Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine) Market Growth and Demand 2020 Global Industry Segmentation Analysis by Manufacturing Size, Trending Status of…

The Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine) Market report covers the overview of the market and presents the information on business development, market size, and share scenario. The report also emphasizes on the growth prospects of the global Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine) market for the period 2020-2024. The report covers market characteristics for each segmentation across the key regions and country and traces the historic and forecast analysis of the industry. The report covers key vendors their revenue, breakdown by regions, and product demand. Other key details include volume, installed capacity, value chain.

Scope of the Report:

As per the , the healthcare nanotechnology (nanomedicine) market includes products that are nanoformulations of the existing drugs or new drugs or are nanobiomaterials. The market is segmented by its application in the medical field, as drug delivery, biomaterials, active implants, diagnostic imaging, tissue regeneration, and other applications. The market is also segmented by its use in the treatment of diseases, like cardiovascular diseases, oncological diseases, neurological diseases, orthopedic diseases, infectious diseases, and other diseases.<

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Key Market Trends:

The Growth of Nanomedicine is Expected to Provide High Opportunities for the Treatment of Neurological Diseases, Over the Forecast Period

A large number of brain disorders with neurological and psychological conditions result in short-term and long-term disabilities. Recent years observed a significant number of research studies being published on methods for the synthesis of nanoparticle-encapsulated drugs within in vivo and in vitro studies. The insufficient absorbance of oral drugs administered for a range of neurological conditions, such as Alzheimers disease, Parkinson disease, tumor, neuro-AIDS, among others, opens up the necessity of nanomedicine with stem cell therapy. Some of the registered nanoparticles for the complex CNS treatment are a gold nanoparticle, lipid nanoparticle, and chitosan nanoparticles.

Other than neurological diseases, research-based progress was found in the treatment of cancers, with the scientific communities identifying new metabolic pathways to find better drug combination using nanomedicine.

North America is Expected to Hold the Largest Share in the Market

In the United States, several companies are closely observing the developments in nanostructured materials across various applications in the healthcare industry, including medical devices, to improve efficiency and efficacy. In the United States, the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI), which was initiated in 2000, is among the supreme bodies that manage all nanotechnology-related activities. Under the NNI, several agencies are working in collaboration with companies and universities. For instance, nano-manufacturing in Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) programs were developed for both commercial and public use. Companies are targeting the treatment of several cancer types and infectious diseases through immunotherapy, where nanoemulsion vaccines and drugs play a significant role. In the United States, one of the major challenges associated with nanotechnology is the ability to integrate nanoscale materials into new devices and systems, along with an application of novel properties at the nano-level. Thus, most of the companies are investing in R&D. Nanotechnology is likely to play a significant role in the delivery of drugs. In the recent strategic plan presented by the NNI in 2016, several programs were identified to further advance the research and development programs, over the forecast period.

The report provides key statistics on the market status of the Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine) Market manufacturers and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine).

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Healthcare Nanotechnology (Nanomedicine) Market Growth and Demand 2020 Global Industry Segmentation Analysis by Manufacturing Size, Trending Status of...

Worthless Coin McAfee Says He Never Believed Bitcoin Would Hit $1M – Cointelegraph

In July 2017, John McAfee said he would eat his own dick if Bitcoin does not hit $500,000 within three years. Today, BTC is hovering at a mere $9,130 and its price must increase by more than 5,376% to meet McAfees prediction.

John McAfee tweets he would eat his dick if Bitcoin doesnt hit $500k. Source: John McAfee Twitter

In general, Bitcoin quite clearly got nowhere near $500,000 in the past three years. Not only that, but McAfee is also seemingly backtracking from his $1 million per BTC prediction.

Last year, McAfee said he is positive Bitcoin goes to $1 million. He said negativity around the cryptocurrency market was overblown, especially considering Bitcoin was in the mid-$10,000s.

But on July 19, 2020, McAfee said:

Not going to get out of it. I never believed Bitcoin would hit $1 mil. It's absurd. Its an old, tired, worthless coin. I just wanted to eat my dick on TV. Wait for it.

Since mid-2019, the price of Bitcoin dropped from around $13,900 to $9,100. Following the 34% drop in a 12-month period, McAfee no longer feels confident about his $1 million BTC prediction.

In July 2019, McAfee said:

Bitcoin is at the mid 10's and people worry. LMFAO!! Why do you pay attention to weekly fluctuations? Look at the past few months FFS! It's rising drastically. I'm still positive about my $1 mil BTC price by the end of 2020. Alt coins like MTC and Apollo will rise ten times more.

Contrary to expectations, it also seems McAfee was referring to the end of 2020 as the prediction date for $500,000 per Bitcoin.

When several cryptocurrency enthusiasts questioned him about the subject, McAfee cited a website called dickening.com. The website says McAfee promised to eat his own dick if BTC does not hit $1 million by December 31, 2020.

McAfee said that it is well documented his bet was for Dec. 31 of this year, not July 2020. When asked about the bet, he reaffirmed that he would follow through with his bet if BTC does not hit $500,000.

He said:

It's well documented that I will eat my dick on Dec 31st 2020, not in July of this year. Google the bet. The In three years was a reference to that date. The originator of this tweet did not research it. Will I eat it? You bet! Myself, or, perhaps, a subcontractor:)

Max Keiser, the host of The Keiser Report and Bitcoin investor, sarcastically said McAfee must now be recovering at the hospital after honoring the bet.

John McAfee honored his bet, made three years ago, to bite off his dick if Bitcoin wasnt at $500,000 GOOD NEWS: Hes doing well at the hospital and expected to make a full recovery, Keiser said.

Of course, McAfees track record shows that his predictions should be taken with a grain of salt. For instance, his facetious U.S. Presidential campaign now appears to be inactive. Then in May 2020, McAfee questioned his own price prediction, leaving many confused.

Nevertheless, for McAfee to win the bet, BTC price would now have to gain at least 10,000% over the next five months.

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Worthless Coin McAfee Says He Never Believed Bitcoin Would Hit $1M - Cointelegraph

How to watch NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover launch live online – Space.com

NASA's Mars-bound Perseverance rover is ready to blast off! You can watch the groundbreaking mission launch Thursday (July 30) live online as well as on TV, cable and satellite and get in on the action over social media.

Perseverance, which we've nicknamed "Percy," is set to lift off July 30 at 7:50 a.m. EDT (1150 GMT) on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The mission will launch the rover to Jezero Crater on the Martian surface, where Perseverance is expected to land on Feb.18, 2021 after a seven-month journey.

You can watch the Mars rover launch live here and on Space.com's homepage, courtesy of NASA TV, beginning at 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT). But NASA's live webcasts, which will include some behind-the-scenes moments for the mission, won't be the only place you can enjoy the launch.

Thanks to the magic of social media, the agency has created a number of ways that anyone can get involved with the event from home. Read on for a timeline of NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover webcasts through July 30, and how to join in via social media.

In Photos: NASA's Mars Perseverance rover mission to the Red Planet

For the launch, NASA is inviting the public to participate online and through social media. The agency is hosting a virtual NASA Social event, rolling out fun augmented reality filters on social media apps (you can find Instagram augmented reality filters of Mars here, Mission Control here and a 3D rover here), educational and fun tool kits for students and they've invited the public to submit videos to potentially be a part of the live launch broadcast, take a souvenir photo in a "Mars Photo Booth" and send your name to Mars!

You can even participate in the launch in virtual reality with a VR launch broadcast with Oculus on Facebook. Additionally, you can explore "Percy" in 3D with an interactive NASA tool that lets you really get up close and personal with the Mars-bound rover. Check out related activities and lesson plans for students here and here, and a "Mars 2020 STEM [Science Technology Engineering and Math] Toolkit" here.

On social media, the agency is using the hashtag #CountdownToMars to celebrate the event.

More than 112,000 people registered to be our virtual guests for NASAs SpaceX Demo-2 test flight launch in May, which was the first time the agency had offered this type of launch experience to the public, NASA Associate Administrator for Communications Bettina Incln said in an agency statement. For our Mars 2020 Perseverance rover launch, we hope even more people will join us as we #CountdownToMars!

With this mission, "Percy" will parachute down into Jezero Crater and is set to spend roughly two Earth years rolling around and exploring the Martian surface. With a robotic arm, a suite of high-resolution cameras and a variety of advanced scientific instruments, the rover will gather data to help scientists explore any possibly habitable environments on the planet, any signs of ancient, microscopic life and the rover will take samples that might one day travel to Earth with a future mission.

To watch history unfold, you can check out the broadcast on NASA's website here in addition to the NASA TV channel if your cable or satellite provider carries it. NASA will stream coverage of the launch online via YouTube, Twitter and other social media channels, and is holding a virtual #launchAmerica event with video tours and other features for the public to watch.

Here's a full list of the NASA streams available:

While launch coverage begins at 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT), NASA will have "Percy" coverage on NASA TV all week. Follow along for updates and all things Mars with the schedule below:

Monday, July 27 (All times in EDT)

1 p.m. Mars 2020 Pre-Launch News Conference

3 p.m. Mars 2020 Mission Engineering/Science Briefing

Tuesday, July 28

2 p.m. Mars 2020 Mars Sample Return Briefing

4 p.m. Mars 2020 Mission Tech and Humans to Mars Briefing

Thursday, July 30

7 a.m. Mars 2020 Perseverance launch broadcast

11:30 a.m. Mars 2020 Perseverance post-launch news conference

NASA has until Aug. 15 to launch Perseverance toward Mars and still reach the Red Planet on Feb. 18. Visit Space.com for complete coverage of the Mars 2020 mission.

Email Chelsea Gohd at cgohd@space.com or follow her on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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How to watch NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover launch live online - Space.com

From Earth to Mars: Rosalind Franklins centenary of science – YubaNet

July 23, 2020 If Rosalind Franklin had had a birthday wish, she probably never would have dreamed of having her name roving on Mars.

As the world celebrates the 100th anniversary of the prominent scientist behind the discovery of the structure of DNA tomorrow, theExoMars rovernamed after her prepares to leave her symbolic footprint on the Red Planet.

The robotic explorer will drill down to two metres into the martian surface to sample the soil, analyse its composition and search for evidence of life buried underground. The mission is set for launchin 2022.

Rosalind Franklin was a leading crystallographer, who looked into how atoms are arranged. She produced the best double helix image of DNA strands with X-rays, and that transformed our world, leading to the biggest advance in biology in the past century DNA technology, says Jim Naismith, director of theRosalind Franklin Institute, a national research centre for life sciences in the UK.

She was not an undiscovered gem in her time, but a really influential scientist for her pioneering work in viruses. We regard her as the first structural biologist of viruses, adds Jim.

The scientists working to send ESAs Rosalind Franklin rover to Mars do not expect to find either DNA or viruses on our neighbouring planet. DNA molecules and viruses are probably too fragile to last for four billion years on the ground, explains Jorge Vago, ESAs ExoMars project scientist.

But we hope that our rover will help write a new page in Mars exploration by allowing us to study organic molecules at depth, and perhaps find some suggestive traces of past life, says Jorge.

Rosalind Franklins legacy lives on a hundred years after her birth on planet Earth. Born on 25 July 1920, her family is touched by the worldwide recognition of her scientific work.

Many people have this vision of a solitary woman who was robbed of a Nobel Prize and was never acknowledged for helping discover the structure of the DNA helix, says her niece, also named Rosalind Franklin in her memory.

She is committed to fighting off that conflictive image and representing her legacy bringing her out as a woman with a place in history. She inspires me to think that all of us, as individuals, have the power to make a difference.

Dr Franklin was on a trip to America when she had difficulty fastening her skirt over her swollen stomach the first sign of an advanced ovarian cancer. She died two years later at 37 years old, working almost to the very end of her life.

A series of online talks and events, including acommemorative coin, is underway around the globe to celebrate the centenary of this woman of integrity who went after scientific discovery for the betterment of humankind, as her niece described her from her home in California, US.

Rosalind believes her aunt would have loved the ExoMars team spirit. The work of ESA engineers on the rover struck me they really do it for the results, not for themselves. This is what Rosalind Franklin was all about: commitment and dedication to science, she said after avisitto ESAs technical centre in the Netherlands last year.

The scientist never conceived science as a race for awards.

AsMars explorationprepares for an international reawakening this year, the ExoMars mission that would have marked Dr Franklins centenary had to be postponed because tests to make all components of the spacecraft ready for the Mars adventure needed more time to complete.

On top of that, the coronavirus pandemic has halted the completion of several tests and verifications since March 2020.

The fitness of the Rosalind Franklin rover to launch to the Red Planet in 2022 is currently being assessed during the qualification and acceptance review by ESA and dozens ofindustrial partners.

The rover successfully proved it can endure martian conditions during the environmental test campaign completed earlier this year in Toulouse, France.

The flight model awaits a more robust set of solar panels at Thales Alenia Space in Turin, Italy. In the same city is a full-scale model of Rosalind Franklin.

A team of engineers will simulate the roaming of the laboratory on wheels from theRover Operations Control Centre(ROCC) at ALTEC, right next to one of Europes largest Mars yards.

While the ExoMars rover tunes up its gear and software for the challenges ahead, parachute tests are expected to resume in October in Oregon, US.

Further tests on the electrical and mechanical elements of the spacecraft will take place in Cannes, France, also in the autumn.

TheExoMars programmeis a joint endeavour between the Roscosmos State Corporation and ESA. Apart from the 2022 mission, it includes the Trace Gas Orbiter launched in 2016. The TGO is already both delivering important scientific results obtained by its own Russian and European science instruments and relaying data from NASAs Curiosity Mars rover and InSight lander. The module will also relay the data from the ExoMars 2022 mission once it arrives at Mars.

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From Earth to Mars: Rosalind Franklins centenary of science - YubaNet

Kevin Hart and the UAE join forces for ‘Mars Shot’ contest – Space.com

Comedian and actor Kevin Hart has partnered with the United Arab Emirates for the "Mars Shot" contest to "make your wildest dreams come true," Hart explains in a video on the contest website.

"Mars Shot" is a global digital campaign that invited people from around the world to apply to "share one inspiring dream for a chance to make it happen," the contest's website reads. "Unleash your imagination and reach for the stars. Let's make the impossible, possible," it continues.

"I am now in a position in my life where I'm all about inspiring, motivating, dreaming, accomplishing," Hart explained in a video on the site. He went on to explain that he partnered with the UAE, which just successfully launched its first interplanetary mission, a Mars orbiter called Hope, for this initiative, which asks people around the world to dream up their own "Mars Shot."

A "Mars Shot," Hart explained, "means dreaming so big that you can't see it here. That dream is so big that it's out there where Mars is. It's way, way out there."

"Whatever you think that your dream is, I want you to take a step past that. Take a step past that dream and go bigger," he said.

Related:The UAE's Hope Mars orbiter: Here's 6 things to knowMore:The United Arab Emirates' Hope mission to Mars in photos

For the contest, applicants submitted videos of themselves explaining what their "Mars Shot," or big idea for the world, is and why they should win.

Of these applicants, 15 were chosen and the public was given the chance to vote for who they wanted to win and whose "Mars Shot" they wanted to see executed. these applicants are a number of artists, storytellers and more.

One of these 15 finalists is actually a space chef analog astronaut Sian Proctor whose "Mars Shot" is to "eliminate hunger and food waste on Earth," by using space food technologies.

Voting for these finalists ends today (July 25), and on Aug. 5, three winners will be announced. And what do they win? Well, according to Hart, they win their "Mars Shot" dream.

"My partners and I will do what we do best: make it happen," he explained.

You can vote for your favorite finalist here.

Email Chelsea Gohd at cgohd@space.com or follow her on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Kevin Hart and the UAE join forces for 'Mars Shot' contest - Space.com

NASA’s Mars 2020 rover will seek signs of ancient life – UPI News

Pilots Troy Asher and Stu Broce walk out of NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center's hangar toward the flight line in Palmdale, Calif., on June 17, 2020. In addition to aeronautics research, Flight Operations personnel support such missions as the Mars Perseverance Rover, slated to launch in July 2020. Photo by Lauren Hughes/NASA | License Photo

Engineers observed the first driving test for the Perseverance rover in a clean room at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., on December 17, 2019. Photo courtesy of NASA

Much of Mars is covered by sand and dust, but in some places, stacks of sedimentary layers are visible. In this image, exquisite layering is revealed emerging from the sand in southern Holden Crater. Sequences like these offer a window into Mars' complicated geologic history. Holden Crater once was a candidate landing area for the Curiosity Mars science laboratory, and still is an intriguing choice today. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

Engineers and technicians insert 39 sample tubes into the belly of the rover at the Kennedy Space Center on May 20, 2020. NASA's upcoming Perseverance rover mission will collect the first samples from another planet for return to Earth by subsequent missions. In place of astronauts, the Perseverance rover will rely on the most complex, capable and cleanest mechanism ever to be sent into space, the Sample Caching System. Each tube is sheathed in a gold-colored cylindrical enclosure to protect it from contamination. Perseverance will carry 43 sample tubes to the Red Planet's Jezero Crater. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

This NASA artist's concept depicts the Ingenuity Mars helicopter, which was prepared for launch from Florida in summer 2020, on the surface of Mars. Image courtesy of NASA

The Perseverance rover undergoes processing at a payload servicing facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center on February 14, 2020. Initial processing took place on February 13, one day after a C-17 aircraft, with the rover aboard, touched down at the Launch and Landing Facility at the space center. Photo courtesy of NASA

The head of the Perseverance rover's remote sensing mast is seen in the Spacecraft Assembly Facility's High Bay 1 at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., on July 23, 2019. The rover contains an armada of imaging capabilities, from wide-angle landscape cameras to narrow-angle, high-resolution zoom lens cameras. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The Opportunity rover used its navigation camera for this northward view of tracks the rover left on a drive from one energy-favorable position on a sand ripple to another in 2010. NASA announced on February 13, 2019, that one of the most successful and enduring feats of interplanetary exploration was at an end after almost 15 years exploring the surface of Mars. The Opportunity rover stopped communicating with Earth when a severe Mars-wide dust storm blanketed its location in June 2018. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The Curiosity rover finds an ancient oasis of a network of cracks in this Martian rock slab called "Old Soaker" that might have formed from the drying of a mud layer more than 3 billion years ago. The view spans about 3 feet, left to right, and combines three images taken by the MAHLI camera on the arm of Curiosity rover. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

The small spherules on the Martian surface in this close-up image are near Fram Crater, visited by the Opportunity rover during the 84th Martian day, or sol, of the rover's work on Mars on April 19, 2004. The area shown is 1.2 inches across. These are examples of the mineral concretions nicknamed "blueberries." Opportunity's investigation of the hematite-rich concretions during the rover's three-month prime mission in early 2004 provided evidence of a watery ancient environment. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The Opportunity rover's shadow was photographed by the rover's front hazard-avoidance camera as the rover moved farther into Endurance Crater in the Meridiani Planum region of Mars on July 26, 2004. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

This scene from the panoramic camera (Pancam) on the Opportunity rover looks back toward part of the west rim of Endeavour Crater that the rover drove along, heading southward, during the summer of 2014. The vista merges multiple Pancam exposures taken on August 15, 2014, during the 3,754th Martian day of Opportunity's work on Mars. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

Mars InSight team members Kris Bruvold (L) and Sandy Krasner react after receiving confirmation that the Mars InSight lander successfully touched down on the surface of Mars. They are inside the Mission Support Area at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., on November 26, 2018. InSight, short for Interior Exploration Using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport, is a Mars lander designed to study the "inner space" of Mars -- its crust, mantle and core. Photo by Bill Ingalls/NASA | License Photo

This image was acquired by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on April 18, 2017. A close-up in enhanced color produces a striking effect, giving the impression of a cloud-covered cliff edge with foamy waves crashing against it. The reality is that the surface of Mars is much dryer than our imaginations might want to suggest. This is only a tiny part of a much larger structure -- a crater that has been infilled by material more resistant to erosion than the rocks around it, surrounded by bluish basaltic dunes. The edge of these elevated, light-toned deposits are degraded, irregular and cliff-forming. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The foreground of this scene from the mast camera on the Curiosity rover shows purple-hued rocks near the rover's late-2016 location on lower Mount Sharp. The scene's middle distance includes higher layers that are future destinations for the mission. Photo courtesy of NASA

A new map of Mars' gravity, derived using Doppler and range tracking data collected by NASA's Deep Space Network from three NASA spacecraft in orbit around Mars -- Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter -- is the most detailed to date, providing a revealing glimpse into the hidden interior of the Red Planet. This view of the Martian gravity map shows the Tharsis volcanoes and surrounding flexure. The white areas in the center are higher-gravity regions produced by the massive Tharsis volcanoes, and the surrounding blue areas are lower-gravity regions that might be cracks in the crust. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

Expedition 46 Commander Scott Kelly of NASA (C) is carried into a medical tent after he landed in the Soyuz TMA-18M spacecraft in a remote area near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, on March 2, 2016. Kelly completed an International Space Station record year-long mission to collect valuable data on the effect of long-duration weightlessness on the human body that will be used to formulate a human mission to Mars. Photo by Bill Ingalls/NASA | License Photo

Dark narrow streaks, called "recurring slope lineae," emanate from the walls of Garni Crater on Mars, in this view constructed from observations by the HiRISE camera on the Reconnaissance Orbiter on September 28, 2015. The dark streaks are hypothesized to be formed by flow of briny liquid water on Mars. The image was produced by first creating a 3D computer model (a digital terrain map) of the area based on stereo information from two HiRISE observations, and then draping an image over the land-shape model. The vertical dimension is exaggerated by a factor of 1.5 compared to horizontal dimensions. Photo by NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona | License Photo

The Opportunity rover's robotic arm, called the "instrument deployment device," at upper left, is seen as it continues to traverse Mars on November 26, 2014. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech | License Photo

A United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy launches NASA's Orion Spacecraft on its "Exploration Flight Test" from Launch Complex 37 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., on December 5, 2014. The unmanned mission will test the systems on NASA's newest spacecraft during a 4 1/2-hour, two-orbit flight. NASA's plans for Orion include flying future manned missions on voyages to deep space exploring asteroids and eventually Mars. Photo by Joe Marino-Bill Cantrell/UPI | License Photo

The Curiosity rover uses the camera at the end of its arm in April and May 2014 to take dozens of component images combined into this self-portrait "selfie" where the rover drilled into a sandstone target called "Windjana" on the Martian surface. Most of the component frames of this mosaic view were taken during the 613th Martian day of Curiosity's work on Mars on April 27, 2014. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission (MAVEN) spacecraft undergoes final preparations at the Kennedy Space Center, Fla., on September 27, 2013. MAVEN will be launched by an Atlas 5 rocket scheduled for liftoff on November 18, 2013. The Lockheed Martin spacecraft will orbit the planet Mars for one year after completing a 10-month journey through space. The mission is to explore how the sun has affected Mars' upper atmosphere and ionosphere. Photo by Joe Marino-Bill Cantrell/UPI | License Photo

This image comparison was taken August 6, 2012 by the Hazard-Avoidance camera on the Curiosity rover before and after the clear dust cover was removed. Curiosity, which successfully landed on the Martian surface on August 6, 2012, was equipped with a host of sensors, cameras and an onboard chemistry lab. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems | License Photo

Technicians look over the the Curiosity rover during inspections at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's NASA Mars Science Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. Curiosity, a mobile robot for investigating Mars' past or present ability to sustain microbial life, was launched on November 26, 2011. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

This false-color view is the first observation of a target selected autonomously by the NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity on Mars on the 2,172nd Martian day, or sol, of its mission, March 4, 2010. NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity used newly developed and uploaded software to choose a target from a wider-angle image and point its panoramic camera to observe the chosen target through 13 different filters. Images taken through three of the filters are combined into this false-color view of the rock, which is about the size of a football. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

The half-mile-wide Victoria Crater in the Meridiani Planum region of Mars, photographed by the HiRISE camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, is seen on July 18, 2009. Colors have been enhanced to make subtle differences more visible. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona | License Photo

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander's Surface Stereo Imager took this image on on June 8, 2008. It shows two trenches dug by Phoenix's Robotic Arm, each trench is about 3 inches wide. Soil from the right trench, informally called "Baby Bear," was delivered to Phoenix's Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer on June 6. The trench on the left is informally called "Dodo" and was dug as a test. This view is presented in approximately true color by combining separate exposures taken through different filters of the Surface Stereo Imager. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University | License Photo

In this artist's conception, the Phoenix Mars Lander, which was launched in August 2007 as the first project in NASA's Mars Scout missions, landed on Mars on May 25, 2008. The mission's plan is to land in icy soils near the north polar permanent ice cap and explore the history of the water in these soils and any associated rocks, while monitoring polar climate.The spacecraft and its instruments are designed to analyze samples collected from up to 20 inches deep using its robotic arm. The arm extends forward in this artist's concept of the lander on Mars. Image courtesy of NASA | License Photo

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took this close-up of Mars when it was just 55 million miles away on December 17, 2007. Mars will be at its brightest on December 24, 2007 as it aligns directly opposite of the sun, and will not be as visible for another nine years.This color image was assembled from a series of exposures taken within 36 hours of Mars' closest approach with Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. Photo courtesy of NASA/ESA/Hubble Heritage Team | License Photo

A new space explorer, Phoenix, is pictured in the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on July 10, 2007. The Phoenix will launch aboard a Delta II rocket to Mars and will dig in the soil and ice in the arctic region of the planet. Both the rocket and spacecraft are undergoing final preparations for the mission. Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA | License Photo

Children play with a meteorite fragment from Mars at the National Air and Space Museum's Mars Day celebration in Washington on July 21, 2006. The event marks the 30th anniversary of the landing of the Viking 1 craft on the Red Planet on July 20, 1976. Photo by Eduardo Sverdlin/UPI | License Photo

The Viking II Lander landed September 3,1976, some 4,600 miles from its twin, Viking I. This image from Viking II shows the boulder-strewn field of red rocks reaching to the horizon nearly 2 miles from the spacecraft on Mars' Utopian Plain. Scientists believe the colors of the Martian surface and sky in this photo represent their true colors. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

A Lockheed Martin Atlas V rocket launches NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Satellite from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on August 12, 2005. The Orbiter will take highly detailed images of the surface of Mars after a seven-month journey to the Red Planet. Photo by Joe Marino-Bill Cantrell/UPI | License Photo

The surface of Mars is seen in this photo mosaic using both visible and infrared images recorded by the Mars Odyssey Spacecraft from August 2004. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

Spirit reached out its arm to meet with the Martian soil for the first time on January 16, 2004. Its Microscopic Imager, one of four instruments at the end of the rover's arm, took the highest resolution image of the Martian surface to date. Throughout the mission, this instrument will act as a geologist's hand lens, providing close-up views of rocks and soils. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech | License Photo

President George W. Bush addresses those gathered at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C., to announce his plans to expand the space program, on January 14, 2004. The president's plans include increased funding to send humans back to the moon, and eventually, to Mars. Photo by Michael Kleinfeld/UPI | License Photo

This section of the first color image from the Spirit rover has been further processed to produce a sharper look at a trail left by the one of rover's airbags. The drag mark was made after the rover landed and its airbags were deflated and retracted. Scientists have dubbed the region the "Magic Carpet" after a crumpled portion of the soil that appears to have been peeled away (lower left side of the drag mark). Rocks also were dragged by the airbags, leaving impressions and "bow waves" in the soil. The mission team plans to drive the rover to this site to look for additional clues about the composition of the Martian soil. This image was taken by Spirit's panoramic camera. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell | License Photo

JPL engineers played Bob Marley's "Get Up, Stand Up" in the control room as they watched new images confirming that the Spirit rover successfully stood up on its lander, a major step in preparing for egress on January 9, 2004. This image from the rover's front hazard avoidance camera shows the rover in the final stage of its stand-up process. Photo courtesy of NASA NASA/JPL-Caltech | License Photo

The second of two NASA Mars Rovers is driven over staggered ramps to test the suspension's range of motion before launch. The first of the rovers, Spirit, is scheduled to land on Mars on January 3, 2003. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

A Boeing Delta rocket lifts off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, carrying NASA's Mars Rover "Spirit" on a seven-month journey to Mars on June 10, 2003. This is the first of two rovers planned to be launched to the Red Planet, signaling NASA's return after six years. Photo by Joe Marino-Bill Cantrell/UPI | License Photo

This is a false-color image of the surface of Mars as taken by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter, an instrument aboard NASA's Mars Global Surveyor and released on May 27, 1999. It is the first 3D imagery of the Red Planet. This high-resolution map represents 27 million elevation measurements gathered in 1998 and 1999. The massive Hellas impact basin in the Southern Hemisphere, lower left, is nearly 6 miles deep and 1,300 miles across, and is surrounded by a ring of material that rises 1.25 miles and stretches 2,500 miles from the basin center. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has discovered an enormous cyclonic storm system raging in the northern polar regions of Mars on May 19, 1999. Nearly four times the size of the state of Texas, the storm is composed of water ice clouds like storm systems on Earth, rather than dust typically found in Martian storms. This image has been processed to bring out additional detail in the storm's spiral cloud structures. Photo by Jim Bell, Steve Lee, Mike Wolff/NASA | License Photo

Former Astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr., the second man on the moon, stands besides a full-scale model of the Mars Viking I Lander with its digging arm extending to the surface, in Pasadena, Calif., on July 28, 1976. UPI File Photo | License Photo

On July 20, 1976, at 8:12 a.m. EDT, NASA received the signal that the Viking I Lander successfully reached the Martian surface. This major milestone represented the first time the United States successfully landed a vehicle on the surface of Mars, collecting an overwhelming amount of data that would soon be used in future NASA missions. Upon touchdown, Viking I took its first picture of the dusty and rocky surface and relayed the historic image back to Earthlings eagerly awaiting its arrival. Viking I, and later Viking II Orbiter, collected an abundance of high-resolution imagery and scientific data, blazing a trail that will one day take humans to Mars. Photo courtesy of NASA | License Photo

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NASA's Mars 2020 rover will seek signs of ancient life - UPI News

Singer Bruno Mars marks 10 years of ‘Just The Way You Are’ – The Star Online

Multi-awarded singer-songwriter Bruno Mars is celebrating the tenth year since the release of his hit song Just The Way You Are, his first single ever.

The artiste took to Facebook on Tuesday (July 21) to greet the song a happy birthday as he gave fans a dose of nostalgia by sharing a screenshot of his release announcement a decade ago.

Ill never get tired of singing this song. I dedicate it to all of you today. Happy B-Day Just The Way You Are. #10YearsYoung, Mars said.

The said screenshot is of his tweet posted on July 20,2010, which read, My Official First single out NOW on [ITunes]! Just The Way You Are.. I hope yall like it.. And to all my fans you guys are AMAZING! I LOVE U.

Other than being his debut single, Just The Way You Are is also the lead song for his first album ever, Doo-Wops & Hooligans.

Through the song, Mars was able to take home his first-ever Grammy Award in 2010 for Best Male Pop Performance. He has since won 10 more Grammy Awards and been nominated 27 times in several categories throughout the years.

Just The Way You Are was certified diamond last year by the Recording Industry Association of America after moving at least 10 million units between sales and streams, as per Forbes on Jan 24,2019. Philippine Daily Inquirer/Asia News Network

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Singer Bruno Mars marks 10 years of 'Just The Way You Are' - The Star Online

Hybrid products could drive first wave of cell-based meat launches, predicts Higher Steaks as it unveils pork belly, bacon prototypes -…

By weight, the pork belly prototypes contain 50% muscle cells grown in a bioreactor (without the use of bovine serum) and 50% plant-based proteins and fats; while the bacon contains 70% muscle cells and 30% plant-based materials.

Were already seeing hybrid burgers and nuggets [combining conventional and plant-based meat from US meat giants such as Tyson Foods and Perdue Farms], and I absolutely think youll see this with cell-based meat as well, said co-founder and CEO Benjamina Bollag, who was speaking to FoodNavigator-USA shortly afterbiotech research lab 3D Bioprinting Solutions unveileda collaboration with KFC to bring hybrid nuggets containing 80% plant-based materials to the Russian market.

Combining cell-based meat - which will likely enter the market in small quantities at a premium price - with plant proteins and fats, could help startups enter the market with more affordable products and ease consumers into the concept, she said, although Higher Steaks longer-term ambition is to make 100% cell-based products cost competitive.

Higher Steaks is using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS), which behave like embryonic stem cells in that they can replicate/proliferate extensively (without having to keep going back to the original source) and differentiate into multiple cell types such as muscle and fat, said Bollag,a chemical engineer who co-foundedHigher Steaksin 2017 with stem cell scientist Dr. Stephanie Wallis and Prof. David Hay, chair of tissue engineering at the Center for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Edinburgh.

Stem cell scientist Dr Ruth Faram has since joined as head of R&D, while Dr James Clark, formerly CTO at Predict Immune, recently joined as chief science officer to help the startup scale up its technology, she added.

Right now, the team is still exploring whether it makes most sense to grow these cell types separately and combine them at the end to make products, or to co-culture them, said Bollag, who could not go into details as the company has filed a provisional patent covering its innovations, but claims that it has some compelling IP that will help it differentiate itself in the nascent cell-based meat industry.

Were working on a portfolio of patents to reinforce this main patent. Were still working out which is the best method to use at scale, but our next prototypes will include fat [from animal cells rather than plants]if not more cell types [as well as muscle] in the mix.

However, the process of reprogramming adult stem cells to behave like embryonic master cells does not involve genetic engineering, a key factor for any company trying to enter the European market, stressed Bollag, who anticipates bringing products to market in 2-5 years, perhaps beginning in high-end restaurants in the EU, where cell-cultured meat would be considered a novel food and therefore subject to pre-approval under the Novel Food Regulation.

We have some more work to do before we would submit a Novel Food application, and then it might take another year and a half [for the approval process]

She added:Were a technology company, so well launch on a small scale, but for a larger scale launch, we want to partner with larger organizations to leverage their expertise in distribution, packaging and consumer insights and so on and then the productscould be [launched under]our brand or their brand or a co-brand.

She would not go into details on materials Higher Steaks is exploring as scaffolding (edible structures upon which firms can seed cells in order to grow more 3D structures), but said Higher Steaks is testing several materials.

There are also a lot of new companies popping up sending us their scaffolds to test, which is really exciting.

As for finding alternatives to fetal bovine serum that can serve as cost-effective growth media (ie. food for the cells), she said: We have very clear pathways on how to get the cost down of both the growth media [to help the stem cells proliferate] and the differentiation media [to signal them to differentiate and mature into different cell types such as fat, muscle etc].

One of the things is reducing the number of growth factors you need, and there are specific things were working on internally, but there are also a lot of companies working in this space so its an area for collaboration.

The decision to focus on pork was made for multiple reasons, said Bollag, who is currently backed by some very supportive angel investors: Pork supply is under significant threat because of African swine fever and on top of that, a lot of antibiotics used[in meat production]are used in pork and poultry, and one of the main challenges we are trying to address is antibiotic resistance.

Pork is also used in a ton of processed products such as sausages that are easier to create [in bioreactors]than something like a [beef]steak. Its also genetically similar to humans, so its easy to adapt the work that has been done on the medical side[to large scale cell-based meat production].

As to what to call meat cultured from animal cells, Bollag says shes happy with the terms cell-based meat, and cultivated meat, adding: Its really about finding something that works for consumers and regulators but doesnt alienate the meat producers but also describes the product accurately.

Cell-based meat: From the laboratory to the market

Despite all the hype, most startups in the space are still working in a laboratory (as opposed to a factory), although several have recently raised more substantial sums (Memphis Meats: $161m,BlueNalu: $20m,Future Meat Technologies: $14m,Wild Type: $12.5m,Aleph Farms: $12m,Meatable: $10m) to support the construction of pilot-scale facilities.

Maastricht-basedMosa Meat which is gearing up for a small scale commercial launch in 2022 assuming it has cleared regulatory hurdles - recently joined forces with Nutreco (which has invested an undisclosed sum in the firm along with Lower Carbon Capital) to work on growth media; San Diego-basedBlueNaluhas also partnered with Nutreco and aims toproduce small quantities of product for commercial launch in late 2021; while Jerusalem-basedFuture Meat Technologiesplans to release hybrid products in 2021 and a second line of 100% cell-based ground meat products suitable for burgers and nuggets at a cost ofless than $10 per pound in 2022.

However, the recent$161m investment in Memphis Meats- which says it has a pretty clear pathto achieving cost parity with conventional meat has given the whole sector a confidence boost, says Krijn de Nood, CEO at Dutch cell-based meat startupMeatable.

Its a huge positive for the industry, it shows there are very serious investors that have done their due diligence and think this is really going to happen.

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Hybrid products could drive first wave of cell-based meat launches, predicts Higher Steaks as it unveils pork belly, bacon prototypes -...

2020 Crises Confront Trump With An Outage In The Power Of Positive Thinking – NPR

President Donald Trump arrives for a news conference at the White House, Thursday, July 23, 2020, in Washington. Evan Vucci/AP hide caption

President Donald Trump arrives for a news conference at the White House, Thursday, July 23, 2020, in Washington.

President Trump has long been a champion of what's been called positive thinking the power to make things that you want to see happen actually happen.

"Affirm it, believe it, visualize it, and it will actualize itself:" Such mantras have characterized much of the Trump story from his childhood, when he first absorbed it from the man who first spoke it, Norman Vincent Peale.

Peale was a minister and author much admired by Trump's father. His most famous book, The Power of Positive Thinking, sold millions of copies in multiple languages and helped spawn a self-help movement and industry that has flourished ever since.

The Trumps attended Peale's Marble Collegiate Church on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, and Peale officiated at the first of Donald Trump's three marriage ceremonies.

Read more here about Peale and his legacy.

It has been argued that Trump stands as the single most successful practitioner to date of Peale's philosophy. Surely his careers as a builder and businessman, TV reality show star and media-dominating politician seemed to prove what Peale preached: "What the mind can conceive and believe, and the heart desire, you can achieve."

Emulating Peale's ferocious focus on attitude probably helped Trump plow ahead when his presidential prospects seemed hopeless just weeks before Election Day in 2016. The candidate appeared behind in polls and a now-infamous audio recording revealed his toxic comments about women.

But: "There are no hopeless situations," Peale had counseled, "only people who take hopeless attitudes."

Obstacles, Peale taught, should never be a deterrent: "You will find they haven't half the strength you think they have."

Until this year, it is possible Trump took this literally. Arguably, he was getting away with it far more often than not.

He seemed to have been experimenting with this parallel universe approach all his life. It was not just the ups and downs of his business and personal life. It was his dogged insistence that there had only been ups and never any downs. He seemed to be demonstrating that an individual truly could ignore obstacles, defy norms and scoff at official rules and still succeed.

Impeachment? What impeachment?

Even impeachment was not a wall that stopped him but rather a hurdle he managed to clear with the help of his party in the Senate.

Still, never is a long time, and the year 2020 has ultimately brought greater challenges than impeachment.

Our present moment compounds the coronavirus pandemic, ensuing quarantines and economic strains and the moral crisis prompted by the nationally witnessed killing of George Floyd by police.

For months, Trump has tried to deny or minimize the gravity of all of these events. Yet they loom as large as ever and perhaps larger.

In an insightful Politico essay in October 2017, political analyst Michael Kruse found Peale's imprint on every phase of Trump's career. But near the end, Kruse noted that Trump's success story remained unfinished, like an study in which some results have yet to be counted.

"From a scientific perspective," Kruse wrote, "Trump is an incomplete experiment."

Kruse then quoted the self-help author Mitch Horowitz, who called Trump's story an example of what, in at least the short run, "you can attain through self-help, through self-assertion and people's willingness to believe what they think that they see."

To which Kruse added: "Trump's version of his own reality, some insist, ultimately will crash against something more real."

And that something might well be the COVID-19 crisis and the sequence of events that has followed.

Irresistible force v immovable object

Watching the president this week as he renewed his late-afternoon briefings on the virus, we all saw a man much altered from the one who convened similar sessions in the early spring.

For one thing he was alone, no longer surrounded by a posse of doctors and research scientists and responsible officials arrayed on stage in the White House briefing room.

Beyond that, the lone figure of the president seemed besieged and becalmed.

He admitted the situation would get worse before it got better. He gave ground on the mask requirement. He cancelled the Republican National Convention's final night speeches and celebration in Jacksonville, Florida a concession to the persistence of the virus he'd earlier hoped would go away by Easter and insisted had passed its peak in April.

So what happens when positive thinking fails? What happens when the power goes out? In common experience, when the power goes out, it gets darker.

Trump's critics and opponents say that is exactly what we are seeing in America today.

Unable to conquer the combination of pandemic effects and civil unrest by the force of his will and a Twitter blizzard of "alternative facts," Trump is now turning to a set of alternative powers.

In June he sent out law enforcement officers to clear peaceful protesters from the street and park in front of the White House. In July he sent federal officers to police portions of selected cities including Portland, Chicago, Albuquerque and Kansas City where he found the performance of local officials unsatisfactory.

Initial efforts to justify this as the protection of federal property in downtown Portland convinced no one. The White House now says the federal officers from the Department of Homeland Security, the Drug Enforcement Administration and elsewhere within the Justice Department are going in on behalf of "law and order."

But that is not the perspective of local and state officials, who have not been consulted or even informed in some cases prior to federal officers arriving in camouflage and helmets, wielding wartime weapons and taking street protesters into custody.

The intrusion of these officers is not absolutely unprecedented, but it is exceedingly rare in the peacetime history of this country. As such it is a test of what the legal system will bear, and what the American public will accept.

Former Sen. Gary Hart, a Colorado Democrat, wrote in The New York Times this week that there are documents setting forth emergency powers for a president in the event of a nuclear war or another catastrophe, such as a pandemic.

These alleged powers have not been made public, nor have they been approved by a vote of Congress or blessed by the judicial branch.

A federal officer fires crowd control munitions at Black Lives Matter protesters at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday, July 24, 2020, in Portland, Ore. Noah Berger/AP hide caption

A federal officer fires crowd control munitions at Black Lives Matter protesters at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Friday, July 24, 2020, in Portland, Ore.

Some things are known

But some information about these secretive documents has been gathered by researchers and lawyers at the Brennan Center for Criminal Justice at New York University Law School.

That has built a fire under Hart, now 83, one of two surviving members of the Senate investigating committee that revealed in the 1970s the serial abuses by the U.S. intelligence agencies in the Cold War. Hart recalls that in March of this year, Trump himself alluded to powers he thinks he has "that people don't even know about."

It is time, Hart says, that the relevant documents are brought to light and subjected to public debate. Absent such an airing, any president might feel free to invoke secret emergency powers suspending at least some citizens' rights under the Constitution in a moment of emergency.

For Trump, a moment of emergency might include the apparent rejection by the voters in his re-election year.

Among the key takeaways from the interview the president gave Fox News anchor Chris Wallace last week was a flat refusal to promise he would "accept the results" of the election on Nov. 3.

He would not say yes or no. He wanted to wait and see how things went.

After all, losing one's re-election bid might seem to pose an obstacle to a second term but Trump may believe that obstacle might not be half as strong as it appeared.

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2020 Crises Confront Trump With An Outage In The Power Of Positive Thinking - NPR

Trump campaign moving forward with opening centers in communities of color amid pandemic – ABC News

President Trumps re-election team is moving forward with plans to open over a dozen retail properties for voter outreach in communities of colorcommunities that have been disproportionately impacted by the coronavirus as the pandemic surges around the country.

The team is looking to resume its previously announced plans to open community centers across battleground states like Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, and North Carolina --places where there have also been significant spikes in COVID-19 cases.

Public health experts such as Dr. Shad Marvasti, director of Public Health and associate professor at the University of Arizona College of Medicine Phoenix told ABC News it would be irresponsible to open these centers during the height of the pandemic.

"Right now it's not advisable to have any type of activity that's not necessary, where people are interacting indoors, particularly in communities of black and brown that have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19, Marvasti said. They are getting hospitalized and dying at much higher rates than white Americans. I think it's irresponsible to expose them by having yet another touch point of people interacting in close settings which we know is higher risk in terms of transmitting the virus."

People holding "Blacks for Trump" signs gather along Southern Boulevard as President Donald Trump's motorcade returns to Mar-a-Lago from the Trump International Golf Club located in West Palm Beach, Jan. 18, 2020

The Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign will look to open 15 Black Voices for Trump Community Centers this Summer in several cities across the country such as Philadelphia, Cleveland, Greensboro, Milwaukee, Charlotte and the host city for the former RNC National Convention Jacksonville, Florida.

RNC Senior Communications Advisor for Black Media Affairs Paris Dennard said that the plan for these centers is to get them in accordance with guidance from local officials.

It is based upon local guidance from mayors and what it can be deemed essential and non-essential etc, but the plan is to get those things opened up this summer, Dennard said.

The Trump campaign is also trying to make up ground since the coronavirus epidemic has since significantly hindered not only the campaigns Black Voices for Trump retail shops plans, delaying their openings.

The Trump campaign has invested millions in efforts to reach voters of color over the last year through both television and digital advertisements, including a $10 million Super Bowl ad, and launching multiple coalitions including Black Voices for Trump and Latinos for Trump.

A supporter of the US president hold signs reading "Latinos for Trump" as they attend a "Keep America Great" rally at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas on Oct. 17, 2019.

The centers are places where the Trump campaign staffers would sell merchandise like hats that have the word woke--appropriating a term that signals racial awareness -- on them while also working to register voters while pitching them on the presidents economic record and criminal justice reform bill.

Perhaps more crucially, a key element of the presidents economic pitch to voters of color has evaporated as the pandemic has sent unemployment rates soaring, disproportionately harming communities of color.

RNC Regional Communications Director of Hispanic Outreach Andres Malave said target locations for the centers have been identified all over the state of Florida and the southwestern part of the country for the Latinos for Trump coalition.

Director of Strategic Initiatives for Arizona Trump Victory, Jeremiah Cota shared an image last week showing off a new retail space where a Latinos for Trump center is set to open in Phoenix, Arizona. Trump Victory is ready to launch the first ever #LatinosForTrump community center in the heart of South Phoenix!, Cota wrote.

The Trump campaigns plans to open a new retail spot in Phoenix, Arizona comes as the coronavirus pandemic in the state shows cases slightly decreasing but so is testing. Arizona had its two deadliest days of the pandemic this past week.

President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference about his administration's response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic at the White House on July 23, 2020, in Washington.

Arizona Governor Doug Ducey announced earlier this month that Arizona bars, gyms and theaters are to be closed again as well as large gatherings were restricted.

Phoenix, Arizona is a heavily populated community of color with 42.6% of residents Latino and 2.6% African American according to 2019 United States Census estimates.

All across the country the coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately impacted communities of color.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, non-Hispanic black persons, Hispanics and Latinos, and American Indians/Alaska Natives, evidence points to higher rates of hospitalization or death from COVID-19 than among non-Hispanic white persons.

An extensive ABC News, FiveThirtyEight and ABC-owned television stations review found that it was significantly harder to get coronavirus testing in those black and brown communities.

Public health experts have repeatedly said that testing and tracing were key strategies in controlling outbreaks across the country.

Malave said that everyone in the centers and everyone that comes in will be following local and state guidelines.

We follow all local and state guidelines to ensure our field teams, volunteers, and everyone we are working with and sharing our message with can celebrate President Trumps re-election efforts safely," Malave said.

The presidents renewed push to woo voters of color comes amid racial tensions in the county that have boiled over following the death of George Floyd, leading to nation-wide protests calling for racial justice also while being down in national polling.

In late May President Trump tweeted when the looting starts, the shooting starts, a phrase was used by Miami Police Chief Walter Headley using it speaking about violent crime in the segregated city during the civil rights movement in 1967.

Headley said Miami hadn't "faced serious problems with civil uprisings and looting because I've let the word filter down that when the looting starts, the shooting starts," according to the Miami Herald. "We don't mind being accused of police brutality," Headley added.

Headley was also known for cracking down on communities of color with policing policies like stop-and-frisk and his use of patrol dogs.

In a recent ABC News/Washington Post poll, the results found that Trump has gone from an 18-point lead among white registered voters to a minimal four points now, while 94% of Black registered voters support Biden.

With regards to handling race relations in the country, Biden leads by 25 points, 58-33%.

Earlier this month, the ABC News/Ipsos poll found that 92% of black Americans and 83% of Hispanics disapprove of Trumps handling of race relations.

Despite his position in the polls, Malave said that these coalitions and centers can pay dividends for the re-election for Trump to better his outreach and messaging to communities of color.

So I think it's a really great opportunity right now to continue to drive our message in this community. We have a really solid deck of Latinos for Trump advisory board members from all over the country, Malave said.

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Trump campaign moving forward with opening centers in communities of color amid pandemic - ABC News

American carnage: how conservative media amplify Trump’s theme of chaos – The Guardian

Mayors across the United States have rejected Donald Trumps election-season depiction of their cities as awash in violence, and media coverage of peaceful protests in Portland and elsewhere has belied the presidents claims of widespread anarchy.

But for Americans who mainly consume conservative media, Trumps latest evocation of an American carnage, with a shocking explosion of shootings, killings, murders and heinous crimes of violence is as plain as the news flashing across the screen.

The stars of conservative cable TV programs and the biggest conservative news sites and social media accounts have echoed and amplified Trump since he declared himself your president of law and order in an appearance outside the White House in early June.

Over the last week, however, alarm over the security of Americas cities has intensified on the conservative airways.

These vicious, violent, hate-filled, anti-American protesters are also attacking federal buildings, Rush Limbaugh said on his radio show last week. How many stores and parks and statues and public buildings have been destroyed recently by rioters? the Fox News host Tucker Carlson asked last month. Reign of street terrorists, the conservative radio host Mark Levin tweeted with a story about the removal and defacement of statues and monuments.

The Republican senator Tom Cotton, who has been calling for a military crackdown in US cities for two months, found a welcome outlet this week for his message on Sean Hannitys Fox News program, one of the countrys most-watched.

If federal troops are brought in and then of course the mayors and the governors, theyre not stopping the anarchists, and theres chaos in the streets and then they have to fire to protect themselves or others, who gets the blame for that? Hannity asked, describing a scenario in which troops fired on protesters.

Well ultimately the blame lies with the criminals, Cotton replied.

Political analysts see Trumps efforts to create the impression of widespread social unrest which only he can solve as part of a long-shot re-election strategy. Trump trails rival Joe Biden by double digits in polling averages including in key swing states.

Conservative media could help Trump to create an impression of chaos at least for their conservative audience. Media consumption habits have shown strong correlation with basic world outlook. An Axios-Ipsos poll published on Tuesday found that a 62% majority of Fox News watchers believe that statistics tracking US coronavirus cases are overblown, while 48% who reported no main news source thought so. Only 7% of CNN and MSNBC watchers thought so.

Trump has blamed Democrats for creating the climate of chaos he relies on conservative media to help him amplify. Im going to do something that, I can tell you, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office this week.

Because were not going to let New York and Chicago and Philadelphia and Detroit and Baltimore and all of these Oakland is a mess. Were not going to let this happen in our country. All run by liberal Democrats.

US mayors have disputed that depiction, urging the Trump administration to stop treating protesters like criminals and accusing the White House of an abuse of power.

Mayors from 15 of the largest American cities addressed a letter to the attorney general, Bill Barr, and the acting homeland security secretary, Chad Wolf, on Monday.

The murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis sparked a national uprising and reckoning, the letter said. The majority of the protests have been peaceful and aimed at improving our communities.

Where this is not the case, it still does not justify the use of federal forces. Unilaterally deploying these paramilitary-type forces into our cities is wholly inconsistent with our system of democracy and our most basic values.

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American carnage: how conservative media amplify Trump's theme of chaos - The Guardian

Officials warn it will take months to implement Trump’s reduced unemployment benefits – Business Insider – Business Insider

The White House announced last week it wants to end the $600 weekly unemployment checks Americans' have received during the pandemic and replace them with payments of up to 70% of a worker's previous wages.

But the National Association of State Workforce Agencies warned Congress that it would take the majority of states between 8 and 20 weeks to transition to this more complex method of calculating individuals' benefits, according to a memo obtained by NPR.

Under President Donald Trump's proposed system, Americans' average weekly federal unemployment would drop to about $200.

State unemployment systems have already struggled to meet the demand of the approximately 30 million Americans currently on unemployment, in part because of outdated technology. Officials say switching to a system based on partial wage reimbursement would involve a more complicated and time-consuming process of gathering information about every unemployed person's former wages.

Trump's Department of Labor told Congress in May that it "strongly" opposed unemployment based on previous wages because it would be "exceedingly difficult if not impossible to implement."

Republicans have for months warned that the $600 unemployment payments, which were passed in March under the CARES Act and expire next week, will discourage many Americans from going back to work. But prominent economists who've studied the issue in recent weeks say there's no significant evidence the elevated benefits are discouraging workers from getting new jobs. Economists also say the cut in unemployment could mean millions of fewer jobs are created in the coming year.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows insisted last week that the technological issues won't prevent timely delivery of unemployment going forward.

Democrats are pushing to extend the $600 unemployment benefits and argue that reducing or delaying the elevated cash assistance will have devastating ripple effects on Americans and the economy.

"With their outdated technology, it would take states weeks to implement any change to the $600 boost," Sen. Ron Wyden, the ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee, said last week. "This would cause significant disruption. The only option that ensures families can pay August rent is extending the $600."

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Officials warn it will take months to implement Trump's reduced unemployment benefits - Business Insider - Business Insider

US Senate primary in Tennessee pits Trump’s candidate against conservative insurgency – CNN

Bill Hagerty was expected to coast to his party's nomination after the President endorsed him a year ago. But with less than two weeks to go before the Republican primary election, Trump's former US ambassador to Japan is facing a fierce challenge marked by a late infusion of ad spending, high-profile endorsements and rallies crisscrossing the state.

Dr. Manny Sethi and Hagerty traded attacks in separate phone interviews on Thursday, directly aiming their messages at the Republicans who will decide the August 6 primary.

Hagerty depicted Sethi, an orthopedic trauma surgeon at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, as a "phony conservative" who supported Trump only when it was "convenient." Sethi fired back that Hagerty, who founded a private equity firm, is a "Washington insider" and a "Mitt Romney Republican."

The primary will test the power of Trump's endorsement in the deep red state, as his political standing has deteriorated over his handling of the coronavirus crisis. It resembles the political battles of the past, with libertarian and tea party-aligned conservatives taking on party leaders and the GOP establishment in divisive primaries that at times threatened their party's hold on critical Senate seats.

Sethi's campaign has been bolstered by the support of Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who appears in an ad for the Protect Freedom PAC, which has dropped more than $800,000 in the race -- more than any other outside group, according to Kantar's Campaign Media Analysis Group.

"The race was a bit of a sleeper," said Paul, who went to medical school with Sethi's medical partner and believes the candidate will "stand up when leadership wants to spend too much money."

"Really in the last couple of weeks, things have really sprung his direction," Paul added.

While Sethi has the backing of Paul, Texas' Sen. Ted Cruz and former Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina -- a trio who frequently battled party leaders in Senate races during the Obama years -- Hagerty has the support of Trump and Sens. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Tom Cotton of Arkansas.

GOP sources said Paul's tactics have annoyed Tennessee Republicans, particularly Blackburn. In an ad running in the state, Paul, staring into the camera, says: "Tennessee is too conservative a state to keep sending Democrats in Republican clothing to represent Tennessee."

The ad angered Blackburn, multiple sources said. When asked if she thought Paul's and Cruz's efforts in the state were helpful, Blackburn replied, "Probably not."

Tennessee's Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander, whose retirement has sparked the primary fight, told CNN that Paul's ad "basically says Tennesseans need to stop electing Democrats dressed as Republicans. So, I don't wear a dress ... and my voting record in support of Trump is 90% and his is 69%."

Party leaders are watching the primary developments closely, as they cannot afford to jeopardize a Senate seat in a state Trump carried by 26 points in 2016.

"I'll acknowledge the polls have gotten tighter, but we're going win Tennessee," said Indiana's Sen. Todd Young, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is officially neutral in the primary.

A deep red state

The winner of the Republican primary will be favored to win the Senate seat in this deeply conservative state. In 2018, Blackburn beat Phil Bredesen, a popular former Democratic governor, by more than 10 points. There are 15 Republicans on the ballot for the Senate nomination in 2020, including Hagerty, Sethi and two other doctors, George Flinn and Byron Bush.

Nevada's Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, who chairs the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said she would not speculate on whether the Democrats would have a better shot at winning the general election if Hagerty loses. "I just know that we have a good candidate and we'll go from there," she said.

Since June, the GOP campaigns and other conservative groups have spent more than $9 million on TV, digital and radio ads, about 10 times what they spent in the previous seven months of the campaign, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group. In the past week, radio host Mark Levin and Blackburn have gotten off the sidelines, respectively endorsing Sethi and Hagerty. And on Friday, two Republicans with presidential ambitions -- Cruz and Cotton -- respectively campaigned with Sethi and Hagerty in several rallies across the state.

"We need strong conservatives and we need fighters," Cruz told CNN. Asked if Trump made a mistake in backing Hagerty, Cruz said: "I think Dr. Manny is by far the better choice."

At a rally in Clarksville, Tennessee, on Friday, Cotton mentioned Hagerty's support during a firestorm of controversy following an op-ed the senator had written in the New York Times, arguing that a president has the authority to use the military to quell civil unrest in America.

"Bill Hagerty stood with me," Cotton said. The senator also argued that Hagerty will stand up to China, too.

Trading barbs as they court the conservative base

In the interview with CNN, Hagerty sought to distance himself from associations with establishment Republicans and attacked Sethi for not doing more to help Trump get elected. While the former ambassador strongly supported Romney during the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, Hagerty indicated that he has since had a change of heart.

"You've got senators like Mitt Romney, who, frankly, have lost their way," Hagerty told CNN, pointing to Romney's decision to march with Black Lives Matter protesters following the police killing of George Floyd. Hagerty called BLM "a Marxist organization" that is "against the nuclear family" and "anti-Semitic."

"If you disagree with them, they don't hesitate to use violence," Hagerty said. "That's not the kind of group that I think our leaders should be standing with."

When asked what he thought of Alexander, the former governor and long-serving senator, Hagerty said, "Senator Alexander is somebody that I don't agree with." He pointed out that Alexander opposed Trump's decision to withdraw from the World Health Organization for allegedly being too influenced by China. Hagerty added that he agrees with Trump on the need to reopen schools, alleging that Alexander has "taken a different position." Alexander, chairman of the Senate committee that oversees education policy, has been reticent to offer dictates from Washington to fully open up schools, as Trump has done.

"Tennesseans can trust me to stand with Senator Blackburn and President Trump," said Hagerty. "That's been my track record."

Alexander told CNN he doesn't know if there's a candidate "who President Trump has more respect for than Bill Hagerty" and pointed out that Blackburn's endorsement will also help Hagerty in the primary.

"My experience is Tennesseans didn't elect me to tell them how to vote," Alexander said.

Pushing back on attacks for being insufficiently supportive of Trump, Sethi pointed out that he had given $10,000 to a Tennessee Republican Party victory account in 2016 and noted that Hagerty had first supported former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in the presidential race.

"We are on the verge of a historical upset in Tennessee politics of finally defeating the Republican establishment in Tennessee," Sethi said. "I think it's the first time that a true conservative can win here in a US Senate race."

There appears to be little disagreement between the two candidates on how to address the coronavirus crisis. Hagerty called Trump's response to the pandemic "excellent," while Sethi said Trump has "done the best that you could really do in this situation" and blamed the "left-wing media" and others who "want him to fail."

In their interviews, the two candidates spent much of their time attacking each other or defending themselves from the slights made by the other.

Hagerty said Sethi donated to ActBlue, the online portal for Democratic candidates. His $50 donation was made a dozen years ago to support a family friend, Sethi said.

Hagerty charged that Sethi had applied for a White House fellowship, a nonpartisan program, under President Barack Obama. Sethi countered that Hagerty had served on the President's Commission on White House Fellowships under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

Sethi took Hagerty's attacks as a positive sign for his campaign.

"I think we're winning," Sethi told CNN. "Based on the fact that they're throwing everything but the kitchen sink at us, I think they're in deep trouble, and they know it."

Hagerty also projected confidence before Election Day. He said Democrats are "pushing us off the cliff into socialism" by proposing policies like "Medicare for All," the Green New Deal and "doing away with law enforcement altogether."

"I'm so dismayed by weak-kneed Republicans that will not stand up to this, that won't be the strong voice that we need," Hagerty said.

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US Senate primary in Tennessee pits Trump's candidate against conservative insurgency - CNN

Trump’s vow to send federal officers to US cities is election ploy, critics say – The Guardian

Donald Trump has vowed to send federal officers to several American cities led by Democrats in what critics say is an attempt to play the law and order card to boost his bid for re-election.

The presidents threat came after a federal crackdown on anti-racism protests in Portland, Oregon, that involved unmarked cars and unidentified forces in camouflage.

Speaking to reporters at the White House on Monday, Trump identified New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Baltimore and Oakland as places in need of federal agents, describing those cities mayors as liberal Democrats.

Were sending law enforcement, he said. We cant let this happen to the cities.

Singling out Chicago, where more than 63 people were shot, 12 fatally, over the weekend, Trump pivoted to an attack on his election rival, Joe Biden. And you add it up over the summer this is worse than Afghanistan, by far. This is worse than anything anyone has ever seen. All run by the same liberal Democrats. And you know what? If Biden got in, that would be true for the country. The whole country would go to hell. And were not going to let it go to hell.

Struggling against Biden in the opinion polls, Trump has leaned into a dark and divisive theme reminiscent of his fellow Republican Richard Nixon in 1968. I am your president of law and order, he declared in the White House Rose Garden on 1 June, shortly before park police and national guard troops fired teargas and chased peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square so he could stage a photo op outside a historic church.

Since then he has repeatedly and falsely accused Biden of planning to defund the police and effectively surrender cities and suburbs to violent criminals. The conservative Fox News network, meanwhile, has been giving emphasis to coverage of inner-city violence rather the coronavirus pandemic.

Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, said: He took longer than I thought he would to start emphasising law and order. But I bet he starts at the convention. Its going to be one of the key themes of the convention. These crazy liberals are causing problems again.

Such a strategy is certainly a candidate for explaining the fresh crackdown in major cities, Sabato added. Ill tell you what it really is, though. It is an unmistakeable hint of what a second Trump term will be like. Therell be no hesitation to do any of this.

The Trump administration sent federal officers into Portland after weeks of protests there over police brutality and racial injustice that followed the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May. Last week, videos showed unidentified federal personnel taking people off the street and driving them away in black minivans.

Mark Morgan, acting commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection, defended the actions in a tweet on Sunday: Law and Order a cornerstone of American society is under siege in Portland.

On Monday the Chicago Tribune newspaper reported that the Department of Homeland Security was making plans to deploy about 150 agents in the city where police defending a statue clashed with demonstrators on Friday.

Lori Lightfoot, the mayor of Chicago and a Democrat, told the Associated Press: I have great concerns about that in particular, given the track record in the city of Portland. I have talked to the mayor of Portland [and] we dont need federal agents without any insignia taking people off the street and holding them, I think, unlawfully.

Political leaders in Oakland, California, were quick to condemn Trumps suggestion federal agents could deploy to their city. Oakland needs Covid relief not troops from our president, Mayor Libby Schaaf said in a statement. He should stop slandering diverse, progressive cities like Oakland in his racist dog whistles and divisive campaign tactics.

Stay away from Oakland, tweeted the Democratic congresswoman Barbara Lee.

The issue has laid bare the binary choice for voters in November. Democrats, warning of a threat to civil liberties, called for Chad Wolf, acting secretary of Homeland Security, to quit. Congressman Don Beyer of Virginia said Wolf was overseeing authoritarian abuses that betray our bedrock principles and would horrify our nations Founders.

He added: Ordering the occupation of US cities, seeking the escalation of violence, and intentionally risking American lives over peaceful protests and graffiti is unfathomable and unacceptable. Secretary Wolf must resign immediately or be fired.

The House committee chairmen Jerry Nadler, Adam Smith and Bennie Thompson said in a joint statement: The Trump administration continues to weaponize federal law enforcement for its own agenda. Like we saw in Lafayette [Square], rather than supporting and protecting the American people, we are witnessing the oppression of peaceful protesters by our own government.

Not only do their action[s] undermine civil rights and sow fear and discord across the country, but in this case, they sully the reputation of members of our armed forces who were not involved.

And the congresswoman Rashida Tlaib of Michigan wrote on Twitter: Theyll have to arrest me first if they think theyre going to illegally lay their hands on my residents.

The sinister events in Portland have renewed fears about creeping authoritarianism from Trumps White House.

Laurence Tribe, a constitutional law professor at Harvard University, has called for peaceful civil disobedience. Stormtrooper tactics have no place in a free society, he said. The apparent deployment of the military for domestic law enforcement violates the Posse Comitatus Act in the absence of a genuine insurrection, and the claim that such deployment is genuinely necessary to preserve order does not meet the laugh test.

The administration is violating the first amendment on a regular basis now, thereby endangering all our liberties.

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Trump's vow to send federal officers to US cities is election ploy, critics say - The Guardian

Democrats, Dont Take the Bait on Trumps Memory Test – The New York Times

Over the last week, the hottest issue in national politics has been President Trumps ability to repeat five words in order people, woman, man, camera, TV a performance on a dementia test that Mr. Trump has called amazing.

Democrats, especially the educational elite, have been having a grand old time making fun of Mr. Trump and have pointed out that he would have been better off not mentioning the fact that he took a screening test for dementia in the first place.

But is that true? Mr. Trump, in fact, may be winning the public relations cycle, however inadvertently.

In Portland, quasi-military units of the Department of Homeland Security, anonymous in their camouflage uniforms marked only with the word Police, have swept people into unmarked vans for being in the vicinity of demonstrations, beaten peaceful protesters, and shot people with potentially fatal impact munitions without provocation, fracturing one persons skull.

The deployment of federal agents with guns to crack down on demonstrators is not just a ham-handed publicity stunt that will likely result in needless civil rights violations and injuries. It is an attempt by the president to use a personal paramilitary force on the streets of Americas cities to do as he sees fit. After Portland, who knows where else Mr. Trump will use his private military.

In this context, anything that distracts attention from the presidents abuses of power in Portland is a good thing for him. And whether or not he can count backward from 100 by sevens is a brilliant diversion, even if Mr. Trump stumbled into it.

That we fall for this unintentional circus act is not an aberration. It is, instead, just the latest version of the competency trap that Democratic elites have fallen into repeatedly regarding Mr. Trump. Indeed, we have a history of underestimating Republican politicians because of their supposed or real incompetence. Ronald Reagan was the B-movie actor, derided as not smart enough to be president. We underestimated George W. Bush as a lightweight son of his accomplished father, a failure in business and comically prone to malapropisms.

We should know better. But with Mr. Trump, the bait is too enticing. Remember how there has never been anyone more qualified than Hillary Clinton to serve as president? Remember the New Yorker cartoon after the election mocking an airplane passenger offering to fly the plane because those smug pilots have lost touch with regular passengers like us?

These were spectacular examples of the Democratic elite missing the point. As the onetime party of the workers has increasingly become the party of the well educated, many have come to assume that academic intelligence and policy expertise are crucial qualifications to rule. But the point of a democracy is not to select the smartest people. The point is to make elected officials accountable to the people. Voters choose the candidates who (they think) best represent them. For many people, that means the person who (they think) is most like them, best understands the challenges they face, sees the world most like them or shares their policy preferences.

If you want to vote for the person who you think is most competent based on intelligence, judgment and experience thats fine. But very few people actually believe that the presidency should be based on cognitive ability or rsum. Democrats vote for Democrats, Republicans vote for Republicans and both sides use the competency argument when it suits them.

Would I vote for an inexperienced candidate who went to an undistinguished college and supported abortion rights, criminal justice reform and free preschool over a former governor and cabinet official with a degree from an elite law school who opposed all of them? Of course I would.

Or, to put it another way, it can feel good to poke fun at Donald Trumps incoherence, narcissism and singular ability to embarrass himself. But he is also launching a deadly serious attack on our democratic values.

Lets not forget which one is more important.

James Kwak is a law professor at the University of Connecticut and the chair of the board of the Southern Center for Human Rights. His latest book is Take Back Our Party: Restoring the Democratic Legacy.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

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Democrats, Dont Take the Bait on Trumps Memory Test - The New York Times

President Donald Trump Tweetstorm The Sunday Edition – Deadline

President Donald Trump is once again out on the links today at his Trump National Golf Course in Sterling, VA.

His golfing partner on the day is Sen. Lindsey Graham, according to the report from the White House Press Pool, which is evidently having less fun than President Trump. The pool report notes the assigned press is holding on the sunny, sweltering sidewalk outside the Italian restaurant at the nearby strip mall.

Before heading out to golf, the Commander-in-Tweet had two messages for his constituents. The President warmed up with an all-caps vow to Make America Great Again!

He then explained his thinking on the situation in Portland, Oregon, where street protests have taken place for more than 50 straight days. The President has deployed federal agents to protect property there, much to the chagrin of local politicians.

We are trying to help Portland, not hurt it. Their leadership has, for months, lost control of the anarchists and agitators. They are missing in action.

The President noted, These were not merely protesters, these are the real deal!

Well update the communications as more roll in. The tweetstorm so far:

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President Donald Trump Tweetstorm The Sunday Edition - Deadline

Trump Is Determined to Split the Country in Two – The Atlantic

The common thread in these twin confrontations is that they pit Republican officials who rely on support primarily from exurban, small-town, and rural voters against major metropolitan areas that favor Democrats. In the process, these RepublicansTrump in particularmay be hoping to rally their nonurban voter base by defining themselves explicitly in opposition to the cities. Trump is likely to underscore that message in his White House speech this afternoon on combating violent crime in American cities.

Quinta Jurecic and Benjamin Wittes: Nothing can justify the attack on Portland

In deploying federal forces, Trump appears to be trying to provoke clashes with protesters, which he can use to convince white suburban voters that hes the last line of defense between them and the chaos allegedly incubating in cities, Rahm Emanuel, the former Chicago mayor, told me. Referring to the street battle between construction workers and anti-war protesters in Manhattan in 1970, Emanuel said, Trump is trying to create his own hard-hat riot, and they are wearing [law-enforcement] helmets.

The political risk for Republicans in that strategy, many political observers told me, is not only that it could provoke more opposition from residents in the city centers, but that it could also accelerate the shift toward Democrats in the large, well-educated, and more and more diverse inner suburbs around the major cities. Over time, the larger denser suburbs have become like cities and throw in with the citiesthey dont identify as much with the less-populated areas, says Robert Lang, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutions Metropolitan Policy Program and a co-author of the upcoming book Blue Metros, Red States.

The two conflicts between cities and Republican leaders represent the culmination of long-running trends. Tensions between GOP-controlled state governments and Democratic-led cities notably intensified after the 2010 midterm election, which delivered to Republicans unified control of the statehouse and governorship in about two dozen states. Since then, states have moved much more frequently than before to overturn city policies, such as those establishing paid sick leave, regulating gun sales, and imposing rent control.

These disputes generated national headlines when the Republican governor and state legislature in North Carolina approved legislation known as the bathroom bill in 2016, overturning a Charlotte city ordinance meant to guarantee equal rights for trans individuals. While Democratic states have occasionally overturned local actions, Briffault wrote in a 2018 analysis, the preponderance of preemptive actions and proposals have been advanced by Republican-dominated state governments.

From the start, the response to the coronavirus outbreak in many of the states with GOP governors has followed this pattern. In some northern states, including Ohio, Maryland, and Massachusetts, GOP governors moved quickly to lock down the economy. Elsewhere, that didnt happen: In Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Arizonaamong othersRepublican governors rejected pleas in March from big-city mayors to shut down the economy as the virus spread, and agreed only after Trump reluctantly acknowledged the need for closures.

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Trump Is Determined to Split the Country in Two - The Atlantic

President Donald Trump says hell throw out first pitch before Red Sox-Yankees game on Aug. 15 – MassLive.com

President Donald Trump will throw out the first pitch before the Red Sox-Yankees game on Aug. 15 at Yankee Stadium, he told reporters at The White House on Thursday. The rivals are scheduled for a 7:07 p.m. first pitch on FOX that night.

Answering a question about the start of baseball season, Trump said Yankees president Randy Levine had invited him to throw out a first pitch later this summer. A Yankees official confirmed to NJ.coms Brendan Kuty that Trump had been invited.

Baseball, as an example, youre going to be at an empty stadium, Trump told reporters in Washington, D.C. Ive agreed... Randy Levine is a great friend of mine, from the Yankees. He asked me to throw out the first pitch. I think Im doing that on Aug. 15 at Yankee Stadium. I said, Hows the crowd going to be?' Its like, you dont have a crowd. There is no such thing.

Its going to be interesting, Mariano, Trump said, turning to former Yankees closer Mariano Rivera, who was in attendance. Hes not used to that. Ive been to many games where he walks in and the place goes crazy. I think it would be just as good without the crowd. You were just born with it. Some people are born with it.

On Tuesday morning, Trump sent a tweet discouraging national anthem protests after multiple members of the Giants, including manager Gabe Kapler and outfielder Mike Yastrzemski, kneeled during the anthem before an exhibition game against the Athletics.

Looking forward to live sports, but any time I witness a player kneeling during the National Anthem, a sign of great disrespect for our Country and our Flag, the game is over for me! Trump tweeted.

Asked about the teams policy on anthem protests earlier this week, Red Sox manager Ron Roenicke said he did not believe any players were planning on kneeling this season but vowed support for any type of demonstrations.

We havent told players you have to do anything, Roenicke said. Weve given them the rights, which is what this country is all about, and the freedom to do what they feel strongly about. We have said what we think and what we would like them to do, but we have also given them the opportunity to express themselves.

This organization is okay with it, he continued. If they want to take a knee, they can take a knee. I dont know that anybodys going to do that, but if they want to, we support them in whatever they want to do.

Related links:

Boston Red Sox dont anticipate national anthem protests but vow to support players who kneel: If they want to take a knee, they can take a knee

National anthem protest: Gabe Kapler, Mike Yastrzemski among San Francisco Giants taking a knee (video)

Dr. Anthony Fauci to throw out first pitch of MLB season before Yankees-Nationals game Thursday night

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President Donald Trump says hell throw out first pitch before Red Sox-Yankees game on Aug. 15 - MassLive.com

An Oral History of the First Federal Execution Under Donald Trump – The Marshall Project

The federal government had executed just three men in the last half century until July, when it executed three in a single week. President Trump has long extolled the death penalty, and last month, Attorney General William Barr set dates for four men. We owe it to the victims of these horrific crimes, and to the families left behind, to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system, Barr said in a statement.

The first man on Barrs list was Daniel Lewis Lee, who was convicted of helping to kill William Mueller, Nancy Mueller, and Nancys 8-year-old daughter Sarah Powell, in 1996. According to prosecutors, the three were shot with a stun gun and then drowned during a robbery by members of a white supremacist group. Several of Nancy and Sarahs relatives opposed Lees execution, but wanted to attend. Feeling they could not travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they unsuccessfully sued to stop it. In the end, they did not witness Lees death, but William Muellers son, Scott Mueller, did attend.

Lees death was scheduled for 4 p.m., on Monday, July 13, but legal fights over the governments lethal injection plan continued into the night, and his time of death was 8:07 a.m., on Tuesday. According to the federal Bureau of Prisons, Lee spent four hours strapped to the gurney.

We tracked down a broad array of those connected to the event, to present a three-dimensional account of the first federal execution in 17 years.

Monica Veillette, niece and cousin of murder victims Nancy Mueller and Sarah Powell: When they announced the new execution date, we thought it was likely a mistake, that someone had not considered how many people would need to travel during a pandemic. Someone called from the Bureau of Prisons to set up our plane tickets and hotels; they handle everything from the minute you arrive.

I kept asking him about COVID precautions and he said hed get answers. He said that he and his wife were scared even to go buy pet food. I said, Imagine flying across the country and going into a prison. He apologized profusely for pushing us to make arrangements. He has a boss to answer to. I felt so sorry for him. And for everyone at the prison.

Earlene Peterson, mother and grandmother of Mueller and Powell: I have a heart condition and a lung condition. I havent been anywhere since the tenth of March, not to church, not to Wal-Mart. I went to my doctor and she had a fit, she said, You are not to go.

Monica Veillette: We have a very large family and Im sure some people supported the execution. I dont want to say how anyone else feels is wrong because grief is a horrible thing to live with.

Scott Mueller, the son of victim William Mueller: To be honest with you, Id rather not talk about it. I want to just keep my stuff to myself, if you dont mind. I feel justice was served. As far as Earlenes family, theyve dominated the whole thing for 25 years, and I wasnt heard of until execution time. I love them, they love me, and we just have a difference of opinion I guess. I wouldnt wish this experience on anyone.

Lee was tried alongside a man named Chevie Kehoe, whom the trial judge described as the ringleader of the murders and the one directly responsible for the eight-year-olds death. Kehoe received a life sentence. Lees lawyers have argued that Lee played a limited role in the crime and was unfairly sentenced using a psychological test that portrayed him as a psychopath.

Earlene Peterson: At the trial, Lee looked more guilty, with a neck tattoo and a missing eye, while Chevie Kehoe had a suit and tie. But you could tell Daniel was the follower, and Chevie was the leader.

Monica Veillette: We never hear about Chevie Kehoe, unless hes moved from one prison to another. We have closure. But with Daniel Lee its been a continuous compounding of our grief, to bear the burden that another human being is going to be killed in your name. We were bombarded with messages of support. People said, I bet you all are so happy. Dealing with all those well-meaning friends and loved ones was so hard. We sued to get the execution postponed because of the pandemic, and the government called our familys fears frivolous. It made me cry more than anything thus far, to be called frivolous by the people who had said they were doing this for us. It felt so cruel.

Scott Taylor, spokesperson, Bureau of Prisons (in an emailed statement): We are deeply concerned for the health and welfare of those inmates who are entrusted to our care, and for our staff, their families, and the communities we live and work in. It is our highest priority to continue to do everything we can to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 in our facilities.

Monica Veillette: The BOP staffer I spoke to had no answers, and said they wouldnt give us anything in writing about COVID precautions, because they said it could be discoverable in court.

As it became clear they werent going to stop the execution, we had to make an agonizing decision. We wanted to be present to say, This is not being done in Sarah and Nancys name, and to let that be the final moment in their story. But what if I went and I was asymptomatic and hugged my grandma, because who would not be able to hug their grandma in that situation, and then my grandma gets sick?

I was still thinking about going as late as Saturday night. When my flight left on Sunday, I knew there was no turning back, and I cried.

Earlene Peterson: My son was going to drive me from Arkansas. My family was having a cow, my church, my friends: No, no, no, you cant do it. So in the end I chose safety.

Ruth Friedman, attorney for Daniel Lee: His lawyers were not in Terre Haute. Im at a worrisome age with a worrisome underlying condition. On the one hand, it felt terrible. On the other, it was good that we could be at our desks to litigate. There were so many problems with this case, and we were getting information from the government in dribs and drabs, and then we were trying to get the courts to pay attention. I couldnt imagine what hours Id spend on a plane, much less driving from Washington, D.C., to Indiana.

Tim Evans, reporter, The Indianapolis Star: As a journalist, it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, but as a person I was nervous. Part of me thought I wouldnt mind if it didnt happen.

Terre Haute prisoner who declined to be named and is not on death row: We tend to start preparing about two weeks out. One of the guys Im friends with had to power-wash the death house, the entire outside of it. Other guys had to weed the area around it. The bigwigs were coming and they wanted it all to look pristine. Its like a show for them.

On Monday morning around 10:30 a.m., an administrator called a meeting about what he called the festivities. He told us to get our trays from the cafeteria, eat as fast as you can, get everything you want to take to read, your radio, blankets, and then we had to go to the old Unicor building or the chapel to be locked down. They were trying to block us from seeing the transport of the prisoner to the execution chamber but a lot of us saw it anyway. They made us dress in our greens, like it was fancy.

On Monday morning, federal judge Tanya Chutkan ordered that the government could not carry out the executions while federal death row prisoners continued to contest the lethal injection protocol. The Department of Justice immediately appealed above Chutkan to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit., but it was already apparent that the Supreme Court would have the final say.

Abraham Bonowitz, anti-death-penalty activist, Death Penalty Action: The state police put up the sawhorse barrier things on the roads around the prison. They had official protest sites one for pro-death penalty protesters and one for anti-death penalty protesters. But you couldnt bring your phones there so we set up at the busiest intersection on US 41, and negotiated a place for our people to park at the nearby funeral home. For a while it was just waiting. By 9 p.m., everyone was just sitting with their phones, refreshing and refreshing the Supreme Court docket page.

Tim Evans, reporter: We went through security checks and they took our phones and we sat down and waited. Around 6 p.m. or so they told us it was going to be awhile, and we left for dinner, came back. Between 9 and 10 they told us it was going to be awhile again and they recommended that the local reporters go home and everyone else get a hotel.

Terre Haute prisoner: Nobody was trying to look outsideit was dark. Everybody was starting to get real pissed off, there was no reason we couldnt go back to our units. No email, phones. Everyone felt that with COVID we didnt need anymore to deal with.

Monica Veillette, family member of victims: I spent Monday night in the part of my living room with the best reception, with my phone plugged in, the ringer turned up high, afraid to walk away or eat or shower or go to the bathroom, scouring the news sites, the Supreme Court website, reading the briefings. I lit a candle.

A little before 11:30 p.m., EST, the D.C. appeals court kept the stay in place and set a schedule to hear further arguments on the lethal injection protocol. It appeared the execution would not go ahead.

Ruth Friedman, defense attorney: We knew it wasnt really over. But when the appeals court upholds unanimously shortly before midnight, that would seem to have meaning.

Tim Evans, reporter: When they told us to leave, one reporter slept in her car. I checked into a hotel, but I was pretty wound up and I tweeted and watched cooking shows. I texted my wife: Do you really think RBG and the other Supremes are up? Around 2 a.m. I decided to get under the covers.

Essays by people in prison and others who have experience with the criminal justice system

Shortly after 2 a.m.., the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to overturn Judge Chutkan's stay, declaring that her last-minute intervention...should be the extreme exception, not the norm. Lees lawyers continued to argue that Lees execution could not be carried out because a stay remained in place (and legal experts have since questioned whether it was lawful for the prison to proceed). The federal Department of Justice argued that the execution could proceed, and filed a motion to formally lift the stay.

Ruth Friedman, defense attorney: For four hours, we were trying to get information and also tell the prison there was a stay in place. Were calling the prison. We did speak to Lee at one point. He was by himself in his cell, hed given his belongings away so he had no books or anything. We called later and they said we couldnt talk to him, and I think its because it was starting.

Tim Evans, reporter: At 2:18 I got the text: Please make your way back to the Media Center we will be resuming the execution at approximately 4 a.m. I slammed a Diet Coke and drove over. It was really dark and there was a lot of dew on the ground, and a lot of big spotlights on the building where we were headed. There were armed guards with bulletproof vests. Inside, there were several viewing rooms, each with its own door and a small bathroom. It was dead silent, which was eerie for a bunch of journalists. We waited in the room for so long I started counting the concrete blocks in the wall. There were two windows covered with a curtain. Everyone was afraid to get up to go to the bathroom because at any moment the curtain could go up.

Earlene Peterson, family member of victims: I was praying all night in my war room, where I have my Bible and computer.

Terre Haute prisoner: We just wanted to go to bed. We got sack lunches, cold breakfasts. The officers were getting really aggravated because it just dragged on and on, but eventually a secretary brought a small television, so we could watch the news and some movies: Remember the Titans, Bruce Almighty. People tried their best to stay awake, because we didnt have beds and there were cockroaches all over the floor.

Scott Taylor, spokesman, Bureau of Prisons: Mr. Lee was restrained for approximately 4 hours, during which he had access to his spiritual advisor and was able to have moments of prayer.

Ruth Friedman, defense attorney: I didnt know they had started the execution until the media reported he was dead.

Tim Evans, reporter: After a while, from inside the witnessing room, you could hear the birds making the sounds they make just before the sun comes up. I drew little pictures of the room. Finally we heard a knock on the door and found out there was another last-minute appeal. We learned it was around 6:40, meaning wed been in there more than two hours. Around 7:45, the curtain started to go up.

Lee was laying with his feet toward our windows, on what looks like an exam table, and there were little arm wings that folded out and his arms were strapped there, with four or five straps on each arm, and he had an IV in the crook of his left elbow and the back of his right hand.

He kind of raised up and gave us a what-for look. My perception of the look was: who are you and why are you here to watch me die? Thats probably me projecting. It was a hard stare.

Its kinda bizarre when I think back on it, but everybody got up to look like it was a zoo and all of us started scribbling notes.

Adam Pinsker, reporter, WTIU: There were several men with him, only one wearing protective gear. They were wearing nice suits, and one of them asked Lee if he wanted to make a last statement.

The Bureau of Prisons would not provide text of Lees final statement, though pieces of it appeared in media coverage.

A detailed, up-to-date schedule of upcoming executions in the United States

Daniel Lewis Lee, according to reporter Adam Pinskers notes: Im not perfect, but Im not a murderer. I was halfway across the country when this happened. I think you know what my first and last meals were. Youre killing an innocent man.

Although much of the evidence around Lees precise role was circumstantial, the trial judge cited later testimony that Kehoe said Lee participated in the deaths of the adult victims but not the 8-year-old.

Tim Evans, reporter: And then he leaned his head back down onto the gurney. The marshal picked up a phone, didnt dial. The drugs started, and he didnt seem to be suffering. At one point he pulled his head up a little. His hand twitched. A couple times his lips fluttered. After the last time I saw his chest rise, he laid still for several minutes. I stepped back and said a little prayer to watch over his soul and to give me courage and clarity; I needed to take my eyes off of it for a minute and this was a good excuse to do that.

Pinsker: I think he breathed like five times. The men with him didnt move. One of them looked straight ahead. I kept focusing on his right hand, because it was closest to me. It lost color, it was pale in the last minutes of the execution, as white as a sheet of paper. It did seem like a long twenty minutes.

Evans: A guy from the prison pronounced him dead and the curtain started dropping again. I left, got my phone, and dictated a few sentences to my editor to add to the story. Lee didnt apologize at all and I wonder if that made it easier for me to detach. If hed been apologetic, would that have still been the case? Also, it was like this weird theme park thing. You had to wait to get in. You had this deplorable villain and justice was served. After all this waiting, the ride was over real quick and then they shuffled you out and brought the next group in the next day. Ive slept pretty well the last couple nights, but last night I was wandering around the house and, wondering, if I looked out that window, would I see him looking back at me like he did?

Statement by Attorney General William P. Barr: Today, Lee finally faced the justice he deserved. The American people have made the considered choice to permit capital punishment for the most egregious federal crimes, and justice was done today in implementing the sentence for Lees horrific offenses.

Evans: As we were leaving, we asked how long had Lee been in there. Because we had been in there for four hours. And they said hed been brought in before us and hed been strapped to the table that whole time. Hed been in that room that long. Which that seems pretty rough.

Ruth Friedman, defense attorney: We were shocked that he was executed. Our team was very tired, very angry, and sad. This was a person to us. He was portrayed as a psychopath, but we know he is not. We knew his kindness, his humor, his pain. We were not able to present in court his history, his traumas as a child, and there are things we now want to honor about his privacy, even though hes gone. But its like any loss; at first its hard to believe the person is gone.

Earlene Peterson, family member of victims: I sobbed. Im a mother, I lost my grandbaby and my daughter, so I know how his mother felt.

Scott Mueller, family member who witnessed the execution: It didnt give me any more closure than I had. Ill have closure when I see my dad in heaven.

Bureau of Prisons staff member who declined to be identified: I cant really tell you anything. Its one of those things thats engrained. But the way that everything transpired with it taking so long, is 100 percent because of the attorneys filing the things that they were filing at the last minute. This is a process, a system, and because of politics it got bogged down for 17 years, but until those sentences get changed to something else, this is whats supposed to happen. Thats as apolitical an opinion as you can get.

Priscilla Hutton, spiritual minister to a man on death row: The death row officers don't change very much, so they get to know these people, and when I talk to them, they are very uncomfortable with carrying these executions out.

Terre Haute prisoner: The staff was pissed too. Afterwards, the administrator apologized to everyone for the fiasco. We didnt get back to our halls till after 8 a.m. Wed had no sleep or shower. It was absolutely a mess. Some of the prisoners were for the executions, some against. Im on the fence honestly. He killed a child, and I have children. But at the same time I do believe in God and its not my place to judge him. But most of us didnt care and just wanted the executions to be over; it was like we were being punished.

Earlene Peterson, family member of victims: They say theyre doing it for us but theyre liars, lying through their teeth. They treated us as if we didnt exist. Im disappointed the president didnt contact me, since I am a loyal voter for him. I feel that Trump has done a good job, and Im hoping and praying he didnt use this politically. I dont want to believe that. I really feel in my heart the government let me down.

See more here:

An Oral History of the First Federal Execution Under Donald Trump - The Marshall Project

Whats Going On With Ghislaine Maxwell and Donald Trump? – Vanity Fair

Earlier this month, Ghislaine Maxwells arrest in New Hampshire immediately prompted speculation about which other high-profile figures could be implicated in connection to Jeffrey Epsteins sexual abuse. The socialite and longtime Epstein associate has denied charges of trafficking minors and perjury, but a federal judge denied her bail last week and she continues to be held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. As with Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew, Donald Trumps relationship with Epstein and Maxwell has shown up in various reports and photographs over the years. But rather than attempt to distance himself from Maxwell during a coronavirus briefing on Tuesday, Trump offered a limp embrace.

I dont know, he shrugged, after a reporter asked whether he thought Maxwell would reveal which powerful men were involved in Epsteins trafficking ring. I havent really been following it too much. I just wish her well, frankly.

Ive met her numerous times over the years, especially since I lived in Palm Beach, and I guess they lived in Palm Beach, but I wish her well, he continued. Whatever it is.

Even the ultraconservative Trump ally Chip Roy, the Republican congressman from Texas, wrote on Twitter on Wednesday morning, This is unacceptably obtuse for a woman accused of the most morally depraved of crimes.

And while the remarks were a rich sound bite for those whove been tracing out Maxwell and Epsteins associations in all their still-emerging detail, they were also a reminder of their history with Trump thats already known. The Palm Beach milieu that Trump mentioned was the occasion for his early relationship with Epstein: as the New York Times pointed out, he told reporters at the White House last July that he knew Epstein like everybody in Palm Beach knew him. The paper reported last year that Trump and Epstein hosted a party at Mar-a-Lago in 1992 with a guest list comprising the two of them and 28 girls. The Florida businessman George Houraney told the Times that he organized the event and told Trump, Look, Donald, I know Jeff really well, I cant have him going after younger girls. Houraney said Trump dismissed the warning.

It wasnt the only such interaction between the two men, whod overlapped in social and business circles for years. Last year, MSNBCs Morning Joe aired newly found footage of Trump and Epstein laughing together while watching dozens of NFL cheerleaders dance at a Mar-a-Lago party in 1992.

Ive known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. Hes a lot of fun to be with, Trump told New York magazine in 2002. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about itJeffrey enjoys his social life.

Last year, though, after Epstein was arrested, Trump told reporters, I had a falling-out with him. I havent spoken to him in 15 years. I was not a fan of his, that I can tell you. The full nature and timing of any conflict still isnt clear, but Trump called Epsteins private Caribbean island an absolute cesspool in 2015 and told reporters to ask Andrew about it.

Photos of Trump with Epstein and Maxwell continue to circulate, especially in recent weeks since Maxwells arrest. Fox News cropped Trump out of one image of the three along with Melania following the arrest. Sure enough, Geraldo Rivera leapt to Trump and Maxwells defense on Wednesday morning:

After Trump pardoned Roger Stone earlier this month, there were also some murmurs that his statement of affection for Maxwell might be more than offhanded.

A Justice Department prosecutor told Politico, in the aftermath of the Stone pardon, it reeks of the president indicating to her that he might reward her if shell stay silent about whatever she knows about him.

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Whats Going On With Ghislaine Maxwell and Donald Trump? - Vanity Fair