SAISD: Allison Peterson Named Region 15 Secondary Teacher of the Year – ConchoValleyHomepage.com

Posted: Jul 23, 2020 / 12:16 PM CDT / Updated: Jul 23, 2020 / 12:16 PM CDT

*The following is press release submitted by San Angelo ISD.

San Angelo ISD congratulates Lake View High School librarian Allison Peterson on being named the Region 15 Secondary Teacher of the Year. Peterson was selected as the Lake View High School Teacher of the Year in the spring and was named the San Angelo ISD Secondary Teacher of the Year in May.

A third-generation educator, Peterson began her career at Lake View in 1994, teaching inclusion and resource English classes for thirteen years. She received a Master of Library and Information Science from the University of North Texas in 2011.

According to the American Association of School Librarians, The school librarian empowers all members of the learning community to become critical thinkers, enthusiastic readers, skillful researchers, curators and ethical users of information. Mrs. Peterson strives to achieve this every day. In addition to library duties, she oversees the distribution, collection and storage of textbooks, serves as the yearbook bookkeeper, assists with the campus Credit Recovery program, and provides on-campus technical support. Mrs. Peterson serves on the Process Champions team and Safety Committee at Lake View. She also assists with the Student Ambassador/Face of Lake View group and serves on the districts Connect+ committee.

Mrs. Peterson consistently designs fun and effective ways to foster a love of reading. One such example is a project she designed based upon the concept of speed dating. Each student has a short time to interact with a book before moving on to dates with different books, some of which they might not have given a second look before. According to Mrs. Peterson, at the end of the class period, each student has interacted with ten to twelve very different books, and has hopefully found one he or she would like to get to know a little better, and maybe even come to love.

Mrs. Peterson is described by her peers as having a love for her students, teaching, and the entire Lake View family. In public education, we should encourage all students to find their strengths and passions, develop the skills necessary to excel in those areas, inspire them to pursue their dreams, and guide them to become eager, life-long learners who, in turn, become contributing members of society, said Mrs. Peterson. When they leave high school, students should believe that all careers are noble and that every worker is essential.

As Region 15 Teacher of the Year, Peterson is one of twenty secondary teachers vying for the State Secondary Teacher of the Year title. This fall, three secondary finalists will be selected and interviewed by the Texas Association of School Administrators prior to naming the state recipient.

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SAISD: Allison Peterson Named Region 15 Secondary Teacher of the Year - ConchoValleyHomepage.com

Millie Peterson – Antioch On The Move

Long time Antioch resident Millie Peterson passed away peacefully on June 30, 2020, at the age of 101. Born on September 9, 1918, on 10th Street in Antioch, Millie attended Antioch schools from Kindergarten to 12th grade graduating with the class of 1935 from Antioch High School. Millie volunteered for the American Cancer Society, Delta Memorial (Sutter) Hospital for 20 years, and the El Campanil theater as an usher. She was involved in various organizations/clubs, including

Millie exemplifies the Antioch spirit of perseverance and service. Millie will be deeply missed by all her family and friends.

Every year Millie Peterson would attend the Victorian Tea at the Antioch Historical Museum. Last week, she passed away just shy of her 102nd birthday. She was born in Antioch in 1918. Her wedding dress is featured in the bridal room at the museum. She will be missed at our tea for sure.

Back in 2012, she was featured in an East Bay Times article, A Life of Work, Fun and Friends written by Trine Gallegos.

Below is an excerpt from the article.

Her father, P.K. Bigelow, ran a dairy farm on Ninth near F and G streets. He also lived his whole life in Antioch. Later, he worked for decades for the city; eventually getting a street named after him.

I am sometimes wistful about the old days, she said. Growing up, Peterson and her family would treat themselves to the movies once a month. And, every Sunday they would enjoy a vaudeville show at the El Campanil Theatre.

Peterson was one of about 30 in Antioch Highs 1935 graduating class. She said there are only a couple of her old classmates still alive, and she is grateful for her new circle of friends.

She enjoyed her job at Famous Fashions (in downtown Antioch) for 30 years. And, continues to take pleasure in the Antioch Womans Club (since 1986). She enjoyed her nearly 20 years of volunteering at Sutter Medical Center.

She liked the progress that has unfolded in her lifetime, but does miss some past joys: People werent in a hurry. Everyone would stop and talk.

There are really nice ideas out there, but with modern technology a lot of little graces have been lost.

She says she doesnt have a secret formula to share to help other to keep sharp and active at her age, but she does believe attitude has so much to do with it.

Her advice to todays youth?

Live life to the fullest; take every opportunity you get; be positive; and, have a happy attitude.

Around East County: Pioneer familys nearly last member passes on

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Millie Peterson - Antioch On The Move

How They Shot the Wrong-Way Car Chase in To Live and Die in L.A. – Film School Rejects

Welcome to Howd They Do That? a bi-monthly column that unpacks moments of movie magic and celebrates the technical wizards who pulled them off. This entry looks into the making of the car chase in To Live and Die in L.A.

William Friedkins take no prisoners attitude is the stuff of legend. This is the man who shoots blank guns on set and films without permits while speeding through New York City at ninety miles per hour. The New Hollywood shenanigans bracket is competitive. But Friedkin is outrageous, passionate, and willing to go to great lengths to get what he wants.

Its not a huge stretch to compare the director toRichard Chance, the hot-blooded cop played by William Petersen in Friedkins cat and mouse neo-noir To Live and Die in L.A.In the film, a fearless federal agent obsessively purses the counterfeiter (Willem Dafoe) who killed his partner, endangering himself and others in the process.

In many ways, To Live and Die in L.A. epitomizes Friedkins interest in the thin line between the cop and the criminal. Chances drive to seek and destroy leads him to commit reckless acts. Acts that rival those of the very man hes hunting. You know, like speeding the wrong way down a Los Angeles freeway during rush hour.

In a characteristically dick-out move, Chance and his new, terrified partner Vukovich (John Pankow) hold up a known criminal who is carrying the cash they need to incriminate their real target, the counterfeiter. The robbery goes south, bullets start flying, and someone shoots the courier.

Soon enough, a simple getaway escalates into a multi-vehicle death race. The pair fails to shake their pursuers through alleyways and flood control channels. And so Chance a cop fleeing like a criminal is seemingly trapped. A wrong way sign beckons.

The tires squeal, and Chances Chevy Impala shoots head-on into traffic. Vukovich falls to pieces in the backseat as Chance weaves wildly between hundreds of oncoming cars, collisions erupting in his wake.

Its a chase sequence that not only looks but feels real. You can see it on the screen: people did this. No wonky physics, no CGI. How the hell do you orchestrate something like that?

A lot of money and a lot of drivers. Oh, right and bymaking William Peterson drive the rightway down the freeway. Waitwhat?

According to stunt coordinator Buddy Joe Hooker, the chase scene was never scripted, let alone planned. But Freidkin and Hooker would frequently talk shop, and the idea for a chase scene began to take shape.

According to Hurricane Billy: The Stormy Life and Films of William Friedkin, Friedkin first conceived of a car chase against the flow of traffic while driving home from a wedding in 1963. As he tells it, Friedkin fell asleep at the wheel and woke up in the wrong lane headed straight into oncoming traffic. He swerved back to his side of the road and spent the next two decades wondering how he could use the experience in a movie.

Working with a stripped-down crew and Hookers diagrams, the eight-minute chase took six weeks to film and was the last sequence shot. In the making-of documentary Counterfeit World, Pankow jokes that by shooting the chase at the end of production, if anything were to happen to the lead actors the film would more or less be in the can.

It was forty stunt guys, Friedkin, and Pankow and me, remembers Peterson. We were going all over LA, blocking off streets and just spinning out.

The films director of photography (and noted Friedkin enabler)Robby Mller declined to shoot the chase over safety concerns, so the second unit cameraman, Robert D. Yeoman, came on instead. (Fun fact: Yeoman went on to become Wes Andersons DP of choice. So keep this mans enormous balls in mind next time you scoff at a twee center frame.)

Peterson himself did most of the chase leading up to the freeway stunt. I was able to do a lot of the driving stuff, and I wanted to do all of it, remembers the actor. It got to the point where it was much more fun to be doing the stunts than it was to be doing any of the acting stuff.

Quote Pankow: I didnt really have to act. I was terrified a lot of the time. Inserts and close-ups of Peterson behind the wheel of the Impala were accomplished with a specially designed hydraulic swivel car that was pulled behind a camera truck.

In other shots, where we see Chance driving in the camera car, the vehicles in the opposing lanes were stationary. This was apparently Friedkins idea. And according to Hooker, it created a strobe-effect: you couldnt tell if the cars were moving or not.

As Peterson describes in abehind-the-scenes featurette, the film rented a portion of a freeway for the weekend and sourced nine-hundred (!) cars to give the impression of rush hour.

The car Chance drives is specifically a 1985 Chevy Impala F41. The LAPD rented it out, along with several other cars used in the film. Three weekends were spent on sections of the Terminal Island Freeway near Wilmington, California. These were closed for several hours at a time to allow the crew to stage and shoot the nightmarish chase.

Now, brace yourself for a twist. In the narrative of the film, Chance and Vukovich are driving against traffic. But, in reality, the opposite was true. Petersen and Pankow drove in the correct direction. Meanwhile, traffic actually flowed backward on the wrong side of the road. This is possible to spot in several brief cuts.

According to an interview with Hooker on Shout Factorys Blu-ray release, one of the reasons Friedkin wanted Petersen and Pankow to drive in that particular direction was because there were these beautiful oil refineries with all the lights, and it was a dusk shot. [Friedkin] wanted to see that in the background with the cars going and the only way he could do that was to reverse the flow of the traffic.

Theres a moment near the end of the chase where the eighteen-wheeler jackknifes and squashes the cars in its path. This was Hookers idea. Like all good ideas, he suggested it before he knew how to pull it off.

To achieve the effect, the stunt team attached the back of the semi to a four-wheel-drive truck. When the tractor and trailer brakes locked up, the truck swung the back of the semi around with the cable.

As for the train jump, where our heroes outpace and cross in front of an oncoming train, as far as I can tell, they just staged and straight up did that.

Friedkin has a weakness for car chases. If you were to compile a list of the most impressive car chases in cinema, Friedkins name would certainly appear in the top ten multiple times. In his memoir, he refers to them as the purest form of cinema, something that cant be done in any other medium, not in literature nor on a stage nor on a painters canvas.

In 1971, Friedkin revolutionized the car chase with The French Connection. Shot on open New York City streets, with Gene Hackman doing a good chunk of the stunt driving himself, the sequence contains an exhilarating lack of control (with the unplanned accidents to show for it).

In the sequence, detective Jimmy Popeye Doyle (Hackman) commandeers a civilians car and chases after the elevated train on which a hitman is making his escape.

Basically, the sequence was about as dangerous to shoot as it looks. Much of the chase was shot on busy streets with no traffic control and no permits (Friedkin, on permits: what are they?). Its a kinetic, frantic five minutes with Popeye in a Pontiac LeMans careening through unsuspecting traffic at a frightening speed.

Friedkin has since acknowledged that he endangered lives for the sake of capturing a thrilling sequence. Furthermore, hes stated he would never shoot anything the way he shot The French Connection chase again. But, in his memoir, Friedkin admits to feeling a need to surpass The French Connection chase.

And so, when it came time to brainstorm a chase for The Live and Die inL.A.there it was: no one had done an against traffic chase at high speed. Like Dick Chance says: were going this way. While Friedkin may not have necessarily eclipsed his first iconic chase, in my books, he certainly matched it. And with permits no less!

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How They Shot the Wrong-Way Car Chase in To Live and Die in L.A. - Film School Rejects

Hochman: With compassion and grace, Wainwright showed why Cardinals wore Black Lives Matter shirts – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Before the game, Wainwright and manager Mike Shildt (in a BLM T-Shirt) shared plans that the Cardinals unified as a team would kneel before (but not during) the national anthem. As the team lined up before the game, a few players and Shildt indeed began to kneel, but the anthem singer was announced too quickly by the public address announcer. Everyone stood back up for the song.

But there were other forms of activism by the Cardinals on this historic night (and not just because the team played a home game without any fans). After wearing the T-Shirts, they wore Black Lives Matter patches on their famous home white uniforms. BLM was stenciled behind the mound, seen during every pitch on the Fox Sports Midwest telecast. And between innings Friday night, the teams official Twitter account tweeted: We are united in the fight to end systemic racism.

And that will be a process in our country. In our city. But as Wainwright said, It starts with one family at a time.

Some people, if they see somebody different, theyre going to discriminate against them, Wainwright said. And thats just theres something in the fabric of humanity thats been there for thousands and thousands of years that we still got to work through. But you know what, were talking about it now and were trying to get past it.

All I can do is love my kids and lead them and shepherd them in such a way as when they go out into the world, they embrace everybodys differences in colors and think everybodys awesome and loves them all the same.

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Hochman: With compassion and grace, Wainwright showed why Cardinals wore Black Lives Matter shirts - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Book review: From Infinity to Man: The Fundamental Ideas of Kabbalah – The Jerusalem Post

In this ground-breaking book, Eduard Shyfrin shows that the ideas of Jewish mysticism (Kabbalah) resonate with the ideas of 21st century science. From Infinity to Man introduces the reader to basic principles of Jewish mysticism such as the ten sefirot the Divine Attributes of God, the description of God as Ein Sof, absolute perfection, and the idea of Ohr Ein Sof, the unending Divine light. It then discusses basic principles of quantum physics and compares many of the concepts of Kabbalah to those of quantum physics, including the theory of information as discussed in Kabbalah and quantum physics. Additional chapters in the book discuss Creation, Kabbalah and Philosophy, and the Torah and Mathematics. Shyfrin is equally well-versed in Jewish mysticism and physics, and names like Einstein, Heisenberg, and Schrodinger frequently appear alongside Kabbalistic luminaries such as Isaac Luria, Shneur Zalman of Liadi, and the Baal Shem Tov.

From Infinity to Man has enjoyed positive reviews since its publication in January 2019.

Midwest bookreview.com writes that it is exceptionally well written, organized and presentedan extraordinarily thoughtful and thought-provoking read and unreservedly recommended for community, college, and university library Judaic Theology/Philosophy collections in general, and Kabbalah studies supplemental studies lists in particular. It should be noted for the personal reading lists of students, academia, and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject

Ben Rothke, of the Jewish Link of NJ writes that This is an interesting book and Shyfrin does his best to show the dynamic between Torah and science. Quantum physics is an absolutely fascinating topic and certainly can be used to better understand the nature of the world we live in. In much of the book, Shyfrin finds corollaries between kabbalistic ideas and tries to map them to the world of physics. In From Infinity to Man, Eduard Shyfrin has written a thought-provoking and most curious work.

The San Diego Jewish World writes, Using information theory and a number of kabbalistic ideas, such as the Sephirot and Tzimtzum, Shyfrin shows the only reasonable conclusion is creation emanated from nothing. Shyfrin even links the arrow of time, our understanding that time can only flow in one direction from past to present to future, and not the other way around, to Kabbalah by demonstrating that terrestrial information mimics divine information, which continually flows in one direction, from the unknowable God, Ein Sof, to the world. Kabbalah has been studied philosophically, theologically, and even mathematically. In From Infinity to Man, Shyfrin examines Kabbalah from a new position, the combined effect of quantum physics and the Theory of Information, and in doing so brings to light a heretofore unstudied perspective.

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Book review: From Infinity to Man: The Fundamental Ideas of Kabbalah - The Jerusalem Post

Physics of Alien Life (The Galaxy Insight) – The Daily Galaxy –Great Discoveries Channel

Science fiction writers have long had bizarre, vivid images of extraterrestrial life from Plutonians resembling intelligent ice cubes to H. G. Wells vision of silicon-aluminum men in Another Basis for Life dwelling in an atmosphere of gaseous sulfur on the shores of a liquid iron sea. Astrobiologists have hotly debated how closely extraterrestrial life would evolve to resemble that on Earth, with some arguing that with a slightly different roll of the Darwinian dice, Earth would have been inhabited by creatures unimaginable. Others argue that if there is biology elsewhere in the universe we would find it strikingly familiar down to the carbon-based machinery in its cells.

Not so, argues Harvards evolutionary biologist, Stephen Jay Gould, in his book Wonderful Life, we are here because one odd group of fishes had a peculiar fin anatomy that could transform into legs for terrestrial creatures; because the earth never froze entirely during an ice age; because a small and tenuous species, arising in Africa a quarter of a million years ago, has managed, so far, to survive by hook and by crook. We may yearn for a higher answer but none exists.

Equations of Life

Enter Charles S. Cockell, an astrobiologist at the University of Edinburgh and Director of the UK Center for Astrobiology, who, 180-degrees contrary to Gould, argues in The Equations of Life that the cosmos if populated, would harbor creatures more like like those lined up at Mos Eisleys dimly-lit cantina on the Star Wars planet Tatooine. No matter how different the conditions on distant worlds, suggests Cockell, all life being living matter material capable of reproducing and evolvingis presumably subject to the same laws of physics from quantum mechanics to thermodynamics and the laws of gravity.

Cockel, reports George Johnson at the New York Times, argues that even at this deep level, the possibilities of life were tightly circumscribed. Rerun the tape of evolution, and DNA, RNA, ATP, the Krebs cycle the rigmarole of Biology 101 would probably arise again, here or in distant worlds. Single cells would then join together, seeking the advantages of metazoan life, until before you know it something like the earthly menagerie would come to be.

Alien Evolution Advanced Life Will Mirror Homo Sapiens

The Right Stuff

An analysis by Ralph Pudritz, a theoretical astrophysicist and director of the Origins Institute at McMaster University shows that the first ten amino acids are likely to form at relatively low temperatures and pressures, and the calculated odds of formation match the concentrations of these life-chemicals found in meteorite samples. The study indicates that you dont need a miracle to arrive at the chemical cocktail for early life, just a decently large asteroid with the right components. Thats all. The entire universe could be stuffed with life, from the earliest prebiotic protein-a-likes to fully DNAed descendants. The path from one to the other is long, but weve had thirteen and a half billion years so far and its happened at least once.

Beings From the Previous Eon Sir Roger Penrose and Joe Rogan: Is Alien Life Out There?

Early Earth was covered with carbonaceous material from meteorites and comets that provided the raw materials from which first life emerged. In his book, The Eerie Silence, astrophysicist Paul Davies echoes Harvards Gould suggesting that the original cells would have been able to pick and choose from the early Earths organic cocktail. To the best of our knowledge, he writes, the twenty-one chosen by known life do not constitute a unique set; other choices could have been made, and maybe were made if life started elsewhere many times.

The Daily Galaxy, Andy Johnson, via New York Times; Paul Davies, The Eerie Silence; Stephen Jay Gould, Wonderful Life and Charles S. Cockell, Equations of Life. (all Kindle editions)

Image credit: Scene from the movie, Arrival.

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Physics of Alien Life (The Galaxy Insight) - The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel

Solved the mystery of strange metals, a new state of matter – InTallaght

Even within the quantum world i strange metals they are very strange, in fact. This state of matter is related to high-temperature superconductors and has surprising connections with the properties of black holes.

The electrons that flow inside a strange metal they dissipate energy at the maximum speed allowed by the laws of quantum mechanics, and their electrical resistance, unlike an ordinary metal, is directly proportional to their temperature.

Finding a model that describes the behaviour of strange metals is one of the biggest challenges of the physics of condensed matter. Using computational techniques, a team of researchers from the Flatiron Institute in New York City and Cornell University solved the first theoretical model for this new state of matter.

The fact that we call them strange metals should make us understand how much we understand about their behaviour, tells Olivier Parcollet, a researcher at the Flatiron Institute and co-author of the study. Strange metals share some properties with black holes and open new research directions in theoretical physics.

For quantum mechanics, the electrical resistance it is the product of the interactions of electrons with other electrons and with the impurities of metals. The greater the average time between two collisions, the lower the resistance of the medium. For an ordinary metal, the resistance increases with temperature but following a complex mathematical function, but in some particular cases (such as superconductors heated just above the superconductivity threshold) this can be simplified considerably. For the strange metals, the equation is extremely trivial: a direct proportionality between resistance and temperature. The proportionality constant depends on some fundamental constants: the Planck constant and the Boltzmann constant, for this reason, they are also called Planckian metals .

The models that describe these materials have existed for decades, but their resolution is far from obvious. The entanglement between electrons it prevents them from being treated as individual bodies and the huge number of particles makes the whole complex. In strange metals, entanglement between over a billion electrons has been achieved.

Peter Cha and Olivier Parcollets team used sophisticated computational methods to obtain numerical solutions for one of the models that describe these materials. The results tell that the strange metals I am a new state of matter halfwaybetween Motts insulating spin glasses and Fermi liquids.

We found an entire region in the phase space showing Planckian behaviour that does not belong to any of the previously known classes, explains Eun-Ah Kim, professor of Cornell University. This quantum state isnt completely blocked but its not completely free either. Its metallic, but it doesnt want to be and pushes the chaos levels to the maximum expected by quantum mechanics.

This new work will help physicists better understand the physics of high-temperature superconductors. The work, as we said earlier, has unexpected connections with astrophysics: also black holes presented properties that depend on the temperature and constants of Planck and Boltzmann, such as the oscillation time after the fusion between two black holes.

The fact that there are similar properties on a scale ranging from strange metals to black holes is extremely fascinating, Parcollet says.

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Solved the mystery of strange metals, a new state of matter - InTallaght

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Driving may never be the same after coronavirus. But what a ride its been! – The Guardian

The past few months showed us something that many thought wed never see in our lifetimes: empty roads. Miles of asphalt without a single vehicle to spoil the view. Parked cars gathered dust, multi-storeys were deserted and garages shuttered. As lockdown eased, cars started to fill our streets again. But the great hiatus provided a glimpse into an alternative future.

Some cities, such as Milan, have already stated that they want to make permanent the changes brought about by the pandemic, and there have been calls across Britain for more space for walking and cycling. The warning lights signalling the end of the cars total dominance over the way we travel and the way we plan cities are now flashing.

For the past 15 years, I have been the Observers motoring editor. Like so many other things, the pandemic brought my weekly column to a juddering halt. Though environmental concerns also played a factor in its demise, its hard to review cars if you cant drive anywhere, despite the temptation of those blissfully empty roads.

What does looking back over 15 years of reviewing cars tell me about motorings next chapter? The automobile has dramatically transformed our lives since its invention. Steam-powered and even hydrogen-driven automobiles can be dated to the 1770s, but 1886 is generally regarded as the birth year of the modern motor. That was when Karl Benz patented his first Motorwagen. There are now 1.3bn cars on the worlds roads.

In terms of captivating design coupled with brilliant technology, the last half-century has surely been the cars golden age. If you regard motor manufacturing as an artform, these past decades will be seen as the automobiles high mark, its Renaissance era, as one game-changing advance was piled on another. But a glance in your rearview mirror will tell you that this period will also be known as the last time cars could be driven with a clear conscience, a time of motoring innocence before driving became so compromised; freighted with the knowledge that these beautiful machines were wrecking our planet.

Guilt has never made for an amenable passenger, and the pumping soundtrack of a gurgling V8 soon starts to sound like a death rattle.

Ive loved cars for as long as I can remember. My mother has a picture of me as a toddler sitting on my potty, knock-kneed and in red sandals, earnestly parking my fleet of colourful Dinky toy cars. I then grew up and through my job found myself at the wheel of the real-life versions of the same models Id been playing with. As a journalist, I drove everything from the first Series 1 1948 Land Rover Defender, with its famous registration plate HUE 166, to the last Jaguar E-Type to roll off the production line in Coventry in 1974. I drove around Le Mans in a vintage 1954 racing car with the grandson of William Lyons, the founder of Jaguar. I drove a one-off futuristic VW prototype with consumption figures so low you could go from London to Edinburgh on little more than a sip of fuel.

There were Minis and Mondeos, Fiats and Ferraris, MPVs, SUVs, ATVs I remember thinking it was funny to take an Aston Martin to a McDonalds drive-thru, only to see there was a Lamborghini in the queue behind me. I took our household rubbish to the council tip in a Rolls-Royce and was cheered by the workers there.

Ive long been dazzled by the cars mechanical mastery of the multiple threats of travelling at speed with a tank of highly flammable liquid in the back. Im amazed you can drive in comfort over frozen tundra or across a scorching desert with your paint job remaining immaculate through a swing of 60C. Why doesnt it all just flake off? Cars give us limitless freedom. Theyre our escape pods, parked on permanent standby.

So whats going to happen to them now? The next generation of motorists will see transformative technology once again reinvent vehicles. But how quickly will it happen? Will we soon be driven by fleets of self-piloted zombie cars? When autonomous cars finally become the norm, a point which is nowhere near as tantalisingly close as some suggest, one of the biggest changes will be the reduction in the number of fatal accidents. It will become almost impossible to die in a crash.

It wont just be lives that are saved, either. Autonomy will create efficiencies in many ways. These vehicles wont be owned we will rent them by the hour or day, which means we wont need so many. and our streets wont be so clogged with underused cars. Traffic lights, road signs and markings will become unnecessary the cars know where they are going. Our cities will be quieter and cleaner. Our built environment will be less dominated by the infrastructure of the road.

The elderly, infirm and even visually impaired will be able to enjoy driving without depending on taxis or other people. Autonomous cars will be far more energy efficient, too. Some studies estimate that fuel use will fall by at least a quarter.

It all sounds pretty good, but this auto-utopia is still a long way from reality. There are so many obstacles to overcome. First up there is cost. Superfast sensors, lasers and cameras dont come cheap. Then there is safety. On average, a vehicle in the UK is involved in a fatal crash once in every 200 million miles. This gives you a clue as to the phenomenal scale of testing that autonomous systems will have to undergo before we as humans will be prepared to hand over the steering wheel to a computer.

What about insurance? If there is a crash, who and what is responsible? The mapping providers? The GPS system? The robo-pilot? Will our premiums drop? What about our no-claims bonus?

In theory, any car can be modified to be self-driving. But for some reason, we tend to pair autonomy with electric vehicles. Battery technology, despite being around for more than a century, is still in its infancy. As the uptake of electric cars increases so their power packs will become smarter, more productive and more efficient. The lack of fast chargers and anxiety over range will cease to be an issue. Clearly, we are in dire need of more public charging points, and the uptake of electric vehicles wont truly get into its stride without the installation of thousands of easy-to-access charge sites across the UK. But a lack of petrol stations didnt stop Henry Ford rolling out his world-beating Model T. He once famously said: If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.

A ban on all new sales of petrol and diesel cars by 2035 will focus our minds. But how ethical and sustainable is the production of an EV? The manufacture of the cars and particularly the essential minerals for the batteries, often mined in countries with poor environmental records and even worse abuses of their labour force is anything but green. Swapping an internal combustion engine for an electric motor is only a short-term fix. Are we, in fact, just kicking our problems down the street?

Autonomous cars will massively reduce the number of fatal accidents. It will become almost impossible to die in a crash.

Of all the scenarios about what well be driving in the coming years, the one I find most plausible is that many of us will actually choose not to drive at all. In some ways, itll be a relief. Commuter constipation, motorway standstills and city gridlock all mean that driving now is often just a frustrating nightmare.

Before the lockdown, Birmingham once, proudly, the UKs motorway city had already announced plans to entice people out of their cars and on to bikes and buses, and on to their feet. If Birmingham goes ahead, it will join areas of York, Bath, Sheffield, Leeds, Edinburgh and Brighton among others, which have already experimented with car-free days. Bristol has announced plans to ban diesel soon.

Further afield, Madrid has banned older cars from its centre, and Paris is following a similar route. The sustainable transport charity Sustrans estimates that of the 6.8 million private vehicle trips that were made daily in Greater London, 4.2 million could be walked or cycled.

Its ironic that the answer to all our car problems might be as simple as more of us turning off our engines, getting out and simply using our own legs.

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Driving may never be the same after coronavirus. But what a ride its been! - The Guardian

5 Ways To Set Up Retiring In Your Thirties – Forbes

Retirement once meant completely stopping work after a long career. Now, it can mean achieving financial freedom in order to take money out of the equation, allowing you to pursue whatever you please, which might be work but doesnt have to be.

5 ways to set up retiring in your thirties

Financial freedom has become a buzzword in personal growth forums, and it has multiple definitions. For me, financial freedom is about choice. Choosing who to work with, on which projects, from wherever in the world you want to be. It also means being able to say no to anything other than work that fulfils your mission and purpose, and yes to those opportunities that arent necessarily well-paid or arent incredibly exciting.

You win at life by being paid to do work that you love so much, youd do for free. An extension of this is not having to work, but believing so strongly that youre onto something, that its how you choose to spend your time.

If that sounds appealing, heres how to set it up:

The FIRE movement (financial independence, retire early) is one that provides specific calculations to work out where you are versus where you want to be. It works on the basis of setting aside 25 times your annual living expenses and putting it into investments. Its not for everyone, but the premise is solid: work out where you are and work out what you need to do.

Without an idea of how much you earn and how much you spend, its impossible to project forward. Start with a blank piece of paper and work out your numbers. Use banking apps such as Revolut to analyse your spending. Get good at spreadsheets.

The penny saved is a penny earned mentality works on a scarcity premise and isnt congruent with the mindset of big thinkers or ambitious people. Alongside thinking of costs, think of opportunities. Think of the value you could bring to others and the financial rewards gained as a result of that. Incorporate that into your forecasts.

Robert Kiyosakis book, Rich Dad Poor Dad, describes doo-dads as things you buy that cost you money, or waste your money. They might include luxury cars, jewellery or lavish clothes. In other words, anything that you dont really need. The Minimalists, however, advocate focusing on less. Fewer possessions and fewer obligations. Fewer focus on unimportant materialism and more on spending time with people. Their mantra is love people, use things because the opposite never works.

Being low maintenance is a vibe, and its achievable for everyone. It involves opting out of unnecessary expense commitments in favour of finding happiness in simplicity. From a financial standpoint, every day of minimalism stacks up, and could mean financial freedom is a whole lot closer.

In an article by Derek Sivers, he talks about how he got rich on the other hand, explaining, Its not how much you have.Its the difference between what you have and what you spend.If you have more than you spend, youre rich. If you spend more than you have, youre not. If you live cheaply, its easy to be free.

5 ways to set up retiring in your thirties

With small risks come small rewards. With big risks come big rewards. What each individual is comfortable with varies wildly. Given, however, that youre not going to live forever, why not take the big risks? Ask the big questions, start that company you cant stop thinking about. Approach that person for that collaboration.

You owe it to your future self to make the decisions that will make him or her proud. There are many reasons you should be dreaming bigger. As Daniel Burnham, architect of Chicago, once said, Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir mans blood.

Most people who retired or became financially free in their 30s didnt do it from a steady salary or stable job. They did it from scalable ideas, a fast-lane project, uniting a tribe, or effecting huge change with a cause that mattered. They did it taking risks that had never been done before, not working 9-5 and imitating their competitors. To get what no one else has, do what no one else will do.

If you need inspiration, think of the people who inspire you the most. Those who make you want to up your game in a big way. Find them online and channel the motivation into replicating it for yourself.

From an old Chinese proverb, The best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago. The second best time is now. I recently spoke to Tayla Evans, a 17-year-old entrepreneur whose sustainable tent concept just won Young Enterprises U.K. company of the year. Evans asked me for the advice I wish Id had at 17. It was this: start now. Stop waiting for conditions to be perfect, stop waiting to finish the year, or the chapter, or the semester. Get a huge head start on your own journey by trying, failing and starting again as soon as you can.

Most people dont think about what they want their future to look like until theyre too far down one path. Many never get around to intentionally designing their life, or career, or even their weekend. But the earlier you make your plan the sooner you can make progress or the sooner you can iterate and pivot.

Start earlier by making your plan immediately. Make your plan by asking better questions. If I had two weeks to do this, how would I do it? How could I make this 10 times bigger?

5 ways to set up retiring in your thirties

You become a combination of the five people you spend the most time with. Five people, working together on collective financial freedom, could be the sole reason you reach financial freedom earlier. As Tony Robbins says, Energy flows where attention goes. Share your plans with your closest circle and watch them be realised at record speed.

A close alternative comes from reading books. The authors become your mentors, exhibiting the research and presenting the case, before giving clear guidance and inspiring you along the route they advocate. There as many methods of financial education as there are people, but Rich Dad Poor Dad, the 4-Hour-Work-Week and Playing with FIRE are good places to start.

Its never before been more attainable to reach financial freedom, and your version of retirement, earlier than former generations. It requires careful planning, inventive thinking, and an assessment of whats really important. Dream big, create the plans, make incredible things happen, and the rest is easy.

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5 Ways To Set Up Retiring In Your Thirties - Forbes

Can Trading In Crypto Lead To Financial Independence: Here Is What You Need To Know – Virtual-Strategy Magazine

Cryptocurrency is the new normal and the lives of millions of people would change with the cryptocurrency. The crypto industry is growing fast in the present world and everyone is willing to take a shift from the general world to a world of cryptocurrencies. The crypto world is moving as fast as the internet moved during the 90s. During that time, many of the entrepreneurs made a career using the internet.

Likewise, crypto is going to get a kick in these years majorly. There is less of a financial barrier in crypto is much lower than any other kind of investment. Crypto or bitcoin empowers the crypto holders or the bitcoin holders by giving them the whole authority of the bitcoin unlike in the case of banks it is own by the bank authorities and the government.

Freedom also brings you the responsibility of your bitcoin so that you can keep it safe. Crypto use is a little difficult than expected because it is not as easy as the normal fiat currency. The whole concept of crypto is a bit difficult to understand and regulate accordingly. You will get a private key and a public key and responsibility of both the keys and the vault are yours. You can start bitcoin trading with bitcoin trading bots.

There are various benefits of using cryptocurrencies, but I will show you some of them here which has made themselves prove better than currency.

If you can employ yourself or if you can work for yourself then you will be able to earn the whole lot for yourself.

Earning crypto would make you much more independent and you can look up to a luxurious life without any fiat currency. There are many ways following which you can make cryptocurrencies easily.

This will give you a good passive income, it could even be your only income and you can make a lot from this one source, but you need to make sure that you do what is needful.

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Can Trading In Crypto Lead To Financial Independence: Here Is What You Need To Know - Virtual-Strategy Magazine

Be Wary of Bad Retirement Advice | NextAdvisor with TIME – NextAdvisor

Editorial Independence

We want to help you make more informed decisions. Some links on our site clearly marked will take you to a partner website and may result in us earning a referral commission. For more information, seeHow We Make Money.

If you read my article on how I only need $581 a month to survive, you know a little bit about my family and our immigrant story.

My mother is the middle child of 11: seven girls and four boys. Her parents were farmers in Ojo de Agua, a small mountainous town on the northern tip of the Dominican Republic. They lived off the land by selling pltanos, mangos, and other fruits and vegetables.

If you asked my grandparents if they had a retirement account, theyd probably laugh at you before they replied: Our children are our retirement account.

Thats the reality for many Latinos today. According to a report by the National Institute on Retirement Security, 4 out of 5 Hispanic households have less than $10,000 in retirement savings. Thats partly because many Latino workers are less likely to have retirement plans at work, and its challenging to make enough money to save for such a long-term goal.

This is a direct result of the lack of financial education in our communities and systemic issues in the U.S. that have prohibited the financial stability and independence of immigrants. The fear of the unknown has also kept many Latinos from investing. According to one study, only 5% of people that invest in the stock market are Latino.

I saw this reluctance firsthand in my family. If there was money to spare, my grandparents and parents focused on supporting the immediate needs of their familynot investing in their own futures. But I was determined to change that.

My moms mother, Juana, never had a real job, and her highest level of education was third grade. Growing up, while the boys chopped banana trees, my own mother and her sisters fetched water from a river two miles away in order to clean the house. My grandparents lived off the land until they slowly began immigrating to the U.S. in the 80s.

My mother, Julia, was 22 when I was born. I was her first child, the little girl she always dreamed of having. She was immensely creative and used her sewing skills to make little dresses for me, a trait she learned after always getting hand-me-down clothes from her older sisters.

Only eight months after I was born, my grandfather received a notice in the mail. He was living in America and the request he had put in for my moms F2A visa was approved. The F2A visa allows a U.S. citizen to bring an immediate family member to the U.S. My grandfather had been planning this for years, but the timing of the approval put my mother in a tough place.

Although my mom knew this could happen, she wasnt prepared to leave her infant and husband behind. But she understood that it would be an opportunity to live a better life, so she left her young family and came to New York to work.

In the U.S., my mother got a job at a pharmaceutical company making minimum wage (about $3.80 an hour at the time). She clocked in and out using a time card and got paid weekly. She didnt understand W2s, taxes, insurance, or 401(k)s. Her only goal? Saving as much as possible so she could afford visas for my father and me.

It took quite a while to save $660 for the application fees and finally begin our immigration process. Four years later, thanks to her sacrifices, we were reunited.

My mother always put her family first, and she didnt save for retirement. Instead, along with her brothers and sisters, she helped my grandparents financially, especially my grandmother who spent her life working and caring for her children, but never had an income.

The first time I learned about saving for retirement, I was 19 years old and working a summer job at a nonprofit organization. The HR manager was a Puerto Rican woman named Maribel. She didnt seem very enthused about her work, and with a straight face she explained a 403(b), the retirement account offered by nonprofits, to me: Its free money, but you need to sign up to get it.

I remember thinking to myself, Sign up now, ask questions later.

I felt like I could trust Maribel. She was knowledgeable, looking out for my best interests, and Latina like me.

But when I told my mom about my new retirement account, she scoffed. Why would you be putting money into that when you dont know how long you will live? You should be saving cash. My mom had always lived paycheck to paycheck, and the fear of not having enough kept her from thinking about investing for the long term.

In one sense, my mom wasnt wrong. I was 20 years old and had zero emergency savings. I didnt have my financial life togetherbut because I had already signed up and was getting an employer match, I continued to save for retirement. Im grateful I did.

If you are getting an employer matchaka free moneyyou should always save for retirement. It took me years to understand the importance of an emergency fund and to build a personal financial plan, but while I was figuring that out, I was investing in the market via my retirement account, watching it grow, and getting my contributions matched by my employer.

I started with a small amount, just $50 per paycheck. But I quickly saw the power of compound. Now I save $500 per month and am on course to have $1.6 million when I officially retire at 67 years old. When I recently showed my mom my account and these projected numbers, she was so amazed and proud. I think its safe to say that shes glad I followed my own personal finance path.

Here are five tips to save for retirement and become a millionaire:

Today, saving for retirement is one of the pillars of my business, Investing Latina. I talk about how its important to pay your future self now in order to be financially self-reliant at retirement age. As I recently shared on Instagram, its important to change the way we see saving for retirement and building wealth for our families. By investing for retirement, we avoid being a financial burden to our children. Its a way to show love and respect.

Perhaps saving for retirement wasnt something that you talked about with your parents. You still have the power to elevate yourself and build wealth.

Financial independence for you can start with just $50 per month. Its all a matter of taking the first step.

Ask your employer about the benefits they offer, like 401(k), 403(b), or 457 accounts, and how much they match. Dont worry about maxing out nowyou can work your way up to contributing to the limit.

If youre self-employed, you can open a Roth IRA on your own (the IRA stands for Individual Retirement Account), where you can save up to $6,000 per year and take advantage of the tax benefits.

Regardless of your history or experience, its never too late to learn and start saving for retirement.

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Be Wary of Bad Retirement Advice | NextAdvisor with TIME - NextAdvisor

Hungarys Independent Press Takes Another Blow and Reporters Quit – The New York Times

BUDAPEST Hungarys most widely read news site was thrown into disarray this week after the organizations editor in chief was fired and scores of journalists quit in protest as the government moved closer to near-complete control over the countrys media landscape.

A decade into Prime Minister Viktor Orbans quest to transform Hungary into an illiberal nation, where he controls nearly all levers of the state and uses them to maintain his grip on power, the takeover of Index.hus advertising unit by an Orban ally was part of a broader effort to limit dissenting voices and silence critics.

The potential loss of the news site as a check on the government was a particularly painful blow to the small but determined coterie of independent journalists left working in the country.

The site was one of many independent media outlets in Central Europe that have come under sustained financial and political pressure from governments bent on controlling public discourse.

More than half the staff at Index, some 70 employees, announced their resignations on Friday after the firing of the editor, Szabolcs Dull.

We have emphasized for years that we have two requirements for Index to continue operating independently: that there be no outside interference in Indexs content or in the composition or structure of Indexs staff, the group said in a statement. The firing of Szabolcs Dull violated the latter of these requirements. His dismissal was a clear interference in the composition of the staff.

The steady decline of independent news outlets is part of the slide toward autocratic rule in Hungary and, to a lesser extent, in Poland. Those concerns were key sticking points in the debate over the European Unions $857 billion pandemic recovery plan and whether Hungary and Poland should be penalized financially.

In the end, recovery money was not tied in a significant way to the behavior of member states, appeasing Poland and Hungary, and setting up a possible clash as the deal moves to the European Parliament for final approval.

Earlier this month, Polands president, Andrzej Duda, narrowly won re-election after a bitter campaign in which the media was a frequent target.

Mr. Duda accused Germany of trying to influence the result through media outlets owned by German companies. The government even summoned Germanys charges-daffaires to complain about the matter, and has yet to approve Germanys incoming ambassador.

After the election, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the leader of the ruling Law and Justice Party, vowed to press ahead with plans to limit media ownership by foreign companies.

The media in Poland should be Polish, the party leader declared after the victory.

Since coming into power in 2015, Law and Justice has transformed state television into a propaganda arm of the government, applied financial pressure on Polish media by preventing all state-related entities from advertising with critical outlets, and waged aggressive campaigns against journalists critical of the government.

Poland fell to 62nd place out of 180 countries ranked in the World Press Freedom Index in 2020, dropping from 18th in 2015.

The election results are being challenged in the countrys Supreme Court, with one of the accusations being that the Law and Justice partys control over state television created an unfair playing field.

The Polish government has often followed the path set by Mr. Orban, who has transformed the media landscape in Hungary despite European Union pressure to change course.

When Mr. Orban returned to power in 2010, he and his allies immediately went to work overhauling the countrys democratic framework. A landslide victory at the polls in 2010 allowed them to unilaterally rewrite Hungarys constitution and change its electoral laws to favor their party. Since then, they have secured constitutional supermajorities in two subsequent elections, despite receiving less than 50 percent of the popular vote.

The Constitutional Court has been stacked and lower courts overhauled, public media and most of the countrys private media have come under the control of the prime ministers allies, and independent watchdog institutions have been stripped of influence.

In late 2018, hundreds of nominally independent media outlets controlled by the prime ministers allies were given to another foundation controlled by Mr. Orbans confidants. Media and competition regulators were barred from scrutinizing the transactions, according to a decree issued by Mr. Orban in early December 2018, on grounds that the ownership changes were of strategic national interest.

Index, which traces its roots to the advent of internet news in Hungary, had largely weathered many political storms over the past decade.

It has reported critically of Mr. Orbans government, prominently featuring stories of Russian meddling in Hungary, alleged graft involving politicians and individuals close to Mr. Orbans inner circle, and by chronicling other government policies widely condemned as assaults on democratic institutions.

In March, as Europe struggled to contain the coronavirus, Miklos Vaszily, a media executive with close ties to Mr. Orbans allies, acquired 50 percent of Indexs advertising business.

The move prompted concern from journalists and free press advocates, not least because of Mr. Vaszilys role in overhauling media outlets, including Origo, a site once regarded as one of Hungarys most reputable independent news organizations.

On June 21, local media reports indicated the leadership at Index planned to overhaul the websites staff, essentially turning reporters into outside contributors. The staff declared the plan a threat to its independence, warning of a concerted attempt to expose the publication to heightened political interference. Within days, the editor in chief was removed from the companys board, its chief executive officer resigned, as did an incoming C.E.O.

The matter remained at a standstill until Wednesday, when Mr. Dull, the chief editor, was fired by Laszlo Bodolai, head of the foundation that exercises ownership of the publication. Mr. Bodolai accused Mr. Dull of being unable to quell internal anxiety at Index, endangering the business.

In a statement released after his departure, Mr. Dull said he always acted with the interests of his staff in mind.

It is no coincidence that Indexs staff felt at risk, he wrote, adding that the recent events have convinced him that Hungary needs a newspaper where content is not decided by outside powers.

A last-ditch attempt by the news outlets staff failed to convince the organizations management to rehire the dismissed editor in chief.

We dont know what is happening, Veronika Munk, the deputy editor in chief, said Thursday afternoon. I firmly feel that for many in the staff work has ended at Index.

Through a windfall of state advertising contracts, which often promote conspiracy theories and attacks on the European Union, media entities under the control of Mr. Orbans allies have flourished. They have been instrumental in promulgating sweeping state-funded propaganda campaigns that tap into anti-Semitic tropes reminiscent of the interwar period.

Imagine all the media in a U.S. state were to come under the ownership of a single political group, says Gabor Polyak of Mertek Media Monitor, a media think tank, and all of these media outlets are funded by taxpayer money.

In 2018, the European Parliament voted resoundingly to initiate proceedings against Mr. Orbans government for what critics say are systemic threats to Hungarys rule of law and democracy. The process could strip Mr. Orban of his vote in the European Council.

At the debate, Mr. Orban rejected criticism of his stewardship of Hungary.

We would never resort to silencing those who disagree with us, the prime minister said.

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Hungarys Independent Press Takes Another Blow and Reporters Quit - The New York Times

Giving abandoned women chance to rediscover their self-worth – The Star Online

SOCIAL entrepreneur Vatsala Nair Manoharan has formed Moms Village to help women achieve financial independence by rediscovering their value.

The establishment, according to her, serves as a community space for women who are rebuilding their lives to seek emotional support through peer groups for abused women.

To empower these women, Vatsala created the hashtag #10Ringgit with the aim of encouraging them to earn at least RM10 a day.

This allows the mothers to rediscover their self-worth and start businesses from home with limited resources and investments.

We aim to reduce womens dependence on shelter homes when they leave abusive marriages or survive crises, she explained.

Single mothers are taught how to take online booking for home food based business under the IbuPJ programme.

Vatsala said during the movement control order (MCO) period, most single and abandoned mothers were financially drained.

The abandoned mothers who sold nasi lemak by the roadside were badly hit, especially during the MCO period.

They are now trying to restart their lives and certainly need help.

Vatsala said abandoned mothers usually faced the problem of husbands who would make sudden appearances and then leave without providing any financial support.

These wives would commonly not file for divorce due to the fear of being judged by society, lack of knowledge and time, poor finances as well as not having a support system.

In some cases, these women continue living with their abusive husbands because they have no financial independence to afford even the basics such as sanitary napkins.

Members of peer groups run by Moms Village learn to be financially independent.

In other cases, the husband may have bought an asset with the wife and stopped payment.

He would then have gone missing and not divorced the wife, leaving her with tremendous mental stress and financial difficulties, she said.

Vatsala urged authorities such as the Credit Counselling and Debt Management Agency (AKPK) to provide more outreach to abandoned mothers.

I see the only way out for these women is to have financial literacy and stability.

Local councils should also play a role by issuing more business permits and avenues for them to start their own businesses, she said.

Moms Village also offers eco-friendly gifts and merchandise through the brand Magic Seed.

IbuPJ co-founders Ellis Nusara Ainul Azhar (right) and Muhammad Amir Faaiz Shamsolnizam teaching single mother Nor Hafiza Ismail (left) ways to manage an online business.

This is an initiative to offer beneficiaries an opportunity to earn a decent living by making and selling eco-friendly gifts that give value to people, planet and celebrations.

These women are financially enabled to put themselves through workshops or affordable entrepreneurial boot camps, thereby giving them an opportunity to start their own business.

Another programme that equips women with entrepreneurial, financial and marketing skills is the seven-week IbuPJ.

The programmes focus primarily on improving the lives of single mothers in the B40 group in Petaling Jaya.

It is part of the National Sustainability Challenge by the Axiata Young CEO Development Programme.

Wong says helping single mothers in Petaling Jaya is vital for economic recovery post-Covid-19.

IbuPJ co-founder Mathew Wong said the programme enabled women to transform their business online to help boost their household income.

Helping single mothers in Petaling Jaya is vital for economic recovery post-Covid-19 and at the same time, directly helps those in need of assistance from Petaling Jaya City Council (MBPJ).

Our team has created an end-to-end programme for IbuPJ in collaboration with MBPJ that will equip single mothers with entrepreneurial, financial and digital marketing skills through a four-week workshop.

We also provide them with an e-commerce platform to sell their products and services, thereby helping them to generate sales and build a community of empowered single mothers in Petaling Jaya, added Wong.

The top 10 mothers in the programme will have access to seed grants of RM800 to buy raw material and necessary equipment needed for their business.

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Giving abandoned women chance to rediscover their self-worth - The Star Online

Disabled Jamaican woman cooks, washes, and writes using feet – NYCaribNews

51-year-old Daphne Williams who was born with a partial right hand and a single finger. She is a picture of resilience as, throughout her life, she has learned to use that solitary finger to undertake every imaginable task on her own.

With the aid of her right foot, Williams cooks, cleans, washes clothes, sews, and writes her own letters. She also lights her coal stove, cuts patterns to sew, and peels food to cook.

A former vendor, the Smithville, Clarendon resident does not allow her disability to stand in the way.

A staunch Christian and believer in God, Williams firmly believes that she was placed on earth for a special purpose.

This is how I was born and I accept it. God knows best, but Jamaica is too blessed for persons with disabilities to live permanently in hardships for the rest of their lives, said Williams.

The fifth of six children and the only one disabled, she explained her late mother cited domestic woes and emotional distress as the cause of her disability. She has had no formal diagnosis for her condition.

She further revealed that her parents were reluctant to register her in the formal education system, out of fear of her being scorned or ridiculed. As a result, she started primary school at age 10 and graduated shortly before her 17th birthday when she should have been leaving high school.

God granted me wisdom, knowledge and understanding, and I see it as a process for me to learn.

A Sunday-school teacher at the Smithville Baptist Church, she professed her love for children and said the congregation, of which she has been a member since 1994, was very supportive.

She believes that not enough is being done to cater to disabled persons, especially in rural areas.

I am disabled, but I am able. I do everything for myself, but if I want a bag juice, somebody has to give it to me, so I want some financial independence so that I can stop being a burden to my sister. I need some help, she pleaded.

Williams greatest challenge is not physical. She is saddled by financial woes and a lack of resources and pointed to an incomplete house on which construction was halted in 2008 as funds dried up.

There are times you need help and you dont really see anybody. I would love some help to fix up my house and a little bathroom.

She added that she would love to be able to own a sewing machine, as she aims to profit from her sewing skills.

Her niece and a church member both vouched for her saying she is a walking miracle who does everything a person with two hands and two feet can do.

Anyone willing to assist Williams may contact her at 876-562-3732.

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Disabled Jamaican woman cooks, washes, and writes using feet - NYCaribNews

Revisiting the Constitutionality of Independent Agencies – The Regulatory Review

The Supreme Court has destabilized principles on federal agencies structures and for-cause removal.

When can Congress protect agency heads from at-will removal by, or at the behest of, the President?

Myers v. United States and Humphreys Executor v. United States, two Supreme Court decisions nearing their respective centennials, have long formed a stable basis for assessing the U.S. Congresss power to provide executive branch officials with for-cause removal protections. Such protections typically limit the grounds for removal to inefficiency, neglect of duty, and malfeasance in office, or similar deficiencies.

Under Myers and Humphreys Executor, officials who exercise purely executive functions could not be accorded such protections and must be removable at-will by the President. But officials who exercise quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions, particularly as members of multi-member commissions or boards, could be afforded for-cause protection.

In Humphreys Executor, the Supreme Court reasoned that the President could require subservience from officials exercising executive powers, such as a postmaster or federal prosecutor, for which the President had ultimate responsibilitybut not those who exercised the delegated powers assigned to the other branches. Under Humphreys Executor, the U.S. Constitution does not require that agency officials whose jobs involve more than just enforcementsuch as making rules or holding hearingsbe removable at-will by the President, despite being members of the executive branch.

The Supreme Courts 1988 decision in Morrison v. Olson destabilized this foundation a bit, holding that even some purely executive officials, such as individuals appointed as special counsel, could receive for-cause protection when warranted by their functions.

In 2010, Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board further destabilized the framework it established in Myers and Humphreys Executor. The question in Free Enterprise centered on the constitutionality of a double level of for-cause protection: Could Congress set up one agency, headed by officials enjoying for-cause protection, that was nested under another agency headed by officials also possessing such protection? The Courts holdingthat Congress could not create more than one level of for-cause insulation between the President and virtually any executive branch officerwas not itself particularly destabilizing. But the majoritys rationale asserted that presidential control over executive branch officials was critical to the Presidents electoral accountability. That reasoning did not bode well for Humphreys Executors continuing validity.

Given the instability of the doctrine and the renewed focus on presidential control over agency officials, the Courts decision this past term in Seila Law v. CFPB was much anticipated.

Seila involved the removal protections Congress gave to the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), an agency that exercises substantial quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative functions. The issue before the Court centered on the viability of the Humphreys Executor framework: Would the insulation the Court affirmed in Humphreys Executor apply even to a solitary agency head, an official freed from operating in a multi-member environment? Or would the Court jettison Humphreys Executor altogether and enshrine the unitary executive theory as constitutional law?

The CFPB case raised these issues in a disturbing context. In creating the CFPB, not only had Congress protected its director with a for-cause removal provision, but Congress had also allowed the director to serve for a five-year term. This structure meant that a President could serve an entire term without gaining an opportunity to replace the CFPBs director with someone more in tune with the Presidents philosophy.

Moreover, the CFPBs budget stems from a source entirely separate from the congressional appropriations process, as the CFPB is funded from bank fees collected by the Federal Reserve. The CFPB also has its own litigating authority, independent of the Attorney General. Substantively, the CFPB possesses broad authority to address issues that are quite controversial and could have broad impacts both on businesses and the general public.

In deciding that the CFPB directors removal protections were unconstitutional, the Supreme Court split along expected ideological lines. The five conservative justices sought to limit Humphreys Executor, with Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Neil Gorsuch, urging its complete abandonment. The four liberal justices sought to reaffirm what they considered to be Humphreys Executors broad reach.

The Courtwith Chief Justice John Roberts writing for the majoritycited to great effect the CFPBs single-headed agency structure, the directors five-year term, and the CFPBs financial independence and litigating authority as establishing a center of power controlled by one person. This structure, the Court explained, allowed the CFPB director to operate largely independent of the primary tools the political branches may use to control executive branch officialsnamely, the prospect of at-will removal by the President and Congresss appropriations process. But the Court eschewed reliance on such a contextual analysis in setting forth the legal rule upon which it rested its decision.

Under Seila, an executive officer who is the sole head of an agency cannot have for-cause removal protection, even if that officer exercises only quasi-judicial or quasi-legislative functions. Such an officials powers must be cabinedeither by having to work within a multi-member board or commission framework, or by being subject to at-will removal by the President.

In so holding, the Court refused to extend Humphreys Executor beyond the multi-member commission setting. In the majoritys view, such a rule was necessary to ensure that the President would remain politically accountable for the actions of principal officers within the executive branch. As Justice Elena Kagans dissent noted, however, the multi-member commission format complicates presidential control since a single agency director is easier to control than a multi-member commission or board.

One might wonder if the Court makes too much of the distinction between single-headed agencies and multi-member entities. Given the current political polarization, the manner of nominating and confirming officials to multi-member bodies, and the considerable powers that many commission and board chairs hold, some agenciessuch as the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Federal Communication Commissionappear to be largely run by individual chairpersons of their commissions or boards.

In dissent, Justice Kagan, writing an opinion joined by the other three liberal justices, began with a quite different premise than that embraced by Justice Roberts. She observed that the Court had repeatedly upheld provisions that prevent the President from firing regulatory officials except for cause, cautioning only that Congress could not impede the Presidents performance of his constitutional duties through imposing removal restrictions. Within that broad limit, Justice Kagan asserted, the Court had maintained that Congress could protect from at-will removal the officials it deemed to need some independence from political pressures.

Justice Kagan ultimately concluded that questions of agency design, removal protections, and the balance between the need for independence and political responsiveness are ones most appropriately left to the political branches of government. Justice Kagan is correct that an agencys independence, or lack thereof, depends on a wealth of features, which include removal standards, internal agency procedures and organization, cultural norms and traditions, and even the personal relationships between bureaucrats and politicians.

The majoritys rule governing for-cause protections may well be challenged as naively unsophisticatedas Justice Kagan does by describing it as the Schoolhouse Rock separation of powers theory. One might have also offered the same criticism of Free Enterprises one-level limitation on for-cause protection.

Nevertheless, in the context of the CFPB director, the majority may well have a point. The combination of the directors for-cause protection and lengthy term, as well as the agencys independent budgetary and litigating authority controlled by a single individual, is arguably a disturbing concentration of power.

But what would be the result if the majority relied upon the troubling characteristics of the CFPB and the tenure protection enjoyed by its director to hold that in combination those factors made the agencys structure too independent of the President and Congress?

Such a ruling would have been narrower, based on the specific facts of the case, and perhaps easier to defend against Justice Kagans challenge. But it would also have meant that many arrangements providing for-cause protection might be subject to a functionalist analysis that must account for all of the circumstances, rather than the relatively straightforward formalist rule the majority imposed prohibiting for-cause protection for single-headed agencies.

What is more, none of the CFPBs circumstantial characteristics are entirely unusual, as many independent agencies have some degree of insulation with regard to budgetary and litigation authority. And many other agencies also address controversial subjects that have broad impact.

In Justice Kagans hands, a more holistic approach would create little uncertainty. Virtually any arrangement, outside of those involving military and diplomatic affairs, would pass constitutional muster. But in the hands of the conservative majority, who believe in robust limitations on insulating executive branch officials, cases challenging the constitutionality of agency structures could likely turn on a combination of a myriad of interacting factors. Even after a string of Supreme Court decisions, the outcomes of these challenges would likely remain uncertain.

Indeed, the more holistic approach, in conservative hands, might begin to resemble the administrative law doctrine governing when Congress can assign adjudicatory powers to non-Article-III courts. The precedents underlying that doctrine, as Justice Sandra Day OConnor quite frankly acknowledged in 1986, do not admit of easy synthesis. And perhaps she should have omitted the word easy.

The majoritys rule in Seila, although absolute in its way, leaves questions unanswered. And although the rule may seem simplistic, and perhaps not entirely coherent conceptually, it does set forth a robust limit on Congresss ability to constrain removalan important aspect of presidential controlwithout launching the Court into an era of intrusive review of agency design best left to the political branches of government and to scholars.

The Court, however, does not appear to have finished with its consideration of for-cause removal protections. Within ten days of its decision in Seila Law, the Court granted certiorari in Collins v. Mnuchin and set the case for full briefing and argument. Collins involves a removal provision that affords for-cause protection to the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The statute in question actually uses the term for cause rather than the typical inefficiency, neglect of duty, and malfeasance in office phraseology.

With Collins on its docket, next term the Court may refine the constitutional principles announced in Seila Law or construe the term for cause as used in a statutory removal provision.

Bernard W. Bell is a professor of law and the Herbert Hannoch Scholar at Rutgers Law School.

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Revisiting the Constitutionality of Independent Agencies - The Regulatory Review

Advisor Group And Triad Advisors Announce Recruitment Of Professional Planning & Wealth, A Hybrid Advisory Practice With $130 Million In Client…

PHOENIX and ATLANTA, July 23, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Advisor Group, the nation's largest network of independent wealth management firms, and network member firm Triad Advisors today announced the successful recruitment of Professional Planning & Wealth, LLC ("PP&W"). PP&W has affiliated with Triad Hybrid Solutions, its corporate registered investment adviser, as well as with Triad's broker-dealer platform. The announcement reinforces Triad's longstanding position as the leading destination for independent hybrid advisor businesses, while underscoring the enhanced value it offers to financial professionals through the scale and resources of its parent company, Advisor Group.

In addition to Triad Advisors, Advisor Group also includes FSC Securities Corporation, KMS Financial Services, Royal Alliance Associates, SagePoint Financial, Securities America, Securities Service Network, and Woodbury Financial.

Based in Greenville, S.C., PP&W is an independent practice that includes two financial professionals and oversees $130 million in total client assets. It offers comprehensive financial planning and wealth management services, along with custom retirement plan programs for business clients. The practice primarily serves working professionals and business owners in the southeastern United States. With 25 and 11 years' experience, respectively, in the wealth management space, Managing Partners Chris Beard and Jesse Hansford started PP&W recently after working side-by-side at another practice in their area.

Triad CEO and President Jeff Rosenthal said, "From our first meetings with Chris and Jesse, we could tell that their focus on serving their clients with integrity while ethically and diligently growing their business would fit right in with our culture at Triad. When we bring new financial professionals on board our platforms, we are looking for people who are willing to roll up their sleeves for the long haul to achieve their goals. Chris and Jesse fit this description, and we are thrilled at the chance to collaborate with them and work towards our mutual success."

Mr. Beard said, "Triad is the gold standard in the industry when it comes to helping practices like ours to thrive, so when it came time for us to make a strategic move, the firm was the logical choice. We pride ourselves on doing our jobs with honesty and transparency and working tirelessly to further our clients' best interests through the provision of candid, unbiased financial guidance. To reach our fullest potential, we knew we needed the support of a great partner, and we found that in Triad and their excellent team. We look forward to building a fruitful relationship for years to come."

Jamie Price, CEO and President of Advisor Group, said, "On behalf of the entire Advisor Group network, we welcome PP&W to the family and congratulate Triad on the recruitment of two financial professionals of Messrs. Beard and Hansford's caliber. Our goal is to provide each of the more than 11,000 financial professionals affiliated with our wealth management firms with the services, platforms and technology they need to grow their businesses. Our financial professionals bring the drive, dedication and commitment to client service, and together we forge ahead to new levels of success. As always, we are in our financial professionals' corner and stand ready to support them in their ongoing growth."

About Triad AdvisorsTriad Advisors is part of Advisor Group, one of the nation's largest networks of independent financial professionals. Headquartered in Atlanta, Triad is a national broker-dealer as well as a multi-custodial registered investment adviser firm that was an early pioneer and continued leader in the hybrid registered investment adviser marketplace. The company has more than 600 financial providers on its platform and provides a comprehensive set of products, trading and technology systems, as well as customized wealth management strategies. For more information, please visit http://www.triad-advisors.com.

About Advisor GroupAdvisor Group, Inc. is the nation's largest network of independent wealth management firms, serving approximately 11,300 financial professionals and overseeing over $450 billion in client assets. The firm is mission-driven to support the strategic role that financial professionals can play in the lives of their clients. Cultivating a spirit of entrepreneurship and independence, Advisor Group champions the enduring value of financial professionals and is committed to being in their corner every step of the way. For more information visit https://www.advisorgroup.com.

Securities and investment advisory services are offered through Advisor Group, Inc. subsidiaries, FSC Securities Corporation, KMS Financial Services, Inc., Royal Alliance Associates, Inc., SagePoint Financial, Inc., Triad Advisors, LLC, and Woodbury Financial Services, Inc., broker-dealers, registered investment advisers, and members of FINRA and SIPC. Securities services are offered through Investacorp, Inc., Securities America, Inc., and Securities Service Network, broker-dealers and members of FINRA and SIPC. Advisory services are offered through Arbor Point Advisors, LLC, Investacorp Advisory Services, Inc., Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management, Inc., Securities America Advisor, Inc., SSN Advisory, Inc., and Triad Hybrid Solutions, LLC, registered investment advisers. Advisor Group, Inc. is a holding company. Advisor Group, Inc. is separately owned and other entities and/or marketing names, products or services referenced here are independent of Advisor Group, Inc. 20 E. Thomas Rd., Ste. 2000, Phoenix, AZ, 85012. 866.481.0379.

Media InquiriesJoseph Kuo / Chris ClemensHaven Tower Group424 317 4851 or 424 317 4854[emailprotected]or [emailprotected]

SOURCE Advisor Group; Triad Advisors

http://www.advisorgroup.com

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Advisor Group And Triad Advisors Announce Recruitment Of Professional Planning & Wealth, A Hybrid Advisory Practice With $130 Million In Client...

A Boss Idea: New Jersey-Based Team Launches ShoreHaven Wealth Partners with Dynasty Financial Partners – Business Wire

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Leading wealth advisor Lawrence Durso, his son Michael Durso and advisor Michael Lombardi today announced the launch of their new firm, ShoreHaven Wealth Partners, an independent wealth management firm based in Red Bank, New Jersey. The team had previously worked together at Durso Wealth Management Group at Morgan Stanley where they managed $420 million in client assets.

ShoreHaven Wealth Partners is an independent wealth management firm working with a select group of affluent multigenerational families and high net worth individuals, to protect, grow and transition their assets. Many of their clients are family-owned businesses who face succession and transition challenges.

Joining ShoreHaven Wealth from Morgan Stanley are the following professionals:

ShoreHaven Wealth Partners has joined the Dynasty Financial Partners network. Through Dynasty, the firm has access, on their clients behalf, to a full array of capital markets and investment banking capabilities, as well as a vast range of investment research and consulting, advanced technology, proprietary analytical tools, and an online research center. They have also selected Fidelity Institutional as the custodian for their clients assets. ShoreHaven Wealth has chosen Black Diamond for performance reporting.

We are excited to launch ShoreHaven Wealth Partners as an independent firm. We believe there are great opportunities to create a customized planning process for our clients as well as create our own brand. And, in the future, we anticipate adding like-minded advisors to our firm, said Mr. Larry Durso.

The ShoreHaven team is a group of seasoned financial advisors and experts and they are well-positioned to flourish in the independent space. Because of the relationship between Larry and his son Mike, the team brings a particularly insightful perspective to their clients in understanding the impact of family dynamics on the management of wealth across generations, said Shirl Penney, CEO of Dynasty Financial Partners. The movement to independence is continuing - even during the lockdown - and we are pleased that an increasing number of RIAs are choosing Dynasty as their platform services partner to help them scale, grow, expand margins, operate more efficiently, and better care for their clients. We are thrilled to welcome ShoreHaven Wealth to the Dynasty Network!

BIOS

Lawrence Durso, Founding Partner, CEO

Larry Durso founded ShoreHaven Wealth Partners in 2020 with his son Michael and Michael Lombardi. Most recently he had led the Durso Wealth Management Group at Morgan Stanley, where he was a Managing Director- Wealth Management.

Lawrence Durso has worked in the financial services industry since 1978. He has primarily focused on creating solutions for unique problems typically associated with high net worth clients and their families. Additionally, he holds multiple securities registrations and life and health insurance licenses.

He holds a Bachelors Degree (summa cum laude) from St. Johns University and a Masters Degree from Columbia University.

Mr. Durso is active in several charitable organizations, including St. Johns University (past President of the SJU Staten Island Alumni Association) and the Daughters of Saint Paul. He is currently Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski II Memorial Fund, also a member of the Algonquin Arts Theatre Board of Trustees and an active Supporter of the Society for the Prevention of Teen Suicide.

Michael Durso, CFA, Founding Partner, Chief Investment Officer

Michael Durso is a co-founder and Chief Investment Office (CIO) of ShoreHaven Wealth Partners. As CIO, he is responsible for oversight of ShoreHavens asset allocation, manager selection, and investment strategy.

He has over a decade of experience in the financial services industry and has worked with clientele ranging from pensions, foundations, endowments, home offices and financial advisors to successful professionals and their families.

He began his career at AllianceBernstein in 2006, where he worked with financial advisors as a Senior Regional Consultant. In 2009, he joined BlackRock, where he was a Vice President within the iShares ETF business. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley in 2016, he worked at SKY Harbor Capital Management, where he was responsible for relationship management in the Americas.

He earned his BBA degree in Finance with a minor in Marketing from James Madison University in 2006. While at James Madison, he was a varsity member of the Track and Cross Country program and 2003 IC4A Mens Cross Country Championship team. He was also a member of Phi Sigma Pi National Honors Fraternity.

Michael a CFA Charter Holder and member of the New York Society of Securities Analysts (NYSSA).

Michael Lombardi, CFP, Founding Partner, Chief Planning Officer

Prior to co-founding ShoreHaven Wealth Partners, he worked with Lawrence Durso in the Durso Wealth Management Group at Morgan Stanley since 2012. Mr. Lombardi began his career as a financial advisor at Wachovia Securities in 2006, shortly after earning his B.S. in finance from The College of New Jersey. He completed the Certified Financial Planning Program at Boston University and, in 2013, was awarded the CFP certification.

Sheryl Iannuzzelli, Director of Relationship Management, Chief Compliance Officer

Sheryl Iannuzzelli runs the day-to-day operations of the team. She joined the Durso Wealth Management Group at Morgan Stanley in 1995. Ms. Iannuzzelli holds a bachelor's degree from Seton Hall University.

About ShoreHaven Wealth Partners

ShoreHaven Wealth Partners is an independent wealth management firm based in Red Bank, New Jersey that works with a select group of affluent multigenerational families and high net worth individuals, to protect, grow and transition their assets. Many of their clients are family-owned businesses who face succession and transition challenges.

Their objective is to help clients enjoy whats important in their lives, through the benefit of financial prosperity. For more information, please visit: http://www.ShoreHavenWealth.com and on Twitter: @ShoreHavenWP

About Dynasty Financial Partners

Dynasty Financial Partners is known for assisting advisors of integrity to better service their clients, run their businesses more profitably, grow faster, and enhance the enterprise value of their firms. Dynasty does this by providing wealth management and technology platforms for select independent financial advisory firms. Dynasty creates access to valuable resources and industry-leading capabilities through an open architecture platform, enabling advisors to address their clients needs and to protect and grow their wealth. Dynasty supports independent advisors and their teams in being independent, but not alone, by creating exclusive community events and experiences. Dynasty also offers access to flexible capital solutions to help advisors expand, scale, and grow their business. Dynastys core principle is objectivity without compromise, and the firm is committed to developing solutions that allow investment advisors to act as true fiduciaries to their clients.

For more information, please visit http://www.dynastyfinancialpartners.com.

Also visit Dynasty on social media:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/dynasty-financial-partners Twitter: @DynastyFP Youtube: http://bit.ly/1MKXhC8

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A Boss Idea: New Jersey-Based Team Launches ShoreHaven Wealth Partners with Dynasty Financial Partners - Business Wire

Minority Consultant Shares Thoughts on Dynamics in Entrepreneurism – The Real Chi

A big part of Pettigrews mission in championing female-minority entrepreneurs is through helping them create secondary sources of income to feel more optimistic in their financial independence, a stable living, and breaking free of the prevailing wage gap.

The system thats just been unfair has no power over you anymore and cant intimidate you the same way because you had something going on that was making money for you, she said. That mindset of thinking about how differently you want to walk, that energetic point of view requires people to feel safe and confident in taking care of themselves.

Even funding opportunities puts a developing business at a standstill. The average loan amount for women-owned businesses was 31 percent less than the amount generated among their male counterparts ($70,239) in 2018 according to Biz2Credit, an online business credit provider that studied 30,000 companies in more than 20 industries.

Pettigrew noted that the lending gap is more pronounced among Black and Brown women and recalls the experiences several women in the National Association of Women Business Owners shared about getting denied from their institutions.

Most people dont have money theyre sitting on to start businesses. They may be really passionate about an idea or about a concept, but quickly the business can get away from them, she said. Women just need, and brown women especially, a fair opportunity at access to the cash. They need assistance in applying for it. So there should be more vehicles for helping women get access."

Like the wage gap, access to finance for women- and minority-owned businesses still has a long way to go in order to level the playing field among entrepreneurs. Reasons such as no bankroll, lack of collateral, or a complex application process intervenes in the path towards business growth and development. The U.S. Senate kicked a breakthrough in 2019 by passing a bipartisan legislation aimed at improving the underfunding gap by increasing access.

Through all the challenges minority-female entrepreneurs endure in their careers, Pettigrews concept for Beyond Blind Spots allows women to recognize the value they have in society and support each other to achieve the freedom and flexibility they want.

I do believe that every person is born worthy, youre born worthy and deserving of your chance, your opportunity, your paths, she said. Which circles me right back to, we have to do this ourselves. Women have to support other women.

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Minority Consultant Shares Thoughts on Dynamics in Entrepreneurism - The Real Chi

Josh Frydenberg wants a COVID childbirth boom. Time to give him ‘the talk’ on where babies come from – Women’s Agenda

Women of Australia, I know youre all super busy with, among other things, remote learning, sorting out the additional unpaid care and domestic work associated with COVID-19, and making home-made face masks.

But I need to interrupt your COVID day with an urgent request: we also need to school our nations Treasurer, Josh Frydenberg. It has recently come to my attention that he doesnt know where babies come from. Its time to have the talk.

Let me explain.

According to the ABC, in a speech to the National Press Club on Friday, Frydenberg warned that population growth was expected to slow to 0.6 percent in 2021, the lowest rate since 1916-17. And he acknowledged that this would be problematic, because population growth has been integral to the almost three decades of economic growth that preceded the arrival of COVID-19 on Australian shores, plunging the country into a recession.

Even before COVID-19, Australia was not onto a winner.

With a birth rate of 1.74 births per woman, it wasdown from 2.02 in 2008. If the birth rate were to continue to fall to or below 1.5, the replacement rate, the future tax base would be at risk. Basically, we wouldnt have enough people to work and pay taxes and fund the roads, hospitals and welfare initiatives that we need to function as a country.

As Liz Allen, a demographer at the ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods, recently wrote in the Conversation, that would be a demographic disaster.

Future generations will have to cover the bill for far more than we have had to, meaning the Australia they inherit will be worse off, wrote Allen.

Enter Josh Frydenberg with a solution. Women of Australia: start making babies!

I wont go as far as tosay, like Peter Costello, one forthe mother, one for the father andone for the country, Frydenberg told the audience at the NPC. But I can say that people should feelencouraged about the future, and themore children that we have acrossthe country, together with ourmigration, we will build ourpopulation growth and that will begood for the economy.

I think the best thing we can do to encourage more children being born across the country is, obviously, to create a strong economy for them to be born into, he added.

Sorry Frydenberg, this is not obvious.

You have to build a strong, caring economy that works for women who, you know tend to give birth to the babies if you want to inspire that kind of confidence. And, judging by recent events, thats not the current plan.

You cant take away free childcare, discourage women from working more hours through tax policy, ignore the scourge of pregnancy discrimination that affects 1 in 2 women, and generally pursue a bloke-covery that disadvantages women and assume that they will be all too happy to return to hearth and home and start breeding.

Its illogical and reveals a complete lack of understanding of the social and economic landscape in which women and their partners make their choices.

In short, Treasurer Frydenberg, thats not where babies come from. You might as well have suggested storks deliver the babies needed to save Australias post-COVID economy.

The reason women and their partners decide to have children are complex.

As Jamila Rizvi wrote in The Age last year, changing social norms have meant that women can now seek fulfillment outside of the more traditional role of wife and mother.

But more than anything, wrote Rizvi, would-be parents considerations are financial. Rizvi pointed to a US study of young couples, in which four of the top five reasons for not having children were financial. These included the cost of childcare and the difficulty Millennials find in securing their financial independence. If youre still living with mum and dad saving up for a house deposit, chances are you wont think its the right time to have a baby.

Whats more, as I have frequently written for Womens Agenda, the so-called motherhood penalty is deeply entrenched in Australia and getting worse.

An umbrella term coined to encapsulate the myriad of issues that contribute to mothers inequality in the workplace, the motherhood penalty includes: the chores gap, i.e. the fact that women shoulder the lions share of unpaid care and domestic work, the lack of flexible work or equitable parental leave policies for fathersandmothers to help level that domestic playing field, the lack of access to affordable childcare, and gender-based discrimination, including pregnancy discrimination.

And now theres evidence that the pandemic is exacerbating that trend, creating a pandemic motherhood penalty of sorts.

I suspect all these things will weigh heavily on womens minds as they judge whether or not the next few years are the right time to have a baby. And unless Frydenberg has some concrete proposals to address them like, say, universal affordable childcare or paid parental leave that is equality available to both women and men his one for country commentary is unlikely to have the desired effect of making Australian women feel particularly broody.

Its just not where babies come from.

Kristine Ziwica is a regular contributor. She tweets @KZiwica

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Josh Frydenberg wants a COVID childbirth boom. Time to give him 'the talk' on where babies come from - Women's Agenda