Black Lives Matter and pandemic focus of this year’s ‘Art and Social Justice Exhibition’ – South Bend Tribune

I Cant Breathe (In Honor of Black Lives) unapologetically occupies most of one wall at the Colfax Cultural Center. George Floyd is murdered in one corner of the painting. Masked protesters march in the other. The broken and jagged word Justice drips blood over the whole piece.

I try to pay attention and make people realize how much injustice is in this world, artist Teresa Greve Wolf says aboutthe piece.

The Expressionist-style painting is part of the 32nd annual "Art and Social Justice Exhibition," which opened last Friday at the Colfax Gallery inSouth Bend. The exhibit features artwork depicting issues of social justice and continues through Aug.13.

The exhibit features work by local artists and highlights social justice concerns, such as racial inequality, poverty, gendered issues and environmental problems.

For example, one mixed-media piece by Melinda Sofia Bandera,"In memoriam of the trans women who have passed," features an ofrenda with paper flowers in front of a transgender flag. A sculptureby Marsha Heck titled "Wealth v. Poverty from the Cultural Chess Series," made with found objects, depicts an unfair chess game with the pieces made out of random objects.

Artwork centered around the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter movement are especially prominent and poignant in this years exhibition, which features more than50 pieces from 30 local and regional artists.

The annual event began in 1989 as an exhibition by local artists Jake Webster and Douglas Kinsey and focused on social justice issues of the time. The show then evolved to display the work of many artists and a spectrum of injustices in the United States and world.

Of the dozens of pieces on display this year, five were chosen by Mark Rospenda, curator of collections and exhibitions at the South Bend Museum of Art, as jurors picks.

Rospenda sayshe had to take many pictures of the art and spend extra time to make his final selections.

It was really hard for me to choose just five, he says. I really appreciate all of the artists for all they are doing and making.

One of the jurors pick awards went to Greve Wolf for her work. Created with acrylics, I Cant Breathe (In Honor of Black Lives) utilizes bold colors and stark imagery. Rospenda sayshe was struck by its visual message.

The colors and composition are so strong, he saysand likensits style to Mexican muralism.

Greve Wolf saysshe painted the piece in May 2021, after witnessing the effects of the pandemic and the lasting impact of the murder of Floyd.

I wanted to show how our justice system is broken and maybe create a feeling leading to action in the viewer of my art that will inspire positive change, she saysin an email correspondence.

Originally from Chile, Granger-based Greve Wolf saysshe often focuses on social justice in her artwork. For her, creating such pieces serves as not only a personaloutlet but as a call to action.

This piece is my expression of both desperation and hope, she says.

Anonymity by Shelby Ping seeks to invoke the same sense of urgency, anger and remembrance from its viewers. A winner of one of the jurors picks, Pings work also focuses on police brutality.

Superimposed in grease pencil on newspaper clips, two police officers with their faces hidden by gear, stand over a separate panel in the work. Within the panel, a figure lies prostrate on the ground.

A really big issue with our police force is that these police officers have the privilege of being anonymous, Ping says, referring to both riot gear and anonymity held by officers after incidents of police brutality.

In the smaller panel, Ping says,she made a conscious decision to compose the work in such a way as to invoke a sense that the victim is entrapped and caged in.

I wanted to do work that was different from a square canvas, she says.

Ping saysshe chose newspaper clippings from the summer of 2020 from articles about police brutality and Black Lives Matter protests but also from articles about sports and the stock market.

By putting the images (of police brutality)up front, Im trying to bring these issues back to the forefront, she says.

Pings hope is viewers will be reminded police brutality still occurs even when its not the center of news cycles.

Laurie Rousseau's linoleum relief I Cant Breathe, COVID-19 also won a juror's award.

The relief depictsblood vessels in a set of lungs, made with marbled, red print paper.

I just felt like looking at that piece, I couldnt breathe either, Rospenda saysof the relief.

After the death of George Floyd and the pandemics tolls, I felt compelled to make lungs, Rousseau says.

Rousseau is based out of South Bend and works with a variety of medias including drawing and printmaking. The jurors award piece is coupled by its sibling piece, I Cant Breathe, Black Lives Matter, featuring a marbled set of black and blue lungs vessels.

Another piece in the gallery, Scott Andersons Buffoons and Bigotry at the Border, started as a demo for a class he taught on water colors. After reflecting on the political battleground of the border with Mexico, he painted the border fence on top.

Working then with greased pencil, ink and acrylics, the two-paneled piece was born. In it, three floppy hats, representing Ku Klux Klansmen, with googly eyes, slump near a border fence, an effigy labeled Trump behind them.

Anderson saysthe figures reflect the buffoonery of their own ideology.

My main premise of my artwork is a critique of ideology and dogma, and certainly social justice falls into that category, he says.

The KKK hoods hit you right in the face, Rospenda says. The hoods themselves are goofy and droopy.

The googly eyes and cartoon-like nature of the figures represent the ridiculousness of seeing other people as less than themselves, he explains.

As an artist himself, Rospenda says,art can serve three purposes in relation to social justice.

First, it acts as an outlet for the artists, he says. Second, its a record of the times, something that will outlive the artists themselves.

Finally, the art can be a catalyst for others.

People can see this artwork and talk about what they feel, he says. They are going to stick in people's minds and, hopefully, lead to action.

He sayshe never felt the need to create art about social justice until the events of 2020.

I felt like making artwork about anything else didnt feel important enough, Rospenda says.

I would encourage everyone to see the show, Rospendasays. And bring someone to talk about it.

What:"Art and Social Justice Exhibition"

Where: Colfax Cultural Center, 914 Lincoln Way W., South Bend

When:through Aug.13

Reception: 5 p.m. Friday

Hours:11 a.m. to5 p.m.Mondays throughFridays

For more information: visit sbheritage.org/Colfax-gallery

Link:

Black Lives Matter and pandemic focus of this year's 'Art and Social Justice Exhibition' - South Bend Tribune

Black Lives Matter Sudbury reflects on first year of local activism – CBC.ca

It's been just over a year since a group of activists in Greater Sudbury got together to rally for the rights of the BIPOCcommunity and join agrowing national and international movement.

Late last spring, the Black Lives Matter Sudbury chapter first formed. The group has since organized rallies and conferences, conducted educational campaigns, and advocated to the local government.

For presidentRa'anaa Brown, it was in May 2020 when she took part in a rally at the Sudbury courthouse, that she wanted to increase her involvement in local activism.

"I saw a lot of activists I had never seen before in town," she said.

Brown had been doing thesis-based research on Black people on the history of art and activism in the United States.

"I felt like it was so perfectly aligned, and I really wanted to get involved and learn more in the movement. And the rest is history."

Ruva Gwekwereresays she had been involved in activism since she was in high school, but it was whilewatching the Black Lives Matter movement grow during the summer of 2020, that led her to want to make sure that was happening locally.

"As a Black person living in the north I was able to see how these issues at home were really potent," she said.

"If I was going to be an activist I couldn't just engage with issues that were happening internationally, I had to engage with local issues as well."

"That's where Black Lives Matter came in and became a really compelling place where I could do that local activism work," Gwekwerere said.

She says there are several issues that are unique to the north, but there are others that are universal across North America, particularly issues with black communities and policing.

Gwekwerere gives examples of problems like police brutality, racial screening and over-policing in BIPOC communities.

"Those are issues that we really need to solve, even in Sudbury," she said.

"Sometimes as activists we feel like our words kind of fall on deaf ears," Brown said, referring to a September presentation the group made to Sudbury City Council. Issues included defunding the police, opportunities for BIPOC artists, and after-school programs for BIPOC youth.

"It's kind of unfortunate that we haven't been able to see the changes," she said.

However, membership within Black Lives Matter Sudbury, and the overall response from the Sudbury community has been positive.

Brown says when the group was first formed there were many folks who denied racism was a problem in Sudbury.

"With the work that Black Lives Matter has been doing pushing forward in this huge educational movement and making people understand that systemic racism is embedded within the foundations of our society and within our city people are starting to see that this does exist," Brown said.

"The community is showing up for us."

To mark its first anniversary, Black Lives Matter Sudbury is holding a rally at Tom Davies Square, starting at 4 p.m today.

"This is an opportunity for us to reflect on all that Black Lives Matter Sudbury has done in the past year, but also thinking about the changes that still need to come, and reflecting on what is still to come in our city," Brown said.

The group has also partnered with Public Health Sudbury and Districts to hold a pop-up COVID-19 vaccination clinic. It's meant for people who identify as Black, Indigenous, or people of colour.

"Statistics have found that Black and Indigenous people of colour have a higher rate of hospitalization and death in Canada," Gwekwerere said. "So we really wanted to make sure that we are addressing those systemic issues."

The vaccine clinic is being held at Tom Davies Square at the same time as the rally. Sixty doses of COVID-19 vaccine will be available.

Morning North10:34Black Lives Matter Sudbury marks its first anniversary

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Black Lives Matter Sudbury reflects on first year of local activism - CBC.ca

Philly cops brother charged with assaulting Black Lives Matter protester in Fishtown – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Richie Goodwin, the brother of a 26th District Philadelphia police officer, was arrested Wednesday and charged with repeatedly punching a man who showed solidarity with Black Lives Matter supporters near the police station last year.

Goodwin, 45, turned himself in to East Detectives division, where he was charged with assault and recklessly endangering another person.

The night of June 1, 2020, between 4 and 10 p.m., dozens of Fishtown residents called 911 or the 26th District to report they felt unsafe because they saw an agitated group of white men armed with baseball bats, wooden walking clubs, axes, and metal tools threatening, harassing, and, in some cases, assaulting peaceful protesters.

There were some 36 reports of a person with a weapon during that time, yet officers arrested no one on any charge within a half-mile of the district headquarters, according to department records provided by police, an Inquirer investigation found. Instead, Capt. William Fisher and other officers watched.

READ MORE: Why arent you arresting them? Philly officials investigate police after assaults against Fishtown protesters.

Goodwin is charged with assaulting Matt Williams, who was biking home with his girlfriend, Kara Khan, after police teargassed them at a Black Lives Matter protest on I-676. They were near Girard Avenue and Berks Street when someone threw a water bottle at Williams head. Khan got off her bike to walk toward the men, some of whom she could see wielded bats.

She said they accosted her with obscenities and racial slurs.

When she asked the officers who stood near them how they could let this happen, she said one of them told her:

Now you know how we feel.

Then a man, later identified as Goodwin, shoved Williams off his bike to the ground. Goodwin repeatedly punched Williams in the head until his ear and face bled, the District Attorneys Office said. Photos show Williams on his knees, with his hands over his head, in an effort to shield the blows. Blood dripped from his head and ear. At least two bystanders attempted to intervene as Williams was attacked.

Goodwin did not respond to a phone message Wednesday. Last year, he told The Inquirer that Williams started the fight by spitting on him. Williams said he didnt spit at anyone.

What apparently provoked Goodwin was when Williams threw up his fist in solidarity with Black Lives Matter supporters, District Attorney Larry Krasner said.

Just as our city and nation continue to reckon with systemic racism and injustice, the Philadelphia DAs office continues to investigate incidents of property destruction, burglary, harassment, and violence that occurred during the historic uprisings of 2020. We will not tolerate violence in the name of movement protest or in the name of protecting the police, Krasner said.

Goodwin had admitted to a reporter that he also shoved a male protester. I became something that Im not, he said, adding that hes not a racist.

Police are well-familiar with Goodwin. He served prison time for punching a man to death during a 2008 alcohol-fueled brawl. He was on probation when he was arrested in March 2012 for a DUI and a judge sentenced him to a maximum of four years, according to court records.

Goodwin is the second person to be charged in connection with the altercations that erupted in Fishtown on June 1 of last year. Last month, George Graf, 36, was charged with conspiracy, aggravated assault, and related charges for allegedly beating a WHYY producer and his girlfriend.

That night, there were roughly 20 officers on the street just outside the police station on Girard Avenue. Some chatted with the bat-wielding men who said they were there to protect the police and their neighborhood from would-be looters. Earlier, officers even shared pizza and sandwiches with them. As a result, the District Attorneys Office and the Police Departments Internal Affairs Division launched investigations.

READ MORE: Philly police stood by as men with baseball bats protected Fishtown. Some residents were assaulted and threatened.

I think police should do their jobs, which are to apply the law in a way that is evenhanded, Krasner was quoted in The Inquirer investigation. And I find it very problematic when you see law enforcement favoring one group over another and systematically refraining from reining in one group that is committing crimes.

On June 3, 2020, officers went to Goodwins house in Port Richmond. Goodwin had told a reporter he had called a crisis hotline that morning, saying he wanted to kill himself because he was being wrongfully labeled a white supremacist on social media.

Goodwin said his brother, Joseph Jr., an officer since 1996, came to help and drove him to the Philadelphia VA Medical Center. Richie Goodwin served in the Navy from 1995 to 1998 where he said he suffered a brain injury after being attacked in the Persian Gulf.

Theres something wrong with me, he said. I dont want to hurt people.

Read more here:

Philly cops brother charged with assaulting Black Lives Matter protester in Fishtown - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Florida man admits murder-for-hire plot that he tried to blame on Black Lives Matter – The Independent

A Florida man from Palm Beach County has admitted to trying to conduct a murder-for-hire plot that he attempted to blame on Black Lives Matter.

During an 8 July hearing in federal district court in Fort Lauderdale, Daniel Slater, 51, admitted that his plan was to kill a woman, who allegedly is his 22-year-old ex-girlfriend, as well as her sister and brother-in-law, who he thought had ruined the relationship, The Palm Beach Post reported.

The landscaper pleaded guilty on Thursday to one count of murder for hire. His sentence is likely to be 10 years in prison.

Slater faced a maximum sentence of 90 years in prison if he was convicted of his six charges, but he instead accepted a plea deal during the hearing presided over by US District Judge James Cohn.

The person he thought was a hired killer turned to be an undercover FBI agent. For his cooperation, prosecutors agreed to drop two other murder-for-hire and three drug charges he was facing.

Richard Della Fera is the fourth lawyer to represent Slater. He said the evidence against the landscaper was quite voluminous. The proof included phone recordings of Slater speaking about how his ex should be treated.

Throw acid on her face, beat the [expletive] out of her, knock her teeth out, break her [expletive] nose, he said on the recordings, court documents state.

FBI agents were led to Slater following the arrest of 26-year-old Brianne Slabaugh in February 2020. She was found dead in Everglades National Park in Miami 18 days later after an overdose of heroin and cocaine, according to a medical examiner.

But before her death, she told Palm Beach County sheriffs deputies that Slater was training her to become an assassin.

Court documents say he wanted her to kidnap several people associated with his ex-girlfriend.

Slater and his associate drove by the victims home, during which Slater instructed his associate on how to carry out the murders when the time came, a press release from the US Attorneys Office in the Southern District of Florida said.

Slater pointed out which of the homes windows to shoot through to kill the couple. Slater also instructed his associate to spray-paint the house to make it appear as if members of the Black Lives Matter movement had committed the crime, the office added.

Slater offered twenty-five hundred dollars to do a drive-by shooting, at one point, but ended up paying only $400, but added that more would be coming later.

Slater is imprisoned at the Broward County Jail. His sentencing is scheduled for 16 September. He made one request during the court hearing to be allowed to call his wife and three children.

Judge Cohn asked jail staff to facilitate the call. I miss talking to my kid[s], he wrote to Judge Cohn in May. Please get a hearing as soon as possible.

Read more here:

Florida man admits murder-for-hire plot that he tried to blame on Black Lives Matter - The Independent

TikTok blocked creators from using ‘Black Lives Matter’ in bios | TheHill – The Hill

TikTok has reportedly blocked users of its Creator Marketplace from being able to use words and phrases including "Black" and "Black Lives Matter" in their bios, flagging the words as "inappropriate content."

Ziggi Tyler, 23, who is a user of the app, discovered the function while he was attempting to update his bio over the Fourth of July weekend. Tyler then posted several videos to the app detailing his findings.

In a screen recording, Tyler showed his followers how he repeatedly attempted to include Black, Black Lives Matter, Black people," Black success, Pro-Black, and I am a Black man in his bio only to receive an"inappropriate content" error, making him unable to update it.

#greenscreenvideo Im going live in 30 minutes to answer questions. Yall need to get this message out. Please. #fyp #fyp #wrong #justice

In the video, Tyler later attempts to add the wordspro-white and supporting white supremacy" to his bio. In those examples, he was able to save the content without receiving an error.

The TikTok Creator Marketplace feature, which is currently in beta testing, aims to help creators connect with brands to form sponsorship deals. Tyler explained to Forbes that he had hoped to use the platform to highlight his racial background to advertisers looking to diversify their talent or launch campaigns focusing on racial justice.

White people can get on here and call me the n-word and make videos about violent extremism but I cant do anything, Tyler said. We cant do anything.

The social media platform attributed Tyler's experience to a flaw within safeguards designed to filter out hate speech.

Our TikTok Creator Marketplace protections, which flag phrases typically associated with hate speech, were erroneously set to flag phrases without respect to word order, a TikTok spokesperson said in a statement to The Hill. We recognize and apologize for how frustrating this was to experience, and our team has fixed this significant error. To be clear, Black Lives Matter does not violate our policies and currently has over 27B views on our platform."

Last month, Black TikTok users decided to go on an indefinite strike, choosing not tochoreograph dances to popular songs after white users of the platform were accused of taking moves from Black users without offering credit. Some of the messages that were then sent by the white users went viral on the platform.

Updated 7:53 p.m.

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TikTok blocked creators from using 'Black Lives Matter' in bios | TheHill - The Hill

Do Black Lives Really Matter at Lululemon? – The Root

Photo: JHVEPhoto (Shutterstock)

It seems something in the spandex aint stretching to authentic diversity and inclusion at Lululemon. The activewear and lifestyle brandwhich boasts over 500 storefronts and over $4.4 billion in 2020 revenuewas one of many companies to proclaim their support for Black lives in the aftermath of George Floyds murder last year. But like many companies, the Vancouver, British Columbia-based brand struggles to keep that same energy in its culture and practices, according to corporate employees who spoke with Business Insider on the condition of anonymity.

From the outside, Lululemon exudes an aspirational lifestyle, with its high-tech activewear and brightly curated 500-plus retail stores designed to reflect the companys core values of personal responsibility, entrepreneurship, honesty, courage, connection, fun, and inclusion, according to its website...But according to 12 current and former Lululemon corporate employees who spoke with Insider, the companys image stands in stark contrast to their experiences behind the scenes at the companys corporate offices.

Regular readers of The Root may remember the infamous Bat Fried Rice incident which beleaguered the brand just after the COVID-19 outbreak was declared a global pandemic in April 2020. To recap, the issue involved a post by a Lululemon art director who posted to Instagram a picture of a T-shirt featuring an illustration of a Chinese takeout box with bat wings and the words No Thank You on the back and right sleeve. That employee was fired as a result and has expressed regret for his insensitivity, but as Insider points out, it wasnt the only incident of bias that affected the brand last year.

In the days following Floyds death, as the company rushed to craft a response to the tragedy and resulting cries for racial justice, an internal task force of designers and copywriters was assembled to revise the companys website homepage. However, as reported to Insider, their intention to lead with Black Lives Matter was quickly kiboshed by a high-level Lululemon manager who demanded it be replaced with the phrase All Lives Matter.

The team of about 10 employees had spent hours mocking up a version of the homepage featuring Black Lives Matter as the headline.

Thats when they were interrupted by a manager, according to four former and current employees close to the matter.

These people said the manager, a director who they added had not been previously involved in the project, demanded that the group use new approved copy. Near the beginning of the proposed text, the phrase all lives matter appeared in capital letters.

We are not writing Black Lives Matter. Thats not where were at, the director told the group, according to two employees present in the room.

After significant debate, the employees several of whom are Black, Indigenous, and people of color agreed to create two designs to present to leadership: one with all lives matter and another with Black Lives Matter.

While Black Lives Matter was ultimately selected, an employee who was involved in the homepage project said they felt triggered and traumatized and described it as one of the most disgusting moments in their time at Lululemon.

After all of these Black employees, all these people of color, said we cannot go forward with this and please dont make us have to mock this up for you, and her saying we have to do itit was a very traumatic experience, the employee told Insider.

G/O Media may get a commission

Ultimately, an Instagram post published by Lululemon on June 1, 2020 would include the caption:

Thank you for all of your thoughts as we continue this important conversation about the systemic inequity, racism and oppression faced by the Black community. Black lives matter.

Our words have power. And we know they are not enough. We need to take action. Youll find our first three commitments above. And youll see more from us over the coming weeks and months.

We also know that our community cares about justice, equity, safety, and holds each other to the highest standards. Were asking you to join us on this journey.

Weve included some actions you can take. Please add to these lists. This is just the start of what we need to do.

#blacklivesmatter

Additionally, after several members of that team reported her, the aforementioned exec was compelled to issue a tearful apology via conference call to about 200 employees, many of whom were entirely uninvolved and unaffected by the incident. She left the company soon after.

Thats one example of one problematic executive, but as described to Insider, the issues run far deeper. Take, for instance, Lululemons innovation division, which goes by the name White Space. The name itself is intended to evoke this blank space, the white space of ideas, as one exec stated. But when employees expressed discomfort with both the name and demographics of team and asked leadership to consider a name changeeven adopting the more race-neutral Lululemon Labs, as one of the teams subsections is named, they were met with opposition.

We have a team called White Space, and there are no Black people on the team, one former White Space employee said.

Another former White Space employee said that after the issue was initially raised, a senior leader on the team encouraged employees to reach out to have a one-on-one discussion. But the employee said his request to meet with the executive went unanswered.

We brought it up, like, Hey, its kind of offensive. We get what you meant by it, but dude, theres literally white in the name and you guys are all white, so maybe reconsider, you know? the employee told Insider.

In place of the one-on-one, that exec held a forum and asked staffers to voice their concerns publiclya format one employee said put very sensitive racial issues on display. By putting staffers on the spot, many were reluctant to speak up, despite their discomfort. As such, the name remains unchanged.

There were more incidents cited by Insider, but most telling might be its recollection of the inspiration for Lululemons ideal customer when the company launched 23 years ago.

When Lululemon founder Wilson launched the company in 1998, he created two muses, Duke and Ocean, that were meant to inspire the companys merchandise and brand strategy, he told The New York Times Magazine in 2015.

Wilson described Ocean as a fashionable and single 32-year-old woman who makes $100,000 a year, owns her own condo, and works out for an hour and a half every day. Duke, the muse for Lululemons menswear, is a 35-year-old man who makes more money than Ocean and loves surfing in the summer and snowboarding in the winter... But before Lululemon stopped using them, Duke and Ocean came to be known as Lululemons ideal customers and some employees felt they were its ideal employees, too, the former Lululemon executive told Insider.

Duke and Ocean were reportedly retired in 2017 and play no role whatsoever in the hiring process, according to Stacia Jones, Lululemons global head of inclusion, diversity, equity, and action, since last October. Nevertheless, at least one former employee told BI that Lululemon was a bastion of the privileged white wellness that typified the entire industryin fact, the company reportedly didnt even have a budget for diversity and inclusion prior to 2020. (It now has a budget of $5 million with a team of 20 international employees.)

We are proud of the progress we are making to become more diverse, inclusive and equitable across all aspects of the employee experience, from recruiting and hiring to leadership and development, Jones told BI. While we are still early in our journey, we are fully committed to the tangible steps were taking that will help create systemic change so that we truly reflect the communities that we serve.

But the employees who spoke with Insider arent buying it, saying the efforts are performative and compelled from external pressure rather than internal response.

I would like to see a better executive leadership team that actually has people of color, one former employee told Inside. You can say that youre doing this work and itll take time for it to trickle down. I still dont think that they are. It just seems like performance activism.

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Do Black Lives Really Matter at Lululemon? - The Root

Fact check: Has Japan has banned all Black Lives Matter apparel from the Olympics? – WRAL.com

By Andy Nguyen, PolitiFact reporter

Protests by athletes during sporting events have long been a point of contention in the public eye; some detractors say athletes should stick to sports, while supporters say they should be able to use their platform to spread awareness of an issue.

Ahead of this years Olympics, scheduled to begin July 23, a Facebook post claims Japan has prohibited athletes from making any political expression during the Tokyo Summer Games, including wearing clothing that says "Black Lives Matter."

"Japan has banned all BLM apparel from the Olympics," the June 20 post reads. "No one can kneel or raise fists during the anthems either. I'm proud of Japan."

The post was flagged as part of Facebooks efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

The post is wrong in that it isnt up to the host country to set what rules athletes have to follow while participating in the games. Instead, thats the responsibility of the International Olympic Committee.

However, the IOC has a provision in its charter, called Rule 50, which prohibits athletes from making any sort of political expression, particularly on medal podiums, in the field of play, and at opening and closing ceremonies. The rule does not target a particular movement or ideology.

The rule states: "No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas." A version of Rule 50 has been in place in the IOC's charter since at least 1975.

Examples of prohibited expressions include displaying any form of political messaging on a persons attire and making any gesture that could be seen as political, such as kneeling or a raised fist.

The IOC did not respond to PolitiFacts request for comment regarding Black Lives Matter apparel at the Olympics.

The focus at the Olympic Games should be on athletes performances, sport and international unity, and "it is a fundamental principle that sport is neutral and must be separate from political, religious or any other type of interference," said Rule 50 guidelines developed by the IOC Athletes Commission.

Rule 50 has been under scrutiny for several years, and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee recently sought to have the rule amended amid a growing wave of American athletes publicly taking up social justice causes, the Washington Post reported. The IOC reviewed the rule and announced in April it would not be changed.

Olympics officials will allow athletes in Tokyo to wear clothing with more general messaging, like "inclusion," "peace," "equality" and "respect," according to the Associated Press.

The IOC also has said there will be opportunities for athletes "to express their views" during press conferences, interviews, team meetings, and on social media.

Acts of political expression by athletes at the Olympics is nothing new and happened as early as the 1906 Athens Games, when a track and field athlete named Peter OConnor waved a pro-Irish flag while representing Great Britain, according to the BBC.

The most well-known example of an Olympian using the global event to make a political statement may have been at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, when U.S. athletes John Carlos and Tommie Smith bowed their heads and raised gloved fists during a medal ceremony at the height of the Black Power movement.

The IOC at the time called their display "a deliberate and violent breach of the fundamental principles of the Olympic spirit" and expelled Carlos and Smith from the games.

The Olympic committee on July 2 announced that it is extending "opportunities for athlete expression" during the Tokyo games. While athletes remain prohibited from demonstrating while on the medal podium, the committee said athletes can express their views:

Olympic rules still require the athletes to express their views in accordance with existing guidelines. For example, the rules still forbid athletes from expressing their views during another team's introduction, or during another country's national anthem. Also, the demonstration must not be "targeted, directly or indirectly, against people, countries, organisations and/or their dignity."

A Facebook post claims, "Japan has banned all (Black Lives Matter) apparel from the Olympics. No one can kneel or raise fists during the anthems either."

The post is partly accurate.

The IOC, not a host country, sets the rules athletes have to follow.

Apparel that says Black Lives Matter may be seen as a form of political expression, and Olympic officials for decades have had a rule prohibiting any form of political expression. Kneeling or raising a fist are forms of prohibited political expression. The IOCs rule does not specifically target Black Lives Matter, or any one ideology or movement.

We rate the post Half True.

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Fact check: Has Japan has banned all Black Lives Matter apparel from the Olympics? - WRAL.com

Reparations: Can Money Absolve the Sins of the Past? – Voice of America

The issue of reparations making amends for historical wrongs perpetrated against a group or population has always been highly controversial. But to the victims of atrocities such as genocide and slavery, offering such compensation should be a no-brainer.

Slavery officially ended in the U.S. in 1865, with the adoption of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. But its effects have persisted, contributing to disparities between white and Black populations. Because of this, many say that amends should be made for the wrong that was done and that they are long overdue.

In a video provided by his office, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and mayors of 10 other cities recently announced they were taking the first step by pledging to pay reparations for slavery to small groups of Black residents in their cities.

"Today we launch Mayors Organized for Reparations and Equity so each of us does something, makes more of a commitment to justice, more of a commitment to wealth building, more of a commitment to a society that includes everybody, more of a commitment to a country that faces its past because we know our prosperity in the future depends on it," Garcetti said.

This followed recent celebrations of Juneteenth, the nation's newest federal holiday. It's a day African Americans have celebrated every June 19 since 1865, when the last enslaved Blacks learned of their freedom, 2 years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

"When I hear about mayors taking a proactive step to provide reparations to people who are injured, it's an acknowledgment that municipalities also participated in the horrific act that has injured Black communities and Black people over the course of history," Andre Perry, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, told VOA.

"We did not arrive at the wealth gap where white families have about 10 times the amount of wealth of Black families simply because of federal policy. Not just because of slavery but because of Jim Crow racism also and historic discrimination in criminal justice and housing," he said.

Jim Crow laws are defined as a series of laws and measures introduced after the Civil War that discriminated against African Americans, relegating them to the status of second-class citizens.

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Yet discussing the issue of reparations at the federal level has always been politically divisive.

In an impromptu press conference recorded on C-SPAN in 2019, then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican from Kentucky, said he didnt think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago for whom none of us currently living are responsible is a good idea.

David Freund, history professor at the University of Maryland, told VOA, The classic argument against [reparations is] that this happened a long time ago, to which historians like me say: No, this started a long time ago and continues to this day. We can document systems, policies, also private practices that are constantly reproducing racial inequalities, so its not a long time ago. And no one has been able to convince me otherwise.

Perry said there have been many examples of reparation efforts, both in the U.S. and in other countries, noting that "when it comes to African Americans, we say, 'No, no, no who will pay for it? I didn't own any slaves' all those lame excuses. Remember, the federal government will pay. We provided reparations for the Japanese interns. We provided reparations for Native Americans. Internationally, there were reparations for those injured because of the Holocaust, so we've seen it internationally. We've even seen reparations given to 9/11 victims. The only time we don't agree with reparations is when it's talking about Black folks."

McConnell argued that we tried to deal with our original sin of slavery by fighting a Civil War, by passing landmark civil rights legislation; weve elected an African American president. I think were always a work in progress in this country, but no one currently alive was responsible for that, and I dont think we should be trying to figure out how to compensate for it. First of all, itd be pretty hard to figure out who to compensate.

Freund noted that many people say its terrible there was slavery in the past but we are glad we abolished it. Its really terrible that we had Jim Crow in the past and its great that we passed the civil rights acts of 1964 and 1965. But, he said, there isnt much recognition that this history has a lasting impact on access to opportunities, resources, health, education and other benefits.

The most significant reparations bill to date, known as H.R. 40, emerged from a House committee only three months ago after three decades of discussion. It would establish a commission to study the treatment of African Americans from 1619 to the present and recommend appropriate remedies.

However, all 190 of the bills co-sponsors are Democrats and it faces an uphill struggle in the Senate, where it would need at least 10 votes from Republicans to overcome a filibuster.

Japanese internment camps

Two months after Japanese aircraft attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, prompting the U.S. entry into World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an executive order providing for the internment of Americans of Japanese descent.

"Many rightfully called it one of the darkest times in American history, when close to 120,000 Japanese Americans were forcibly removed on the West Coast and placed into concentration camps scattered throughout the country, said David Inoue, the executive director of the Japanese American Citizens League. A "lot of this was rooted into the wartime hysteria on false claims by the government that Japanese Americans were a security threat to this country."

Nearly five decades later, Congress passed and then-President Ronald Reagan signed legislation in 1988 that recognized and apologized for the mistake and provided a cash payment to the former internees.

Inoue told VOA that payment was ultimately $20,000 per person. They did have to be surviving. If someone had been incarcerated and passed away, they would not then be eligible for payments, or their survivors would not be eligible for payment."

But for some, he said, there was no way monetary reparations were going to truly compensate the internees for what they had lost financially and psychologically. "People who lost family members, people who died in the camps, money was not going to bring those people back.

Other countries have also acknowledged and paid for their past sins, including Germany and the United Kingdom.

Germany and the Holocaust

As of 2020, the German government had paid more than $80 billion in Holocaust reparations as a result of negotiations with the Claims Conference, an umbrella organization established in New York in 1951 by 23 national and international Jewish organizations.

The Holocaust was the state-sponsored persecution and murder of about 6 million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators, according to Washington's Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Britain, Kenya's Mau Mau community

In 2013, Britain apologized and agreed to pay compensation to thousands of veterans of the Mau Mau nationalist uprising in Kenya, which was brutally suppressed by the British colonial government in the 1950s.

The Kenya Human Rights Commission estimated that 90,000 Kenyans were killed or maimed and 160,000 detained.

In Kenya, Mau Mau veterans and campaigners welcomed the apology at the time but said the compensation of 300,000 shillings or about U.S. $3,500 per victim was not enough for the pain, suffering and long-term effects the community had endured a feeling shared by many victims of atrocities in general.

While reparations can come in many forms, some people oppose cash compensation, arguing that any money paid is blood money.

Henry Ridgwell contributed to this report, which also contains information from The Associated Press.

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Reparations: Can Money Absolve the Sins of the Past? - Voice of America

Black Lives Matter marks one year in Sudbury – CTV Toronto

SUDBURY -- It's a major milestone for Black Lives Matter Sudbury that marked it's one year anniversary with a rally at Tom Davies Square.

A smaller but powerful group joined the organization as they heard speeches of empowerment. Organizers spoke of the accomplishments they have to celebrate but how there's still more work to be done.

They also spoke of how Greater Sudbury has yet to accept their demands or to defund the police budget by 10 per cent.

"I'm so ecstatic to be here, it's been a long road of us getting here, from originally being a Facebook chat of like-minded individuals and now we're a registered not-for-profit group," said president Ra'anaa Brown.

Brown says they've seen a lot of growth over the past year where their membership has doubled, even tripled and she's proud of how they've become a recognizable organization.

"We still have a lot of work to do but a lot of change has started to happen, you know already we're starting to educate the community. People are starting to understand the need for groups like our organization. They're starting to see the systemic racism that does exist within our institutions," she told CTVNews.

Ruva Gwekwerere, their communications liaison was also on hand and ready to help lead a march around the square.

"It feels great to have grown so much over the past year. We've really been able to garner support to get people who haven't understood the issues to come on board and understand the issues," said Gwekwerere.

She tells CTVNews they're very proud of what they've been able to accomplish with the rallies as well as their conference. She didn't even know if it was possible in Sudbury but now they have a movement.

"One of our biggest campaigns has been for the police budget, we're asking for a 10 per cent reduction to the police budget and for that money to go toward social services in Sudbury. We have a big problem with homelessness in Sudbury - we have addictions and mental health issues," she said.

Following their land acknowledgement and opening speeches. Black Lives Matter protested around the city block containing Tom Davies Square, first moving down Paris Street before stopping on Brady Street in front of the Greater Sudbury Police Service Headquarters.

Traffic was stopped and members laid down on the hot black pavement as someone read out names on a bullhorn.

The group then again recited their demands to the city while waving black and red coloured smoke.

After a brief demonstrations they've continued moving again and returned to the plaza, all while being escorted by members of the police traffic unit.

Black Lives Matter Sudbury says the police budget increased this past year. They're going to continue to push and call for change from city leaders.

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Black Lives Matter marks one year in Sudbury - CTV Toronto

Hear Ministry’s Seething New Song "Good Trouble," Inspired by Black Lives Matter – Revolver Magazine

Revolver has teamed with Ministry for an exclusive "bone" vinyl variant of their new album, Moral Hygiene. It's limited to 300 order your copy now!

Industrial-metal trailblazers Ministry have just announced that their new and 15th album, Moral Hygiene, will drop on October 1st via Nuclear Blast. The news came with the debut of the album's first single "Good Trouble."

The menacing, crushingsong is classic Ministry fare: propelled by driving riffs, mechanical drums, mainman Al Jourgensen's signature seething vocals (and wailing harmonica) and some choice cut-n-paste samples. "Good Trouble," which wasinspired by the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests and the activism of late Congressman John Lewis, arrives with a new video featuring footage of last year's demonstrations in Los Angeles shot by Jourgensen and his partner Liz Walton.

"I was watching the coverage last July around Lewis' death and was in awe the next day when this entire letter from him was published in the New York Times," Jourgensen says about the inspiration behind the new single. "How suss was that to want to keep making progress after his death by thinking about the legacy he left. I was struck by the reflectiveness of his speech, knowing he was dying and making sure it was released because he saw trouble ahead. That is the moral hygiene of this album we have to do something to change and I really hope we continue to act and live up to the idea of getting into good trouble for the benefit of society."

The 10-track Moral Hygiene is the follow-up to Ministry's last full-length, 2018's Amerikkkant.

"The good thing about literally taking a year off from any social activity or touring is that you really get to sit back and get an overview of things as they are happening, as opposed to being caught up in the moment," said Jorgensen in a statement about the album. "And what I saw with how we handled several public crises from the pandemic to racial injustice to who we vote in to lead our country is that times are changing, and society needed to change to get away from the idea that has permeated us of take care of yourself, fuck everything else. Now more than ever we need moral hygiene. It consumed me as I wrote this album. It's not some pious term. It's what we have to return to in order to function as the human species on this planet. And I'm proud to have had such great guests on this album to help cement that message like Billy Morrison, Jello Biafra and Arabian Prince."

Moral Hygiene was recorded with engineer Michael Rozon at Scheisse Dog Studio, Jourgensen's self-built home studio. Jourgensen wrote and performed all songs with additional contributions from Billy Morrison (Billy Idol, Royal Machines), Cesar Soto (Man The Mute), John Bechdel (Killing Joke, Fear Factory), Roy Mayorga (Stonesour, Soulfly, Nausea), Paul D'Amour (Tool, Feersum Ennjin), Arabian Prince (N.W.A.), Jello Biafra (Dead Kennedys) and sitar player Flash.

Moral Hygiene will be available in multiple digital and physical formats, including the Revolver-exclusive "bone" vinyl variant, limited to 300 worldwide. Pre-orders are available now.

Moral Hygiene track listing:1. Alert Level2. Good Trouble3. Sabotage Is Sex4. Disinformation5. Search and Destroy6. Believe Me7. Broken System8. We Shall Resist9. Death Toll10. TV Song #6 (Right Around the Corner Mix)

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Hear Ministry's Seething New Song "Good Trouble," Inspired by Black Lives Matter - Revolver Magazine

The DeanBeat: The week in the console and game engine wars – VentureBeat

Join AI & data leaders at Transform 2021 on July 12th for the AI/ML Automation Technology Summit. Register today.

In what was supposed to be the quietest of weeks, we got some real news. Amazon announced that would open-source its Lumberyard game engine as the Open 3D Engine, overseen by the Linux Foundation and supported by 20 companies. Then Our Machinery announced its lightweight and hackable game engine, The Machinery.

And Nintendo announced it would ship the Nintendo Switch OLED model with a new screen and slightly better audio. It fell short of having rumored features that would be likely part of a still possible Nintendo Switch Pro. Its got a better OLED screen, but it doesnt run 4K graphics even though it will cost $350 when it debuts in October at $50 more than the regular Switch.

During this otherwise slow week, its fun to look at the strategic significance of these chess moves, and how they will impact the competition in game engines and further divide game developers into factions. The console wars affect gamers. But the game engine wars have big consequences for developers.

Above: Nintendos Metroid: Dread is one of the Switchs biggest upcoming games.

Image Credit: Nintendo

Nintendos move represents a small defensive move against Sony and Microsoft, which are selling their new game consoles against the older Switch technology. Yet Nintendos focus on hybrid home and mobile means that it doesnt really directly compete with Sony and Microsoft. This move simply lets Nintendo go after hardcore Switch fans and new Nintendo customers with the combo of the Switch OLED and Metroid: Dread this fall. Its about capturing a bigger piece of the holiday spending pie this fall. Nintendo may still launch a better Switch Pro, but it doesnt have to rush it out amid the semiconductor shortage that is restraining all sales now.

This is at its heart just good marketing and merchandising by Nintendo, whereas the engine developments feel more important. And I have a feeling this could compete well against the Microsoft and Sony consoles that sales bots (and rarely, people) can buy, and the Switch OLED should do well when your other choice for something new is Microsofts new Xbox minifridge.

Sony struck back with a short State of Play event highlighting the unveiling of Moss: Book II, the sequel to the award-winning Moss of 2018 from Polyarc. It took us for a spin with some other new games like Deathloop. And, of course, Microsoft celebrated that because it came from Bethesda, which Microsoft now owns. Every week, these companies just like taking little jabs at each other.

Above: Deadhaus Sonata is an example of a game made with the Open 3D Engine.

Image Credit: Apocalypse Studios

The Machinerys move was a surprise, with an engine focused on programming needs and the preference for a modular and hackable product. It represents another choice in the market beyond Unity and Unreal, and it has a chance t0 gain a foothold.

On the open source engine side, its not surprising that Amazon went this route. The Lumberyard engine wasnt successful in its bid to compete with Unreal and Unity. It had Amazons own game studios as its users, but one of its biggest customers, Roberts Space Industries (the maker of Star Citizen) still hasnt shipped its flagship game. Many interpret the delays as bad news.

Amazons own studios have had a hard time as well, with a number of cancellations over the years, such as a recently canceled game based on The Lord of the Rings and the short-lived Crucible title. Amazon Games is still shipping other titles such as the New World massively multiplayer online game. But with such mixed results, its no surprise that Amazon threw in the towel on a proprietary engine and converted it to open source, where dozens of companies could contribute to making it better.

Insiders said that they believe its main purpose at Amazon was to steer the game industry to use Amazon Web Services, which was easily integrated into Lumberyard. And if we remember this important point, Amazon Games San Diego studio leader John Smedley once said that former CEO Jeff Bezos at Amazon told the game makers that he wanted them to make games with ridiculous computation. I take that to mean that they really cared about Amazon Web Services, and they can still make that a bigger cash cow even if they dont own the engine.

I think that if we look at the competition, it makes sense that open source would eventually become relevant in the engine market, as it has transformed sectors such as the mobile operating system market (iOS vs. Android) and the PC market (Windows and MacOS vs. Linux). Open source always keeps the other commercial vendors honest and offers freedom of choice for those who value it.

Its hard to say if Amazons move will put much pressure on Epic Games and Unity.

For Epic Games, Fortnite has generated huge revenues that dwarf what the company brings in from the Unreal game engine. Thanks to the Epic v. Apple antitrust trial, we know that Epics internal documents show that it made $3.8 billion in revenue from Fortnite in 2019 and just $98 million from Unreal Engine royalties. The fledgling Epic Games Store, started in 2018, was expected to outpace the 25-year-old engine divisions revenue in 2020 by 4-to-1. Where once games were made to be expressions of what the game engine can do, now the engine exists so that the company can generate outsized revenues from hit games like Fortnite.

As an aside, it was interesting to see Denis Dyack, the CEO of Apocalypse Games, as the lead bannerman for Open 3D Engine. Dyack once sued Epic Games while at Silicon Knights in 2007, alleging Epic held back its most-advanced version of its engine from licensees such as as Silicon Knights. Dyack lost the lawsuit, but he became a figure in the game engine wars by backing the Open 3D Engine.

Above: Echo goes up against the Ancient in an Unreal Engine 5 demo.

Image Credit: Epic Games

Yet game engines can be strategic. For one, they can be kingmakers for smaller platforms. The engines programmers do this by porting a game engine so that a game created on it can run on a wide variety of platforms. As I noted back in 2014, Unity got traction early on by convincing platforms to give it money to port its engine so that games created with Unity could run on the designated platforms. The smaller platforms would do this so they could get more games on their platforms and get a cut of that revenue.

This porting capability of game engines is important because it fulfills the mission of the engine, which is just a tool for game makers. It enables developers to offload the hard engineering work of porting their games to many different platforms. And those game developers can simply focus on making their games better, writing it once and having it run on many platforms to maximize revenues. This helped Unity become known as a kingmaker and an enabler, and that did good things for Unitys valuation. It went public last fall and is worth $29 billion.

Epic Games charges a 5% royalty on successful games, while Unity charges a fee for every copy of its engine used by developers. Unitys model gets harder to do with Epics tactic of giving out grants to startups that use its engine (though it does give some money to non-Unreal startups). Both Epic and Unity are expanding the pie of revenues by reaching into new markets, like movies and other entertainment. But Unity makes more money through its Unity Ads platform, which integrates advertising into games, for a fee.

Well see how much adoption the O3DE will get over time, but I see good things coming from increased competition in every part of the game market, including the market for engines and tools. And lets not forget that engines are only so important in the absence of games like Fortnite. Epic Games recently raised $1 billion at a $28 billion valuation.

Why is it worth so much? Well, the engine is pretty important for the companies that want to use technology tools to create the metaverse. And Unreal Engine 5 is coming soon, and that should enable a new generation of games, including new games coming from Epic itself. And so, you see, yet another DeanBeat column comes back around to the notion of themetaverse, the universe of virtual worlds that are all interconnected, like in novels such asSnow CrashandReady Player One.

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The DeanBeat: The week in the console and game engine wars - VentureBeat

Who is the greatest of all time? – Stabroek News

The question of who is the greatest chess player of all time is constantly being asked and debated. For English grandmaster, mathematician and writer Jonathan Speelman, the strongest players of recent times are Bobby Fischer, Anatoly Karpov, Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen, in that order. One can add Viswanathan Anand and Vladimir Kramnik to that list, keep-ing to world champions only.

In the 19th into the 20th centuries, Germanys Emanuel Lasker, Cubas Jose Raul Capablanca and Russias Dr Alexander Alekhine, all world champions, were unmatched. Lasker, for example, held the world championship title for a record 27 years.

Earlier than that, American Paul Morphy was a prodigious talent. He crushed everyone in his path although he was never world champion. His biography, Paul Morphy: The Pride and Sorrow of Chess, reveals that in his short career of about a year and a half, he was the finest natural player of his generation. But he retired early from chess and grew to despise the game. Fischer had written of him: Morphy was perhaps the most accurate chess player who ever lived In a set match Morphy could beat anybody alive today. Grandmaster Reuben Fine put it even more strikingly: Imagine Joe Louis at his prime in a country where his most dangerous opponent was 56 and weighed 150 pounds. Who can begin to conceive of Morphys real strength? All we have left are the splendid games Morphy played.

Speelman may have mentioned Fischer first, primus inter pares, because he attained a FIDE rating of 2785 following his victory over Russias Boris Spassky in 1972. That would be number five on todays ELO rating list. Fischer was 100 points above Spassky when they played for the champion-ship title. Also, the facts speak for themselves. In the Candidates matches of 1971, up to the world championship, the results were as follows:

1. Fischer vs Mark Taimanov6-0

2 .Fischer vs Bent Larsen6-0

3. Fischer vs Tigran Petrosian6 1-2

4. Fischer vs Boris Spassky12-8 .

US grandmaster Yasser Seirawan named his top five chess players as Kasparov, Karpov, Fischer, Carlsen, and Anand in that order.

In my view, Fischer was the best simply because he was a workaholic, working at chess tirelessly. And in Fischers time there were no chess engines or databases, everything accomplished through studious work. To measure or not to measure? Somehow, I believe the arguments are destined to go on.

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Who is the greatest of all time? - Stabroek News

A hearty chess gesture from the Czech Republic to the Indian state of Kerala – Chessbase News

TheMunicipal House,an important Art-Nouveaubuilding in the centre of Prague, was host to a charity simultaneous chess exhibition by the top-rated Czech Grandmaster David Navara against 20 opponents on June 29,raising about 160,700 Czech Korunas (about 6,285 Euros)or 5,57,000 Indian Rupees. A brainchild of Pavel Matocha, organiser of the famous Chess Train event, the simul in support of Covid-19 vaccination drive in the Indian state ofKeralareceived a massive support from the civil society when Prime Minister of the Czech RepublicAndrej Babihimself turned up as one of the participants, in the presence of the ambassador of India to the Czech Republic,Hemant H Kotalwar.

The Municipal House at Prague, next to the Powder Gate, in the centre of Prague | Photo: Wikimedia

Simultaneous display by David Navara in progress | Photo: Prague Chess Society

David Navara making a move against the Prime Minister of Czech Republic, Andrej Babi | Photo: Prague Chess Society

This extraordinary event has a backstory, borne out of a friendship between two chess organisers who visited each others unique events and fell in love with the ambience and local culture, and extending a helping hand to the other at such trying times of the global pandemic.

A former national level player and Olympian, N RAnil Kumar (Correspondence International Master and retired English Professor), travelled to Prague in 2019 and participated in the unique Chess Train event and enjoyed it thoroughly.

Master Class Vol. 12: Viswanathan Anand

This DVD allows you to learn from the example of one of the best players in the history of chess and from the explanations of the authors how to successfully organise your games strategically, consequently how to keep your opponent permanently under press

N R Anil Kumar as a participant at the Chess Train 2019 | Photo: Prague Chess Society

He liked the novel idea of playing chess on wheels, appreciating the uniqueness and the friendly touristic experience among a chess-loving crowd, the event being well crafted by Pavel Matocha with whom he formed a warm friendship.

He also realised the potential of the state of Kerala in conducting such an event on waves around its abundant backwaters, subsequently forming the organisation Orient Chess Moves with a few of his friends to create the unique Chess Houseboat event at the Gods own country, the state of Kerala in India. Joe Parappilly and P Manoj Kumar, two former national level players, and Ajit Kumar Raja and Joju Tharakan, two educationists who are Principal and Director respectively of theSakthan Thamburan college, Thrissur, Kerala were the other founder members of the Orient Chess Moves.

The Orient Chess Moves and Chess Train crowd. Sitting: Johann Linzer (Austria) Karel Glacner (Czech Republic) Norbert Krueger (Germany). Standing: Joju Tharakan, Mrs Jiri & Jiri Navratil (Czech Republic), N.R.Anil Kumar, Ajith Kumar Raja, Joe Parappilly , Walter Anema (Netherlands) and the Matocha family | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

The inaugural Chess Houseboat event was conducted during Jan - Feb 2020, and attracted a moderate crowd. The uniqueness of the event caught the attention of Kerala Governments State Tourism department, which also joined hands with the organisers, thus making it an official event for the state. Pavel Matocha travelled all the way to Kerala with his family to participate in the event, enjoying the hospitality, sights, cuisine and the chess, strengthening his endearment for the land.

The most beautiful chess tournament venue ever the chess houseboat floating at the Vembanad Lake, the backwaters of Kerala | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

Game on at the Houseboat | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

It was not just about the game great cuisine was on offer too | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

...delighting the young and old alike | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

The Kerala Tourism, belonging to the state government, has an interestingly designed logo depicting various attractions of the land

The Chess Houseboat event created a huge visual impact from its inaugural edition, encouraging the organisers to make more ambitious plans for its future, just when the pandemic unfortunately hit the state of Kerala, just as it did with the rest of India.

Anilkumar and Parappilly have also been part of Chess Kerala, a collective of chess lovers in the state who have been conducting events regularly since 2017, a short programme with Nigel Short during December 2019 being one of their major events before the pandemic.

Greatest Hits Vol. 1

Nigel Short takes us on an electrifying journey through a very rich chess career, which saw him beat no less than twelve world champions. His experience in tournaments and matches all over the world Short has visited a total of 89 countries can be seen in the narratives that precede the games which he annotates with humour and instructive insights.

Nigel Short arrives in Kerala | Photo: Chess Kerala

Nigel Short Simul at Cochin, Kerala | Photo: Chess Kerala

Ever since the beginning of 2020, Chess Kerala has been organising various fundraising events to contribute to the Kerala Governments Covid-19 treatment and vaccination drives. Their recent initiative has been theCovid Vaccine Challenge Grand Prix series 2021online event through which they raised Rs.3,46,106, contributing to the KeralaChief Ministers Distress Relief Fund(CMDRF). The initiative was supported by the breadth of Indian chess community.

Anil Kumar and members of Chess Kerala presenting the Chief Minister of the state Pinarayi Vijayan (White Shirt) a contribution of Rs.4,55,000/- (about 5,155 Euro) raised from the online event Checkmate Covid-19 conducted during May 2020. Note the traditional dress worn around the waist by Anil Kumar and the Chief Minister - it is the Kerala special Mundu, denoting simplicity as well as majesticity | Photo: Chess Kerala

Chess Kerala is a vibrant organisation, with consistent chess activities of a charitable bend. A remarkable feature of the organisation is a band of hard-working women, who among themselves conducted the successful Chess Kerala Women Grandprix 2021 during May 2021.

The women team of Chess Kerala, who exclusively organised the Chess Kerala Women Grandprix 2021 | Photo: Chess Kerala

Noting the efforts of his friends from Chess Kerala, Pavel Matocha too decided to engage the chess community of the Czech Republic to help the state of Kerala by organising a charity event in Prague. He roped in the top player of Czech, David Navara to play a Simultaneous Display for 20 boards, with the participation being free of charge but expecting everyone to contribute to the fund, to be in turn sent to the CMDRF.

David Navara with two young participants of the Simul | Photo: Prague Chess Society

The Government of the Czech Republic showed amazing enthusiasm for the event, with the participation of the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic Andrej Babi, former Minister of Healthcare Roman Prymula (a FIDE Master) and Member of the Czech Parliament Patrik Nacher.

Prime Minister of Czech Republic, Andrej Babi | Photo: Prague Chess Society

Member of the Czech Parliament Patrik Nacher | Photo: Prague Chess Society

FIDE Master Roman Prymula, a former Minister of Healthcare | Photo: Prague Chess Society

A short and well-produced video presentation of the event:

Charitativn simultnka pro Indii (charity simultaneous) for India | Video: Aneka Krukov

No doubt, Matochas credentials and standing helps - he is the founder of the Prague Chess Society, organiser of the Chess Train, owner and CEO of the Sach Mat s.r.o. (CheckMate Ltd.) a trading company, and chairman of the Czech Television Council.

Typical mistakes by 1600-1900 players

Some mistakes repeat themselves often in amateur games. With themes such as "Miscalculating Forcing Lines", "Being Too Materialistic" and "King Safety" Nick Pert shows you how to avoid making typical mistakes.

Sometimes, you have to get on the ground and push Pavel Matocha in action during the Chess Train event | Photo: Prague Chess Society

The partner of the event was Motorpal, a.s, the Czech manufacturer of fuel injectors for diesel engines, with a contribution of 50,000 CZK (about 2,000 EUR), their chairman of the board and CEO Radim Valas personally attending the event.

The Municipal House was the grand venue, where a video message from Anilkumar was played at the beginning of the event.

With all the participants and organisers ready for the Simul, N R Anil Kumars video message was played out, conveying the gratitude of Chess Kerala and the people of the state for this hearty charitable gesture all the way from the Czech Republic | Photo: Prague Chess Society

Navara won 18 games and drew 2 (against lawyer Michal Vavra and statistician Libor Nentvich).

Things always start briskly on the chessboard Nacher makes a move on his board, keenly watched by Babi | Photo: Prague Chess Society

Things may even seem to be going your way for a while... | Photo: Prague Chess Society

...but they are bound to get overwhelming, when the opposition is a David Navara Nacher and Babi do not seem to be doing well on the chessboard. But you have to really give it to their involvement! | Photo: Prague Chess Society

Organisation was classy, as these little details reveal | Photo: Prague Chess Society

An enthusiastic and involved support also came from the Ambassador of India to the Czech Republic, Hemant H Kotalwar, who made it a point to attend the simultaneous display, kept in contact with the Chess Kerala troupe back in India during the event, and also tweeted from the venue.

Ambassador of India to the Czech Republic, Hemant H Kotalwar delivers his address, flanked by Matocha and Navara. Note Matochas dress - he is wearing the Indian Sherwani presented to him during his visit to the Chess Houseboat event | Photo: Prague Chess Society

When I contacted Hemant Kotalwar to understand better this warm and noble gesture of a Prime Minister of a country and other luminaries turning up for a charity simul just for one of the numerous states of India, I found someone who enjoys his job. India and Czech have a historically strong friendship over centuries. The subject of Indology (study of Indian languages) and the ancient language of Sanskrit have been faculties of the Charles University of Prague since the 1860s. The famous Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore has a demi-god status in the Czech Republic, with a street (Thkurova) even named after him. His famous work Gitanjali was translated directly to the Czech language from Bengali in the 1930s, and many from Czech went over to India since the 1920s to study at his college at the Shantiniketan. It is obvious from his narrative that such a historical tie between the two nations naturally leads to such hearty gestures as this charity simul.

A sample view of the beautiful Visva Bharati University situated at Shantiniketan, West Bengal India. Founded by Rabindranath Tagore in 1921, it is a much revered institution, where classes are still held in the open under the shade of huge mango trees and students and tutors alike still travel by cycles to keep pollution at bay | Photo: Wikicommons

The Czech connection can also be felt through Indian history, if one remembers names such as Bata and Jawa. The popular brands are so etched in the commercial landscape that an average Indian has all the reasons to believe they are desi brands rather than originating from the Czech Republic. The Bata footwear started manufacturing in 1894 in India, and even got the neighbourhood named as the Bata Nagar. The Jawa motorbikes have a cult following in India to this day, known for their track record for maintenance friendly, enjoying a revival in the recent few years.

The Czech Brand Bata which every Indian thinks of as Indian | Photo: Wikicommons

Kotalwar underlines many such reasons for this warm relationship, and also indicates a personal liking for the cool culture of the Czech republic, where even a Prime Minister - also the fourth richest of the country - easily mingles in public, and turns up for playing in such charity events.

Former chairman of Grandmaster Association Bessel Kok who visited the event to support his friend Matocha, seen here with Hemant Kotalwar and his son Aditya Kotalwar | Photo: Prague Chess Society

Back in Kerala, the event was received with enthusiasm by the media, many of the leading newspapers and TV Channels of Kerala reporting on the event, the uniqueness of the gesture not being lost.

From the Kerala daily Desabhimani on 30th June 2021. The language is Malayalam, based on which the state of Kerala was originally founded

From another Malayalam daily Veekshanam on 30th June 2021, a large report

From The Hindu daily on 30th June 2021

From 24 News, a Malayalam news channel

From Kairali News, a Malayalam news channel

Overwhelmed by the event, I finally probe Matocha on what endeared him so much to Kerala to come up with this hearty and noble gesture. One week in Kerala that I spent last year at the end of January! With my wife and our youngest child we took part in the Chess Houseboat, a wonderful chess and tourist event, organised by my friend N R Anilkumar. After the few days of Chess Houseboat, we became friends with many chess players of Kerala, of this Gods own country, and my conviction is that it is our duty to help our friends!

The Matochas - when a visit to the Gods own country forged a special friendship | Photo: Orient Chess Moves

Matocha typically started playing in his childhood, and turned into an active organiser about two decades ago. He has brought many of the Czech political heavyweights to chess events in the past, and quips when I ask how he convinced such luminaries as the Prime Minister of Czech and other parliamentarians to attend the simul, It is not hard to persuade people who love chess to take part in a chess event!

It is simply impossible to stand in India and not to be overwhelmed by this hearty gesture from a faraway land, which worships Rabindranath Tagore, the Bard of Bengal, that crown jewel of Indian creativity who was the first to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Tagore wove magic with words, found inspiration in - befitting of this event - the harmonies of the universe, and some of his famous verses from the Gitanjali offer the relevant poignant conclusion:

On the seashore of endless worlds children meet.

The infinite sky is motionless overhead and the restless water is boisterous. On the seashore of endless worlds the children meet with shouts and dances.

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A hearty chess gesture from the Czech Republic to the Indian state of Kerala - Chessbase News

Top 10 Memes that Changed History – nation.lk – The Nation Newspaper

It was evolutionary biologist (and real love-him-or-hate-him guy) Richard Dawkins who coined the term meme in his 1976 bookThe Selfish Gene. He wrote that in the same way that a gene is a self-replicating unit of biological evolution, a meme is a self-replicating unit of cultural evolution. That is to say, its an idea that spreads and changes the more it spreads. And, not to get too meta, just look at how the idea of a meme (itself a meme) has changed. Nowadays, when the average person says the word, they mean a funny image someone shared online.

And theyre partly right.

Funny online memes are like digital genes, carrying information from person to person, being altered and progressed as they go. Except instead of carrying the blueprints for life, they carry doges, Shreks, and Sean Beans. Sometimes, memesbe they pictures, hashtags, challenges, or not digital at allhave had a huge cultural impact. Here are ten such memes, those that were so dank they changed history.

Images of Winnie the Pooh blocked on Chinese socia media

The memein this case, really any image of Pooh Bearis heavily censored in China. The country even went so far as to ban the release of the film Christopher Robin within its borders just to prevent showing any image of the cuddly ol bear. And why? It all dates back to 2013 when President Xi Jinping visited the U.S. and some memers compared him and President Barack Obama to Pooh Bear and Tigger.

Xi was not a fan and considered being memed an affront to the dignity of himself and his office. He is particularly touchy as, in part, his goal to be the figurehead of both a cult of personality and an authoritarian regime. This has made the memeagain, just any image of one simple cartoon bearinto both a symbol of Chinese governmental corruption and protest.

The 50 Best Celebrity ALS Ice Bucket Challenges

In 2014, a challenge trend emerged online, organically and gradually growing from a series of unrelated charitable cold-water challenges to a massive worldwide meme dedicated to raising money for ALS (also commonly known as Lou Gehrigs disease). Raise money they did: over $220 million in 2014 alone.

And the trendwhich operates by one poster challenging another to post as wellhas made multiple resurgences in the years since. Though none have attained 2014 levels of success, they have generated more and more revenue for ALS-related charities and organizations. The meme has shown an incredible ability to produce grassroots funding and demonstrates the potential memes have to change finance going forward.

Radiation is Good For Your Skin Shocking 50s Commercial

Nowadays, even the scientifically illiterate understand that radiation can be dangerous. But in the first half of the complicated 20th century, newly-discovered radioactive elements like radium were thought to be safe. More than that, they were all the rage.

Radium in particular was used in every product imaginable, from makeup to clocks to clothes to medicine. Between being considered a cure-all and its fun self-luminous quality, radium became the catchword of quality in its day. You can find the word on/in all sorts of product labels, commercials, posters, and signs. It was a viral buzzword that brought the dangers of radioactivity worldwide fame.

Decorating with Death | The Depressing World of VANITAS Paintings (Memento Mori Part I)

It is impossible to pick the single most influential and widespread meme today, but in the Medieval and Renaissance periods, the winner is clear: the memento mori. Memento mori, meaning remember that you will die, is a motif that appeared in a huge amount of paintings over hundreds of years (and is still in use today).

The gist of the meme is simple: include some object in your work to remind the audience that death is inevitable. This was most often either some timekeeping device set to a penultimate time, some living thing clearly on its way out, or simply a skull.

Even limiting the meme to just skulls, you can easily find hundreds of examples from paintings. Some are hiddenperhaps a small skull on a shelf whose contents are otherwise normaland some are the central focus, as in Holbeins The Ambassadors. Its safe to say that no Renaissance nobles ever forgot that death was drawing nearer.

Eric Clapton Speaks About Clapton is God Graphiti

Before the internet, perhaps the single most common way to spread visual memes was graffiti. With obvious placement on or around high-traffic and high-visibility areas, many graffiti phrases spread from creator to viewer to creator, just as online memes do today.

A notable example is the phrase Frodo Lives!, which was spray-painted across the world in the 60s and 70s as a slogan for the hippie movement, green movement, and Vietnam protests. Another is Clapton is God, referencing musician Eric Clapton, which went up across the U.K. and U.S. during the guitarists tenure with the band Cream. Another still would be the Kilroy was Here drawings that soldiers spread across the world during World War II, bringing a connectedness and levity to soldiers bleak tours in combat.

YOUTUBERS REACT TO TIDE POD CHALLENGE

Like the ALS Ice Bucket Challenges idiotic, malicious twin, the Tide Pod Challenge arose to show us the power that memes have to effect change. Only this time, the change is stupid and harmful. In 2018, videos began to be posted online in which peopleusually teens and 20-somethingsate Tide Pods. Ate them. They ate Tide Pods.

Tide Pods, compact packets of laundry detergent, are colorful and bite-sized and became increasingly compared to candy. They are, however, incredibly unsafe to eat and the challenge, as well as the flurry of memes surrounding it, led to a spike in injuries from Tide Pod ingestion and even a few deaths. YouTube has since banned the videos, though the phenomenon is undoubtedly not the last meme-generated epidemic of stupidity.

The real history of Mad Magazines Alfred E. Neuman: CBC Archives | CBC

Mad Magazineis a comedic institution, influencing and even defining satire for generations. The bucktoothed, big-eared mascot that so frequently graces its cover actually has a name: Alfred E. Neuman, and the character has a long and winding history.

In short, the images creation is still unknown, but it quickly spread to become a catchall mascot for turn-of-the-20th-century advertisers, being used to sell food, appliances, and services. Its other prominent use was in racist propaganda. Pamphlets and posters from the time show the character, with his exaggerated features, smiling dumbly alongside slogans like, Irish Need Not Apply and Kill the Jews. AsMad Magazine(before that a comic) gained popularity, they gradually gained control over the character and now his catchphrase has become the much-less inflammatory, What, me worry?

Trump beats up CNN in wrestling meme tweet

In 2017, Donald Trump tweeted a short meme video edited to look like he was beating up a personification of news network CNN outside a wrestling ring. It ends with the CNN logo being replaced with one that says FNN: Fraud News Network. The clip stirred up a great deal of concern and anger and changed the way memes are perceived in politics for a number of reasons.

For one, it is unprecedented for a sitting leader of a first-world nation to spend so much of his day paying attention to memes. For another, the meme was created by a Reddit user with a long history of racist and anti-semitic posts. For another still, newly-positioned leaders attacking the integrity of the free press has historically been a common tactic of authoritarians. Trumps oft-repeated fake news slogan has drawn many comparisons to Hitlers lying press slogan.

Both Trump and the clips creator apologized for posting the video.

How This Frog Meme Became A Symbol Of Hope And Hate

The story of Pepe the Frog is a tragedy. The meme began as innocently as possible. Pepe was a character in the online comic Boys Club, where the frog mostly just hung out, smoked weed, and joked about silly nonsense. He then became a meme, his face used as a blank canvas to convey a million different ideas and emotions. And then

We lost him. From 2015-2017, there was a snowball effect, centered at first around Donald Trump and then later around 4chan culture, which took Pepe from the feels good man frog to a central symbol used by the alt-right. He has become enmeshed with hate speech, Nazism, and even the 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol. Pepes creator, Matt Furie, has been very outspoken about his dislike of Pepes cooption and has sued multiple parties and organizations who have profited from using Pepe as a symbol of extremism and hate.

Unlike Pepe, the doge meme began as pure as fresh snow and has remained that way ever since. Doge is easily one of the most popular memes of the internet age and has taken on countless variations over its lifetime. It has appeared in ad campaigns, video games, phone apps, and every corner of the internet. The doge was most famously used as the name and symbol of one of the largest cryptocurrencies, Dogecoin.

Dogecoin is currently valued hundreds of times beyond its initial price, and thanks to repeated endorsements from personalities like Elon Musk, is becoming almost as renowned as Bitcoin. Doge has done more for Dogecoin than lend its face, however. The doge embodies the philosophy of the currencys creators, who wished to create a fun, relaxed cryptocurrency with an equally fun, relaxed community. Serving as the inspiration for a major currency system, the doge meme proves the potential of memes to effect sweeping change on previously stagnant systems.

fact checked by Rachel Jones

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Top 10 Memes that Changed History - nation.lk - The Nation Newspaper

ADAX Announces that Roger Ver, the Founder of Bitcoin.com, Joins the Investor Board – Yahoo Finance

NICOSIA, Cyprus, July 06, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Recently, ADAX has announced that Roger Ver, the founder of Bitcoin.com, joins the ADAX investor board (related link on CryptoNews). Since the project's inception, ADAX has racked up an impressive list of accomplishments. The automated decentralized exchange has already made a number of headlines announcing its partnerships with big names from within the DeFi industry. It has also undergone a successful bout of private and public token sales, as well as token listings. The most recent recognition of its integral role within the Cardano ecosystem has been the addition of Roger Ver (https://twitter.com/rogerkver), the so-called 'Bitcoin Jesus', to its community of dedicated believers.

One of the early crypto enthusiasts, Mr Ver is best known for his early support of startups such as Bitcoin.com, Kraken, Ripple, Blockchain.com, BitPay, ZCash that subsequently grew into industry titans. Mr Ver has been a proponent of the Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System since 2011, tailoring his investment strategy to support projects that demonstrate high growth potential. Following this principle, Mr Ver has once again decided to invest early, with an expectation that ADAX decentralized exchange is likely to play a substantial role within the future Cardano-based DeFi industry.

Mr Ver's investment in ADAX follows the news of Mate Tokey, also a co-founder of Bitcoin.com, joining the decentralized exchange as a strategic advisor. There is already widespread expectation within the crypto community that with the help of Messrs Ver and Tokey ADAX is likely to demonstrate exponential growth and a substantial increase in early adoption. This expectation is reinforced by other notable developments, such as ADAX's recently signed partnerships with Black Dragon, a fundraising and marketing group, as well as Charli3, a decentralized oracle within the Cardano ecosystem.

ADAX (PRO) token, listed on ExMarkets, is currently one of the few freely tradeable Cardano native tokens, which has been on a firm upward trend ever since its private and public sales. In a clear demonstration of the dedication of the project's community, over 12m tokens have already been allocated to the staking pool.

Story continues

Social Links

Twitter: https://twitter.com/adax_pro

Telegram: https://t.me/adaxcommunity

Media Contact

Company: ADAX

Contact: Dovydas P, CMO

E-mail: team@adax.pro

Website: https://adax.pro

Address: 3 Demetrakopoullou Street, Office 203, Nicosia 1090, Cyprus

SOURCE: ADAX

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ADAX Announces that Roger Ver, the Founder of Bitcoin.com, Joins the Investor Board - Yahoo Finance

Holiday on Welsh private island goes viral on TikTok and stuns people around the world – Wales Online

This private Welsh island has gone viral after a visitor shared a video of his holiday there.

Ynys Castell has left people around the world speechless as the holiday-maker shares his video of his drive up the tidal carriageway, atmospherically lit driveway and then the amazing panoramic views on arrival. With blue skies all around and boats bobbing on the vibrant water, it could be a scene from Sardinia or the Balearic islands.

But the unique island is actually located between Anglesey and the mainland and has incredible views of the Menai Strait and Snowdonia. You can find 23 other secret hideaways in Wales you'll never want to leave here.

READ MORE:23 hidden Welsh beaches so beautiful you'll be delighted you found them

The home sleeps up to 13 guests and is set in mature gardens with lawned areas, vantage seating spots, meandering paths and steps down to the water's edge and its very own slipway, North Wales Live reports. It is available to book through Menai Holidays.

You can watch the video here:

TikToker ___rta' shared the video and his clip has been seen by more than 456,000 people around the world and racked up nearly 55,000 likes, and thousands more comments and shares.

They then posted a second clip with extra footage from the island after so many people asked to see more from the incredible holiday let.

Other users took to the comment section to share their thoughts on the island.

I need the link, one user commented.

Oh my god I didnt know you could stay here, Ive always wanted to visit, another added.

One woman from Anglesey said: I have lived on Anglesey my whole life and I never knew you could drive on that island.

Tagging their friend, a third local said: How the hell do we live on Anglesey and NOT know about this?

Meanwhile, dozens of users likened the island's driveway, which is only visible during certain tide times, to hit horror movie starring Harry Potter's Daniel Radcliffe, The Woman in Black. And others are wondering if it's big enough to hire as a wedding venue.

Eagle-eyed viewers may remember having seen it somewhere before, though. In Keeping Faith, the absolutely stunning location is where Cadi's dad lives and where Cadi and her two sisters were brought up after their mother died. You can find out more about that here.

Share your thoughts in our comment section below.

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Holiday on Welsh private island goes viral on TikTok and stuns people around the world - Wales Online

Exploring the Elizabeth Islands (and swimming with cows) – The Boston Globe

The inn offers other nice touches, too: a bar area where guests can help themselves to complimentary drinks and snacks, bicycles to use to explore the island (bike trails are nearby), yoga on the lawn on Saturday mornings, and breakfast, prepared by Annabelle, and worthy of mention. All in all, it has a very upscale, unfussy, intimate vibe, the perfect balance between luxury resort and seaside inn.

After checking in on the first day, we explored the town, had dinner at Garde East overlooking the harbor, and slept like babies in our spacious rooms, under crisp Frette linens.

It might be a little sporty out there, Captain Eamonn Solway said the following morning as we boarded his 26-foot, six-passenger charter boat. But this is one of my favorite trips. I never get tired of it.

The trip is a long one, covering 50 miles around the Elizabeth Islands, a chain of 13 islands off the Cape Cod coastline, just north of Marthas Vineyard. All but two of the islands are owned by the Forbes family, a wealthy Boston-based enclave, who made their money trading opium and tea in the 19th century. We motored around the West Chop Lighthouse, and into the choppy waters of Vineyard Sound. It was a gorgeous day, bright and sunny, with great visibility. We passed Nonamesset Island, circled around a couple of striper fishermen, and motored along the shoreline of Naushon Island, the largest privately owned island in the Northeast. Solway stopped the boat in pretty Tarpaulin Cove overlooking the Tarpaulin Cove Lighthouse and a historic Colonial home nestled on the sandy shoreline.

During the 18th century, the cove would have been filled with merchant ships with their tall masts and billowing sails. There might have been 50 or more ships in the cove at one time, Solway said. It must have been quite a sight. The cove is one of the few deep-water shelters in Vineyard Sound, once the second busiest shipping passage in the world, and one of the most dangerous. Boats would shelter in the cove, pick up supplies and mail at the shoreline home, and most likely tip a few pints. Today its a popular spot for pleasure boats, and the beach, which is open to the public (thank you Forbes family), is well-liked by people and cows.

Sometimes the cows take the trail up to the lighthouse, hang out for a while near the boulders, and then head down to the beach for a dip, Solway said. Ive taken a lot of cow pictures here.

The cows were nowhere in sight until we left the cove and turned the corner, and there they were. What a nice private island life they had, one-percenter cows! The water was 61 degrees; obviously warm enough for bovines but not for us. We snapped photos of the black and white, Oreo cows as they grazed in the grass, laid in the sunshine and cooled in the water. It was a scene that was more verdant Scottish Highlands than New England coastline. Later, we spotted a large herd of Scottish Highland cows, big, hardy animals with horns, grazing and swimming in the water.

The outermost island in the Elizabeth Island chain is Cuttyhunk, a pretty slice of land with a small community. It is exactly what we want a New England island to be: well-maintained cottages and homes hugging the shoreline and rambling up hills, blooming flower boxes, gravel backroads, a community message board, a tiny K-12 schoolhouse, and views galore. A small market and a couple of take-out shacks line Fish Dock where we landed, including the Harbor Raw Bar, serving Cuttyhunk Island oysters. During the summer, they motor around the harbor offering fresh oysters on the half shell to boaters and visitors, Solway said. We were disappointed the Raw Bar was closed on our visit; instead of slurping, we walked the main street up the hill to Naval Lookout Point, an old battery station, with spectacular views.

Back on the boat, we still had miles to go, but the waters had calmed, the sun was still shining. Solway pointed out Penikese Island, with its own unique back story. It was once home to a teenage boys reform school, a former leprosy hospital, and the Anderson School of Natural History. Today, its a state-owned wildlife refuge.

Nearby, were hundreds of seals basking on a tiny island outcropping. This is a small colony, Solway says. The whole ecology out here has changed because of the overpopulation of gray seals. And theyre drawing in the sharks.

We left the cute, controversial seals in our wake and headed for the dramatic Gay Head Cliffs and the Gay Head Lighthouse, on the western end of Marthas Vineyard, before putt-putting slowly into Menemsha Pond, looping around the harbor. The small harbor and docks were filled with working fishing boats, including the Tomahawk. That boat is owned by Buddy Vanderhoop, a well-known charter fisherman on the island, Solway said. His great uncle was a Wampanoag who once harpooned Moby Dick, the only white sperm whale ever taken.

Menemsha Village is also known as a filming site for the movie Jaws; the remains of the Orca II, the boat that was sunk at the end of the film, sits abandoned on a beach across the village docks.

We listened to the cackling of sea birds and the shrill calls of oystercatchers as we made our way back to the Vineyard Haven town dock, before returning to the quiet, plush sanctuary of Nobnocket, windswept and sun-drenched, and happy (with photos of wading cows). Nobnocket Boutique Inn, 60 Mt. Aldworth Road, Vineyard Haven, 508-696-0859, http://www.nobnocket.com; off-season rates $195-$280, in-season $375-$499. Island Girl Excursions, 508-364-1936, http://www.islandgirlexcursions.com; Vineyard Sound & Cuttyhunk Loop, up to six passengers $950.

Diane Bair and Pamela Wright can be reached at bairwright@gmail.com

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Exploring the Elizabeth Islands (and swimming with cows) - The Boston Globe

Attempt to Spend Elon Musk’s $160 Billion Wealth With This Online Simulator – Newsweek

Spending Elon Musk's money might sound like an easyand delightfultask, but an online simulator has demonstrated that it's not so simple.

Forbes estimates Musk's net worth at around $160 billion, making him the third-richest person on the planet as of July 8, behind Amazon executive chairman Jeff Bezos and LVMH chief Bernard Arnault.

Could you fritter away such an enormous sum? An Italian web designer, Nino Trivelli, invites you to try via his shopping simulator "Spend Elon Musk's Fortune."

The rules are somewhat less strict than the challenge set for Richard Pryor in Brewster's Millions, in that you are allowed to accumulate assets, but the amounts involved are astronomical.

The cheapest item on Trivelli's list is a $299 Nintendo Switch; the most expensive is a $3 billion NFL team.

Other options include the Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci for an estimated $869 million, a mega-yacht for $300 million or a lifetime of eating out for every meal at $2.4 million.

You can't pay in Musk's beloved Dogecoin, but you do get a printable receipt at the endin case you want to return anything, obviously.

Trivelli, who made the site to practise his coding and web development skills, said: "Musk has repeatedly said he plans to sell most of his possessions, so I thought it was perfect for this small project."

The Tesla and SpaceX boss told his 57.9 million Twitter followers in June that he had sold his seven properties.

A year earlier, he had tweeted about his intention of "selling almost all physical possessions." He also told Joe Rogan's podcast in May 2020: "I think possessions kind of weigh you down. They're kind of an attack vector, you know?"

Trivelli shared his simulator to the "Internet Is Beautiful" community on Reddit, gaining over 8,000 votes in 12 hours. Users also shared their techniques for blowing billions in the comments.

"It can take hours if you spend it on 'regular' apartments, cars and TVs, which is crazy," said Trivelli.

One Redditor's successful method was to buy, among other treasures, 172 Mona Lisas. How he would do this was not explained.

The simulator isn't entirely accurate, as this example shows and some users have pointed out. If Musk were to liquidate all his wealth, he would be required to pay taxes. Still, technicalities aren't that important when you're trying to choose between buying 10 NBA teams and 30 private islands. (Treat yourselfget both.)

Trivelli was inspired by fellow web designer Neal Agarwal, who created a "Spend Bill Gates' Money" simulator, which asked players to spend $100 billion. Gates is worth about $124 billion, according to Forbes, and has donated tens of billions to charity.

Agarwal also created the popular website Ten Years Ago, which lets users browse the internet exactly how it appeared one decade ago, to the day. Speaking to Newsweek in May, he said: "There's been a surprising amount of discussion about old web design, with tons of people saying they liked how the internet used to look. For me, I think the site shows how fast the internet changes10 years isn't that long but on the internet it's an eternity."

Trivelli acknowledges Agarwal at the bottom of his simulator, writing: "Inspired by neal.fun, created by Nino."

The Italian told Newsweek: "There are some sites that do the same thingspend X moneybut none really captured the dimension of billionaires' wealth. So I made my own. I added percentages, which I think are key to understand the amount spent. And the fact that you have to click each time you want an itemnot just putting a number in an inputmakes it more enjoyable and rewarding, or maddening.

"The idea was to have fun fantasizing about buying things you dream to have, but also be thought-provoking. How much is too much?"

In June, Musk tweeted that the "only time I sell Tesla stock is when my stock options are expiring and I have no choice." So, the simulator might be as close as even he will get to the real thing.

Correction 7/8/21, 1 p.m. ET: This article was updated to state Musk is the world's third-richest person, according to Forbes on July 8.

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Attempt to Spend Elon Musk's $160 Billion Wealth With This Online Simulator - Newsweek

Dusit International subsidiary Elite Havens recognised for offering one of ‘The World’s Most Amazing Vacation Rentals’ in new Netflix series -…

Bangkok, Thailand Elite Havens, the leading provider of high-end vacation rentals in Asia and a subsidiary of Dusit International, one of Thailands leading hotel and property development companies, has seen the quality of its offerings celebrated in a new Netflix reality series, The Worlds Most Amazing Vacation Rentals.

The show, which premiered on 18 June 2021 and is now available for viewing to more than 208 million subscribers worldwide, sees hosts Mr Luis D. Ortiz (Million Dollar Listing), Ms Megan Batoon, and Ms Jo Franco (travel content creators) showcase remarkable properties around the globe and the life-changing experiences they have to offer.

A large portion of the first episode is devoted to NoKu Beach House, a sublime beachfront getaway in Seminyak, Bali, which is managed as part of Elite Havens hand-picked portfolio of close to 300 fully staffed private luxury havens throughout Asia.

Created by award-winning, internationally acclaimed interior designer Alex Zabotto-Bentley, and surrounded by an immaculate tropical garden, the private six-bedroom residence boasts a beach-facing plunge pool, a tennis court, and an outdoor cinema and spa. Guests also benefit from a full fleet of professional in-villa staff, including personal butlers, massage therapists, and a private chef who prepares customised gourmet meals.

NoKu Beach House serves as a wonderful showcase of the Elite Havens experience and the bespoke services our distinctive properties have to offer, said Ms Maya Rigg, CEO, Elite Havens. We are delighted this stunning villa has been featured in Netlixs exciting new show especially as host Luis D Ortiz, who spends his life around luxury properties, described it as luxury at its best. In the post COVID-19 world, luxury villas provide the perfect secluded and safe hideaway for travellers seeking a highly personalised holiday experience. And as the first episode of The Worlds Most Amazing Vacation Rentals highlights, Elite Havens has everything in place to exceed guest expectations with bespoke services, stunning locations, and unrivalled local insight.

Established in 1998, Elite Havens performs integrated marketing, reservations, concierge and management services for luxury villas across Indonesia, India, Japan, the Maldives, Sri Lanka and Thailand. Dusit International acquired the company in 2018 as part of its three-pronged strategy for balance, diversification, and expansion. This strategy includes providing broadened experiences for customers beyond Dusits traditional hotel brand line up in the midscale through to luxury segments.

In Dusits home base of Thailand, Elite Havens offers a wide range of secluded and luxury villas on the paradise islands of Phuket and Koh Samui. From three-bedroom residences in prime beachside locations, to a 20-bedroom mansion set within a sprawling garden, each property promises to offer unfaltering service standards; professional, highly trained villa staff; and the personalised services of the Elite Concierge.

Ms Suphajee Suthumpun, Group CEO, Dusit International, said, Leveraging our rich experience in operating full-service hotels for more than 70 years, Elite Havens gives travellers a unique opportunity to stay in some incredible private residences while enjoying the same gracious hospitality for which our legacy brands are renowned. With stunning locations and incredible designs, Elite Havens spacious properties are ideal for groups of friends and families seeking highly customised, secluded vacations at exceptional value for money. Thanks to Elite Havens unrivalled community links, they promise to offer unique journeys of self-discovery too. Netflixs new show highlights the distinct appeal of this fast-growing segment of the lodging spectrum, and we are delighted that Elite Havens offerings have been named among the worlds best.

From now through 31 August 2021, Elite Havens is offering up to 35% off stays at its villas in Thailand. This, and other special promotions, are available when booking direct via elitehavens.com.

The Worlds Most Amazing Vacation Rentals is streaming now on Netflix at https://www.netflix.com/th-en/title/81060530.

Photos of NoKu Beach House can be downloaded at https://app.box.com/s/f9di2gahcmehnstkekvw9g8paw7f99m9/folder/139828087767.

The Worlds Most Amazing Vacation Rentals is a Netflix reality series created by George Verschoor and Will Spjut. The show takes viewers on the journey of a lifetime, as hosts Luis D. Ortiz (Million Dollar Listing), Megan Batoon and Jo Franco (travel content creators) explore and live in some of the dreamiest properties ever built. With an eye for every budget and style of travel, these three experts explore vacation homes that range from affordable treehouses to exclusive private islands, and from unforgettable igloos to gourmet getaways, giving viewers a glimpse of the life-changing experiences that they have to offer.

Available to watch now at https://www.netflix.com/th-en/title/81060530

Established in 1948, Dusit International is a leading hospitality group listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand. Building on its two core areas of business Hotels & Resorts and Hospitality Education the company has expanded its operations over the past four years to comprise five business units. The additional units include Foods, Property Development, and Hospitality-Related Services. Today, the company"s property portfolio comprises more than 300 distinctive hotels, resorts and luxury villas operating under six brands across 15 countries worldwide, as well as two leading hospitality colleges with campuses in Thailand and the Philippines. Following a three-pronged strategy for sustainable growth, including balance, expansion and diversification, the company has recently expanded into food production, on-demand hospitality services, and property development to reach new markets and add further recurring streams of revenue to the company.

For more information, please visit http://www.dusit-international.com.

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Dusit International subsidiary Elite Havens recognised for offering one of 'The World's Most Amazing Vacation Rentals' in new Netflix series -...

How Neighbor Islands Are Working To Address Overtourism In Hawaii – Honolulu Civil Beat

Amid a post-pandemic tourism surge, Hawaiis counties are rethinking their reliance on the visitor industry with new laws meant to stem the flood of visitors.

Kauai is considering a new visitor parking fee at overcrowded beaches. The Hawaii County Council recently weighed the pros and cons of defunding Big Island tourism promotion since, regardless of marketing efforts, visitors seem to keep coming anyway.

Last week the Maui County Council introduced its toughest measure yet when it adopted a ban on new hotels in south and west Maui. No building permits will be given out for visitor accommodations in these areas, which includes Lahaina and Kihei, for up to two years.

Short of shuttering existing hotels, the ordered halt on new hotel construction is arguably the most substantial move the county could make considering it has no control over the number of rental cars on the roads or the number of airplanes flying in.

The changes come at a time when the Hawaii Tourism Authority, facing a shrinking budget, is shifting to take on a bigger role in managing tourism instead of mainly focusing on marketing Hawaii to the world.

State lawmakers this week underscored their dissatisfaction with the agencys efforts so far at tourism management by overriding Gov. David Iges veto of House Bill 862, which slashes the Hawaii Tourism Authoritys annual budget to $60 million from $79 million.

HTA President and CEO John De Fries said in a prepared statement that the agency going forward will collaborate at the federal, state and county levels more than ever before to alleviate concerns.

He pointed to the new Maui ALOHA Shuttle pilot program that launched July 3 to help reduce airport chaos amid a rental car shortage as an example of a creative solution generated in partnership between HTA and Maui County.

But some county officials raised questions about whether more promised collaborative efforts can come fast enough as the state seems to be losing its window to implement any real change to the industry post-pandemic.

Its like if youre stuck under a woodpile, which is kind of what tourism is, and it just keeps piling on while youre trying to figure out how to get out from under it, said Maui County Councilwoman Kelly Takaya King, who championed Mauis hotel moratorium. You wouldnt keep piling on more and more wood while youre trying to figure out how to stop the wood, right?

With overseas travel still restricted, Hawaiis desirability as a post-pandemic getaway for mainland tourists is soaring. But with restaurants and tours still operating at limited capacity and dire labor and rental car shortages, tourists are flooding an island chain thats perhaps less equipped than ever to cater to them.

Popular opinion is that something has to give to rein in the visitor industrys intrusion on the daily lives of residents fed up with traffic jams, overcrowded beaches and illegal parking.

Maui has become so inundated with tourists in recent months that the islands mayor asked airlines to cut back on flights. But the counties have no control over the number of flights coming to the islands. So while King said she appreciates the mayors efforts to ask the airlines to cut back, she said its really just semantics.

The council is going to take action where we can, and talking to the state or talking to the airlines is not action, King said. Its a request for someone else to take action. And we appreciate that the mayor is trying to do that, but the people are demanding action.

What is Fault Lines?

Although the states tourism authority is renewing its efforts to partner with the counties since May, for example, the HTA has convened multi-agency meetings to discuss collaborative efforts to mitigate overtourism on the Hana Highway the counties arent waiting around to see if these efforts will actually be successful.

King said shes working to find out whether it would be a good idea for the county to further crack down on illegal vacation rentals by charging a fine to tourists who stay in unpermitted accommodations instead of only holding owners of illegal rentals accountable.

This has always been a normal pattern of behavior for the counties whenever they feel issues are not being adequately addressed at the state level, they address them themselves, said Mufi Hannemann, president and CEO of the Hawaii Lodging & Tourism Association and a seasoned politician.

This occurred during the pandemic a lot and its going to continue, he said. As much as we try to group them together as one, the counties see themselves as very different.

How many tourists is too many? Maui Countys strategic plan for the tourism industry defines it like this: the number of visitors on Maui at any given time should not exceed a third of the resident population.

That means that Maui, which has a population of 157,000, shouldnt have more than about 52,000 visitors at a time, or one tourist for every three residents.

In 2019, the average number of visitors was equivalent to 43% of Mauis population, or about 67,500 people, according to Dick Mayer, a retired UH Maui College professor who served as vice chairman of the committee that advised Maui County on setting the 33% threshold for Maui island visitors.

King said residents are no longer willing to put up with a level of tourism that violates the countys destination management plan.

People even before the pandemic were getting fed up with tourists and now everybody is exasperated, King said. It just came back too fast and too furious. So the momentum and the political will is there.

In contrast to whats happening on Maui, Kauai Mayor Derek Kawakami said his goal is not to slash the number of visitors to the Garden Isle but to manage them better once they arrive.

The county is working with the private sector to stand up alternative modes of transportation, such as shuttle systems, to help tourists navigate the island while reducing their dependency on daily car rentals that clog the roads.The county is also considering reengineering some beach parking lots to include a visitor shuttle drop-off lane.

And the mayor said hes considering ordering periodic shutdowns of county campgrounds to give the natural resources a break an idea inspired by the pandemic-related shutdowns, which had positive environmental impacts on popular beach parks.

Im not sure that me saying that I want to reduce the number of visitors is honest because I would be telling people something that sounds great but is very difficult to achieve, Kawakami said. But I do think we can address how these visitors are visiting our island and it all boils down to the amount of vehicles that are on our roads and taking up parking spaces.

A group formed in 2020 to identify Kauais strengths and weaknesses as a visitor destination cited poor leadership at the state and federal levels as the islands top threat, especially if communications between agencies dont improve.

Of particular concern to the group was overuse leading to poor conditions at state-managed beach parks.

When the state pulled back funding for lifeguards at several beach parks in April, including Kee Beach at Haena State Park on Kauai, Kawakami said the county stepped in to fill the budget hole.

I decided that you cannot compromise lives and so I paid out of our county pocket for lifeguards for the state, he said.

Its like when we have a visitor that needs to get rescued on a state trail we dont blink, Kawakami said. We send our county helicopter and our county firefighter to go rescue that visitor. And I think the biggest thing I would ask the state is to just treat me as a partner in that same way.

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How Neighbor Islands Are Working To Address Overtourism In Hawaii - Honolulu Civil Beat