Geriatric psychiatry and COVID-19: Interview with Dr. Ali Abbas Asghar-Ali – Baylor College of Medicine News

Editors note: This is the first in a series of Progress Notes posts featuring mental health professionals, their interests, and their thoughts on the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Ali Abbas Asghar-Ali is a geriatric psychiatrist and currently serves as the geriatric psychiatric fellowship director at Baylor College of Medicine. He is also dedicated to enhancing the cultural attunement of clinicians to best serve all patients.

I have been fortunate enough to engage and receive professional guidance from Dr. Asghar-Ali, who also serves as the faculty advisor for PsychMinded, the student organization leading this interview series.

Dr. Asghar-Ali shares his professional journey and how he has been coping during these uncertain times.

It wasnt until late in my third year in medical school that I decided I would like to pursue psychiatry. When I started medical school, I saw myself becoming an internist. During my rotation in psychiatry, I recognized how much I enjoyed learning about peoples emotional health and working with individuals and the environments in which they exist. It was only then that I realized I had an interest in psychological constructs and community structures.

I took as many sociology and psychology courses as I could as a science major. In medical school, I never missed a psychiatry interest group meeting (while I was vice president of the internal medicine interest group!)

I am a geriatric psychiatrist, which requires a one-year fellowship after completion of a general psychiatry residency. Since completing my training, I have been at the VA, which is an ideal clinical setting for a geriatric practitioner and offers tremendous opportunities to develop an educational and research career.

For eight years I was an inpatient geriatric psychiatrist. However, for the last five years my time has been split between electroconvulsive therapy and educational efforts at the South Central Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center.

The field has a lot to offer and can be extremely gratifying. There are a tremendous number of facets to psychiatry, ranging from psychoanalytic therapy to deep brain stimulation. Though stigma persists, there is change afoot with an increasing emphasis on mental wellness and seeking care if needed, making this an ideal time to become a psychiatrist.

Geriatric psychiatry is a remarkably interdisciplinary sub-specialty. Older adults can have highly complex conditions and needs, and often no one discipline can fully address these needs. Depending on the setting, e.g., an acute inpatient unit, the psychiatrist may be the team lead. In such a circumstance, their role would include diagnosis and directing the treatment plan. Within treatment planning, they would be considered the expert in psychiatric medication management.

However, it is critical that psychiatrists have a biopsychosocial understanding of the persons condition and develop a treatment plan that acknowledges and strives to address each issue. While the psychiatrist may not be the expert in social interventions, they must be knowledgeable about resources that could be utilized and incorporate them into treatment planning.

Shared responsibility and humility are important when working in an interdisciplinary team. Its essential that all team members have an opportunity to voice their understanding and recommendations. In geriatric psychiatry, the team often also includes an occupational therapist/physical therapist, caregivers, and a geriatrician. Specialists such as neurologists, speech pathologists, PM&R specialists, may also interface with the team.

I feel very fortunate that I have been able to continue my work with little disruption we are able to offer ECT at the VA to those who need it, and I continue to develop scholarly projects. I work with wonderful colleagues who are supportive.

Of course, I have been spending much more time at home and I again feel fortunate to have a comfortable home in which my mother, children, wife, and I can all have our own space. As a family, we have undoubtedly grown closer. Ramadan was especially meaningful as we practiced all our observances together with minimal distractions. I have been taking more time to sleep and ensuring that physical activity does not disappear from my life.

Paying attention to mental health and physical health before there are problems is important Were often taught to brush things under the carpet, to push through. However, its important to take time to develop personal resources to manage day-to-day life, then employ these resources when stressors occur.

We have developed a Wellness Guide for Veterans that highlights tools to maintain wellness, I also read a wonderful article that highlights the usefulness of laughter and how to harness it in a very deliberate manner.

I am also a great believer in interdependence. Working as a collective, whether its with colleagues, friends, family, or healthcare professionals not only builds bonds, but also allows us to maximize our resources.

-By Jessica C. Sheu, third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine

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Citius Pharmaceuticals Forms Scientific Advisory Board for the Planned Development of its Proprietary Treatment for Acute Respiratory Disease…

CRANFORD, N.J., July 22, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Citius Pharmaceuticals, Inc.("CITIUS") ("Company") (NASDAQ:CTXR), a specialty pharmaceutical companyfocused on developing and commercializing critical care drug products, announced today the formation of the Citius ARDS (Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome) Scientific Advisory Board to provide the company expert guidance on its planned development of induced mesenchymal stem cells (iMSCs) under option from Novellus, Inc. to treat and reduce the severity of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) associated with COVID -19.

The ARDS Advisory Board consultants are:Michael A. Matthay, MD, Professor of Medicine and Anesthesia at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF), a Senior Associate at the Cardiovascular Research Institute, and Associate Director of the Critical Care Medicine at UCSF. Dr. Matthay's basic research has focused on the pathogenesis and resolution of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), with an emphasis on translational work and patient-based research, including clinical trials. Dr. Matthay's recent research has focused on the biology and potential clinical use of allogeneic bone marrow derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) for ARDS. He is currently leading the "Mesenchymal Stromal Cells For Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (STAT)," a United States Department of Defense supported study of MSCs for ARDS.

Mitchell M. Levy, MD, Chief, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, where he is Professor of Medicine. Dr. Levy also serves as Medical Director of the Medical ICU at Rhode Island Hospital. He has been an investigator on numerous pharmacologic and biologic trials intended to treat sepsis, cardiovascular and pulmonary pathology. He has expertise in trial design, clinical trial execution and trial management and is one of the three founding members of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC). Dr. Levy is Past-President of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (2009).

Lorraine B. Ware, MD, Professor of Medicine and Ralph and Lulu Owen Endowed Chair,Professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University;Director, Vanderbilt Medical Scholars Program. Dr. Lorraine Ware's comprehensive bench-to-bedside research program centers on the pathogenesis and treatment of sepsis and acute lung injury with a current focus on mechanisms of lung epithelial and endothelial oxidative injury by cell-free hemoglobin. Dr. Ware is also a lead investigator for the "Mesenchymal Stromal Cells For Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (STAT)" study.

"We are extremely pleased to have been able to attract such a prestigious group of experts to advise and guide us in the Company's planned development of iMSC's for the treatment of ARDS" said Mr. Myron Holubiak, CEO of Citius. "These individuals are recognized opinion leaders and expert in the planning and execution of clinical trials in this therapeutic area. We will be seeking their advice in all phases of our clinical trial design."

About Citius Pharmaceuticals, Inc.Citius is a late-stage specialty pharmaceutical company dedicated to the development and commercialization of critical care products, with a focus on anti-infectives and cancer care. For more information, please visit http://www.citiuspharma.com.

About Citius iMSCCitius's planned induced mesenchymal stem cell (iMSC) product is derived from a human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line generated using a proprietary non-immunogenic and non-viral mRNA-based (non-viral) reprogramming process. Unlike the MSCs derived from bone marrow, placenta, umbilical cord, or adipose tissue these proprietary iMSCs are based on a clonal process and therefore are genetically homogeneous and exhibit superior potency and higher cell viability. The Citius iMSC is an allogeneic (unrelated donor) mesenchymal stem-cell product manufactured by expanding material from an iMSC master cell bank. The master cell bank produces "off-the-shelf" iMSCs that are uniform as compared to MSCs using donor-sourced cells, which is subject to batch-to-batch and cell-to-cell variability that can affect clinical safety and efficacy. In vitro studies demonstrate that iMSCs are shown to secrete higher levels of immunomodulatory proteins than donor-derived cells, and may reduce or prevent pulmonary injury associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in patients with COVID-19.

About Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)ARDS is a type of respiratory failure characterized by rapid onset of widespread inflammation in the lungs. ARDS is a rapidly progressive disease that occurs in critically ill patients most notably now in those diagnosed with COVID-19. ARDS affects approximately 200,000 patients per year in the U.S., exclusive of the current COVID-19 pandemic, and has a 30% to 50% mortality rate. ARDS is sometimes initially diagnosed as pneumonia or pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs from heart disease). Symptoms of ARDS include shortness of breath, rapid breathing and heart rate, chest pain (particularly while inhaling), and bluish skin coloration. Among those who survive ARDS, a decreased quality of life is relatively common.

Safe HarborThis press release may contain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Such statements are made based on our expectations and beliefs concerning future events impacting Citius. You can identify these statements by the fact that they use words such as "will," "anticipate," "estimate," "expect," "should," and "may" and other words and terms of similar meaning or use of future dates. Forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could negatively affect our business, operating results, financial condition and stock price.

Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those currently anticipated are: the risk of successfully negotiating within the option period a license agreement with Novellus, Inc. for our planned iMSCs therapy for ARDS; our need for substantial additional funds; risks associated with conducting clinical trials and drug development; the estimated markets for our product candidates and the acceptance thereof by any market; risks related to our growth strategy; risks relating to the results of research and development activities; uncertainties relating to preclinical and clinical testing; the early stage of products under development; our ability to obtain, perform under and maintain financing and strategic agreements and relationships; our ability to identify, acquire, close and integrate product candidates and companies successfully and on a timely basis; our dependence on third-party suppliers; our ability to attract, integrate, and retain key personnel; government regulation; patent and intellectual property matters; competition; as well as other risks described in our SEC filings. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in our expectations or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based, except as required by law.

Contact:Andrew ScottVice President, Corporate Development(O) 908-967-6677 x105ascott@citiuspharma.com

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For Black Scientists, the Sorrow Is Also Personal – Duke Today

I have tried to live in a world that does not see color but have only succeeded in living in a world that does not see me.

I am a medical doctor and a scientist; the first African American awarded a PhD in neuroscience at Duke University. I have led a National Institutes of Health-funded research lab for almost a decade, and I was awarded the Society for Neuroscience Young Investigator Prize in 2019. I am an American Association for the Advancement of Science Alan I. Leshner Public Engagement Fellow, and I have hosted TEDMED three times.

I am a scholar, teacher, mentor, speaker, and mental health advocate. I have served on national commissions, I have advanced federal policy, and I have even held court with a president of the United States. I have published in Cell scientific journals, and as a peer reviewer, I have worked to advance the scientific rigor of my colleagues. Yet, most days, I am unseen and unknown. As I watched a knee slowly, mercilessly, and inhumanly extinguish yet another black life, I was overwhelmed by anger and sorrow, and at this very moment, I am terrified to run on the trail near my home. I am a black academic in America.

Academia is the space where evidence is created, explored, and shared. I started medical school 20 years ago full of the belief that everyone was equal and that scientific evidence was fair, unbiased, and always reflected the truth. Yet, I was soon confronted by overwhelming images of black men in my textbooks who all had advanced-staged sexually transmitted diseases. Surely it wasnt only black men that get STDs? These subtexts about race and health infected many of the narratives that accompanied daily morning rounds in the hospital. One day, it became strikingly clear that the academic system was subtly advancing an insidious idea that everyone was not indeed equal.

As I grew as a scientist, I began to recognize the profound consequences of this insidious framework. I learned that blacks were underrepresented in the clinical trials used to achieve FDA approval for many commonly prescribed medications. How could any well-reasoned scholar then argue that these medications worked as well for black patients? Even the large-scale genomic studies I read in the world-leading scientific journals as a physician-scientist trainee did not extrapolate to blacks. Did black lives even matter with regards to the equitable development and distribution of medical interventions? Every corner of the academic system seemed to suggest that they did not, and there were few black academics to generate alternative evidence to confront this insidiously biased framework. Even now, only 12 percent of scientists awarded major grants by the National Institutes of Health are black. Painfully, scientific evidence also suggests that even after accounting for training institutions, publication records, and major awards, the review system used to select winners for these research grants is biased against blacks.

While these systematic realities each take their emotional and intellectual toll, my personal experiences as a black academic in America have been much more scarring. There was the time a well-meaning individual called the police to report a black man soliciting in my friends neighborhood. The squad car arrived as I was walking toward my friends house from a nearby pond; my Danskos, scrubs, white coat, Duke medical school ID badge, and the oversized anatomy book in my hand were not sufficient evidence to bypass their 20 minute inquisition.

Every meeting is my protest. Every protest is exhausting. There is a price that I pay every single day.-- Dr. Kafui Dzirasa

There was the first time that I was invited to give a keynote lecture at a major international conference. While I stood in the hotel lobby with my colleagues, a woman walked through the crowd and handed me her suitcase. I was the only black face in sight. Then, there are the endless occasions where colleagues who always say hi when I am wearing my white coat either dont recognize me when I wave or even make eye contact with me when I am wearing sweatpants (my preferred outfit in the lab).

The most embarrassing experience was when I went to grab a slice of pizza at my department lunch after a student seminar. A staff member quickly approached and asked me who I work for (myself) and then whose lab I was in (my own) as if I had not understood the question, though we were literally standing in the same research building that Ive spent the vast majority of my time in as a graduate student, postdoctoral researcher, clinical resident, and faculty over the last 20 years. I responded in the same way I always do. I hid myself and answered with a smile. I am a black man, and the idea of making people feel uncomfortable about my presence always feels like career suicide.

Since then, Ive sat in far too many meetings where there are no faces that look like mine. The pipeline doesnt existits impossible to recruit talented black people, they say. And so, I choose to quietly protest this entire academic system with my excellence. I held my protests at Duke, MIT, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, WashU, UPenn, Yale, Weill Cornell, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, Stanford, UCSF, Columbia, UVA, University of Rochester, Tufts, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UT Southwestern, Baylor, NYU, University of Chicago, Northwestern, UIC, UT San Antonio, UNC, NC State, Brown, University of Buffalo, Ohio State, University of Minnesota, UCSD, UCLA, University of Colorado Anschultz, Cal Tech, National Institutes of Health, Woods Hole, Einstein, and the University of Florida. For the few black trainees in the audience, it is the first time that they see a face that looks like theirs at the podium. I prepare endlessly to become the best because my excellence gives these trainees hope.

I must outwork this system. I must outlast this system. I must be scientifically sound and full of wit. Its the only way to have impact. I must be endlessly optimistic. Its the only way to endure the unceasing environmental cues that scream I dont belong. I bear the full weight of my experiences, my perspectives, and my community as I work tirelessly to advance the biomedical research enterprise and the mental health of all Americans.

Every meeting is my protest. Every protest is exhausting. There is a price that I pay every single day. I accept this unfathomablepersonal cost to create new evidence and to counterbalance insidious historical untruths.

I also bear the shared experiences of the many young scientists that I mentor. We are all tired, and we have been crippled by the weight of these chronic and acute experiences. And yet, we all continue to yearn and desperately hope for a day when AllLivesMatter. This was Martin Luther King Jr.s dream, the self-evident promise whispered at our precious Americas inception. We are drowning in sorrow.

Yet, we are also overbrimming with hope as our beloved America finally awakens to the notion that all lives cannot matter until BlackLivesMatter too. We are black academics in America. We too define the truth, and it is time for our colleagues to listen and, in this instance, follow.

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For Black Scientists, the Sorrow Is Also Personal - Duke Today

COVID-19 vaccine trials to be conducted at Washington University, Saint Louis University Washington University – Washington University School of…

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Vaccine trials to enroll about 3,000 area residents

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the Saint Louis University Center for Vaccine Development have joined the effort to find a COVID-19 vaccine that can prevent the illness. Researchers at the universities expect to enroll about 3,000 participants in several COVID-19 vaccine trials, with each school participating in different trials.

As U.S. scientists ramp up a national effort to evaluate COVID-19 vaccine candidates at clinical trial sites across the country, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the Saint Louis University Center for Vaccine Development have been tapped to join the historic effort to find a COVID-19 vaccine that can prevent the illness.

Researchers at the two universities expect to enroll about 3,000 participants in several COVID-19 vaccine trials, with each school participating in different trials.

Researchers say it will be critically important to enroll participants who are likely to be exposed to COVID-19 or those at risk for severe disease from COVID-19, including participants over age 65.

COVID-19 Prevention Network

Washington University and Saint Louis University are participating in the trials as a part of the COVID-19 Prevention Network (CoVPN), a newly organized network formed by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) to develop and test vaccines and treatments in the fight against COVID-19.

The COVID-19 Prevention Network will participate in large-scale phase 3 vaccine trials that will enroll thousands of participants from across the U.S. or in some cases around the world to determine whether the vaccines can prevent COVID-19 disease.

The COVID-19 Prevention Network brings together several existing NIH networks, including:

Each of the networks has expertise in conducting clinical trials and is quickly pivoting to evaluate potential COVID-19 vaccines.

Leaders in the Field

Locally, Washington University and Saint Louis University are well positioned to conduct the COVID-19 vaccine trials, due to extensive expertise in infectious disease research.

The Saint Louis University Center for Vaccine Development is home to one of 10 Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Units in the United States. As such, SLU conducts phases 1 through 4 vaccine and treatment trials, including clinical studies in collaboration with industry partners.

The Center for Vaccine Development at Saint Louis University has 30 years of experience testing novel vaccines and completing urgent pandemic vaccine trials, said Daniel Hoft, MD, PhD, the centers director and principal investigator for the VTEU. We recognize that particularly in these unprecedented times, collaboration is critically important. We look forward to using the collective strengths at SLU and Washington University to get COVID-19 vaccines ready for the U.S. public and world.

Washington University School of Medicine has more than 30 years experience leading clinical trials evaluating new treatments and vaccines for infectious diseases through its Infectious Disease Clinical Research Unit and the AIDS Clinical Trials Group. The latter has been instrumental in conducting trials to control the HIV pandemic, leading to safe and effective medications that treat and prevent HIV infection and AIDS.

Our long history of working with the HIV community has demonstrated how critically important community support is in conducting successful clinical trials, said Rachel Presti, MD, PhD, an associate professor of medicine, director of Washington Universitys Infectious Disease Clinical Research Unit and principal investigator for the AIDS Clinical Trials Group and the HIV Prevention Trials Network. We are excited that the St. Louis community will have this opportunity to participate in historic clinical trials aimed at helping to identify the most effective vaccines for preventing COVID-19.

Partnering with the Community

St. Louisans will be key to the success of the vaccine trials, said Sharon Frey, MD, clinical director of SLUs Center for Vaccine Development and principal investigator of the trial at SLU. A powerful example of the role the St. Louis community plays in advancing public health was seen in the communitys response to the 2009 pandemic influenza vaccine trial. We are deeply grateful for the support of the St. Louis community as we launch these trials, which represent our best hope to fight back against the COVID-19 pandemic.

This is where we begin to really fight back against the scourge of COVID-19, said Washington University lead research coordinator Michael Klebert, PhD, an instructor of medicine. The collaboration of two world-class medical schools with the support of volunteers from the St. Louis community in this effort will be a powerful combination. We are looking forward to the challenge.

Saint Louis University and Washington University will share additional information about the trials as it becomes available.

For more information about vaccine trials at Washington University School of Medicine, please email idcru@wustl.edu; call 314-454-0058 or visit the Division of Infectious Diseases clinical trials site.

For more information about vaccine trials at Saint Louis Universitys Center for Vaccine Development, please visit vaccine.slu.edu; call 314-977-6333 or 1-866-410-6333; or email vaccine@slu.edu.

The Washington University HIV Clinical Trials Unit is supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), grant numbers 5UM1AI069439-15 and 3UM1AI069439-15S1.

The Saint Louis University project is funded under cooperative agreement number UM1 AI148685.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

Established in 1836, Saint Louis University School of Medicine has the distinction of awarding the first medical degree west of the Mississippi River. The school educates physicians and biomedical scientists, conducts medical research, and provides health care on a local, national and international level. Research at the school seeks new cures and treatments in five key areas: infectious disease, liver disease, cancer, heart/lung disease, and aging and brain disorders.

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Different Takes: Gun Violence Is Almost Rivaling The Pandemic; Sacklers Just Might Get Away With Their Fortune Intact – Kaiser Health News

Editorial pages focus on these public health issues and others.

The Washington Post:2020 Is Shattering Gun Violence Records. We Must Act.As the novel coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the United States, another epidemic is surging: gun violence. Most other types of crime fell during the initial phases of the pandemic, but gun violence increased and mass shootings in particular continue to spiral out of control. There are a lot of crises tugging at the publics attention, but we cannot let this go unresolved. Often when people discuss mass shootings, they focus on the number of people killed, but that overlooks the massive public health and economic toll that nonfatal shootings have on this country. To better take that into account, we define mass shootings as incidents in which four or more people are shot, excluding the shooter. (Devin Hughes, 7/21)

The New York Times:The Sacklers Could Get Away With ItThe billionaire Sacklers who own Purdue Pharma, maker of the OxyContin painkiller that helped fuel Americas opioid epidemic, are among Americas richest families. And if they have their way, the federal court handling Purdues bankruptcy case will help them hold on to their wealth by releasing them from liability for the ravages caused by OxyContin. The July 30 deadline for filing claims in Purdues bankruptcy proceedings potentially implicates not just claims against Purdue, but also claims against the Sacklers. The Sacklers may yet again benefit from expansive powers that bankruptcy courts exercise in complex cases. (Gerald Posner and Ralph Brubaker, 7/22)

Stat:Medical Schools Need To Lower The Cost Of Producing DoctorsMedicine has become a profession accessible mainly to the rich. Just look at the price tag for medical school. In the 1960s, the four years of medical education needed to earn an M.D. in the United States could be had for about $40,000 in todays dollars. The price is now $300,000, a 750% increase. (David A. Asch, Justin Grischkan and Sean Nicholson, 7/21)

Stat:My Patients Want The Good Old Days Of Office VisitsI recently got a note from my secretary with this message from a patient: Tell the doctor I have no interest in a phone call or one of those video visits. When she is back to seeing patients again in the office, let me know. Im hearing that a lot lately from patients who continue to delay routine medical care, not due to fears of Covid-19 but because they yearn for the old face-to-face office visit. (Amy E. Wheeler, 7/22)

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Promoting diversity and inclusion as a medical student at Stanford – Scope

Third-year medical student Claire Rhee decidedto take a stand on issues of social justice long before she chose to pursue a career in medicine.

When she was still in high school in New Jersey, Rheebecame fascinated with the many ways that social context, income level and surroundings can influence a person's health.

After arriving at medical school at Stanford, she became increasingly involved in promoting diversity and inclusion, which led her to serve last year as co-chair of the Stanford University Minority Medical Alliance. SUMMA represents and promotes awareness of issues facing a number of minority groups, including African Americans, Latinx, Asian-Pacific Americans, Muslims, people from indigenous backgrounds, people who identify as LBGTQ+, and people with disabilities or chronic illness.

I caught up with Rhee to discuss her time with SUMMA, diversity and inclusion in health care, and what it means to be an ally.

Why did you get involved in SUMMA?

Being an Asian American, straight-passing woman, I can engage in these communities without going out into the world and facing a lot of discrimination that others face. Allyship was always something that was a little bit scary to me, because I was worried that I would do something wrong. But at Stanford our community is small enough -- and you have enough touchpoints with everyone -- that there isn't that sense of: you send out an email that says something insensitive and you get flamed by 500 people on Twitter or something. I could learn and be corrected and approach this with humility, but also feel like I was being cared for at the same time.

What is something you're proud of from your time as a SUMMA leader?

I am so excited about the incoming medical student class. It is the most diverse incoming class in Stanford Medicine history, and so many of them expressed interest in social determinants of health and social justice in general.

I've been involved in the admissions process and in recruitment since my first year of medical school, and it has been one of our priorities at SUMMA to make our already small class sizes as diverse as possible. This year's success was a cumulative effort by the student leaders who planned interview days and revisit weekend, by the office of admissions and the financial aid office who worked with the students to make it possible for them to come here, and by our SUMMA organizations, who show these students the strength of our communities.

Why is it important to increase diversity and inclusion in the health professions?

There's a ton of data that shows that patients feel a lot more comfortable if they're treated by a doctor who they think understands their experience. And sometimes that boils down to identity.

I know that I have patients -- I have family members -- who will only see doctors who speak their language, which I completely understand. Or who will, if they have the freedom of choice, only see doctors who are of the same ethnicity as them. I think that's within the patient's right to decide, to an extent. I think it offers a better space for providing culturally humble care. And when we start having more providers that look like our patient demographic, then we will likely see better health care outcomes in the health care system.

Sometimes doctors or students are sort of told to "stay in our lanes." In other words, not to speak out on social issues. Why is it important that we speak out?

Because none of us operates in a vacuum.

The reason I came into medicine was because of the human side of things. That's what makes it interesting. What makes it complicated. And what gives value to this profession. I think to ignore the fact that we all live in a society that affects our health is misguided.

What advice do you have for people who want to be allies, but don't know how?

It's not going to be easy. A lot of us have really deeply embedded societal norms and different levels of self-awareness of those norms. But everyone in the SUMMA community is aware that people come here with the intention to learn.

We all have the capacity to learn. The hard thing is when that cognitive part comes at odds with the emotional part of being told you did something wrong at some point. I think, as high achievers, that's especially difficult to reckon with. But if you come at it from a place of humility -- and understand that the pain that some of these communities face day-to day is so much larger than you being told you're wrong -- it helps. It at least helps put me in the right headspace, which means putting my ego on the back burner.

Photo courtesy of Claire Rhee

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Promoting diversity and inclusion as a medical student at Stanford - Scope

Arcturus Therapeutics & Duke-NUS Received Approval to Proceed with Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial for COVID-19 Vaccine Candidate, LUNAR-COV19 – BioSpace

Human dosing of LUNAR-COV19 expected soon

Differentiated STARR mRNA vaccine expected to produce humoral and cellular immunity at very low doses

New preclinical data demonstrates neutralizing antibody titers continue to increase for 50 days after a single administration

SAN DIEGO and SINGAPORE, July 21, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Arcturus Therapeutics, Inc. Holdings Inc.(the Company, Arcturus, Nasdaq: ARCT), a leading clinical-stage messenger RNA medicines company focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of therapeutics for rare diseases and vaccines, and Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapores flagship research-intensive graduate entry medical school, today announced that the Clinical Trial Application (CTA) for COVID-19 vaccine candidate LUNAR-COV19 has been approved to proceed by the Singapore Health Sciences Authority (HSA). Arcturus and Duke-NUS partnered to develop a coronavirus vaccine using Arcturus STARR technology and a unique platform developed at Duke-NUS allowing rapid screening of vaccines for potential effectiveness and safety.

Arcturus & Duke-NUS will initiate human dosing of LUNAR-COV19 as soon as possible. The healthy volunteer study will evaluate several dose levels of LUNAR-COV19 in up to 108 adults, including older adults. Follow-up will be conducted to evaluate safety, tolerability and the extent and duration of the humoral and cellular immune response.

The approval of the Clinical Trial Application for LUNAR-COV19 is a critical milestone for Arcturus. We are excited to advance this promising vaccine candidate into clinical trials. Based on our preclinical data, we believe that our self-replicating mRNA-based approach may produce high rates of seroconversion and robust T-cell induction with a potential single administration, at very low doses. The LUNAR-COV19 profile is meaningfully differentiated and may facilitate the mass vaccine campaigns necessary to target hundreds of millions of individuals globally, said Joseph Payne, President & CEO of Arcturus.

Professor Ooi Eng Eong, Deputy Director of the Emerging Infectious Diseases Program at Duke-NUS, said, Preclinical studies on LUNAR-COV19 have shown very promising findings, including the possibility that a single dose of this vaccine may be sufficient to trigger robust and durable immune responses against SARS-CoV-2. We are very eager to start the first-in-human clinical trial here in Singapore and advance LUNAR-COV19 on its journey to becoming a potential commercial vaccine.

There is a tremendous global imperative to develop effective preventive measures for COVID-19 infections. We are heartened by the rapid and promising progress in our vaccine collaboration with Arcturus as we move forward into clinical trials, said Professor Thomas M. Coffman, Dean of Duke-NUS Medical School.

The STARR Technology platform employed in LUNAR-COV19 combines self-replicating mRNA with LUNAR, a proprietary nanoparticle delivery system optimized for mRNA molecules. The efficiency and self-replicating nature of the approach were designed to enable very low doses, and a potential single vaccine administration. Prior animal data has demonstrated robust humoral and cellular immunity elicited at doses as low as 0.2 g of LUNAR-COV19. Additionally, Arcturus demonstrated 100% seroconversion for anti-SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies with a very low single dose (2.0 g).

New preclinical data demonstrate that neutralizing antibody levels in response to a single administration of LUNAR-COV19 (0.2, 2.0, 10.0 g) continue to increase over 50 days. The increasing antibody levels are attributed to the self-replicating mRNA of LUNAR-COV19. These results were obtained using a Luminex bead assay. A 1/2000 serum dilution was assayed for neutralizing IgG antibodies in the mouse serum every 10 days for 60 days post vaccination.

AboutArcturus TherapeuticsFounded in 2013 and based in San Diego, California, Arcturus Therapeutics Holdings Inc. (Nasdaq: ARCT) is a clinical-stage mRNA medicines and vaccines company with enabling technologies: (i) LUNAR lipid-mediated delivery, (ii) STARR mRNA Technology and (iii) mRNA drug substance along with drug product manufacturing expertise. Arcturus diverse pipeline of RNA therapeutic candidates includes programs to potentially treat Ornithine Transcarbamylase (OTC) Deficiency, Cystic Fibrosis, Glycogen Storage Disease Type 3, Hepatitis B, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and a self-replicating mRNA vaccine for SARS-CoV-2. Arcturus versatile RNA therapeutics platforms can be applied toward multiple types of nucleic acid medicines including messenger RNA, small interfering RNA, replicon RNA, antisense RNA, microRNA, DNA, and gene editing therapeutics. Arcturus technologies are covered by its extensive patent portfolio (192 patents and patent applications, issued in the U.S., Europe, Japan, China and other countries). Arcturus commitment to the development of novel RNA therapeutics has led to collaborations with Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., part of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Inc., Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, CureVac AG, Synthetic Genomics Inc., Duke-NUS, Catalent Inc., and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. For more information visit http://www.ArcturusRx.com

AboutDuke-NUS Medical SchoolDuke-NUS is Singapores flagship graduate entry medical school, established in 2005 with a strategic, government-led partnership between two world-class institutions:Duke University School of Medicineand theNational University of Singapore(NUS). Through an innovative curriculum, students at Duke-NUS are nurtured to become multi-faceted Clinicians Plus poised to steer the healthcare and biomedical ecosystem inSingaporeand beyond. A leader in ground-breaking research and translational innovation, Duke-NUS has gained international renown through its five signature research programmes and eight centres. The enduring impact of its discoveries is amplified by its successful Academic Medicine partnership withSingapore Health Services(SingHealth), Singapores largest healthcare group. This strategic alliance has spawned 15 Academic Clinical Programmes, which harness multi-disciplinary research and education to transform medicine and improve lives. For more information, please visitwww.duke-nus.edu.sg

Forward Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements that involve substantial risks and uncertainties for purposes of the safe harbor provided by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements, other than statements of historical fact included in this press release, including those regarding the Companys expected performance, the Companys development of any specific novel mRNA therapeutics, the Companys efforts to develop a vaccine against COVID-19, and therapeutic potential thereof, based on the Companys mRNA therapeutics, the forecasted safety, efficacy, characteristics or reliability of a vaccine against COVID-19, were one to be successfully developed based on the Companys mRNA therapeutics, the dosing level and frequency of a vaccine against COVID-19 were one to be successfully developed based on the Companys mRNA therapeutics and the impact of general business and economic conditions are forward-looking statements. Arcturus may not actually achieve the plans, carry out the intentions or meet the expectations or projections disclosed in any forward-looking statements such as the foregoing and you should not place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on managements current expectations and involve risks and uncertainties, including those discussed under the heading "Risk Factors" in Arcturus Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019, filed with the SEC on March 16, 2020 and in subsequent filings with, or submissions to, the SEC. No assurances can be given that any results reported in pre-clinical studies can be replicated in further studies or in human beings, or that a vaccine can or will ever be developed or approved using the Companys technology. Except as otherwise required by law, Arcturus disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they were made, whether as a result of new information, future events or circumstances or otherwise.

ContactArcturus TherapeuticsNeda Safarzadeh(858) 900-2682IR@ArcturusRx.com

Kendall Investor RelationsCarlo Tanzi, Ph.D.(617) 914-0008ctanzi@kendallir.com

Duke-NUS Medical SchoolLekshmy Sreekumar, Ph.D.(+65) 6516-1138lekshmy_sreekumar@duke-nus.edu.sg

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/fb3fb0a3-1978-4788-8811-57c446b49588

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Anti-Spike Glucoproteins

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Arcturus Therapeutics & Duke-NUS Received Approval to Proceed with Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial for COVID-19 Vaccine Candidate, LUNAR-COV19 - BioSpace

Black Lives Matter Protest Held on Saturday in Fort Bragg to Honor the Two Months Since George Floyd’s Murder – Redheaded Blackbelt

Saturday marks the 2-month anniversary of the murder of George Floyd and not enough has changed to improve the situation for Black people in the USA. Please come join in a community protest at Fort Bragg Town Hall on Saturday July 25, from 3-5pm. Bring a sign if you want, there will be some speakers, a march, and updates on what is happening in the County and town regarding racial justice issues, and see how you can get involved to push for change locally and nationally.

We have been promoting social distancing and I believe everyone has been wearing masks at the protests these past 2 months. Lets keep that up while staying connected to each other, and connected to the work that needs to be done.

In sadness and rage,

Andy Wellspring

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Black Lives Matter Protest Held on Saturday in Fort Bragg to Honor the Two Months Since George Floyd's Murder - Redheaded Blackbelt

5 pitfalls Black Lives Matter must avoid to maintain momentum and achieve meaningful change – Waging Nonviolence

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In just over a month the Black Lives Matter whirlwind has shaken things up. Change is afoot far and widefrom NASCAR to the NFL, from racist statues being torn down to corporate posturing and statements of solidarity. And there is momentum for core shifts: cities promising some reduction of funding for policing, Minneapolis considering disbanding police, and the Movement for Black Lives recently introduced the BREATHE Act, which offers a map on how to turn the values of the movement into concrete federal policy.

To the cynic, many of these acts are symbolic and may disappear when the pressure dies down. To the hopeful, these represent shifts including the widespread participation of white people that signal real meaningful change in our culture is underway.

Whatever you believe, there are steps the movement could take to carry on that energy and steps that could cause it to disappear. Based on my work in numerous movements, here are some key perspectives to hold onto.

Dont measure success with growing numbers

The movement has to be very careful about which yardstick gets used to measure success.

Traditional politics is best at measuring which way the wind is blowing. Movements are about changing the headwinds of our time.

Capitalism teaches shareholders to look at how much money has been made and how many new plants have been opened. The goal is constant growth. Thats not a good yardstick for movements.

The most obvious way this sneaks into our thinking is when we ask ourselves: Are the number of protests growing? Are more people in the streets? Is more money coming into movement organizations?

Movement success shouldnt be measured that way.

Another yardstick for progress that we are taught by traditional politics involves the current strength of the legislation we support. Do we have a bill with lots of sponsors? Do we have cross-party support? Do we have editorial support from the Washington Post and New York Times? Is our bill seen as politically likely to win?

To be clear: having these things can be good. But traditional politics is best at measuring which way the wind is blowing. Movements are about changing the headwinds of our time.

Radical bills often look unpalatable until they pass. Movements go through ups and downs so if the movement clings to these yardsticks too much during the ups, it can be devastating when they come back down.

Therefore, emails highlighting huge numbers at protests, or getting endorsements from major newspapers, might unwittingly set the movement up for failure by teaching people to defer to those yardsticks.

An alternative movement yardstick was put out by Bill Moyers Movement Action Plan years ago, which outlined the natural ups and downs of movements, which typically progress through three steps:

1. Prove there is a problem.2. Prove the failure of established institutions to solve the problem3. Prove our alternatives are better than inaction.

The movement has finally, successfully convinced the nation that there is a problem: Black lives dont matter to this country. A growing percentage of the public is now accepting that police as a whole are not up to the task of respecting Black lives. These are two huge successes.

The movements messages instead could focus on shifts in the cultural mood, the changing narrative even the clarifying vehemence of our opponents! Because next, we have the daunting task of proving that our alternatives while not perfect and with their own growing pains are better than inaction.

Dont think movements are synonymous with protests

One of the most tricky moments for activists comes when the near daily protests in the streets fade. Its hard to predict when this moment of the whirlwind will slow down. Were in a pandemic where there is no normal life to return to there are few jobs, no school, and for some of us no places to hang out and socialize.

But eventually it will happen. Protests will get smaller or disappear. The media will be quick to say the movement has ended. In fact, quite ignorantly, the front page of CNN already quotes people saying it!

Savvy movements accept that numbers may be smaller in street protests, but take solace in the solidifying of movement language, concepts and support in mainstream society.

Movement historian Vincent Harding talked about the Black freedom struggle as a river. While this moment has new twists like widespread participation by white people movement rivers have some predictable ebbs and flows.

When the movement uprising moves beyond the turbulence of the whitewater, there will be versions of backlash. The media will forget that any change has happened and eventually turn their attention elsewhere. Testing any easing up of the public outcry, politicians and corporate leaders will tiptoe away from their previous stances. As the number of protests dwindle, the exposure of frontline protesters to police retaliation will increase. Wins will become much harder to achieve. All this emboldens the opposition to return to the old status quo.

The movement should let people know this now, so theyre not unprepared.

In response, the movement may attempt riskier and bolder actions to try to remake the glory of the whirlwind. If that doesnt work (and it rarely does), protesters can have a sense of failure, potentially leading to toxic internal power struggles.

Savvy movements, however, accept that numbers may be smaller in street protests, but take solace in the solidifying of movement language, concepts and support in mainstream society. They dig in and proceed to the task of campaigning for radical reforms where they can and convincing more people to embrace the revolutionary changes needed.

As Tamiko Beyer writes, Street protests grab headlines, and theres a tendency to focus almost solely on policy and electoral politics as the pathway to change. But there are many other roles to play in supporting a movement, some of which I explore in Building A Movement To End the New Jim Crow, an organizing guide to accompany Michelle Alexanders acclaimed book The New Jim Crow.

Waging Nonviolence depends on your support. Become a sustaining member today and get a copy of this book.

Dont be disappointed with the failure of cheap reform

Not wanting to appear too tone deaf to public outcry, Senate Republicans put together a reform bill. It was awful: using training to limit chokeholds and reporting to try to stem the wave of police violence. The movement can be glad it failed to gain energy.

Not to be outdone, House and Senate Democrats put together their own reform bill. This too barely even nibbled away at the fundamental power of police or the structure of our criminal injustice system. Making chokeholds illegal? Limiting the transfer of military-grade weapons? More police training? Thats nowhere near the problem. Thankfully, it appears destined to fail as well.

One response to these legislative losses is movement anxiety and feelings of failure or hopelessness. Maybe the government simply does not care. Maybe we cannot win. Maybe we have already lost.

Breathe. Its actually good news.

The 1960s student sit-ins against segregation did not immediately result in legislative wins. Even after the peak event of the March on Washington, it took another year for the 1964 Civil Rights Act to pass. That gap in time was full of legislative maneuvers to try to offer the most watered-down bill possible.

The Movement for Black Lives has already taken a tremendous step forward, not waiting around for politicians to keep proposing bad policies but instead presenting their own alternative proposals. They are demanding a radical defunding of police and pouring money into services for the Black community.

The upcoming phase of the movement requires stopping cheap reforms and advancing these radical proposals. Once the public demands action, the opposition wants to know how little they can do to get us off their backs. They therefore offer the easiest actions the ones that require the smallest change first.

The oppositions job is to offer the easiest reforms; our job is to teach society why thats not enough.

The dance with these cheap reforms is more complex than simply shaming them for being insufficient.

An early concession by the police during this uprising was the symbolic act of police kneeling. Parts of the movement responded differently: Some praised the cops for breaking ranks and challenging their own. Others condemned the cops for doing the least possible while still retaining their guns, their immunity and their intent to kill.

Because Im an educator, Im aware that when learning a new paradigm, two contrary things need to happen. People often implement the easiest reforms first like a baby learning to walk. If people are met with only negativity, they can get discouraged. So people need some encouragement.

They also need to be challenged. Few people move into a new worldview casually; it often involves heat and painful reflection.

Divergent movement responses speak to these different aspects. Therefore, its insufficient to just condemn reforms as not being enough. Showing the way with encouragement for steps made also matters.

This dance is not simple. Its painful if Black folks are always left doing the condemnation. Or if the different responses attack each other for not saying the same thing. With bad legislation, foot-dragging politicians and bureaucratic intransigence, the movement will thankfully get lots of practice and have many opportunities for teachable moments.

From the vantage point of teachable moments, the movement can embrace these cheap reforms as a chance to clarify, educate and do political education. The oppositions job is to offer the easiest reforms; our job is to teach society why thats not enough.

Dont assume Biden will save us think of him as a balloon

If you really believe Biden will save us, then you and I need to have a long talk.

But even if we know in our hearts that Biden wont save us, many of us place too much emphasis on the November election. Dont get me wrong, I expect to do my share of phone calls to turn people out to vote. But after Nov. 3, I plan to be right back in the streets. I hope you will too.

When Obama was elected, far too many of us waited for him to give us marching orders on health care. The result was a few measured wins, but not the revolutionary change we needed.

Thankfully, few of us believe Biden will be a transformative president. That disbelief may be a gift for the movement, if we use it to take strong leadership and lay down the criteria for victory. Movements should dictate values, not elections.

Those in social movements should see politicians as balloons. A balloon follows the wind. If you blow on it, it can be pushed one way or the other. Politicians follow the wind as well, readily changing their opinions and stances.

But politicians are balloons tied to a rock. If we swat at them, they may sway to the left or the right. But, tied down, they can only go so far. Instead of simply batting at them, we should focus on moving the rock, which is peoples activated social values.

Depending on the makeup of our government, the string on the balloon might be longer or shorter. But politicians know they can only be pushed so far one way or the other. If they absolutely violate the activated social norms of their constituents, they are in trouble.

Politically speaking, our job is to activate those values and showing up on the streets Nov. 4 is a good way to start.

Dont assume our legislative process cant work, but dont depend on it

Governance in this country is a big problem. During my lifetime, virtually no big problems are being solved at the federal level. Pick any episode of the 90s TV show West Wing and the problems from that era are still around: immigration, gun control, climate change, partisan gridlock, the Electoral College and the list goes on.

This isnt how all countries work. In Western Europe, where they continue to have governments that function more democratically, the elites have been forced to confront big challenges. They are using the pandemic to accede to some demands of the climate movement and outlaw some of the worst carbon polluters, while each level of our government is passing the buck to someone else until blame finally lands on individuals for not wearing masks.

This is one of the classic signs of an empire in decline. Like Rome or the British Empire, the government is unable to address its core problems. The pandemic has exposed the U.S. governments fatal inability to protect its own people. In short, our government may not be up to the task of instituting the kind of radical change needed.

This decline is beyond left or right, Democrat or Republican. The U.S. empire is cracking. Its ability to control countries elsewhere is eroding; its sway in international politics and ability to control the global economic order are in retreat. The decline is speeding more and more erratically as our financial and corporate elites cling to the support that Trump offers them, even in the face of his narcissistic inability to grasp facts, pursue coherent policies, or lead the nation).

The movement may face the possibility that theres a lack of political ability to pass meaningful legislation under this current system. In the face of this decline, Black Lives Matter may need to be ready to join other movements in a movement of movements to prepare for a revolution in this country.

That doesnt mean the movement shouldnt fight each legislative fight and try to win at each local campaign it can. It has to because our lives depend on it and thats a vehicle for moving more people into our corner.

But federal, state or local campaigns may not be able to give what the movement wants especially because the system is too decrepit or weighted down by fanatical devotion to the empire. We should be ready to think about what kind of changes we need so we might actually have a functioning, fruitful, lively democracy.

Movements get nurtured when we do these things when we teach people its more than just protest and numbers but about winning over the hearts and minds of the people. Movements win when they stop being in reactive mode to politicians and instead move them like balloons. And movements really win big when they ask for changes they want and prepare the people to understand that the system may need revolutionary action to pull it off. If we do all these things, well have an even stronger, more resilient and powerful movement.

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5 pitfalls Black Lives Matter must avoid to maintain momentum and achieve meaningful change - Waging Nonviolence

Black Lives Matter mural to be removed in Springfield due to lack of permits – WWLP.com

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno announced Wednesday that members of his staff and a group of Black Lives Matter activists mutually decided to remove the mural in front of Old First Church at 50 Elm Street due to lack of permits.

According to a news release sent to 22News, the decision was made due to the fact that proper procedures must be followed concerning murals of this type.

Mayor Sarno said they are moving forward with a similar project that has been endorsed by the City Council which will be located on Court Street and is expected to be painted in September.

I want to make it perfectly clear that this was a mutually agreed decision and in no way reflects negatively on the intent. We are moving forward with a similar project that has been endorsed by our City Council and myself, which will be located on Court Street following all proper procedures and protocols, Sarno said.

The project for the official mural is currently being reviewed by theDepartment of Public WorksDirector Chris Cignoli. Following Council President Justin Hursts request, Sarno will be facilitating donations through theUnited Way of Pioneer Valley.

All donations can be sent directly to C/O Executive Director Paul Mina of United Way of Pioneer Valley located on 1441 Main Street in Springfield.

22News Reporter Mike Masciadrelli is covering this story. You can watch the full report on 22News starting at 5 p.m.

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Black Lives Matter mural to be removed in Springfield due to lack of permits - WWLP.com

21-year-old who wrote Black Lives Matter over blue line: I did it because I love this country’ – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Skylar, the 21-year-old college student responsible for writing Black Lives Matter over local artist Scott LoBaidos thin-blue line NYPD tribute outside the departments 122nd Precinct stationhouse in New Dorp, said she stenciled over the line to push back against the divisiveness she says it stands for.

It seemed like a direct response to the Black Lives Matter mural, and it didnt sit right with me, said Skylar, who declined to provide her last name while standing outside the precinct on Tuesday with a small group of protestors.

After seeing LoBaido create the blue line on the Advance/SILive.com, Syklar said she went to her garage and began creating stencils to use and then I just did it.

Many people drove by, cursing at me, telling me to get out,' get off the Island,' you hate America,' but thats not the case, she said. I did it because I love this country and I see the potential in this country, so thats why I did it.

The small group of protestors who gathered on Tuesday, some of whom held signs that read, Black Lives Matter, received verbal barbs from passing motorists. One driver said, go home. Others hurled profanities.

Skylar, however, said the Black Lives Matter movement doesnt mean that police lives dont matter, doesnt mean that white lives dont matter. It doesnt mean any of that stuff.

Black lives are not treated the same way, she said. If Black lives matter, we all win, because we all matter then. Then all lives matter. Thats the third step were on the first step.

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21-year-old who wrote Black Lives Matter over blue line details decision: I did it because I love this country'

LoBaido, who recently held a police rally at the 122nd Precinct, painted the blue line along the divider on Hylan Boulevard that runs from Bancroft Avenue to Lincoln Avenue. He said the tribute, isnt anti-BLM, adding that the subtle and simple piece of art is meant to stand as a sign of support for the NYPD.

He re-painted the line on Tuesday the same day he unveiled an anti-de Blasio banner on the overpass of the Staten Island expressway, which depicted the mayor wearing a Che Guevara t-shirt while holding up the seemingly-decapitated head of the Statue of Liberty.

The banner hung off the Fingerboard Road overpass of the expressway. LoBaido had to remove the artwork shortly after unfurling it.

While the thin blue line remained untouched on the Hylan Boulevard median as of Tuesday night, Skylar said her future plans are to be determined.

Anti-de Blasio artwork created by Scott LoBaido hangs from the Fingerboard Road exit of the Staten Island Expressway. (Staten Island Advance/Tom Wrobleski)Tom Wrobleski/Staten Island Adva

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21-year-old who wrote Black Lives Matter over blue line: I did it because I love this country' - SILive.com

Black Lives Matter mural in Redwood City washed away after suggestion to paint MAGA 2020 – KRON4

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (KRON) City officials along the Peninsula quietly remove a Black Lives Matter mural after someone suggests putting up a Trump 2020 slogan.

The Redwood City mural was put up on the 4th of July with approval from city officials but it was washed away last week after a local attorney requested that mural supportingPresident Trump be painted nearby.

Well, the artist says hes thankful the city allowed him to paint the mural in the first place.

His issue is that a human rights message was possibly washed away because of someones political stance.

On the other hand, the woman calling for the Trump campaign slogan to be painted says both ideas are free speech and comparable.

Redwood Citys Black Lives Matter mural on Broadway has been quietly washed away.

The mural was painted a little over two weeks ago but as a new proposal emerged, the bright yellow letters soon vanished.

They made the decision to take Black Lives Matter off the street as the first person that proposed the MAGA 2020, Dan Pease said.

Dan Pease was surprised by the removal considering the city supported the mural and even supplied the paint.

Then last week the 17-foot letters were erased shortly after a local real estate attorney requested a Trump campaign slogan be painted nearby.

Black Lives Matter is not a political statement. Black Lives Matter is a human rights issue, its a call, its a message, its a symbol, Pease said.

Maria Rutenberg argues the public space was being used to promote a limited private agenda and that Redwood City has become an arbiter of private political expression.

A statement to KRON4 reads in part:

Governments cannot and should not get to pick and choose who should be allowed to speak. Now that the cities open up asphalts as public forums, everyone with any political message is free to write their own. I, for one, would like to paint MAGA 2020. At a time like this, its especially important that we allow free and open political discussion for all sides, not just BLM.

Pease says city officials told him last week they planned to remove the mural for violating traffic and vehicle codes but he believes the quick removal came in fear of any legal pressure.

Pease would like to discuss any differences with people in his community who think Black Lives Matter is a political message.

I dont agree with MAGA 2020 but if somebody wants to support Trump wants to put MAGA 2020 and the city of Redwood City wants to support that then more power to that individual, Pease said.

Pease says hed be more than happy to paint the mural again but only if the city wanted him to.

He hopes people were at least inspired by the former mural.

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Black Lives Matter mural in Redwood City washed away after suggestion to paint MAGA 2020 - KRON4

The Black Lives Matter Street Art That Contain Multitudes – The New York Times

The first word, Black, was designed by Tijay Mohammed, a Ghanaian-born artist, and used vibrant Kente fabric design and Adinkra symbols, which represent concepts like royalty, unity and legacy.

Sophia Dawson, a Brooklyn-based visual artist, took the second word, lives. The L contains the faces of the mothers who have lost their children to police killings. The I uses imagery inspired by Emory Douglas, an artist for the Black Panther Party; the V highlights the culture of the African diaspora; the E contains faces of Black Panther Party members who are currently in prison; and the S carries a passage from the Bible.

The street painting at Foley Square resembles many that have been done around the country in its word choice and placement, but part of what has been lost in the national debate over the art and the political statements they make is the logistical care, intentional placement and artistry that went into the creation of many of them.

While some like those at Trump Tower and near the White House are primarily stencil work in the blazing yellow paint typically used for road markings, and are known largely for their challenging placement, others have been fully realized works of art that went through rigorous processes of design and planning.

This month, the Foley Square street art in Lower Manhattan and the one in Harlem were unveiled, with the multicolored letters of Black Lives Matter replete with imagery related to Black people who were killed by the police, as well as vibrant symbols of freedom, hope and joy.

In Cincinnati, the art appears in the red, black and green of the Pan-African flag, with silhouettes, phrases and textured designs filling the letters. In Jackson, Mich., it was designed it in a graffiti-style font. In Portland, Ore., the letters contained a timeline of historical injustices in the state.

The purpose of the Fifth Avenue project at Trump Tower was clear: to rile up the president, who called it a symbol of hate. The street painting was intended to get the message up quickly; the stenciling and outlining was done by the Department of Transportation, and roughly 60 volunteers helped lay down 100 gallons of traffic paint.

The other artworks in Manhattan were intended not as a political statement meant for President Trump to see but as an opportunity for local artists, community togetherness and discussions about race and policing. The outlines of the enlarged Black Lives Matter letters are filled with intentionally placed symbols and colors.

I wanted the design to embody our experience as a whole as a Black community and what we strive for, said Patrice Payne, one of the artists involved with the work at Foley Square.

Justin Garrett Moore, the executive director of the citys Public Design Commission, said that there is a clear difference between the street paintings borne from mayoral decision making, which serve as an acknowledgment that public officials have heard the calls of racial justice protesters, and the community-driven murals, where theres a deeper connection to the space and the message.

These are Black communities that are really wanting to have an expression for this historic moment that were in, he said.

It happened to be a work near the White House, spearheaded by the mayor of Washington, Muriel E. Bowser, that set the groundwork for the countrywide spilling of paint on the ground.

After the Washington painting made the news, an organization representing small business owners in Harlem, called Harlem Park to Park, started discussing what their version of a Black Lives Matter artwork would look like.

There was a certain expectation that Harlem, known as the epicenter of Black culture, needed to take the trend a level up, said Nikoa Evans-Hendricks, the groups executive director. The result was two sprawling sets of words on either side of Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard, between 125th and 127th Streets. On the northbound side, eight artists had creative control over two letters each. The southbound side was painted red, black and green by a collection of community groups.

We wanted to make sure the mural didnt just represent words on the street but embodied the Harlem community, Ms. Evans-Hendricks said.

The artists were chosen by LeRone Wilson, the artworks curator, who also designed the first two letters. The B that he designed depicts the Ancient Kemetic goddess Maat, with feathered wings reaching across the curves of the letter, and the bird deity Heru, welcoming the spirits of those who have died at the hands of police into the universe.

Within the L, he painted the names of 24 Black people killed by the police, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Michael Brown and Amadou Diallo.

Within the outlines of several other letters, the artists painted images associated with the outrage over the treatment of Black people by the police: The faces of Ms. Taylor and Sandra Bland and Mr. Floyds daughter occupy the two Ts in the word matter. The I in lives contains the badge numbers of the four police officers charged in connection with Mr. Floyds death.

The artists received advice from the citys Department of Transportation on what materials to use on the asphalt. They took the agencys recommendation of using road line paint used for markings on streets and sidewalks, which many artists right now are doing to make the street art more durable.

The act of painting the work in Harlem was designed as a community event, with catering from local restaurants and help painting from the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem and Harlem Little League.

Every day we were out there, hundreds of people wanted to be involved, Mr. Wilson said.

And after the unveiling, the space became a gathering place for people, as well as a space to appreciate art at a time when museums are shut because of the pandemic.

The creators are hoping that the city agrees to a request to keep the street closed to traffic until the end of the summer, as the city did with a street painting in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, which was created with the yellow traffic paint and contains the names of Black people killed by the police.

The location for the Harlem work was chosen because it was at the heart of a Black community. In Lower Manhattan at Foley Square, it was because of a nearby cherished national monument: It draws meaning from its proximity to the African Burial Ground, which contains the remains of New York Citys colonial African-American community.

Amina Hassen, an urban planner with WXY, an architectural and urban design firm that worked on the project, said that the location along Centre Street, near the state and federal court buildings, was also significant because of its connection to the policing and incarceration of Black people.

As with the Harlem work, the artists of the Foley Square project had control over the designs within the outline of the Black Lives Matter letters, but the city still had to review the designs to make sure they complied with safety standards. (This time the artists were chosen by the Department of Cultural Affairs, and the project was shepherded by Gale A. Brewer, Manhattan borough president, and Black Lives Matter of Greater New York.)

They first blocked out the artwork in 3-D software, carefully avoiding any street features that the Department of Transportation said they couldnt paint over, said Jhordan Channer, the architectural designer for the project. When it came time to install the 600-foot-long painting, they first painted a white canvas and a drop shadow to make sure the letters stood out. Tats Cru, a group of professional muralists in the city, executed the artists designs with heavy-duty traffic paint, exterior-grade enamel paint and spray paint. They were assisted by youth from Thrive Collective, an arts mentoring program that works with New York public schools.

For the last word, matters, Ms. Payne started in the M with the image of a Black woman as an ancestral figure and nurturer. The design progresses to images of broken shackles, a raised fist, a sun peeking out behind storm clouds, with a tattered American flag at the forefront.

Since the first street painting was unveiled in Washington, some segments of the Black Lives Matter movement have criticized them as being purely symbolic gestures from politicians at a time when activists are calling for the defunding of police departments.

The artists and designers behind the community-driven works say that there are important uses for this symbolism, like education and providing meaningful public art commissions by Black artists.

Ms. Evans-Hendricks remembers seeing a mother walking her son down the letters of the Harlem street art, which run between 14 and 16 feet wide, and explaining the meaning of each word.

It has come alive in a way that the community really needed, she said.

But they also recognize the limits of the works and hope that the solidarity coming from politicians goes beyond paint on the street.

Im very interested in the art going up and taking my child to visit it and discuss it, Ms. Dawson said. But Im more interested in the tangible change that must come from this.

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The Black Lives Matter Street Art That Contain Multitudes - The New York Times

How the Black Lives Matter generation remembers John Lewis – The Associated Press

Of all the ways that John Lewis influenced American life and politics, his indelible impact on young people may be among the most enduring. From student activist to elder statesman, Lewis continually encouraged the nations youth to start good trouble and modeled just how to do that.

He was arrested alongside millennial activists pushing for comprehensive reform of U.S. immigration laws in 2013. He led a sit-in in the House of Representatives over gun control following a mass shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub in Orlando in 2016. And when he was not protesting, he was helping young people understand history, as when he cosplayed as his younger self at San Diegos Comic-Con to celebrate the release of his Selma, Alabama-themed graphic novel series in 2015.

Lewis, the Black civil rights icon who some called the conscience of Congress, died Friday.

In one of his last public appearances, he posed for a picture in June, standing on the Black Lives Matter Plaza mural painted just outside of the White House amid nationwide protests over the death of George Floyd.

For the Black Lives Matter generation, the connection to Lewis is deeper than many may realize. As a young man, through clouds of teargas and a hail of billy clubs, Lewis nearly lost his life marching against segregation and for voting rights. As a Georgia congressman, Lewis was generous with his time, taking meetings and sharing stages with activists who, from Sanford, Florida, to Ferguson, Missouri, Baltimore to Minneapolis, also withstood teargas as well as rubber bullets, pepper spray and arrests in their own protests against racism.

Activists remember the legacy left behind by Rep. John Lewis.

He didnt have to stand with us, he chose to, Malkia Devich Cyril, the founder and senior fellow of MediaJustice, which advocates for open and democratic media and technology platforms, told The Associated Press. Thats real leadership.

In exclusive interviews with the AP, prominent organizers from the Black Lives Matter movement reflected on Lewis example and his kinship with their generation:

BRITTANY PACKNETT CUNNINGHAM, Ferguson activist and educator:

I remember sitting on the other side of President Obama from (Lewis) at this pretty historic, multigenerational civil rights meeting, and understanding the optical placement of the generations in that moment. And I just kept thinking to myself, do not let John Lewis down. I was finally able to thank him, face to face, eye to eye, for treading the path my generation was now walking. With kindness in his eyes and determination in his voice, he reminded me that the road to freedom is never easy and thats precisely why we have to keep taking it. Youll have setbacks, he told me. Keep going. Be consistent. You will get there.

PHILLIP AGNEW, co-founder of the Dream Defenders, a police and prison abolition group, and organizer in the Movement for Black Lives:

I think the first time I ever met him was at (Congressional Black Caucus Foundation), the legislative forum that they have every year. This is kind of after Dream Defenders had taken over the Capitol of Florida, and there was a big buzz about our little fledgling group at that time. I didnt think that he would know who I was I absolutely knew who he was. And I remember him coming and speaking to me and saying how proud he was, looking at the things that we had done in Florida.

PATRISSE CULLORS, co-founder of Black Lives Matter and its global network of chapters:

The first time I was introduced to Congressman Lewis was through (the 1990 PBS docuseries) Eyes on the Prize. And I was like, Oh, thats me. He was a young, radical Black man who was challenging not just the status quo in government, but also the older leadership in the movement. And I felt really moved by him. What I witnessed significantly in Eyes on the Prize was police terror and police brutality, and the way that it was used against the (Edmund) Pettus Bridge protesters who were brutalized fighting for a more equitable America, for Black people in particular. And so, we fast forward to 2020, when we have been in the streets, and the same tactics of the police being used against us as a way to deter us from fighting for Black freedom. And yet, that never deterred Congressman Lewis. ... That is a deeply moving commitment to Black people.

ALENCIA JOHNSON, political strategist:

I had the opportunity to staff (former Democratic presidential candidate) Sen. Elizabeth Warren, when we did the Edmund Pettus Bridge crossing, the Sunday before Super Tuesday, when I was working on her campaign. And (Lewis) came. It was like he was literally passing the torch to everyone who was there. ... That symbol of him coming from his sick bed, all the way to Selma was just so, wow, Im actually getting emotional thinking about that. He was so intentional and persistent about ensuring that people who are fighting know that they have his support and his admiration. He talked about how he admires how young people are showing up now.

ASH-LEE WOODARD HENDERSON, co-executive director of the Highlander Center for Research and Education, a social justice leadership training school:

Ive been thinking about how important John Lewis life has been and will continue to be for weeks. And this moment still feels so freaking unfair. ... I remember the stories and encouragement. The never-wavering mandate. I will remember a man who reminded us all that our optimism isnt futile. That building a global neighborhood and a building beloved community are similar but not the same. Thats the legacy. Thats the work. Im so grateful, in this sea of grief, for such a divine human who loved us so deeply.

CHARLENE CARRUTHERS, founding national director of BYP100, a Black youth organizing group, and Movement for Black Lives organizer:

Looking at his work and his story, if I can even do half of that with my life then Id consider it a worthy contribution. And its not about being perfect. But it is about saying, Im going to be in this for my entire life. Im in this thing. Not for fame, not for glory. He could have done something else. His legacy is one of making a lifetime commitment to Black people.

CHELSEA FULLER, spokesperson for the Movement for Black Lives and deputy communications director for Blackbird, which supports grassroots movements:

In 2000, I was 12 years old and, like most children that age, struggling to comprehend the possibilities of who I could become. He asked me if I liked school and what I wanted to do when I was all grown up. I told him I didnt know, but that I liked to write and that I liked Black history, but didnt think there was much I could do outside of being a professor. He took my hand and looked me square in the eye and said that loving my people and being a storyteller were not small things; but that they were powerful. Congressman John Lewis encouraged me to see the power in stories about our people and our fight for freedom.

___

Morrison is a member of the APs Race and Ethnicity team. Follow him on Twitter at https://www.twitter.com/aaronlmorrison.

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How the Black Lives Matter generation remembers John Lewis - The Associated Press

Changing the Indians team name is simply the right thing to do: Dave Weible – cleveland.com

CHICAGO -- Changing the name of Clevelands baseball team isnt about the game. And its not about political correctness, or any other buzzword that gets hurled around to shock people into their respective Culture War camps.

This is about Cleveland who we are as a people, what we stand for.

I was raised on Cleveland baseball in the 90s. Herb Score and Tom Hamilton were my summer soundtrack in the car, on the porch, and in the garages and yards of every friend I had.

As life has taken me away from Northeast Ohio, the team has been my season ticket back to not just childhood, but home itself. Ive dreamt of those perfect summer nights off the shores of Lake Erie while scoring games from the desert of New Mexico to the bustle of Brooklyn.

Everywhere Ive gone, Ive found fellow fans. And any Clevelander who has physically left home behind whether for the short or long term has experienced that bond that comes when you spot someone in a hometown hat at the airport bar or on an unfamiliar street.

That connection is about more than baseball I sure dont see the same thing among Yankees fans. Its about being from Cleveland.

And theres a reason for that. As its importance in other areas has waned since the middle of the last century, Clevelands sports teams have remained the citys most recognizable symbols on the national stage. They are what people know us for, and, possibly more than any other city in America, how we identify ourselves.

David Weible grew up in Lakewood and is a writer, editor and web strategist in Chicago.

But while our sports teams may be our cultural calling cards, as a people, were of course much more.

In my experience, were the guy who stops to help you change a tire on the side of the highway. Were the lady who doesnt just give you directions, but shows you the way. Were the kid who returns your wallet, untouched, when you drop it on the street.

Were honest, hard-working, decent people. We do the right thing. Were Clevelanders. And somehow, our teams tend to reflect that. Whether theyre the team-to-beat or perennial bottom dwellers, we take pride in them, because they represent us.

Right now, theres a mark on that pride. Our team has a name that many Americans, members of our own community, and, Im willing to bet, some members of the team itself, find counterproductive and hurtful.

It doesnt matter whether you agree with that viewpoint or not. Politics and posturing aside, the undeniable truth is that those feelings are there, and they are real.

I understand that changing the name is a serious undertaking for the organization. And I understand the attachment fellow fans have to things as they stand especially since every single one of us born after 1915 has never known our team as anything else.

But the work is not impossible, and any fan willing to disavow their team simply because of a name change wouldnt seem to be much of a real fan at all especially in Cleveland, where we pride ourselves on loyalty as much as anything.

The organization is obligated to consider things in business terms, though theyve made clear theyll also be involving a range of outside stakeholders. Rightly so.

Even from a purely business standpoint, an opportunity for new merchandise sales, for positive press in a perpetually negative news cycle, and a chance to quiet the ever-growing roar of anger and discord outside the gates of Progressive Field at every home opener ought to carry some weight.

As fans and Clevelanders, we should look at changing the name as the honest and decent thing to do. The right thing to do. Because thats who we are, and, win or lose, thats something we can all be proud of.

David Weible is a writer, editor and web strategist living in Chicago. He was raised in Lakewood and is a graduate of Lakewood High School.

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Changing the Indians team name is simply the right thing to do: Dave Weible - cleveland.com

The White House Press Corps Should Boycott The Return Of Trump’s Coronavirus Follies | Opinion – Patch.com

By Michael J. Cozzillio and Krista J. Cozzillio, Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor

-July 22, 2020

For 40 months, President Donald Trump has chosen to use his press conference podium as a bully pulpit in the most literal sense. When he has opted to hide in his bunker, he simply dispatches one of his stooges from the prevarication panel to emcee the surreality show.

One such display of incivility involved a slam at a reporter for wearing a face mask in a crowded Rose Garden. Trump snidely accused the newsman of donning the mask out of "political correctness" as opposed to responsible behavior to protect himself and his fellow citizens from infection. Regrettably, there is no personal protection device that could insulate him from the toxic invective being spewed by Typhoid Donnie.

To recount here the number and pitch of the smug insults that he has levlled at journalists is superfluous. One would hope that even the most casual observers would recognize the litany of boorish, insufferable, spiteful comments visited upon the White House press corps indisputably most often women and people of color.

Sadly, during Trump's absences, his assigned minions have only perpetuated his fantasies and have shown no greater respect for the audience.

When are the victims of this vitriol going to say "enough is enough?"

And when are their employers going to say, "To hell with the story, preserve your dignity, walk out with our blessings, and leave the socially bankrupt host to peddle his inarticulate drivel in a vacuum?"

Further, there should be no amount of job security or journalistic duty that will compel obeisance while colleagues are abused and intimidated, even absent institutional media backing.

Arguments that the press, as competitors, cannot be expected to show some unity and camaraderie are unconvincing as are remonstrations that an empty newsday would be devastating.

The public could survive and might relish the silence while this egomaniac melts away under the garish sun of inattention. After all, what prior president has striven so singlemindedly to be the centerpiece of every day's news, and for the sake of sheer antics rather than for newsworthy deeds?

True, a show of allegiance would require a bonding of erstwhile competitors who may otherwise vigorously joust over a breaking story.

But, history is rife with examples of groups who band together in common enterprise even though the members may be diverse in several ways. We may have differences with our neighbors, but on the night of a fire or other calamity, we are one responder.

We have seen rivals in one context demonstrate remarkable esprit de corps in others. The evolution of labor organizations in professional sports provides a telling illustration.

In numerous labor disputes, players who vie as competitors on the field have stood shoulder to shoulder to contest the leagues' financial exploitation and restrictive intrusion on their contractual freedom.

Admittedly, a boycott, rather than a strike, may be a more pertinent analogy, because it does not presuppose an employer-employee relationship. Nonetheless, that point having been acknowledged, the message remains the same.

Finally, and most apt, the purveyors of daily events have experienced a few labor battles of their own. Militant expressions by the press are by no means novel concepts.

Countless strikes have occurred commencing as early as the turn of the 20th century involving all aspects of that industry, from the "newsies" of 1889 to the reporters and pressmen. While many of the industry's disputes involved only certain members of a particular labor organization, in 1995 members of several different unions participated in a strike in Detroit lasting almost two years.

Labor unions, civil rights' organizations, and town hall gatherings have all reached points where they have said, "We have had it!"

Sacrificing individual ambition, they often epitomized fortitude when family, friends, and the general public counseled more passive resistance.

Clearly, some showing of civil disobedience or discontent is by no means a subversive notion. Indeed, the press manifested its sense of professional courtesy and collegiality several years ago when some of its members voiced support for a Fox News protest against the Obama White House's dismissive comments.

When faced with an adversary that demeans their entire raison d'etre, aren't they all bedfellows, however strange? How many times will a captive media cower before this dominating stalag ubermeister?

Moreover, not only is Trump's behavior inexcusably disparaging, the lack of any meaningful pushback by the victims enables him to convert a dialogue into a rambling campaign speech as evidenced by his recent Rose Garden diatribes.

Stand up. Walk out. Let the empty suit spread his mendacious, self-indulgent pap to a crowd dressed as empty seats.

What will he do when the press walks out stock the room with the Breitbart Brigade? Will he call the Pinkertons? Will he put down this walkout with thugs and brick bats, strikebreakers, all those things that in his distorted, myopic vision would "make American great again?"

Whom will he regale with his delusions of grandeur and fairytale achievements?

His raised voice will create a reverberating echo in the vacant room. The sniggering that he hears will be from the ghosts of the Fourth Estate who for years spoke truth to power in an effort to give the public the information that it craved, and did so without fear of vilification from someone with half of their intellect and none of their zeal.

Michael J. Cozzillio is a former member of the faculty at Catholic University's Columbus School of Law as well as Widener Commonwealth Law School in Harrisburg, where he has served as Emeritus and Distinguished Professor of Law. Krista J. Cozzillio is a graduate of Vassar College and Catholic University's Columbus School of Law. She is a former law school administrator and area piano instructor. Their work appears occasionally on the Capital-Star's Commentary Page.

This story was originally published by the Pennsylvania Capital-Star. For more stories from the Pennsylvania Capital-Star, visit PennCapital-Star.com.

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The White House Press Corps Should Boycott The Return Of Trump's Coronavirus Follies | Opinion - Patch.com

David Tennant says There She Goes left BBC terrified of political correctness backlash for making light of – The Sun

DAVID Tennant has admitted There She Goes left the BBC terrified of political correctness backlash for making light of disabilities.

The comedy sees David and co-star Jessica Hynes play parents of a child with a severe learning disability.

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The show has just returned for a second series after the first won praise for not suger-coating the trials of parenthood and marriage.

While David's character Simon relies on booze and dark humour to cope, wife Emily admitted in a low moment in season one that she had struggled to love her newborn daughter.

In a chat with The Guardian, David, 49, revealed his pride in the way the show tackles its subject matter, even if it is an uncomfortable watch sometimes.

However, the cast and the BBC had had some trepidation about the show, because it lacked a certain sentimentality and political correctness there was a real fear he said.

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The star also recalled how a journalist had predicted an incoming "s**tstorm" with series one, saying: "He said: You are going to be destroyed for putting this on television.

"We all hoped he was wrong but we feared that he might be right.

One concern was casting a non-disabled actor to play the couple's daughter Rosie, who is non-verbal and has the mental age of a toddler.

Show bosses had explored the route of hiring an actor with a learning disability, but David said: "Anyone who appreciates the kind of challenges that a child like Rosie would have doesnt doubt that it would not really have been possible.

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There She Goes is based on the experience of the writers Shaun Pye and Sarah Crawford, whose daughter was born with an extremely rare - and still undiagnosed - chromosomal disorder.

David's character Simon is based on Stuart, and the actor admits he would try and catch him out on set.

He said: "Id go: This bit were doing today that didnt really happen, did it? And everything is true.

There She Goes continues tonight at 9.30pm on BBC Two.

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David Tennant says There She Goes left BBC terrified of political correctness backlash for making light of - The Sun

PETER YOUNG: China may be dismissive of the UK – but Britain’s bark still has bite – Bahamas Tribune

The issue of the extent of the involvement in Britain of Chinas huge telecommunications company, Huawei, has finally come to a head. Last week, citing national security concerns, the UK government banned the tech giant from any role in developing the infrastructure of 5G the nations next generation mobile communications network. This effectively reverses the governments decision in January to allow Huawei to play a limited part in this on the grounds the company would be the answer to delivering faster new generation internet. Now, UK firms are banned from purchasing new 5G equipment from Huawei, thus blocking any of its products for the new network, while any of its existing infrastructure equipment must be removed from the 5G network by 2027.

The UK government states the decision was taken in the security interests of the nation and new and highly restrictive US sanctions in May, including removal of Huaweis access to products built in the US, combined with diplomatic pressure appears to have been a game-changer so that the latest decision was claimed to have been inevitable. Earlier, the US had warned of the opportunity for China to spy, steal or attack in this field, and the UKs action is clearly in the interests of the Americans who have welcomed it as good for trans-Atlantic security while at the same time protecting citizens privacy. Equally, the strength of Britains domestic political objection to Huaweis proposed participation in 5G should not be underestimated.

The security concerns are based on the growing evidence that Huawei, despite its claims to the contrary, is not independent of the Chinese state but in reality is part of its security apparatus. There is surely little doubt that, as a communist country with centralised control and where dissent is not allowed, China insists its companies cooperate fully with the nations security services the difference between despotism and democracy. No less an authority than a former head of Britains MI6, Sir Richard Dearlove, is quoted as saying publicly that no part of the communist Chinese state is ultimately able to operate free of the control of its communist party leadership.

Huawei, therefore, presents a potential security risk to the UK as the forthcoming 5G network for phones could be used for hidden and underhand purposes. In such circumstances, there seems to be general agreement that it makes no sense to allow a potentially hostile foreign power to be at the heart of the sensitive infrastructure of Britains new communications system.

It is the case, of course, that Huawei is already partially involved in 3G and 4G but the UK government maintains 5G is fundamentally different, more sensitive and vulnerable. Meanwhile, it is interesting that Huawei announced even after having its equipment stripped from 5G - the launch of three new stores in the UK marketing its range of products including its popular smartphones providing internet access, the playing of films and the ability to make phone calls around the world.

The background to all this and the broader context are important. In recent years, China under the leadership of President Xi Jinping for whom the Party rules have now been changed to enable him to retain his position almost, it appears, indefinitely is looking to maximise its power across the globe. As I wrote in a recent column about Beijings controversial new security law for Hong Kong in which its bilateral treaty with Britain had been brushed aside with blatant impunity, China is showing a more belligerent approach to the rest of the world in its quest for global primacy.

It seems to be seeking pre-eminence as the new superpower whether it is Xis Belt and Road initiative or its growing military activity and influence in the South China Sea and renewed threat to Taiwan or its ongoing trade war with the US.

How different the whole picture looked at the time of President Xis state visit to Britain in 2015 when the-then Prime Minister David Cameron spoke of a Golden Age of good bilateral relations with improved exchanges across-the-board - not only enhanced economic cooperation, investment and trade but also links with universities in order to share advanced scientific and technological research. Now, the situation has changed to the extent that some see these as the Chinese infiltrating British universities to obtain intellectual property and sensitive technology to be passed on to the countrys defence establishment.

Five years later, Sino-British relations have soured, with clashes over coronavirus, Hong Kong, Huawei and human rights abuses.

At the weekend, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab expressed concern about the gross, egregious human rights abuses perpetrated against more than a million Muslim ethnic minority Uighur people in northern China that have caused international outrage. According to reports, not only have they been subjected to intense state surveillance but mosques have been destroyed and thousands have been sent to re-education camps while even enforced sterilisation has been mentioned. Mr Raab described all this as deeply troubling.

As for Huawei, China has condemned the latest decision and its ambassador in London has called it a bad move for Britain itself. He has also criticised the UK for dancing to the tune of the US and warned of a resolute response including the threat of retaliation - especially if, separately, the UK imposes sanctions over human rights abuses or in relation to Hong Kong. What is more, he made the meaningless suggestion that Britain had missed the opportunity to be a leading country. His inappropriate language is likely to be counterproductive, and he might have done better if he had attempted to convince people about Huaweis claimed independence of its own government even if he knows that not to be true; but, as the book says, envoys are sent abroad to lie for their country!

Whatever happens, it is likely Chinese leaders will not want to be seen by the Party faithful to be bowing to the West while at the same time it is in their own interest to maintain good trade relations with Britain. For is part, despite the current difficulties, Britain must surely remain fully engaged with China as a leading player on the world stage, but it has taken firm action by announcing yesterday suspension of its extradition treaty with Hong Kong.

Amid the continuing calls for much-needed effective action to battle racism and police brutality in the US almost two months since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, one of the consequences the other side of the Atlantic of the activities of Black Lives Matter has been an accelerated debate about the woke movement.

While many contend that the growth of illiberalism emanated originally from the US, in Britain this movement is developing as a strange and increasingly insidious phenomenon. There seems to be a growing institutional disdain for freedom of expression so that people are beginning to feel they are no longer living in a free society. Instead, this woke movement seems to consist of those who are trying to enforce their extreme views on others by shaming or ruining those who think differently.

The so-called cancel culture, which is apparently the latest expression of wokeness, looks to be defined as criticising and shaming people often on social media - and attempting to undermine or destroy the professional standing of anyone who deviates from ever-more extreme standards of political correctness. People are now required to submit to a new ruling orthodoxy from which it is a sin to deviate.

Of course, the notion of political correctness has been around a long time. Reportedly, in the 1970s and early 1980s it was first used wittily by liberal politicians to refer to extremism in some left-wing issues. It seems now to be understood by most people as the need to avoid language or behaviour that could offend some individuals or a particular group of people or, more positively, actively using language, behaviour, policies or measures that are intended to avoid offence or disadvantage to them, particularly those who are considered marginalised or discriminated against because of race.

To most people that sounds fair and reasonable, though political correctness is often taken to extremes by those too easily offended without justification and where subjective judgment can be flawed. But, by and large, it works. What is now taking hold in Britain in public life and national institutions, universities and schools, the police, the press and other media, big business and even the Church is the promotion of a woke ideology which demands anyone who departs from the new orthodoxy is decreed evil and beyond redemption.

All this may sound fanciful to some but the woke movement is growing. It is interesting, however, that voices are now being raised in opposition to what is seen as a minority of activists trying to dictate to others how they should live and what they should think. For example,British comedian Ricky Gervais, pictured, has stood up publicly for free speech, describing wokeness as weird as he says, just because you are offended does not mean you are right. In addition, last week a letter was sent to Harpers Magazine by some 150 liberal philosophers, writers and intellectuals denouncing the current intolerant climate of public discourse.

It seems to me there is some doubt about what exactly constitutes the new orthodoxy and who has defined it. There is insufficient space today to make a proper case for free speech. But, generally in the Western world people accept instinctively the need for a logical exchange of ideas and opinions through argument and counter-argument in determining the truth and reaching measured conclusions on an issue as enunciated by the 19th century German philosopher Hegel in the dialectic named after him. In a democracy, shutting down debate, imposing conformity and crushing dissent is unacceptable and should be resisted. As someone said, if you dont support free speech for people with whom you disagree, you dont support free speech.

Despite the gloom and doom of new coronavirus restrictions here at home, I hasten to offer some positive and happy news from faraway Britain. Last Friday, The Queen attended the wedding of her granddaughter, Princess Beatrice who is the daughter of Prince Andrew, at Windsor. Because of social distancing requirements it was a small private event attended only by close friends and family. Prince Philip was also there looking fit and well at the age of 99. It was a rare appearance for him since his official retirement in 2017 and his first public engagement in a year.

Later the same day, Captain Thomas Moore was knighted by The Queen. It was he who had raised earlier this year the enormous sum of about $40 million for the National Health Service by completing 100 laps of his garden in time for his impending 100th birthday. Captain Tom, as he became known, captured the hearts of the nation for his determination in a worthy cause and he was seen as a symbol of hope and perseverance during the coronavirus crisis so that he became a national treasure.

At the unique, open-air, personal investiture ceremony in the grounds of Windsor Castle in brilliant afternoon sunshine, The Queen was reported to have thanked the-now Sir Tom for his extraordinary fundraising efforts and remarked that 100 was a wonderful age, while he himself expressed his own thanks and appreciation for being honoured in this way and with typical humour apparently quipped that, if he had to kneel down for the ceremony, he might never get up again!

So Friday was indeed a happy day to gladden the heart a lovely wedding for the new bride and bridegroom and a fitting climax to the Thomas Moore story. It will also surely not have escaped notice this was the first public appearance by The Queen since the coronavirus lockdown measures and another example of her dedication and commitment to duty at the age of 94 - even in such troubled times. It was certainly a busy day for her.

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PETER YOUNG: China may be dismissive of the UK - but Britain's bark still has bite - Bahamas Tribune

The Changing Meaning of Age, Gender and Race in Medical Research – American Council on Science and Health

Much of the ambiguity of RCT's results lies in how closely the treatment and control groups matched to one another. Variables that are continuous along a spectrum, like age, are grouped into "buckets," in an attempt to make the heterogenous more homogenous. But as our knowledge increases, the underlying diversity of variables, even ones we formerly thought were more in the discrete, yes/no category are being challenged. Among the challenged are age, gender, and race.

"See, it's not about racesJust placesFacesWhere your blood comes fromIs where your space isI've seen the bright get dullerI'm not going to spend my life being a color".

- Black and White Michael Jackson

Race

Race has long been a description of phenotype, black, brown, yellow, and white. The more contemporary, and politically charged statement is that race is a social construct a cultural, not "objective" view. This particular view has generated agrowing tempest in medicinearound a standard test of kidney function, the glomerular filtration rate (GFR). GFR measures the ability of the kidneys to detoxify the blood and is a primary marker of kidney health or failure. Actually, measuring GFR requires a 24-hour collection of urine so various nomograms, the new term might be algorithms, estimate those 24-hour values from a single point in time, blood test.

For a variety of reasons, including a belief that black individuals were more muscular than comparable white individuals, and therefore had higher levels of creatinine, the substance measured in GFR, the algorithm adjusted for being black. As a result, clearances for black patients were greater than those for comparable white individuals. The downstream result is that black patients were most likely to have false-negative GFR tests; their kidney function was worse than the GFR would suggest. These factitiously good results not only delayed concern about developing renal insufficiency but adversely impacted their priority on recipient lists for kidney donation. In the last few weeks, UCSF, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, the University of Washington, and Vanderbilt, among others, have dropped the racial component of the algorithm, in some cases substituting some indirect measure of muscle mass.

"This equation assumes that Black people are a homogeneous group of people, and doesn't take into account, how Black is Black enough?"- Vanessa Grubbs, MD Associate Professor of Nephrology UCSF

23andMe has made a business of separating us based on our genetics rather than our phenotype. Their calculated equivalence to "race" isancestry composition.To give you a sense of how genetics differs from phenotype, consider the US census that describes six categories [1], and 23andMe which has six main categories with 18 sub-categories and an additional 38 sub-sub categories.

Gender

Our earliest gender assignment was based on the most obvious of phenotypes, our external genitalia male, female, and individuals born with both, hermaphrodites. With expanding knowledge, our definition has progressed to the internal phenotype, the presence of a uterus and ovaries, or prostate and testis, to the presence of sex chromosomes. Today, gender can be measured by the release of hormones, a metabolic pattern. This metabolic definition has come forward in the discussion around long-distance runner Caster Semenya and her ability to compete as a female athlete. [2] Further conflating the problem is the entanglement of gender identity and orientation, which are related but separate. While more and more often, we see that the question of gender on surveys is couched as "gender identified at birth," this wording may meet some political correctness but fails to provide much scientific precision.

Age

You would think that age is pretty straightforward. Even creating buckets of ages should be easy. Of course, it all depends on what you mean by age. In looking at underage drinking, while the definition of underage may vary from locale to locale, the idea of what chronologically is 18 or 19 should be constant. On the other hand, what happens when we want to study health impacts. In this setting, are we interested in chronologic or physiologic age (often considered as frailty or some measure of co-morbidities)? It will make a difference. For example, how important is age versus frailty in the high-mortality associated with COVID-19? Capturing a chronologic value is probably not sufficient.

Medicine - the applied art

All of these categories are basic to applied medical research. And while the cultural positioning around categorizing race, and to a lesser degree, gender burns with a hot white light that may shed more heat than necessary, the concerns they raise are nonetheless valid. We need to develop not only consistent definitions but recognize that the definition changes with what general area we study. This further fractionation of categories may improve precision medicine, letting us compare more apples to apples. Still, it will require far more participants in studies to replace the statistical power lost as categories increase.

[1] White, Black or African American, Asian, American Indian and Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, and Other Pacific Islander. If you want a deeper dive into how the US Census has categorized race over its entire existence consider this article from Science News,How the US census has measured race over 230 years

[2] ACSH discussed Semenya's confrontation with the International Association of Athletics Federation in a special series, which can be foundhere,here, andhere.

Sources: A yearlong push to remove racist bias from kidney testing gains new grounds, Stat

More:

The Changing Meaning of Age, Gender and Race in Medical Research - American Council on Science and Health

Whats Going On In NYC This Week – Jewish Week

SANDCATCHERS

Featuring original music by Tzadik recording artist Yoshie Fruchter that is inspired both by maqam and the Appalachian Trail, Sandcatchers blends the sound of the oud, which has a deep history in the Middle East and tradition spanning centuries, with the lap steel, a much younger entity. A live online concert by the band features Yoshie Fruchter (oud), Myk Freedman (lap steel), Michael Bates (bass) and Tim Keiper (drums/percussion). Saturday, July 25, 6 p.m., Live on Tl-Barbs, barbesbrooklyn.com. Donation requested.

SELF CARE:LEIGH STEIN

Highbrow, brilliant, says New York magazine. Self Care proves Leigh Steins status as a great demolition expert (Kenneth Tynans term for Bernard Shaw) of the influencer era, says The New Republic. A Vulture Best Book of Summer 2020, the new novel is about Maren Gelbs company-imposed digital detox. She tweeted something terrible about the presidents daughter, and as the COO of Richual, the most inclusive online community platform for women to cultivate the practice of self-care and change the world by changing ourselves, its a PR nightmare. Stein appears in an online conversation with Jess Barron. Thursday, July 23, 7 p.m., McNally Jackson Independent Booksellers, mcnallyjackson.com. Free.

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INON BARTANON, PIANO: TIME TRAVELER SUITE

The New York Times has called the Tel Aviv-born Inon Bartanon one of the most admired pianists of his generation. In this livestreamed recital, hell bring together Baroque dance suites by Bach, Handel and Rameau with movements from more modern works, including Thomas Ads Blanca Variations (2015), which are based on the Ladino folk tune Lavaba la blanca nia. Thursday, July 23, 7:30 p.m., 92Y, 92y.org. $10.

ROBIN WASSERMAN WITH SPECIAL GUESTS: MOTHER DAUGHTER WIDOW WIFE

An enthralling, gritty, and altogether unpredictable read that holds nothing back You will be utterly riveted (BuzzFeed). From the author of Girls on Fire, an NPR Best Book of the Year, comes a new novel centered on a woman with no memory, the scientists invested in studying her Dr. Benjamin Strauss and his ambitious student Lizzie Epstein and the daughter who longs to understand. Wasserman and guests will appear in an online discussion. Friday, July 24, 7-8 p.m., Strand Book Store, strandbooks.com. Free.

Israeli civil rights lawyer Lea Tsempel is the subject of the documentary, Advocate. It airs on PBS documentary series POV next week. Pov.org

ADVOCATE

Attorney Lea Tsemel is a champion in Israeli human rights circles for her longtime defense of Palestinians. But she is seen by some as the devils advocate. Filmmakers Rachel Leah Jones and Phillippe Bellaiche document her trials in Advocate, which was shortlisted for an Oscar in the Best Documentary Feature category. The film airs as part of PBS POV series, Monday, July 27, 10 p.m., Thirteen/WNET, pov.org.

CRIP CAMP Q&A

If ever there were a film about fun, resilience and tikkun olam, Crip Camp is it. No one at Camp Jened, a camp for disabled teens just down the road from Woodstock, could have imagined that those summers in the woods together would be the beginnings of a revolution. The campers-turned-activists shaped the future of the disability-rights movement and changed accessibility legislation for everyone. Join a virtual, live-captioned Q&A with filmmakers. Monday, July 27, 8:30 p.m., Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, jccmanhattan.org. Free. Watch the film on Netflix, netflix.com.

DAVID CROSS NEEDS TO DO STAND-UP

Actor David Cross (Arrested Development) tries his hand at live stand-up comedy during a pandemic. Were just hoping he does his bit about the binary nature of the word Jew. Enjoy socially distanced comedy in Parklifes 4,000-square-foot outdoor yard while enjoying tacos and drinks. Masks are required and all safety guidelines will be adhered to. Monday, July 27, 8:30-10 p.m., Littlefield LIVE@Parklife, 636 Degraw St., Brooklyn, parklifebk.com. $28 (includes two tacos).

JUDY GOLD ON YES, I CAN SAY THAT WITH ROSIE ODONNELL

Join comedian Judy Gold and Emmy Award-winning Rosie ODonnell online for a laugh-out-loud conversation about Golds new book, Yes, I Can Say That: When They Come for the Comedians, We Are All in Trouble. Over the last few years, with the dramatic rise in political correctness and cancel culture, weve seen a dangerous increase in censorship of comedians who cover controversial issues. What are the uncomfortable truths that comedy reveals about our culture and society? Why is free speech the core value of our democratic society and what can be done? Tuesday, July 28, 7 p.m., 92Y, 92y.org. $10.

BERNARD-HENRI LVY IN CONVERSATION WITH THOMAS FRIEDMAN

A French philosopher, activist and filmmaker, Bernard-Henri Lvy is author of more than 30 books, most recently The Empire and the Five Kings and The Genius of Judaism. Few moments in modern history are riper than this one for his sharp lens and iconoclastic insight. Join Lvy in discussion with New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman about his latest book, Virus in the Age of Madness, which lays out a complex collision of catastrophes and whether they will lead to the humiliation of democracies. Wednesday, July 29, 5-6:30 p.m., Virtual Streicker, emanuelnyc.org. Free.

NATAN SHARANSKY & RABBI RICK JACOBS: PRISON, POLITICS AND THE JEWISH PEOPLE

A month before the release of his new book, Never Alone, reflections on the journey hes traveled from Soviet Gulags to the rough-and-tumble of Israeli politics and then to the leadership of the Jewish Agency, Natan Sharansky will join us for a conversation moderated by Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism. Monday, August 3, 5 p.m., Virtual Streicker, emanuelnyc.org. Free.

HAMPTONS TRUNK SHOW

For more than a dozen years, UJA-Federation has presented the Hamptons Trunk Show, a hub of shopping, connecting and raising money for the charity. This year, the trunk show is a virtual experience that UJA promises will rival its big tent event. As always, a percentage of proceeds will benefit UJA including, this year, its response to the ongoing needs created by Covid-19. Each morning at 11 a.m. the trunk show will feature a live segment with trendsetters in the fashion world. Monday, Aug. 3-Thursday, Aug. 6, UJA-Federation of New York, ujafedny.org/event/view/hamptons-trunk-show. Register for free.

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Whats Going On In NYC This Week - Jewish Week