Modern in the Making: Post-War Craft and Design in British Columbia – Dexigner

Modern in the Making, on view at the Vancouver Art Gallery through January 3, 2021, is the most comprehensive showcase of the mid-century craft and design scene in British Columbia assembled to date, examining ceramics, fashion, furniture, jewelry and textiles that defined West Coast modern living.

Comprising over three hundred works created from 1945 to 1975, this exhibition reveals the multiple ways modernism was interpreted in British Columbia, with the inflection of local histories, materials and knowledge with a recognition of the rich Indigenous cultures that predated the arrival of settler cultures.

"The post-war craft and design period in British Columbia was especially significant because design and craft were activities considered essential for a life of creative pursuit. Modern in the Making: Post-War Craft and Design in British Columbia surveys a period characterized by enormous creativity and innovation that transformed the culture of this region-the reverberations of which continue to be felt today," stated Daina Augaitis, Interim Director at the Vancouver Art Gallery. "Well-crafted objects are currently experiencing a revival, as the handmade has assumed a position of renewed importance in our digital age."

In the three decades following the Second World War, thousands of people immigrated to British Columbia seeking the benefits of its resource-based economy, mild climate, natural amenities and inventive spirit. This optimistic post-war environment fostered the development of exceptional design and craft practices deeply influenced by the tenets of modernism: simplicity, fine craftsmanship and functional design for everyday use.

The exhibition is organized chronologically to document how the aesthetic, material and conceptual approaches to design and craft shifted over three decades of production. The included works reflect the increased demand for a wide range of functional, domestic objects that could complement the new West Coast modern architectural style that had begun to emerge. Highlights include Nuu-chah-nulth weaver Nellie Jacobson's grass buttons and traditional baskets that point to both the ruptures in this region caused by colonial expansion and the importance of Indigenous design in the modernization of British Columbia.

Photo: Ian Lefebvre, Vancouver Art Gallery

more: vanartgallery.bc.ca

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Modern in the Making: Post-War Craft and Design in British Columbia - Dexigner

Battle Creek seeks ways to keep people in their homes as evictions are expected to spike – Concentrate

Editor's note: This story is part of Southwest Michigan Second Wave's On the Ground Battle Creek series and our ongoing COVID-19 coverage. if you have a story of how the community is responding to the pandemic please let us know here.

Eviction filings and hearings in Battle Creek are expected to ramp up with the expiration today (July 23) of a statewide moratorium on evictions.

In advance of this expiration, city staff began working on a plan to address what they were being told would be a wave of evictions that are the result of individuals either losing their jobs or having their hours reduced as their employers try to manage the impact of shutdowns and losses in revenue resulting from COVID-19.

Chris Lussier, Community Development Manager for the City of Battle Creek, says part of the citys plan involves allocating about $729,000 to local organizations already working on stemming the tide of evictions and working with individuals who could lose their homes and those who are already homeless.

Antwoine Davis, a Health Care Advocate with Summit Pointe, often helps people in Battle Creek and Calhoun County deal with housing issues. Here she meets with a woman, a potential client, at the SHARE Center in Battle Creek.Those dollars are part of a $5 billion allocation through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Security (CARES) Act that Congress made to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that HUD is re-distributing to municipalities through its Community Development Block Grant program. Of that $5 billion, $2 billion was earmarked for communities, including Battle Creek.

Our strategy focuses a little bit around homelessness prevention and emergency shelter, but the majority of the funds will be going towards rent assistance, eviction diversion, and case management with housing, Lussier says. Were expecting that one of the largest unmet needs is that were going to have this large wave of evictions or a lot of folks who are not able to pay their rent.

The funds, he says, will help people catch up on their rent or be re-housed if they are evicted.

With the lifting of the moratorium, state officials are estimating a backlog of more than 75,000 eviction filings.

Closer to home, there is a waiting list of just over 227 individuals who are hoping to work with staff at Summit Pointe responsible for assisting those facing possible eviction. Summit Pointe, which will receive $440,000 from the citys CDBG funding to cover assistance for back rent, is designated by the state as Calhoun Countys Housing Assessment Resource Agency, according to Maggie Honaker, an independent consultant who is working with the countys Homeless Coalition to address issues of homelessness.

Honaker says Summit Pointes work includes providing intake assessments, housing case management to help people identify and understand the different options available to them, and managing financial agreements negotiated between landlords and tenants.

Maggie Honaker is working with the countys Homeless Coalition to address issues of homelessness.The eviction moratorium was rescheduled a number of times, Honaker says. It was originally set to expire at the end of June. Each time we got near that deadline we had more folks who were calling to get information because they knew theyd be in a financial situation where they were not going to be able to make lump sum payments.

Alisa Parker says, We dont really know what the backlog is. Parker is the Managing Attorney with Legal Services of South Central Michigan which serves Calhoun, Barry, and Branch counties. That organization also will receive CDBG funds.

When shelter-in-place orders were first put in place, Parker says, our numbers were really low because landlords were not able to file cases. In recent weeks weve seen a slow uptick and we are starting to see some of those cases trickle in now.

Parker says she thinks the majority of cases will be for non-payment of rent. She says she anticipates a huge rush starting mid-August into September when the additional $600 in unemployment people have been receiving is no longer available. Those payments, which are on top of normal unemployment benefits, are scheduled to stop on July 31.

Many individuals have been using that extra $600 to cover rent.

If the jobs arent there, Parker says she anticipates higher than normal numbers of people seeking help to stay in their homes or assistance in finding stable housing situations if they are homeless. Those in subsidized housing will fare better because their Section 8 vouchers will fluctuate to continue supplementing monies they dont have.

Most of our cases are low-income folks who are working and have experienced a reduction in hours, Parker says.

With CDBG funds, Summit Pointe and all of its partner organizations working on issues affecting the homeless will have received a total of $2.7 million in local, state, and federal funding to deal directly with the fallout from COVID-19 on the city and countys most vulnerable populations. This includes individuals who had to be relocated from the Haven of Rest Ministries and S.A.F.E. Place, the countys only domestic violence shelter, to area hotels during the height of the crisis.

Through an Eviction Diversion program operated by Legal Services, Parker says the goal is to get clients engaged with H.A.R.A (Housing Assessment Resource Agency) to develop a plan enabling clients to stay in their homes or be re-housed. Last year, she says her staff served about 248 individuals, households, or families through this program, which received initial funding from the United Way Battle Creek Kalamazoo Region.

We negotiate with landlords to agree to dismiss a case based on conditions involving a certain amount of days to get the judgment against a tenant paid while connecting people to service agencies who could provide resources for back rent, Parker says. This allows people to get their case resolved right then and there. Most of the cases that end up coming to us are resolved 85 to 90 percent of the time with that first appearance.

Legal Services' CDBG allocation is covering the cost of hiring a new attorney focused on handling the agency's eviction cases.

Our selling point is that using the courts is going to take you a while, but if we can get the rent satisfied and our tenants remain housed, lets work together to that end, Parker says. Most landlords arent out there to become property moguls. Theyre aiming to make a modest income out of the housing market. They also have bills to pay. A lot of landlords and property managers want to find ways to work with people.

The citys strategy for allocating the CDBG dollars most effectively is based on input from members of a Joint Operations Committee that was established when state-mandated orders to shelter in place began to take effect. The JOC is made up of city and county leadership and also has subcommittees charged with addressing the needs of the areas most vulnerable residents.

We used the priorities that came out of the Joint Operations Committees response to the COVID-19 crisis to do scans of the needs and based our strategy on that, Lussier says. We looked at a number of different things. The overwhelming need was around housing and sheltering the homeless in Battle Creek.

In late March, the Full Blast recreation center was converted to serve as a shelter for clients of the SHARE Center, a day shelter that also serves meals and offers programming for low-income individuals in various housing situations. That conversion cost about $80,000 that will be covered by CDBG funding, Lussier says.

We can use those funds retroactively, he says. Basically, we were using those dollars for converting the facility before we got the money.

Lussier says he expects to have signed agreements this week with different organizations receiving a portion of the CDBG funds. In addition to Summit Pointe, these include Haven of Rest Ministries, Community Action Agency, S.A.F.E. Place, Legal Services of South Central Michigan, and the citys Parks and Recreation Department.

While working through the grant process, Lussier says he knew that a focus had to be on hard-to-reach communities and those that experience challenges to accessing resources. He says representatives with Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation, a program through the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, have been hired to work with his group to develop an affirmative marketing plan.

We are paying them to assess the populations least likely to apply for assistance, identifying the barriers, and getting them to apply so they can access resources, Lussier says.

We have over 3,000 families, a lot of these families are already in a pretty vulnerable place. Our guess is that were talking about thousands of families who have a need for these resources. Our hope is that well be able to help 600 families just with these CDBG resources. Were not going to be able to help everybody. The need is going to be greater than the demand.

The vast majority of these people are either part of the citys ALICE population or new to that population because of a job loss or other reductions in income, Lussier says. ALICE is an acronym for Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed households that earn more than the Federal Poverty Level, but less than the basic cost of living for the county which represents the ALICE Threshold.

The federal poverty guidelines for a family of four in Michigan is $24,600 and the ALICE threshold for a four-person household with an infant and a preschool-age child is $61,000, according to the United Way of the Battle Creek Kalamazoo Region.

Based on the most recent ALICE research, about 46 percent of the countys residents and 50 percent of the citys residents are at or well below the ALICE threshold, according to Honaker.

The homelessness crisis and the anticipated increase in evictions are both very much income-driven and are among the disparities that have surfaced in a big way between those who have means and those who dont, she says.

We have over 8,000 rental units in the city and the number of households that we can support at some level of assistance is going to be about 1,000. Im not sure exactly how many households we can support, Honaker says.

Lussier says he cant predict when the impact of the lifting of the moratorium will be felt. He says he and his staff have been working quickly to determine how the CDBG funding will be allocated.

One piece of anxiety around this for me is that were still ironing things out, he says. I know this will create even more expectation around the resources available and our ability to meet those expectations.

This brings up the need for a much broader conversation that needs to include discussion about housing costs, wage disparities, and the cost of not returning to work, Parker says. Her organizations client base is individuals who fall below 125 percent of the federal poverty level. Many of them are working low-wage jobs that dont cover the cost of basic needs like food, shelter, or clothing for themselves and their families.

Those who are part of the ALICE population arent always able to use the free legal services because they are above that federal poverty level. For them, the loss of a job or decreased work hours will hit them hard, Parker says.

Even if people have jobs and the economy continues to open up, we still dont have a vaccine for COVID-19. Were still anticipating spikes and schools may be online with in-person options, Parker says. But, the reality for most working people is that if you cant bring your kids to work with you, you have no option but to stay home. In a lot of cases thats us every-day, lower-middle-class working people.

Many of these individuals depend on caseworkers with the Department of Health and Human Services to navigate the system and find resources, but Parker says a number of these employees have been furloughed.

We are going to have to figure out a way to maneuver through all of this, she says.

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Battle Creek seeks ways to keep people in their homes as evictions are expected to spike - Concentrate

Elon Musk Shares New Pic of Adorable Son, Gives Update on …

Elon Musk took to social media on Monday (July 20) to show off a new photo of his son, X AE A-Xii.

Das baby kann noch keinen lffel benutzen, the SpaceX CEO jokingly captioned the snap of himself cradling the baby in German, which translates to The baby cannot use a spoon yet.

Born on May 4, Musk and girlfriend Grimes originally named their firstborn X A-12. Soon after the birth, the pop star explained via Twitter that X is the unknown variable, the symbol is the elven spelling for A.I. and A-12 represents the classification for the CIA aircraft known as Archangel. However, the couple were eventually forced to reconsider the unique spelling of the babys name in order to comply with California state law.

Last month, Grimes also teamed up with rapper Ashnikko for her first taste of new music since giving birth, releasing the anime-heavy music video for the pairs new single Cry. Her latest album, Miss Anthropocene, was released back in February.

Check 0ut Musks adorable photo with X AE A-Xii below.

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Elon Musk Shares New Pic of Adorable Son, Gives Update on ...

‘The Largest Terror Threat Facing the US’ – KNPR

"Its undeniable that right-wing extremists are the largest terror threat facing the United States," said Howard Graves, a senior research analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

As of the mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, in 2019, Graves said, right-wing extremists had killed more people on U.S. soil since 1911 than any other ideologicalcohort.

The question of right-wing extremism and its ties to Nevada has come up in the wake ofthe arrest of threeClark County menalleged subscribers of the boogaloo ideology who now face federal charges of plotting to firebomba Black Lives Matter protest in Las Vegas.

Graves told KNPR's State of Nevada the case mirrors onein Oakland, California where two men were also arrested for plotting to use a protest as cover for their own plans.

That is a similar dynamic to what we saw unfolding in Las Vegas where these individuals planned to hijack peaceful protests against police brutality and actually use them to bring about the larger ambition of the boogaloo movement, he said.

The larger boogaloo movement centers around the idea that not only is another civil war imminent but patriots should do what they can to bring it about, Graves said.

Leah Sottile is a freelance reporter, who has been covering extremism - especially in the West - for a number of years.

"The boogaloo is something a lot of people are still learning about," she said.

Sottile has read the grand jury transcript from the case of the Las Vegas men charged in the plot, identified asStephen T. Parshall, Andrew Lynam, and William L. Loomis.

She said their exact plan isn't completely outlined in court documents, but, according to an FBI informant, they wanted to take an action that would speed up their revolution.

According to Sottile, boogaloo believers were drawn to reopen rallies held in the spring. She said it gave them a chance to connect offline and begin talking about how to advance their plans.

When the anti-police brutalityprotests started at the end of May, the extremists saw another chance.

And at the core of the boogaloo ideology is really an anti-law enforcement perspective, she said.

Lynam told the informant they were anarcho-capitalist, which is the idea of eliminating centralized governmentsin favor ofindividual ownership,free markets and private property.

Sottile said she believes the men wanted to cause a disturbance big enough to start a riot, but that most of the protesters on the streets of Las Vegas weren't interested.

Samantha Kutner is an independent researcher and a fellow with the Khalifa Ihler Institute.

She has been studying another right-wing extremist group known as the Proud Boys. The group has asimilar ideology to the boogaloo. She agreed that groups like these use the Black Lives Matter protests with one thing in mind - raising awareness of their own causes.

It is important to understand that racist, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, ethno-nationalists, civic nationalists they dont start caring about Black lives overnight. They see a conflict to exploit so they can surf the Kali Yuga, more or less, she said.

The Kali Yuga is aHindi phrasefor the final dark stage of the world in which it collapses into the apocalypse and is reborn. Some right-wing groups use the phrasesurf the Kali Yuga as a way to refer to the predicted end of the world.

Kutner noted that the Proud Boys and other right-wing groups have lost strength since the Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville in 2017 and the New York Ten incident in 2018, which sent two Proud Boy members to jail for an attack on left-wing protesters.

She said they are now using the uncertainty of the coronavirus pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests to ramp up recruiting.

Theyre really attempting to increase visibility and thats kind of the connection between how they adopt the boogaloo aesthetic," she said of the Proud Boys,"It is less about how they identify, because their views on Black Lives Matter differ from many self-identified boogaloo boys, but they will adopt the boogaloo aesthetic if it helps them maximize their visibility.

The Proud Boys and boogalooare not, of course, the first anti-federal governmentextremists to emerge from Nevada. That movement goes back to the 1970s and the sagebrush rebellion, which bred current protesters such as theBundysofBunkerville.

Sottile thinks much of the anti-government sentiment in Nevada, and around the West, is tied in some ways to the amount of land the federal government manages.

Sometimes that feels like theyve got their hands in the pockets of the people who are trying to live off the land or even just be a little bit further away from the establishment and the government, she said.

She also points to the alleged safety of nuclear testing in Nevada during the 50s and 60s as a deception that fosteredgeneral distrust of the government.

While it seems as if there are more extremist groups now than in years past, Graves said there is actually an ebb and flow to extremism. He said the sagebrush rebellion cooled off when Ronald Reagan, who seemed to be an ally to the cause, was elected. The same thing happened in the late 90s and early 2000s when militia groups dissipatedwhen George W. Bush was elected.

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'The Largest Terror Threat Facing the US' - KNPR

Extremist Proud Boys have been trying to ally themselves with Philadelphia police and showed up at a local FOP event: report – AlterNet

Philadelphia is a Democrat-dominated city with a decidedly left-of-center district attorney (Larry Krasner, an ally of Sen. Bernie Sanders) and Black female police commissioner (former Portland, Oregon Police Chief Danielle Outlaw) who was quick to speak out about the death of George Floyd and stress that she encouraged nonviolent protests. But its also the city where the infamous Frank Rizzo, who was often accused of police overreach, once served as police commissioner and later, mayor. The far right doesnt have a lot of influence in Philly, yet in a July 16 article for the Daily Beast, reporter Kelly Weill discusses the efforts of extremist Proud Boys to ally themselves with Philly police officers.

When the president of Philadelphias police union disavowed a far-right group whose members were photographed at a union party this weekend, Weill reports, it was at least the third time in recent weeks that local cops had been accused of canoodling with violent groups on the fringe. Members of the Proud Boys, an ultra-nationalist group that frequently mingles with white supremacists, were hard to miss when they showed up for a party at the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police headquarters Thursday night, (July 9).

Weill notes that according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, around ten members of the Proud Boys showed up at that FOP event and chanted all lives matters at protesters. Philadelphia police union president John McNesby, however, spoke out against the extremist group.

In an official statement, McNesby wrote, We have recently been informed that members of the Proud Boys were present outside the FOP headquarters this week following a visit by the vice president (Mike Pence). If we were aware of their presence, we would have immediately escorted them off our property. At no time were these individuals allowed inside of our building. Philadelphia police officers, FOP leadership and members condemn their hateful and discriminatory speech in any form.

But Weill reports that even the Proud Boys called elements of McNesbys statement into question.

According to Weill, In a public chat channel, the group posted a picture of what appeared to be the bar inside the FOP headquarters. On Twitter, the group claimed to have spent $1000 at the headquarters that night.

A Philly police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity was highly critical of the Proud Boys, telling the Beast, Nobody wants them there. I sure as hell dont want them there. Its weird. Who wants them there? Who wants their support?

Steven Windisch, an assistant professor who focuses on criminal justice at Phillys Temple University, told the Beast that the Proud Boys efforts to ally themselves with police officers serve two purposes. One, its a form of recruitment lets get into these institutions, get buddy-buddy with them, and maybe we can recruit them. Two, its also a product of their identity. The Proud Boys, in particular, see themselves as a kind of security force for Republican elites. Theres an unofficial brotherhood that I think they project onto law enforcement that theyre one and the same, fighting the same battle.

then let us make a small request. AlterNets journalists work tirelessly to counter the traditional corporate media narrative. Were here seven days a week, 365 days a year. And were proud to say that weve been bringing you the real, unfiltered news for 20 yearslonger than any other progressive news site on the Internet.

Its through the generosity of our supporters that were able to share with you all the underreported news you need to know. Independent journalism is increasingly imperiled; ads alone cant pay our bills. AlterNet counts on readers like you to support our coverage. Did you enjoy content from David Cay Johnston, Common Dreams, Raw Story and Robert Reich? Opinion from Salon and Jim Hightower? Analysis by The Conversation? Then join the hundreds of readers who have supported AlterNet this year.

Every reader contribution, whatever the amount, makes a tremendous difference. Help ensure AlterNet remains independent long into the future. Support progressive journalism with a one-time contribution to AlterNet, or click here to become a subscriber. Thank you. Click here to donate by check.

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Extremist Proud Boys have been trying to ally themselves with Philadelphia police and showed up at a local FOP event: report - AlterNet

2 boys saved when caught in falls in French apartment fire – FOX 25/48 – WiProud.com

by: ARNO PEDRAM, Associated Press

In this grab taken from video, a boy hangs from a window as flames engulfed an apartment as onlookers below prepare to catch him, in Grenoble, France, Tuesday, July 21, 2020. A boy and a toddler escaped a blaze at an apartment in the southeastern French city of Grenoble on Tuesday after they jumped into the arms of residents. The two brothers, aged three and 10 years old, were hanging from a window as flames engulfed their home and onlookers below screamed for them to jump down. (AP)

PARIS (AP) Two young brothers were saved from an apartment fire in the southeastern French city of Grenoble when they dropped about 10 meters (33 feet) from a window and were caught by people below.

The two, aged 10 and 3, were unharmed by the fall Tuesday but might have suffered from smoke inhalation, French media reported.

Video of the dramatic rescue showed the younger brother being dropped from at least three stories up as black smoke billowed from the window and flames engulfed an adjacent balcony. As onlookers screamed, the older brother then hung from the window and let himself fall into the arms of those below.

The boys were hospitalized along with 17 residents of the building, the media reports said. Four of the people who caught the boys also were taken to the hospital to check if any bones were fractured when they caught the boys.

Athoumani Walid, a 25-year-old student who suffered a broken wrist from helping catch the children, said he heard screams and went out to investigate after seeing the fire from his nearby apartment and rushed to help along with four or five other people.

We didnt know what to do, Walid told The Associated Press on Wednesday. We wanted to break the door but it wasnt possible.

They then went outside and shouted for the boys to jump into their arms.

Although he initially feared for the boys, when they jumped, fear disappeared, Walid said. What mattered was to catch them, he added.

Walid said he hopes the rescue will change perceptions of the Villeneuve neighborhood, which has a large immigrant population.

We are told its a sensitive neighborhood, Walid said, but yesterday we showed we are here for each other, and we save each other.

Mayor Eric Piolle congratulated residents on the rescue, which he said underscored the citys tradition of solidarity and mutual help.

In May 2018, a young Malian migrant rescued a child dangling from a balcony and was offered French citizenship. Video of the rescue showed 22-year-old Mamoudou Gassama climbing up four floors of the apartment building in just seconds to rescue the child, to cheers from onlookers. By the time Parisian emergency services arrived, he had already pulled the child to safety.

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2 boys saved when caught in falls in French apartment fire - FOX 25/48 - WiProud.com

Clueless star Alicia Silverstone says she’s most proud of how much the film ‘means to gay boys’ 25 years after its release – PinkNews

Dionne (Stacey Dash) and Cher (Alicia Silverstone) in the original Clueless. (Paramount)

Clueless star Alicia Silverstone reflected on the movie 25 years on, noting that her favourite part of its legacy is what it means to gay boys.

The 1995 cult classic followed a well-manicured bunch of Beverly Hills high school students in a glossy teen update to Jane Austens Emma. Silverstone played the misguided but well-intentioned Cher, who navigates failing her drivers test, saying as if! a lot and falling for cute guys.

One such guy is Elton, played by Jeremy Sisto, who Cher initially crushes on before he comes out as gay. That slither of LGBT+ representation, coupled with Clueless being aggressively quotable, has long made the film popular in queer circles.

This is something Silverstone, 43, is more than aware of. Chatting to Vogue, she said of all the responses to the film, the queer communitys resposnse was the most meaningful.

I was really well-received by the gay community after Clueless came out, the actor explained.

Theyve always been my people. I dont know if its just this film or my vibe thats endeared me to them, but that has always been my favourite aspect of the film.

Particularly what it means to gay boys.

The interviewer then joked that he knows plenty of gay men who thought they wanted to date Cher until Christian showed up and made us realise we actually wanted to be her best friend.

[American fashion designer] Christian Siriano is like my real-life Christian, Silverstone said.

Whenever we hang out hes basically like my boyfriend. We love each other so much and Im sure some of that stems from him really admiring Clueless and what Cher meant to him and all of his friends growing up.

As much as some are expressing fatigue at Hollywoods obsession with reboots, a Clueless relaunch described as Mean Girls meets Riverdale meets a Lizzo music video might be the one exception.

The new iteration will reportedly be centred on Dionne, played by Stacey Dash in both the 1995 film and the subsequent TV series.

Deadline described the concept as a baby pink and bisexual blue-tinted, tiny sunglasses-wearing, oat milk latt and Adderall-fueled look at what happens when the high school queen bee Cher disappears and her lifelong No. 2 Dionne steps into Chers vacant Air Jordans.

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Clueless star Alicia Silverstone says she's most proud of how much the film 'means to gay boys' 25 years after its release - PinkNews

Simply Healthcare Foundation Directs More Than $125000 to Support Boys & Girls Clubs throughout Florida during the COVID-19 Pandemic – Business…

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Simply Healthcare Foundation is directing more than $125,000 to several Boys & Girls Clubs across Florida to address needs related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The funding will support initiatives such as transportation, healthy eating and access to healthy food options, the Triple Play program and summer childcare services.

The Simply Healthcare Foundation is a philanthropic arm of the Anthem Foundation, which has committed to provide more than $50 million to support COVID-19 relief efforts across the country.

There is an unprecedented need for support in our local communities and Simply Healthcare is committed to supporting local organizations as we all grapple with the challenges brought on by this pandemic, said Holly Prince, Simply Healthcare Medicaid Plan President. To help address the needs of Floridians, we are proud to be working with the Boys & Girls Clubs to support initiatives that will have a direct, positive impact on the health and well-being of people and communities that have been adversely impacted by the pandemic.

Simply Healthcare Foundations $125,000 contribution will support nine Boys & Girls Clubs as they work to urgently address specific COVID-19 relief efforts. The funds will support Triple Play, virtual learning efforts, programs to promote healthy eating and fitness and food distribution efforts to local communities. The funding will support the Boys & Girls Clubs in Hernando, Polk, Citrus, Broward and Manatee Counties, as well as the Tampa Bay, Northeast Florida, Suncoast and Miami-Dade clubs.

The Boys & Girls Clubs are working tirelessly to support our communities during the pandemic, said Alex Rodriguez-Roig, President of Boys & Girls Clubs of Miami-Dade. We are grateful to Simply Healthcare Foundation for their generous grant for the Project Learn program to support great futures. With their support, Boys & Girls Clubs of Miami-Dade can continue to offer in-person and virtual summer programs to our area youth in a safe and structured environment. These positive programs are very important to keeping our youth members engaged during this critical time.

In 2020, the Simply Healthcare Foundation has contributed more than $600,000 to support COVID-19 relief efforts across Florida to address food insecurity, basic human services, personal protective equipment and medical supplies, technology and social and emotional wellness.

ABOUT SIMPLY HEALTHCARE FOUNDATION

Simply Healthcare Foundation is the philanthropic arm of Anthem, Inc. Together, with local, regional and national organizations, Simply Healthcare Foundation works to enhance the health and well-being of individuals and families in communities that Anthem and its affiliated health plans serve. Simply Healthcare Foundation funding is focused on strategic initiatives working to address and provide innovative solutions to health care challenges, as well as promoting the Healthy Generations Program, a multi-generational initiative with six areas of focus: Healthy Heart, Cancer Prevention, Healthy Maternal Practices, Type 2 Diabetes Prevention, Healthy Active Lifestyles and Mental Health. These disease states and medical conditions include: prenatal care in the first trimester, low birth weight babies, cardiac morbidity rates, long term activities that decrease obesity and increase physical activity, diabetes prevalence in adult populations, adult pneumococcal and influenza vaccinations and smoking cessation.

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Simply Healthcare Foundation Directs More Than $125000 to Support Boys & Girls Clubs throughout Florida during the COVID-19 Pandemic - Business...

Premier League’s New Boys: ‘It’s unbelievable’: Bilic joy as West Brom promoted to Premier League – RTL Today

Slaven Bilic hailed West Bromwich Albion's promotion to the Premier League as one of the proudest moments of his career after a 2-2 draw against QPR sent them up on a dramatic final day of the Championship season.

Bilic's side will join Championship title winners Leeds in the top-flight next season after a nail-biting Wednesday night at the Hawthorns.

With third-placed Brentford beaten 2-1 by Barnsley and fourth-placed Fulham held to a 1-1 draw at Wigan, Albion finished in second place to secure their return to the Premier League after two seasons away.

"You don't know how exhausting it was this season. You can't imagine how proud and happy I am," former Croatia and West Ham boss Bilic said.

"I managed my country for six years and I said no matter which club I manage nothing will compare. I feel as proud as I felt then."

On a riveting finale in the second tier, 2013 FA Cup winners Wigan were relegated to League One along with Hull and Charlton.

But the focus was on West Brom, who fell behind against QPR when Ryan Manning netted after 34 minutes.

Grady Diangana equalised just before half-time when he fired in after Callum Robinson set him free.

The Baggies went in front early in the second half when Diangana's cross found the unmarked Robinson to tap in.

QPR weren't making it easy for West Brom and the tension mounted after Eberechi Eze lashed a 61st minute equaliser into the top corner.

West Brom's attention turned to Griffin Park, where Brentford were unable to take advantage as they chased a first season in the top-flight in 73 years.

- West Brom joy -

Brentford, who missed a chance to go second when they lost at Stoke on Saturday, found themselves trailing when Barnsley's Callum Styles struck in the 40th minute.

With West Brom drawing, a victory would have taken Brentford up and Josh Dasilva equalised in the 72nd minute.

But in stoppage time, Clarke Oduor tapped in Barnsley's winner and news quickly spread to the Hawthorns, where Bilic implored his players to defend the point that would take them up.

"What a season, what a league. I didn't enjoy every minute of it, of course, but with a finish like this, the results at the bottom, it's unbelievable," Bilic said.

"I thought Brentford would have pressure in today's game. It's not easy. That's why I'm very proud of the boys."

Barnsley's surprise victory lifted them out of the relegation zone in the most dramatic fashion.

Brentford will have to pick themselves up for the play-offs, where they will face a two-legged semi-final against Swansea, who made a stunning climb into sixth place with a 4-1 win at Reading.

"We can't sit down and cry too long because that will never help anything," Brentford boss Thomas Frank said.

"We will have a sleep and then be ready to fight again."

Swansea took the place of Nottingham Forest, whose 4-1 home defeat against Stoke knocked them below the Welsh club on goal difference.

The other play-off semi-final will see Fulham face fifth placed Cardiff, who eased to a 3-0 win over bottom of the table Hull.

Troubled Wigan are relegated following the end-of-season deduction of 12 points for going into administration earlier this month.

The Latics, who were last in the Premier League in 2013, had reached 59 points, but the deduction reduced their total to 47, which left them in the relegation zone.

Wigan have appealed against the points penalty, which was triggered when the controversial sale of the club left them in the hands of new owners, who immediately opted to go into administration.

"I feel physically sick for everyone. I don't want to talk about the appeal because the reality is, we shouldn't be in this situation," Wigan boss Paul Cook said.

Charlton went down after a 4-0 thrashing at Leeds, who were presented with the Championship trophy -- their first silverware since 1992.

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Premier League's New Boys: 'It's unbelievable': Bilic joy as West Brom promoted to Premier League - RTL Today

Self Care Revolution, Mayor Asks Advisory Board Member to Resign, Nebraska Files Lawsuit Against Stem Cell Clinics and more Top Local News for Friday,…

7/17/20 Day 26 ofPhase IIINationwide case trends

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Today we have stories self care being a revolutionary act forindividuals resisting oppression, Mayor Jean Stothert asking a member of the citys LGBTQ+AdvisoryBoard to resign and Nebraskasattorney general filing a lawsuit against Omaha stem cell therapy clinics.

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From a gay college gymnast to coach and CrossFit trainer – Outsports

Growing up in a small East Texas town allows you to become one of two things: a dreamer or complacent. From the start I was a big dreamer.

As a child I always knew I wanted a bigger life outside of Athens, Texas. I fantasized about moving to a big city and having friends, both male and female friends. Growing up I only had female friends. I dont think I had an actual male friend whom I considered to be a special part of my life until I came out as gay. It was a long road of emptiness.

As a child, boys never wanted to play with me. I was obsessed with two things: singing and gymnastics. Those two things just didnt fit into the normal stream of life for most young Texas country boys.

I got a lot of flack from boys calling me gay, sissy and writing me off as weak because I didnt have a dream to play for the Dallas Cowboys. At the time I told myself I didnt care. I didnt realize the void I had until I was older.

When I was 16, I changed schools, leaving the private school I had attended for 11 years and moving to public school. I reinvented myself. I was not doing gymnastics at this time and joined the cross-country and tennis teams.

Despite having no experience in either sport, I picked them up pretty easily. I loved working hard and pushing myself and for the first time starting making friends who were boys. I wouldnt call any of them close, but because I was a hard worker and contributed to the team I was accepted.

I got back into gymnastics after high school when I joined my college club gymnastics team at Texas State University in San Marcos. I also started coaching the sport as well. As an athlete I continued to compete on the club team until I was 24 and for the first time in my life became close with men, my male teammates.

It may sound strange to some people, but becoming so close to my male teammates filled a void. I always wanted guy friends and as a child always felt nervous around other boys. Gymnastics gave this to me, sports gave this to me. I remember finally telling one of my teammates I was gay and his reaction of finally really shook me. I was under this impression I was fooling everyone, but they all were just waiting for me to share with them. We all became so much closer after this.

After college I moved to Dallas and starting coaching gymnastics full-time. I started a boys competitive team and saw similarities of some boys who reminded me of my younger self. I noticed the boys who had mannerisms like me, who were more artistic and loved pretty things. I also could see how the other boys would treat them. Thats when I knew I had an opportunity to not only make a huge difference in these young boys lives, but also teach lessons.

Coaching was never something I imagined Id make as my lifes profession. After graduating from college and attending graduate school I had every intention of becoming a social worker. I enjoyed helping people, but the profession did not provide me as much satisfaction as coaching gave me.

In 2009 I moved to Colorado with my boyfriend. Through crazy circumstances I took a job managing a gymnastics facility and within a year the owners gave me the option of buying the gym. I took a chance, leaving social work behind and took this small gym and passion I had for the sport and things took off. I started a boys program and after a few years I had created the second largest boys team competitive program in Colorado.

I knew that if I wanted this program to be a safe space for all types of boys I needed to be an example. I needed to be out to both the parents and the boys. My mission was to provide a safe space where boys like me could come and participate in something the loved and not be teased or ridiculed. The way to do that was to make my life seem as normal as any other family.

My boyfriend was involved in all gym functions and surprisingly accepted by everyone. The boys on my team knew who he was and it never mattered. I was providing these young boys with something I didnt have growing up a gay male figure who was proud to be himself.

After owning the gym for 10 years and breaking up with my boyfriend I decided to make a bold move. I sold my gym and moved to LA. I had been involved in CrossFit while in Colorado and had owned and started my own CrossFit gym during my tenure. I decided to make a switch to personal training and coaching CrossFit. The gymnastics background has helped enhance my ability to train adults.

I take a similar approach to teaching skills as I would in gymnastics and continue to create an atmosphere that is all-inclusive, especially to LGBTQ members. Stepping into a gym can be nerve-wracking and intimidating and the extra stress of Will I be accepted for being me? no longer has a place in the fitness and sports community.

I feel very fortunate that the fitness communities Im involved with allow for such diversity and Im proud work with owners, coaches and members to provide safe spaces.

When I have an LGBTQ member come to me and say this is the first time theyve felt included with the straight guys in the gym or that theyve become friends with a straight bro guy for the first time it takes me back to that feeling I had as a kid. Always wanting to be accepted for being me. It makes me really proud to be part of something special.

JR Jaquay lives in Los Angeles where he is a full-time CrossFit Coach and personal trainer. He and his boyfriend Shawn are the proud pops to two mini-Schnazuers, Lemon and Lulu. They are looking forward to expanding their family to two-legged children in the next few years. You can reach JR on Instagram at @jrthegymnasticscoach

Story editor: Jim Buzinski

If you are an out LGBTQ person in sports and want to tell your story, email Jim (kandreeky@gmail.com)

Check out our archive of coming out stories.

If youre an LGBTQ person in sports looking to connect with others in the community, head over to GO! Space to meet and interact with other LGBTQ athletes, or to Equality Coaching Alliance to find other coaches, administrators and other non-athletes in sports.

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From a gay college gymnast to coach and CrossFit trainer - Outsports

COVID-19 Impact on Nanomedicine Market Overview With Detailed Analysis, Competitive Landscape, Forecast To 2026 | Abbott Laboratories, CombiMatrix…

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Global Nanomedicine Market Report provides an overview of the market based on key parameters such as market size, sales, sales analysis and key drivers. The market size of the market is expected to grow on a large scale during the forecast period (2019-2026). This report covers the impact of the latest COVID-19 on the market. The coronavirus epidemic (COVID-19) has affected all aspects of life around the world. This has changed some of the market situation. The main purpose of the research report is to provide users with a broad view of the market. Initial and future assessments of rapidly changing market scenarios and their impact are covered in the report.

The global nanomedicine market was valued at $111,912 million in 2016, and is projected to reach $261,063 million by 2023, growing at a CAGR of 12.6% from 2017 to 2023.

The drug delivery segment accounted for nearly two-fifths share of the global market in 2016.

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Nanomedicine is an application of nanotechnology that deals in the prevention & treatment of diseases in humans. This technology uses submicrometer-sized particles for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of diseases. Nanomedicines are advantageous over generic drugs in several aspects such as, to reduce renal excretion, improve the ability of drugs to accumulate at pathological sites, and enhance the therapeutic index of drugs. Thus, nanomedicine is used in a wide range of applications that include aerospace materials, cosmetics, and medicine.

The global market is driven by increase in the development of nanotechnology-based drugs, advantages of nanomedicine in various healthcare applications, and growth in need of therapies with fewer side effects. However, long approval process and risks associated with nanomedicine (environmental impacts) restrain the market growth. In addition, growth of healthcare facilities in emerging economies is anticipated to provide numerous opportunities for the market growth.

The vaccines segment is expected to register a significant CAGR of 13.2% throughout the forecast period. The treatment segment accounted for about fourth-sevenths share in the global market in 2016, accounting for the highest share during the forecast period. This is due to the high demand for therapeutics among patient and rise in the incidence of chronic diseases.

The neurological diseases segment is expected to grow at the highest CAGR of 13.9% during the forecast period, owing to high demand for brain monitoring & treatment devices and drugs. The oncological diseases segment accounted for the highest revenue in 2016, with one-third share of the global market, and is expected to maintain its dominance throughout the forecast period.

In 2016, Asia-Pacific and LAMEA collectively accounted for about one-fourth share of the global market, and is expected to continue this trend due to increased adoption of nanomedicines, especially in China, India, and the other developing economies. In addition, rise in investments by key players in the field of nanomedicines is key driving factor of the Asia-Pacific market.

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Allied Market Research (AMR) is a market research and business-consulting firm of Allied Analytics LLP, based in Portland, Oregon. AMR offers market research reports, business solutions, consulting services, and insights on markets across 11 industry verticals. Adopting extensive research methodologies, AMR is instrumental in helping its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their market domains. We are equipped with skilled analysts and experts, and have a wide experience of working with many Fortune 500 companies and small & medium enterprises.

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Whats all the fuss about the Fussy Vegan and their food? – The South African

The fussy vegan is almost a lifestyle clich. For a start, just what is veganism? And then, if you know a vegan or are one, are vegans as fussy as they are reported to be?

Veganism is a way of life which tries to cut out all forms of ecological exploitation for ethical, health or environmental reasons. For many it is much more than a diet, it is also a pattern consumption habits.

The culture has existed for centuries. However it has been gathering mainstream momentum recently as public figures endorse it.

There are still many misconceptions about what it means to be vegan, such as that it is expensive. This is not necessarily true, however. Eating only plant-based food is more sustainable than is widely perceived.

There are different categories of vegans, such as ethical vegans who believe all creatures have the right to life. They therefore refrain from disrupting conscious beings lives and do not consume their flesh, drink their milk or wear their skin.

Some people are attracted to veganism for its health benefits. There is growing evidence that a plant-based diet can reduce the risk of diseases such as cancer, type 2 diabetes and Alzheimers for example.

Environmental vegans choose to avoid animal products because of the detrimental impact farming them has on the environment. For instance, animal farmers may cause land erosion, which can lead to climate change and eventual poverty and malnutrition.

The Fussy Vegan is a plant-based restaurant chain which offers a variety of takeaway vegan products with low environmental impacts.

Paul Kalima is the manager at The Fussy Vegans Blairegowrie branch in Gautng. For him, veganism is compassion not only for people but also for animals and the environment.

This makes him an environmental vegan who feels The Fussy Vegan is the perfect match for his personality.

For me, The Fussy Vegan is just one of those things I think is a dream come true, being actively involved in something this big, he said.

Kalima is in charge of operations at the restaurant, and seems to have the right sort of temperament needed to interact with the businesss stakeholders.

Besides being friendly and resourceful, Kalima is frustrated by the overall disregard many people have for their environment.

It always used to bother me to see a lot plastic around me [and] to see a lot of resources being wasted and a lot of animals being killed, Kalimasaid.

I just never used to understand that but when I came around to The Fussy Vegan, thats where I got most of my education.

With regards to the food items on the menu, Kalima said he has a hard time picking a favourite. He wants customers to try all the options. These include plant-based burgers, sandwiches, bowls, sides, drinks and more.

Health and safety is key. The Fussy Vegan has an interactive online ordering system to cut the chance of transmission of the coronavirus.

We have come up with this online system where a person can just order before they come around. It is so convenient because it really interacts with the customer. The software that were using is super friendly.

Kalima has high hopes for the future of The Fussy Vegan.

I feel like in a couple of years we are probably going to branch out to so many people. A lot of people have been making those requests.

They love the food that we make, they love what we stand for and what we do as well.

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Whats all the fuss about the Fussy Vegan and their food? - The South African

Letter to the editor | Former hard-core Dem now backs Trump – TribDem.com

For most of my adult life, I have been a hard-core Democrat, but in 2016, all of that changed and I supported Donald Trumps platform and I voted for him.

I will support and vote for him in his reelection because he stands for what I stand for: pro-life and letting babies live, support of law enforcement, Second Amendment for gun rights, voter ID, economic prosperity, small government and less government control, term limits, capitalism vs. socialism and communism, free speech, the national anthem, our flag and the Constitution.

Trump may not be the smoothest talker, and sometimes he comes on a little strong, but in my heart, I know that he is fighting hard to preserve and protect all the things that I stand for.

I am a patriot, and so is Trump.

Trump 2020. God bless and protect America.

Mary Carol Edwards

Richland Township

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Revisiting Missouri gun laws after couple in STL charged with felony unlawful use of weapon – KYTV

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - Video of a couple pulling their guns on protesters outside their St. Louis home has gone viral. It has people all across the state and country asking: what are my rights when it comes to protecting my home, specifically with a gun? Mark and Patricia McCloskey are at the center of it all after the June 28 incident.

They claim the protesters tore down an iron gate into their gated community and threatened to kill them and burn down their house. This week, the St Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardener charged the couple with felony unlawful use of a weapon, which drew criticism from President Trump, MO Senator Josh Hawley, Missouris Attorney General, and Governor Mike Parson, who said he would pardon the McCloskeys, if they were convicted.

Many now they have questions about the Castle Doctrine,' and Stand Your Ground laws, because those laws did change in 2017. We sat down with those who enforce the law, and those who interpret it.

The law may be written in black and white, but the way its interpreted has shades of gray.

It is your right to protect yourself, your family and your property in the state of Missouri, and effectively saying that, you do not have a duty to retreat, said Christian County Sheriff Brad Cole. He helps teach those who carry. But if you find yourself in a legal bind, defense attorney Dee Wampler often gets a call. He has written a book on gun laws.

You cant just start shooting people or killing people unless you are in fear of great bodily harm. And then you have the right to shoot and use force to repel force, Wampler said. At a time when guns and ammunition are flying off store shelves, it pays to know the law. Missouris law used to require you to retreat before pulling a gun, but that changed three years ago.

You own your own home and property, and what we call curtilage which is that area immediately surrounding your home to the ionosphere up there, and to the middle of the earth, and if anybody comes on your property you have the right to defend yourself, Wampler said.

What about openly showing your gun? Wampler says it is okay unless its in an angry or threatening manner. However, even that is okay, he says, if its necessary in self defense, according to Missouri statute.

Thats why we have the second amendment to protect yourself against other people, protect yourself against the government, and thats what we expect you to do, said Sheriff Cole.

In Missouri, you do not have to take a conceal carry class to carry a gun. However, Sheriff Cole recommends you do so that you understand your weapon and understand the law. You can call any sheriffs office in the state and get a list of approved instructors.

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Revisiting Missouri gun laws after couple in STL charged with felony unlawful use of weapon - KYTV

It’s a tough job market, so this college grad is hoping to land an internship anything to get some experience – CNBC

CNBC's "College Voices 2020" is a series written by CNBC summer interns from universities across the country about coming of age, launching new careers and job hunting during a global pandemic. They're finding their voices during a time of great social change and hope for a better future. As part of the series, each student chose a recent college graduate to profile to provide an up-close and personal look at who the class of 2020 is, what issues they're facing as they try to find a job in these extraordinary times and how they're tackling them. Here is the story of Jordan Levy, a graduate of Rutgers University.

The coronavirus pandemic has created a stir of events for everyone across the world these last couple of months. The unemployment rate has skyrocketed, many businesses are temporarily closed,more than100,000 people have died, and the fear of what will happen in the coming months lingers on.That makes it all the more difficult for the Class of 2020 to find a job in the worst job market since the Great Depression.

Jordan Levy, a recent graduate of Rutgers University with a B.A. in journalism/media studies and music, has already felt this impact. As an African-American, he has taken this pandemic, the events of George Floyd's death, and the economy, to heart. He haslived through the 2008 recession, the 2010 BP Oil Spill, a mass amount of unarmed black men being killed, and now the coronavirus. All at the age of 22 years old.

I took some time to sit down with Levy, whowasa good friend of mine growing up, to talk about these issues and histhoughts about thefutureamidthe chaos.

Levy explainshow he has been working a lot in the sun at his new jobwithapackage-delivery service. He twirls his face mask in his fingersas he describesthe lack of social distancing going on in the warehouses, and the lack of enforcement to wear masks. I take this information in as I ponder his professional career in this coronavirus life we are all living.

Jordan Levy in a subway station on the way to his former internship.

Source: Jasmine Cunningham

Levy had an internship at a magazine earlier in the year that was before the coronavirus pandemic hit. Around the beginning of March, they told him they would have "fewer weeks" in the office. Then those fewer weeks turned into a couple of days, and those days turned into the internship being shut down completely. It was clear in his voice that he was upset. This wasn't the launching pad to his career that Levy had hoped.

None of this was as he or any of the Class of 2020 had hoped. Levy graduated in May from home via a computer screen instead of a stadium filled with tassels and regalia. It was a pre-recorded ceremony, with the graduates' names scrolling past the screen like the end credits of a movie. Except, there wasn't that same gratifying feeling you get at the end of a movie when the credits roll.

Newly graduated but feeling unsettled that this was how the launch of his adult life was happening, Levy took a lot more time to read, but found it hard to write new material. As a journalist, his life revolves around writing, yet being cooped up inside for such a long period of time with no inspiration from the outside world made putting pen to paper (or rather, fingers to keyboard) a tough task. Furthermore, his tone became a bit more dismal when he brought up how "freelance budgets are drying up," making picking up even part-time work in journalism tough right now.

I brought up the issues of George Floyd, expecting his demeanor to be that of anger and frustration, but found him calm and relaxed. The death of George Floyd, after a Minneapolis cop kneeled on his neck for over 8 minutes, was upsetting but the protests and social upheaval that resulted were "long overdue."

"There is more progress on police reform happening in the past few weeks than in the last few years," Levy said.

More From Invest in You:It's a tough outlook for graduates in the Class of 2020Many college graduates are relying on unemployment to pay the billsPerseverance is key for my generation to succeed and create change in the world

Rubbing his hands together, he brings up the chants for the abolition of police and prisons a notion that "a lot of people have never heard before," which sounds scary and confusing at first thought. Levy explains that the calls for abolition will more than most likely not be met. But what could happen and what people want is "the substantial decrease in the political power of the police, more than anything else." That includes the unions, the supporters of unions, etc. I ask him what he believes is the right course to go, being that both of us will inhabit this world as the next generation. He says abolition of the police but then chuckles, noting that such a decision feels like it would be in the same lane as communism, a word and philosophy hit with such taboo that it started the Cold War between the U.S. and Russia.

I ask him what his plans are post-graduation and if he's worried about money.

Levy says he's stopped looking for entry-level jobs because a lot of seasoned journalists have lost their jobs from this virus and if they can't find a job, then his chances are even less likely. Instead, he says he'll pursue finding an internship just to get some experience in his field. Based on his past experience with an internship, he feels like it's better "to have something rather than nothing."

As for money concerns, it helps that he isn't a big spender, "which is a natural gift," he says. Plus, with the pandemic, no one is making a lot of plans to go anywhere which makes saving money even easier than usual.

So, what does he think about the economy?

Levy says he does not believe a Biden or Trump presidency will do much to change the economy in an effective manner.

What he hopes for is that the government will help people get through this and be more responsive to the cries and demands of its citizens. He'd like to see a more progressive approach for how money is distributed in America things like defunding the police, putting more money into mental health institutions, increasing the minimum wage and taxing not only the rich, but corporations more. He sees the need for less corporate power in politics as a whole.

As I get up to lead him out, we fist pump and say our goodbyes. He places his face mask back on a visual metaphor for how much more needs to be done in order to get things right. The course of real change is met by being in discomfort, not being complacent.

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It's a tough job market, so this college grad is hoping to land an internship anything to get some experience - CNBC

In the Age of Abolition, Many Reforms Constitute Incarceration by Another Name – Truthout

As millions of people ponder a future without police and prisons, and as authorities try to dream up ways of derailing the momentum of popular insurrection, Maya Schenwar and Victoria Laws new book, Prison By Any Other Name: The Harmful Consequences of Popular Reforms, provides a guide to staying on the path to transformation. In the book, Schenwar (Truthouts editor-in-chief) and Law (an investigative reporter who has been covering prison issues for Truthout and other outlets for years) balance two critical needs. First, they alert us to reformist policy tricks and rebranding that authorities will use to keep reproducing oppression on a mass scale. Second, they help us shape our imagining of a different society to view abolition not like a monumental goal we have no hope of ever reaching, but something we practice every day. In this interview, Schenwar and Law discuss how they came to write the book, why reform movements can often co-opt the push for abolition, and why working toward abolition is not simply a distant vision but something we must practice every day.

James Kilgore: How did you come to write this book and why do you think it is relevant at this moment?

Victoria Law: We started writing this book in 2015. We could never have predicted this moment of demands to defund the police, increasing calls for abolition and people wanting to know what a world without police (and prisons) might look like. But here we are and our book examines the pitfalls of popularly proposed reforms that come up repeatedly as alternatives to mass incarceration. These alternatives fail to recognize that policing and imprisonment are built on bedrocks of white supremacy, colonialism and patriarchy. They also ignore the underlying causes of why people commit harm (or engage in acts that are criminalized). Instead, these alternatives pose seemingly more humane measures than locking people in physical buildings, called jails, prisons or immigrant detention centers. But theyre still forms of coercive control. One wrong step like going to the store without permission could mean incarceration. We challenge these reforms and highlight how people are creating new ways to address and prevent violence and harm. Like everyone, I have engaged in and been personally impacted by violence and harm. Punitive policies do nothing to prevent or address harm, nor help people heal from harm.

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Maya Schenwar: Yes Vikki and I were both wary of how sinister new forms of confinement and policing and surveillance were gaining traction in the name of reform.

Part of this wariness emerged from witnessing my sister go back and forth between jails, prisons and other forms of confinement for 15 years, mainly due to her addiction to heroin. When she wasnt in jail or prison when she was free she wasnt actually free. She was bound to an electronic monitor, under harsh probation restrictions, or confined in a mandated drug treatment facility she couldnt leave. This took a toll on her. She would always say her main desire was to be entirely free from institutions, but it felt impossible. None of these alternatives did anything to help her move beyond addiction; study after study has shown us that in general, you cannot mandate people into lasting recovery.

Meanwhile, Id been researching incarceration and editing stories about prisons for many years for Truthout. When I started writing about prisons in 2005, few people wanted to read about that issue. By 2015, there was so much energy fueling the prison reform train. And there was a massive and long-overdue national focus on police violence, anti-Blackness and racial injustice, in the midst of the Black Lives Matter movement and related struggles.

Although there was momentum behind shrinking the system among grassroots activists and powerful organizing happening, politicians were putting energy into reforms that would not change the carceral system at all. We saw a need for a book that would address the limits of and the harm caused by many popular reforms that were being accepted as improvements.

What do you mean by your title: Prison By Any Other Name?

Schenwar: Our title shows how the common reforms we describe are often new forms of imprisonment. Electronic monitoring is a good example; its basically a form of house arrest, as you note in your work, James, terming it e-carceration. We also write a lot about the use of psychiatric hospitals and locked-down drug treatment centers as places to put people as alternatives to prison. These reforms are popular, including among many liberals, because they seem kinder and gentler but they still involve keeping people whove been criminalized out of the larger society. They dont challenge the process of deeming people criminal, a label which is overwhelmingly applied to Black and Indigenous people and other people of color, trans people, disabled people, drug users and other marginalized groups.

These things are not the same as prison: Most people would rather be confined and surveilled in their home than behind bars. But the only options should not be a bad cage or a worse cage. We need to imagine a society with no cages at all.

Can you talk about one or two of the most memorable or surprising encounters you had with people you interviewed in researching this work?

Law: One of my early and most memorable interviews was with Elliott Fukui. Starting from the age of 12, Elliott had been placed in involuntary psychiatric confinement 20 times in seven years. He described how psychiatric confinement, which is often seen as something helpful or protective for those who are experiencing suicidal ideation or mental health crises, actually mimic the punitive structures of imprisonment including solitary confinement, physical violence, lack of human contact, and failures to acknowledge the role of systemic racism and oppressions or underlying traumas leading to mental health issues.

By the time I interviewed Elliott, he was in his thirties, had built a strong support system and developed a safety plan among his friends and community to support him when he was verging on crisis. Hes now an organizer who gives trainings about disability justice training which includes both examining the political history behind the ideas of madness and confinement and building a wellness and safety support system so that a person (and their loved ones) can avoid being entangled in a system that might end with involuntarily confinement, under medication or other controls. His experience challenges the idea that people who are most impacted must look to outside experts to determine what is best for them and instead can create their own paths to safety and wellness.

Schenwar: Patricia, a mother of five, wrote me about being confined to an electronic monitor. Shed been charged with burglary for entering the home of a friend, with whom she had an open-door policy, to retrieve her own medicine. When she got in touch, she had been on house arrest with a monitor for two years. Shed expected to be done in six months. Her sentence dragged on and on largely because she could not pay the weekly fees of $115 to be on the monitor. She cut corners. Her family went a winter without heat, their car was repossessed, they stopped going to the doctor, but still fell behind. Meanwhile, the restrictions of house arrest meant she couldnt even take her children to the park. Her case worker told her that her sentence would continue until she caught up on fees. Meanwhile, she was charged for every week that her sentence was extended.

Here she was, trapped in her home due to poverty. In our first conversation she had told me, If I had just done time, I wouldve been done by now. My whole family is on house arrest and my kids cant understand why.

Stories like Patricias made us want to show how these alternatives that are assumed to be better than prison are still harsh, punitive, oppressive, harmful, and that if we support them, were supporting deep harm inflicted upon human beings, families and communities.

Many actors in these new forms of incarceration pose as guardians of social welfare and protectors of the poor. Can you talk a little about who these people are, how they function and why they pose a danger to an agenda of transformation?

Schenwar: So many people are being deputized as police. Teachers are enlisted to call in the police about a whole range of discipline problems, fueling the school-to-prison pipeline. Doctors, nurses, social workers, child care providers and many others are mandated reporters to Child Protective Services. In 18 states, everyone is a mandated reporter, meaning were all being called upon to police our neighbors parenting. Psychiatrists perpetuate institutions of coercive control in the name of mental health. Case workers serve as gatekeepers to social services and ultimately police their clients. Some policing practices involve recruiting community members to serve as the eyes and ears of the police, surveilling their neighbors and calling the police whenever they sense danger a determination often grounded in racism, classism, transphobia and ableism.

People didnt get into these professions to be police, but its what theyve become. Its not just people with badges and guns. What makes it so insidious is the way in which its supposed to be enforced by all of us. Thats why Vikki and I and other abolitionists are calling for an end to policing, not just the official police.

Obviously, you both think deeply about how racial oppression is intertwined both historically and in these processes of reform. Many people are familiar with the disproportionate incarceration of Black people, but have you found new dimensions to racial oppression in these reforms that you write about?

Law: Racism, colonialism and white supremacy show up in all the popularly proposed alternatives. For instance, we examine the child welfare system, which some have dubbed the New Jane Crow because of how it targets Black women and women of color. People often think this is designed to help parents and children. In reality, the system surveils, controls and punishes. Mariame Kaba calls it the child kidnapping system. A parent doesnt have to be accused of abuse or violence to become entangled in the child welfare system; child welfare intervenes because a family is living in poverty and someone calls in a complaint not having heat in their building or letting their children go to the nearby playground while theyre at work. Many of these types of complaints and the systems reaction draw on cultural assumptions about Black women as mothers vestiges from the times of slavery when slave owners justified breaking apart families and selling children by telling themselves that Black women did not love and care for their children. When we were writing this book, a series of events occurred where people called child welfare on Black mothers because their children were left asleep in a car. At the same time, white parents were writing about raising free-range children, where they allowed their 7-year-old children to roam the city, including taking the subway, without any parental or adult supervision. Public reaction to free-range parenting was mixed, but the child welfare system did not become involved. In the cases of Black mothers who could not afford daycare, children were taken away and placed in foster care.

Schenwar: By the time theyre 18, the majority of Black children have experienced a child protective services investigation. As the child welfare system increasingly targeted Black and Indigenous families in the 1960s and 1970s, it became more punitive. And punitive meant tearing children from their families.

Racial oppression is pervasive in the helping institutions we discuss in our book. Many people love the idea of mandating mental health treatment instead of prison, but these treatments are coercive and inherently oppressive if theyre mandated by a court. Black people are three to five times as likely as white people to be handed a schizophrenia diagnosis one of the serious categories is most likely to result in court-mandated treatment. In the 1960s and 70s, some doctors called schizophrenia protest psychosis and insisted on strong sedatives to address it: trying to literally suppress peoples drive to participate in Black liberation movements. In the late 19th century, some Southern towns labeled Black residents insane by census-takers. Throughout history weve seen how these labels increase peoples vulnerability to measures like sterilization and institutionalization.

We cant separate this countrys systems of care from its explicitly punitive institutions, pretending the former are free of racial oppression.

You obviously place a heavy emphasis on gender analysis. In what ways do you think the gender dynamics of reform are different than what happens when mass incarceration is done with steel and concrete cages?

Law: There are both similarities and differences. For instance, when a father goes to prison, he often has a female partner or family member to take care of his children. Women, on the other hand, are more likely to be primary or sole caregivers to their children. Incarceration removes a mother from that role, making it more likely that her children will land in foster care and be legally terminated from her custody. In 1997, Congress passed (and Clinton signed into law) the Adoption and Safe Families ACT (ASFA), which mandates that, if a child has been in foster care for 15 of the past 22 months, the state needs to begin proceedings to terminate parental rights.

Popular alternatives to incarceration, such as mandatory drug treatment or involuntary psychiatric confinement, might have the same effect. If a mother (or other caregiver) has no one to care for her children while she is confined Somewhere Else, she risks having her children placed in the foster care system. In response, in New York State, advocates, including formerly incarcerated women, fought for the ASFA Expanded Discretion Act to allow judges to pause ASFAs timeline for parents in prison and those whose children are in foster care while they are in residential drug treatment.

Can you describe how you became abolitionists and why it is particularly useful today during the mass uprising?

Law: We live in a society [obsessed with] punishment and punitive policies. This hasnt stopped violence and harm from happening. If it did, we should be living in one of the safest eras in human history.

We need to recognize that, everyone in this world (who is older than a baby or toddler) has both engaged in harm and been impacted by harm. Mass incarceration and the popular alternatives to mass incarceration do not address the underlying reasons behind why harm and violence happen. They dont challenge or change structural conditions (such as racism, misogyny or poverty) or individual reasoning and behavior.

Were in a momentous time when increasing numbers of people are recognizing police do not keep us safe and are often purveyors of violence. Locking up people (mostly Black, Brown and other marginalized people) has not kept us safe, either. We need to put more resources into structures that have proven to meet peoples basic needs and to keep us safe. These include affordable housing, access to medical and mental health care, food, living-waged employment (if not a universal basic income).

When we interviewed Ruth Wilson Gilmore, she encouraged us to think about abolition not as an aspirational adventure but as already-accumulated encounters, awarenesses and activities. She pointed out that organizing for workers rights is a step toward abolition; organizing for environmental justice is a step toward abolition; anything that gets us closer toward meeting peoples actual needs and transforming conditions that are likely to produce harm is a step toward abolition. This helps us view abolition not like a monumental goal we have no hope of ever reaching, but something we practice every day.

Schenwar: Getting to abolition was a journey. My first real, deep personal interactions with the system involved a friend who was incarcerated prior to his deportation, my sisters incarceration in juvenile jail and friends who were incarcerated for acts of civil disobedience. In all of these cases, I could tell myself, Ok, we could get rid of juvenile jail and stop incarcerating people for immigration and end the drug war and free political prisoners, but wed still need prisons to address real problems. Of course, incarceration doesnt solve problems, it entrenches and deepens problems, but this is the mindset thats pervasive in our society, that we somehow need prisons.

Several things pushed me fully toward abolition. One was reading and re-reading Angela Davis, Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Beth Richies work, as well as my mentor Kathy Kellys writings from prison. They encourage us to think beyond incarceration. My friend and pen pal, Lacino Hamilton, who remains in prison in Michigan after more than 20 years inside, has also been one of my primary mentors. Lacino has a deep analysis of how the systems groundings in anti-Blackness and capitalism translate to how everyday life unfolds in prison that you cant just take those things away from prison; but must uproot those groundings. And witnessing the brutality of my sisters repeated incarcerations, and how they never addressed any of her issues but made them worse, caused me to question the entire system more deeply.

It is very significant that calls to abolish police and prisons are now infusing mainstream public discourse. This call to uproot the entire system is being emphasized again and again. Even if some people do not immediately agree, the fact they are even hearing abolition is a thing, that policing is a manifestation of white supremacy and capitalism and should be vanquished is significant. It plants a seed.

Police, prisons and the alternative prisons we describe in our book grew out of a foundation of oppression, and they continue to reproduce oppression on a mass scale. Once someone fully comprehends that, its hard to argue that these institutions have any place in the life-affirming and liberatory society we want to live in.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

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In the Age of Abolition, Many Reforms Constitute Incarceration by Another Name - Truthout

OP-ED: Its time to rethink how we deal with crime – SaltWire Network

HALIFAX, N.S.

In recent weeks, calls to defund police agencies have grown throughout the U.S. and Canada as disturbing images of police brutality against African-Americans and Indigenous people continue to receive high-profile attention.

The term defund is an ambiguously provocative moniker. Even if it is taken literally, there is little chance that any resulting policies will lead to the abandonment of big-city police agencies or the discarding of traditional law enforcement approaches to crime. Indeed, most of the immediate reforms contemplated in such cities as New York, Los Angeles and Toronto in recent weeks entail only a modicum of budget cuts to their police agencies.

To be sure, some advocate for the abolition of police forces, in part because of the historical and systemic racism that persists in policing and law enforcement cultures, policies, and programs.

Calls to defund branches of the criminal justice system (CJS) are not limited to police; a prison abolition movement has grown in North America and Europe as critics demand a wholesale move away from state-imposed institutionalization and punishment and toward community-based corrections, rehabilitation, and social reintegration. Solitary confinement has become a lightning rod for prison abolitionists who cite research and high-profile cases exposing how its use constitutes a human rights violation.

Calls to defund and abolish the police and the broader carceral structure of criminal justice are the result of an increased understanding of the inherent limitations, misuses, and injustices of the CJS that put the sanctity of the entire system beyond even the most meaningful reforms. The traditional cops, courts, and corrections approach is insufficient to unilaterally control, prevent, or deter acts that threaten public safety; the CJS is unable to cope with the actual quantity of crime, fails to identify most criminal offenders and bring them to justice, fails to rehabilitate offenders, and fails to address the underlying factors that contribute to crime and criminality.

There is scant theoretical justification for the traditional CJS approach to controlling crime. Deterrence theory which assumes that crime results from a rational calculation of the costs and benefits of criminal activity and therefore potential offenders can be swayed from such behaviour through the threat of punishment rests on the false premise that altering criminal penalties will alter behaviour. In fact, research and statistics generally conclude that increasing the severity of penalties has only a negligible effect on crime and recidivism, especially among serious and chronic offenders (although this body of knowledge did little to influence the Harper Governments tough-on-crime agenda).

Critics of the CJS also point to its enormous costs, the high rate of incarceration generally and of nonviolent offenders specifically, and the negative impact that a criminal record and incarceration can have on people.

Perhaps the most damning critique of the CJS is that it is fraught with systemic injustices perpetrated against the innocent, victims, those from lower socio-economic backgrounds, and those with mental illnesses. The most frequent injustices of the CJS in North America are committed against people of African or Indigenous heritage, who are arrested, punished, incarcerated, abused, and killed by the system at a rate far greater than Caucasian offenders. The criminal justice system in Nova Scotia has long been plagued by racism, the latest evidence of which is documented in a 2019 report on racial profiling by Halifax-area police showing that black people were carded at a rate six times higher than that of white people.

Another fundamental criticism of the CJS is that it is almost entirely reactive when addressing crime and disorder issues and, as a result, only addresses the symptoms of much deeper social problems. What makes this particularly troubling is that police and the CJS have increasingly become the main state institution in dealing with a broad range of social problems that have nothing to do with crime, such as family breakdown, mental health illnesses, homelessness, poverty, inequality, and racism.

The intrinsic faults and unfairness of the CJS underscore the importance of the defund and abolition movements. It should be noted, however, that many activists and intellectuals behind the calls for defunding are not endorsing the abolition of law enforcement agencies necessarily; instead, they are arguing that funding and other resources be shifted to policies, programs, agencies, and institutions that can more effectively and fundamentally address the root causes of crime and other social problems while avoiding the abuses and injustices wrought by the CJS.

For years, criminologists such as myself have called for a massive shift in resources away from the CJS towards crime prevention and, more specifically, problem-solving solutions that emphasize social and community development. This alternative approach is inherently proactive in that it focuses on the social (root) causes of criminality by strengthening such institutions as the family, housing, schools, health care, social welfare systems, and local communities and economies.

Central to this philosophy is the belief that many social problems currently being dealt with through the CJS should be treated as public health issues and addressed accordingly. A proactive, preventative, public health approach to crime and violence emphasizes such alternatives to policing, law enforcement and the CJS as social workers (to work with troubled families), outreach workers (for at-risk youth and homeless populations), conflict mediators (to prevent violence), community-based psychiatric nurses (to deal with mental health emergencies), supervised group homes (for those with complex needs), restorative justice (as an alternative to courts), as well as addictions treatment centres and safe injection sites.

The American criminologist Peter Greenwood distinguishes between the ultimate goals of the CJS and that of social problem-solving crime prevention. He asserts that the main role of the CJS in helping to produce a civil and orderly society is the control of individuals and groups. In contrast, crime prevention through social and community development is ultimately geared toward the improved functioning of the individual and society.

While disagreements may exist over the definition and extent of defunding, there is a growing need to fundamentally re-think how we deal with crime in society. At the very least, less emphasis should be placed on the use of policing, law enforcement, and the broader CJS as the front-line institutions in dealing with social problems. Concomitantly, resources need to be shifted towards those policies, programs, organizations, and institutions that truly address the root causes of crime through proactive, community development, social welfare, and public health interventions, especially ones that serve those who are most marginalized and discriminated against in our society.

Stephen Schneider, a resident of Wolfville, is a professor with St. Marys Universitys Department of Criminology.

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OP-ED: Its time to rethink how we deal with crime - SaltWire Network

Not Another NHS Reorganisation? – Medscape

In his State of the Union address in 1962 President John F Kennedy declared 'The time to repair the roof is when the sun is shining'.

It would seem reasonable to infer from this that it would be a really bad time to fix the roof during a huge typhoon, or perhaps during an unprecedented global pandemic if we were to be thinking about this in terms of the NHS.

The NHS is a huge, complicated organisation and has shown itself to be remarkably resilient for dealing with the first acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. I think most commentators would praise how the NHS has coped with this, showing great flexibility, including being able to rapidly bring on-line huge increases in critical care capacity to ensure that this precious commodity was not overwhelmed by demand. There are rightly held concerns regarding the delays - which are becoming more evident - affecting cancer diagnosis and treatment and other elective waiting lists.

The complexity of the NHS and the trends of demand - particularly as the UK is dealing with an increasingly elderly population with multiple medical conditions - means that NHS planning needs to be considered over the medium to long-term. Unfortunately, it seems that our political leaders rarely think of such timescales and usually only consider actions over the terms of a parliament and their chances of re-election.

Over the years the NHS has gone through multiple, and considerable, reorganisations, from the establishment of NHS foundation trusts under Tony Blair's government in The NHS Plan in 2000 - which gave much more autonomy to high performing hospitals - to the more recent and lamented Andrew Lansley reforms in the Health and Social Care Act 2012. Lansley's act was opposed by the BMA as it was felt that it would increase the amount of private provision within the NHS - this has proved unfounded. But it did result in massive organisational changes. Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) and Strategic Health Authorities (SHAs) were abolished and their 60-80 billion worth of commissioning was transferred to GP-led clinical commissioning groups. These changes were hugely costly, with projected redundancy costs of 1 billion for around 21,000 PCT and SHA staff, many of whom received large redundancy payments only to be re-employed in almost identical roles for the new groups.

Prior to the introduction of Lansley's reforms warnings were given that the abolition of SHAs - which were responsible for improving regional services and for co-ordinating responses to challenges posed - and the disruption to the speciality of public health with diminished funding, would disrupt our ability to respond to an emergency or epidemic situation. It is unfortunate to consider that if the COVID-19 pandemic had occurred 10 years earlier, the local authorities would have been in a much better position to cope and to mobilise far more quickly than happened this year, when the contact tracing was abandoned in early March.

As the death toll mounts in the UK, with the official overall number at more than 45,000, many feel that the Government should have done better in its response. It seems unable to acknowledge any mistakes and continues to make claims of 'world beating/leading' initiatives including a 'game-changing app' for track and trace that was abandoned at an apparent cost of more than 11 million, for 6 weeks work. The manual track and trace system, despite great fanfare and claims of great success, appears to be failing to contact approximately 1 in 5 confirmed COVID cases, and of those contacted around 70% of their close contacts were identified and asked to self-isolate. Although freely admitting limited knowledge about the epidemiology, the large percentage not being identified leaves me concerned about our ability to identify and limit any further local outbreaks.

Unfortunately, one area we appear to have been 'world leading' during this pandemic is with the number of health and social care workers that have sadly lost their lives. The UK, with at least 540 deaths, is second only to Russia (545).

With this background it is concerning to learn that the Prime Minister is planning a radical reorganisation of the NHS, and the thought of the incumbent government and its ministers gaining more direct control of the NHS does not fill me with any confidence following their continued apparent mismanagement of the current crisis. It is claimed that there is ministerial frustration with the role played by some agencies during the pandemic, particularly Public Health England (PHE), and with the independence of Simon Stevens, the Health Service's chief executive.

Any further major reorganisations will undoubtedly come at significant cost and would seem wasteful in the current climate of stretched NHS budgets. These will likely worsen rather than improve once the full economic cost of the COVID pandemic becomes clear and the Government's spending spree needs to be repaid. The cynics may suggest that this apparent desire to reform the NHS is merely one of the opening gambits for the inevitable 'blame game' that seems certain to follow, and highlighting problems within the NHS would help absolve or deflect blame from government.

The Lansley reforms that introduced competition between health care providers possibly had no place in a national health service, and many organisations are already working in closer partnerships at local levels to ensure that resources can be used more efficiently, for example, centralisation of acute stroke services, rather than each hospital delivering this 24/7.

The NHS is far from perfect, but it has shown incredible adaptability and resilience in its response to this unprecedented crisis. The last thing the NHS needs at this time is the distraction of another huge reorganisation which would possibly be motivated for short-term political gains rather than necessarily for the long-term future of the NHS. It is worth stating that some of the initiatives that were enforced by the pandemic need to be explored further and possibly maintained, for example, increased use of telephone and video consultations, and perhaps the introduction of A&E by appointment.

I'd even go as far to suggest that given the opportunity to make a sensible long-term plan, with appropriate funding and with limited political interference (I know this is unlikely to happen), the NHS could, indeed, get back to being 'world beating'.

Original post:

Not Another NHS Reorganisation? - Medscape

Race-based disadvantage denialism is a head-on assault on the transformation project – Daily Maverick

Former minister of trade and industry Rob Davies. (Photo: EPA / Nic Bothma)

The reinvigoration of the Black Lives Matter campaign in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd has underscored the extent to which racism and race-based disadvantage has persisted in the United States more than 150 years after the abolition of slavery and more than 50 years after the passage of civil rights legislation.

A growing number of people around the world are now recognising the necessity for further steps to be taken in many countries to eliminate structural racism as an integral part of promoting greater inclusivity and social justice.

Yet, in South Africa, we still have people who want to argue that because we have had universal suffrage for just 26 years, the effects of hundreds of years of discrimination and institutionalised racism have disappeared and any remaining disadvantage must be due to individual circumstances.

One such denialist is Paul Janisch (Business Maverick, 22/7/2020). For some years, Janisch has run a blog dedicated to demonising any measure aimed at promoting broad-based black economic empowerment (BBBEE). His stock in trade has involved highly personalised attacks, including developing an infantile nickname for myself: Bolshie Bob. Wednesdays piece was yet another example of his red-baiting anti-transformation rants.

For the record, when I was appointed minister of trade and industry in 2009, the 2003 Black Empowerment Act was already in force. The Codes of Good Practice developed in terms of it had the merit of establishing a system to measure and compare various BEE initiatives then underway.

The act also sought to promote and encourage empowerment by setting this as a factor to be taken into account by public authorities when awarding incentives or other benefits. Research presented at the BBBEE Advisory Council, however, indicated that despite this legislation:

The overall result was that what passed for BEE was all too often a share deal in which some black persons received a minority stake in some established company unmatched by any real managerial or leadership control. Companies involved in such deals, again all too often, presented themselves as empowered for the purposes of obtaining some or other benefit from the government.

The 2013 BBBEE Amendment Act was an attempt to steer BEE in a better and more productive direction. It established a statutory offence of fronting and set up a BBBEE Commission to investigate and deal with cases of fronting. Revised codes required delivery, at a sub-minimum level, on such elements as skills development and supplier development elements which we judged could help promote a greater level of more effective empowerment of black people either in empowering companies themselves or in their supply chains.

What cannot be allowed to pass unchallenged, though, are attempts by denialists like Janisch to generalise issues arising in this particular case into a head-on assault on the transformation project as a whole. What he thinks of me is immaterial and a matter of complete indifference to me personally.

The 2013 Amendment Act also sought to facilitate the inclusion of small black-owned enterprises into supply chains by proscribing any requirement on them to obtain costly BEE verification certificates.

Verification agencies were not statutory bodies and their assessments were not required for official purposes. They had sprung up in the years after the 2003 act, and their verification certificates were widely demanded by larger companies seeking to earn points for themselves in dealings with suppliers. Apart from removing costly private sector red tape from SMMEs, the 2013 act also required the development of a regulatory framework for verification agencies a task that, alas, still has to be completed.

Significantly, the 2013 Amendment Bill was supported in the National Assembly by the DA, under its then parliamentary leader, Lindiwe Mazibuko that is until she was overruled by her leader and sent to Harvard. Other initiatives we undertook included the Black Industrialist programme, where incentives were provided to black-owned businesses involved in manufacturing. I would maintain that the vast majority of beneficiaries were quality enterprises of the sort we definitely need to see more of.

Have these measures eliminated fronting? Absolutely not. But, I would argue, we are much better equipped to tackle what is, after all, a form of fraud by having established the commission. By the time I left office, the commission had dealt with several cases of fronting to good effect. Does still more need to be done to develop a more productive and genuinely broad-based BEE? Absolutely, and I am sure this is something the current authorities are seized with.

The issue that Janisch seized on arose from an attempt to simplify and render less costly efforts by public entities to facilitate BBBEE. Instead of requiring development finance institutions or operators of public infrastructure to have to obtain verification certificates, a process was developed to accord them BBBEE facilitator status. A high court has now ruled that there were procedural flaws in the case of Telkom, which it also ruled was not entitled to such status as it is not a fully state-owned entity. The current authorities will have to determine the way forward on that particular issue.

What cannot be allowed to pass unchallenged, though, are attempts by denialists like Janisch to generalise issues arising in this particular case into a head-on assault on the transformation project as a whole. What he thinks of me is immaterial and a matter of complete indifference to me personally.

But, in the world after Covid-19, which is also the world increasingly recognising the imperative to work to eliminate structural racialised inequality and poverty, the common task required of all South Africans must surely be to find new and better ways to ensure that such issues are addressed in ways that result in more inclusive outcomes. BM/DM

Rob Davies is a retired former Minister of Trade and Industry.

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Race-based disadvantage denialism is a head-on assault on the transformation project - Daily Maverick