Andy Schmookler: Troubled and troubling notions of ‘Liberty’ – Northern Virginia Daily

Patrick Henry famously presented Liberty and Death as alternatives. But lately in America weve seen a troubled and troubling notion of Liberty in which Liberty and Death come packaged together.

How many on the right, for example, would reject that famous idea, No one is free to falsely shout Fire! in a crowded theater?

A recent flagrant example of the problem involved armed men who, a little while back, posted themselves around the Michigan State Capitol to denounce the lockdown (which had been instituted to stop the spread of the pandemic) as an act of tyranny and an infringement of their rightful liberty.

The great Supreme Court justice who penned that famous line about shouting Fire! was saying that the right of free speech as essential as it is is not so absolute that it allows one to act with reckless disregard for the public safety. (Because a false cry of Fire! threatens to panic a crowd into a deadly stampede.)

Our Founders gave us rights. But they also wanted the nation they were founding to be able, when necessary, to implement coordinated strategies to protect the peoples collective well-being. (Which is why the draft, for example, has not been declared an unconstitutional infringement on individual liberty.)

Powers to implement quarantines have long been recognized, as a legitimate means to minimize the loss of life during a dangerous epidemic. These have been considered necessary infringements on our liberty.

(Accordingly, in response to this pandemic, virtually every free and enlightened nation on the planet instituted some such systematic limitations on peoples freedom to spread this deadly disease.)

Yet there is a strain of political thinking in America in which individual rights are consistently treated as absolute, even when the nations collective well-being is serious jeopardy.

For example, many in the same political subculture in which the necessary measures to control a deadly pandemic are denounced as tyrannical likewise argue that their right to bear arms is absolute that it cannot be restricted in any way to protect public safety.

They reject the idea that, just as the right of free speech does not extend to causing a deadly stampede, so the fact that our nation has a homicide rate 10 times that of other free nations indicates the need to find a better balance between individuals rights to bear arms and the right of the people as a whole to be protected against wanton gun violence.

From that same political subculture, we also get consistent opposition to instituting any coordinated measures to meet the challenge of the global climate crisis.

None of these challenges pandemic, rampant gun violence, climate disruption can be met by people acting individually. Each, rather, requires a coordinated, collective strategy.

Thats the context in which Ive pondered those heavily-armed men around the state capital in Michigan protesting against the measures required to minimize the damage to the American people inflicted by this pandemic.

I wonder: How do these people who discount so thoroughly the legitimate needs of the society as a whole see their relationship to society? Are they indifferent to ideal outcomes where our society

defeats the viral contagion that has invaded us, through all of us Americans acting as a team under good wartime leadership, to protect the vital interests of everyone;

successfully navigates the climate challenge to avoid harming our children and grandchildren and the future of humankind;

finds an optimal balance between the rights of individuals to have firearms and the need of the society to avoid that American slaughter from gun deaths thats put our nation off the charts among free societies?

Yet many of these same people are vociferous in declaring themselves patriots. Which leads me to wonder: In view of this political subcultures consistent discounting of the needs of the nation as a whole, what does their patriotism (e.g. that of people like those who accuse Michigans Democratic Governor of being a tyrant) consists of?

What Ive seen leads me to believe their patriotism is of the Were # 1 kind. Thats what weve seen about the patriotism of Make America Great Againthat its not about the greatness of an America that as the leader of the free world -- leads the community of nations into a better future for all, but about an aggressive assertion of our nation as a dominant and aggressive power.

Such a patriotic stance toward the wider world looks like a repetition of the same attitude that those liberty-loving people manifest as individuals toward their wider society, i.e. an aggressively defiant attitude that rejects whatever claim the surrounding world makes on them to help advance the greater good.

I wonder what is at the root of such an attitudeone that, in the name of Liberty, rejects the right of society to require anything of them, and that displays angry defiance toward the authority our founders established to enable the nation to take effective, coordinated action for the common good.

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Andy Schmookler: Troubled and troubling notions of 'Liberty' - Northern Virginia Daily

COVID-19 update: Online training and pledge required of all – The Ohio State University News

As part of the planned return to on-campus operations, The Ohio State University will require all students, faculty and staff to complete an online training course and the Together As Buckeyes Pledge.

Executive Vice President and Provost Bruce A. McPheron and Dr. Hal Paz, executive vice president and chancellor for health affairs and CEO of the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center, used their weekly message to the campus community to detail the new requirements.

McPheron and Paz delivered the joint message on July 24.

Dear Ohio State Community:

Good afternoon. This week, we are sharing with you several important updates. As we continue to plan for a return to on-campus operations in the autumn, Ohio State will require that all students, faculty and staff complete an online training course and the Together As Buckeyes Pledge. We are also sharing accountability measures for failure to take the training and sign the pledge, and for anyone who chooses not to abide by required health and safety guidelines.

These steps, shared at University Senate, are part of a larger picture of mandatory safe and healthy measures, including wearing a mask, practicing physical distancing and ensuring good hygiene. We want to be clear: Our return to on-campus operations in the autumn is fully dependent on each member of the university community following all requirements and guidance. If we fail to collectively maintain this culture of caring for ourselves and each other, we will not be able to be together on our campuses doing the things we love including teaching, learning, researching, playing sports and keeping active, and cheering on our student-athletes.

In the fight against the spread of COVID-19, we are Together As Buckeyes.

Online training course and Together as Buckeyes Pledge

All students, faculty and staff must complete an online training course and the Together As Buckeyes Pledge. The pledge acknowledges an understanding of and commitment to the behaviors described in the training. It is not a legal waiver.

The 10-minute training will be assigned in the coming weeks to BuckeyeLearn transcripts and the pledge will be signed upon completion of the course. We will alert the entire community when it is available. Accommodations will be made for those without access to a computer to complete the training.

Completing the training and signing the pledge are mandatory for all students, faculty and staff before returning to Ohio States campuses. Those who have already been working on a campus should take the online training and sign the pledge as soon as possible. For those not physically returning to a campus, the training and pledge need to be completed by the start of autumn semester on Aug. 25.

The training course will cover expectations for daily health checks, personal protection such as face masks, hygiene, staying informed and more.

Accountability measures

While we expect everyone to follow the guidance voluntarily, accountability measures will be in place for those who do not complete the training and sign the pledge, or choose not to abide by required health and safety guidelines. These accountability measures range from additional training and informal coaching to formal disciplinary action based on existing structures for students, faculty and staff. They are available on the Safe and Healthy Buckeyes website.

Please visit the website regularly for updates, including guidance related to our mask requirement for all students, faculty, staff, vendors, volunteers and visitors.

As a reminder, masks must be worn on Ohio States campuses when entering indoor or enclosed spaces. Masks also must be worn in outdoor spaces where individuals gather and cannot maintain physical distancing of at least 6 feet between each person. This is in alignment with state guidance for institutions of higher education and the recent mandate from the Ohio Governors Office.

Travel advisory

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine announced this week a new travel advisory, recommending that Ohioans self-quarantine for 14 days after returning from any state or territory with a COVID positivity rate greater than 15%. This list currently includes: Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, South Carolina and Texas.

The university is reviewing this new advisory, and we will keep you informed on how these changes may impact Ohio States travel guidelines. We are also extending the university state of emergency through Saturday, Aug. 1, which enables us to utilize Disaster Leave (Policy 6.28).

Thank you for your continued commitment to each other and our universitys mission. Next week, July 27-31, we celebrate Faculty and Staff Appreciation Week, recognizing the many ways that you work each day to advance Ohio States mission. For virtual events and discounts available throughout the week, visit the Human Resources website.

Additionally, you can show your appreciation for a colleague or colleagues with personalized messages and virtual cards available at the Kindness at Ohio State website.

We remain Together As Buckeyes.

Sincerely,

Bruce A. McPheron, PhD

Executive Vice President and Provost

Harold L. Paz, MD, MS

Executive Vice President and Chancellor for Health Affairs CEO, Wexner Medical Center

COVID-19 Resources

Wellness Resources

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COVID-19 update: Online training and pledge required of all - The Ohio State University News

MLB COVID-19 testing results: League announces small number of positives on 2020 Opening Day – CBS Sports

Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Players Association (MLBA) on Friday jointly announced the results of the latest round of coronavirus (COVID-19) testing prior to the start of Opening Day for the 2020 regular season. Of the 10,939 samples collected and tested in the past week, six have been new positives for COVID-19, which comes to a rate of 0.05 percent. Of the six positive tests, four were players and two were non-player personnel.

MLB and the MLBPA began intake screening testing at the beginning of July when teams began reporting for spring training 2.0, and will continue COVID-19 testing as part of the monitoring process. Since testing began, 32,640 samples were collected and tested, with 99 "new" positive tests, resulting in a 0.3 percent rate. Of those 99 positive tests, 84 were players while the remaining 15 were non-player personnel.

Baseball returned Thursday night as the Nationals hosted the Yankees and the Dodgers faced the Giants. The Nationals, however, opened their season without their brightest offensive star. Juan Soto received a positive COVID-19 test result on Thursday and was unable to pay in the opener. Soto, who played earlier in the week in an exhibition game, was asymptomatic and it's unclear how long he'll be sidelined.

There weresome issueswith teams getting results on time earlier in the testing process, and the coronavirusstill poses a serious threat to the 2020 season. But Friday's test results are a good sign of thehealth and safety protocols working, at least for now before teams begin traveling. Player safety and testing are among five big off-the-field questions facing the 60-game shortened season.

Given the potential short- and long-term health and safety risks being taken by those involved in a 2020 season, MLB and the MLBPAagreed on COVID-19 guidelineswhich include the allowance of high-risk players to opt out of the 2020 season while receiving full pay. High-risk would include people who have heart disease, lung disease, cancer, high blood pressure, or diabetes.So far, 14 total players have opted out.

Although coronavirus is considered a respiratory illness, the disease can impact a number of systems and organs. That includespossible effects on the heartandthe brain.More than 140,000 Americans have died this year from COVID-19.

Friday will serve as MLB's traditional Opening Day, with 14 games on a packed slate. You can follow the action here.

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MLB COVID-19 testing results: League announces small number of positives on 2020 Opening Day - CBS Sports

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-19-2020 – 5 PM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of 5:00 p.m., on July 19,2020, there have been 230,864 total confirmatory laboratory results receivedfor COVID-19, with 5,042 total cases and 100 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (25/0), Berkeley (548/19), Boone(61/0), Braxton (7/0), Brooke (38/1), Cabell (222/7), Calhoun (5/0), Clay(15/0), Fayette (101/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (78/0),Hampshire (50/0), Hancock (57/4), Hardy (48/1), Harrison (138/1), Jackson(149/0), Jefferson (268/5), Kanawha (520/12), Lewis (24/1), Lincoln (20/0),Logan (45/0), Marion (134/3), Marshall (82/1), Mason (27/0), McDowell (12/0),Mercer (72/0), Mineral (71/2), Mingo (53/2), Monongalia (733/15), Monroe(16/1), Morgan (20/1), Nicholas (20/1), Ohio (177/0), Pendleton (19/1),Pleasants (5/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (90/23), Putnam (111/1), Raleigh(92/3), Randolph (196/2), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (2/0), Taylor(29/1), Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (149/2), Webster(2/0), Wetzel (42/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (198/9), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at thelocal health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certaincounty may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individualin question may have crossed the state border to be tested.Such is the case of Preston and Wood counties in this report.

Pleasenote that delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from thelocal health department to DHHR.

Please visit thedashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

Link:

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-19-2020 - 5 PM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Texas Department of Transportation project updates for the week of July 27, 2020 – The Cherokeean Herald

TYLER TxDOT is planning to conduct the following construction and maintenance work in the district during the Week of July 27, 2020. Schedules are subject to change due to weather conditions, equipment failure, or other unforeseen issues. Slow down and pay attention when traveling through work zones.

Work continues on Loop 323 in Tyler from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m., Sunday through Thursday nights. Paving operations are being conducted on the south side from SH 155 moving east to US 69. Expect lane closures and delays as work is conducted. More project information is available in the Smith County section of this release. ----------------------------------------

District Seal Coat

Operations continue with work in Henderson County. Motorists should expect lane closures and delays during this work to seal and protect roadways from water, and provide a longer life cycle. Seal coat operations are planned for:

Henderson County

SH 31 from FM 773 in Murchison to FM 314 in Brownsboro

SH 31 from Loop 7 in Athens to Malakoff

SH 19 from North Loop 7 through Athens to FM 1516

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Anderson County Palestine Maintenance crews plan to perform mill and inlay operations on SH 155 between US 175 and FM 2267. Work will start in Frankston on the southbound outside lane moving south. Expect lane closures managed by traffic control devices. Flaggers will handle traffic on side roads.

Anderson County construction projects updates:

Safety Improvement Project (New Project)

Limits: US 287, etc., in Rusk, Anderson, Smith, and Henderson counties

Contractor: Stripe-A-Zone

Cost: $1.1 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Spring 2021

The contractor is scheduled to continue milling operations on FM 756 in Rusk County and FM 850 in Smith County. Motorists should use caution when traveling through the project and expect lane closures and delays. The contract includes upgrading centerline and edge line rumble strips, and pavement markings.

County Road Off-System Bridge Project

Limits: Various locations in Anderson County

Contractor: Stateline Construction, LLC

Cost: $1.5 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2021

The contractor continues to work on Salt Works Road, CR 370 bridges, and roadway elements. The road is closed to through traffic. The project includes the construction of bridges, storm sewers, guardrails, base, pavement surfaces, and pavement markings.

SH 155 Pavement Repair and Overlay Project

Limits: From 0.145 miles north of FM 315 south to 0.190 miles south of Loop 256

Contractor: Reynolds & Kay, LTD

Cost: $1.5 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2020

The contractor is scheduled to continue striping operations. Expect lane closures and delays. The contract consists of planing, pavement repair, surface asphalt, guard fence, and pavement markings.

US 79 Super 2 Project

Limits: From 0.5 miles northeast of Loop 256 to the Anderson/Cherokee County line

Contractor: Madden Contracting Company, LLC

Cost: $14.4 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2021

Work is ongoing on the shoulders and driveways, and to place drainage structures. The work zone speed limit is 60 mph. Expect lane closures and delays. The project is widening for a Super 2, including sub-grade work, surface treatment, base and surface hot-mix asphalt, widening structures, bridge rail, metal beam guard fence, signage, and permanent striping.

US 287 Super 2 Project

Limits: From just north of FM 2419 south to 1.7 miles north of SH 294 in Elkhart

Contractor: A.L. Helmcamp, Inc.

Cost: $6.1 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Fall 2020

The contractor is grading ditches and placing signs. Use caution and expect lane closures with delays possible. The work zone speed limit is 60 mph. The project includes base repairs, treated subgrade, surface asphalt, upgrading structures, signs, and pavement markings.

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Cherokee County Jacksonville Maintenance plans to perform edge repairs on FM 855 and FM 2138. The Rusk crew will conduct edge work on FM 2274 between SH 204 and US 79. Expect lane closures at both locations with traffic control managed by signage, flaggers, and a pilot vehicle.

Cherokee County construction projects updates:

FM 241 Safety Widening

Limits: From US 69 southeast to SH 21

Contractor: A. L. Helmcamp, Inc.

Cost: $5.5 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2021

The contractor is scheduled to install drainage improvements. The project is widening the existing roadway and incorporating safety upgrades.

County Road Bridge Replacement Project

Limits: CR 2905 at Bowles Crk.; CR 2614 at Beans Crk.; CR 1504 at Turnpike Crk.; CR 3202 at Mills Crk.

Contractor: Stateline Construction, LLC

Cost: $1.9 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Winter 2020

CR 3202 at Mills Creek is closed to through traffic with the contractor scheduled to continue bridge construction. CR 1504 at Turnpike Creek is closed to through traffic with bridge construction ongoing. No work is scheduled on CR 2905 at Bowles Creek or CR 2614 at Beans Creek both of which are open to traffic. The project is replacing the existing bridges at each location with new structures.

SH 204 Super-2 Widening Project

Limits: From US 79 in Jacksonville southeast to SH 110

Contractor: Madden Contracting Company, LLC

Cost: $13.7 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2021

The contractor is scheduled to continue the construction of the westbound passing lanes. Expect daily lane closures. The project is adding passing lanes and incorporates safety upgrades.

US 69 Sidewalks in Jacksonville

Limits: From Nacogdoches St. to Tena St. in Jacksonville

Contractor: Highway 19 Construction, LLC

Cost: $507,099.00

Anticipated Completion Date: Fall 2020

The contractor is scheduled to continue sidewalk and driveway construction. The southbound outside lane closes daily on this project to construct sidewalks along US 69 in Jacksonville.

US 79 Widening Project

Limits: From the Neches River to 1.2 miles northeast of FM 747

Contractor: Drewery Construction Company, Inc.

Cost: $8.2 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2020

The contractor is scheduled to perform striping and project cleanup. Expect delays! The work zone speed limit is 60 mph. The road is being widened to add passing lanes.

US 79 Rehabilitation Project

Limits: From 0.16 miles east of SH 110 to the Mud Creek Relief Bridge

Contractor: Madden Contracting Company, LLC

Cost: $8.2 million

Anticipated Completion Date: Fall 2020

The contractor is scheduled to perform pavement rehab on the south side of the roadway. Expect delays when construction is in progress. The work zone speed limit is 60 mph. The project is rebuilding the roadway pavement and upgrading bridge rails

FM 343 and FM 1861 Drainage Improvements

Limits: From US 69 to 2.7 miles E of US 69; FM 316 E to Henderson/Van Zandt Co. line

Contractor: Highway 19 Construction, LLC

Cost: $640,000.00

Anticipated Completion Date: Summer 2020

No work is scheduled for this project to upgrade safety features on driveways and cross-culverts.

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Gregg County Longview Maintenance crews plan to conduct ditch maintenance on FM 2275 in Warren City, east of Gladewater. Edge repairs are planned for FM 2011 from FM 2204 to SH 322. Expect lane closures at both locations with flaggers managing traffic control.

Gregg County construction projects updates:

Various Landscape Projects

Limits: Spur 502/Judson Rd and Loop 281; median of SH 149 and US 259/Eastman Rd

Contractor: Encino Landscape, Inc.

Cost: $298,628.00

Anticipated Completion Date: Late Summer 2020

Work continues in the right-of-way with little to no traffic impacts. The project consists of landscaping improvements at Spur 502 and Loop 281 and SH 149 at US 259. Work includes landscape beds, irrigation systems, and retaining walls.

FM 3272 Restoration Project

Limits: From US 80 to FM 2275 in White Oak

Contractor: Reynolds and Kay, LTD

Cost: $3.1 million

Anticipated Completion Date: September 2020

See original here:

Texas Department of Transportation project updates for the week of July 27, 2020 - The Cherokeean Herald

Fed Circ: 3rd Parties Not Responsible for Defective Motions to Seal – The National Law Review

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that a district court did not abuse its discretion in denying reconsideration of a previous order denying a litigants defective motion to seal with regard to the litigants own information, but vacated and remanded for further consideration with regard to third-party information.Uniloc 2017 LLC v. Apple, Inc., Case Nos. 19-1922, -1923, -1925, 1926 (Fed. Cir. July 9, 2020) (Mayer, J.).

Uniloc sued Apple for patent infringement in the Northern District of California. Apple moved to dismiss. The briefing on the motion included material that Uniloc had designated as highly confidential. Both parties filed motions to seal. Unilocs motions to seal covered quotations from published opinions and matters of public record, among other things. Unilocs supporting declarations included only boilerplate assertions of harm from disclosure. Non-party Electronic Frontier Foundation asked Uniloc to narrow its redactions, and when Uniloc declined, Electronic Frontier moved to intervene for the purpose of opposing Unilocs sealing motions. The district court denied the motions to seal as overbroad under the local rules, which require such motions to be narrowly tailored.

Uniloc sought an extension of time and ultimately filed a motion for leave to seek reconsideration. In that motion, it agreed to make public more than 90% of the material it had originally sought to seal. It also filed a new motion to seal the remainder. In support, it attached a much more specific declaration supporting sealing the more limited set of materials, as well as several declarations of third-party licensees, who stated that disclosure of their confidential information would be harmful to them. The court denied the motion seeking leave as not meeting the local rules requirements for reconsideration. The court also denied the narrower motion to seal, reasoning that Uniloc should have filed a proper motion to seal in the first instance. Uniloc appealed.

Uniloc argued that the district court had abused its discretion in denying the narrower motion to seal. In considering Unilocs argument, the Federal Circuit distinguished between Unilocs information and third-party information. Applying Ninth Circuit law, the Court held that the district court had not abused its discretion by strictly enforcing its local rules with regard to Unilocs information. Uniloc had violated the local rules in its motion to seal and subsequent motion for reconsideration. Moreover, the Court explained that notwithstanding the submission of a narrowly tailored motion, the burden is always on the moving party to provide compelling reasons for sealing, which Uniloc had failed to do.

Next, the Federal Circuit explained that third-party information calls for an analysis not dependent on the overbreadth rationale because third parties should not be harmed by a litigants failure to follow the local rules. Because the district courts analysis had been based on overbreadth, the Court found that the district court failed to make findings sufficient to allow us to adequately assess whether it properly balanced the publics right of access against the interests of the third parties in shielding their . . . information from public view. It thus remanded to the district court for further consideration of this issue.

Practice Note:Indicta, the Federal Circuit notified the bar that it considered overbroad motions to seal to be a problem in patent litigation, and characterized the district court as having sent a strong message that litigants should submit narrow, well-supported sealing requests in the first instance. Parties should narrowly tailor requests to seal and support such requests with declarations identifying specific harms stemming from the disclosure of the particular information sought to be sealed as well as the parties efforts to keep the information secret.

Link:

Fed Circ: 3rd Parties Not Responsible for Defective Motions to Seal - The National Law Review

Modi government shrunk eco-sensitive zones to make way for Oil Indias projects in Assam – Scroll.in

On May 27, an oil well in Assams Tinsukia district began to leak gas and condensate. The blowout eventually sparked a fire on June 9, killing two firemen, displacing over 10,000 local residents, devastating flora and fauna in the surrounding areas, and sparking unprecedented public anger against Oil India Limited, the central government-owned company which drills oil in Assam.

Facing a barrage of local protests, the company has announced plans to cap the well that is, seal and kill it off by this weekend.

But documents submitted to the Union environment ministry reveal that the company has massive expansion plans worth Rs 7,000 crore, which would involve drilling around 260 new wells, in Tinsukia district alone. In other words, the very area where the disaster occurred.

Two expansion projects have already been cleared by the Union environment ministry in April and May. The company is seeking clearances for the remaining projects.

Significantly, the Union environment ministry itself paved the way for these clearances when it asked the state government in 2017 to reconsider the proposed boundaries of the eco-sensitive zone around the Dibru Saikhowa National Park. The park is one of the two ecologically fragile areas flanking the Baghjan oil field where the explosion occurred.

Guidelines framed by the Union environment ministry in 2011 describe eco-sensitive zones as shock absorbers around national parks, wildlife sanctuaries and protected areas. Mining and polluting industries are prohibited within these buffer zones, which could extend up to 10 kilometres from the boundaries of national parks. State governments are supposed to delineate the boundaries of these zones, which are cleared and notified by the Centre.

On the suggestion of the Union environment ministry, Assam government amended its proposal, cutting down the eco-sensitive zone on the southern boundary of the Dibru Saikhowa National Park to zero kilometres. The zone was notified by the Centre in January.

This simple tweak has not only paved the way for the two new projects, it has also set a precedent for more expansion plans.

Questions emailed by Scroll.in to the Union environment ministry have not been answered. This story will be updated if the ministry responds.

The first draft notification for the Dibru Saikhowa National Parks eco-sensitive zone, published by the Union environment ministry on April 8, 2016, had proposed an eco-sensitive zone of 9.144 kilometres all along the boundary of the park. It noted that the park, spread over an uninhabited island of 340 sq km, was rich in biodiversity: 36 species of mammals, 106 species of fish, 104 species of butterflies. It was home to several endangered species, elephants and tigers moved through it.

The draft notification was submitted to the ministrys expert committee on eco-sensitive zones for consideration. In its 24th meeting, held on February 27-28, 2017, the committee noted the presence of oil drilling sites in the vicinity and sent back the proposal to the state government with instructions that it revisit the idea.

By the time the committee held its 37th meeting in September 2019, the state government had submitted a new proposal revising the extent of the eco-sensitive zone down to 658.25 square kilometres. In some parts of the boundary it would be 8.7 kilometres. In others, in deference to Oil Indias objections, it would be zero kilometres.

Since the oil drilling sites were already existing wherein extraction was an ongoing activity, State Govt considered the request of OIL and revised the extent, say the minutes of the 37th expert committee meeting, quoting MK Yadava, the Assam governments representative. Yadava is now Assams acting chief wildlife warden.

The state government cited ongoing exploration as the reason for tapering off the eco-sensitive zone. But, in effect, it paved the way for further expansion in what would have been eco-sensitive zones.

The final gazette notification for the parks eco-sensitive zone was published by the Union environment ministry on January 28, 2020. It said zero extents of the eco-sensitive zone were justified because of the existence of crude oil and natural gas in the immediate vicinity of the southern side of the national park boundary.

Criticising the decision, NK Vasu, former chief wildlife warden of Assam, said eco-sensitive zones should not be cut short merely because of oil exploration. Development activities cant be a concern of the ESZ, he said. The ESZ is designed keeping in mind the interests of the ecology of the area.

Four months after the eco-sensitive zone was whittled down, on April 9, the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change cleared Oil Indias Rs 1,067-crore proposal to drill 16 exploratory and development wells, set up four production installations and lay a pipeline under four existing petroleum mining leases: Mechaki, Mechaki extension, Baghjan and Tinsukia extension.

On May 11, Oil India received environmental clearance for hydrocarbon exploration in the Dibru-Saikhowa National Park using a new technology called extended reach drilling. The technique would allow Oil India to drill horizontally from outside the park to tap the hydrocarbon reserves within.

According to documents submitted by Oil India to the Union environment ministry, there would be seven wells using extended reach drilling under the 75 square kilometre Baghjan mining lease, approved in 2006.

These seven wells would be drilled in the three existing plinths, or platforms on which wells stand. That includes plinth for Baghjans well number 5, which burst into flames last month.

Before the January 2020 notification, neither of the new projects would have been possible. The new wells for the extended reach drilling project would be drilled 1.1 to 1.5 kilometres from the national park boundary. When Oil India applied for environmental clearance for the Mechaki Extension project , it noted the project site was 1.7 kilometres from the park.

The environmental clearance for the Mechaki extension project notes how 10 wells and three production facilities, which were earlier falling within 10-kilometre ESZ are now out as per the minutes of the 37th ESZ expert committee meeting.

Oil India had been waiting for the eco-sensitive zone to be narrowed. It gave an undertaking that it would not carry out drilling or construction activities for the Mechaki extension project till the final notification for the eco-sensitive zone was published.

A curtailed eco-sensitive zone helped Oil India bypass other clearances. For example, it needed a National Board of Wildlife clearance for the Mechaki Extension project since many of the drilling locations were within 10 kilometres of the Dibru Saikhowa National Park. In its Form 2 application for prior environmental clearance, the company said it would seek clearance from the National Board for Wildlife. With the new eco-sensitive zone boundaries, that is no longer needed.

It is not required since we are not drilling inside forest land or ESZ area, said Tridiv Hazarika, the spokesperson for Oil India.

Two other proposed projects could gain from the zero kilometre eco-sensitive zone around the Dibru-Saikhowa National Park.

There is the Rs 1,988.62 crore Khagarijan project, where Oil India has 44 development and 10 exploratory wells. In 2016, Oil India had also submitted a proposal for 179 wells, production locations and pipelines in the North Hapjan-Tinsukia-Dhola area in Tinsukia district, a Rs 3,500-crore project.

The 2016 proposal covers areas under five petroleum mining leases, including the Baghjan lease. Documents submitted to the environment ministry, reviewed by Scroll.in, mention that the Dibru Saikhowa National Park, the Padumoni Wildlife Sanctuary and the Borajan Wildlife Sanctuary all fall within 10 kilometres of the proposed project.

The documents also specify how the Bherjan Wildlife Sanctuary and the eco-sensitive zone of the Dibru Saikhowa National Park is located within the block area. A part of the Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary also falls in the southern part of the block, the document says.

As with the Dibru Saikhowa National Park, Oil India raised objections to the draft notification demarcating the eco-sensitive zone around the Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary. At the 37th meeting of the expert committee, Yadava had said that Oil Indias objections were being taken into account as there were drilling sites in the vicinity of the park.

Yadava told the committee that the eco-sensitive zone boundary would be modified in such a way that the extent is up to 1km beyond the southern boundary of PA [protected area] and there is a restriction of drilling activities within that 1 km. The eco-sensitive zone is yet to be notified.

The Dehing Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary is the last remaining patch of lowland rainforest in Assam. Over the past few months, the National Board for Wildlifes clearance to coal mining projects close to the sanctuary and revelations of illegal mining in the area have given rise to public anger in Assam. In June, after months of facing public wrath, the state government said it would push for the sanctuary to be upgraded to a national park.

Meanwhile, the Baghjan blowout has led to closer scrutiny of Oil Indias existing operations. Well number five in Baghjan was drilled in 2005. Hazarika said it received environmental clearance in 2011, along with other wells in the area.

We applied for the EC together since Baghjan 5 well was being drilled before the EIA notification of 2006, Hazarika explained. The Environmental Impact Assessment notification of 2006 set up a system of expert committees granting environmental clearances to industrial projects after scrutinising their environmental impact.

In 2011, Oil India got two environmental clearances from the Union environment ministry, one for the six exploratory wells in Mechaki area and one for 26 development wells and 15 exploratory wells in North Hapjan-Tinsukia-Dhola area. According to Oil India claims, the latter covered Baghjans well number five.

The environment clearance for the North Hapjan-Tinsukia-Dhola wells, granted in November 2011, states, No national park/wildlife sanctuary/eco-sensitive area are located within 10 km. Yet, according to the divisional forest officer, Baghjans well number five is just 900 metres from the core area of the Dibru Saikhowa National Park.

The Hindustan Times reported how the wells in the region, including well number five, were not assessed for their wildlife impact and no clearance from the National Board for Wildlife was obtained, even though they were close to the park.

Officials at the Union environment ministry did not respond when asked whether Baghjans well number five had received environmental and wildlife clearances.

Hazarika, however, denied that Oil India had bypassed clearances. We play by the rulebook, he said. We have never concealed anything and have abided by the law. We will only ask for an NBWL clearance when we need to go inside the forest or ESZ. We have never taken shortcuts.

The environmental clearances for Oil India, however, come without an important step in the process mandated by the Environment Impact Assessment notification of 2006: public hearings.

No public hearings were conducted before the environmental clearances were granted to Oil India projects in 2011, documents reviewed by Scroll.in show. The Mechaki Extension and the extended reach drilling projects have also been exempted from public hearings.

The expert appraisal committee, in a meeting that ended on January 1, 2020, acknowledged national importance of the [extended reach drilling] project. It also noted issues in conducting fresh public hearing due to prevailing law, order & local pressures and vulnerability, and granted the project an exemption.

Oil India had told the committee about the alleged problems it had faced in the conduct of public hearings and claimed it could lead to a long delay.

On March 12, about two weeks before the nationwide lockdown against the coronavirus, Oil India did organise a public hearing in Baghjan village. This was for its expansion projects, including North Hapjan-Tinsukia-Dhola, Khagorijan and the extensive reach drilling wells. Although the latter had been exempt, an Oil India official said they decided to include it since there had been confusion about the project earlier and a public hearing was being held anyway.

According to an official of the Assam Pollution Control Board who attended the meeting, the new projects elicited a mixed response. Some supported the projects while others mentioned their reservations, said the official, who did not wish to be named.

The Baghjan blowout may have soured the relationship with local residents even further. People who have lost their property are getting desperate for compensation, said Hemanta Moran, a local government teacher in Baghjan. As local protests continue, the district administration has been entrusted with assessing the compensation amount.

So far, Oil India has deposited Rs 9 crore with the deputy commissioner of Tinsukia for Rs 30,000 interim compensation to around 3,000 families who have been temporarily displaced. By July 27, deputy commissioner will complete the damage assessment and we will pay compensation as per that assessment, Hazarika said.

An official source said capping the well, compensation and the loss of production due to protests had cost the company an amount touching Rs 300 crore.

An Oil India executive speaking off the record admitted the company had lost local trust after the blowout. We have lost the faith of the people; it will take time to regain, he said, adding that rising anger could mean Oil India would have trouble implementing its expansion plans. The priority is to cap the well. We will get to know of the mood of the people after the well is capped and compensation issues are sorted out.

There is still time before the expansion plans are put into action the extended reach drilling project, for instance, still needs to get a forest clearance, which could prove difficult.

We will cross the bridge once we get there, said Hazarika.

Meanwhile, conservationists are up in arms. World Wildlife Fund India said the Baghjan blowout and fire proved, once again, the danger of having a zero-kilometre eco-sensitive zone around protected areas.

A 10 km ESZ should be maintained for all Protected Areas and oil and gas including other developmental activities that could cause potential ecological damage should not be permitted inside ESZs which are a crucial buffer for PAs, the World Wildlife Fund said in response to questions sent by Scroll.in.

The Wildlife Institute of India released a preliminary report in early June assessing the impact of the blowout on aquatic flora and fauna. It noted mass mortality and said the blowout had created environmental conditions that were debilitating to the survival of species.

The Dibru Saikhowa National Park and the nearby Maguri Motapung wetland are home to 40 species of mammals, 500 species of birds, 104 species of fish, 11 species of chelonians, 18 species of lizards, 23 species of snakes, 105 species of butterflies and 680 plant species.

The institute called for a thorough impact assessment before any new drilling takes place. It would be not only prudent but also essential for the wellbeing of all life forms that the approved new wells and further explorations in this area should be initiated only after a thorough investigation of potential impact, as well as evaluating disaster handling capabilities in place, with appropriate technology and trained manpower, the report said.

But who will bear the responsibility of ensuring that environmental norms are met?

Hazarika claimed that questions about zero-kilometre eco-sensitive zones had to be answered by government authorities as they were not determined by Oil India.

Yadava, who represented the Assam government at the eco-sensitive zone committee meeting, heads two state government committees investigating the Baghjan incident and its impact. According to him, the buck stopped with the Centre.

Asked if there was a rethink on how eco-sensitive zones should be designed post the Baghjan incident, he said: No, there is no such thing. We dont decide on the ESZ. It is done by a government of India committee.

Officials of the Union environment ministry, including a secretary and an additional secretary, did not respond to Scroll.ins email with queries about the zero-kilometre eco-sensitive zone of the Dibru Saikhowa National Park and whether there has been a rethink on how eco-sensitive zones are designed in the aftermath of the Baghjan blowout. Gaurav Khare, the spokesperson of the Union environment ministry, promised to get back by Monday evening. The story will be updated if the ministry responds.

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Modi government shrunk eco-sensitive zones to make way for Oil Indias projects in Assam - Scroll.in

Study finds Thames is home to some of the highest levels of microplastics of any river in the world – London News Online

Fall into the Thames these days and you are more likely to choke than drown.

Because the River Thames has some of the highest levels of microplastics of any river in the world, a new study reveals.

Scientists have recorded 94,000 microplastics a second flowing down the river beating the biggest European rivers, the Danube and Rhine, as well as the Chicago River in the US.

There is some doubt on whether Chinas Yangzte river is worse.

Tiny bits of plastic have been found inside the bodies of crabs which live in the Thames.

And flushed away wet wipes are clogging up the shoreline, forming wet wipe reefs, including on the South Bank near Hammersmith Bridge.

Researchers at Royal Holloway, University of London, are calling for stricter regulations on single-use plastics after finding the native shore crab and the Chinese mitten crab are ingesting microplastics.

And careless disposal of plastic gloves and masks during the coronavirus pandemic might make the problem worse, they warn.

Professor Dave Morritt, from Royal Holloway, said: The increased use of single-use plastic items, and the inappropriate disposal of such items, including masks and gloves, along with plastic-containing cleaning products, during the current Covid-19 pandemic, may well exacerbate this problem.

The Thames is cleaner than it used to be for some pollutants, such as trace metals, they say.

But glitter and microbeads from cosmetics, fibres from washing machine outflows and potentially from sewage outfalls were among the pollutants.

Most of the microplastics were from large bottles and food packaging.

Crabs contained tangled plastic in their stomachs, including fibres and microplastics from sanitary pads, balloons, elastic bands and carrier bags.

About 95 per cent of mitten crabs were found to have tangled plastic in their stomachs.

Clams near the wet wipe reefs contained synthetic polymers, possibly from the wet wipes and sanitary items.

Researcher Alex McGoran said: Tangles of plastic were particularly prevalent in the invasive Chinese mitten crab, and we still dont fully understand the reason for this.

The research was carried out by the Royal Holloway with Natural History Museum (NHM) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).

In total, 135 crabs were examined and 874 pieces and tangles of plastic, mainly in the form of fibres, were removed from their bodies.

Frequently these fibres form tangles of up to 100 pieces of plastic, filling the stomach of many crabs.

Anna Cucknell, ZSLs Thames Project Manager, said: Plastic pollution is devastating for aquatic ecosystems, and I was shocked by the densities we found.

Thanks to decades of conservation two species of seal and more than 100 species of fish including sharks, seahorses and the Critically Endangered European eel, call the Thames Estuary home.

We must not let plastic pollution threaten their survival.

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So if you have enjoyed reading this story, and if you can afford to do so, we would be so grateful if you can buy our newspaper or make a donation, which will allow us to continue to bring stories like this one to you both in print and online.

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Study finds Thames is home to some of the highest levels of microplastics of any river in the world - London News Online

What To Make Of The Mysterious Melania Trump – Worldcrunch

NEW YORK As I finished reading The Art of Her Deal, a biography on Melania Trump by Mary Jordan, it struck me that I could not remember anything relevant that the first lady has ever said that would be worth publishing. Nothing I have heard from Melania has ever been uplifting or even depressing. And in Jordan's book, there was nothing new in what Melania was saying, nothing inspiring, nothing we haven't heard before. It was as if Melania had kept repeating the same mantra again and again, like this phrase, largely used in Slovenian: "The sun always shines after the rain!"

In the book, Melania's expressions are packaged in small blurbs and read like haikus on survivalism that contain common-sense wisdom, rooted deeply in a rural mindset. Her words have an overtone of fatalism, restraining even the tiniest glimmer of hope. Most of the time, when she says something, it's just a dull expression of an obsolete weltanschauung.

Choosing words can be either an art or just the plain repetition of common sense expressions that we Slovenians inherited from our rural ancestors and the Habsburgs. Is it possible that Melania uses them to cover-up her misanthropic nature? She may also sound dull and reluctant for many reasons we do not know about: perhaps because of her looks, which to her mind might not be good enough for public appearance; or maybe she is simply not interested or is unsure about what to say. Maybe it's because a nondisclosure contract with her husband bans it. Or could she be putting the president of the United States on ice, ignoring him because he offended her? Perhaps she carries herself the way she does because her mother taught her how to survive in a world governed by men; how to defend herself and be desirable at the same time, a technique Melania applied to Donald Trump from their first encounter on.

Most of the time, when she says something, it's just a dull expression of an obsolete weltanschauung.

Melania lives in a cocoon, protected with layers of common sense wisdom she learned during her childhood. On rare occasions, when she steps out of her golden cage and opens her mouth, she reminds us of Chance the gardener (Peter Sellers) in Hal Ashby's 1979 cult movie Being There.

Chance lives in the townhouse of a wealthy old man in Washington D.C., tending to the garden. He never leaves the property. Other than gardening, he watches TV, his only contact with the outside world. When his benefactor dies, Chance finally leaves the house, wandering aimlessly. He passes a TV shop and sees himself captured by a camera in the store window. Entranced, he steps backward off the sidewalk and is struck by a chauffeured car, owned by mogul Ben Rand.

Rand's wife, Eve, who is in the car, brings Chance to their home to recover. Rand is a confidant and advisor to the president of the United States, whom he introduces to Chance. In a discussion about the economy, Chance takes his cue from the words "stimulate growth" and talks about the changing seasons of the garden. The president misinterprets this as optimistic political advice and quotes Chance in a speech. Chance now rises to national prominence, attends some important dinners, develops a close connection with the Soviet ambassador, and appears on a television talk show during which his detailed advice about what a serious gardener should do is misunderstood as his opinion on what his presidential policy would be.

The Trumps in November 2019 Photo: Andrea Hanks/White House

Being There is a comedy. It's a story about a misunderstanding between parallel worlds. As Chance, Melania is misread for what she really is. Or better, her parsimonious words are generic and open to loose interpretations, just like Chance's. "People do not know me," Melania says repeatedly, meaning, nobody understands her. She is right. One of the best insider moments that open a little crack into Melania's personal life is a quote about the spa Melania built in a section of the top floor of the Trump Tower penthouse in Manhattan. Melania described it in an interview for Allure magazine in 2008:

"I wanted some privacy and comfort when I needed to get a massage, manicure or pedicure, or have my hair or makeup done. It's 300 square feet, all white marble and silver fixtures with white towels and robes. Everything is from Italy and it's all very modern a very different look from the rest of the apartment which is more baroque."

Taking care of her body is essential central, the core business of Melania Trump. Her body is her most important asset, her looks are her passport. She spends most of her time in a spa or any place where she can recreate her image before she appears in public. She depicts her beauty parlor in aseptic, surgical terms, as space where she painstakingly works herself to perfection. When Melania was asked if Donald Trump ever joined her in the spa, Melania laughed. The spa is her sanctuary. Nobody could cross that threshold.

Of course, the interview with Allure is 12 years old, but according to a Vanity Fair report, Melania Trump's makeup artist of over a decade, Nicole Bryl, was responsible for setting up a designated room for hair, makeup and wardrobe in the White House. "Melania wants a room with the most perfect lighting scenario, which will make our jobs as a creative team that much more efficient since great lighting can make or break any look," she said. Bryl added that it takes "about one hour and 15 minutes of uninterrupted focus" to do the first lady's makeup.

Her looks are her passport.

But there is more. The fresh news comes from Jordan's book after she interviewed the housekeepers at the Bedminster Trump National Golf Club, one of the presidential couple's favorite places. "One of the worst jobs was cleaning up the residue from Melania's regular applications of tanning spray to make sure any traces were removed from all the white surfaces in the bathroom. The bronzer washed off in the shower, and Melania used it nearly every time she left the house," the housekeeper Victorina Morales said. Is this what Melania is all about? Devotion to her body? Solitude in her beauty?

As Mary Jordan observes, Melania's inner circle is small, her former staff sign non-disclosure agreements and old acquaintances in Europe are discouraged from speaking: "In three decades as a correspondent working all over the world, I have often written about the reluctant and the reclusive, including the head of a Mexican drug cartel and a Japanese princess, but nothing compared to trying to understand Melania," Jordan writes in the book.

In my own journalism career, I have always tried not to interview people like Trump and Berlusconi, as any dialog with them would be completely predictable and useless. Melania, I thought, was a different story. I wrote my first piece about her at the insistence of my friends and readers, who thought that I was in a unique position to do so. However, I soon understood the difficulty of the endeavor:

"A couple of years ago, as a Slovenian reporter, I started to follow Mrs. Trump's Twitter account, @MELANIATRUMP. I dropped the effort soon after because my former countrywoman did not show any signs of political life or any otherwise interesting activity. It was all about tacky mundanity interrupted by occasional close-up photos of a single rose. An attempt to demonstrate her artistic talent or just touting the fact that her Donald brought her a bouquet of roses? I did not pay attention to these details back then."

Writing about Melania can only be done by adding speculation and fiction.

I very quickly abandoned the effort to reach Melania for an interview. None of the contacts I had worked, all channels were blocked. There were people who in return for a payment were offering pieces of third-hand information on Melania. Disgusted, I refused all of them. Whichever way I turned, I bumped into a thick wall. I assume Jordan must have felt the same since she considered Melania to be a more reluctant and reclusive subject than the head of a Mexican drug cartel and a Japanese princess. My conclusion, more than four years ago, was that writing about Melania can only be done by adding speculation and fiction. I concluded my first piece on Melania Trump by writing:

To me, Melania is similar to a sleeper cell. She's not a terrorist of course, but she could be radicalized in the same way former Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi's wife, Veronica Lario, did. She was a B-list actress when Berlusconi approached her at a bus station in Milan. He went to see her in a theater. Veronica was nowhere to be seen for many years. She gave Berlusconi three children and lived in a "castle" as Melania does. Then Veronica met an intellectual a philosopher and former mayor of Venice, Massimo Cacciari and became radicalized. She'd had enough of her husband's nonsense. Illuminated by Cacciari, she didn't want her kids to be like their father. She filed for divorce and started the end of the Berlusconi era. All this after the whole country failed to get rid of him.

Unlike Veronica, Melania Trump has only one 10-year-old son with Donald Trump. She spends a lot of time with him and apparently talks to him in Slovenian. Is there the hope that Melania will do something similar to what Veronica did? And as a consequence deprive Trump of her support or stop him from being that violent, reckless person that he is? Or perhaps come out on the open and say something that will stop Mr. Donald Trump from running for president?

Lauren Collins of the New Yorker read correctly what I was trying to do:

"On the site Yonder News, the Slovenian-born journalist Andrej Mrevlje considered in what amounted to an inspired piece of non-fan fiction whether Melania could ever undergo a transformation similar to that of Veronica Lario, Silvio Berlusconi's ex-wife." In her great piece, Collins she too, was never able to interview Melania found a magnificent definition for the presidential couple: "For Trump, as it turns out, Melania is the perfect body on which to hang a brand."

Once I started to write about Melania, I received calls and emails from journalists who were trying to know more about her, checking in with me to see if Melania was a story worth writing. I told them about what I thought was the main difficulty, the challenge.

I thought that Melania could be a great character for a spy novel. An inspirational, beautiful woman planted as a spy in the White House by a group of former international diplomats with financial links to Silicon Valley. They are using the first lady to promote a new device that would enable corporations, with the help of the Chinese, to surveil the communications among "Five Eyes," intelligence agencies from the dilapidating Western world. The group organizes a cover-up operation, a horse parade on Pennsylvania Avenue. But the transport of 400 Lipizzaner horses gets hacked by Russians and becomes a cover-up for another big operation, in which the initial group of plotters plays the role of double agent for a Pan Slavic organization that smuggled trillions of dollars from Russia into Swiss banks.

In the novel, a famous young pop philosopher organizes lectures and workshops on film, Lacan, and Hegel in the Rose Garden of the White House. The presidential palace becomes an intellectual gathering spot, a booming cultural center like College de France in the age of Michel Foucault. But things get complicated when the beautiful female agent, the first lady, falls in love with the famous philosopher. The well-balanced spy business gets disrupted as the first lady starts to take over the White House, causing the president to have a massive heart attack when he realizes that his wife and philosopher speak the same language.

I thought that Melania could be a great character for a spy novel.

The Art of Her Deal, is, obviously, a completely different book. It has 280 pages of starkly different material, based on Jordan's 44 minutes of phone interviews with Melania in 2016. Nevertheless, the book has a fascinating opening. In the first chapters of the book, Melania Trump appears smart, balanced, and determined, with a strong agenda in mind. Melania is portrayed as the strategist who the 45th president of the United States depends on. She is the Melania who picked Pence as vice president, the wife who scolded her husband for being a wimp during the campaign, commanding him to go back to fight and win the election. Melania who stubbornly remained in New York for the first six months of Trump's presidency.

Refusing to go to the White House from day one, Melania must have remembered her mother's advice on how to use her charms (the words are mine). While she was away from the White House, she became aware, Jordan wrote, of the leverage she had when it came to her influence over her husband. Trump's team was pressing her to come to Washington and help stabilize the president. According to Jordan, Melania wanted to secure her son Barron's position with a new nuptial agreement, leveling his status to that of the other four Trump children. Melania won, earning a new nuptial agreement, writes Jordan. Her actions echo what Veronica Lario did to her husband, tycoon, and prime minister Silvio Berlusconi before she filed for divorce.

When I read the first part of the book, I thought it was promising. I loved the way Jordan demonstrates the rudeness of young Melania ascending the social ladder. She built good working relationships with the people who helped her modeling career. But as soon she managed to take it a step further, when she left Ljubljana for Milan, then went to Paris and eventually ended up in New York, she never looked back. She cut off all contacts and past relationships. There are plenty of interesting details in Jordan's book if you are interested in Melania's world. I for one did not know that Donald Trump suffers in small spaces and how obsessed he is about sleeping in his own bed. There is more.

But in my opinion, the interesting part of the book, unfortunately, dissolves into detailed reporting of Melania's modeling career. Jordan confirms many times that Melania is a so-called "commercial" model, good for catalogs and advertising, but nothing like a top, career model. But we kind of knew that. As I was reading the book I slowly lost interest and started to wonder who on earth would like to know the minutes of Melania's life with roommates, managers, rivals, in short, explaining all the petty networks that helped her to climb to Trump Tower.

It seems that Jordan got carried away by her journalistic ethics to report out facts. As the facts were scarce, she plunged into the microcosms of a person leading a totally uninteresting life. As a consequence, there are at least two Melanias in Jordan's book. Let's hope nobody tries will to write about a third one.

See more from World Affairs here

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What To Make Of The Mysterious Melania Trump - Worldcrunch

‘A stain on national life’: why are we locking up so many children? – The Guardian

Gethin Jones is a man of wisdom, insight and compassion. He has an insiders bitter understanding of life in care, youth justice, drug addiction and prison. In many ways, his story is one of all that is wrong with the criminal justice system when it turns its firepower on the young.

I spoke to Gethin late last year as I approached my 50th birthday. He and I are about the same age. In terms of our life journeys, that is where the similarities largely end. Now smartly dressed, balding, but looking every inch the successful professional that he is today, Gethins start in life could not have been more different.

His mother, a single parent to four children, had spent her childhood in care and had learning difficulties. With hindsight, Gethin understands that his mothers history and struggles made it impossible for her to relate to her children in an ideal and entirely nurturing way. Without a hint of blame, he observes that he simply did not have the sort of family relationships and support that a child needs to thrive. Gethin soon found himself ensnared in the criminal justice system.

His first conviction was at the age of 11, the result of what he describes as erratic behaviour. A predictable pattern ensued: a year later he was in the care system; by 13 he had been expelled from school; at 14 he was sent to youth custody for the first time, came out, went back in, and before he knew it his childhood was gone for ever. He had spent most of his teens behind the door. And then things really took a turn for the worse.

Gethin reached the age of 20 and had not once seen a child psychiatrist, psychologist or any other professional with the time and skills to find out what was going on and to help him find a different way to live. Having been told by everyone in authority, throughout his childhood and teenage years, that he was destined not only for failure but for prison and drug addiction, it was unsurprising that the predictions came true.

Gethin recalled one occasion when he was released from a young offender institution on a Friday, stole some cigarettes from the petrol station on the Saturday, was arrested and in a police station over the weekend, before being remanded back to custody by the magistrates court on the Monday morning. No matter the order made against him by the courts, Gethin would breach it and go back inside.

As soon as he graduated to adult prison, Gethin found heroin, having never taken it on the out. It became his driving force for the next decade, and he entirely gave up on any way of life beyond the drug, crime and prison. The most terrible irony of all is that his fierce intelligence was never extinguished. He knew exactly what he had become and why. Appearing before yet another court when he was 20, to receive yet another prison sentence, he told the judge: What you see before you is what you created.

The judge disagreed, dismissing all talk of rehabilitation, of giving Gethin a chance to pursue training and employment of some kind. You are a professional criminal, he pronounced. You will never be a bricklayer or a plumber. You will never be anything.

This was the verdict of the criminal justice system on Gethin Jones, a young man barely out of his teens. You can almost hear the cheers for the judges remarks from a certain brand of politician, from much of the media and, at election time, from plenty of voters.

Over the past 25 years, as a criminal defence lawyer, I have seen first-hand how criminal justice works, not just in Britain but around the world. And one of the most pointless and counteractive parts of the criminal justice system I have seen is the incarceration of children.

I am no apologist for violence and antisocial behaviour. My views on children in the criminal justice system, just as my views on the use of prison and the prohibition of drugs, do not arise from some sentimental, soft, liberal perspective. Quite the opposite I am interested only in the hard facts as to what does and does not work in reducing crime, improving lives and, first and foremost, preventing as many people as possible from becoming victims.

In 1970, a new era of getting tough on young offenders really began to gather momentum with the incoming Conservative government. The number of juveniles locked up each year increased by 500% between 1965 and 1980. Earlier faltering steps towards a welfare-based approach to youth justice had well and truly come to an end. Utterly contradictory policies towards young offenders prevailed in the 80s and 90s, veering between the exploration of non-custodial alternatives and increased sentence lengths, introduced by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of 1994.

Despite a reduction in the number of young prisoners in recent years, some innovations, such as mandatory detention for young offenders for certain weapons offences, have once again seen the return of the get tough approach. At no time in recent history have the conditions inside young offender institutions been more oppressive and violent than they are in 2020. Considered by many to be even more dangerous than adult prisons, establishments such as Feltham YOI, west of London, closely replicate the feral violence of custodial institutions in the Victorian age.

As one inmate put it after his release: Literally every day I was there, youd see a fight. It just happened all the time, literally all the time. Another young man who was sent to Isis YOI in south-east London spoke of the sort of violence that erupted there: Someone got stabbed in the neck in the shower. It was very gruesome and horrifying for me to see all the blood spurting out and someone on the floor nearly dying.

For one teenager, Zahid Mubarek, Feltham was to mark the end of his young life altogether. Zahid was serving his first and only custodial sentence, for stealing some razor blades (value 6) and vehicle interference. Towards the end of his sentence, Zahid was allocated a new cellmate. Robert Stewart was a psychopathic and violent racist, and had already been involved in killing another inmate before he was placed with Zahid, who spent the last days of his life in constant fear.

The prison officer who made the decision to place Stewart with Zahid apparently knew nothing of the previous murder. Nobody noticed that, slowly but surely, Stewart was dismantling a table in his cell. He eventually managed to separate one of the table legs and, in the early hours of the very day that Zahid was due to be released, battered him to the edge of death in his sleep. Zahids uncle, who saw him lying in a hospital bed, clinging to life, realised that there was no hope. His injuries were so horrendous, I knew he would not be able to survive them, he later recalled.

An inquiry into Zahids death heard that some of the officers at Feltham had engaged in a practice known as gladiator or colosseum, in which black or ethnic minority inmates were deliberately placed with known racists. It was said that bets were then placed on how soon violence would erupt in the cell.

So much for civilised 21st-century Britain. This is the society we have created and, just as with prison policy across the board and our approach to drugs, we have got it completely wrong. Not only are young offender institutions places of misery, violence and death (there is a suicide in a British young offender institution almost every month, and self-harm is at epidemic levels), but they also have precisely the opposite effect to that which is claimed by their advocates. YOIs, and in fact youth custody centres and juvenile facilities all over the world, are one of the most effective methods ever invented to increase rates of reoffending and worsen levels of crime by young people.

One former inmate, Jason, spoke of his stays in seven different institutions between the ages of 14 and 17. At first it was a bit of a shock to the system not having your family around, and then I got used to it, he said. Jasons time inside was not put to waste. How to weigh up drugs and sell them, how to make a profit on them, car theft. Ive learned how to fight in jail. Youve got to fight quick it can only last a couple of seconds before you get stopped, so youve got to fight better. You go for hurting as soon as possible fighting, kicking, biting, together.

Young offender institutions are not only universities of crime, but a form of medieval survivalism, played out in gyms, corridors, dining halls and, for some of the most tragic victims of all like Zahid in bed, fast asleep.

Recidivism the tendency to reoffend is a word that is largely confined to criminology lectures, official statistics and the occasional government report. It is not a headline-grabber like hooligan, thug or teen gangster. Few politicians get excited about statistics, still less about those that tend to undermine the prevailing public mood around election time.

Perhaps readers with an above-average interest in criminal justice policy may have read the word recidivism with a guilty lack of enthusiasm. You could be forgiven for doing so, when politician after politician advocates a crackdown on antisocial behaviour, gang violence, knives and even feral youth. In response, many elements of the news media duly oblige with copious acclamatory reports of such policies. Voters respond with approval in large numbers at the ballot box, in Britain and elsewhere, and parliament duly obliges by passing harsh sanctions for children and young people, whichever party is in power.

In the US, mandatory custodial sentences have long been a feature of the sentencing of children, even in some cases leading to the imprisonment of those under 18 for the rest of their natural lives. In England, we have been steadily moving in the same direction, as politicians respond slavishly and without reason to each round of media coverage of a youth crimewave. Escalating incidents of knife violence in recent years, specifically those involving young people, have led to the introduction of a mandatory custodial sentence for a first offence of threatening someone with a knife or a second offence of possessing one. The use of evidence, or of any form of analysis of what actually works to reduce youth crime, always gives way in the end to populism.

In 2019, the home secretary, Priti Patel, took the tough on crime rhetoric to a new level in British politics when she said that she wanted people, including young offenders, to literally feel terror at the thought of what would happen to them if they committed a crime. She has advocated increased use of custodial sentences, aggressive police action against young people on the streets in the form of greater use of stop and search, and a zero-tolerance approach to cannabis possession. Patels supporters could be heard cheering on this war on crime.

Throughout all of these waves of media and political tub-thumping about youth crime, and subsequent policies on child sentencing, one thing above all shines through: recidivism. Just as with the imprisonment of adults, the criminalisation and incarceration of young people simply does not work. I have lost count of the times I have patiently and calmly used unambiguous evidence to that effect, only to be met with a shrug of the shoulders and an admonition to think of the victim, protect the public or impose punishment.

Criminalising children causes more crime and more victims and locking children up even more so. Prison and drug reform are important to me, but a sea change in our handling of troubled children, in society as a whole, and not just in the criminal justice system, is the most important issue of all.

Despite all the media coverage around antisocial behaviour, knife crime and young people, we have actually seen a sharp decline in the overall number of recorded crimes committed by children. As with all recent crime figures, there has been a huge distortion in Britain as a result of dramatic reductions in police numbers and in the funding of the criminal justice system, including the courts, prosecutors and defence lawyers.

One explanation for falling crime rates in certain categories is undoubtedly that there are fewer police officers to make arrests, fewer prosecutors to bring charges and fewer courts to sentence offenders. But, on any view, the figures show that reduced use of custody does not mean big increases in crime by children quite the opposite.

The Prison Reform Trusts annual Bromley Briefing sets out in stark terms the countless dangerous, unfair and irrational outcomes of the child justice system. Despite a dramatic fall in the overall number of young people under 18 in custody (70% since 2009), the number of crimes committed by that age group has fallen even more (75%). This hardly suggests a link between increasing the incarceration of the young and the reduction of youth crime. Young inmates are many times more likely to have been in the care system than other children, which surely calls out for attention to what happens in care as a top policy priority, rather than simply locking up even more care-leavers.

Tragically, in what amounts to a stain on Britains national life, the proportion of young ethnic minority people in custody has increased in the past decade, along with assaults, use of physical restraint and self-harm incidents. In fact, the total number of violent incidents is higher than when there were three times the number of young inmates as there are today. We are brutalising children on a daily basis, all in the name of getting tough on crime. The media, politicians and the public are mostly looking the other way. Hundreds of the most damaged and vulnerable young people in our society face the daily risk of violence, self-harm and death, and we are all allowing this to happen.

But surely putting children through this dystopian nightmare must teach them a lesson, whatever the sentence? Dragged through the courts, given a dressing down by the judge, treated like what they are criminals? Who would want to go through that twice? Or more? The answer is, of course, that nearly all of them end up back in the system not twice, but countless times, and those who receive the toughest sentences do so the most.

Official figures show the shocking truth about the criminalisation of our children. More than 40% of young people subjected to the criminal justice process reoffend within 12 months. Imagine if a manufacturer were building cars that crashed at a rate of 40% a year, due to a design flaw. There would be an uproar. Vehicles would be subjected to factory recalls, safety certificates would be withdrawn and the offending business would be shut down by public demand. But the average young offender crashes not just once, but reoffends a staggering four times, after being sentenced by the criminal courts. With that shameful rate of failure, the youth justice system should be demolished altogether and rebuilt from the ground up.

The plain truth is that the tougher we get on young people, the more crimes they commit, the more victims we create, and the greater the total of human misery for our society.

Heroin took hold of Gethin, and was both available and, by the time he became hooked, acceptable as a form of escape in the prison environment. He explained how this had come about, after a history of disapproval of smackheads among the general prison population, for whom smoking cannabis had long been a more tolerated form of drug use. In the mid-90s, they introduced mandatory drug testing, and that led to an explosion in heroin use in prison, he explained. It only stays in your system for a couple of days, whereas weed is there for weeks. Yet another perverse manifestation of the law of unintended consequences in the criminal justice system a generation of heroin addicts, created directly by a testing policy that had been given no real thought before it was introduced.

Years passed, and Gethin got out and went back in much of his third decade of life was also spent inside. He noticed a change over the years. It used to be 80% career criminals, and 20% addicts and the mentally ill, he told me, Now its the other way around.

In his late 20s, believing that his life would never be more than a bag of gear, a prison cell and a council estate, Gethin was a cornered animal and [his] soul was dying. Miraculously, after receiving yet another prison sentence, this time of four years, he met people who, for the first time in his life, treated [him] with respect and care. Caring staff on the inside were followed by engagement with services, official and voluntary, after he was released from that sentence. Six long years later, Gethin had completed what he describes as his whole rehabilitation journey.

He was well on his way to the age of 40 by this stage childhood, youth and young adulthood were mostly behind him. There is only one feature of Gethins life that sets him apart from the majority of other children arrested, criminalised, brutalised and institutionalised by our criminal justice system: he managed, eventually, to escape. He now runs a successful business, Unlocking Potential, which draws upon his own experiences to provide training, mentoring and commercial services, aimed at inspiring others and supporting projects to engage with offenders of all ages in ways that might actually make a difference.

Gethin is in no doubt that what he said to the judge all those years ago was the truth. The criminal justice system that judge represents which operates on behalf of us all is what created Gethin the child, Gethin the young offender, Gethin the addict, Gethin the adult criminal. It is the same system that created all the young men I met at young offender institutions.

Gethin believes that a legal and safe supply of drugs, access to counselling, addiction services and appropriate forms of therapy would have a huge impact on young people in the criminal justice system particularly those who have passed through the care system and experienced trauma in their lives.

He spoke of a 14-year-old child criminal, recently named and shamed in the press for antisocial behaviour. The boy had become feral at the age of five after his mother died. His father had cancer. The boy was highly aggressive and had, unsurprisingly, entered the criminal justice system. Where were we when he was five? Gethin asked, rhetorically.

The only thing that mattered to Gethin was safety both for the child, and for the rest of us. He had no doubt that it was possible to offer security for the damaged children crossing the radar of the police, and that those leaving care in particular needed to receive huge financial investment, just to provide the basis of a stable adult life. The shameful truth is that we spend almost nothing on the sorts of services needed to support young people through the most troubled of times to pick them up when they fall, and to provide them with the basic ingredients to enter adulthood as fully functioning members of the community, rather than as pariahs, blighted for life by the label criminal.

We nevertheless pay hundreds of thousands of pounds to process many of these children through the criminal justice system, and to warehouse them for years and even more if they end up graduating to adult prisons, as most of them do. Indeed, we happily condemn damaged children at enormous expense to hellholes like Feltham, where they are more likely to be assaulted or killed than to find an escape from the revolving doors of courts, prisons and addiction.

This is an edited extract from Justice on Trial: Radical Solutions for a System at Breaking Point by Chris Daw, published by Bloomsbury and available at guardianbookshop.co.uk

Follow the Long Read on Twitter at @gdnlongread, and sign up to the long read weekly email here

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'A stain on national life': why are we locking up so many children? - The Guardian

‘The Office:’ How the Jim-and-Dwight Rivalry Impacted the Actors’ Offscreen Relationship – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Fans of The Office loved seeing John Krasinski, who played Jim Halpert, romance Dunder Mifflin receptionist Pam Beesly, portrayed by Jenna Fischer. While the couple brought in a big audience, another duo on the show was also a big draw.

The running rivalry between Jim and Dwight Schrute, played by Rainn Wilson, helped make The Office Must See TV. With the two characters playing complete opposites, Krasinski and Wilson perfected their on-air personas which also had an affect on how they interacted off camera.

When producers on The Office began casting calls, Krasinski was originally being invited to play Dwight. Immediately the actor knew it wouldnt be a good fit.

When they asked me to audition for this, they actually sent the sides for Dwight, and there was something very weird, Krasinski told NPR in 2016. There was something in me that just said if I go in, I want to go with my best foot forward. I dont feel like Im Dwight. I feel like Im more Jim.

Apparently Krasinskis choice didnt sit with producers who saw the 13 Hours star as the office nerd Dwight. At first they rescinded their offer but fortunately came around to give the actor a chance.

RELATED:The Office: John Krasinski Kept One Memento When He Thought The Show Was Going to be Cancelled and its Not the Teapot

My manager at the time called and said, you know, he doesnt want to go in for Dwight. He wants to go in for Jim, and they said, great, then he wont come in at all, Krasinski recalled. There was about three weeks there where I thought the role was gone, the opportunity was gone. And then they called and they said, OK, he can come in and read for Jim, which was pretty amazing.

Wilson created an iconic character in his portrayal of Dwight. Playing the offbeat salesman with a penchant for Battlestar Galactica, ping pong, survivalism, and karate, Wilson soon tired of being seen as only the odd beet farmer rather than a versatile actor.

I am not Dwight Schrute, okay? Wilson said in aCrooked Mediapodcast, according toEntertainment Weekly. I played a character for 200 episodes, and it was an awesome character, and he was a beet farmer. That doesnt mean you should hand me beets or make beet jokes every time I go into Starbucks and ask if they have like a beet latte or something like that.

Often approached by fans, The Office alum prefers not to be barraged with a plethora of Dwight-isms.

RELATED:John Krasinski May Have Given The Offices Jim and Pam a Shout Out in A Quiet Place

Dont hand me reams of paper, and dont say fact to me, and dont ask me which is bear is best, he requested. And thank you for watching the Emmy-winning showThe Office.

Though Jim was frequently seen playing tricks on Dwight while Dwight would respond by hurling insults at Jim, Krasinski revealed that their onscreen sparring gave them a sort of familial relationship.

Ithink the rivalry made us become kind of like brothers, Krasinski said in his NPR interview. Theres that rivalry between brothers, obviously. And its not necessarily competitive. Its just this free spirited thing. I think that we really did become a family on that show.

As brothers often have their share of roughhousing, the script sometimes required Jim and Dwight to tussle which often resulted in an injury for Krasinski.

RELATED: Why John Krasinski Had To Use His Jim-from-The-Office Power for This Film

Another thing that was funny about Rainn and my relationship was like a brother, one of the things that I got nervous about was play fighting with him because hes a very good actor, Krasinski explained. But I, for some reason, would always end up injured when we did any play fighting. So the producers picked up on this and said, you know, Rainn, really just be fake on this. You know, just try to preserve Johns health.

The Jim-and-Dwight rivalry remains one of the most beloved in television history.

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HUMAN GENETIC ENGINEERING OR HUMAN GENE EDITING CONCERNS …

This assignment looks at human genetic engineering or human gene editing concerns. Global warming isnt the only vexing issue; the world is wrestling. While delegates gathered in Paris to discuss climate change, the International Summit on Human Gene Editing convened in Washington. The Summit debated the alteration of human DNA and how far scientists should go when editing human DNA. The main focus was whether scientists should use powerful new genetic engineering techniques to edit genes. The editing of genes is either in human eggs, sperm, or embryos. The extremely controversial step raises a host of thorny safety and ethical issues. The introduction of new diseases into the human gene pool is among human genetic engineering or human gene editing concerns.

The CRISPR/Cas9 system is also among human genetic engineering or human gene editing concerns. The CRISPR/Cas9 system has been revolutionary in the world of genetic research. However, as genetic engineering moves into human applications, its time to ask how far human genetic engineering is going. The introduction of the CRISPR/Cas9 system in 2012 kicked-started the rapid development of gene-editing technology. The system was kick-started into the widely practiced technique that it is today. With use on the bacterial genome becoming old hat, researchers are turning to human use. Although becoming a reality, the alteration of human DNA remains something seemingly fictional.

future science and the alteration of human DNA

Human genetic engineering or human gene editing concerns continue to rise as research on the same continues. Genes influence health and disease, as well as human traits and behavior. Ongoing advances make it increasingly likely that scientists will someday incorporate the alteration of human DNA. The alteration will genetically engineer humans to possess certain desired traits. Of course, the possibility of human genetic engineering raises numerous ethical and legal questions. Although such questions rarely have clear answers, different scientists expertise informs us of peoples genomic ethical boundaries. There have been human gene editing concerns regarding whether there should be the performance of genetic testing for adult-onset conditions.

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Details Revealed on The Two "Trippier" Unproduced TERMINATOR: GENISYS Sequels – GeekTyrant

If Terminator: Genisys had been good and a big hit for the studio, we would have seen two sequels that would have closed out the story. Its a shame to see what happened with the Terminator franchise. The past few attempts just could reach the bar that was set with Terminator 2: Judgement Day. Maybe things would have been different if James Cameron was the guy actually directing and spearheading the films. But, he was busy with Avatar.

For those of you curious to know what we would have seen happen in the sequels had Terminator: Geniysis been a hit, co-writer Patrick Lussier recently explained the direction that the sequels would have gone. It would have focused on the time loop angle, and we would have seen more of Matt Smiths version of Skynet.

On a recent episode ofThe Production Meeting Podcast, Lussier said:

We wrote like two drafts of the next one, the direct sequel, and had an outline for the third one, what that would be, that answered all the questions that were presented inGenisysand brought it back around and closed it all off.

During the interview, he was asked if the sequel would have attempted to build their own identities instead of paying homage to the first two original movies in the franchise. In his response, Lussier said talked about Smiths character and said the films would have been trippier.

Yes. They were introducing new characters. They dealt more with how the future and where Skynet comes from and what that sort of time loop is. That Matt Smith character. It became much more of a focus, so they were probably a little trippier and stood away fromT2a little more. Started having their own identity. Theres sort of an interesting escaping the fatalistic part of itwho knows? Maybe one day theyll release it as a comic or something.

Theres no mention of John Connors role in the story, but actor Jason Clarkepreviously said the story would have focused on John Connor and what happened to him after he was taken by Skynet. It would have focused on a cyborg version of Connor:

What I remember was that second one was going to be about Johns journey after he was taken by Skynetlike going down to what he became; half machine, half man. Thats where the second one was going to start, and thats about all I knew.

It would have been interesting to see how this story would have played out fully. Who knows, though. Maybe one day we will get to see that story in comic book form. One thing is for sure, though I dont think well be seeing any more Terminator films in the foreseeable future.

Via: /Film

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Visit to the film set – Explica

Were going to make a Justice League movie, whether its now or in ten years, Gregory Noveck then senior vice president of creative affairs at DC Entertainment would tell Variety in 2008. But neither we nor Warner We are going to do it until we can do it well. It failed him for a year, but yes: Almost a decade after that first attempt (frustrated by the 2007 writers strike), we found ourselves in a van heading to Leavesden Studios to visit the set of League of Justice (like this, like Wonder Woman, officially without the article la). They are the first to see this, Patrick Tatopoulos, production designer for the fifth DC Extended Universe film, told us.. In fact, we have to ask them a lot of discretion because what is in this room would constitute a massive spoiler. In that room was all the aesthetics: drawings and conceptual art of different moments of the first joint adventure of Batman, Flash, Aquaman, Wonder Woman and Cyborg. Suspiciously missing from the Justice League set: Superman.

Concept art of the Flying Fox aircraft.

Superman is dead, what did you not see the last movie? Jason Momoa replied jokingly to a little boy who asked about the absence of the Man of Steel at Comic Con. And whoever is not aware, at the end of Batman vs. Superman, after he and the Batman were reconciled thanks to the now infamous name Martha, the Kryptonian lost his life defeating Doomsday.

The burden of keeping the world safe is on Bruce and Diana. They will have to gather the team and fight a great threat, Gal Gadot told us, in full Wonder Woman outfit, over tea at the catering table on the set of Justice League. Moments before we had followed the Amazon from her camper through a small piece of Themyscira, recreated for this installment. Although it is not known if it will be a flashback, the home of Wonder Woman as well as some of her compatriots will appear in the Justice League.

Zack Snyder and Gal Gadot, behind the scenes.

At the time they couldnt tell us who or what that threat was about, big enough to make Batman and Wonder Woman look for reinforcements, but today we know that the Big Bad (to use a favorite term from Joss Whedon, who was recruited to supplement the script and eventually direct) is Steppenwolf, a new god who survived a Doomsday attack in the comics and who will be here after the three Mother Boxes. These, which are artifacts with almost unlimited powers, are protected one in Themyscira, another in Atlantis and the third on Earth. Each one has the look of the place where it is, Tatopoulos told us.

The malevolent presence is the perfect pretext to call new heroes. In the last tape we had small glimpses of some members of the team, Zack Snyder told us. But now well see them all in action together and how they interact with us.

It is this part, the interaction of the five characters, which turned out to be one of the greatest challenges, since not only are they heroes with very different characteristics, but nobody knows anything about this version of several of them. Taking care of each one in detail was of crucial importance, since they should not only create the dynamics between them, but also introduce ourselves to more than 50% of the team. One of the things I focused the most on, in character terms, was showing that Aquaman can do more than talk to the fish, Jason Momoa told us on the set of Justice League.

This differentiation of each was very important for the production design, because, according to Tatopoulos, we have never had so much variety: there are things underwater, on horses, in Barrys Speed Force . In addition, each of the suits has technical specifications that tie them to the plot. The Flash costume has about 120 pieces that we 3D printed. It looks like a prototype, because it does not take long to use itMichael Wilkinson (costume designer nominated for an Oscar in 2013 for American Scandal) told us, who revealed that the Superman suit will have a more metallic look, more like the Man of Steel, he said.

The scene we witnessed gave us a glimpse of the different personalities. The heroes go down an elevator to the batcave for the first time: Batman, the leader, shows them the way; Wonder Woman follows, self-assured; Cyborg descends silently, inspecting; Aquaman has a slight air of arrogance, and Flash is amazed, like a kid in a toy store. Its exciting! We are creating a visual vocabulary of how Flash moves and what it can do. He has no experience like the others, so we can invent more, confessed on the set of Justice League Ezra Miller, smiling and charismatic: just as we can see his character on screen. This is an important separation from the grim tone of both The Man of Steel and Batman vs. Superman. We had already seen a small attempt to lighten the tone of the DCEU in the highly criticized Suicide Squad, but it was not until Wonder Woman by far the entry with better acceptance among the public and critics in this new stage of DC that the universe really woke up.

Suicide Squad did very well commercially, executive producer Jon Berg told us. But narratively it didnt work. We had a great cast and characterizations, but the story fell out of the storyline. We could do better. Batman vs. Superman has a very dark tone. People did not respond to that. The success of the much more optimistic Wonder Woman, together with the reshoots that Joss Whedon made Zack Snyder left the post-production in the hands of Whedon after the death of his daughter could signal a change in plans for Justice League.

However, the success of Diana Prince did not alter the plot of the Justice League, as confirmed by Geoff Johns, a producer whose name is synonymous with comics. He wrote, among others, the classic Flashpoint the name of the Flash film directed by Andy Muschietti -, a story in which the hero travels to an alternate universe where there is no Justice League and where Batman is Thomas Wayne , Bruces dad, avenging the death of his son. You have to remember that this movie [Liga de la Justicia] We did it long before Wonder Woman was released. She is like that, optimistic and hopeful. There is nothing to do differently, the characters are who they are. The reshoots on the set of Justice League lasted only a couple of weeks Henry Cavill was in the middle of filming Mission Impossible 6, so he arrived on set with a mustache that was removed with digital effects and, according to the reports were used just to inject him with a little humor, not to change the plot. Even so, it is clear that already from the trailers there is a lighter tone in terms of the script, and a brighter image in marketing than in previous films. In general, the DC universe is a hopeful and optimistic place. He is known for characters who are inspirational and aspirational, says Johns.

And yes, the future of the DCEU itself looks hopeful and optimistic. With a long way to go and stories to tell, its fair to say that DC has the two things that are most needed to deliver products that satisfy fans: patience and a willingness to learn from their mistakes. Even if it takes ten years.

A version of this article was first published in the print edition of Cinema PREMIERE in November 2019.

J. Ivan Morales Writer, film director and editorial director at this, his friendly neighboring cinema publication, Cine PREMIERE. You will never lose hope for a second season of Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip and Firefly.

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Visit to the film set - Explica

Elon Musk Is Working On A Chip That Will Let You Stream Music Directly Into Your Brain – BroBible

The last time we checked in on Elon Musks Neuralink company, the wealthy entrepreneur was talking about having cyborgs living side-by-side with humans in the near future.

Back then, Musk was of the belief that by the year 2035 we will probably start seeing more truly cyborg activity.

This despite the fact that Musk is also the same person once called the commercialization of artificial intelligence our biggest existential threat.

He wasnt joking about cyborgs either as Neuralink has already created technology that allows monkeys to control computers with their minds. (And, in turn, assisting yet another threat to life as we know it.)

Fast forward to this week and Musk is back at it again, only this time he was telling computer scientist Austin Howard that his Neuralink company is developing on a chip that can be implanted into humans which will allow people to stream music directly to their brains.

Hopefully, that doesnt mean wed all be forced to listen to Dont Doubt Ur Vibe on a loop once our chips are implanted.

According to people who know way more about this kind of stuff than me, like Victor Tangermann at Futurism.com

We still know very little about what Neuralink has been working on. Our best look so far came during a 2019 presentation in which the company showed off a device that hooks up to the brain via holes in the skull cut by lasers.

Early iterations of such a device are largely aimed at repairing broken neural connections in those who suffer brain disorders including Parkinsons, Musk said during a recent podcast appearance.

Its still entirely unclear if Neuralinks brain-computer interfaces will ever be able to bypass the ear, the cochlear nerves, and beam music magically to the auditory brain.

Perhaps (definitely) more importantly than being able to stream music directly to ones brain, Musk, in related Twitter conversations, said Neuralinks chip could also help stimulate the release of oxytocin, serotonin, and other chemicals when needed as well as assist in other important medical issues related to the brain.

Now those are things to actually get excited about.

Heres how it could all work

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Elon Musk Is Working On A Chip That Will Let You Stream Music Directly Into Your Brain - BroBible

‘A recovery that puts people first’: A group of young Australians is demanding a government job guarantee to fight both soaring unemployment and…

While the coronavirus itself might be indiscriminate, its economic impact has certainly hit young people the hardest.

Youth unemployment has risen to 16.4%, more than double the headline rate, with government forecasts pointing to more pain ahead.

As Treasury presented its budget update inside Parliament House on Thursday, young Australians marched outside to demand genuine reform.

Young people all over the country are being left behind. We need an approach to recovering from this crisis that puts people first and creates good jobs and a society that works for all of us, protest organiser Bella Himmelreich said.

The demonstration is part of the Tomorrow Movement, a relatively new national grassroots group led by volunteers rallying for major economic and climate reforms.

With Australia headed for its first recession in three decades, they are urging policymakers to look for new economic solutions rather than returning to policies that the group say have failed time and time again.

Young people were already suffering before the coronavirus crisis [with] high unemployment, unaffordable housing and a climate crisis. We refuse to go back to a world that didnt work for all of us, Himmelreich said. Thats why well keep fighting for a recovery that puts people first.

To put the country back to work and kickstart a genuine recovery, the group proposes policymakers adopt whats known as a job guarantee. It would essentially see the government unconditionally hire all Australians who are looking for work in full-time minimum wage positions.

If we want to get people back into jobs, theres no shortage of meaningful work to be done in public housing, public health, aged care, climate, the arts and so many other areas, communications lead James Clark told Business Insider Australia. Why not put the country to work to meet the shortages we know we have?

We have to rebuild the economy but theres no point rebuilding it the way it was before because it simply wasnt working for most people, and it was especially failing the young, he said.

The idea, while extreme for a Coalition government, has been endorsed by union groups including the United Workers Union as well as GetUp.

These arent radical ideas. In a country as wealthy as Australia, theyre common sense and basic decency, GetUp organisers said, outlining the policy as part of their proposed economic blueprint.

While the policy has been floating around for some time, progressive campaigners see the current coronavirus crisis as the perfect opportunity to be bold. Take Spain, which this month embarked on the worlds largest experiment with a universal basic income for 850,000 of its citizens. Even Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), the idea that governments like Australia can essentially print money without restraint, has become a mainstay of the news cycle.

However, while there might be growing public appetite for progressive solutions, the Morrison government is going in the other direction. It revealed it will take a knife to wage subsidies and welfare in September, a move Himmelreich and others naturally oppose.

Pushing people into poverty doesnt create jobs, it just makes it harder for hundreds of thousands of people to survive. The government must keep the rate of all social security payments above the poverty line, Himmelreich said.

The government will cut $300 from the fortnightly payment in September, with most of the 1.6 million recipients to be reduced to $815. Modelling from the Australia Institute shows the move will push 375,000 Australians, including 80,000 children, below the poverty line.

With the current coronavirus supplement due to end entirely in December, unemployed Australians will then have to make do with just $282 a week.

The Morrison government justifies the cuts on the premise that heightened welfare discourages Australians from finding work. From August, recipients will again be required to meet mutual obligations, requiring them to apply for a determined number of positions in order to qualify for payments.

However, with hundreds of thousands more Australians expected to lose their jobs over the next six months, the activists at the Tomorrow Movement arent buying it.

Young people are looking around and they know there are no jobs. Now theyre being told they need to go and apply for jobs that dont exist, Clark said. If youre in Melbourne and all of your experience is in hospitality or retail, how on earth are you meant to find a job at the moment?

Part of registered charity Young Campaigns, the Tomorrow Movement is planning a series of protests against the cuts. Itll see young people take action on 18 September to warn theres no turning back.

The group is rallying for something akin to Americas Green New Deal, promoting the idea that twin economic and climate crises can be addressed collectively, through targeted public spending and the rapid growth of sustainable industries. Its this idea that forms the very core of the movement.

A lot of young people dont really see much point in getting through the pandemic only for climate change to ruin their lives in 20 years anyway, Clark said.

Our mission is to help them find their voices and mobilise to fight for the future.

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Analysis: Behind the legal maneuvering in the Reclaim Idaho initiative – Idaho EdNews

In the long list of unexpected news stories from 2020, theres this: A fight over funding Idaho public schools has reached the U.S. Supreme Court.

But lets take a break from writing about the legal maneuvers in the Reclaim Idaho K-12 voter initiative lawsuit.

Its big picture time. It comes down to two fundamental questions: How much should Idaho spend on public schools, and who ought to dig into their pockets to pay? This is a fight we all could have seen coming. Because its a fight weve been having for years.

The Reclaim Idaho Invest in Idaho initiative is, in essence, a reassignment of the education investment. If Reclaim Idaho succeeds in getting the initiative on the November ballot, if it passes, and if the 2021 Legislature enacts it more or less intact three separate and big ifs the K-12 funding picture changes significantly.

Corporations and wealthy Idahoans would pay directly into a fund for K-12, to the tune of $170 million to $200 million annually. The higher income taxes would affect only Idahoans making more than $250,000 or couples making more than $500,000 so Reclaim Idaho argues that it is proposing a tax increase for just 5 percent of the population.

The income taxes are somewhat but not exactly aligned with Idahos ever-growing supplemental property tax levy bill. Idahoans have a proven history of voting for taxes for schools, and the supplemental levies prove it. In 2019-20, Idahoans paid $214 million in voter-passed supplemental levies, nearly twice as much as they paid a decade ago.

So, will the new income taxes replace these property taxes, reducing the reliance on a tax Idahoans have long reviled? Not necessarily.

Its possible that property taxes will go down in some districts and that some districts may decide not to run supplemental levies, Reclaim Idaho says on its own website. However, there is no guarantee. Districts may decide to continue to raise local levy dollars in order to supplement new state dollars.

Of course, theres no way to guarantee what will happen with supplementals, which are on the books in 92 of Idahos 115 school districts. Theres no guarantee that the long list of possible uses for the new income taxes everything from teacher salaries and full-day kindergarten to special education services and art, music and drama programs would line up with what districts say they need, and what local voters are willing to finance.

And, of course, Reclaim Idaho cannot (and does not) promote its initiative as both a tax shift and a K-12 funding boost. In its Supreme Court filing Tuesday, Reclaim Idaho cited a recent National Education Association report that found Idaho dead last in the nation in per-pupil funding. As Reclaim Idaho Bonner County volunteer leader Linda Larson said in a June 6 court statement, My team of volunteers understood that the current level of funding for education in Idaho is a crisis.

And that message was resonating, Reclaim Idaho leaders say.

Before mid-March, and before the group suspended face-to-face petitioning, Reclaim Idaho said it was tapping into a growing cadre of volunteers. The group started in October with 143 volunteers. By March 10, the number had swelled to 546 volunteers, field director Ashley Prince said in a June 5 court statement.

From the middle of February to March 12, Reclaim Idahos signature count doubled from 15,000 to more than 30,000, co-founder Luke Mayville said in a June 5 court filing. That left the group more than halfway toward its goal, with an April 30 deadline. As Reclaim Idaho describes it, the only thing that halted the initiative was a global pandemic, which put an end to the signature drive and started a legal battle that has unfolded across three levels of the federal judiciary.

Maybe, indeed, momentum was on Reclaim Idahos side. The states lawyers have spent some of their time castigating Reclaim Idaho saying the groups own procrastination led to the initiatives demise. But Reclaim Idaho has already shown it knows how to get an initiative on the ballot, as it did with its successful 2018 Medicaid expansion drive. If group leaders say they were right on schedule, whos to say theyre wrong?

And maybe, once again, Reclaim Idaho had managed to tap into a reservoir of public frustration. After seven years of waiting for the Legislature to move on Medicaid expansion, Idaho voters were more than ready to do it themselves. Are voters just as frustrated about how much Idaho pays for schools and who pays the taxes that support K-12?

The Reclaim Idaho initiative challenges some very basic notions the Legislature holds about school funding and tax policy. While the Legislature has steadily increased K-12 funding in recent years, lawmakers have turned a blind eye to the increasing reliance on supplemental levies. And many lawmakers including House Majority Leader Mike Moyle, perhaps the Legislatures most powerful voice on tax policy contendthat the states corporate and personal income tax rates should be lower, not higher.

Right now, the state and Reclaim Idaho are arguing about the mechanics of online signature gathering, and the First Amendment implications of suspending an initiative during a public health crisis.

But lets not lose sight of the big-picture issue. The Reclaim Idaho initiative wont settle the debate over how we pay for schools. But it could put the question into sharper focus.

Each week, Kevin Richert writes an analysis on education policy and education politics. Look for it every Thursday.

Senior reporter and blogger Kevin Richert specializes in education politics and education policy. He has more than 30 years of experience in Idaho journalism. He is a frequent guest on KIVI 6 On Your Side; "Idaho Reports" on Idaho Public Television; and "Idaho Matters" on Boise State Public Radio. Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KevinRichert. He can be reached at [emailprotected]

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Analysis: Behind the legal maneuvering in the Reclaim Idaho initiative - Idaho EdNews

Pros and Cons of Cryptocurrencies: Ripple and Bitcoin – Global Trade Magazine

Lots of people have run down bitcoin, and many have claimed that cryptocurrency has had its day, but bitcoin is still here, and so are many types of cryptocurrency. Perhaps Ripple hasnt set the world on fire, but then maybe that is the way it is supposed to be. Perhaps cryptocurrencies like Ripple are supposed to start at the very bottom and then work their way up over decades. Bitcoin had to struggle from the bottom, and it is now the most respected and most valuable cryptocurrency in the world. Here are the pros and cons of bitcoin and Ripple.

There are plenty of upsides to bitcoin, and it is especially pleasing to see that bitcoin is still riding high when so many online gurus claimed that it would be made extinct by Ethereum.

BTC is Popular and Understood

The thing about bitcoin is that it is now very popular and people understand how it works. This is contrary to most other Cryptocurrencies where people need to be taught what they are, what they do, and why they are special.

Bitcoin is Trusted

The whole notion of cryptocurrency may still be daunting to some people, but the name bitcoin is the most trusted in the entire cryptocurrency market. Even other well-known Cryptocurrencies are not as well-liked or trusted.

BTC is Fairly Stable

We have all see the big rises and big dips, but bitcoin has staying power and seems to have a natural price and value growth. It may well end up becoming a widely accepted currency in the future.

Five years ago, one could have said there were many downsides to bitcoin, but these days with the acceptance of cryptocurrency as a form of payment and money transfer, there are only really two downsides to bitcoin.

Quantum Computing Would End all Cryptocurrency

If a technology company were to invent quantum computing, then bitcoin mining could be done at very fast speeds, which would make bitcoin and all cryptocurrency useless. However, Quantum computing is a long way off yet, especially when you consider that we have only just discovered the 3D chip.

Bitcoin is Expensive

Although the cost of bitcoin is an issue, it is not really a problem. You can buy a portion of a bitcoin and use it to transfer money and buy things. Nevertheless, as an investor looking to make a profit, the cost is a problem for small investors.

The price of ripple has seen massive surges and massive drops, yet there is still a fair amount of trading going on, so do not rule out Ripple just yet.

XPR is Affordable

The cost of Ripple is tiny, especially when compared and other Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and Ethereum.

It Solves the Cross-Border Problem

Just like bitcoin, you can use Ripple to quickly transfer money overseas and back again, and it will not cost you a fortune to do so.

Very Fast Settlements

The pre-mined nature of XRP goes a long way to helping ensure that transactions are settled quickly. They can run at 1000 settled transactions per second, which is a brilliant speed.

XRP has its downsides too. The mainstream appeal of Ripple is a big selling point, but will these downsides convince you to invest in another coin?

It is More of an Investors Coin

This is the sort of coin you may invest in if you want to make money in the short and long term, which may eventually be its downfall because investments come and go.

Its Rival SWIFT is the Worlds Largest RPS Network

The problem with investment coins is that their real-world use is often limited. Where SWIFT and OMG are used daily for currency moving transactions by payment processors, XRP is less utilized in the real world.

The Founders Own Too Much of the Coin

Ripple is pre-mined, which is why and how the owners are able to own over one-third of the entire stock of Ripple. This runs contrary to a decentralized theme, especially since the owners could sell off their share at any time and irreparably destroy the value of the coin.

___________________________________________________________________

James Miller is a career expert from Medellin. He is passionate about career success stories, surfing, and photography. Also, James writes to his own blog SimplicityResume about career success and about job industry insights.

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Pros and Cons of Cryptocurrencies: Ripple and Bitcoin - Global Trade Magazine

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are about to go mainstream Jim Duffy – The Scotsman

NewsOpinionColumnistsUsually the preserve of nerds and geeks, cryptocurrencies are now attracting interest from governments and major corporations, writes Jim Duffy

Thursday, 23rd July 2020, 4:45 pm

Studying sociology was a complete and utter waste of time, according my old shift sergeant in the polis. He was real stickler for tradition and crossing Ts and dotting Is. He wasnt a fan of those cops who entered the service with degrees and wanted to get into cushy department jobs as quickly as possible to get off shiftwork and off the street.

And of course, I was doing a second degree in thats right sociology. Well, to be fair, it was socio-economics and socio-linguistics, so it had some function. But not to him. Hey Duffy, tell us all wit a sub-culture really is. To his amusement and that of his fellow sergeants, I really had no clue. But I do now.

Right under our very noses, there is a sub-culture growing and bubbling away. I am part of it so I can relate to it. There are a whole grouping in Scottish society also part of this sub-culture too. It has meaning. It has interest. And it has the potential to make them millionaires. And that is the dangerous part of this particular sub-culture. Its called crypto, but you may simply know it as Bitcoin.

It didnt dawn on me that I was part of this sub-culture until I was watching a live-stream video from the CEO of one of the big cryptocurrencies. As I watched and listened, my attention was drawn to the scrolling comments sidebar.

Usually I ignore this fast-moving and irrelevant verbiage as it involves a lot of hype and fans love for the host of the webinar. Lots of to the moon and pictures and emojis or rockets and dollar signs. But, to my amazement up popped a well-known Scottish name telling the presenter that he loved him.

I felt a bit sick to be honest. It was all a bit sycophantic. But, it stopped me in my tracks as both he and me were part of the same sub-culture.

Like all sub-cultures, theres usually something deviant or subversive. In sociological terms, these are not as harsh as they appear. In short, it just means that they have different views from the norm and are usually grouped together, while communicating together in forums, chatrooms or less accessible platforms. Do I feel deviant? Yes, most certainly as the crypto geeks or movement has been sidelined for such a long time.

In 2018, the crypto scene burst into life reaching all-time highs. But, the gains made by investors and speculators fizzled out. And from that time, it has had to lick its wounds in a very bearish market place.

Nevertheless, it has moved on and while we all got back to ISAs, bonds, building society accounts and premium bonds, the crypto sub-culture has been busily beavering away. Actually developing software and infrastructure that could make a difference to our lives. And the lives of those in developing countries.

We are a group of nerds who have our own FTSE 100-style list of top crypto companies. We have exchanges where we can buy and sell and trade this crypto as it moves up and down just a regular market place. New companies come to the fore, while others mature and create value. We have an array of You-Tube influencers, who put out entertaining videos each day. We have tweets galore where folks chat on this coin or that coin. And so it goes on. But, while this sub-culture keeps busy and we dont shout from the rooftops about it, there is big change coming. And Im not happy.

Part of being part of a sub-culture is that feeling of being in it together. We are not quite accepted. Governments are wary of crypto. Banks have been sceptical and dismissive of this part of finance that undermines them and worries them at the same time. Big institutional investors want to stake their cash on trusted five-star funds, not crypto decentralised finance. And credit card providers and the likes of PayPal dont want involved with this sub-culture.

Until recently, that is... Now they are now all over it and my sub-culture will move from exactly that into mainstream. Yuck.

As I said, crypto has come along way. And with that progress, comes adoption and acceptance into new financial networks. Mastercard, PayPal and governments are now creating the policy plumbing for crypto to enter your lives.

Some of the magic will go

While my dirty little secret loses it sex appeal and moves out and upwards. Soon, you will be able to invest in companies you may have never heard of, but that are actually pretty big already.

Names such as Cardano, Reserve, VeChain and, of course, Bitcoin will at some point be offered by financial advisors within regulated funds. Disclaimer I invest in these. And here all the fun stops for me.

Sure, my sub-culture buddies stand to make some huge returns on their bags of crypto when it all goes mainstream. And the Lambo garages might be busy. But, I feel a little sadness or mixed feelings really. Yes, Im glad that the confidence we all had in crypto has been proven right and the geeks, nerds and hodlers, yes you read that right, will make a few bob. However, the genie will be out the sub-culture bottle and it will lose some of its magic as it moves to the high street.

So, if my old sergeant wants to know now what a sub-culture is, I can prattle on for a good hour on its genesis, hopes and fears, systems and processes, communication apparatus and a whole lot more. But, within 12 months, it will be gone and a new one will take its place.

Now thats something to look forward to

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Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are about to go mainstream Jim Duffy - The Scotsman

Secret royal living in the Bahamas EXPOSED – New Idea

She is famous for being one of the five bridesmaids at Charles and Dianas wedding but nowadays India Hicks is living a quiet life in the Bahamas.

Getty

Prince Charles has always had a soft spot for his goddaughter, reveals Phil. Although India has lived in the Bahamas for many years she keeps in constant touch with Charles and speaks to him often. They share the same sense of humour and he loves her free spirit. Charles will always be close to India.

Two years ago, India revealed the strength of that bond in an interview.

Charles was, and still is, a remarkable godfather caring, considerate, and involved. I adored him then and still do now, she told Town and Country magazine.

In 2018, when Charles turned 70, India paid tribute to him posting on Instagram, Every birthday, every Christmas, a card and present would arrive from my godfather. To begin with they were signed from your loving Godfather Charles then they became your old Godfather Charles then your ancient Godfather Charles.

In 2018, when Charles turned 70, India paid tribute to him posting on Instagram.

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He might be celebrating a 70th birthday this year but, goodness, he is far from ancient.

She added: I am lucky to have such a godfather, but we are all lucky to have such a prince amongst us.

Now 52, India was born into an aristocratic family and was once 678th in line to the throne. Through her maternal grandfather, the Earl of Mountbatten, she is also a second cousin to Prince Charles. As a result of her royal connections, at 13 years she was asked to be a bridesmaid at the 1981 royal wedding.

She has said that as a teenage tomboy she was initially horrified to be asked but then glowed with pride when the big day came, Phil explains.

India would later recall the momentous day and seeing the Princess of Wales first appear in her wedding dress.

I clearly remember the moment Diana appeared at the top of the staircase. Everyone fell silent. The bride was radiant and ready to become the most famous of princesses, says India, whose mother, Lady Pamela Hicks, was one of the Queens bridesmaids.

As a result of her royal connections, at 13 years India was asked to be a bridesmaid at the 1981 royal wedding.

Getty

India has worked as a model, photographer and interior designer and ran a luxury lifestyle brand until last year. Prince Charles was one of the first family friends to offer his support when she decided to step away from her business.

Charles commiserated with her and told her she should be proud of what she had achieved, explains the royal expert. But he also told her to look forward and get involved with something else.

Since then India has concentrated on charity work, Shes also launched a podcast and has included interviews with her mother.

Charles has loved listening and of course they bring back memories of Lady Pamelas father, Lord Mountbatten.

For more, pick up the latest issue of New Idea. Out now!

New Idea

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Secret royal living in the Bahamas EXPOSED - New Idea