City Lights: Professor and Author Kathryn Paige Harden at Politics and Prose – Washington City Paper

Kathryn Paige Harden at Politics and Prose

Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equality might sound like a book written by a 20th-century eugenicist, but its author, Kathryn Paige Harden, is far from that. A professor of clinical psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, director of the Developmental Behavior Genetics Lab, and co-director of the Texas Twin Project, Harden has spent years researching how DNA differences play a large role in educational and economic success to propose a new society where everyone thrives, regardless of how one fares in the genetic lottery. In her book, Harden chronicles the complicated history of genetics, sharing both her and other scientists findings, as well as personal experiences and analogies that help demonstrate how genetic inheritance can sometimes be sheer luck. Throughout Genetic Lottery, Harden challenges notions of racial superiority and eugenics to reclaim the field of genetics, arguing that we must acknowledge the importance (and power) of DNA to create a fairer world. On Jan. 24, at yet another Politics and Prose virtual event, Harden will be joined by Angela Duckworth, founder and the CEO of Character Lab, to discuss Genetic Lottery and how it can be applied to making real-life social change. The virtual talk starts at 6 p.m. on Jan. 24. Registration required. politics-prose.com. Free.

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City Lights: Professor and Author Kathryn Paige Harden at Politics and Prose - Washington City Paper

Sunday Reading: A Cultural Review of the Aughts – The New Yorker

In the fall of 1999, The New Yorker published a short piece about a twenty-three-year-old writer who had just released her first novel, in England. Zadie Smiths White Teeth was due to be published in the U.S. in the spring of 2000kicking off the millennium with a bang. White Teeth, a gentle satire of migration and cultural identity, concerns, among other matters, Nazi eugenics programs, the eschatology of Jehovahs Witnesses, the DNA of mice, and a militant group called Keepers of the Eternal and Victorious Islamic Nation, or KEVIN, the piece, by Kevin Jackson, observes. Smith writes like an old hand, and, sometimes, like a dream. It can be immensely pleasurable, years later, to revisit the initial discovery of new talents and works of art, the people and projects that gave a decade its own flavor and Zeitgeist.

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This week, were bringing you a selection of piecesa culture review, of sortsthat capture the creative pulse of the early two-thousands. In Dont Look Back and New Frontiers, Anthony Lane explores the mind-bending machinations of Michel Gondrys Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and the spare poignancy of Ang Lees Brokeback Mountain. (Brokeback Mountain, which began as an Annie Proulx story in these pages, comes fully alive as the chance for happiness dies. Its beauty wells from its sorrow.) In Flesh on Flesh, John Updike reviews Atonement, Ian McEwans majestic novel of unfulfilled love. (The frail, moist flesh, mutilated in war, corseted and shamed in peacetime, and subject, in the long view, to swift decay, gives this intricately composed narrative its mournful, surging life.) In Living Pains, Sasha Frere-Jones considers Mary J. Bliges accomplished career as she releases her eighth studio album. In Under the Spell and Counterlives, Joan Acocella delves into the phenomenon of the Harry Potter series and analyzes the far-reaching themes of Philip Roths The Plot Against America. (In an eerie conversion, The Plot Against America transforms the piety-spouting, finger-shaking elders of the Roth oeuvre into prophets.) In Sympathy for the Devil, Kelefa Sanneh studies the shifting musical styles of the rapper Eminem. Finally, in Heartbreak Hotels, David Denby examines how Sofia Coppola captures the loneliness and humor of Bill Murrays faded movie-star character in Lost in Translation. Coppola doesnt punch up her scenes; shes not interested in tension leading to a climax but in moods and states of being, Denby writes. Not much happens, but Coppola is so gentle and witty an observer that the movie casts a spell.

Erin Overbey, archive editor

Ian McEwans semi-Austenesque novel, Atonement.

At twenty-three, the author has had the nerve to ignore her misgivings and produce her dbut novel, White Teeth.

Philip Roths The Plot Against America.

Brokeback Mountain and The Chronicles of Narnia.

Lost in Translation and Dirty Pretty Things.

Eminem pleads his case.

Harry Potter explained.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

Mary J. Bliges chronic brilliance.

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Sunday Reading: A Cultural Review of the Aughts - The New Yorker

Texas GOP gubernatorial candidate says he won’t fire staffer tied to white nationalist movement – The Texas Tribune

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Republican gubernatorial candidate Don Huffines said Wednesday he will not fire a campaign staffer who said on his YouTube channel in 2020 that he wants to restore historical American culture by maintaining a supermajority of the original stock of the United States, and maintaining a homogeneity, referring to white people.

The staffer, Jake Lloyd Colglazier, has previously done fieldwork for the campaign, Huffines said, adding that he will not take any action against Colglazier.

On his YouTube channel, Colglazier warned that were nearing the demographic cliff, a reference to an increase of people of color gaining more political and economic power. On another livestream platform, he mocked a woman who appears to be Asian, saying she needed to be in China getting the shit beat out of her by her husband. In another post, he said, I spit on George Floyd.

If I were to go through the social media history of any young Texan I would find something I disagree with, Huffines said in an emailed statement. My campaign will not participate in cancel culture.

Huffines did not respond to questions about whether he condemned Colglaziers comments or whether he condemned white nationalism.

Colglazier, 24, a self-proclaimed American nationalist, previously worked for the far-right conspiracy site Infowars, owned by Alex Jones. While at InfoWars, he interviewed white supremacists such as Vincent James Foxx, who founded the now-banned alt-right Red Elephants site, and Faith Goldy, a conspiracy theorist who was fired from a conservative Canadian website for talking on a podcast hosted by the neo-Nazi website Daily Stormer.

Political Research Associates, a social justice think tank, first reported evidence of Colglaziers connections to the America First/Groyper movement on Friday. So-called Groypers make up an alt-right network of people who advocate for a majority white, Christian nation and identify as American nationalists. They coalesce around their support of Nick Fuentes, a white supremist podcaster who has been banned from Twitter, YouTube and the streaming platform DLive for violating hate speech policies.

Until Friday, the True Texas Project, a conservative nonprofit, had a biography for Colglazier on its website that identified him as currently the Deputy Communications Director for the Don Huffines for Governor campaign. That sentence has since been removed, and the True Texas Project did not respond to a request for comment.

Huffines, a former state senator from Dallas, said in his Wednesday statement that Colglazier is not his deputy communications director, but acknowledged hes done work for the campaign.

America First started as a conservative TV commentary series by Fuentes. With episode titles such as Combating Anti-White Hatred, Diversity Is Code for Anti White and Modernity Kills Women, the series also boasted guests including Foxx, Goldy and Patrick Casey, a leader in the Groyper white nationalist movement. The show also featured Colglazier, who went by Jake Lloyd at the time, on an episode about Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Colglazier was one of three speakers at an America First conference in December 2019, when he called on the Groypers, to overtake the countrys conservative party.

The greater political establishment of the United States will crumble at the hands of the Groypers. History will remember the Groypers and the movement that followed, that flowed from America First, Colglazier said at the conference.

Colglazier could not be reached for comment.

Regardless of his staff position, Colglazier publicly remains a strong supporter of Huffines for governor, as he said in a December interview with Current Revolt and as seen in his Twitter profile.

Huffines is running to the right of Gov. Greg Abbott, whom he criticizes frequently for not being conservative enough. Among Huffines top campaign platforms are bans on critical race theory and building a wall at the Texas-Mexico border to try to block illegal immigration.

Abbott did not respond to a request for comment.

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Texas GOP gubernatorial candidate says he won't fire staffer tied to white nationalist movement - The Texas Tribune

The world has moved on from Colleyville. American Jews cant. – Vox.com

When an armed man stormed a Texas synagogue on Saturday, taking a rabbi and three worshippers hostage, it seemed fairly obvious that the victims identity had something to do with the attack. But in a press conference after all four hostages escaped Beth Israel synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, FBI special agent Matthew DeSarno seemed to deny that, telling reporters the attacks motive was not specifically related to the Jewish community.

DeSarno was attempting to communicate that the hostage takers core demand the release of imprisoned jihadist Aafia Siddiqui wasnt about Jews. But interviews with the hostages themselves revealed a clear connection: Their captor believed that a Jewish conspiracy ruled America and that, if he took Jews hostage, he could compel the US to release Siddiqui.

He terrorized us because he believed these anti-Semitic tropes that the Jews control everything, and if I go to the Jews, they can pull the strings, hostage Jeffrey Cohen told CNN. He even said at one point that Im coming to you because I know President Biden will do things for the Jews.

Perhaps DeSarno wasnt aware of this when he made his comments, which the FBI has since walked back. But major media outlets ran with his line, blaring headlines that downplayed the anti-Semitism at the core of the attack. It was as though the attacker had chosen Beth Israel at random, rather than targeted a Jewish community near where Siddiqui was imprisoned.

The coverage only underscored a creeping sentiment that spread among us last weekend. Many Jews, myself included, already felt like few were paying attention to the crisis in Colleyville as it unfolded over the weekend; that we Jews were rocked by a collective trauma while most Americans watched the NFL playoffs.

This is not a new feeling.

In the past several years, American Jews have been subject to a wave of violence nearly unprecedented in post-Holocaust America. If these anti-Semitic incidents garner significant mainstream attention a big if attention to them seems to fade rapidly, erased by a fast-moving news cycle. The root causes of rising anti-Semitism are often ignored, especially when politically inconvenient to one side or the other.

There are always exceptions: In the wake of the Colleyville attack, for example, many Muslims have been particularly vocal allies. But for the most part, the world has moved on. American Jews, on the other hand, cannot for good reason.

Lets recount what the past few years have been like for American Jews.

In August 2017, the torch-carrying marchers at Charlottesville chanted, Jews will not replace us, as they rallied to protect Confederate iconography. Armed individuals dressed in fatigues menaced a local synagogue also named Beth Israel while neo-Nazis yelled, Sieg heil! as they passed by.

In October 2018, we saw the deadliest mass killing of Jews in American history: the assault on the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, which claimed 11 Jewish lives. The far-right shooter believed that Jews were responsible for mass nonwhite immigration and wanted to kill as many as he could find in retaliation.

In April 2019, another far-right shooter preoccupied by fears of a Jewish-perpetrated white genocide attacked the Chabad synagogue in Poway, California, killing one and injuring three.

In December 2019, New York and New Jersey the epicenter of American Jewry were swept by a wave of anti-Semitic violence.

Two extremist members of the Black Hebrew Israelite church, a fringe religion that believes they are the true Jews and we are impostors, killed a police officer and three shoppers at a kosher market in Jersey City. A man wielding a machete attacked a Hanukkah party at a rabbis home in Monsey, New York, killing one and injuring four. Orthodox Jews in New York were subject to a wave of street assaults and beatings.

In May 2021, the conflict between Israel and Hamas led to yet another spike in anti-Semitic violence, including high-profile attacks perpetrated by individuals who blamed American Jews for Israels actions. In Los Angeles, for example, a group of men drove to a heavily Jewish neighborhood and assaulted diners at a sushi restaurant. The attackers were waving Palestinian flags and chanting, Free Palestine!

This sort of violence is certainly not the norm. In absolute terms, most American Jews are still quite unlikely to be targeted by anti-Semitic attacks. But both quantitative and anecdotal data suggest that there has been a sustained rise in anti-Semitic activity.

The following chart shows data on anti-Semitic incidents of all kinds, ranging from murders to harassment, from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a Jewish anti-hate watchdog. The ADL data, while not perfect, is one of the better sources of information on the topic and it shows a spike in the past several years.

The explanation among scholars and experts for this rise tends to focus on Donald Trumps presidential candidacy and the concomitant rise of the alt-right.

In this telling, Trumps ascendance shifted the Overton window for the far right, leading to a rise in anti-Semitic harassment and violence. (Trump himself repeatedly made anti-Semitic comments despite having Jewish family.) Recent academic research finds that, in the United States, anti-Semitic beliefs are more prevalent on the right.

The attacks in Pittsburgh and Poway suggest this diagnosis is in large part correct. But the past few years of anti-Semitic violence demonstrate clearly that its not the full story.

The Colleyville siege seems to have been perpetrated by a British Islamist. The 2021 attacks seem to have emerged out of anti-Israel sentiment, a cause more associated with the left. The 2019 violence in New York and New Jersey doesnt really connect to politics as we typically understand it, emerging in part out of a radical subsection of the already-small Black Hebrew Israelite group and local tensions between Black and Jewish residents in Brooklyn.

What this illustrates, more than anything else, is the protean and primordial nature of anti-Semitism a prejudice and belief structure so baked into Western society that it has a remarkable capacity to infuse newer ideas and reassert itself in different forms.

Today, we are seeing the rise not of one form of anti-Semitism but of multiple anti-Semitisms each popular with different segments of the population for different reasons, but also capable of reinforcing each other by normalizing anti-Semitic expression.

There is no mistaking the consequences for Jews.

In a 2021 survey from the American Jewish Committee, a leading Jewish communal group, 24 percent of American Jews reported that an institution they were affiliated with had been targeted by anti-Semitism in the past five years. Ninety percent said anti-Semitism was a problem in America today, and 82 percent agreed that anti-Semitism had increased in the past five years.

Synagogues have had to increase security spending, straining often tight budgets that could be spent on programming for their congregants. Measures include hiring more armed guards to patrol services, setting up security camera systems, and providing active shooter training for rabbis and Hebrew school teachers.

Some of this is familiar; there have been armed guards at my synagogue as long as I can remember. But much of the urgency is new. For a community that has long seen America as our haven, a place different in kind from the Europe so many Jews were driven out of, its a profoundly unsettling feeling.

Dara Horn, a novelist and scholar of Yiddish literature, spent 20 years avoiding the topic of anti-Semitism. She wanted to write about Jewish life rather than Jewish death.

But the past few years changed things. In 2021, Horn published a book titled People Love Dead Jews, an examination of the role that Jewish suffering plays in the public imagination. Her analysis is not flattering.

People tell stories about dead Jews so they can feel better about themselves, Horn tells me. Those stories often require the erasure of actual Jews, because actual Jews would ruin the story.

One of the more provocative examples she mentioned is the oft-repeated poem, attributed to German pastor Martin Niemller, citing attacks on Jews as one of several canaries in the coal mine for political catastrophe. Youve probably heard this version of it, or at least seen it on a Facebook post:

First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out

Because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out

Because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out

Because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for meand there was no one left to speak for me

In theory, the message is one of solidarity: What happens to Jews should be of concern to all of us. But Horn argues that theres a worrying implication to this message, one that instrumentalizes Jews rather than centering us.

What youre basically saying is that we should all care when Jews are murdered and attacked because it might be an ominous sign that real people might be attacked later, Horn tells me. I get that thats not what its trying to say, but it plays into this idea that Jews are just this symbol that you can use for whatever purpose you need.

In American political discourse, anti-Semitism often gets treated in exactly the way Horn fears: as a tool to be wielded, rather than a problem for living, breathing Jewish people.

Among conservatives, support for Israel becomes equated with support for Jews to the point where actual anti-Semitism emanating from pro-Israel politicians, from Donald Trump to Marjorie Taylor Greene, is treated as unimportant or excusable. The Jewish experience becomes flattened into a narrative of Judeo-Christian culture under shared threat from Islamist terrorism, eliding the ways in which Americas mostly liberal Jewish population feels threatened by the influence of political Christianity on the right.

Colleyville is already being deployed in this fashion. In a public letter, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) turned an attack on Jews into an attack on admitting Afghan refugees.

I write with alarm over reports that the Islamic terrorist who took hostages at a Jewish synagogue in Texas this past weekend was granted a travel visa, Hawley claims. This failure comes in the wake of the Biden Administrations botched withdrawal from Afghanistan and failure to vet the tens of thousands who were evacuated to our country.

Never mind that the attacker came from Britain, not Afghanistan. Never mind that he was not a refugee. Never mind that Jews are some of the staunchest supporters of refugee admittance in the country, owing to our own experiences as refugees after the Holocaust.

There are also problems like this on the left, albeit less common among mainstream political figures.

Incidents of anti-Semitic violence are mourned and then swiftly deployed in partisan politics, turned into a brief against MAGA America, rather than serving as an opportunity to confront the way many progressives fail to take anti-Semitism seriously as a form of structural oppression. Similarly, Jewish concerns about anti-Israel rhetoric crossing the line into anti-Semitism are ignored or even dismissed as smear jobs. I have had brutal, sometimes even angry conversations with progressive friends and acquaintances on this very topic.

The throughline here is that Jews dont own their stories; that anti-Semitism means what others want it to mean. And thats when people pay attention to anti-Semitism at all, which they often do not except for the few days after incidents like Colleyville.

A common refrain from Jews I know during and after the Colleyville standoff was a sense of total alienation, that they were glued to their phones and TVs while most others had no idea that American Jews were in crisis. It wasnt that we had been made into object lessons for others, at least not yet; it was that our suffering was barely worth noticing.

What American Jews need from mainstream American society right now is to be listened to, for our fears about rising anti-Semitism to be heard and, once heard, taken seriously on their own terms.

This does not require the false assumption of a monolithic Jewish community, where all of us agree on how to tackle anti-Semitism. What it does require is a mental reorientation among Americas non-Jews: a willingness to reckon with the fact that anti-Semitism remains a meaningful force in American society, one that requires a response both unfamiliar and politically uncomfortable.

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The world has moved on from Colleyville. American Jews cant. - Vox.com

Temple Grandin Wants Us to Think Differently About Kids Who Think Differently – The New York Times

Dont put me on the McDonalds takeout window, Temple Grandin said over Zoom from her home in Fort Collins, Colo. Not going to do very well there cant multitask, cannot follow long strings of verbal instruction. Its a little humbling to hear what Grandin says she cant do, considering how insubstantial it is compared with what she can do and has done. The author, scientist and Colorado State University professor is as responsible as anyone for broadening our understanding of autism, through her tireless lecturing and the many books she has written on the subject. (Thinking in Pictures: My Life With Autism, published in 1995, is the classic.) Grandin, who is 74, also helped transform the meat industry through her design of more humane handling systems for livestock. Though she has been so influential on how we think and feel about autism and animal welfare, its the more tangible things that matter most to her. I am interested in my practical projects, Grandin says. Where I can actually do stuff.

During the pandemic, there has been a lot of discussion about whos vaccinated and whos not, and historically, a fear of autism is one of the things that antivaxxers I will make only one comment: I have two Pfizers and a booster and a flu shot. Thats all Im going to say.

Well, if its OK, I have another couple of questions about vaccines and autism, and you can choose if youll answer or not. Thats a subject where thats pretty much all Im going to say. I am glad that I have my vaccinations. I dont have to worry about going to the hospital. Ill leave it at that.

In the past, youve expressed openness about people who felt skeptical about vaccines because of No comment.

Is it your understanding that the concern that certain parents have with vaccines is No comment.

OK, Ill move on for now. Youve written so much about being a visual thinker. How does a thinker like yourself think about moral problems, which often begin as abstractions? I have to convert it to a picture with a specific example. As Ive gotten older and loaded more and more pictures into my mental database, then I can search that database sort of like Google for images. So when I think about moral things, I see them as little video clips. Now lets explain how I categorized things as a young child. Lets take dogs versus cats: All the dogs in my neighborhood when I was 4 years old were large. I sorted horses, dogs and cats by size. But when a dachshund came into the neighborhood, I could no longer sort dogs by size because it was smaller than the other animals Id sorted as dogs. I had to find other sensory-based features that dachshunds shared with dogs: barking, nose shape, smell. I had to use the different criteria to put the dachshunds in the dog category. Id like to talk now about three kinds of thinking: Theres an object visualizer like me, who thinks in photorealistic pictures; then the other kind of thinker is the visual spatial, pattern thinker; then of course youve got your verbal thinkers. One of the big problems with verbal thinkers is they tend to overgeneralize. Theyll talk about some concept like an inclusive classroom, but theyll have absolutely no idea of How do I implement that?

Temple Grandin in 1993. Laura Wilson

On the idea of moral questions and visual thinking: Youve been asked a million times about the morality of someone like yourself, whos concerned with animal welfare, being part of the meat and poultry industry. Ive done a lot of thinking about that.

I understand how one could visualize something like a more humane slaughterhouse. But how do you visualize the moral aspect of something that might be harder to see, like, say, the negative ecological impacts of the industry? Ive been thinking about that very much. About four years ago, I went to a really important departmental seminar, and we had an older agronomist, a crop person, come talk to all the livestock people in our department, and he told me something that was a game changer on how I thought about things. I learned that the animals made some of the best crop land. If you do grazing wrong, it wrecks land. If you do grazing right, you actually improve the soil health and improve the land, and you can also sequester carbon. Also, theres research on things like seaweed that you can feed cattle to reduce the methane they put out. Now, thats not going to be sustainable youd strip the oceans of seaweed if you did use that but we need to find out whats in the seaweed, and then you could probably manufacture that ingredient. The other thing we need to think about on sustainability with some of these plant-based burgers is that they have a whole lot of ingredients different grains, peas, stuff like that. Each one of those ingredients has a supply chain, and that involves diesel-powered trucks and equipment to harvest that crop, grow that crop. Some of that could get unsustainable.

Do beef manufacturers have enough incentive to change to more sustainable behaviors? I learned a long time ago the importance of economic incentives. Some of the first research I did was on bruising. What I learned from that is if you had the wrong economic incentives, you had more bruises. If you had the right economic incentives, you reduced the bruises. I dont like to I have a no politics policy, so Im not going to get into specifics, but the United States and other countries have subsidies that motivate practices that are not sustainable. Ill leave it at that.

Im not going to ask you the specifics of your politics Im not getting into politics.

But given that politics touches everything, what does it mean to have a no politics policy? And why have it? Because politics interferes with the stuff I care about. Right now, at the age of 74, one of the big things I care about is I want to see the kids who think differently having successful careers, successful lives. Im seeing a lot of parents that overprotect their kid. Theyve got a 16-year-old who might be doing well in school, but he has never gone shopping. Youve got to get them out doing things. Thats stuff I care about.

Do you find politics too abstract? One of the things that bothers me is when its all gobbledygook, because theyre not talking about how youre actually going to fix something. Like when they had the power failures in Texas, they just talked gobbledygook. My approach to that and I know a lot about equipment is I would visit each of those power plants and find out exactly what froze. I wouldnt be fighting over who owns them, because I only have one goal: I dont want that mess to happen again. But I dont want to talk to suits. Get me alone down in the maintenance shop in that plant, and Ill find a guy who will sing to me. Hell tell me everything. As soon as the suit walks in the room, that guy will clam up because hes afraid hell get in trouble. Ive got to talk to the good technical people. Theyll tell me whats wrong, and they cant tell me much abstract BS.

What about when people talk about issues of race or polarization? Is that abstract? I try to figure out specific ways to solve something. One of the things thats really shocking is the rsum studies. You put different names on them, and theyre not called back for interviews. Its disgusting. Ill discuss that because thats hard scientific data that is specific, and I can look those papers up on Google Scholar.

There are specific studies debunking the idea that vaccines have a causal relation to autism, right? No comment. No comment. No comment.

You dont think it could be useful for people to hear your opinion? No comment. No comment.

I got it. You better get it. Because Im not discussing it.

Have you gotten in trouble for talking about this subject before? No comment. Ive had my two Pfizer shots and my booster. If they require a fourth shot, Ill be first in line, thank you.

I was just reading about how nearly 10 percent of all greenhouse-gas emissions are the result of the cattle industry. Do you think we should be moving toward a future where we eat less beef? One of the things we need to be doing is reducing food waste. The amount of food that we throw out is absolutely disgusting.

And reducing food waste would be a sufficient counterbalance? Its certainly going to help. Theres simple ways you can reduce it. A lot of university cafeterias got rid of giving you trays, because if you put your food on trays, you take more stuff and waste more stuff. But, you know, theres methane emissions, but there are also carbon emissions, and the power plants and transportation put out the most carbon emissions.

Grandin teaching at Colorado State University in 2010. William A. Cotton/Colorado State University

Do you feel protective of the beef industry? I want to work on improving the beef industry. The work that probably brought about the greatest change was when I worked with McDonalds, Burger King and Wendys on implementing auditing and inspection of plants. I developed a simple scoring system, and the plants had to get acceptable scores on things like electric-prod use, stunning. When you have a big buyer insist on standards, I dont care what industry youre in, that can bring about great change. Thats also something thats a doable project. I avoid the vague things because they interfere with doable projects like my audits that brought about a big change. I dont want talk. I want measurements. Something I can observe with my eyes.

Youve had such success conveying your experience of autism to neurotypical people. Are there aspects of your autism that you feel you havent been able to convey? Thats too vague a question for me to even begin to answer.

In Oliver Sackss New Yorker profile of you, its evident that your search for meaning in life was driven by anxiety and fear. Why those emotions? I think Ive got that simplified now: The meaning of life is if something that you did made something better. Like, I get an email from a parent: Thank you so much. My kid is employed now because I read one of your books. That is a little piece of the meaning of life right there. Thats something that I did. I also think, having spent so many years in heavy commercial construction, its about finishing a project and making it work. I take that same approach to working with some of these autistic kids. If a smart autistic kid ends up on a disability check playing video games all day, thats a failed project compared with, lets say, he could learn a skilled trade and now owns a metal fabrication shop.

A handful of times now, Ive asked you sort of philosophical questions, and each time your answer was about a practical, tangible thing. I understand thats what Thats what I do.

Thats what you do. But Im interested in knowing whether you see any interrelationship between the philosophical and the practical because Im going to just talk about the practical.

But isnt the philosophical what helps determine how practicality is put to use? For example, making the philosophical determination that animals should be treated with respect then drives practical decisions about their treatment. Does that make sense to you? All right, Im going to give you an example: I got my brand-new copy of Nature that I like for my breakfast reading. I was looking at a complicated article about superconductors that can be used in computers. Ive read a lot of articles on batteries, and there are issues with mining rare earth metals to make batteries. Now, theres research going on where we could make some of these things out of easy-to-get materials like iron, for example. Im putting something thats more philosophical together with an engineering thing: If you can make batteries out of easy-to-get stuff, then it solves a lot of problems with mining rare earths where its likely to cause social-justice issues.

Do you feel social-justice issues are intrinsically important? Yes, they are important, but I want to avoid the politics. Ill give an example of a social-justice thing I totally believe in: We use DNA testing to prove that a prisoner did not do a crime. Thats a practical application of something that involves social justice.

Might there be impractical applications of social justice? Theres all kinds of theories that dont work. Id rather talk about stuff we know works.

I realize that maybe earlier I should have just asked this question bluntly: Do you believe vaccines can cause autism? Im not discussing that. I will give you one thing about vaccinations: I listened to the news, and a doctor was complaining about having heart-attack patients die because they could not get into the emergency room because the hospital was so full of unvaccinated Covid people. And then I talked to this person that was not vaccinated about, you know, maybe all these people filling up this hospital killed some heart-attack patients. He said, I never thought about that. That I will talk about.

But why not vaccines and autism? I dont want to talk about that.

Im curious about your reluctance. Im not discussing it.

OK. There are certain things I dont talk about because it interferes with stuff I care about. Its that simple.

Going back to that Oliver Sacks profile: You didnt give an answer for why it was fear and anxiety that motivated your search for meaning. When I was young, I was totally driven by anxiety. I found out my amygdala was three times bigger than normal. Ive been on antidepressant medication, an old form called desipramine, since 1980, and it stopped all that anxiety, that frenzied looking for the meaning of life. That made the frenzy go away. I have done some of my best work when it comes to design after I went on that drug. I just visited one of my projects: Its over 35 years old, and Im so pleased. None of the gates are broken off got the best gate hinges in the industry. Yeah, Im proud of that.

This interview has been edited and condensed from two conversations.

Opening illustration: Source photograph by Matthew Eisman/Getty Images

David Marchese is a staff writer for the magazine and the columnist for Talk. Recently he interviewed Brian Cox about the filthy rich, Dr. Becky about the ultimate goal of parenting and Tiffany Haddish about Gods sense of humor.

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Temple Grandin Wants Us to Think Differently About Kids Who Think Differently - The New York Times

This Crypto Will Be the Ethereum of 2022 – Motley Fool

Several cryptocurrencies are emerging to take on the king of the hill, Bitcoin. Ethereum's (CRYPTO:ETH) trading price rose 408% in 2021.Investors like Ethereum as a viable competitor to Bitcoin because of its faster transaction speeds and its large ecosystem ofdecentralized applications (dApps), which are programs that run on blockchains.

But there is another up-and-coming crypto starting to show promise. NEAR Protocol (CRYPTO:NEAR) rose 984% last year.This layer-one blockchain offers similar benefits in transaction speeds and utility value as Ethereum,but with much greater upside potential. Let's check it out.

Image source: Getty Images.

The entire crypto market is currently worth just over $1.5 trillion.If you're looking for a relatively safe but strong performer that can multiply your original investment, I would look at smaller blockchains that are seeing price momentum supported by a growing developer community.

NEAR currently has a market cap of $6.2 billion. It could rise 42-fold in value, and it would still only match Ethereum's current market cap of $268 billion.

On the other hand, if Ethereum increased 42 times in value, it would command a market cap of over $11 trillion, which is not likely to happen anytime soon.

Supporting the upside case for NEAR are some key developments in the past year that are starting to attract investor interest.

It can take six minutes to finalize a transaction on the Ethereum blockchain, but NEAR can currently process up to 1,000 transactions per second and has the potential to reach 100,000 per second.

NEAR uses a technology called sharding, which fundamentally makes it faster than Ethereum.With Ethereum, every transaction must be processed through every node in the network, which slows it down. But with sharding, the work is split among different nodes, so transactions can be processed much faster.

The NEAR Foundation says the rollout of its Simple Nightshade sharding mechanism will make its blockchain "super-fast, incredibly secure, and capable of onboarding millions of users into the world of Web3 without skipping a beat."

In the same announcement, NEAR disclosed that only 13% of the network was being used in mid-November of 2021, but the NEAR team said that the average number of daily transactions had risen to more than 300,000, with "more and more projects building" on the blockchain.Prices of cryptocurrencies tend to follow growth in developer projects, so this is a strong indicator of where NEAR might be heading.

NEAR has one of the fastest-growing developer communities, and that's being validated by a rising value in the market. I believe it's a promising cryptocurrency to buy with higher upside than Ethereum in 2022.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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This Crypto Will Be the Ethereum of 2022 - Motley Fool

Down 67% from high! Are golden days of this ‘Ethereum Killer’ over? – Economic Times

New Delhi: The recent crypto market crash has dragged a number of cryptocurrencies sharply lower, with many of them trading at less than half their prices from peaks.

One such example is Solana, which enjoyed the title of 'Ethereum Killer' till a few weeks ago. But now, it has lost its mojo.

The digital token has slipped down to the eighth spot among the largest crypto tokens from the fifth position earlier. It has lost two-thirds of its value from the peak of $260 hit last November. The crypto-token was trading around $86.5 on Monday. In the last 24 hours, Solana has tanked more than 17 per cent with its traded volume down about 25 per cent in the given period. The volume in this token has remained low off late.

Shivam Thakral, CEO of BuyUcoin, a homegrown cryptocurrency exchange, said Solana network faced a major outage and was down for almost 48 hours. "The issue was resolved on Sunday but the damage was already done as Solana witnessed heavy liquidations," he said.

Vikas Ahuja, CEO of CrossTower India said that the instability issue was experienced by validators and also many excessive duplicate transactions were noticed according to a notice on the Solana website on January 22.

A point to observe is that Solana has not created a new defined low from a high time frame perspective, indicating that buyers are getting active and preventing a further decline, said Raj A Kapoor, Founder, India BlockChain Alliance.

OUTLOOKSolana could drop to the $78-80 range if the crucial supports are breached and the present signals suggest that the market is headed for the same, thanks to the extremely volatile crypto space, said experts.

However, they said that investors with a 2-3 year horizon will always make a profit in the crypto market. Solana is an attractive buying option at $60-70, they added.

Kapoor of India Blockchain Alliance refrained from giving a long-term estimate but advised to stay invested in the token and buy it on dips.

Currently, Solana is commanding a market cap of little more than $27.3 billion, which was around $80 billion during its golden days. Its market cap is marginally ahead of Terra ($25.5 billion).

Gaurav Dahake, Co-founder & CEO, Bitbns said the overstressed beta version is one of the reasons for this fall in Solana and is expected to be resolved in a short time. Although there is more to be expected in terms of price going downwards, he said.

Solana is a highly functional open source project that banks on blockchain technologys permissionless nature to provide decentralized finance (DeFi) solutions.

The idea and initial work on the Solana project began in 2017 and the token was officially launched in March 2020 by the Solana Foundation with headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Solana is a layer 1 token which is the base layer for cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin.

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Down 67% from high! Are golden days of this 'Ethereum Killer' over? - Economic Times

Ethereum Scraps "ETH 2.0" in Roadmap Rebrand – Crypto Briefing

Key Takeaways

The Ethereum Foundation has rebranded the terms Ethereum 1.0 and Ethereum 2.0 in order to avoid future confusion. Going forward, they will be known as Ethereums execution layer and consensus layer, respectively.

In a Mondayblog post, the Ethereum Foundation announced that it would retire the terminologies ETH 1.0 and ETH 2.0 in favor of the terms execution layer and consensus layer.

The execution layerformerly known as Ethereum 1.0refers to the Proof-of-Work blockchain that is known today as Ethereum. The Proof-of-Stake Beacon Chain, which is intended to take over consensus processes after the merging of the two blockchains, will henceforth be known as the consensus layer. Taken together, they are to be known collectively as Ethereum.

The critical step in this direction will be the upcoming merge, a future upgrade in which the current Proof-of-Work chain will unite with the Proof-of-Stake Chain. It is scheduled tentatively in June 2022.

Proof-of-Stake is a consensus system requiring validators to stake their funds on the network to validate new transactions. Ethereums move from Proof-of-Work to Proof-of-Stake is intended to enable greater scalability and eventually lower transaction costs.

In the post, the team aired concerns that the existing terms, Ethereum 1.0 and 2.0, have the potential to confuse new usersit wrote that users intuitively think that Eth1 comes first and Eth2 comes after. Or that Eth1 ceases to exist once Eth2 exists. Neither of these is true. Per the team, after the upgrade takes place this year, there will no longer be two distinct networksor even conceptsof ETH 1.0 and ETH 2.0. The two will simply be separate but integral components of the overall network known as Ethereum.

Another critical objective behind the rebranding was the prevention of scams. The team aims to prevent users from getting scammed by malicious entities who have taken advantage of the confusion created by the numerical names for Ethereum Proof-of-Work and Proof-of-Stake chains. Such scams sometimes involve tricking users into believing they must migrate their ETH to ETH 2.0, resulting in lost funds.

Disclosure: At the time of writing, the author of this piece owned ETH and other cryptocurrencies.

The information on or accessed through this website is obtained from independent sources we believe to be accurate and reliable, but Decentral Media, Inc. makes no representation or warranty as to the timeliness, completeness, or accuracy of any information on or accessed through this website. Decentral Media, Inc. is not an investment advisor. We do not give personalized investment advice or other financial advice. The information on this website is subject to change without notice. Some or all of the information on this website may become outdated, or it may be or become incomplete or inaccurate. We may, but are not obligated to, update any outdated, incomplete, or inaccurate information.

You should never make an investment decision on an ICO, IEO, or other investment based on the information on this website, and you should never interpret or otherwise rely on any of the information on this website as investment advice. We strongly recommend that you consult a licensed investment advisor or other qualified financial professional if you are seeking investment advice on an ICO, IEO, or other investment. We do not accept compensation in any form for analyzing or reporting on any ICO, IEO, cryptocurrency, currency, tokenized sales, securities, or commodities.

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As of today, the Ethereum 2.0 deposit contract contains about 9 million ETH, equivalent to about $30.2 billion. Users Stake $30 Billion For ETH 2.0 9 million ETH have been...

Ethereum has launched its Kintsugi testnet, the latest step toward replacing its Proof-of-Work consensus mechanism with Proof-of-Stake. Kintsugi Is a Step Toward Proof-of-Stake Ethereum Foundation member Tim Beiko posted today...

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Ethereum Scraps "ETH 2.0" in Roadmap Rebrand - Crypto Briefing

Crypto.com says hackers stole more than $30 million in bitcoin and ethereum – CBS News

Crypto.com said Thursday that cybercriminals had breached its security systems earlier in the week and made off with more than $30 million in stolen bitcoin and ethereum.

The cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com, known for its viral commercial starring Matt Damon as well as its recent $700 million deal to rename the Staples Center in Los Angeles as Crypto.com Arena, said the hackers managed to bypass its two-factor authentication system and withdraw the funds from 483 customer accounts, according to a statement the Singapore-based crypto exchange posted Thursday on its corporateblog.

"Unauthorized withdrawals totaled 4,836.26 ETH, 443.93 BTC and approximately US$66,200 in other currencies," the company said in the post.

That works out to around $15 million and $19 million in ethereum and bitcoin, respectively, based on current exchange rates. All customers have been "fully reimbursed" for any lost funds as a result of the hack, Crypto.com said.

The blog statement serves as a postmortem of the hack, which the company said happened Monday. It provides details of the event and the company's detection and response to the cyber breach, as well as its "next steps," but it does not offer information on the identity of the hackers behind the breach.

The timing of Crypto.com's public statement, a full three days after the hack, is viewed by many as belated confirmation. According to an article from CoinDesk on Wednesday, about 4,600 etherium that was reportedly stolen from Crypto.com was "currently being laundered via Tornado Cash an Etherium Mixer." Thursday's blog post also followed a Bloomberg interview Wednesday with Crypto.com Chief Executive Kris Marszalek, in which the CEO acknowledged that approximately 400 customer accounts were hacked.

"Given the scale of the business, these numbers are not particularly material and customer funds were not at risk," the CEO told Bloomberg.

The company first acknowledged something unusual was up in a January 16tweetin which it announced the temporary suspension of withdrawals following user reports of "suspicious activity on their accounts."

"We will be pausing withdrawals shortly, as our team is investigating. All funds are safe," the company said.

The company's claim that "All funds are safe" was quickly challenged by customers, most notably Los Angeles-based jeweler Ben Baller, who immediately tweeted back, "I messaged yah guys hours ago about my account having 4.28ETH stolen out of nowhere and I'm also wondering how they got passed the 2FA?"

Two-factor authentication, or 2FA, is the multistep security system that requires users to provide two distinct forms of identification, such as a one-time passcode in addition to a password, when logging into an online account. The commonly used security measure provides an extra layer of protection against weak passwords such as, say, a surname followed by "123." While used by industries across the board, 2FA is considered a must for digital currency accounts. Monday's breach, however, brings into question the reliability of 2FA in keeping digital assets safe from hackers.

For now, Crypto.com says it is sticking with 2FA, but not for long.

Upon discovery of the breach, the company "revoked all customer 2FA tokens" and used the 14 hours of downtime from withdrawal activity to "revamp," according to the statement. Customers were then "migrated to a completely new 2FA infrastructure," as an additional security measure.

That is only temporary, however, as the company says it plans to ditch 2FA for "true Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), providing added strength for our global user base."

Shares of Crypto.com have fallen more than 6% since news of the security breach, closing Thursday at 46 cents a share.

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Crypto.com says hackers stole more than $30 million in bitcoin and ethereum - CBS News

Experts React to the Feds Digital Currency Report and Falling Prices for Bitcoin and Ethereum. Heres What Investors Should Know – NextAdvisor

Editorial IndependenceWe want to help you make more informed decisions. Some links on this page clearly marked may take you to a partner website and may result in us earning a referral commission. For more information, see How We Make Money.

Its official: The Federal Reserve is toying with the idea of issuing a U.S. digital currency.

In a long-awaited report released last week, the Fed explored the costs and benefits of a government-issued digital currency, but deferred a final decision on whether to move forward. Instead, the Fed is giving the public and other stakeholders until May 20 to share their input before taking further action.

Unlike cryptocurrencies, which are typically created within the private sector and regularly see big price swings, a central bank digital currency (CBDC) would be a digital form of cash thats issued and backed by Americas central bank. However, whatever move the Fed makes next could fortify cryptocurrencies or detract from their value, according to Grant Maddox, a certified financial planner and founder of Hampton Park Financial Planning based in South Carolina. It depends on the direction our government chooses to take, he adds.

The Fed was clear in the report that it wont proceed with the issuance of a CBDC without clear support from the executive branch and from Congress, ideally in the form of a specific authorizing law.

The Fed is attempting to be politically savvy as it weighs a digital dollar, says Salman Banaei, head of public policy in North America for crypto data firm Chainalysis. If the Fed had taken a clear stance on the matter, they would have gotten a lot of political pushback, says Banaei.

Hours after the reports release, and amid the stock markets worst week in nearly two years, Bitcoin and Ethereum saw significant drops. The prices of Bitcoin and Ethereum havent been this low since July.

There are two leading factors influencing the demand for crypto now: its value as an inflation hedge and its value as a risk asset, says Banaei. The perceived likelihood of a crypto future rises or falls based on regulatory risk too.

Heres what experts are saying about the report released this week, and what investors should make of it.

Point of view: Head of public policy in North America for crypto data firm Chainalysis

Reaction: What I was surprised by was how seriously the Fed took the notion of a CBDC. The crypto industry is excited to see that this is happening. A lot of the infrastructure that has been built to support the crypto industry could easily integrate the CBDC into existing providers. But the timeline for a CBDC is going to be far more extended I think its going to take two to four years before we get another major milestone.

Point of view: Host of the Unchained Podcast and author of The Cryptopians: Idealism, Greed, Lies, and the Making of the First Big Cryptocurrency Craze

Reaction: Its not surprising that the Fed would be exploring a central bank digital currency because blockchain technology, although its still being developed, has many advantages over our current analog systems. Plus, it could help the US dollar maintain its global reserve currency status. It already looks like China could try to leverage its digital yuan to chip away at the USDs status as the global reserve currency. Its also not surprising that the Fed is not ready to announce any decision, but are currently just soliciting feedback, because a central bank digital currency raises a lot of questions about security and privacy, plus has the potential to disrupt existing financial institutions.

Point of view: CFP and founder of Hampton Park Financial Planning

Reaction: They are keeping up with the likes of China and others who have advanced in blockchain. A digital U.S. currency may allow for quicker payments to foreign allies, improving our geopolitical outlook. The move could improve monetary policy decisions by allowing for easier distribution. We join about 90 other countries reviewing this option. The addition could add additional complexity to our world markets and distract attention from the dollar.

Point of view: CFP and founder of Insight Financial Strategists

Reaction: Blockchain has plenty of applications that dont have to be a currency, so there are still plenty of things to do in the private sector. I firmly believe that no self-respecting government will give up control of its currencies to a private sector entity. Governments need to retain control of the money supply and of interest rates. Like it or not, these are major tools for managing economies. The U.S. is not the only country thinking of digitizing its currency. China is on its way, too, as are a number of other countries.

While there probably arent any immediate changes crypto investors should make based on the Fed report released this week, its a good reminder that policy makers are paying attention to how perceptions of crypto are taking shape.

The Fed move means that people who were thinking of crypto as actual currency are going to get their bubble popped, says Chen. Many Bitcoin types were thinking that it is a currency and that it would replace traditional currencies. Well, not if the Fed, the European Central Bank, and other central banks have anything to say about it.

The fundamentals of cryptocurrency investing remain the same. Experts say you should stick to the big two cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin and Ethereum, and only invest what youre OK with losing or no more than 5% of your total portfolio. Always prioritize important aspects of your finances, such as saving for emergencies, paying off high-interest debt, and saving for retirement, ahead of cryptocurrency investments. As for where you buy and trade crypto, stick with a mainstream, high-volume cryptocurrency exchange, like Coinbase or Gemini, that proactively complies with evolving federal and state regulators.

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Experts React to the Feds Digital Currency Report and Falling Prices for Bitcoin and Ethereum. Heres What Investors Should Know - NextAdvisor

Could Decentraland Boost Ethereum’s Valuation? – The Motley Fool

ThisJan. 12edition of "The Crypto Show" on Backstage Passhighlighted an interesting discussion of whether Decentraland(CRYPTO:MANA) and other metaverse games could indirectly boost the value ofEthereum(CRYPTO:ETH).Fool.com contributors Chris MacDonald and Jon Quast took on this topic.

Jon Quast:I don't mean to put you on the spot here, but as far as the NFTs go, I know this can be built on various blockchains. Are these built on the Decentraland or is it built on something else like the Ethereum blockchain? I might be asking the wrong question here.

Chris MacDonald: Decentraland is built on the Ethereum blockchain. Each of these metaverse cryptocurrencies have different ways of transacting.

We're going to talk about The Sandbox (CRYPTO:SAND) in a second. But for The Sandbox, they have their own cryptocurrency SAND. We have to use SAND tokens to trade NFTs and with Decentraland, I'm actually not 100% sure. I think the transactions are done in Ethereum but I might be wrong on that. Viewers can correct me if I'm wrong, but it is built on the Ethereum blockchain.

Quast: As Decentraland is adopted, is this also good for Ether?

MacDonald: Well, that's one of the growth arguments for Ether and for the Ethereum network, in general, is that as these metaverse cryptocurrencies built on top of Ethereum, that the value of Ether should grow.

There's a theoretical valuation model, that a token is worth all of the sum aggregate value of all the applications built on top of its network. For Ethereum, projects like Decentraland are really important and we're seeing more interest in these projects. There's an indirect valuation argument that can be made for Ethereum as well for sure.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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Could Decentraland Boost Ethereum's Valuation? - The Motley Fool

Ethereum Foundation Sold 20K ETH Worth $97M At Its All-Time High – Benzinga – Benzinga

The Ethereum Foundation, the company behind the development of the Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) blockchain ecosystem, sold a significant amount of their ETH holdings at the assets peak price in November 2021.

What Happened: According to a transaction observed on the Ethereum blockchain by Twitter user Edward Morra, on November 11 last year, the Ethereum Foundation cashed out 20,000 ETH on crypto exchange Kraken.

At the time, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap was trading at a price of $4,800 and the collective amount sold was worth more than $97 million.

Related Link:Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin Regain Some Composure Why This Analyst Thinks This Crash Is Not Like The Ones That Came Before It

Ethereum has lost at least 40% of its value since its peak price last year and was trading at under $2,500 at the time of writing.

Morra highlighted that in 2021, the Ethereum Foundation cashed out 35,000 ETH on May 17 incidentally, this was also at the assets previous all-time high and two days before the wider crypto market crashed.

The Ethereum Foundations wallet address is called EthDev and has a total of 353,318 ETH worth $827 million at current prices.

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Ethereum Foundation Sold 20K ETH Worth $97M At Its All-Time High - Benzinga - Benzinga

How to Manage Volatility as Bitcoin and Ethereum Fluctuate Wildly – Motley Fool

On this Jan. 12edition of "The Crypto Show" on Backstage Pass,Fool.com contributors Chris MacDonald and Jon Quast discuss volatility in the crypto world, and how to handle this volatility with cryptocurrencies such asBitcoin(CRYPTO:BTC) andEthereum(CRYPTO:ETH).

Jon Quast: Let's kick it off here at the very beginning and let's talk about what's been going on, crypto movements. It's been volatile, Chris.

Chris MacDonald: Yeah. Interestingly, declines in Ethereum have been following the same pattern over recent weeks and we've seen there's a little bit of a recovery in the market today. It's interesting.

We're going to get to some of the inflation data later, but the market is interpreting seven percent inflation as a good thing today. That's interesting. What we're seeing is a recovery across-the-board. Bitcoin has been a little bit less volatile than the other tokens, and I think probably being viewed more as a store of value. We're seeing Bitcoin's volatility, it's up five percent today but down five percent for the week, and Ethereum, it's been a little bit more volatile lately, so we're seeing a bigger increase today and a bigger decrease over the past week, and that's what we've seen in some of the Altcoins, and a lot of the more higher momentum meme tokens and other interesting ones that are grabbing a lot of investors' attention right now.

Jon Quast: It's incredible when you think about it. Bitcoin, I don't know what the exact market cap is right now, but roughly a trillion dollar market capitalization. You look at Ethereum, I believe last I checked somewhere in the ballpark of 500 billion market cap.

Moves like this -- up 10 percent, down 10 percent. It's very, very surprising to me at this stage of the game. We didn't have this in the notes, but I just want to ask, how much sleep are you personally losing over the daily fluctuations of crypto? I'm asking a little bit facetiously.

Chris MacDonald: Well, for me, personally, I've got a small percentage of my portfolio in the crypto in general. For me, the volatility is somewhat expected. I think a lot of people that follow the crypto space or have followed it for a little while know about how volatile these tokens are and expected. I think that's the expectation you have to have going into it that with the returns that these tokens have provided, alongside that comes a lot of volatility.

Over the short-term, these moves are expected, and that goes to the thesis too of, will these ever be true currencies because do you want to get paid in something that goes up double-digit percentage every week or down. You want something a little bit more stable, so we're going to talk about some stablecoins today too. I think that's a little bit of a segue there, but that is an interesting aspect of the crypto world. I think viewers on here have to expect that volatility a little bit.

Jon Quast: Yeah, and definitely, when you are dialed into long-term investing, you really have to lay some of those day-to-day gyrations. You have to lay them to rest, put them out of your mind. Personally, I haven't even checked my cryptocurrency portfolio value in 2022. Because frankly, I know that it's been volatile. I don't want to do that to my own psychology and I'm still hanging on for the long term. The reasons that I invested still apply today, so I don't need to check it personally for my own psychology.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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How to Manage Volatility as Bitcoin and Ethereum Fluctuate Wildly - Motley Fool

Why Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin, and Crypto.com Coin All Jumped Today – Motley Fool

What happened

Cryptocurrencies were experiencing a nice rebound on Thursday after feeling pressure earlier in the week. The broader stock market is up, and tech stocks, in particular, are moving higher, which generally helps cryptocurrencies. But the bigger news was about a new venture capital fund being raised by Andreesen Horowitz.

Bitcoin (CRYPTO:BTC) was the biggest cryptocurrency to make a significant gain Thursday: It was up by 4.1% at one point in the last 24 hours and at the time of this writing is trading 3.4% higher. Ethereum (CRYPTO:ETH) rose by as much as 4.8% and is now up 3.9%, while Dogecoin (CRYPTO:DOGE) was up by as much as 4.7% and is currently 2.6% higher. Crypto.com Coin (CRYPTO:CRO) was up by as much as 9% and is currently 8.4% higher for the day.

Image source: Getty Images.

The biggest news on the cryptocurrency front actually came out of Russia, where the country's central bank and the Federal Security Service (FSB) have called for a ban on trading cryptocurrencies, and that ban may extend to mining crypto as well. Many crypto mining operations have set up shop in the country. China was the first major country to ban cryptocurrencies. For numerous reasons, it wouldn't be surprising to see Russia follow a similar path.

Cryptocurrencies would like a bigger global audience, but the market clearly doesn't see Russia's actions as something to worry about right now.

More consequential news came from venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, which is reportedly interested in raising $4.5 billion for new Web 3.0 and cryptocurrency funds. Initial reports indicate that a $3.5 billion fund will be dedicated to traditional venture investments in companies building for Web 3.0 and the cryptocurrency environment, while $1 billion will be invested in digital tokens.

Andreessen Horowitz has already been one of the most successful cryptocurrency investors to date, and this could solidify its position as the biggest player in this emerging industry.

The news out of Russia is generally a negative for cryptocurrencies, but not surprising. However, I would recommend paying more attention to the moves Andreesen Horowitz makes in the space. The firm has been a key player in helping to build out infrastructure for cryptocurrency and NFT trading, but this investment round could take its involvement to another level.

Long term, the reason I'm bullish on cryptocurrencies generally is the underlying innovation and utility that can be built on these platforms. And the cryptocurrencies that developers are building applications on are the ones that will be successful long term. That's at least one reason the crypto market is moving higher Thursday.

Volatility certainly plays a role as well. The crypto market continues to be volatile, but also correlated with the broader stock market overall. With the market heading higher Thursday, it's not surprising that some of the biggest cryptocurrencies are rising as well.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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Why Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin, and Crypto.com Coin All Jumped Today - Motley Fool

Ethereum whales diversify to MATIC as altcoin integrates proof-of-stake mainnet with FTX – FXStreet

Ethereum whales are adding altcoins to diversify their portfolio. Analysts are bullish on MATIC price recovery and predict a trend reversal in the altcoin.

The cryptocurrency market suffered a bloodbath today. MATIC price posted 13% losses overnight. The altcoin launched its staking program on Bitfinex, offering the exchange 90 million tokens. Proponents expected a bullish impact on MATIC price after the launch of the staking program.

MATIC network has integrated the proof-of-stake mainnet with FTX. Users can now deposit and withdraw the altcoin on either chain. Therefore, the Polygon network hit two significant milestones with the launch of staking on FTX.

@Trader_XO, a pseudonymous cryptocurrency analyst evaluated the MATIC price trend and predicted a spike in the altcoins price. The analyst believes that there is only one direction for the altcoins price, and that is upward.

@BitQueenBR, a crypto analyst and trader, believes that MATIC price is approaching a trendline that has been respected since 2021. The analyst believes that breaking down the trendline could fuel a bullish narrative; however, if MATIC price breaks previous higher low, the downtrend could continue.

Analysts argue that MATIC price has set a bull trap for traders and expects recovery from altcoins price.

FXStreet analysts believe that MATIC price could fall below critical support. This could drive the altcoin to $1.7, continuing the downtrend.

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Ethereum whales diversify to MATIC as altcoin integrates proof-of-stake mainnet with FTX - FXStreet

Someone Just Sent $50M In Ethereum To An Anonymous Wallet – Benzinga – Benzinga

What happened: $50,427,300 worth of Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) was just moved between 2 anonymous cryptocurrency wallets in a single transaction.

This mysterious persons Ethereum wallet address has been identified as: 0xca436e14855323927d6e6264470ded36455fc8bd

$50 million worth of Ethereum was sent to an unknown recipient, with Ethereum wallet address: 0x6571d6be3d8460cf5f7d6711cd9961860029d85f

Why it matters: Cryptocurrency whales that own millions of dollars in Ethereum tend to move markets single-handedly. If the whale decides to exit this Ethereum position, there could be enough market impact to push down the price of ETH. It takes about $15 to $30 million of sell pressure to move the price of Ethereum down 2% on any given exchange.

You can view more details about the transaction here

According to Glassnode, there are 92,262 Ethereum wallets with over $100,000 in ETH.

See Also: Best Crypto Apps 2021 and Best Crypto Portfolio Trackers

Price Action: Ethereum is down -7% in the past 24 hours.

See Also: How To Buy Ethereum

Public Blockchain data sourced from Whale Alerts Twitter.

This article was generated by Benzingas automated content engine and reviewed by an editor.

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Someone Just Sent $50M In Ethereum To An Anonymous Wallet - Benzinga - Benzinga

The Best Ethereum Casinos for Real Money Gambling in 2022 – The News Minute

If youre a player whos invested some money into their crypto wallet, you might be interested in finding the best Ethereum casinos around.

Ideally you should be on the lookout for some red flags before making your final choice - suspiciously good reviews, slow payout systems, and poor customer support are a few that come to mind.

Were ensuring that our top picks avoid these drawbacks while offering easily redeemable Ethereum casino bonuses, prompt customer support, leading game variety, and more.

mBit Casino was our #1 pick for their generous crypto match and impressive free spin welcome bonus. However, with 12 additional Ethereum casinos on our runners-up list, theres sure to be something for everyone.

Lets take a closer look!

First Look

Best Ethereum Casino Overall - mBit Casino

Best for no-deposit bonus - Bitstarz

Best for slots - 7bit Casino

Best for sports betting - Cloudbet

Best for reload bonus - Slots.lv

Runners-Up:

Bovada

Ignition

Red Dog Casino

Stake.com

Wild Casino

SuperSlots

El Royale

BigSpinCasino

SlotsEmpire

BetOnline

Sportsbetting.ag

MyBookie

Pros

Impressive crypto match with fair playthrough

300 free spins upon first deposit

2, 700+ casino games to enjoy

Instant, fee-free withdrawals

Accepts 6 forms of crypto

Cons

Finding the best Ethereum casino is like finding a needle in a haystack, but it doesnt get better than mBit. Their generous, 110% crypto match (35x playthrough) combined with an assortment of over 2,700 online casino games to enjoy makes mBit a solid choice for our #1 selection.

Gaming Variety: 5/5

Theres zero room to get bored at mBit Casino. They offer 2,700+ casino games to choose from, so no matter how long youve been playing youre sure to find something new and exciting. Among your choices are 1161 specialty slots, 12 poker variants, 12 types of blackjack, 3 kinds of bingo, keno, and over a hundred table games

The only issue we found with their gaming selection was a complete lack of live dealer games, which took us by surprise. However, theres more than enough on mBits menu to make up for this small shortcoming!

Bonuses: 4.8/5

We were very impressed with mBits bonus offering. Theyll match your first deposit 110% up to 13.2 ETH, and theyll give you 300 free spins to boot. The entire package is attached to a challenging but fair 35x playthrough, which means youll be able to earn your bonus back in a reasonable period of time.

Banking: 4/5

Before we say anything else, you should know that fiat currencies are not accepted here. Instead, youre limited to betting with 6 forms of crypto - mBit takes BTC, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, Dogecoin, and Tether.

They offer a low deposit minimum of 0.01 ETH (the equivalent of $32), and they provide instant, fee-free withdrawals to your crypto wallet.

Theres not much to complain about here other than their refusal to accept fiat currencies, but if youre an Ethereum enthusiast youll have no problems placing your bets.

Customer Support: 4.5/5

Their customer support team is fantastic, and they offer 24/7/365 assistance to players via live chat, email, and phone. We were able to get a real person on the phone in under 15 minutes, and we got an email reply from them in under 24 hours.

Pros

20 free spins upon sign-up (no deposit)

Instant, fee-free withdrawals for players

Crypto match up to 28 ETH + 180 free spins

Accepts 6 forms of crypto

3,524 games to enjoy

Cons

Fairly high 40x playthrough for all bonus offers

No fiat currencies accepted

No live dealer games in sight

Bitstarz is a solid second pick for our review - aside from being the only Ethereum casino on this list that offers players a no-deposit bonus, you can take advantage of their huge initial crypto match and enjoy a staggering assortment of over 3,500 casino games.

Gaming Variety: 4/5

Bitstarz understands the importance of being able to find something new and exciting to play no matter how long youve been involved with them. Thats why they offer more than 3,500 casino games in total - among them, youll find 840+ slots, several poker and blackjack variants, bingo, baccarat, and a few versions of roulette.

While they fail to offer players live dealer gaming, they make up for it with their otherwise vast selection of slots, table, and specialty games. As Bitstarz continues to update their catalog, you can bet on finding something new to enjoy every time you log on.

Bonuses: 4/5

The casino offers players the opportunity to take advantage of 20 free spins upon making an account. Bitstarz is the only ETH casino on our list to offer a no-deposit bonus! However, when you do make your first deposit, youll receive a 100% match up to 13 ETH along with 180 free spins.

The only downside to speak of here is their comparably high 40x playthrough requirement. Youll earn your bonus back, but it might take more time than absolutely necessary. On the other hand, their no-deposit bonus is pretty sweet and gives you more room to work with.

Banking: 3.7/5

Again, we have to reiterate that no fiat currencies can be used at this casino. Once you get past that, youll be able to bet with 6 forms of crypto. Bitstarz takes Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Litecoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash, and Tether.

They offer a low deposit minimum of 0.01 ETH and an even lower deposit minimum of 0.0002 BTC, which we appreciated. Moreover, they provide instant and fee-free withdrawals to your desired crypto wallet.

Wed like to see them accept fiat currencies eventually, but for Ethereum players, Bitstarz is a great fit.

Customer Support: 5/5

Bitstarz goes above and beyond to provide high-quality customer support for all players. Aside from adhering to the industry standard of 24/7/365 assistance via live chat, email, and phone; they can also be reached on Twitter and Facebook.

Additionally, if theres a lengthy expected hold time when you call their phone line, their automated system will call you back when a real person is available to speak with you. No more listening to terrible elevator music!

Pros

1,200 slots for players to enjoy

Accepts fiat currencies and offers fiat match

65 ETH welcome package over first 4 deposits

Low deposit minimums all around

Instant crypto payouts

Cons

7bit Casino was our obvious pick for slots lovers - 93% of its games comprises of quality slot titles. Its mainly leaning towards crypto-focused online gambling. However, they dont discriminate against fiat currencies and in fact offer a generous deposit matches all around.

Gaming Variety: 3.5/5

This casino may be slots-heavy, but it doesnt mean you wont enjoy other classic casino games in this site. While 7bit is mainly slots-focused, it still offers a good selection of table games, poker, specialty games, and even bingo.

Bonuses: 3.5/5

You can take advantage of fiat and crypto match deposits alike, but you wont find any sort of no-deposit bonus here. Their 100% crypto match extends to 65 ETH and 100 free spins over your first 3 deposits, and additionally, they offer a fiat match deposit of 100% up to $100.

While were glad 7bit has come around to accept various forms of fiat currencies, we were a bit disappointed to notice their comparably high 40x playthrough requirement for earning back your fiat and crypto matches.

Banking: 4.5/5

In addition to accepting 6 forms of crypto (BTC, Litecoin, ETH, Dogecoin, USDT, and Bitcoin Cash), you have the option to make your deposits with Visa/MasterCard, Maestro, Neosurf, and Skrill/Neteller.

Moreover, they offer low deposit minimums all around - youll only need to deposit $10 or the equivalent of 0.01 ETH to start placing your bets here. Finally, they offer instant crypto withdrawals and 48-72 hour fiat payouts.

Their wide variety of available deposit methods (combined with their low deposit minimums and speedy payout times) encouraged us to give them a 4.5/5 rating.

Customer Support: 4/5

Their customer support was easy to get in touch with. They offer 24/7/365 assistance via live chat, email, and phone. We emailed their team and got a response back in under 24 hours. When we called their phone line, we were able to speak to a real person in just under 20 minutes. No complaints here!

Pros

20+ sports available to bet on

Live dealer baccarat, blackjack, and roulette

Impressive crypto match up to 65 ETH

Accepts 12 forms of crypto

Broad selection of games to enjoy

Cons

No phone support available

Sports odds arent the most competitive

No fiat currencies accepted

Link:

The Best Ethereum Casinos for Real Money Gambling in 2022 - The News Minute

Bitcoin Manages A Greenish Hue As Ethereum, Dogecoin Keep Flashing Bright Red: Is The Crypto Bloodbath Ne – Benzinga

Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) held its head above the water Monday evening but most major altcoins remained subdued as the global cryptocurrency market cap decreased 1.6% to $1.7 trillion.

What Happened: The apex coin traded 1.4% higher over 24 hours at $36,450.99. Over a seven-day period, it has plunged 13.7%.

Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), the second-largest cryptocurrency, traded 2.7% lower over 24 hours at $2,422.50. For the week, it has dropped 24.5%.

Dogecoin (CRYPTO: DOGE) was down 0.8% over 24 hours at $0.14 over 24 hours. Over the last seven days, it has fallen 20.1%.

DOGE-rival Shiba Inu (SHIB) declined 5.5% to $0.00002 over 24 hours. It has lost 27.2% of its value over the week.

The three largest gainers over 24 hours were SAFEMOON (SAFEMOON), Maker (MKR), and Cosmos (ATOM).

SAFEMOON shot up a whopping 210% to $0.0000015, ATOM spiked 4.8% to $1,904.38, and ATOM was up 2.3% at $35.71 in the period.

See Also: How To Buy Bitcoin (BTC)

Why It Matters: On an intraday basis, BTC moved between $33,064.80 and $37,475.91 mark, while ETH touched a low of $2,180 and a high of $2,502.70 in the period.

Cryptocurrency markets remain volatile ahead of the Federal Open Market Committee meeting slated for Jan. 25 and Jan. 26.

The rapidly changing Federal Reserve policy in response to rising inflation has caused extreme fear in both legacy and crypto markets, said Marcus Sotiriou, an analyst at the United Kingdom-based digital asset broker GlobalBlock.

The Joe Biden administration is expected to release its strategy for digital assets going into February with the executive order presented to the president in the coming weeks, according to a prior report.

Meanwhile, political tensions are boiling over in Europe. NATO sent in reinforcements and the United States put its troops on the alert over Russian troop build-up on Ukraines borders, according to a Reuters report. Both Russia and the United States are major Bitcoin mining nations.

A bearish market is leading to a fall in open interest. Bitcoin and Ethereum futures open interest have contracted $6 billion and $3.1 billion respectively since November highs, according to Delphi Digital data.

Futures Open Interest Vs Funding Rate for Bitcoin, Ethereum Courtesy Delphi Digital

As prices soured, traders with highly leveraged long positions have been closed out multiple times over the past few weeks. Funding rates remain neutral, with longs and shorts staying even and traders undecided, the independent cryptocurrency research firm wrote, in an emailed note.

The weekly RSI [Relative Strengh Indicator] currently sits at 37, which is usually considered as indicating the price is oversold. The fact that every bear market bottom for Bitcoin has ranged between 29-35 on the weekly RSI suggests that the risk/reward is advantageous for buying in this area if you believe in the long-term value of this asset class, said GlobalBlocks Sotiriou.

Sven Henrich, a technical analyst and commentator, tweeted Monday that it was time to start nibbling on the apex coin.

Amsterdam-based trader Michal van de Poppe said on Twitter that Bitcoin was ready for a test at $38,000 and possibly $40,700 level.

Read Next: Amid The Crypto Carnage, These 2021 Faves Lost Nearly Half Of Their Values Last Week

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Bitcoin Manages A Greenish Hue As Ethereum, Dogecoin Keep Flashing Bright Red: Is The Crypto Bloodbath Ne - Benzinga

Ethereum Classic (ETC) Falls 5.01% Monday: What’s Next for This Bearish Rated Crypto? – InvestorsObserver

Ethereum Classic (ETC) gets a bearish rating from InvestorsObserver Monday. The coin is down 5.01% to $22.91 while the broader crypto market is down 4.18%.

The Sentiment Score provides a quick, short-term look at the cryptos recent performance. This can be useful for both short-term investors looking to ride a rally and longer-term investors trying to buy the dip.

Ethereum Classic price is currently below support. With support set around $23.45 and resistance at $24.99, Ethereum Classic is potentially in volatile territory as selling pushes the crypto's price below recent support.

Ethereum Classic has traded on low volume recently. This means that today's volume is below its average volume over the past seven days.

Due to a lack of data, this crypto may be less suitable for some investors.

Click here to unlock the rest of the report on Ethereum Classic

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Ethereum Classic (ETC) Falls 5.01% Monday: What's Next for This Bearish Rated Crypto? - InvestorsObserver

As Markets Break Down, Traders Favor Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and Two More Altcoins, According to Cryp… – The Daily Hodl

An autonomous bot thats been outperforming the crypto market by using data from weekly surveys of traders shows strong demand for Ethereum and three other altcoins.

The Real Vision Bot was co-developed by quant analyst and hedge fund CEO Mortiz Seibert as a way to obtain signals and gauge trader sentiment from fans of the financial content platform Real Vision.

Real Vision says the bot has had an astonishing record of outperforming the aggregated bucket of top 20 cryptos by more than 20% simply by surveying the preferences of traders.

The latest survey results show that while leading smart contract platform Ethereum (ETH) remains popular with investors at 64% overweight compared to the bot, layer-2 scaling solution Polygon (MATIC) has climbed to the exact same level.

Just a single percentage point behind at 63% is decentralized finance protocol Terra (LUNA) in third place.

Bitcoin (BTC) fills the fourth slot with 62% of respondents voting to overweight their holdings with BTC, despite the rough ride its been on since hitting an all-time high back in November.

Smart contract platform and ETH alternative Solana (SOL) rounds out the top-5 crypto assets at 48%.

Interoperable blockchain ecosystem Cosmos (ATOM) was a hair behind in sixth place, followed by layer-1 smart contract platform Avalanche (AVAX) and the enterprise-grade blockchain platform Fantom (FTM).

Completing the top-10 list are cross-chain interoperability protocol Polkadot (DOT) and decentralized oracle network Chainlink (LINK).

Participants in the Real Vision Bots surveys dont necessarily have to own the crypto in question in order to cast a vote for it. In an interview with Real Vision, the bots co-creator Moritz Seibert describes it as a hive mind that is able to beat other entities in the crypto ecosystem.

This bot is really fascinating because it started as a research project, where we linked it up with a Real Vision Exchange to run paper portfolios based on weekly surveys, where what we wanted to find out is if theres a Real Vision hive mind that can beat the markets and that can also beat the interviewees, the professionals that are interviewed on the Real Vision platform.

And so, as it turns out, there is a hive mind crypto portfolio thats far ahead of the bot run crypto portfolio and the experts and the market.

Featured Image: Shuttersock/vectorpouch/Natalia Siiatovskaia

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As Markets Break Down, Traders Favor Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and Two More Altcoins, According to Cryp... - The Daily Hodl