‘Defund the police’ is not a real reform strategy – The Maine Wire

The last few months have been tense, marked by social distancing and physical isolation amid the outbreak of a new virus. In-person communication and deciphering nonverbal cues is made more difficult by widespread use of facial coverings and plastic barriers. The American public has watched as the chasm between them and their government widens, mostly from ever-lengthening, amorphous states of emergency.

Not to discount the persistent issue of violent crime in our cities, among the population, the many accounts of gratuitous violence at the hands of public officials has brought the most hardened supporters of law-and-order to the table to discuss how American society can reform its police and restore accountability.

But, how can this be solved? Police departments are run at the local level. Budgets are allocated through the little-understood mechanisms of city, town, and county government. To many Americans, it can seem like a long way to reform.

Not every police department needs reform. The vast majority of law enforcement officials (LEOs) enter the force to protect and serve their communities, and maintain that commitment throughout their service. Policing would be a dangerous job under the most limited and accountable form of government.

Today, officers are tasked with enforcing numerous laws and rules that do not enhance public safety. This has led to a greater divide between police and the people they serve in many areas of the U.S. and especially our metropolitan areas. To help to remedy this situation, state and local policymakers should look to a myriad of reforms to bridge this divide.

Increase Accountability in Police Union Contracts

A point that cannot be overlooked in this larger debate is the role that public-sector labor unions play in obfuscating their members from full accountability. This facet is on display no more than within police union contracts. By reforming these contracts, policymakers can balance the scales between the powerful, politically-connected bargaining units and city leaders, who delegate managing their forces to their police chiefs.

At a basic level, public officials must be held to the same standards as the people they serve, whether they be police officers, bureaucrats or politicians. When individual police officers receive numerous complaints from the public, union contracts should not get in the way of proper discipline. Yet, quite often, they do.

Stephen Rushin, a Loyola University law Professor, in an interview with CBS News, gave an example from San Antonio, Texas, where all officers accused of a civil service rule violation are required to receive access to all sorts of evidence against them, such as video, GPS coordinates, witness statements, and affidavits before they can be questioned.

The union for the citys officers, the San Antonio Police Officers Association, noted that those requirements do not apply to criminal proceedings, but many officers are unlikely to face criminal charges for breaching standards of conduct. The union signaled that they understand that the winds of change are blowing in the direction of increased accountability, noting that as we move forward in time and our industry adapts to changes, there will be a need to make modifications.

In many cases dealing with alleged police misconduct, local taxpayers are likely to shoulder the financial burden. In just 2019 alone, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) paid out nearly $69 million in settlements; this number does not count the settlements paid in cases settled out of court.

Since the June 2018 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Janus v. AFSCME, public employees are no longer required to financially support their union as a condition of employment. If individual police officers are concerned about losing their communitys trust, they may withdraw union support and form smaller, more accountable professional organizations bound by their own values.

While local leaders will need massive political will to take on these powerful public-sector unions, there are solutions that individual officers may pursue in order to strengthen the reputation of their profession and relationship to those they serve. An initiative called the Thick Red Line aims to reach local police officers and empower them to restore the trust and faith in the police by organizing with their colleagues, either with or without their union, into a department-wide refusal to enforce any law or regulation that doesnt have a real victim.

Eliminate Civil Asset Forfeiture in Every State

The next step in examining the interplay between LEOs and the public requires following the money, so to speak. This must include a hard look at the policy of civil asset forfeiture, which allows police to seize personal property simply through the suspicion of a crime.

The tricky thing about this problematic policy, is that it is adjudicated in civil court, instead of criminal court. In these proceedings, the state flips due process on its head, prosecuting your property for its involvement in a crime. This means that the individual whose property was seized must prove the innocence of their property by demonstrating that it is more likely than not (a preponderance of the evidence) that their property was not involved in the commission of a crime.

In many areas of the U.S., police rely on this tool to make up significant portions of their budgets. Because many jurisdictions allow police to keep much, if not all, of what they seize, a perverse incentive exists for officers and departments at large to engage in this type of activity. The positive side of this is that Maines laws on civil asset forfeiture are recognized as one of the best in the country.

Instead of seizure of property through a criminal conviction of an individual for a specified crime, police need only be suspicious that a crime took place using the property, in order to seize it under civil asset forfeiture. This practice should be ended in every state in order to protect the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans. No one should be punished with a loss of property without due process.

Roll Back Excessive Fees and Fines

Many laws, ordinances, and regulations are on the books all across the country that local governments rely on to pad their budgets.

A survey by the Institute for Justice, a liberty-focused national public interest law firm, found that in three Georgia municipalities that rely disproportionately on the accumulation of revenue through fees and finesdescribed as taxation by citationcontributed to significantly lower levels of trust in government, particularly among African-American communities, those most likely to be ticketed under these schemes.

By limiting ordinances to those that truly protect community health and safety, localities would greatly limit the incentive for police to become revenue collectors. Some local police budgets around the country depend on ticket fines for minor violations of traffic laws, and numerous other code infractions. An egregious case involving the town of Pagedale, Missouri showed ticketing for ordinances prohibiting barbecuing in front of a house and having holes in window screens.

By getting rid of the incentive for officers to accumulate revenue through fining the population for trivial offenses, such as the examples above, taxpayers may rest assured that local governments are spending their tax dollars more wisely while also maintaining a healthy relationship with those they serve.

Treat substance use and abuse as a public health issue, not one of criminality

Our nations outdated drug laws and enforcement regimes cause LEOs to view the drug user and the drug-addicted through a lens of criminality, instead of viewing the issue as it is, one that requires a holistic public health response. As my colleague, Julia Bentley argues, our current drug laws are more draconian than necessary for a free society, and have caused much more harm than good, whether measured in fiscal, public health, or social impact.

By reducing criminal penalties, and removing drugs from the criminal sphere altogether, we can eliminate the incentive for police to accost drug users who are not committing any type of violent or property crime. We can also reduce the societal stigma on drug use in order to prompt the drug-addicted to enter voluntary treatment. Yes, this would be a large shift in the mindset of Americans to drug use, but these policy changes will increase the likelihood that those who are addicted will seek therapy for their illness.

The idea of seeking harm reduction as a priority for policymakers has gathered greater popularity as public understanding of addiction as a mental illness has come to the fore. Looking at countries who have embraced this policy, namely Portugal, we see that use of drugs among the population, and especially among minors has decreased since the beginning of that policy. The drug-addicted have also been more willing and able to seek treatment and pull themselves out of a deadly downward spiral.

A white paper by journalist Glenn Greenwald published by the Cato Institute in 2009, noted that prior to decriminalization of individual possession of small amounts of drugs in 2001, The most substantial barrier to offering treatment to the addict population was the addicts fear of arrest. Portugal continues to hold drug trafficking and production as criminal offenses, but treats individual drug use as a public health issue, offering easier access to treatment. As a result, factors such as new HIV infections have substantially dropped over the last 20 years, reports the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).

De-militarize Local Police Forces

In the late 1990s, the federal Department of Defense began the 1033 program, through which local police departments may accumulate excess military equipment from the Pentagon. The equipment has become excess because of updated congressional allocations to the military, rendering previous tools obsolete. The 1033 program equipment is provided to local law enforcement agencies by request, and at little to no cost to localities. Police departments in Maine covering college campuses, the wardens service and small towns and cities have received nearly $10 million in military equipment from the Pentagon since the beginning of the program.

The largest receipt of military gear went to Sanford since it houses the only SWAT team in Southern Maine. This may well be necessary, as long as use of SWAT force is reasonable given the circumstances. The Bangor Daily News reports that Sanford police have ordered more than $1.5 million in military equipment, including two Navistar Defense MaxxPro Mine-Resistant Ambush Protection vehicles, which were designed to protect U.S. soldiers from deadly mines during wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In 2014, after clashes between police and protesters as a result of the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, President Obama restricted the parameters of the 1033 program, but President Trump restored it in August 2017, after heavy police union lobbying. If the use of this equipment, if ever justified, is used in a reasonable manner, it is unlikely to draw much ire from the public. But combined with the aforementioned excessive fines, fees, and criminalization of victimless offenses, these disbursements can have the effect of further dividing the ethos of local police (to protect and serve) and their communities.

Societys goal for effective police reform, as it should be for any application of government force, should be a system that requires everyone to follow the same laws so all can be held accountable to the same standard. We must ensure the greatest possible level of human-to-human understanding between agents of the state and the public they serve.

Though not an exhaustive list, by enacting some or all of these reforms, policymakers may well be able to begin to heal the divide between police and some of the communities they serve, avoiding the vague, unnecessary, and unproductive calls from activists to defund the police.

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'Defund the police' is not a real reform strategy - The Maine Wire

Learn the SEO and social media tactics to build a truly thriving online business – The Next Web

TLDR: The SEO and Social Media Ads Certification Bundle explains how to market, grow audiences, and convert sales in the online world.

If you dont feel 100 percent comfortable that youve got a full command over how to reach and market to potential customers online, dont be discouraged. Between constantly changing avenues and best practices that can shift almost daily, pinning down the best way to get the word out about your products and services to a receptive audience is incredibly tricky.

Not impossible, however. There are methods that can increase your chances of reaching your target audience and finding the customers you seek. The training in The SEO and Social Media Ads Certification Bundle ($29.99, over 90 percent off from TNW Deals) can give you a strong leg up in smart, battle-tested approaches for pushing your brand forward on the web.

The collection brings together six courses that examine different tactics for crafting a visible online presence that can drive sales.

In Introduction to SEO Split Testing and Optimization, youll not only learn how search engine optimization (SEO) works but also how to use the tools to conduct split testing to determine which approaches are effective and which ones arent in unlocking SEO success.

With How to Start an Online Store Using WordPress and WooCommerce, students explore the steps to help newbies and seasoned pros alike build a digital storefront that can have a fully-stocked online business up on its feet using WordPress and its business-minded plug-in WooCommerce.

The path to success comes down to finding and converting customers, so the How to Build Funnels with ClickFunnels training explains various ClickFunnel types to help craft lead generators and sales paths that can spark actual sales and profits.

Social Media Automation and Instagram Marketing and Ads Success offer methods for using automation apps to have quality social media posts happening all the time, even when you arent around to post; as well as focused Instagram-specific tactics for understanding users on the platform, creating impactful Instagram ads, and boosting your engagement with potential customers.

Finally, Peak Productivity for Anyone steps outside the digital world a bit, offering insightful approaches to help anyone increase their productivity, embrace better time management, declutter their life and basically put yourself in the best position for professional and personal success.

Each course in this bundle is a $199 value, but with this offer, all six are on sale now at about $5 each, just $29.99.

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Read next: Theres no workplace equity for women in STEM and COVID-19 made it worse

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Learn the SEO and social media tactics to build a truly thriving online business - The Next Web

Heaven and the mundane – Big Issue North

As San Francisco enjoyed the Summer of Love in 1967, Londons Swinging Sixties were already in motion, allowing the citys young residents to live their utopian dream. The capitals downbeat post-war image was eclipsed by the bright colours of fashion and Pop Art. This new era also paved the way for political protest, set to a psychedelic soundtrack featuring the likes of Cream and Pink Floyd.

My Canadian editor once said: I know what youre doing, Mitchell. Youre making your own Middle Earth, arent you?

Although the counterculture revolution later drew criticism, it nevertheless helped to shape the collective consciousness and proved that creating a better society was achievable. This vibrant yet turbulent period in modern history is the setting of Utopia Avenue, the highly anticipated new novel by Cloud Atlas author David Mitchell, in which a band of the same name climb rock stardoms precarious ladder.

Utopia is otherworldly, says the 51-year-old, speaking via Skype from his home in County Cork, Ireland, where he lives with his wife and two children. Its only really a place you can glimpse, but those glimpses are crucial and without them, you are in a dystopia. Even if by some chance you do get there, it rarely stays that utopia for long. Utopia Avenue is in the real world its an impossible thing alongside a very mundane, suburban thing, so the band and I like the name because its an oxymoron.

Mitchell was born in Ainsdale, Southport in 1969, where he has fond childhood memories of playing in the sand dunes. He moved to Worcestershire with his family, aged six, and later graduated from Kent University with a masters in comparative literature.In 1994, after a year in Sicily, he moved to Hiroshima, Japan, where he worked as an English teacher. There, he met his wife, Keiko, before writing his debut novel, Ghostwritten, which was released in 1999 and awarded the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. A further six novels followed, including his seminal work Cloud Atlas, which was adapted into a motion picture starring Tom Hanks. Was being a writer always an aspiration?

It would have been a bit of a stretch at times to call it an aspiration, or even a daydream, but even if I couldnt always express it, I think Ive always had an affinity with language, explains Mitchell, a proud patron of the British Stammering Association an affliction he has himself suffered with throughout his life.

I also got pleasure from world-building, narrative building and imagining people who werent real. I noticed that long before I ever formulated it in a sentence.

The novel pays homage to the 1960s timeless sounds as the fictional band rub shoulders with real-world artists. Like his latest characters, music has shaped Mitchells life immeasurably.

The biopic of your life has its own soundtrack, he says.There are songs from your youth that licensed you to act and think in certain ways. Songs that contain different versions of yourself and songs that you play for their mood-altering properties. The marriage of lyrics and music can alter how you feel in life-enhancing ways and I wouldnt want to live in a world without that.

Over eight novels and counting, Mitchell has created a multiverse within his ever-expanding ber novel. He is masterful at interlocking stories often across continents, genres and time periods earning him a loyal fan base. It is also a favoured trait to introduce past characters into someone elses tale.

Shakespeare did it, so I cant claim to have invented this and I wouldnt, admits Mitchell, whose previous novel, Slade House, originated from experimental storytelling on Twitter.

When a character in an earlier novel walks on stage in a new novel they come with luggage and associations. The prime directive has always been that if this book is the only thing by me that you ever read, then it must make complete sense as a standalone novel. But if you have a popular character in an earlier book, then why not use the luggage theyre bringing in the present book? Its kind of irresistible.

Mitchells body of work is akin to the popular fantasy of JRR Tolkien and George RR Martin in terms of its ambitious worldly scale.

My Canadian editor once said: I know what youre doing, Mitchell. Youre making your own Middle Earth, arent you? laughs the two-time Booker Prize nominee.I began to dispute it, but then I thought about it and they were essentially right. I want to write this cathedral-sized literary undertaking bigger than Westeros in terms of world size and I also dont want to do that, because if I tried to, it would be at the expense of everything else. The ber novel lets me do both.

Following shows in Europe, Utopia Avenue travel Stateside on tour, bridging their utopian dream with the American Dream. Such journeys mirror Mitchells globetrotting, which was vital to his early novels before starting a family.

The days where I could put everything I owned in a backpack and go off for six months, living as cheaply as possible, are pretty much long gone now, but I have brilliant memories of those days, he reflects, having had his planned book promotion schedule affected dramatically by Covid-19.They were really important in terms of replenishing the compost heap of experience that I could draw from. I like to visit a place as if Im a location scout, thinking, what use could this place be for narrative? There are good valid reasons to do things, in and of themselves, but theres often a secondary, more novelistic reason for going to a place or saying yes to an invitation.

When his son was diagnosed with autism at the age of three, Mitchell came to understand the challenges faced by those living with the condition, who often find the modern world overstimulating and difficult to navigate. To think of it as a disability, much less an illness or a curse, is a grave disservice, he says, after co-translating two novels on the subject by Naoki Higashida from Japanese to English with his wife.

It can be hard, but often these hardships come about by the neurotypical world not knowing how to make the world more friendly for autistic people. If I could spare my son the hassle, pain and future problems, I would remove those obstacles. However, I am very grateful to him and autism for teaching me about neurodiversity.

Beyond its central focus on music, one of Utopia Avenues wider themes is the collision between idealism and reality.

[In the late 1960s] it was believed by a critical mass that if you willed it strongly enough, you could change some of the foundation blocks upon which society is built, says Mitchell, of movements including civil rights, the CND and feminism.

Many of the organisations that have an influence on the world, such as Greenpeace or Amnesty International, can trace their roots back to this exciting time. Any institution we value including the NHS, universal suffrage or the welfare state was at some point somebodys dangerous, subversive and utterly unrealistic utopian dream, viciously suppressed by the powers that be.

Despite this period sparking much-needed progress, Mitchell believes that society has continued to neglect the disadvantaged over subsequent decades.

Our society assumes that youre healthy and middle class and if you dont fit into those categories then youre in trouble. Thats not a society. A society only deserves to call itself that if it is taking proper care of those who need it, he says passionately. I know everything costs money, but the levels of inequality are so pharaonic they make the Victorians look fair. Its despicable, its wrong and the answer is not revolutionary. The answer is just fair taxation or a fairer idea of fair that would do so much. Why does it make you a raving, drooling Marxist for saying: We can do better than this?

Mitchell considers the issue of homelessness. If you have a roof over your head and food in the fridge then youre already one of the lucky ones. One stroke can take your life off script suddenly you need other people and having a decent income isnt enough anymore. If you have a kid who will need help when youre no longer around, you start thinking about this more.

Against the backdrop of a global pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests, societal inequalities continue to be put under the microscope. The utopian dream of the Swinging Sixties has been replaced by an all-encompassing movement for a permanent change to the longstanding status quo. Although divides remain, recent surges in community spirit and increased government scrutiny by the press have done much to unite society. Mitchell contemplates whether the tide is turning.

I am hopeful. Our better angels are there in the newspapers and media. They are there in the behaviour of many of our neighbours too, especially right now.

As long as this is not exterminated, snuffed out or misappropriated by murky forces, then there is no reason to believe that this hope cannot be nourished into something much stronger.

Its important to believe, but you cant stop there either. Hope is not enough. You need hope and action.

Utopia Avenue out now (Sceptre Books, 20)

A Day in the Life by The Beatles from Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band

The Beatles in a single song: groundbreaking yet grounded, dream-like yet quotidian, edgy Lennon and melodic McCartney, ending with one of the all-time great final chords.

I Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl by Nina Simone from Nina Simone Sings the Blues

A sumptuous two minutes 32 seconds in praise of sensuality and bluesy longing. Curvaceous sax solo thrown in for free.

All Along the Watchtower by Bob Dylan from John Wesley Harding

A windswept harmonica, urgent bass and drums, and lyrics that project feverish flickering images from stories or visions.

My Back Pages by The Byrds from Younger Than Yesterday

A crackling, yearning, soaring Dylan cover. Busier than the original, this version serves the lyrics better. Roger McGuinns 12-string guitar solo is brief but heart-breaking.

White Rabbit by Jefferson Airplane from Surrealistic Pillow

In 1967 psychedelic songs were 10-a-penny and five-a-cent: psychedelic songs as irresistible, catchy and sinister as this were rare. The song itself, like Alice in Wonderland, has become a cultural touchstone.

Montague Terrace (in Blue) by Scott Walker from Scott

A prose poem of seedy bedsitland belted out by a heartthrob-turned-chanson powerhouse, set to a lush orchestral arrangement. Astonishing. They dont make em like this anymore. They didnt make many like em back then, either.

Ruby Tuesday by The Rolling Stones from Flowers

An evergreen portrait of a woman with an elegant melody, coloured by Brian Jones on recorder. Vulnerable and curiously un-Stones-like.

Im Waiting for the Man by The Velvet Underground from The Velvet Underground & Nico

This jangling two-chord song about scoring drugs sounds as fresh, listless and immediate today as it did half a century ago when, surely, it must have sounded like a song from another planet?

A Change is Gonna Come by Aretha Franklin from Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You

The Queen of Soul fully inhabits Sam Cookes song, buoyed by piano and organ. For as long as prejudice and injustice exists, the song will be not only moving and beautiful, but relevant.

Little Wing by The Jimi Hendrix Experience from AxisBold As Love

Tender lyrics and an intricate guitar part that interweaves with the vocal like a backing singer. I wish Little Wing was three times as long.

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Heaven and the mundane - Big Issue North

730DC Has Launched a New Newsletter About Events. They Take Place 100 Years in the Future – Washingtonian

A scene from "Dispatches From 2120." Art by Josh Kramer.

The cherry blossom trees are dead. The federal government is moving to Colorado. But theres good news for anyone pining for statehood for the District of Columbia: It will happen! In 100 years.

Thats the setting for Dispatches From 2120, a speculative fiction newsletter from the terrific local things-to-do newsletter 730DC that debuted Thursday. A new 2120 newsletter will appear weekly, as will a related comic on Instagram. Both will be created by Josh Kramer, a freelance journalist and artist whos lived in DC on and off (mostly on) since he enrolled in American University in 2005. Kramers fascinated by transportation and urban infrastructure, and last year he created a comic for CityLab about how a commute might look in a dystopian future.

While the newsletter will describe happenings in the new commonwealth of Douglass (whose citizens rejected the names Washington and Columbia because of their namesakes troubling histories), the comic will tell the story of a resident who works for the Department of the Interior, has a relationship, and has to decide whether to move to Colorado to keep his job.

Theres a couple of things that are just like mentioned, literally in one or two lines in the newsletter, Kramer says, and they end up being a huge setting for an entire chapter of the comic. If that sounds like a fictional universe to you, youve understood the project, he says. He compiled a bible of things that are canonically true about the world in Dispatches From 2120, but he hopes people will want to contribute sanctioned fanfic in whatever form they like. For someone who is really invested in sports or local music or food, he says, there would be so much that they could do here.

Technology is often where fiction about the future stumblesnot every sci-fi author imagined that wed all would walk around with a powerful computer in our pockets, for instance. There is a lot of technology in there, he says. But it is specific to certain areas that were talking about. For example, in the first newsletter, theres an event (sorry, its sold out) where an arborist will present a plan to bring cherry blossoms, which died out due to climate change, and a reference to the Governor-elects remarks on public messaging, AKA that notification you couldnt swat away yesterday.

The idea is I bet there will be notifications of some sort, he says. And you can dismiss them or not.

Douglasss governor to be is named Angela Beal, and if that last name sounds familiar to you, theres a reason why: Kramer constructed a name generator for the project using the names of DC ANC commissioners, the Washington Mystics, and the Washington Wizards. Some characters are referred to with they/them pronouns, as well: In the future, Kramer reckons, around a third of the population will prefer such forms of address.

If that sounds like progress, please note that in the future of Dispatches From 2120, ANCs still exist. We definitely early on decided that we did not want this to be a full on utopia or a full-on dystopia, he says. People around the US dont always understand that DC is a city with its own culture and government, an issue Kramer doesnt expect time to erase. I wanted to see a version of the future that grappled with that.

The Washington Post still exists in 2120, and theres a publication called CHEERS that Kramer views as similar to the now-shuttered Express.I was curious whether my employer might exist a century from now, something Kramer says he hadnt considered. After a few moments of discussion, we decided that it would, but its name would have to change, too. I do hope my descendants will enjoy working at Douglasstonian.

Dispatches From 2120 will appear every Thursday until September 10. Current subscribers will already receive the newsletter and you can alsosign up here and look for comic updates on 730DCs Instagram. Kramer will appear in a live Q&A on 730DCs Instagram at 7:30 PM on August 17.

Join the conversation!

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730DC Has Launched a New Newsletter About Events. They Take Place 100 Years in the Future - Washingtonian

WW3: Satellite images catch THOUSANDS of Chinese troops stockpiling weapons across border – Daily Express

Back in May 20 Indian soldiers were killed in border clashes with their Chinese counterparts which were fought with metal bars, rocks and clubs.An unconfirmed number of Chinese troops are also believed to have died in the hand-to-hand fighting.

However according to Indias The Print news service, a large concentration of Chinese troops has gathered in the Akasi Chin border region.

Indian military sources told the service this was making the Indian Army cautious about the disengagement process.

They added: There is a fear that the People's Liberation Army (PLA) is intentionally delaying the disengagement process to sustain it till winter and then open a new front, possibly in the Northeast.

China withdrew troops from the contested Ladakh area following Mays deadly border clash, but the region remains tense.

Indian media reports satellite images from Shiquanhe in the Tibet Autonomous Region show the build-up of 5,000 Chinese soldiers and their equipment.

Movements were allegedly first detected by Indias EMISAT spy satellites.

In addition to the troops the images purportedly show a large quantity of heavy vehicles and tents.

New helicopter landing sites are also said to be pictured.READ MORE:China threat - Fearsome new Indian fighter jets warn China of conflict

Speaking to The Print an Indian Government figure said New Delhi had boosted its own forces in response.

They said: China has built up troops in large numbers.

We, too, have brought in a large number of troops into the Ladakh sector.

The talks are very protracted, and it seems China is intentionally dragging them.DON'T MISS

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China no longer enjoys the surprise factor.

They had the first-mover advantage in Ladakh initially but they have been countered there and everywhere now.

Following Mays deadly clashes anti-Beijing protests broke out across India.

The Indian Government responded by banning a number of Chinese apps, including TikTok, on national security grounds.

Simon Tack, an analysis from the US Stratfor group, emphasised how important the region is for China.

Speaking to the New Zealand Herald he said: Controlling the source and course of rivers that run from Ladakh also provides a great deal of environmental security for China, as the Himalayan mountains in the region are an important source of water to the areas below them on either side.

China initially launched its military push into Ladakh in May, when the region's snow- and ice-covered valleys had just started to thaw.

But as winter begins to settle in November, the entire region will once again be covered in deep snow, which will make a continued build-up of both Chinese infrastructure and troops in Ladakh difficult.

China and India fought a localised month-long war along their contested border in 1962.

The conflict, which left several thousand dead, ended with an uneasy ceasefire.

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WW3: Satellite images catch THOUSANDS of Chinese troops stockpiling weapons across border - Daily Express

Posted in Ww3

China accused of ‘global domination’ plot via COVID-19 spread as ‘Xi wants to rule world’ – Daily Express

Asia political expert and author Gordon Chang accused China's President Xi Jinping of using coronavirus to even the playing field for his dreams of world domination. President Xi Jinping and Chinese officials have repeatedly denied that there is any coronavirus conspiracy and that they have willingly spread the deadly disease, however. During an interview with Express.co.uk, Mr Chang claimed President Xi is keen on China dominating the world rather than see a strong influence from the West.

Mr Chang said: "China wants to rule the world.

"First of all it is a communist country and communism is a world-wide revolutionary movement.

"Also, Xi Jinping has been hinting that the world should be ruled by China.

"He talks about these notions of world-wide Chinese rule. And uses the same imagery and the language of Chinese emperors in that regard.

DON'T MISS:China warned Donald Trump prepared to cut all ties with Beijing

"Xi Jinping is making it clear that there shouldn't be a Western civilisation of competing states but there should be this global harmony, essentially China ruling the world."

Mr Chang also claimed he believed China had behaved maliciously during the coronavirus crisis and spread the virus willingly, despite the denial from the Chinese Government.

He said: "China maliciously spread this disease beyond its borders.

"We, of course, don't know what was in Xi Jinping's mind.

"But after having seen what the coronavirus did to cripple China, if he wanted to level the playing field by spreading the disease beyond his borders, he would have done exactly what he did do."

Mr Chang also highlighted past instances that suggested this could be the communist leader's future plan.

He said: "His foreign minister Wang Yi in September 2017 wrote an article that said Xi Jinping thought and it is important to remember that a thought in communist party lingo is an important ideological body of work.

"He wrote that Xi Jinping thought he had made innovations on and transcended 300 years of western international relations thinking.

"If you take 2017 and subtract 300 years you almost get to 1648, so along with his time he was referencing the treaty of Westphalia which established the current international order.

READ MORE:

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"By use of the word transcended he was saying that he should be no sovereign states or no more of them than China."

Mr Chang concluded that when combined with Xi Jinping's statements it creates a dangerous rhetoric.

Mr Chang said: "When you put this in connection with Xi Jinping's statements using these imperial era notions we have got to be concerned. We have got to be concerned China doesn't want to compete with Britain or the United States. He wants to overthrow that order with world-wide Chinese rule."

Despite the claims, China's ambassador to the UK, Liu Xiaoming has insited Beijing is willing to work in harmony with the UK.

"It is hard to imagine a global Britain that bypasses or excludes China," he said. "Decoupling from China means decoupling from opportunities, decoupling from growth and decoupling from the future."

The Chinese official added that once the Brexit and COVID-19 issues are dealt with, "there will be unlimited prospects for China-UK co-operation in areas of trade, financial services, science and technology, education and healthcare".

He said he hoped the two countries have "enough wisdom and capabilities" to manage their differences "rather than allowing anti-China forces and Cold War warriors to kidnap the China-UK relationship".

"Great Britain cannot be great without independent foreign policies," he said.

Meanwhile China has consistently urged the United States to stop what it describes as virus slander.

The US should stop wasting time in its fight against the coronavirus and work with China to combat it, rather than spreading lies and attacking the country, the Chinese government's top diplomat Wang Yi said in May.

State Councillor Wang, speaking at his annual news conference on the sidelines of China's parliament, expressed his deep sympathies to the United States for the pandemic.

"Regretfully, in addition to the raging coronavirus, a political virus is also spreading in the United States. This political virus is using every opportunity to attack and smear China," said Wang, who is also China's foreign minister. Some politicians have ignored the most basic facts and concocted too many lies about China and plotted too many conspiracies," he added.

"I want to say here: Don't waste precious time any longer, and don't ignore lives," Wang said. "What China and the United States need to do the most is to first learn from each other and share their experience in fighting against the epidemic, and help each country fight it."

"China has always advocated that, as the world's largest developing country and the largest developed country, both of us bear a major responsibility for world peace and development," he said. "China and the United States stand to gain from cooperation, and lose from confrontation."

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China accused of 'global domination' plot via COVID-19 spread as 'Xi wants to rule world' - Daily Express

Posted in Ww3

Iran humiliated as they bungle sinking of replica US warship and block vital naval port – Daily Express

The Revolutionary Guard had been bombarding the mock vessel in the hope of "symbolically sinking" it in the Strait of Hormuz prior to re-floating it so it can be reused for similar purposes in the future. However, US naval expert Hal Sutton said all has apparently not gone to plan since the exercise, which was dubbed "Prophet Mohammed 14th".

He added: "It is meant to be reusable and has been symbolically destroyed twice already.

"But now it really has sunk. And in very much the wrong place."

Mr Sutton explained: "It is just outside the harbour entrance to Bandar Abbas, near to the main approach channel.

It is so shallow that other ships face a very real risk of catastrophic damage if they sail over it

Hal Sutton

"It is so shallow that other ships face a very real risk of catastrophic damage if they sail over it.

"In fact, at least as of a couple of days ago, it was partly above water. This is a serious shipping hazard."

Last week's drills saw speedboats swarming round the replica of aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, before ground forces launched attacks and a helicopter fired a missile.

JUST IN:Coronavirus map LIVE - UK death toll rises by 65

However, the sinking of the vessel appears to halted Iran's hopes of a repeat performance, certainly in the near future.

If the replica has sunk the bottom of the Strait, Mr Sutton told Forbes Iran would not be able to raise it again - and given how shallow the waters are, it has the potential to pose a major hazard to any ships attempting to enter the harbour.

The use of dummy American warships has become an occasional feature of training by Irans Revolutionary Guards and its naval forces.

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In 2015 Iranian missiles hit another mock-up, also resembling a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier.

Tensions between the US and Iran have rocketed since US President Donald Trump withdrew from Irans 2015 Joint Plan of Comprehensive Action (JPOCA) nuclear deal with six powers and reimposed sanctions which have severely impacted Tehrans oil exports.

Irans Guards in April vowed to destroy US warships if its security is threatened in the Gulf.

Iranian officials have also repeatedly threatened to block Hormuz if Iran is not able to export oil or if its nuclear sites are attacked.

There have also been regular stand-offs between the Iranian Guards and the US military in the Gulf in recent years.

US officials have said closing the Strait would be crossing a red line and America would take action to reopen it.

Iran cannot legally close the waterway unilaterally because part of it is in Omani territorial waters.

However, ships that sail it pass through Iranian waters, which are under the responsibility of the Irans Guards naval force.

Last year, the Stena Impero, a UK-flagged vessel, was seized by the Revolutionary Guard and detained at Bandar Abbas for two months.

Continued here:

Iran humiliated as they bungle sinking of replica US warship and block vital naval port - Daily Express

Posted in Ww3

From emperor penguins to 96-year-old graduates, here’s the good news this week – iNews

Emperor penguins

Researchers have discovered 11 penguin colonies in Antarctica increasing the number of colonies known about by 20 per cent. Satellite images revealed distinctive stains on the ice from droppings. The discovery was hailed as exciting and Philip Trathan, of the British Antarctic Survey, said the region needs to be closely monitored in light of climate change.

The 96-year-old, who has lived through childhood poverty, war and, most recently, the coronavirus pandemic, sailed through an exam that makes him Italys oldest university graduate. Last week, the former railway worker stepped forward to receive his diploma and laurel wreath, applauded by his family, teachers and fellow students more than 70 years his junior. Mr Paterno said he struggled a little with the video calls that replaced classroom teaching during the coronavirus shutdown, but he was not put off by the disease itself after the war and everything else he had been through in life.

Plans to build a 6.5-acre park in Manchester were revealed this week following concerns about access to open space during the coronavirus lockdown. Mayfield Park will be Manchesters first city-centre park in more than a century. The Government said it will contribute 23m to help transform the area between Piccadilly Station and Mancunian Way.

BP has pledged to almost halve its oil and gas production within a decade and shift its focus to renewable energy as the company reinvents itself to survive in a greener future.

Despite the lack of a music festival season, retailers say that shoppers have been busy buying tents, sleeping bags and cooking equipment. Many staples have sold out, as part of the UK staycation boom.

Efforts to restore British native populations have been given a boost of nearly 1.2m to recreate habitat for the shellfish around the coasts. The Zoological Society of London, and partners Blue Marine Foundation and British Marine, have been awarded 1,180,000 by the Peoples Postcode Lottery.

A three-year-old British boy has become the youngest person to reach the summit of a 10,000ft mountain, while his seven-year-old sister became the youngest person to climb the mountain unaided. Jackson Houlding, the son of professional climber Leo Houlding, and his sister Freya, made it to the top of Piz Badile in the Alps on the border of Switzerland and Italy. Mr Houlding said: My daughter climbed it all by herself, all the way, including all the hiking and everything it was very impressive.

A prototype of the companys next-generation Starship has successfully flown to an altitude of 150m, paving the way for a craft capable of carrying humans to the Moon and Mars. The uncrewed test vehicle, which the company hopes to use one day to colonise Mars, rose up on a plume of exhaust before deploying its landing legs and touching down softly.

The detectorist is toasting success after discovering a hoard of silver English Civil War-era coins worth at least 100,000 in a field owned by his local pub in Suffolk. It comes after a decade-long search for treasure which has taken him around the globe. To make sure the haul was not pilfered, he stayed up for three nights to deter any so-called nighthawks.

The first really effective treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) could be available within five years after researchers raised hopes that they had discovered the holy grail of MS therapy. Scientists have identified a natural mechanism in the body that could be boosted with an existing diabetes drug to protect against the nerve damage at the centre of the disease. This would not only halt progression of MS but may partially reverse it as well. At the moment, treatments help to alleviate the symptoms of relapsing remitting MS, the milder, more common form of the disease although these do little to slow its progression.

The 85-year-old widow was reunited with her long-lost wedding ring after hundreds of people turned online detective. The gold band was found in a plant pot by tour guide Debbie Davidson when she took up gardening to pass the time during lockdown in Edinburgh. She shared her find on social media, where users tracked down Alices daughter, who shared the news with her mother.

Britains pubs and restaurants enjoyed their busiest Monday of the year following the launch of the Governments Eat Out to Help Out scheme. Chancellor Rishi Sunaks initiative allows diners 50 per cent off meals Monday to Wednesday in August at partaking restaurants, with a 10 cap per head on the discount. The restaurant-booking platform Opentable said there was a 10 per cent jump in the number of diners on Monday compared with the same day last year.

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From emperor penguins to 96-year-old graduates, here's the good news this week - iNews

Yes, the tech giants are big in truth, probably too big to break up – The Guardian

Whats the difference between Mark Zuckerberg and John D Rockefeller? Exchange the trainers for a pair of spats, and the T-shirt for a frock coat, and the answer is not all that much, according to lawmakers in Washington: a robber baron is a robber baron whether he wears a top hat or a baseball cap.

The US has a history of bringing antitrust cases against monopolies that stretches all the way back to the breakup of Rockefellers Standard Oil back in 1911.

Now it is the turn of the tech giants to be put under the spotlight, which is why Facebooks Zuckerberg, Amazons Jeff Bezos, Apples Tim Cook and Googles Sundar Pichai were summoned to Capitol Hill last week appropriately, via video stream.

David Cicilline, the chair of the House of Representatives antitrust subcommittee, made it abundantly clear what he thought. All four companies wielded monopoly power and some of them should be broken up. Their control of the marketplace allows them to do whatever it takes to crush independent businesses and expand their own power, he said.

Worryingly for Zuckerberg et al, it was not just Democrats such as Cicilline who were fired up. Republicans on the committee made it clear that they thought the social media companies had demonstrated blatant bias against conservatives. Inevitably, Donald Trump weighed in, saying that if Congress refused to act then he would.

Amazon, Alphabet, Apple and Facebook, together with Microsoft, have sailed through the lockdown and now account for getting on for a quarter of the S&P 500 by market cap

No question, the big four tech companies deserve to be subjected to the closest scrutiny. While none of them has the market dominance that Standard Oil enjoyed at its peak, they all have huge reach. Two of them, Google and Facebook, have no serious rivals.

And they want to keep it that way. The evidence amassed by Congress suggests that whenever Google or Facebook have spotted a potential rival they have used their clout to see them off: sometimes by squeezing firms out of business, sometimes by swallowing them up.

Zuckerberg put up the best defence when he said he had done it the American way, starting with nothing and succeeding by offering better products that appealed to consumers. Companies arent bad just because they are big, he insisted.

Thats absolutely true. There is no law in the US against a small company becoming a household name. There are, though, laws that are designed to prevent companies that make it big from eradicating competitors. Yes, at the moment, it is hard to argue that the tech giants are gouging consumers: Google and Facebook are free, Amazon wins market share by undercutting rivals, and there are plenty of cheaper alternatives to Apple devices.

Even so, there are two reasons why that will not and should not spare the big four from the threat of breakup. The first is that monopolies stifle innovation and that is bad news for consumers in the future. The second is that the concept of the harm that monopolies can do has been broadened out to include potential damage to debate and democracy. Thats the real difference between Standard Oil and Facebook: there was never any suggestion that Rockefeller could swing elections by manipulating the oil price.

All that said, immediate action against the tech giants looks improbable despite the sabre- rattling from both Capitol Hill and the White House. Why? Because Amazon, Alphabet (the company that owns Google), Apple and Facebook together with Microsoft have sailed through the lockdown and now account for getting on for a quarter of the S&P 500 index by total market capitalisation. Does Trump want to crater the stock market by breaking them up? Does Congress? Not really.

Provisions for bad loans landed with a thump at the banks last week. The share prices of Barclays, Lloyds Banking Group and NatWest fell as their boards took a conservative approach to planning for Covid-created losses.

Regulators, however, can give themselves a pat on the back. Amid the lenders grim economic projections, almost no one thinks the UKs big banks need more capital. This happy state of affairs goes almost unremarked, but shouldnt. Lessons from 2008-09 were learned; the recession would be worse with a financial crisis on top.

NatWest, as Royal Bank of Scotland has renamed itself, is sporting a core capital ratio of 17.2%, many times what it had in the bad old days. Lloyds and Barclays arent far behind. The scope for loss absorption, in the jargon, should be enormous. But shareholders, who have essentially funded such strong capital buffers, would like something in return a return of dividends.

The Bank of England effectively banned them in March in the interests of safety, and investors worry that a supposedly temporary measure will be extended again and again. If a lender has more than enough capital to withstand a heavy storm, they ask, why shouldnt it be allowed to distribute the excess? Isnt that the point of investing in a bank? Its a reasonable view.

This battle could become intense. The Bank will review the ban later this year but its statement last week was taken as cautious. It will look at the level of uncertainty on the future path of the economy, market conditions, and capital trajectories prevailing at that time. An extended ban, in other words, is possible.

Necessary too, some would say. Maybe, but nor do we want banks to retreat into full-on safety mode, which wouldnt help the economic recovery. The dividend ban on banks should be as short as possible.

There is a sense of trepidation across the US this weekend after official figures showed the economy shrinking at an annualised rate of 32.9% between April and the end of June.

This fall is more than the 30% drop seen over 15 quarters between 1929 and 1933, and brings home the magnitude of the Covid-19 pandemic. Never before has the US economy experienced anything like it, and to say the figures left economists stunned is an understatement.

The shock was compounded by the realisation that Washington is poised to switch off the unemployment benefit supplement that has kept many families from needing food banks and defaulting on loans since the pandemic gripped the nation in March.

Democrats have pleaded for a change of direction after recent figures showed that the recovery had already stalled. Unemployment claims in the US rose for the first time in four months last month. For people who have lost jobs and now live on credit, the coronavirus benefit supplement is a lifeline.

Meanwhile, GDP in the eurozone declined by 12.1% in the second quarter, the largest quarterly decline on record. It could be said that the same stuttering recovery that characterises the US, and the UK for that matter, is also taking place across the 19 eurozone countries.

However, there is one major difference. The nations that drive the currency blocs economic growth Germany, France, Spain and Italy have pledged to maintain subsidies for businesses and households, knowing that only a consistent and prolonged level of support can prevent the recovery from stalling. A 750bn package of grants and loans for business put together by Brussels, while flawed, helps to reinforce that message.

A second wave of the virus will be a blow to every country that succumbs, but the seriousness with which eurozone countries are dealing with the economic as well as the health effects of the pandemic is likely to prove a winner.

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Yes, the tech giants are big in truth, probably too big to break up - The Guardian

Which Tech Giant Is Likely To Fall First? – Medium

Microsoft is the oldest on the list but one of the most successful companies in the world. Founded in 1975 by Bill Gates and Paul Allen, it has had its ups and downs since its inception as well as leadership changes in the last few decades.

Like Amazon, Mircosoft is extremely diversified even with runner up products like Bing.

Bing, however, is still profitable growing at a rate of 914% per quarter and still accounts for almost 6.4% of Microsofts total revenue (more than a service like Linkedin). They are also growing at a modest 14.56% since the last quarter of March 31 in 2020, putting them in a favorable growth rate over some of the other tech giants in the list.

One of the major advantages Microsoft also has over other businesses is their influence within the enterprise space. With this, the company has had significant success with not only Microsoft Azure and their office products but recently, with products like Microsoft Teams.

With such a big enterprise footprint, Microsoft has been able to expand newer products into its B2B customer base and also grow their cloud footprint.

This diversified portfolio of products, as well as a huge footprint within the enterprise space, cements Microsoft for many more years to come and will be the unlikely tech giant to fall first along with Amazon.

The only drawback is, in a lot of these product categories, including search, cloud, and gaming, they are only second to the market leader (E.g., Google for search and Amazon for cloud).

The only drawback is, in a lot of these product categories, including search, cloud, and gaming, they are only second to the market leader (E.g., Google for search and Amazon for cloud).

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Which Tech Giant Is Likely To Fall First? - Medium

Tension myositis syndrome – Wikipedia

Tension myositis syndrome (TMS), also known as tension myoneural syndrome or mindbody syndrome is a name given by John E. Sarno to a condition of psychogenic musculoskeletal and nerve symptoms, most notably back pain.[1][2][3] Sarno described TMS in four books,[4][5][6][7] and stated that the condition may be involved in other pain disorders as well.[2] The treatment protocol for TMS includes education, writing about emotional issues, resumption of a normal lifestyle and, for some patients, support meetings and/or psychotherapy.[1][8] In 2007, David Schechter (a medical doctor and former student and research assistant of Sarno's) published a peer-reviewed study of TMS treatment showing a 54% success rate for chronic back pain. In terms of statistical significance and success rate, the study outperformed similar studies of other psychological interventions for chronic back pain.[1]

The TMS diagnosis and treatment protocol are not accepted by the mainstream medical community.[9][10] However, TMS and Sarno's treatment methods have received national attention, including a segment on ABC's 20/20;[10] an episode of Larry King Live;[11] an interview with Medscape;[2] and articles in Newsweek,[12] The Seattle Times,[13] and The New York Times.[9] Celebrity doctors who support TMS treatment include Andrew Weil[14][15] and Mehmet Oz.[16] Notable patients treated for tension myositis syndrome include Senator Tom Harkin, John Stossel,[3] Howard Stern,[17] and Anne Bancroft.[9] In 2017, TMS was covered favorably in journalist C. J. Ramin's book "Crooked". Ramin, who herself suffered from back pain for decades, criticized many of the popular back pain treatments and remarked Sarno as "the rock star of the back world".[18]

According to Sarno, TMS is a condition in which unconscious emotional issues (primarily rage) initiate a process that causes physical pain and other symptoms. His theory suggests that the unconscious mind uses the autonomic nervous system to decrease blood flow to muscles, nerves or tendons, resulting in oxygen deprivation (temporary micro-ischemia) and metabolite accumulation, experienced as pain in the affected tissues.[2][8][19] Sarno theorizes that because patients often report that back pain seems to move around, up and down the spine, or from side to side, that this implies the pain may not be caused by a physical deformity or injury.[7]

Sarno states that the underlying cause of the pain is the mind's defense mechanism against unconscious mental stress and emotions such as anger, anxiety and narcissistic rage. The conscious mind is distracted by the physical pain, as the psychological repression process keeps the anger/rage contained in the unconscious and thereby prevented from entering conscious awareness.[20][21] Sarno believes that when patients recognize that the symptoms are only a distraction, the symptoms then serve no purpose, and they go away. TMS can be considered a psychosomatic condition and has been referred to as a "distraction pain syndrome".[22]

Sarno is a vocal critic of conventional medicine with regard to diagnosis and treatment of back pain, which is often treated by rest, physical therapy, exercise and/or surgery.[5]

Back pain is frequently mentioned as a TMS symptom,[1][8][23][20] but Sarno defines TMS symptoms much more broadly than that:

Below is a list of criteria for diagnosing TMS, according to Schechter and Sarno:

Schechter and Sarno state that if a patient is unable to visit a medical doctor who is trained in TMS, then the patient should see a traditional medical doctor to rule out serious disorders, such as fractures, tumors and infections.[13][22]

The treatment protocol for TMS includes education, writing about emotional issues and resumption of a normal lifestyle. For patients who do not recover quickly, the protocol also includes support groups and/or psychotherapy.[1][8]

Sarno's protocol for treatment of TMS is used by the Harvard RSI Action Group, a student volunteer organization, as part of their preventative education and support program for people with repetitive strain injury, also referred to as "RSI".[24]

Education may take the form of office visits, lectures and written and audio materials. The content of the education includes the psychological and physiological aspects of TMS.[1][8] According to Schechter, the education allows the patients to "learn that their physical condition is actually benign and that any disability they have is a function of pain-related fear and deconditioning, not the actual risk of further 're-injury.'"[1]

Sarno states that each patient should set aside time daily to think and write about issues that could have led to the patient's repressed emotions. He recommends the following two writing tasks:

Schechter developed a 30-day daily journal called "The MindBody Workbook" to assist the patient in recording emotionally significant events and making correlations between those events and their physical symptoms. According to Sarno and Schechter, daily repetition of the psychological process over time defeats the repression through conscious awareness.[25]

To return to a normal lifestyle, patients are told to take the following actions:

Sarno uses support meetings for patients who do not make a prompt recovery. Sarno states that the support meetings (a) allow the patients to explore emotional issues that may be causing their symptoms and (b) review concepts covered during the earlier education.[8]

Sarno says that about 20% of his patients need psychotherapy. He states that he uses "short-term, dynamic, analytically oriented psychotherapy."[8] Schechter says that he uses psychotherapy for about 30% of his patients, and that six to ten sessions are needed per patient.[1]

Alan Gordon, LCSW has created a TMS recovery program which includes various articles, exercises, and segments from sessions exemplifying therapeutic concepts.

While psychogenic pain and pain disorder are accepted diagnoses in the medical community, the TMS modality is more controversial.

A non-peer-reviewed 2005 study by Schechter at the Seligman Medical Institute (SMI), co-authored with institute director Arthur Smith, found that treatment of TMS achieved a 57% success rate among patients with chronic back pain.[26]

A peer-reviewed[27] 2007 study with Schechter, Smith and Stanley Azen, Professor and Co-Director of Biostatistics in the Department of Preventative Medicine at the USC Keck School of Medicine, found a 54% success rate for treatment of TMS (P<.00001). The treatment consisted of office visits, at-home educational materials, writing about emotional issues and psychotherapy. The average pain duration for the study's patients was 9 years. Patients with less than 6 months of back pain were excluded to "control for the confounder that most back pain episodes typically resolve on their own in a few weeks."[1]

Schechter, Smith and Azen also compared their results to the results of three studies of other psychological treatments for chronic back pain. The three non-TMS studies were selected because of (a) their quality, as judged by the Cochrane Collaboration, and (b) the similarity of their pain measurements to those used in the TMS study. Of the three non-TMS studies, only one (the Turner study) showed a statistically significant improvement. Compared to the 2007 TMS study, the Turner study had a lower success rate (2635%, depending on the type of psychological treatment) and a lower level of statistical significance (P<.05).[1]

Schechter, et al. state that one advantage of TMS treatment is that it avoids the risks associated with surgery and medication, but they caution that the risks of TMS treatment are somewhat unknown due to the relatively low number of patients studied so far.[1]

To see current and past research, go to https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/home and search for Condition or disease "Mind Body Syndrome" with status all studies.

Notable patients who have been treated for TMS include the following:

The TMS diagnosis and treatment protocol are not accepted by the mainstream medical community.[9][10] Sarno himself stated in a 2004 interview with Medscape Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine that "99.999% of the medical profession does not accept this diagnosis."[2] Although the vast majority of medical doctors do not accept TMS, there are prominent doctors who do. Andrew Weil, a notable medical doctor and alternative medicine proponent, endorses TMS treatment for back pain.[14][15] Mehmet Oz, a television personality and Professor of Surgery at Columbia University, includes TMS treatment in his four recommendations for treating back pain.[16] Richard E. Sall, a medical doctor who authored a book on worker's compensation, includes TMS in a list of conditions he considers possible causes of back pain resulting in missed work days that increase the costs of worker's compensation programs.[32]

Critics in mainstream medicine state that neither the theory of TMS nor the effectiveness of the treatment has been proven in a properly controlled clinical trial,[6] citing the placebo effect and regression to the mean as possible explanations for its success. Patients typically see their doctor when the pain is at its worst and pain chart scores statistically improve over time even if left untreated; most people recover from an episode of back pain within weeks without any medical intervention at all.[33] The TMS theory has also been criticized as too simplistic to account for the complexity of pain syndromes.[10] James Rainville, a medical doctor at New England Baptist Hospital, said that while TMS treatment works for some patients, Sarno mistakenly uses the TMS diagnosis for other patients who have real physical problems.[34]

Sarno's response was that he had success with many patients who have exhausted every other means of treatment, which he said is proof that regression to the mean is not the cause.[10] TMS was covered favorably in a recent book on back pain "Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery" by Cathryn Jakobson Ramin with her remarking that: "Every time I told anyone I was writing about back pain, I learned to expect questions about whetherIknewSarnoswork.Almost everyone had run into someone who had been curedbySarno,often after years of discomfort. I was happy to be able to inform his many admirers that, yes, I had actually spoken with the rock star of the back world."[18]

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Tension myositis syndrome - Wikipedia

Posted in Tms

I Tried Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation – TMS Therapy as …

May is Mental Health Awareness Month. For too long, men have been silent about mental health and its literally killing us. We can change that. Our Healthy Mind, Healthy Body series shines a light on mental health issues that everyone should be talking about.

According to the latest estimates, more than 300 million people worldwide are living with depression. Medication and talk therapy are effective treatments for most patients but not all.

If first-line treatments don't work, some people with depression turn to brain stimulation therapies. One such treatment is transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which uses a pulsed magnetic field to stimulate nerve cells or neurons in the regions of the brain that regulate mood. When stimulated, the neurons release neurotransmitters like serotonin, which are otherwise depleted in people with depression.

"Serotonin is supposed to flow from the neurons to the front of brain and tell us, 'This is a happy moment!' But for a depressed person, that doesnt happen," explains Dr. Kalyan Dandala of Associated Behavioral Health Care, a network of treatment centers in the Northwest that offer NeuroStar TMS Therapy. "We're waking up that part of the brain thats been dormant."

NeuroStar

TMS has been used for more than a decade, and was approved by the FDA in 2008. It's proven to be helpful for at least half of patients who complete several weeks of near-daily treatments, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. But it's a major time commitment and some patients experience relapses.

Benjamin*, 26, dealt with depression for years. He tried various types of medication, but none had the effects he was looking for. In March 2018, at the recommendation of his psychiatrist, Benjamin began TMS therapy. This is his story, as told to MensHealth.com news editor Jordyn Taylor. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

It started with anxiety, actually.

It came out of nowhere. After I graduated high school, I came to Seattle to learn how to be a restaurant cook. I was surprised at how well I was handling the stress and then a couple of years later, stuff just started happening.

I was having panic attacks and feelings of, "I just can't handle this." I was working at my first restaurant job, and I can vividly remember having a mental breakdown while I was cooking during a rush. The order had all these different modifications, and I kept messing up. The anxiety kept building and building until it erupted, and I kind of lost it. I was trying to keep a calm face about it, but my coworkers could tell that something was going on. I felt embarrassed, but I had to be like, "Guys, I need help. I can't get through this."

I went to a psychiatrist, and I was given medications to help with the anxiety. I would use one, and then it would lose its magic a little bit, and we would go to something else. We tried two or three; there was one that kind of stuck, and the anxiety came into check.

But then the depression took over.

Anxiety is like, I can't handle it. Depression is more like, I don't care. The best way to describe it is just kind of wandering aimlessly through life with no enjoyment. I lost sight of myself. I couldn't really figure out who I was anymore. I wasn't enjoying the activities that made me me: I ran in high school, but I didn't want to go outside or exercise. Music was also a huge part of my high school career, but I didn't want to do anything.

I thought I was going to keep having to cycle through medications until I eventually hit the jackpot and even then, would it still have worked? I definitely had a feeling of hopelessness, like, is this going to be me forever?

There was a point when my psychiatrist left to work somewhere else. She gave me a long prescription, but after a year, I was running low on my medication, and I decided I really needed to go back to somebody.

"I definitely had a feeling of hopelessness like, is this going to be me forever?"

I was talking with my new psychiatrist about how my depression medication, Wellbutrin, hadn't been working. She was like, 'Okay, since you've tried different classes of medications and they haven't been working, I think you qualify for this new treatment.'

She starts telling me about transcranial magnetic stimulation therapy, and I start laughing because I tell her I've heard about it. I had read about TMS therapy I thought it was really cool and futuristic, but that I'd probably never do it in my lifetime.

One of my hangups was the daunting idea of going there for 30 minutes a day, five days a week, for six weeks. It's a huge commitment. But beyond that, I was excited to try it, because I liked the idea of a non-medicated treatment.

They say the first day is always the hardest, and I can truly say that is is. Normally they're 30-minute appointments, but the first appointment is an hour and a half. They need to take the time to find the area of the brain associated with depression, so they do the whole mapping process.

You're basically sitting in a dentist's chair. You have your arms on a rest, and you put your hand up: Your fingers are all spread out like you're holding a football, and then your thumb's pointed out like you're trying to hitchhike. Then they use the machine it's a coil that kind of cups the top, back part of your head to send these electromagnetic waves in. They're trying to get a reaction from your thumb. [Editor's note: the magnetic pulses are targeted at an area in the left upper part of your brain that controls your mood, which is a few centimeters in front of the area that controls your thumb.]

It feels like a tapping sensation; I joked that I want to look around and see this woodpecker sitting on the chair and poking at my head periodically. I would feel a tap, and then they would look at my thumb. If there wasn't a reaction, they moved it and tried again until they got a good one.

NeuroStar

Next, they calibrate the starting dose for you. That part was the hardest. They administer what the treatment will be like on a certain level, and they ask you, 'Okay, how painful was this from 0 to 10?' They did it for the first time, and I'm like, 'Alright, that's 1 or 2.' They raised it up it was a 3 or 4 they raised it again 5 maybe but you know, the pain was bearable. They kept going up, and once it felt like 7 or 8, I was just like, 'Nope, that's way too much let's bring it down.'

It was also really hard because it triggered emotions for me. March 29 is when I went in there, and the whole month of March was really crappy for me and my family. You'd naturally get teary from the tapping, but I was also trying not to cry because it was bringing up all these emotions. It was a crazy trip, but what I really loved about this whole process was that from day one, the TMS specialist told me, 'We care about you and your journey through this, so we're here for you.'

The first day was incredibly tough, but it was a place of no judgement everybody was there for me. I came back the next day and started everything.

Now, I only have four treatments left. The only side effects they told me I might experience is headaches or a sensitivity in the scalp at the area of the treatment, but I felt neither.

"I knew it wasn't going to be a magical Cinderella transformation, but I definitely feel like a newer person."

Going into this, I knew it wasn't going to be a magical Cinderella transformation, but I definitely feel like a newer person. In the beginning, I started feeling more moments of happiness, but there were also some days where I didn't know if it was working or not but it could have been the depression talking. It really took a lot of my closest friends and family to start noticing these differences. I talk with my dad, and he's like, "Your demeanor has changed. You just sound happier." My best friend at work, she's like, "Yeah, you just look better even as far as your posture goes, just the way you carry yourself." I'm feeling like myself again.

After these treatments, I feel like I'm more connected with myself and the world around me, and I can truly say that I'm happy with myself. I like me. It took a long time to get to that point, because throughout depression, I kind of hated myself. I hated life, and I hated who I was. Now I have a lot more clarity I'm even thinking about my future.

Interestingly enough, Ive been entertaining the idea of going into the mental health field. I don't know exactly what I'd do, but I just like the idea of helping people with depression or other mental illnesses. I want to give people the hope that I was given to tell people its okay, this isnt a forever thing. You can overcome this.

*Last name has been withheld to allow subject to speak freely on private matters.

Share your own moment of #HowIGotHelp and let your voice inspire other men. For more information on how to get help for anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues, please check out our list of resources. If you would like to locate treatment services in your area, call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Treatment Referral Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).

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I Tried Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation - TMS Therapy as ...

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RedwoodConnect 2.0 Sets Sights On Simplifying TMS Integration – Benzinga

Logistics companies across the sector agree: Integrating transportation management systems (TMS) is cumbersome. Complicated wiring isn't the only thing leaving businesses tangled. Problems such as communication errors, tight deadlines and overwhelmed IT staff often make integration costs spiral out of control.

Chicago-based Redwood Logistics aims to eliminate these inefficiencies and simplify the integration of supply chain technologies with its latest advancement, RedwoodConnect 2.0. The software was first revealed at the FreightWaves LIVE conference in November, where it earned recognition as Best in Show.

In this Freight.Tech Update, presented by Redwood Logistics, FreightWaves Lead Economist Anthony Smith and Eric Rempel, chief innovation officer at Redwood Logistics, discussed the ambitious goal to streamline systems integration for logistics providers both large and small.

"Connect 2.0 has the chance to become the industry's de facto integration tool due to its incredible cost-effectiveness, security and scalability," said Rempel. "Our technology provides small and mid-sized businesses the same tool kit typically reserved for larger enterprises."

Rempel outlined Connect 2.0's objective to democratize supply chain management for logistics providers of all sizes. Users are presented with "plug and play" cloud-led supply chain functionality that simplifies workflows and provides greater avenues for data sharing.

"Connect 2.0 simplifies and streamlines the systems integration process," Rempel said. "It allows our customers to double down on their technology investment in one seamless place by mitigating integration risks and providing a clear path for eliminating legacy debt."

The Connect 2.0 conversation continues in the video below.

Photo by frank mckenna on Unsplash

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RedwoodConnect 2.0 Sets Sights On Simplifying TMS Integration - Benzinga

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Transportation Management System (TMS) Market is Projected to Expand at a Steady CAGR over the Forecast by 2025 – Owned

Transportation Management System (TMS) Market Report aims to provide an overview of the industry through detailed market segmentation. The report offers thorough information about the overview and scope of the market along with its drivers, restraints and trends. This report is designed to include both qualitative and quantitative aspects of the industry in each region and country participating in the study.

Key players in globalTransportation Management System (TMS) market include:3GTMS Inc.,CargoSmart Ltd.,JDA Software Group, Inc.,Oracle Corporation,Manhattan Associates Inc.,Precision Software Inc.,SAP SE,One Network Enterprises Inc. and more.

Request sample copy of this report at https://www.reportsintellect.com/sample-request/1255885?utm_source=prime&utm_medium=24

This study specially analyses the impact of Covid-19 outbreak on the Transportation Management System (TMS), covering the supply chain analysis, impact assessment to the Transportation Management System (TMS) market size growth rate in several scenarios, and the measures to be undertaken by Transportation Management System (TMS) companies in response to the COVID-19 epidemic.

This report also splits the market by region: Breakdown data in Chapter 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.

Americas, United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, APAC, China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, India, Australia, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia, Middle East & Africa, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Turkey and GCC Countries.

Inquire for a Discount https://www.reportsintellect.com/discount-request/1255885?utm_source=prime&utm_medium=24

Transportation Management System (TMS) Market to tricky structures, classifications and applications. This research report also provides a clear picture of the global market by presenting data through effective information graphics. It also provides a detailed list of factors that affect market growth.

A detailed study of the competitive landscape of the Global Transportation Management System (TMS) Market has been given along with the insights of the companies, financial status, trending developments, mergers & acquisitions and SWOT analysis. This research will give a clear and precise idea about the overall market to the readers to take beneficial decisions.

Transportation Management System (TMS) Report provides future growth drivers and competitive landscape. This will be beneficial for buyers of the market report to gain a clear view of the important growth and subsequent market strategy. The granular information in the market will help monitor future profitability and make important decisions for growth.

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Transportation Management System (TMS) Market is Projected to Expand at a Steady CAGR over the Forecast by 2025 - Owned

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NBA team bosses to fund black empowerment $300M over 10 years – TRT World

NBA's 30 teams will provide $1 million annually to fund the NBA Foundation, which is being launched by the league's board of governors and the players' union.

National Basketball Association (NBA) team owners are to contribute a total of $300 million over the next 10 years to a charitable foundation aimed at accelerating economic growth in the Black community.

The league said on Wednesday each of the NBA's 30 teams will provide $1 million annually during that time to fund the NBA Foundation, which is being launched by the league's board of governors and the players' union.

"The creation of this foundation is an important step in developing more opportunities for the Black community," said National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) President Chris Paul.

"I am proud of our league and our players for their commitment to this long-term fight for equality and justice, and I know we will continue to find ways to keep pushing for meaningful institutional change," Paul said.

READ MORE: NBA League to paint 'Black Lives Matter' on courts

Empowerment for Black communities

The foundation aims to drive economic empowerment for Black communities through employment and career advancement, increasing access and support for high school, college-age and career-ready Black men and women.

It will also work toward deepening the NBA's commitment to racial equality and social justice, movements that have gathered momentum after the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man killed in police custody in May.

Anti-racism protests have been at the forefront of the NBA's restart at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, with games being played on courts that have "Black Lives Matter" painted on them and players wearing jerseys with social-justice messages.

"We are dedicated to using the collective resources of the 30 teams, the players and the league to drive meaningful economic opportunities for Black Americans," said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.

"We believe that through focused programs in our team markets and nationally... we can advance our shared goals of creating substantial economic mobility within the Black community."

READ MORE:After long awaited return, NBA will feature 89 international players

Foundation's mission

It will also assist national and local organisations that provide skills training, mentorship, coaching and personal development in NBA communities across the United States and Canada.

Part of the foundation's mission regarding employment will be on obtaining a first job, securing employment after high school or college and career advancement once employed.

"All NBA team governors recognise our unique position to effect change and we are committed to supporting and empowering young black men and women in each of our team markets as well as communities across the US and Canada," said NBA board of governors chairman Larry Tanenbaum, chairman of the ownership group for the reigning NBA champion Toronto Raptors.

FourNBAclub owners, three players and executives from the NBPA and a member of the league office will serve on the foundation board of directors.

"We're dedicated to using the collective resources of the 30 teams, the players and the league to drive meaningful economic opportunities for black Americans," NBA commissioner Adam Silver said.

"We believe that through focused programs in our team markets and nationally, together with clear and specific performance measures, we can advance our shared goals of creating substantial economic mobility within the Black community."

READ MORE:More militarised federal agents sent to fight #BLM protesters in Portland

Source: TRTWorld and agencies

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NBA team bosses to fund black empowerment $300M over 10 years - TRT World

Real Men Feel: Walking Through The Fire [Podcast] – The Good Men Project

Hypnotherapist, coach & master firewalk instructor, Barry Collins, joins us to discuss how firewalking is not about firewalking. It is a metaphor for all the changes and challenges we face in life.

Listen to Real Men Feel, #188, Walking Through The Fire here:

Barry shares how firewalking can help people surpass perceived limitations, gain empowerment, and look at life in a new way. He also tells us how firewalking spread from India to the western world and into personal growth events in the US and UK.

Firewalking is NOT to be taken lightly or tried at home. Lots of training goes into leading these events and many lessons can be learned from participants at any point during the event. Barry has led over 3,000 people across the coals, and his instructors do 100 firewalks as part of their training.

We discuss the attraction and repulsion of fire, the importance of being able to not just listen to instructions, but follow them, the most impactful insights people have had, and how firewalking develops a form of resilience. Barry also shows us, if you watch the video, a cringe-inducing example of how we can choose our response to anything.

Topics and Questions Include:

Watch Real Men Feel, #188, Walking Through The Fire, May 26, 2020

Learn more at Firewalk.co.uk and connect on Facebook and Twitter.Check out Barrys book Face Everything and Roar

Let us know what you thought here in the comments or shoot an email to [emailprotected].

Subscribe to the podcast at RealMenFeel.org/subscribe

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Scroll down to the author bio for all the links to access more #RealMenFeel

A version of this post was previously published on RealMenFeel.org and is republished here with permission from the author.

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Real Men Feel: Walking Through The Fire [Podcast] - The Good Men Project

BankRI gives $5500 in charitable grants to three Pawtucket organizations – Valley Breeze

8/4/2020

PAWTUCKET Three Pawtucket-based organizations that work with youth and families on education, healthy living and to provide basic supports have been awarded a total of $5,500 in charitable grants by Bank Rhode Island. The organizations are Junior Achievement of Rhode Island, The Empowerment Factory, and YMCA of Pawtucket.

The grants are helping to support both current programming and initiatives set to begin in the fall.

At the YMCA of Pawtucket, funding is supporting the Grab n Go meal program, in which boxes of nonperishable meals are available to local families. With many in the community struggling amid the pandemic, the program has grown to reach some 200 families. Additionally, the grant is helping the Ys efforts to provide personal need and baby items to those in need, along with offering virtual classes.

Junior Achievement of Rhode Island has received funding to deliver financial literacy programs during the upcoming academic year. Programs are developed for both in-person and virtual learning, with students in Pawtucket, Central Falls, Providence and Woonsocket being introduced to the importance of how smart choices about education, career and saving today can lead to a strong financial future.

Blending social-emotional learning with environmental education, The Empowerment Factory is using its grant to deliver its Healthy Living Community Adventure curriculum. The program engages participants in healthy habits through virtual learning, creativity and beautification projects while social distancing.

Nonprofits, especially right now, are a lifeline for our communities in so many ways, and the commitment these organizations have to their Pawtucket neighbors is a perfect example of just that, said Mark Meiklejohn, president and CEO of BankRI.

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BankRI gives $5500 in charitable grants to three Pawtucket organizations - Valley Breeze

Multi-month prescription, home delivery for uninterrupted AIDS drugs in times of Covid-19 – Hindustan Times

Within days of China locking down Wuhan and other cities in coronavirus disease (Covid-19) -hit Hubei province on January 23, and India confirming its first case in Kerala on January 30, officials from UNAIDS and National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) went into a huddle in New Delhi to ensure an uninterrupted supply of HIV services, which are offered free to everyone who needs them under the national Aids control programme.

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) given to people living with HIV (PLHIV) works in two critical ways -- it slows disease progression and helps PLHIVs lead productive lives, and reduces the viral load to lower disease transmission and prevent new infection.

When Covid-19 was first reported in India, we put our heads together with NACO, civil society and PLHIVs to plan for contingencies such as the Wuhan lockdown , to mitigate the impact on critical HIV services, including ART delivery and harm reduction, said Dr Bilali Camara, Unaids Country Director for India, who is a medical epidemiologist by training. Unaids is the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS.

By March, monthly dispensation of ART drugs was replaced with a three to six months supply across states. Instead of monthly, we began giving six months provisions to people so they didnt have to come back to a facility and risk exposure to Covid-19, or spent money on transportation etc. This was introduced by state Aids control societies across India very quickly. With treatment saturation, we can achieve a lot in terms of keeping PLHIVs health and preventing new infection, said Dr Camara.

What also helped was the introduction of a new antiretroviral drug with fewer side-effects called dolutegravir. At the beginning of the pandemic, there was a very good policy change, when NACO introduced a much safer, less toxic drug on Unaids advice. That medication really helped people stay on treatment course, which will improve outcomes and lower their risk of developing drug resistance, he said.

There are 2.1 million people living with HIV in India, with new infections rising in Assam, Mizoram, Meghalaya and Uttarakhand, and declining in Nagaland, Manipur, Delhi and Chhattisgarh. Just eight states accounted for two-thirds of the estimated 87,580 annual new HIV infections in India in 2018.

In absolute numbers, India has the third highest number of people living with HIV (PLHIV) in the world after South Africa and Mozambique, but cases have hovered around 2.1 million for the past decade despite people living longer with improved access to testing and ART. Since 2010, India has reduced new infection by 37%.

Delhi resident Saurabh, 41, who does not want to share his second name, is among those who benefited from the multi-month dispensation of ART drugs just before the lockdown. I was surprised when I was given medicines for several months in March but within a week, the lockdown was announced, which meant I couldnt step out. It was a big relief as I could continue treatment without a break, said Saurabh, who was diagnosed with HIV in 2012.

India has accomplished reductions in new HIV infections, important reduction in AIDS-related deaths, and an increase in the number of pregnant women living with HIV on treatment, with a 66% ART coverage in 2018. This has resulted in 79% people knowing their status, and 82% of them being on treatment, said Camara. Testing and treatment is provided free in the public sector, and costs the government US$ 70-80 per patient per year.

The lockdown also invigorated the community-based dispensation drugs. We have volunteers collect the ART drugs from the government and distribute them on motorbikes, bikes, carts, and on foot to ensure people get medicines at their doorsteps. I really have to thank all the networks of HIV and Aids in India, all of them have participated, said Dr Camara.

Opportunities to fast track the AIDS response include focusing on high burden districts for the elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV based on the last ANC survey data which has shown a prevalence of 0.2%., and intensifying prevention programmes, including targeted interventions for key populations such as female sex workers, (1.56% HIV prevalence), the prison populations with 2.04%, transgender (3.14%), and people who inject drugs (6.26%), according to NACO data.

Covid-19 has been a huge challenge but it has forced us to think differently. UNAIDS has worked with NACO and ministry of health to take oral substitution therapy to injecting drug users in prescribed doses for two to three months, said Camara. Since this again was community- led, the oral substitution therapy using buprenorphine (opioid) reached injecting drug users at home as well as the homeless.

The unexpected outcome was that more and more people moved from injecting drug use to oral drug use, which is preferred because HIV infections occur from injecting drug use. So we have an opportunity to reduce risk as injecting drug use is a serious problem is in the north eastern states, and some pockets in Punjab and Uttar Pradesh, said Dr Camara.

At least 82 countries criminalise some form of HIV transmission, exposure or non-disclosure, sex work is criminalised in at least 103 countries and at least 108 countries criminalize the consumption or possession of drugs for personal use, according to UNAIDS.

There are instances drug users being put in jail, NACO data collected for the first time from jails for 2019 shows 2.04% prevalence rate which is 10 times more than the general population. Jailing drug users like criminals is not addressing the problem of drug use and Covid-19 has helped establish that overcrowded jails are not practical. Jails should be an instrument to educate and rehabilitate people, he said.

Working closely with the community for HIV service delivery and engaging them in the national AIDS response is key. Community empowerment is essential to reduce stigma, deliver medicines and and tools for prevention, which has gone down. The increasing emphasis in treatment is needed, but not at the cost of prevention in vulnerable populations, who still account 62% of new infections in India, said JVR Prasada Rao, former health secretary, and founder director of NACO, and special envoy at Unaids.

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Multi-month prescription, home delivery for uninterrupted AIDS drugs in times of Covid-19 - Hindustan Times

How to get started if you’ve never had a bank account – The Associated Press

Managing your money without a bank account is doable. But it can pose challenges and the COVID-19 pandemic has only added more.

Your economic impact payment mightve arrived weeks or months after others did, in the form of a check or prepaid debit card, because you couldnt choose the faster delivery option of direct deposit into a bank account. And if youve gone to the store lately, you may have been asked to pay with a debit or credit card or in exact change due to a nationwide shortage of coins and concerns over germ transmission.

A bank account can make life easier in these situations, among others. To avoid future issues, consider opening one or try again if youve been rejected in the past. Heres a guide to getting started.

ASSESS YOUR MONEY NEEDS

If youre one of the 14 million adults without a bank account in the U.S., you might have a system that works for you. Maybe that includes using alternative products such as prepaid debit cards and check cashing services. Financial counselor Brandy Baxter has worked with clients who used check cashing services for practical reasons.

They preferred to walk in, walk out with cash in hand, says Baxter, an accredited financial counselor and financial coach who runs the firm Living Abundantly in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Check cashing stores like Check n Go and ACE Cash Express may operate for longer hours than banks and have easy approval processes to get cash quickly. But this comes with a steep fee, which can range from 1% to 6%, or more, of the check amount.

Bank accounts can fulfill money needs beyond what prepaid cards and check cashing services can. For example, their fraud protections can limit what you pay if youre victimized, and many accounts let you lock debit cards remotely when stolen.

And once youve begun a relationship with a bank, other doors open: Credit cards, auto or small business loans and cheaper alternatives to payday loans may eventually be within reach.

Checking accounts dont just help you save costs; theyre the stepping stones to use other financial products, says David Rothstein, principal at Cities for Financial Empowerment Fund, who manages BankOn, a national platform that promotes financial inclusion.

FIND A BANK THAT FITS YOU

If you find banks intimidating or have had issues getting an account before, community banks and credit unions tend to be more accommodating than national banks and are often mission-driven for example, focusing on the financial health of their surrounding communities.

Were very lenient at giving someone a second chance, says Pedro Murillo, area branch manager in the San Francisco Bay Area for Self-Help Federal Credit Union. If an employee comes in to apply for a loan and doesnt have pay stubs, what else (can they) show us? A letter from (their) employer? We dont want to give up.

Like other credit unions, Self-Help requires a person to open a savings account to become a member; the minimum to open an account is typically a few bucks. Then members can apply for other products, like a credit builder loan.

You can search online for the term CDFI which stands for community development financial institution to find credit unions like Self-Help near you. Many require those who join to be in the same area or state where the credit union or bank has branches.

WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT APPLYING

To open an account, youll generally need your Social Security number, one or two forms of identification and money for the first deposit.

Its common to apply for two bank accounts at the same time: a checking and a savings account. The checking account grants access to a debit card, bill payment system and other services, while the savings account lets you set money aside and, ideally, grow by earning interest.

Banks usually screen applicants on ChexSystems, a national reporting agency that keeps records of accounts closed against a persons will. If you have lost access to a bank account in the past, you might be rejected by other banks until you settle your ChexSystems record. This can mean paying off debt to a bank or disputing errors on the record.

Once youre cleared, consider what banks often call a second chance checking account or a BankOn-approved checking account. Many of these dont charge overdraft fees, which kick in if you try paying for something that would put your balance in the negative.

Finding and opening the right bank account involves some effort. But once youre approved, having a safe place for your money and a better chance to get affordable loans can make it worthwhile.

To have a checking account is the cornerstone of any financial empowerment effort, Rothstein says.

This article originally appeared on the personal finance website NerdWallet. Spencer Tierney is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: spencer.tierney@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @SpencerNerd.

RELATED LINKS:

NerdWallet: Second Chance Checking Accounts Across the U.S.

https://bit.ly/nerdwallet-second-checking

Opportunity Finance Network: CDFI Locator

CDFI Locator

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How to get started if you've never had a bank account - The Associated Press

WiMSA shines a light on the future of women in mining – Mail and Guardian

SPONSORED

As Women in Mining South Africa (WiMSA) marks a decade in existence, the organisation continues to grow its role as a free platform providing support and guidance to women in the industry all through sponsorship and time volunteered by industry professionals with skills and experience to share.

WiMSA chairperson Thabile Makgala joined WiMSA as a volunteer before being appointed to her role leading the organisation over the last year and a half. I wanted to join a network of women in the mining industry, who support, inspire and mentor other women, she says. Her view of the organisations value was shaped in those early days: WiMSA creates a space for womens voices to be heard and that was important for me.

WiMSAs emphasis on mentorship and support for women in the industry has extended to creating opportunities for women to meet industry colleagues, providing a presence at educational institutions to further public knowledge about careers for women in mining, and ensuring that legislation provides a clear framework for the creation of workplaces in which female mining professionals can thrive.

Dr Thuthula Balfour, Head of Health at the Minerals Council South Africa, heads up the WiM task team to oversee the implementation, oversight and evaluation of the White Paper on Women in Mining published earlier this year. Balfour notes that the lack of female representation is a global business problem across industries, but also that it is of particular concern in the South African mining industry, which lags behind other sectors in the country and other mining jurisdictions, which makes WiMSAs role essential.

Mining companies have both a business and moral imperative of enhancing the representation of women across all levels, says Balfour, and are trying to increase the female representation in the workplace through various initiatives. While there has been much improvement in business in general, the mining industry still struggles to attract and retain women at all levels of employment. It is also the case that, once employed, on-the-job challenges at mining operations lead to women leaving mining roles.

With this observation, it becomes clear that transforming the mining industry is not only about attracting women to its exciting possibilities, but also achieving retention through genuine support for professional women which, one might hope, will eventually lead back to an all-round more attractive reputation for the industry as a field in which women can thrive. To achieve this holistic change, attitudes need to be shifted, but there need to be structural and administrative changes, too.

WiMSAs diverse team has made great strides in advancing womens personal growth, leadership and career development in the past decade, and has even been able to continue with the implementation of new projects in the face of Covid-19 and all of its attendant challenges.

Taking a moment for reflection and to look to the future, Makgala imagines a world in which many of WiMSAs goals have been reached. I sincerely hope that 10 years from now the fundamental elements such as empowering, caring, showing respect, connecting and growing our female talent would have been achieved, she says. While the need for WiMSA will persist, if its current efforts are effective, its role in the next decade will change: I hope that the conversations about women, parity, diversity, inclusion would have advanced and that the industry would have made concerted efforts to transform without the need to impose legislative requirements. Change would be happening organically within the industry. Cayleigh Bright

Rules and legislation cant be understood entirely as cold, hard facts: in any industry, regulations affect the daily lives of people who spend the majority of their waking hours occupied with that fields pursuits. The mining industry has a particular history of gender-based exclusions enforced by the law: women have only been legally allowed to work underground in South African mines since 1996. Redressing this kind of institutional exclusion requires a multi-layered approach of the kind that WiMSA is in the process of taking: understanding workers needs on a human level, then enshrining their rights in legislation that, when effectively implemented, will enable them to thrive.

Coach and consultant Briony Liber is the mentoring lead on the WiMSA committee, and since beginning her work with the organisation in 2017 has gained extensive insights into the ways in which the mining industry can be transformed at a structural and individual level. Legislation and policy set the framework, but when we apply that mechanistically we approach it from a ticking boxes compliance perspective, says Liber. The implementation and measurement of industry standards have a complex role to play in helping us to understand what makes a thriving, equal industry.

Liber explains: Structurally, we can set the legislation and guidelines and metrics by which we measure success. But we so often set metrics that are about how many women are in the industry, how many women are at board level, but we lose the granularity and the quality of those numbers by not looking at metrics that assess risk and opportunity.

In order to ensure that this deeper level of insight is achieved, says Liber, its necessary to ask questions that explore various areas and aspects of the workplace. For example, Are there areas in organisations where women are at risk? Or is the organisation at risk by having an imbalance in female representation and institutionalising another one-dimensional perspective? Are there areas in organisations where there are opportunities that can be leveraged if there were more women in those areas of the organisation?

Key metrics, then, should measure both risks posed to women and opportunities available to them. In addition, the numbers gathered should be examined carefully to avoid the easy conflations and misinterpretations that can cloud our understanding of just how transformed the industry is: Are our metrics tracking the progression of women and representation across the organisation rather than in the typical areas of human resources, for instance? When we only look at gender representation we obscure the dynamics of where women are in the mining industry or any organization for that matter and we reinforce structural issues.

Much of the work of assessing intricate workplace issues has been done in the White Paper on Women in Mining. Dr Thuthula Balfour, Head of Health at Minerals Council South Africa, heads up the Women in Mining task team comprising member companies representatives to oversee the implementation, oversight and evaluation of the White Paper on Women in Mining. In this capacity, shes been able to ensure that the papers clear, comprehensive recommendations are used to their best potential.

The White Paper on Women in Mining is focused on streamlining industry strategies to advance women in mining and make the workplace conducive to womens success. It aims to do this by encouraging female representation in the industry and to drive decisions that are in the best interest of women, says Balfour.

This objective, and the more granular goals defined in the white paper, are to be reached through the implementation of a number of initiatives also outlined in the paper. Among them are diversity and inclusion programmes that include men, the development of industry guidelines for women in mining, the inclusion of women in mining KPIs in senior management performance plans, the review and adaptation of workplaces to ensure that the needs of women are met and the review of physical work capacity requirements in line with the capabilities of women and collaborations with relevant partners that advance the cause of women in mining. The interventions and recommendations also include the individual growth and support structures urgently needed in a rapidly transforming industry: job shadowing, training, recruitment, retention, talent pools and succession planning.

Liber points out that its necessary to understand the personal, or lifestyle, aspects of an employees success, and that addressing these needs for the individual can eventually enable a societal shift. The lifestyle issues around flexibility, maternity leave, childcare etcetera, are crucial for both women and men to share the role of caregiving, she says. If organisations afforded men the same amount of paternity leave that women have, perhaps the pressure on women to be the caregiver may be alleviated, and the opportunity may be afforded to men to take on a more equitable role in the home, thereby enabling women to take on more equitable roles in the workplace. Cayleigh Bright

Mining is one of South Africas most important industries and it only looks to become more so in the years just ahead. Future-looking technology depends on it: five of the 16 materials used to make such solar panels are mined in South Africa, as are metals and minerals such as cerium, lanthanum, and neodymium, which are used in the creation of batteries and fuel cells. These are just some of the materials within the immediate purview of the rapidly expanding technology industry.

As the importance of mining is further entrenched, more sustainable technologies and practices are implemented, and the very structure of the industry is likely to be irrevocably altered, with the archaic need for manpower soon to be overshadowed by the spectres of automation and robotics. Much has been made of the employment crisis these technologies will create, but theres another way to look at this shift; a silver lining of sorts. As mining becomes less reliant on physical labour and more on intellectual rigours, gender is likely to become less of a relevant factor in the makeup of its workforce.

As the process of mining becomes increasingly automated, different skill sets will be needed to contribute. As the industry adopts technologies such as drones and data science, it will become far more appealing to ICT and STEM graduates.

Despite the fact that the majority of university graduates are women, comparatively few enter into technical careers such as those in mining, with many citing the toxic corporate culture as an aspect of whats off-putting about entering the industry. This is only exacerbated by what the Harvard Business Review calls The Athena Factor: a phenomenon that causes womens careers to stall around the point where mens careers accelerate, usually at the early management level.

Without a mentor or a clear path forward, this is a disheartening prospect for many professional women and when combined with a corporate culture that makes it easier for men to misbehave, to put it euphemistically, it leads to 41% of women leaving roles in technical careers because of a hostile work environment. If gender parity is to be achieved, this must be addressed on a fundamental level.

Raksha Naidoo, Managing Director at African Mineral Standards, is hopeful. I think that the change is coming, she tells us. Its probably coming at a rate thats a lot slower than most of us would like, but its moving in the right direction. I think, for me, a lot of people are saying the right things, and whether it translates into reality, time will tell.

Mentorship programme

Naidoos advocacy for women in the workplace has led to her involvement with Women in Mining South Africa (WiMSA), which in turn has resulted in AMIS recently becoming the first platinum sponsor of WiMSAs mentorship programme. Women in leadership positions, including Naidoo and the mentors at WiMSA, are incredibly important inside of the industry, as they are able to lay the foundation for future generations to flourish, and Naidoo feels positive about the potential of the entrepreneurship programme to harness technologys potential to reach women working in remote regions, who may not previously have had access to mentorship and connections that a more central location might offer. Today, role models and providers of good advice are no more than a video call away.

WiMSA champions the development of women in the mining industry, serving as a platform and network that has allowed women within the industry to find and support one another. Thanks to organisations like these, women are able to find mentors within the industry and can collectively push the envelope in terms of their representation and treatment within the industry. Their accessible digital presence also allows young women interested in the industry to easily gain insight into the obstacles they will face as well as the support that is available to them.

Bonds between women

I initially joined WiMSA for the networking events, says Petro du Pisani, Head of Business Improvement Projects at Anglo American and now Deputy Chair of WiMSA. After Id attended a couple of events I noticed how great bonds were being made between the women. It was a safe place to meet, share stories and support each others businesses. I wanted to be a part of creating this environment for women to collaborate.

I think WiMSAs work is incredibly important because it creates awareness about the issues we face as women in the industry and it provides a platform to meet women from all over the industry. When asked about how the fourth industrial revolution might impact gender parity in the industry, it became clear Du Pisani finds the future an exciting prospect. Technology is probably the most exciting prospect for shifting gender dynamics in the mining industry, she says. Technology like the exoskeletons used by Ford means that everyone can operate heavy equipment. As we move to increased automation, more job opportunities should open up for women. Anyone can operate an automated drill rig, truck, shovel or drone.

She has a word of caution, too: We need to find ways to balance the disruptions that will be caused by 4IR with the need for jobs and human dignity being able to protect livelihoods. Jobs will change, and there needs to be a collaborative effort to ensure that we are providing education and skills-transition programmes that will enable people to earn a living in the 4IR.

No matter how much the industry changes in the years ahead, its clear the mining world is beginning to grasp that it needs to become appealing to everyone, regardless of gender, in order to remain relevant in increasingly technologically-driven times. With a combination of tech-powered intervention and the very human qualities of communication and collaboration, a more equal future may well be in sight. James Nash

Men remain the gatekeepers of many industries, and mining is one of them. Undoubtedly, there are powerful women in mining but across the broader picture, it remains a male-dominated industry. Organisations such as Women in Mining South Africa (WiMSA) offer representation, networking and support but are unable to manifest real and meaningful change without the support of men in positions of power throughout the industry. In order for gender parity to be achieved, everyone has to be on board.

Reducing gender inequality is not only in the best interest of women, but it has been proven that societies and workplaces that are more inclusive are also more productive and competitive, says Dr Thuthula Balfour, who in addition to her role as Head of Health at the Minerals Council South Africa, heads up Women in Mining task team comprising member companies representatives to oversee the implementation, oversight and evaluation of the White Paper on Women in Mining. In an equal environment, free of discrimination, everyone wins.

One of the steps outlined in the Minerals Council White Paper on Women in Mining includes diversity and inclusion programmes that include men. Women must be empowered to understand and exercise their right to work in an environment that is free of discrimination and abuse, says Balfour, while men should be educated on acceptable behaviour and to be aware of consequences for failures in this regard. They also need to know not to remain silent should they witness a violation. Men have a very important role to play in ensuring that all workplaces are equitable environments where people of both genders can flourish and reach their full potential. Men need to make a conscious effort to let go of subconscious biases and should instead view women as allies and equals in the workplace. By learning and understanding the issues surrounding gender equality, men can actively make a difference and support women.

Deshnee Naidoo is a Mining Industry Advisor driving the Women in Mining project at the Minerals Council of South Africa and her unique career path has allowed her to glean many keen insights. I started my career in Anglo American Platinum as a Learner Official Metallurgist in 1998, she tells us. I had an Anglo American bursary to study Chemical Engineering, which was my introduction to the industry, and I stayed in the industry because it became my passion and purpose.

Over the course of her career, Naidoo held positions such as CFO for Anglo American Thermal Coal in 2011 and in 2014 she joined Vedanta Resources, where she was appointed CEO of Vedanta Zinc International and Copper Mines Tasmania. Her time spent interacting at the highest levels of the industry has made it evident what must change.

Gender discrimination is everyones problem, she says. The industry needs an integrated, multiple stakeholder approach including men and women across leadership, management, labour, government and communities to be successful. Predominantly, men are in decision-making roles today and if they are not taken along in the understanding of bias, constraints and injustices inhibiting the representation and advancement of women in the industry, the industry will not make the required progress.

The gender imbalance is only made worse by misconceptions that plague women in the industry: that they cannot occupy a technical role, that they cant maintain a career and a family, or that theyre simply not suited to an industry as traditionally masculine as mining. These false notions can make the workplace unbearable for women and seep further into the collective consciousness so that women are far less likely to pursue a career in a technical industry. A study from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) found that at 15 years old, on average, only 0.5% of girls wished to become ICT professionals, compared to 5% of boys.

Although the study refers to ICT, there are clear parallels between that industry and mining and as the tech industry continues to expand and disrupt other markets, theres little doubt that ICT professionals will become some of the most valued members of mining companies. Whats clear is that the mining industry must undergo some kind of metamorphosis; instead of fighting the inevitable change it must embrace it and become stronger. This acceptance of change must extend to the outdated notion of mining as a mans industry and those in decision-making roles should be active in their attempt to reform and refurbish the industry.

Petro du Pisani, Head of Business Improvement Projects at Anglo American, and the incoming Chairperson of Women in Mining South Africa, says: The landscape is shifting. We already have some inspiring role models in the South African mining industry where women are on boards and leading mining companies. There is definitive research that shows that increased diversity leads to improved financial results. Through legislation (such as the Mining Charter) and common sense, many industries are shifting to more inclusivity, and mining is no different.

Progress can be slow and hard to quantify. We are not there yet, Du Pisani says. According to the latest Minerals Council white paper, women make up only 12% of the workforce in the South African mining industry, so industry programmes like HeForShe are still important to create awareness. HeForShe, a global solidarity movement initiated by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, also known as UN Women, has gained commitment from some of the most prominent forces in mining.

De Beers, a leader in the sector, partnered with UN Women to become a HeForShe Thematic Champion and pledged $3-million in programmes to support women in southern Africa and Canada. They promise to be a positive force in their marketing, and aim to more than double the rate of women appointed into senior leadership roles, while striving to attract young women who might be interested in the industry towards careers with them. With more women in leadership positions, female role models for young professionals in mining will be more plentiful, and the impact of this positive cycle cannot be understated.

Constructive measures have been put in place by many of the Mineral Councils member companies, says Balfour. Theyve put measures in place to support women in the workplace by developing policies, instituting hotlines for reporting of abuse and systematically improving the working environment to promote safety for women. In March this year, the Minerals Council launched the Stop Abuse campaign, modelled on our approach to the KhumbulEkhaya safety campaign. Balfour says, This was designed to complement our members work and to provide new capacity and impetus throughout the industry regarding the critical issue of sexism, sexual harassment and abuse in the workplace.

As part of this initiative, Balfour explains, the Minerals Council called for member companies to commit to making their workplace safer for women free from violence, intimidation and harassment and to involve women in the development of policies to make them feel safe, to train men and women alike to understand what behaviour is not acceptable, to make it clear to men they will be called out on poor behaviour and face penalties including suspension, job loss or criminal prosecution, and to provide a trustworthy mechanism for reporting incidents and supporting the reporters. Many of the commitments are integral in their practicality: companies must include issues of violence and other harassment against women into company risk management, adapt infrastructure and how work is carried out to make the environment safer for women, and report honestly on the state of womens safety, just as they do on safety and health.

The steps to transforming mining into a gender-balanced industry are clear, but the way is still barred. As Naidoo succinctly puts it: We need men to be allies. James Nash

African Mineral Standards (AMIS) holds itself to a high standard when it comes to making gender equality a norm in minings next tech-enabled chapter, and it aims to enable others in the minerals industry to do the same.

For nearly 16 years, AMIS has been offering a vital and specialised global service in the mining and minerals industry. The only of its kind on the continent, and one of just five global competitors, AMIS develops, produces and supplies certified reference material for mining and commercial laboratories to use for quality control, in an industry where quality is of the highest importance. Each product package, known as a certified reference material (CRM), features a different ore, made by milling down rocks taken from mines into a fine powder. Its then homogenised and packaged, ready to be sent to laboratories all over the world. In simplest terms, CRM is the ruler with which laboratories are able to measure performance and check results in an auditable way, as the reference material is certified.

AMIS also aims to be at the forefront of change in an industry that has not only been male-dominated, but also historically slow to enact transformation. Gender disparity in the industry is a legacy issue stemming from superstitions such as how it was considered bad luck to have a woman in a mine continuing to unfounded stereotypes, and even making its way into the law: The South African Minerals Act of 1991 prohibited women from working underground.

While black-owned mining businesses are becoming the norm, the under-representation of women in mining only recently became a talking point, as more women complete STEM qualifications, and through the concerted efforts of organisations such as Women in Mining South Africa (WiMSA), which offers personal, leadership and career development for women in the mining and minerals sector through events, networking, mentorship, workshops and more. WIth increasing numbers of women obtaining degrees in STEM subjects but the rate of attrition increasing as one examines positions higher up on the career ladder in STEM-related industries, its clear that comprehensive support for young female professionals could go a long way to close persistent, gendered gaps in income and status.

Managing Director of AMIS, Raksha Naidoo, had been following the work of WiMSA with keen interest before attending a few of their events. I liked the fact that they were a voice, and they were a voice for a lot of people, she explains, pointing out the inherent need for an organisation to amplify the concerns of the minority. Empowering women has been a strong motivator for her, both personally and professionally: she founded the non-profit organisation The Girlfriends Group, which helps to educate, develop and protect young women. Helping others has been one of Naidoos great passions, and she hopes it can be passed on. I dont want to be a voice for others, she says, but rather to teach, support and encourage women to find their own voices.

Naidoo personally knows the importance of mentorship, and thus the value that a project like the WiMSA Mentorship Programme will have in cultivating opportunities and developing promising young women in the mining sector. I was very fortunate in that in previous roles I had a mentor who helped me steer myself in a direction, and see potential in me that I didnt necessarily see myself, says Naidoo. Through this positive experience, Naidoo realised how effective a mentor was in helping her, and formed the seed of a desire to help and develop others in a similar position. I think that that experience has without a doubt shown the importance of doing that for other people, and Id very much like to see myself do that and help develop other people, she says, explaining how her own career development has informed her leadership philosophies at AMIS.

So Im very pro-development, pro-opportunity. Id like to say that I give people a bit of a safe space to try and fail, and if they fail, its about how do we learn from the failure? as opposed to a destructive failure. Historically, she believes, women have been somewhat less likely to have that safe space to build confidence through trying, failing and developing professionally, especially in male-dominated spaces and its a valuable place for any young professional to develop their skill set and learn about their own abilities and aptitudes. Without this opportunity to fail, Naidoo and many other business leaders have noted, were often unable to build confidence, or to take the necessary next steps forward in a task, project or career.

True to her words about learning from mistakes, Naidoo has also gleaned valuable lessons from less positive experiences with mentorship: after seeking mentorship from an industry role model, she came to understand that not all mentorship relationships will work out, and that they require reciprocal effort. She notes that a great mentorship relationship requires mutual participation from both parties. An ideal mentor is trustful, ready to listen and willing to give to the relationship without expecting anything in return beyond the satisfaction of helping the right person.

One snippet of advice to young professionals seeking a mentor in their industry is to spend time and effort shopping around and learning about those whom they admire before reaching out to them, whether that means online research or casual introductions at networking events. Having gotten personally involved and now incorporating AMIS into WiMSAs mentorship initiative, Naidoo is prepared to take the next step to ensure that a new generation of women in mining can make the most of the experience of being a mentee, then pay it forward at a later stage in their own careers.

More inclusive

Jumien Peceur, Business Development Manager at AMIS, believes that advances in technology are among the factors allowing the mining industry to develop past its dated misconceptions, and that more broadly shifting perceptions of gender roles mean that it was always just a matter of time before women broke into the sector. A more inclusive environment should take hold, because mining is becoming less and less labour-intensive, and the more that happens, the more gender neutral it should become, he says.

Hes quick to caution that these benefits will depend on investment in the necessary infrastructure that makes tech tools widely and democratically available, but he has a strong hope in the power of 4IR to level the playing fields in terms of many perceived and actual disparities between genders. As requirements and conditions in the industry shift, attitudes will need to follow; with intentional attempts at transformation, the chance to remove barriers does exist.

Naidoo has observed that the industry has been slow in its transformation, but recognises that the women taking on senior positions are now the trailblazers, responsible for being the inspiration for a new generation to explore the mining sector as a career option. Many of the pressures that acted as barriers for women pursuing such a career are slowly being broken down, but are still apparent at higher levels. While its historically difficult for men to recognise certain types of non-verbal discrimination, the fact is that its still something that occurs daily in varying degrees of severity. We go to these trade shows and these exhibitions, and people come to visit our stand, but still naturally gravitate to talk to the males, and still look at the female as the personal assistant, Naidoo explains.

Its also those experiences that have prompted the leadership of AMIS to make the organisation the first Platinum Sponsor of the WiMSA Mentorship Programme. As Naidoo explains: Its something that I believe in and I think its something that can definitely propel women to the next level: to become more empowered, to become more confident, so that they can then go on and mentor somebody else. She knows her experience as a woman in the industry can add value, considering how important mentorship was to her in her career growth, and the passion to help is one that can never be quenched.

The programme will make use of an online network to increase its availability and to reach women in more remote areas of the country. Naidoo believes that this is the most beneficial approach for everyone involved, as factors such as geography, telecommunications and time all act as obstacles for a mentorship relationship. That regular engagement helps you build and foster the relationship as you move forward. I think now, especially in the times of Covid-19, its important, and it makes the world a smaller place. There are other values to this virtual approach, according to Naidoo: This new platform might give a lot of people the confidence to have conversations that they wouldnt necessarily be able to have face-to-face. I know it shouldnt be like that, but not everybodys brave enough to stand up to it, either.

Thats where the value of WiMSA lies, and the platform it creates can shift the status quo and the perception of women in mining. By being present at school career days, theyre able to reshape ideas about the industry as an option for women, starting with the girls wholl one day become the industrys young professionals, and then its leaders. By presenting at mining events, workshops and businesses in the sector, theyre able to ensure that more men are being exposed to the needs and benefits of transformation. And by building the networks and facilitating the mentorships that AMIS is enabling, theyre taking a hands-on approach to ensuring that the future of mining is more representative of South Africas population, while opening doors for women throughout the country that were once locked. Best of all, partnerships between such organisations, and between individuals as mentees and mentors, are creating dialogue that reaches the ears of those who need to hear it most. Cayleigh Bright

Women having to negotiate their value to employers by highlighting how they can be beneficial to the bottom line is an additional dehumanising difficulty propelled by the patriarchal agenda inherent in the capitalist system.

The workplace should be physically and psychologically safe for a woman to achieve success, without fearing for her safety or having to diminish herself at work, says Petro du Pisani, Head of Business Improvement Projects at Anglo American, and the incoming Chairperson of Women in Mining South Africa.

The South African mining industry lags behind its international counterparts in providing employment to a diversity of genders. The Mineral Councils White Paper Report on Women in Mining reported that women only account for 12% of the workforce. In a country in which women make up 51.1% of the population, as recorded in Statistics South Africas mid-year report for 2020, this suggests that the mining industry is not doing enough to attract, retain or upskill women.

There shouldnt be a single factor hindering a woman from entering the mining industry, explains Du Pisani. My work has enabled me to have conversations with women in all parts of the industry: artisans, operators, boilermakers, loco-drivers, occupational hygienists, geologists, mining managers; there isnt a single job a woman cant do. Additionally, if women can do the job, they should be treated the same as men and be paid the same. The day-to-day support systems labelled as female support systems are actually family support systems and should enable the childcare options available to women to be available to men too.

Child-rearing is often cited as one of the main reasons for the apprehension around including women in personnel across many industries. This comes across with a tinge of irony when you consider that women form the larger percentage of primary breadwinners in South African households. On the other side of the coin of archaic gender roles, surely corporate systems should position men as active co-parents, and enable them as much time as required by women to bond with and care for their children? The history of migrant labour gets much mention in the conversation of how absent fathers became a prevalent reality in South Africa; creating systems that encourage men to participate in parenthood in the same way women are expected to not only gives women the opportunity to pursue better professional prospects; it contributes to social redress.

Increasing collaboration and generating effective dialogue around 4IR in the mining industry is another way to reconcile disparities, adds Du Pisani. It is possible to find ways to balance the disruptions that 4IR will cause with the need for jobs and human dignity: technology is already proving to be something of an equaliser in other industries where physical strength was once a significant factor, and the nature of the workplace is likely to shift considerably hopefully, for the better. Jobs will change, and there needs to be a collaborative effort to ensure that we are providing education and skills-transition programmes that will enable people to earn a living in the not so distant future, Du Pisani continues.

And in the same breath, more can be done to provide a nurturing environment to the women who are in the industry already; helping them ascend to their full potential and diminishing the gender pay gap. Strong policies that combat the scourge of gender-based violence and workplace adaptations that create a safe space for expectant moms are adjustments that result in growth and make room for women busying themselves with professional relationships that inspire success.

Mentoring has played a pivotal role in my career. My mentors have provided me with the space to solve my own problems and have uncovered issues I believed about myself, which were holding me back from reaching my full potential. The role of a mentor is to listen, enable their mentee to solve their own issues. Sometimes my mentors have provided just the right piece of advice at the right time for me to move forward, says Du Pisani.

Changing structures in a way that centres human dignity and development can create significantly more mentorship success stories. One can get stuck on a definition of mentoring that emphasises a teacher-and-student relationship, but mentorship often organically takes place where there is mutual admiration and a common interest in self-improvement that breeds valuable exchanges between co-workers who uplift each other: a reality thats not easy to achieve in cut-throat professional environments that promote a culture with a pecking order.

Du Pisani recognises that although more is possible, the situation is far from all doom and gloom: The landscape is already shifting; we do have inspiring role models in the South African mining industry where women are on Boards and leading companies. There is definitive research that shows that increased diversity leads to improved financial results. But Id like to see more partnerships between womens mining organisations across Africa and the rest of the world. Our community needs to expand and have a positive impact on women who work in the mining industry globally. Jabulile Dlamini-Qwesha

When it comes to the future of the mining industry, starting change sooner is better: so, in order to inspire and cultivate STEM talent, WiMSA takes an active approach to communicating with girls of school-going age.

WiMSA has always wanted to promote STEM subjects to high school students to create an awareness of the different types of work available within the sector, says Lindy Scott, a creative director and consultant in business strategy and innovation services, whose committee role at WiMSA has involved expanding and promoting the perception of women in the mining industry. Careers for women in mining are not often promoted in popular culture.

Briony Liber, a career coach and consultant, and WiMSAs head of mentorship, confirms that these biases have a far-reaching effect: At an institutional mind-set level, we need to be looking at the unconscious biases that our organisations sit with, says Liber. The language that is used that most people arent even aware of but that subtly impacts on how women perceive themselves, how they are perceived within the organisation and how they are treated, unconsciously.

This is a pivotal moment in time for women in tech: rapid advances in technology and increasing automation could work to narrow the gender gap in many industries mining being a good example in that physical strength can no longer be used as a proxy for capability or, if womens education opportunities are not advanced, it could cause it to widen. When looking at the skills required for 4IR, and the skills that will be required in mining in the future, WiMSA is now looking to start working with early childhood development and promoting STEM at grassroot levels, says Scott. This is a new area for WiMSA, and one that will become a long term project for the organisation. WiMSA wants careers in mining to be a choice for girls within our country.

The desirability of careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics-based fields is something that needs to be actively promoted. As has been noted in many STEM-powered fields, the problem of causing girls to de-select from studies and careers in the sciences is more complex and pervasive than explicit admonitions to stick to softer pursuits. Even when girls are not actively discouraged from participating in STEM subjects, social attitudes around what boys and girls like stifle young girls interest in science and technology as purposeful careers.

In my experience, your career choices are shaped by your parents and popular culture, says Scott. When I was young, the idea of an artist or photographer was one that I had seen in movies and romanticised. I believed that creativity was my biggest skill. I convinced myself early on that maths and science were not for me: this was a limitation I had put on myself. If we can change the narrative and show girls that careers in engineering are creative and that problem solving is a skill that anyone can do, the future of work for girls should look different.

To this end, WiMSA shares stories about women in engineering, and works to spotlight diverse ideas and thought leaders. The speakers we expose members to are positive role models with grit and ambition, says Scott.

Along with cultivating a desire to participate in the industry, of course, learners need an aptitude, and that needs to be developed, too. Scott explains that, The skills required for STEM careers are found to start in early childhood; skills like problem solving, creativity and the foundations of maths. We cant expect our youth to succeed in the careers of the future without giving them a strong foundation.

Keeping in mind that childcare responsibilities still tend to fall to women in todays society, WiMSA realises that education of its communities children is a matter well within their purview. The organisation is constructing a response to the urgent needs for early childhood development (ECD) interventions that will take a weight off of the minds of these female mining professionals, as well as helping to shape the minds of those who could become the next generation of industry innovators.

Scott notes that WiMSA is welcoming ideas and suggestions that could make the new project more effective. Our ambition is to create awareness and provide mining communities with solutions and resources to empower mothers and educators within the communities, she says. We are looking to sponsor ECD teachers as a response to the Covid-19 crisis. Childhood education is a concern for our members and many fear that their children will be left behind because of the Covid-19 pandemic. WiMSA wants to take action and provide solutions for this through partnerships and dialogue. Cayleigh Bright

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WiMSA shines a light on the future of women in mining - Mail and Guardian