning to an egalitarian society requiresboth systemic-institutional change and change in ourconscious and unconscious minds.

As long as classsociety has existed, it has been a social dominancehierarchy. Hierarchy is a social construct, used to justifydomination and exploitation. Myths have always been used tojustify the rule of the few over the many. Kings and Lordsmaintained that God gave them the authority to rule overpeasants. Slave-owners declared that non Christians could beenslaved. Today capitalists say that they are smarter andworked harder and thus have the right to privately ownproduction and pay workers wages. They made themselvesrulers, and then they sought to divide those whom theyruled.

The brutal economic system of slavery inAmerica required social control to prevent the unity ofblack and white labor. The slave-owners created the lies andlaws of racism. Frederick Douglas, the famous abolitionist,wrote: The hostility between the Whites and the Blacks ofthe South is easily explained. It has its root and sap inthe relation of slavery, and was incited on both sides bythe cunning of the slave masters. Those masters securedtheir ascendancy over both the poor White and the Blacks byputting enmity between them. They divided both to conquereach. The demonizing myths of racism created aculture of race hierarchy in the general population. Whenindustrial capitalism began to expand it used the racistideology to divide black and white to exploit and profitfrom the wage worker.

Today we live in a capitalisteconomy where the 1% owns controlling interest incorporations, industry, finance and land, while the 99% areexploited. A few thousand years of social hierarchy hascreated a cultural environment where it is largely acceptedas natural. It is in the air, consciously andunconsciously embedded in our culture. We generally acceptthe oppressive system of social dominance. Children as youngas six are implicitly (unconsciously) awareof status.

Social status is widely acceptedimplicitly even among those whohold egalitarian world views. Studies have shownthat status is more important thanmoney.

Significantly, social status isstrongly linked to fear in our brains emotional center.The 1% use their power to deflect and divide the 99% bypromoting stereotypes and mass propaganda to dehumanizecertain groups which impact the limbic system, theprimitive brain, with the powerful emotions of fear andhate When status is threatened the emotion offear is generated leading to hatred and violence.History reveals that when the 99% begin to organize forprogressive social change that could create more socialequality, the ruling class feels threatened.Confrontation is inevitablesince it is invariablyinitiated by the forces of reaction whosee their power threatened. A famous economist oncewrote: the most violent, mean and malignant passionsof the human breast, the Furiesof private interest.

The top down dominance ofcorporate capitalism continue to divide and subdivide the99% into those who are considered worthy and those who areless worthy --race, nation, religion, sex, immigrant, tribeand more, ad infinitum. The power systems of dominancehierarchy are built into the major institutions andorganizations of society- corporations, the state, thepolice and the military for example. It is not a few badapples, but the rotten barrel of the barrelmakers .

There are those who maintain that itis in human nature to dominate and exploitthey sayit has always been so. Nothing could be further fromthe truth. Anthropologists have repeatedlydemonstrated that humans have lived for thousands of yearsin egalitarian societies. In fact many have practicedreverse hierarchythose who sought to dominate asdespots were punished,banished or killed.

Social hierarchy is acreated oppressive social construct as isracism. It can be abolished. Socialdominance hierarchy and the fear of losing status are notinevitable. We have the potential to unite the worlds 99%and create a society of equals. It is crucial that thoseseeking to transform the political and economic systemacknowledge not only must they build a movement foreconomic, social and political equality but also struggle toovercome their own implicit hierarchical biases. If not,social hierarchy will be carried into the futurewhere leaders will become rulers whoundermine and corrupt the egalitarian world view. Historyhas clearly shown that only eternal vigilance of the rankand file mobilized against social hierarchy has thepotential to win and maintain the solidarity of anegalitarian society. We must change ourselveswhile also seeking to changesociety.

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If Progressives Want to Win, They’ll Have to Talk About White Supremacy – The Nation

Donald Trump addresses supporters at a rally in central Pennsylvania in May 2019. (Drew Angerer / Getty Images)

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The Democratic nomination contest is at a pivotal point, especially for the left. Progressive issues are ascendant, moderate candidates are vote-splitting, Bernie Sanders tops the polls, and Elizabeth Warren just had a very strong debate performance in Nevada. And yet despite the tantalizing proximity of progressive victory, there remains a glaring hole at the heart of the lefts strategy: the failure to prioritize the fight against white nationalism and racial resentmentthe sources of this presidents power, and the cornerstones of capitalisms structural inequality.Ad Policy

If the structural change that Warren espouses and the political revolution that Sanders champions dont explicitly address the racial realities that lie at the heart of this country, then their movements could fail to inspire the kind of transformation the candidates say they want. My research has found thatnearly half of Democratic voters are people of color, and a dramatic drop-off in African American turnout in 2016 was a principal factor in Hillary Clintons defeat. Conveying the urgency of the fight against white supremacy could be critical to propelling the kind of turnout that will help Democrats win in November.

Donald Trump is obviously unlike any president we have seen in a long time. Trump, who famously said he could shoot somebody on New Yorks Fifth Avenue and not lose any voters, seems to defy the laws of political gravity. But many fail to appreciate what has kept him afloat.

White identity politics are at the foundation of the United Statesenshrined in slavery starting in 1619 and codified at the nations conception, with the passage of the 1790 Naturalization Act restricting citizenship to free white persons. Typically, political appeals to white racial resentment have come in more implicit and coded dog whistles, such as Ronald Reagans demonization of black welfare queens. It has been a long time since someone with Trumps stature openly and unapologetically embraced the racist right wing; many might have assumed it would be political suicide to brand Mexican immigrants rapists, enact bans on Muslim immigration, or whip up a xenophobic mob chanting, Build the wall! Trumps speech and policies have unleashed deep wells of racial resentment, and myriad academic studiesmost of them ignored by Democratic consultants and leadershave shown that this is a motivating factor for many of his supporters. (I have started a list of these studies here.) The engine driving the Trump machine is white supremacy.Related Article

Despite this, the most progressive candidates in this race have spent far more time critiquing other, more moderate candidates and supposedly race-neutral aspects of Trumps time in office, such as his tax cuts for the rich, than they have fighting white nationalism. (Ironically, moderate Joe Biden may be the only one who has directly refuted Trump on this point: One of his early campaign ads challenged the presidents 2017 defense of the white supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia.) Warren and Sanders are correct to decry the rise of corporate interests within the Democratic Party. Its admirable to fight for a higher minimum wage, universal health care, and aggressive action to save the planet from climate catastrophe. But in doing so, both progressive voting groups and candidates like Warren and Sanders are missing the strategic and moral imperative of reframing this election.

With upcoming primaries in the more diverse states of the South and Southwest, candidates are starting to bump up issues pertaining to voters of color. Yet none of the remaining candidates have made Trumps drive to make America white again a centerpiece of their campaign. This would go beyond talking about issues that resonate with communities of color. It would require ably and enthusiastically countering Trumps vision of a white America with what it really is: a proudly multiracial country. When progressive candidates fail to call out Trumps appeals to white racial resentmentor to match the force with which he makes themtheyre allowing him to reap the benefits, without paying the price.

The default playbook for too many Democrats is to talk around white supremacy, usually for fear of turning off white voters. But there is compelling evidence that the best way to blunt racist dog-whistling is to call it out. In her 2001 book The Race Card, Princeton political scientist Tali Mendelberg revealed how Republicans use of coded racial messages, and their impact on voters, lost power when the implicit was made explicit. In studying voluminous survey data on the 1988 presidential elections when George H. W. Bush used ads about Willie Hortonan African American who committed a crime after being released from prisonMendelberg noted that Democrats feared that if they [spoke] explicitly about race they [would] lose crucial white votes. But her research found the opposite to be true: when campaign discourse is clearly about racewhen it is explicitly racialit has the fewest racial consequences for white opinion. Even Trump usually prefers to talk about a border wall than about the pro-white immigration agenda advanced by Stephen Miller, one the White Houses most enthusiastic white supremacists.Current Issue

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The through line between this Novembers election and the long-term goal of transforming this unequal nation should be an agenda that speaks to the pain so many Americans feel: the pain rooted in the racial wealth gap. The average white family now has more than 10 times the wealth of the average black family, and 7.5 times that of the average Latino family. That is a direct consequence of centuries of public policies that have sanctioned white wealth creation by seizing land from indigenous people, importing Africans to do backbreaking unpaid labor, and exploiting Mexican and Central American farm workerstopped off by government-sanctioned racial discrimination in housing and hiring.

Although its not widely discussed, Republicans are, in fact, experiencing some blowback from Trumps actionsespecially from white-collar suburban voters who gave Trump a chance in 2016 but defected to the Democrats in 2018, contributing to the Democratic takeover of the House and seven previously Republican-held governors offices. Groups and leaders on the left have an opportunity, and an obligation, to push their preferred candidates to lead on the fight over Americas racial identity. Warrens and Sanderss speeches are replete with references to Wall Street, big corporations, and corruption in Washington, DC. Although both have been critical of Trumps deportation policies and ICE, they have not distinguished themselves in a field of candidates who tiptoe around the issue of immigrationeven though children are still in cages at our nations borderand dance away from reparations, ignoring the gargantuan racial wealth gap that cleaves the fabric of our society. None of the candidates onstage in Las Vegas on Wednesday even mentioned immigration until late in the evening. It was clearly not top of mind, even in a state as Latino as Nevada.

It is still not too late for these candidates to course-correct. There are at least three concrete steps that progressives could take to make a meaningful difference:

Forge a united front to demand that the Democratic nominee choose a person of color as their vice presidential pick. For all the appeal of hoping Sanders and Warren would team up, an all-white ticket is not what will inspire and mobilize the most racially diverse electorate in the history of this country. None of the current candidates have been willing to make this commitment, and a chorus of voices from the left on this issue could push them do so.

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Create a common war room to drive the narrative about this administration and its enablers white-supremacist priorities. Progressive and left groups could each dedicate staffers to this joint effort, which could provide tools, information, and coordination for activists. This could lead to creative, attention-getting actions in cities across the country, exposing both the presidential reelection campaign and key Senate elections as the referendums on whiteness that they are.

Launch a joint petition to demand a Democratic campaign budget and plan that reflect the actual demographics of the voters they need to reach. The default focus of much Democratic spending remains on running television or digital ads targeting white swing voters. The organizations and committees in the Democratic ecosystem typically spend significantly more than $1 billion in a presidential election year; a coalition of progressive groups could demand that half of those funds go toward organizing and turning out the vote in communities of color.

The black Marxist author Manning Marable wrote in 1985 that at the heart of the American experience is a series of crimes: the violent theft of the land itself, the violent theft of millions of people from Africa and their subsequent bondage as chattel, the bloody conquest of the Southwest from Mexico, and the government-sponsored war on Native Americans. That series of crimes has created the conditions which the left is now working to transform. But during this campaign, they have done it wearing racial blinders. That could lead them to failure. The resurgent progressive movement could both win this electionand lay the foundations for a better societyby tackling the existential threat that white supremacy poses to this countrys social contract and democratic institutions. It is not too late, but the clock is ticking.

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If Progressives Want to Win, They'll Have to Talk About White Supremacy - The Nation

Democratic presidential candidate Tom Steyer speaks one-on-one with News 2 – WCBD News 2

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (WCBD) Democratic presidentialcandidate Tom Steyer spoke one-on-one with News 2s Brad Franko to discuss hiscampaign and performance in the Palmetto State.

Recent polls from Real Clear Politics shows Steyer is now among the top three democratic candidates for president in South Carolina.

But is South Carolina the end-all-be-all for his campaign? Steyer says diversity is key and feels his campaign is appealing to everybody across the spectrum.

Nevada and South Carolina are the first two states that arediverse, he said. There are a lot of black people and there are a lot of Latinos,a lot of Asian Americans, Native Americans as well as white people. I know thatanybody, who wants to put together a coalition of democrats needs to appeal to everybodyacross the spectrum and if anybody wants to beat Donald Trump in November of2020, then they have got to be able to relate to those people and have everyoneshow up to the polls in November.

Steyer admitted that South Carolina has special importance. Itabsolutely does, and Ive said that for a long time.

Running for president is a cutthroat process. Recently in South Carolina, a newspaper talked about Steyers financial investment in the state and a former party chairman said what he is doing isnt investing but paying people off.

What were doing in South Carolina, we have the most peopleon the ground of anybody in South Carolina. If you call hiring people andpaying them for doing work, paying people off I think thats what they callthe American way in fact, we have a diverse group of people, take a lookwhose working for us, who is endorsing me, if youre asking people to do workfor you, to do community organizing Im a community organizer, I know thebest way to do community organizing the only really effective way is havepeople go into those communities that they are a part of and that they know.So, the idea of paying people off; people are doing work and so they getpaid. Thats entirely appropriate andthats the way community organizing works.

He went on to say, My wife moved to South Carolina for goodness sakes. My being on the ground more than any other candidate, our having a bigger group of people working on the ground than anyone else, the fact that Im the only candidate that will say he or she is for reparations for slavery, the fact that Im talking honestly about race, willing to take on Mr. Trump on the economy, saying I think his economic policies stink for working people and I can show it. Im talking about a completely different kind of economy with a much higher minimum wage; a tax cut of 10% for everybody who makes less than $250K and the creation of over four and a half million good-paying union jobs across the county to rebuild it in a climate-smart way I think what Im doing in South Carolina is resonating because in fact people can get a chance to see me, see who I am, see who my family is, they can listen to me and know that what I am talking about is a real-world and its much better than this kind of Mar-a-Lago economy that Mr. Trump has been promoting.

The South Carolina Democratic Primary will be held on Saturday,February 29th.

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Democratic presidential candidate Tom Steyer speaks one-on-one with News 2 - WCBD News 2

A revolutionary view of the Sanders campaign – Workers World

The competition for the Democratic presidential nomination has become a focus of political life in the United States. For revolutionaries debating how to view this campaign, we must answer the following questions: What is the class character of the Sanders movement? What is the potential impact of the Sanders movement on the worldwide interests of the working class and the oppressed? How can this development lead to a broader revolutionary upsurge in the heart of the U.S. empire? From there we must chart a plan of action.

Character and context of Sanders movement

The rejuvenation of social democracy and liberal reformism, most notably in the rise of the left in the Democratic Party, comes as a response to the decline of the U.S. empire and the inability of the U.S. capitalist economy to provide decent, well-paying jobs to a majority of the working class.

On one hand, the Peoples Republic of China has risen as a clear economic and geopolitical challenge to U.S. imperialist world domination. On the other, the U.S. remains plagued by endless imperialist war, mass incarceration, low wages, enormous debt, underemployment, sexual and gender-based violence, and outbursts of racist, fascist terror. A major financial collapse looms, threatening to finally reveal the weaknesses of the real economy and then unleash a deeper ruling-class assault on workers quality of life.

In struggle against neoliberal economic terrorism by U.S. banks and corporations and their client states, our class has taken to the streets across the world. Tens of millions have fought against austerity and the capitalist ruling class in Chile, Ecuador, Haiti, France, Colombia and elsewhere; hundreds of millions if India is included. The desperate attempts of the U.S. empire to maintain its stranglehold on the world economy have caused anti-imperialist reactions in Iraq, Iran, Venezuela and Palestine.

The unifying issue of this global struggle is the declining prospects for working-class youth who live in capitalist societies. A multinational youth movement has identified neoliberal capitalism as its primary enemy. In some ways, the second presidential campaign of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders gets its popular energy from and provides a voice for part of the U.S. wing of this working-class youth movement.

The viability of any reformist movement like the Sanders campaign, in the face of a weakening global capitalist system, can be debated. Can social democracy and progressive reformism be revived? Insecure about maintaining its profits in a capitalist economy that is declining relative to other world powers, the U.S. ruling class has increased its exploitation of the working class, taking an ever larger proportion of the wealth the workers produce.

Without the material basis provided by the expansion of U.S. imperialism and its reaping of superprofits, any rebirth of social democracy would find it difficult to deliver meaningful benefits to the workers, even should it win an election. What is needed instead is a movement that seeks nothing short of the end of capitalism.

Ruling class attacks Sanders

Earlier this month, Sanders said: In many respects, we are a socialist society today. Donald Trump, before he was president, as a private businessperson, he received $800 million in tax breaks and subsidies to build luxury housing in New York. The difference between my socialism and Trumps socialism is I believe the government should help working families, not billionaires. (Axios, Feb. 9)

As communists, we are well aware that Sanders holds political positions we cant support: his lack of solidarity with international anti-imperialist struggles, his lack of support for reparations for slavery along with Black Lives Matter, his vitriolic attack on pro-socialist leaders like Hugo Chvez and Nicols Maduro in Venezuela, his support for laws criminalizing sex workers and much more.

Sanders program is more like Lyndon Johnsons War on Poverty in the mid-1960s or Franklin Roosevelts New Deal in the 1930s. Sanders social democracy is only seen as a radical socialist project because the U.S. ruling class has imposed such right-wing, pro-capitalist ideology and programs on the population.

The U.S. ruling class may own finance capital, oil, pharmaceutical giants and the health profit industry, be landlords or real estate investors, own big data, agriculture and/or other sectors. Their slightly different specific interests are reflected by the two parties, the Democrats and the Republicans.

Most big capitalists, however, are overjoyed with Trumps transfer of wealth to their pockets. Others may see Trump as a loose cannon and consider Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg or another politician as more competent to protect and expand their interests. Yet they all unite against Sanders, not just because of the potential impact on their profits, but because they fear a greater social movement could develop that will call into question the elites plunder and profit.

Thus, we can expect anti-communist attacks against Sanders to continue to escalate if his campaign continues to gain steam. This red-baiting must be met with an active campaign to popularize real socialism, one that goes beyond Sanders deflective statement (in the Axios quote) about how socialism already exists for the rich.

Our movement must unequivocally defend the necessity of socialism and the obvious, documented superiority of workers ownership of the means of production, paired with planning that prioritizes human needs and the life of the Earth over profits.

Internationalism is a necessity, not an inconvenience

Along with the red-baiting, the attacks on Sanders from pro-Israeli forces similar to the outrageous attacks on former Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn by the British media will continue. This is even though Sanders limits his statements on Palestine to support for basic human rights.

Sanders himself is Jewish. Yet this will not stop the attacks on him for alleged anti-Semitism simply because he doesnt give full backing to Israels murderous campaign to annihilate the Palestinian people. These attacks must be met by a strong, anti-racist movement in defense of the Palestinian peoples right to exist, from the river to the sea.

Sanders claims to be against U.S. wars in Iraq and beyond, yet his voting record doesnt reflect that. Sanders support for U.S. imperialism must be fought by those who wish to see his domestic program be successful. The domestic and foreign policies of the empire are directly connected. Both policies are about the balance of power between the oppressed and the oppressor.

While liberal politicians may fear taking anti-war positions, socialists must expose the foreign policy of the empire as directed by the needs of capitalism. Ruthless sanctions and murder must be contested in the name of international solidarity and the survival of the more than 7.5 billion people in the world threatened by the most violent ruling elite ever, based in Wall Street and Washington.

Our struggle, that of the working class in the U.S., is primarily against the U.S. billionaires, not against other countries. The strategy of revolutionary defeatism to defeat our own ruling class as expressed by V.I. Lenin during World War I, should be elementary for revolutionaries and must be learned by a resurgent left that, for too long, has been infected by bourgeois pro-war propaganda.

We must also learn how to resist the imperialist attacks on China, Venezuela, Iran, Cuba, the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea and beyond. Working-class internationalism and solidarity with the oppressed are central to our long-term goal of socialist revolution.

Allies of the U.S. working class abroad may view the election of Sanders as a victory against the empire. A Sanders victory could open serious struggles over the need to dismantle the U.S. empire in order to save the planet, to rebuild the global economy and to pay reparations to those dispossessed by the U.S.

To the extent, however, that Sanders gives public support for closed borders, sanctions, U.S. air strikes and other measures, this would alienate his popular base a base he would have to rely upon to beat back the inevitable attacks from the right. This contradiction could give rise to a greater level of struggle.

Elections: A barometer or an organizing tool?

As revolutionaries, we know that socialist transformation is necessary for humanity and to sustain life on Earth, and we know this transformation cannot come about by using the masters tools described in the U.S. Constitution. Rather, we view capitalist elections as a limited survey of the attitudes of the multinational working class and the other classes in U.S. society. Every four years, about 55 percent of the voting-age population with a greater proportion of voters from the less oppressed and older sectors of the working class choose a president from either of the two major parties, both of which are owned and operated by the capitalists.

Sanders campaign has attempted to use the Democratic Party to raise issues in the interests of the working class. Many Democratic Socialists of America members view the Sanders campaign, and electoral politics more generally, as the primary channel to engage and radicalize the working class. This is unlike the period from the 1930s to the 1970s when the left looked toward the labor movement or other social movements as the centers of politicization and class identity development.

The argument of DSA and other left groups that have worked alongside the Sanders campaign is that the campaign a shortcut to building mass consciousness. Many young activists have hit the streets in the name of the Sanders campaign to promote classwide solidarity against the billionaire ruling class and to try to win supporters to their socialist organization.

Ruling-class ideology insists that the primary arena of politics is bourgeois elections, particularly national elections for president. Thus, when the left plans a political strategy, the question of whether to run in elections is a question of what is the most effective type of mass organizing that can build revolutionary socialist consciousness.

The Sanders campaign has prioritized the central tenet of the Occupy movement from the last decade: the struggle of the 99% versus the 1%. Sanders has put forth stronger positions on racial justice, migrant rights and many other policies that reflect the hard work of organizers in peoples movements.

Sanders 2016 primary campaign took on the right-wing establishment Democratic Party and had a major impact in winning thousands of new people to socialist organizations. The DSA and others have joined this years campaign with the goal of recruiting new members and pushing the campaign to the left, riding the wave and seeing where they will end up.

What happens when or if the DNC steals the nomination from Sanders? Will organizations to the left of the Democratic Party still insist on voting Blue no matter who? Will there be a political fracture in which the Sanders movement, even despite the refusal of Sanders himself, decides to make a dirty break from the Democratic Party and form a new socialist electoral third party?

What if Sanders were to get the nomination and then win the election against Trump? Who will defend him from the wrath of the capitalists and a stock market that could be in free fall? Will a mass movement emerge and move in a more radical direction, emboldened by the results?

Will the mirage of capitalist democracy be revealed as a fraud? Will that demoralize the masses or radicalize them?

While the fate of the Sanders movement is yet to unfold, the most pressing question for revolutionary socialists may be: What is the most effective way to agitate, educate and organize this Sanders movement into an anti-imperialist, anti-capitalist, revolutionary movement?

Which road to socialism?

Workers World Party believes that the goal of revolutionary parties when entering capitalist electoral politics should be to advance a revolutionary program in order to shatter illusions of capitalist democracy and win broad working-class support. The Democratic Party in the past has been the graveyard of social movements. Still, bourgeois political campaigns can reflect and show the significance of peoples movements.

The question of critical support for or independence from the Sanders movement is one we plan to answer through action. We will attend Sanders campaign rallies in order to meet this movement and push for revolutionary socialism. We will be in the streets with this movement, raising demands that speak to young people looking for revolutionary change. We look at this development with revolutionary optimism and we will study it closely.

WWP is still considering how to intervene in the 2020 presidential campaign. We will definitely run a major ideological campaign, entitled Which road to socialism? With this effort, we will put forth our revolutionary socialist perspective in a wide variety of ways. We will organize regular discussion groups in our branches across the country to engage these questions, all the while reaching out to the Sanders movement and those to its left to discuss the contradictions of social democracy and attempt to win people to fight for revolutionary socialism.

We will challenge the weaknesses of Sanders movement and push it in a revolutionary direction, not by being sectarian or opportunist, but by waging an honest ideological and mass struggle that speaks to the needs of the working class and the oppressed to go further.

Even moderate social reforms can take place only under the pressure of mass movements in the streets and in our workplaces. Real revolutionary socialism, including the seizure and liberation of private property in the means of production, cannot occur by amending the U.S. Constitution. It must be the result of a worldwide mass movement that uses various tactics and strategies to defeat capitalist rule.

With this in mind, we will launch a series of mobilizations to fight the racist, anti-worker policies of the Trump administration. That the Democratic Party has enabled these policies for example, the U.S. sanctions that have terrorized hundreds of millions of people on the planet will expose the imperialist character of both parties.

Currently we are working with hundreds of organizations to launch an international campaign against U.S. sanctions, entitled Sanctions Kill. Campaigns like this allow us to connect with those directly impacted by U.S. sanctions passed by Democrats and Republicans. We will mobilize on May Day to unite the movements against capitalism, imperialism, racism and all the crimes of this system with a show of solidarity on this socialist-inspired, international day of struggle.

We will continue to mobilize against U.S. imperialism in all its manifestations, as part of our devotion to our worldwide class. We will continue to organize for the most oppressed of our class for incarcerated workers, for political prisoners, for low-wage workers, for people with disabilities, for the homeless, for those oppressed because of gender or gender expression or national origin, and for migrants and refugees all with the goal of building a broadly popular communist party steeled in combat and the day-to-day struggles of our class.

Finally, we will use this election to push for real democracy. While this election may be seen as a referendum on Trumps social and economic policies, we will push to make this election a referendum on the crimes of capitalism. Imagine, a peoples referendum in which we vote with our feet, by withholding our labor and by fighting for a real future, a socialist society.

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A revolutionary view of the Sanders campaign - Workers World

This is What a Society Without a Future Looks Like – City Watch

Like you do, perhaps. Our societies means Anglo ones: America, Britain, Australia perhaps. You can judge for yourself if your society is on the list. What underlies all this? How did we get here? To things like today: a fresh-faced new government advisor supports eugenics, because he thinks minorities are genetically inferiorall of which, of course, isa literal form of genocide as defined by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. He was hired.by the wayfor hisblog comments. What the? What on earth?Genocide stalking the halls of powerby way of the comments section?

Such stuff isnt just horrific. Its surreal and absurd.It makes the jaw drop like a stone and the head spin in whiplash. Its now just as if we now live in a dystopia written by pedophiles, wannabe basement-dwelling fascists, militant authoritarians, men who put kids in camps, silent majorities who shrug at it all, elites who wonder what the problem is, billionaires who profit in glee at all the above, and other assorted forms of human failurewe do. But I digress.

When I look at our societies, I see three obvious patterns. They tell me our societies arent going to make it. Not just because, well, those patterns are therebut also because as societies we dont seem capable of understanding or acknowledging theyre therewe wont own up, confront, recognize, admit them. All that put together is the stuff of something very much like an inevitable social collapse. How do you treat a patient who wont admit how sick he really is? My patterns link the hard stuff to the soft stuff economics, politics, society, to values, priorities, what we genuinely consider worthy. They are subtle things. Theyre aboutwhywe make and go on making the astonishingly foolish choices we do.

The first thing I see when I look at our societies is a pattern of staggering economic mismanagement.How is it that we had endless money for wars, for aggression, for intelligence agencies to launch covert plots to install dictators (Im not making that up), for rage, for violence? For bank bailout? But none to bail outthe working class, the middle class, the average family? How is it that hedge funds get endless free money from the government, every single nanosecond of every single day but literally a full half of American work low-wage jobs? What the? You see what I mean by staggering economic mismanagement.

And yet elites, as a whole, refuse to own up to this.Just today I saw Barack Obama tweeting how successful his economic policies were. Sorry, reality says the opposite: 75% of Americans struggle to pay the bills, 80% cant raise a tiny amount for an emergency, incomes have stagnated for decades. Hardly the stuff of an economic miracle. But when Barack says it, you probably believe it. I get it. Hes a nice guy. His heart is in the right place. But thats not enough to create a working society, much less economy. Every pattern Ill speak about is a hidden one we refuse, as a society, to own up to it. And so what can we do about it?

Underlying that pattern of staggering economic mismanagement is a set of values.We value, as a society, violence, cruelty, aggression, hostility, over and above everything else, especially their opposites: kindness, decency, gentleness. What kind of society do those values build? Can they yield anything but the dystopia we live in?

The second pattern I see when I look at our societies is a history of shocking institutional failure, built on moral degradation.Were the societies who built an international slave trade. We literally plundered a continent for its people, and made them our slaves. We then put them to work, and created the kind of society so horrific that escapees were hunted down by informers and police. Can you imagine? Or have you blocked it all out?

(Go ahead and tell me what moral atrocity ranks up there with building a centuries long slave trade that engulfed the planet. But morality isnt, as we think, a thing of no consequences, a thing to have on a Sunday, and then forget about on Monday. That is our big mistake, perhaps our biggest.)

That history of horror shapes us to this very day: it deprived us of ever being able to build the institutions of a functioning modern democracy.Why are we literally the only societies in the rich world without working healthcare, education, retirement, and so on? Why do what of those we have degrade by the day? Because the residue of slavery haunts us: too many (white) people think: I wont invest in them! Theyre dirty, filthy subhumans! Why, their grandparents were my grandparents slaves! Maybe they dont say it. But they certainly think it. Its hardly a coincidence the societies which pioneered the global slave trade and then segregation are today the ones without decent public goods, which require a whole society to cooperate, and accept one another as equals. Its a relationship. Slavery and segregation were to mean that America would never develop any functioning modern social systems, really.

And yet that thread of institutional failure, too, we refuse to accept and own up to.When have you seen the obvious link above discussed seriously that a) public healthcare, retirement, college, childcare etc are what make a society civilized, and b) our barbarisms long hangover is what prevented us ever becoming a civilized society? I havent ever, really. Maybe its hinted at, or intimated. Maybe we go so far as condemning our brutal and sordid past. But we dont really own up to the social consequences of our history of horrific immorality: that such immorality had profound real-world effects. It left us institutionally stunted, underdeveloped, broken, unable to treat each other like human beings.But societies who cant build institutions to treat each other like human beings can scarcely ever progress beyond exploitation, abuse, authoritarianism, tribalism, and hate. Wait isnt that exactly where were trapped?

The third pattern I see is a kind of shattering mismanagement of social norms and expectations. Who else in the world denies their neighbors things like healthcare, education, and retirement? Nobody especially nobody in societies that have the means. Yet we do. Why is that? Why are we so indifferent to each other? So cruel, so aggressive, so hostile?

Probably because we are too busy teaching our kids, and each other, that the only point in life is something like this: to be more competitive than the next person, so you can accumulate more stuff than them, so you can make them envious, so you can feel supreme. The point of life isnt to care for your neighbour, to do great and beautiful things, to write a world-changing book or make a life-changing discovery its to make more money. Why? Because thats how you show you are strong. And weakness is death. Because only the strong deserve to survive, after all.Capitalism and patriarchy and supremacy intertwine to make the survival of the fittest our deepest and only true moral law.

Thats what I mean by a kind of shattering mismanagement of social norms and expectations. Weve internalized that value, most of us: that the weak deserve to perish, and the strong survive. We might not think we have, and we might not say we do, but our actions belie us. We grin at our reality shows and long for our perfect pecs and boobs and sigh wistfully over this billionaire or that celebrity. My God! Arent they a perfect person? Well happily spend a small fortune on the plastic stuff of self-aggrandization. But invest in healthcare or retirement for all? LOL.

So we go on dehumanizing ourselves, and everyone around us, as a necessary consequence. We buy into the systems of our own undoing. Sorry, you arent good enough, pretty enough, tough enough, mean enough, selfish enough. Youre just not competitive enough to make it, son. We dont value things like gentleness and humanity and decency not really. Theyre a sure way to get fired or demeaned or picked on or bullied, if you dare to show them, really. The storys the same, from grade school to working life.

Weve become societies of bullies, in other words. But societies of bullies are also societies of cowards.And that cowardice is easy to see. Were happy to call out celebrities for using the wrong pronoun. But calling men who puts kids in cages fasciststhats over the line. Were happy to spend hours a day on Facebookwhich makes us feel miserable and unhappyand who do we take our fury out on? Each other and ourselves, mostly. We dont stick up for people much. We dont put ourselves on the line. Why bother, when the stakes or life or death? Ah, but that is the precise moment we accept that rule of the strong over the weak, too. Cowards and bullies, united in predation.

Were the worlds great materialists, and materialist individualism of this kind has been our downfall.It has led us, through greed and selfishness, to settle for the moral law that the strong should survive, and the weak perish. What other destination can materialist individualism yield? When enough of us say: the only that counts in life is my happiness, and my happiness is a function of how much stuff I havethen by definition, our society cant be a place that has things like healthcare, retirement, education. We cant really have a democracy, in which equality, freedom, and justice are valued. We cant have a society in which things like inherent self-worth exist and are given by all to all.Societies of bullies and cowards, competing to accumulate more things they cant afford in the first place, like the ones weve become, are doomed to exploit and abuse and prey on each other all the way down the abyss. And that is where we are self-evidently heading, fast.

Let me sum up my thre patterns.We mismanaged our economies, because we valued violence and aggression and cruelty over simply, gently, wisely, investing in each other. We mismanaged our institutions and moral possibilities because we valued comfortable denial and numbing complicity and dim-witted pleasure over growth, forgiveness, self-understanding, the struggle of becoming something truer and better, the test of maturity. We mismanaged our societies because we chose individualism and competitiveness and greed over cooperation and fellowship and generosity. Those choices have now caught up with us. How are we to unmake them?

Those patterns outlive any one leader.Or party. Or institution. They are so, so deep in us its hard to see what could excise or extricate them. They are inoperable tumours of the soul, not just little flaws in the mind. They arent simple or easy or straightforward to understand much less transcend. Is there a blade sharp enough to cut them out of us?

That is why I dont think our societies have much of a future, my friends.Societies dont often rise to the challenge of reinventing their foundational values, their defining sets of priorities. Rome was brought down by its callousness and hunger for empire in the end. Soviet Russia, by its craving for power and control.

What about us?I dont think that we are going to transcend what by now are so visibly our foundational values: hostility, aggression, cruelty, violence, selfishness, greed, individualism, materialism, pleasure-seeking over truth-telling. They seem to be the only things we really, genuinely care about as societies, cultures, people. Give enough of us enough of those and there is no level of degradation and despair we wont settle for. And so I think the real story of our collapse is that those old, old values are toppling us, eroding our foundations, while corroding our pinnacles. And we are becoming dust in historys wind. Perhaps, in the end, that is all we deserved.

(Umair Haque writes for Eudaimonia and Co where this perspective was first posted.)

-cw

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This is What a Society Without a Future Looks Like - City Watch

Global transportation management systems (TMS) market is expected to grow with a CAGR of 13.4% over the forecast period from 2018-2024 – Benzinga

New York, Feb. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market: Global Industry Analysis, Trends, Market Size, and Forecasts up to 2024" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05751652/?utm_source=GNW 4% over the forecast period from 2018-2024. The study on transportation management systems (TMS) market covers the analysis of the leading geographies such as North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and RoW for the period of 2016 to 2024.

The report on transportation management systems (TMS) market is a comprehensive study and presentation of drivers, restraints, opportunities, demand factors, market size, forecasts, and trends in the global transportation management systems (TMS) market over the period of 2016 to 2024. Moreover, the report is a collective presentation of primary and secondary research findings.

Porter's five forces model in the report provides insights into the competitive rivalry, supplier and buyer positions in the market and opportunities for the new entrants in the global transportation management systems (TMS) market over the period of 2016 to 2024. Further, IGR- Growth Matrix gave in the report brings an insight into the investment areas that existing or new market players can consider.

Report Findings1) Drivers Rising demand for Software as a Service (SaaS) based transport management system The growing need for a transportation management system Enhanced efficiency in the process upon TMS solutions2) Restraints Lack of awareness about the transport management system3) Opportunities Growing digitalization in emerging economies Increasing emphasis on customer service

Research Methodology

A) Primary ResearchOur primary research involves extensive interviews and analysis of the opinions provided by the primary respondents. The primary research starts with identifying and approaching the primary respondents, the primary respondents are approached include1. Key Opinion Leaders associated with Infinium Global Research2. Internal and External subject matter experts3. Professionals and participants from the industry

Our primary research respondents typically include1. Executives working with leading companies in the market under review2. Product/brand/marketing managers3. CXO level executives4. Regional/zonal/ country managers5. Vice President level executives.

B) Secondary ResearchSecondary research involves extensive exploring through the secondary sources of information available in both the public domain and paid sources. At Infinium Global Research, each research study is based on over 500 hours of secondary research accompanied by primary research. The information obtained through the secondary sources is validated through the crosscheck on various data sources.

The secondary sources of the data typically include1. Company reports and publications2. Government/institutional publications3. Trade and associations journals4. Databases such as WTO, OECD, World Bank, and among others.5. Websites and publications by research agencies

Segment CoveredThe global transportation management systems (TMS) market is segmented on the basis of components, transportation mode, deployment type, and application.

The Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market by Components Hardware Solutionso Operations Managementa. Driving Monitoringb. Risk Managementc. Real-time Vehicle and Asset Trackingd. Predictive Fleet Maintenancee. Mapping and Route Guidancef. Otherso Traffic Managementa. Parking Managementb. Information Managementc. Signalingd. Automatic Number Plate Recognition Serviceso Support and Maintenanceo Others

The Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market by Transportation Mode Roadways Seaways

The Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market by Deployment Type On-premise On-demand

The Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market by Application Industrial Transportation Consumer Goods and Retail Transportation Logistics Transportation Electronics and Electrical Transportation Food & Beverage Transportation Others

Company Profiles MercuryGate International Inc. Amber Road, Inc. KRATZER AUTOMATION AG BluJay Solutions Omnitracs,LLC inet-logistics GmbH MercuryGate International Inc. CTSI-GLOBAL The Descartes Systems Group Inc. JDA Software Group, Inc.

What does this report deliver?1. Comprehensive analysis of the global as well as regional markets of the transportation management systems (TMS) market.2. Complete coverage of all the segments in the transportation management systems (TMS) market to analyze the trends, developments in the global market and forecast of market size up to 2024.3. Comprehensive analysis of the companies operating in the global transportation management systems (TMS) market. The company profile includes analysis of product portfolio, revenue, SWOT analysis and latest developments of the company.4. IGR- Growth Matrix presents an analysis of the product segments and geographies that market players should focus to invest, consolidate, expand and/or diversify.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05751652/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

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Global transportation management systems (TMS) market is expected to grow with a CAGR of 13.4% over the forecast period from 2018-2024 - Benzinga

Posted in Tms

7 Takeaways From REWIRED, An inewsource Investigation – KPBS

inewsource published a two-part investigation last week called REWIRED. The stories detail an experimental brain treatment, a Navy SEALs psychotic break and an internal investigation at the University of California San Diego, one of the countrys top research institutions.

Since the articles are lengthy, we compiled the top seven takeaways from the investigation for the TL;DR crowd.

The only thing you need to know going in: TMS stands for transcranial magnetic stimulation, a relatively new medical treatment that uses electromagnetism to affect the brain. Clinical trials have shown TMS is effective in battling major depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and migraines.

Thats all. So without further ado:

Former Navy SEAL John Surmont turned to Dr. Kevin Murphy, at the time a UC San Diego vice-chancellor, to treat his traumatic brain injury and PTSD. Murphy used a personalized version of TMS that isnt scientifically proven to be effective. Surmont felt the treatment was helping at first but later began showing signs of mania, like singing loudly at inappropriate times and exhibiting abnormally high energy.

Murphy supervised at least 234 personalized TMS treatments given to Surmont. Eventually, the veterans manic symptoms became so bad that he self-admitted to the San Diego VA psychiatric ward. After discharge, Surmont went on a weeks-long breaking-and-entering spree in Los Angeles where he thought he was on a covert military mission that resulted in several arrests and years of court hearings.

Murphy said he continued to treat Surmont even as his manic symptoms worsened because these people are sick, my friend. What are you supposed to do, stop treating someone?

A UCSD whistleblower complaint prompted the UC Presidents Office to investigate whether Murphy used a $10 million university gift to enrich his private businesses. Murphy denies this, though he acknowledges he wasnt great at inventory or auditing.

The $10 million was supposed to be used for Murphy to research his experimental brain treatment, but all that research has been suspended while the investigation continues. University officials wont talk to us until the investigation is complete, but they expect to wrap it up shortly.

Murphys unique version of TMS involves taking readings of patients brainwaves to offer each person a customized treatment. The doctor said hes treated thousands of patients this way who suffer from autism, cerebral palsy, depression, anxiety, ADHD, PTSD, sleep disorders and a bad golf swing all to great results. He claims his treatment is effective on more than 90% of his patients and that it works better than traditional TMS, which doesnt incorporate a patients brainwaves into the treatment.

However, there is no clinical trial or published research supporting Murphys claims. Experts we spoke with were concerned that Murphy was misleading patients, especially vulnerable people who may be willing to try anything if they think it might help with a debilitating condition.

The U.S. Special Operations Command, which oversees the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Air Force special operations, is expected to soon begin testing Murphys treatment on military personnel to examine its effects on human performance.

Murphys private company, PeakLogic, signed a contract with SOCOM that gives the federal agency the ability to test how Murphys treatment improves symptoms experienced by military personnel who suffer from chronic pain, a SOCOM spokesman said. It will take place at the Air Force Research Laboratory and Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

UCSD policy requires its faculty and staff to get approval from the university when conducting outside research, but Murphy told us he never went through that process because its his private company engaging in research not him. University policy applies to all faculty research and doesnt contain an exemption for private businesses.

While Murphy was opening his private businesses devoted to his version of TMS, he struck up a relationship with Michael McDermott, who was then the chief counsel of the UCSD health system. McDermotts job was to give campus health officials legal advice.

We looked through business filings and found McDermott was a corporate officer for one of Murphys nonprofits and one of his companies while working at UCSD. McDermott also managed a company that contracted with Murphys TMS clinic in exchange for 15% of its revenue. The attorney never listed those business interests on university disclosure forms during his two-year tenure.

During the internal UC investigation, Murphy frequently cited McDermott as proof that he did nothing wrong: The doctor was working with a university lawyer as he opened and grew his businesses, so he figured he had UCSDs approval.

In 2016, Murphy pitched a study to the San Diego VA to test how effective his treatment is for patients with PTSD. Murphys research proposal included details of a previous study he said hed performed, along with data and charts.

The data and charts were not Murphys: He took them from a competitors study and kept the language verbatim throughout sections of his proposal, except he substituted the name of their treatment for his.

This is what would be considered by scientific professionals to be plagiarized material, an expert told us. (You can read Murphys explanation for what happened here.)

Many of the things Murphy told us over 13 hours of interviews werent supported by evidence or were incorrect.

For example, Murphy claimed that in the six months leading up to Surmonts psychotic break, the veteran was homeless, doing drugs on the streets of Los Angeles and hadnt shown up for treatment. When we presented the doctor with evidence disproving each of those statements, he told us his previous claims were based on his personal belief or opinion, along with the fact that he sees thousands of patients and cant be responsible for remembering the history of each.

As for the UC investigation, Murphy claims more than a dozen people at the university who had a hand in overseeing the $10 million gift for his research, or worked with him to set up his companies, or worked for him to manage his funds, were incompetent or so jealous of his success that they wanted to see him fail. We couldnt verify most of those claims.

Im on the bleeding edge of this, Murphy said. And so everyones shooting arrows in my back, going, Stop him. Stop his research. Whistleblower him. We want this. Sue him. Make him look bad. Whatever it takes. Because this is really a big deal.

Aired 2/20/20 on KPBS News

Listen to part one of this story by Brad Racino.

Aired 2/20/20 on KPBS News

Listen to part two of this story by Jill Castellano.

KPBS' daily news podcast covering local politics, education, health, environment, the border and more. New episodes are ready weekday mornings so you can listen on your morning commute.

KPBS Midday Edition is a daily radio news magazine keeping San Diego in the know on everything from politics to the arts.

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7 Takeaways From REWIRED, An inewsource Investigation - KPBS

Posted in Tms

Author talk leads to TMS anti-bullying club – Teton Valley News

The sixth and seventh graders of Teton Middle School were unusually captivated during a presentation in the gym last Wednesday morning. The students listened and laughed as childrens book author Ben Mikaelsen described the trials of his childhood, interspersed with remarkable photos of him with his tame 700-pound black bear, Buffy.

Mikaelsen was in Driggs thanks to a grant from the Education Foundation of Teton Valley. Sixth grade English teacher Jennifer Marlar, fresh from the Teton County, Wyoming school district, was surprised to find that TMS didnt have any anti-bullying programming.

So I made it my mission to start an anti-bullying campaign, she said.

The sixth graders are reading Touching Spirit Bear, Mikaelsens novel about a juvenile delinquent that finds redemption through a Native American healing process, so it seemed like a no-brainer to invite Mikaelsen to speak at the middle school. Marlar applied for $1,500 through the EFTV classroom grant program. That covered half of Mikaelsens speaking fee, so Jackson Hole Middle School paid the rest in order for him to visit that school as well.

EFTV executive director Pam Walker said that through the Tin Cup, other fundraisers, and private donations, the nonprofit has been able to gradually increase the amount of funding for classroom grants, and this year will give educators a total of $31,000 for new programs, supplies, technology, books, and field trips.

Mikaelsen spoke, joked, and jested for an hour, describing his experiences being bullied as a student in Bolivia and Minnesota, and becoming a bully himself. He explained that chasing his passions of storytelling, high diving, flying, and sky diving freed him from that relentless cycle.

He challenged the students to pursue their own dreams and to have the bravery to be kind to their peers.

You have one fantastic life to explore Planet Earth, he told them. Are you going to waste it putting other people down?

Now Marlar hopes to build on Mikaelsens momentum by forming a student-led anti-bullying after school club. She said the kids will plan, research, and implement a school-wide campaign to encourage mutual respect, kindness, and support.

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Author talk leads to TMS anti-bullying club - Teton Valley News

Posted in Tms

Notice of Nexstim Plc 2019 Full Year Results – Yahoo Finance

Company announcement, Helsinki, 24 February 2020 at 9.00 am (EET)

Notice of Nexstim Plc 2019 Full Year Results

Nexstim Plc (NXTMH:HEX, NXTMS:STO) ("Nexstim" or "Company") will announce its full year results for the year ended 31 December 2019 on Friday 28 February 2020 at 9.00 am Finnish time.

A conference call for analysts, investors and media will take place at 15:00 Finnish time (EET) on Friday 28 February 2020. The call will be hosted by Mikko Karvinen, CEO and Joonas Juokslahti, CFO, who will present the financial and operational results followed by a Q&A session.

The dial-in numbers for the conference call are:

Finland: +358 (0) 9 2319 5437

Sweden: +46 (0) 8 50520 424

UK: +44 (0) 20 3003 2666

USA: +1 212 999 6659

Standard International: +44 (0) 20 3003 2666

The call password is Nexstim

NEXSTIM PLC

Mikko Karvinen, CEO

Further information is available on the website http://www.nexstim.com, or by contacting:

Mikko Karvinen, CEO+ 358 50326 4101mikko.karvinen@nexstim.com

Sisu Partners Oy (Certified Adviser)Jussi Majamaa+ 358 40 842 4479jussi.majamaa@sisupartners.com

About Nexstim Plc

Nexstim is a Finnish, globally operating medical technology company. Our mission is to enable personalized and effective therapies and diagnostics for challenging brain diseases and disorders.

Nexstim has developed a world-leading non-invasive brain stimulation technology called SmartFocus. It is a navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) technology with highly sophisticated 3D navigation providing accurate and personalized targeting of the TMS to the specific area of the brain.

SmartFocus technology is used in Nexstims proprietary Navigated Brain Therapy (NBT) system, which is FDA cleared for marketing and commercial distribution for the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) in the United States. In Europe, the NBT system is CE marked for the treatment of major depression and chronic neuropathic pain.

In addition, Nexstim is commercializing its SmartFocus based Navigated Brain Stimulation (NBS) system for diagnostic applications. The NBS system is the only FDA cleared and CE marked navigated TMS system for pre-surgical mapping of the speech and motor cortices of the brain. Nexstim shares are listed on the Nasdaq First North Growth Market Finland and Nasdaq First North Growth Market Sweden.

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For more information please visitwww.nexstim.com

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Notice of Nexstim Plc 2019 Full Year Results - Yahoo Finance

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Best informative report on Cyber- Terminal Management System (TMS) Market is growing rapidly with provides detailed profile – Keep Reading

Global terminal management system (TMS) market is projected to register a substantial CAGR of 7.6% in the forecast period of 2019 to 2026.

TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) market report gives key measurements, status of the manufacturers and is a significant source of direction for the businesses and organizations. Thus, the study of this report helps businesses to define their own strategies about the improvement in the existing product, modifications to consider for the future product, sales, marketing promotion and distribution of the product in the existing and the new market. The TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) report is extremely valuable for mapping the strategies related to production, product launches, costing, inventory, purchasing and marketing. All these factors are of utmost importance when it comes to achieving a success in the competitive marketplace.

Download Terminal Management System (TMS) Research Report in PDF Brochure at: https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/request-a-sample/?dbmr=terminal-management-system-tms-market&sc

The data and information included in this TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) market report helps businesses take sound decisions and plan about the advertising and sales promotion strategy more successfully. This market research report is generated by taking into account a range of objectives of market research that are vital for the clients success. This report also includes strategic profiling of key players in the market, systematic analysis of their core competencies, and draws a competitive landscape for the SEMICONDUCTORS AND ELECTRONICS industry. The TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) market report includes market shares for global, Europe, North America, Asia Pacific and South America.

Scope of the Report

Further, this report classifies the TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) market dependent on regions, application, end-user, and type.

Scope of the Report

Global Terminal Management System (TMS) Market By Offering (Hardware, Software and Services), Project (Greenfield and Brownfield), Application (Receipt / Dispatch By Truck, Rail Wagon, Pipeline, Access Control, Inspections, Kiosk Functionality, Automatic Bay / Berth Allocation, Sealing, Blending, Automatic Tank Farm Control and Others), Vertical (Railway, Renewable Sector, Aviation Industry, Chemicals, Oil & Gas and Others)

Methodologies utilized to evaluate the market-:

Research analysts and experts have utilized excellent market research tools such as SWOT analysis, Porters Five Forces analysis, PEST analysis, and Primary and Secondary research analysis to define, describe and evaluate the competitive landscape of the TERMINAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (TMS) market.

Recent Developments

Primary Respondents: Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs): Software Experts, Manufacturers, Researchers, Distributors and Industrialists. Industry Participants: CEOs, V.P.s, Marketing/Product Managers, Market Intelligence Managers and, National Sales Managers.

Table of Contents Major Key Points

Part 01: Terminal Management System (TMS) Market OverviewPart 02: Manufacturers ProfilesPart 03: Global Terminal Management System (TMS) Market Competition, by PlayersPart 04: Global Terminal Management System (TMS) Market Size by RegionsPart 05: North America Terminal Management System (TMS) Revenue by CountriesPart 06: Europe Terminal Management System (TMS) Revenue by CountriesPart 07: Asia-Pacific Terminal Management System (TMS) Revenue by CountriesPart 08: South America Terminal Management System (TMS) Revenue by CountriesPart 09: Middle East and Africa Revenue Terminal Management System (TMS) by CountriesNew Business Strategies, Challenges & Policies are mentioned in Table of Content, Request Detailed TOC: https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/toc/?dbmr=terminal-management-system-tms-market&sc

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Best informative report on Cyber- Terminal Management System (TMS) Market is growing rapidly with provides detailed profile - Keep Reading

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Harry and Meghan should ‘do the right thing’ and withdraw TMs – World Intellectual Property Review

A UK law which likely requires the Queens consent to register Sussex Royal as a trademark may leave Prince Harry and Meghan Markle with little choice but to drop the brand, lawyers have told WIPR.

The couple, who have decided to step back from royal duties, are in discussions with the Queen and the rest of the royal family on the precise nature of their future relationship.

Particularly at issue is the pairs continued use of the term Sussex Royal, which the Queen reportedly considers untenable as they seek distance from active royal life.

Andy King, partner at Mewburn Ellis, said the Queens position means that the registrations, expected to be granted next month, could contravene UK trademark law.

WIPR reported yesterday, February 20, that section 4 of the UK Trade Marks Act 1994 requires the royal familys consent for marks which could lead the public to think the application had royal authorisation.

If the Queen, as reported, considers the Sussex Royal brand to be untenable, then this could potentially be seen as consent having been withdrawn, King said, clarifying that this would only apply once the couple formally step back from royal duties at the end of March.

The registrations may be vulnerable to cancellation on this basis, although not necessarily, he said. The legal test is the position at the time that the applications were submitted, a time when the Sussexs did have consent. It is for this same reason that the applications may not be opposable on this ground as things stand.

While there have been multiple notices of threatened opposition against the Sussex Royal marks, no formal oppositions have yet been filed.

But given the reported disagreement with the royal family, if the registrations do indeed grant next month, it would seem necessary for the registrations to then be surrendered, he added.

Harry and Meghan left with no choice

Laurie Heizler, of counsel at Barlow Robbins in London, said the Sussex Royal Foundation, which filed the marks and is owned by the couple, should do the right thing and withdraw the applications.

Given the Queens position, Heizler said it is difficult to imagine that these trademark applications can now make any progress.

Heizler argued that, in light of the Queens reported position, it would certainly be in bad faith if the couples company tried to progress the applications, despite having had royal authorisation when they were filed.

Even if it did so, the well-publicised controversy surrounding the couple and the Queens interventions would most likely lead to the UK Intellectual Property Office refusing to grant the trademarks, Heizler added.

The company would be well advised to withdraw the trademarksit probably has no choice, he said.

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Harry and Meghan should 'do the right thing' and withdraw TMs - World Intellectual Property Review

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TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Size 2020-2025: Why It Is Important? and Key Manufacturers| MAG & More , Magstim , MagVenture -…

QY ResearchAnalysts have used latest primary and secondary research methodologies to prepare this highly detailed and accurate report. The research study offers company profiling of leading players operating in theGlobal TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market 2020. Players profiled in the report are studied on the basis of recent developments, business strategies, financial progress, and main business.

>>Top Players are Covered in this Report: MAG & More, Magstim, MagVenture, ANT Neuro, Brain Latam Co, Deymed

Los Angeles, United State, Feb 2020-

The report offers a complete research study of the Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market that includes accurate forecasts and analysis at global, regional, and country levels. It provides a comprehensive view of the global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil market and detailed value chain analysis to help players to closely understand important changes in business activities observed across the industry. It also offers a deep segmental analysis of the global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil market where key product and application segments are shed light upon. Readers are provided with actual market figures related to the size of the global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil market in terms of value and volume for the forecast period 2020-2025.

Click Below! For TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Research Report

Major Manufactures Covered in this report:

MAG & More, Magstim, MagVenture, ANT Neuro, Brain Latam Co, Deymed

Market Segment by Type

H-coil, C-core Coil, Circular Crown Coil

Market Segment by Application

Hospital, Clinic, Others

Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market: Regional Segmentation

For a deeper understanding, the research report includes geographical segmentation of the global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil market. It provides an evaluation of the volatility of the political scenarios and amends likely to be made to the regulatory structures. This assessment gives an accurate analysis of the regional-wise growth of the global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil market.

Regions Covered in the Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market:

The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt) North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada) South America (Brazil etc.) Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.) Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

Get Customized Report in your Inbox within 24 hours@https://www.qyresearch.com/customize-request/form/971964/global-tms-transcranial-magnetic-stimulation-coil-industry-market

Key Areas of Focus

Important Questions Answered in this Report:-

Table of Contents

Executive Summary1 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Overview1.1 Product Overview and Scope of TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil1.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Segment by Type1.2.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate Comparison by Type (2014-2025)1.2.2 H-coil1.2.3 C-core Coil1.2.4 Circular Crown Coil1.3 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Segment by Application1.3.1 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Comparison by Application (2014-2025)1.3.2 Hospital1.3.3 Clinic1.3.4 Others1.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market by Region1.3.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Size Region1.3.2 North America Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.3.3 Europe Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.3.4 China Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.3.5 Japan Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.3.6 Southeast Asia Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.3.7 India Status and Prospect (2014-2025)1.4 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Size1.4.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Revenue (2014-2025)1.4.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production (2014-2025)

2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Competition by Manufacturers2.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Market Share by Manufacturers (2014-2019)2.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Revenue Share by Manufacturers (2014-2019)2.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Average Price by Manufacturers (2014-2019)2.4 Manufacturers TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites, Area Served, Product Types2.5 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Competitive Situation and Trends2.5.1 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Concentration Rate2.5.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Share of Top 3 and Top 5 Manufacturers2.5.3 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion

3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Market Share by Regions3.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Market Share by Regions3.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Revenue Market Share by Regions (2014-2019)3.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)3.4 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production3.4.1 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate (2014-2019)3.4.2 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)3.5 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production3.5.1 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate (2014-2019)3.5.2 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)3.6 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production (2014-2019)3.6.1 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate (2014-2019)3.6.2 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)3.7 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production (2014-2019)3.7.1 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate (2014-2019)3.7.2 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)

4 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption by Regions4.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption by Regions4.2 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption (2014-2019)4.3 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption (2014-2019)4.4 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption (2014-2019)4.5 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption (2014-2019)

5 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price Trend by Type5.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Market Share by Type (2014-2019)5.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Revenue Market Share by Type (2014-2019)5.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Price by Type (2014-2019)5.4 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth by Type (2014-2019)

6 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Analysis by Applications6.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Market Share by Application (2014-2019)6.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Growth Rate by Application (2014-2019)

7 Company Profiles and Key Figures in TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Business7.1 MAG & More7.1.1 MAG & More TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.1.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.1.3 MAG & More TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.1.4 Main Business and Markets Served7.2 Magstim7.2.1 Magstim TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.2.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.2.3 Magstim TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.2.4 Main Business and Markets Served7.3 MagVenture7.3.1 MagVenture TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.3.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.3.3 MagVenture TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.3.4 Main Business and Markets Served7.4 ANT Neuro7.4.1 ANT Neuro TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.4.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.4.3 ANT Neuro TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.4.4 Main Business and Markets Served7.5 Brain Latam Co7.5.1 Brain Latam Co TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.5.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.5.3 Brain Latam Co TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.5.4 Main Business and Markets Served7.6 Deymed7.6.1 Deymed TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Sites and Area Served7.6.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Product Introduction, Application and Specification7.6.3 Deymed TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2019)7.6.4 Main Business and Markets Served

8 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Manufacturing Cost Analysis8.1 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Key Raw Materials Analysis8.1.1 Key Raw Materials8.1.2 Price Trend of Key Raw Materials8.1.3 Key Suppliers of Raw Materials8.2 Proportion of Manufacturing Cost Structure8.3 Manufacturing Process Analysis of TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil8.4 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Industrial Chain Analysis

9 Marketing Channel, Distributors and Customers9.1 Marketing Channel9.1.1 Direct Marketing9.1.2 Indirect Marketing9.2 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Distributors List9.3 TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Customers

10 Market Dynamics10.1 Market Trends10.2 Opportunities10.3 Market Drivers10.4 Challenges10.5 Influence Factors

11 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Forecast11.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue Forecast11.1.1 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Growth Rate Forecast (2019-2025)11.1.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Revenue and Growth Rate Forecast (2019-2025)11.1.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Price and Trend Forecast (2019-2025)11.2 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production Forecast by Regions (2019-2025)11.2.1 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue Forecast (2019-2025)11.2.2 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue Forecast (2019-2025)11.2.3 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue Forecast (2019-2025)11.2.4 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue Forecast (2019-2025)11.3 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast by Regions (2019-2025)11.3.1 North America TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast (2019-2025)11.3.2 Europe TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast (2019-2025)11.3.3 China TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast (2019-2025)11.3.4 Japan TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast (2019-2025)11.4 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Production, Revenue and Price Forecast by Type (2019-2025)11.5 Global TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Consumption Forecast by Application (2019-2025)

12 Research Findings and Conclusion

13 Methodology and Data Source13.1 Methodology/Research Approach13.1.1 Research Programs/Design13.1.2 Market Size Estimation13.1.3 Market Breakdown and Data Triangulation13.2 Data Source13.2.1 Secondary Sources13.2.2 Primary Sources13.3 Author List13.4 Disclaimer

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TMS(Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) Coil Market Size 2020-2025: Why It Is Important? and Key Manufacturers| MAG & More , Magstim , MagVenture -...

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The Morning Show: From Reality To The Screen – Old Gold & Black

Though Apple TVs + flagship offering looks, sounds and casts like great TV, director Mimi Leders faulty depiction of daily newsroom activity compromises the series authenticity. I should know. I worked for the morning news show the series is based on.

The Morning Show (also the name of the show-within-the-show, referred to as TMS) profiles the fictional UBA network grappling with the downfall of The Morning Shows lead co-anchor Mitch Kessler, who has been accused of sexual misconduct. Things escalate quickly as the network and the show attempt to reconcile internal strife while producing a seamless newscast that refrains from revealing the chaos. In the meantime, a previously unknown news anchor who went viral in a controversial video is slated to fill Kesslers seat.

The shows handling of this crisis is somewhat inaccurate, as far as workplace standards are concerned. Again, I would know. I worked on that morning news show in the wake of the removal of one of its longtime anchors, Matt Lauer, also accused of sexual misconduct.

For one, each character spends most of each episode yelling at each other to the point where it seems like they are just yelling for yellings sake. How they dont become hoarse is a mystery. Even under tense and stressful circumstances, Executive Producers (EPs) do not barge around control rooms and studio hallways screaming and cursing out their colleagues, as is character Charlie Chip Blacks normal routine. EPs often praise their colleagues for producing a great show, though you wouldnt know it from watching The Morning Show.

When Alex Levy (Jennifer Aniston) protests anchoring the show unless Chip can promise her the network will renew her contract and honor her requested terms, she finally sits in her anchor chair just seconds before the show goes live. Its designed to be dramatic and suspenseful TV, which it is. But, even on a normal day in the series, the anchors sit in their chair just seconds before the show starts. This isnt how it really goes down. Anchors spend at least an hour at the desk pre-taping headlines and reviewing scripts. They dont pout in their dressing rooms like Alex Levy and Bradley Jackson (Reese Witherspoon), only miraculously appearing in the studio just seconds before air. The nonchalant attitude of The Morning Show anchors do not adequately represent the day to day work of national news anchors. Instead, their actions perpetuate the stereotype that television news anchors do nothing but read the teleprompter and look pretty. This is a gross understatement of their roles. They often research and co-produce their own stories in addition to delivering them to the American people.

Anchors and professional journalists very rarely, if ever, go off script. However, it seems that this is the norm on TMS, which sends Chip into a frenzy of rage and network executives calling the studio. Anchors also do not have random breakdowns on live TV, although these meltdowns only speak more highly of Anistons acting.

The series awards the anchors very little time to report any news, making it difficult for the viewer to believe they are actually as talented at their jobs as we are led to believe. We are also led to believe that TMS anchors are infamous for garnering a were among people connection with their audience, but viewers never have the chance to see this for themselves. In fact, The Morning Show feels almost intentionally sealed off from the rest of the world. In contrast to the morning news shows it emulates, there are no studio windows and the anchors never come into contact with the general public. There is also the premise that Alex Levy is a world-renowned journalist, but she comes off as cold, unanimated and lacking empathy, though Im sure this is intentional.

Despite its inaccuracies, The Morning Show is always entertaining, tackles real world issues and is sometimes so suspenseful you cant help but catch yourself holding your breath. I really havent given the series the credit that is due, especially since they do correctly portray many enigmas of the New York morning news show world. Its smart, clever and most importantly, timely. Delightfully, the New York City scenery transports the viewer to the heart of the big apple, as they daydream of taking a walk around in Alex Levys apartment and attending lavish media galas.

It is also brilliantly acted. Most notably, Hollywood favorites Aniston and Steve Carell display some of their best performances to date and demonstrate a more serious acting skill set not always present in their claim-to-fame series Friends and The Office, respectively.

Billy Crudups performance comes as a surprise. He plays a slimy and annoying, yet charming network executive, delivering one of the strongest performances of any cast member. Hes the character we want to hate but cant bring ourselves to. Plus, he and Bradley go on a private Barneys shopping raid, so theres that.

Better yet, The Morning Show sticks the landing, big time. The finale is one of the best episodes of TV so far this year, keeping the viewer engaged until the very last second. I wont reveal what happens its something you have to see to fully appreciate. It left me with an overall positive feeling of the series, regardless of its over-dramatism and inaccuracy, as well as a yearning to watch the second season, which will be available on Apple TV + in November of this year.

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The Morning Show: From Reality To The Screen - Old Gold & Black

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