The crypto factor: investigating jurisdiction, lis pendens and the greatest mystery in the crypto world – Lexology

Bitcoin is the worlds first decentralized cryptocurrency. The concept and technology behind Bitcoin was first published in October 2008 when its pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto, sent the now famous protocol to a mailing list of cryptography enthusiasts. That protocol has since spawned a system of value and exchange with a current market cap of ~$150 billion.

Thus begins the complaint of Ira Kleiman, the personal representative of the estate of Dave Kleiman, against Craig Wright, filed in the Southern District of Florida in February 2018. The lawsuit concerns the ownership of hundreds of thousands of Bitcoin and the intellectual property rights associated with certain blockchain technology.

Craig Wright is an Australian computer scientist and businessman. Since 2016, he has claimed that he is Satoshi Nakamoto, a claim that has been subject to a lot of scepticism in the crypto world. He is also the backer of a hard fork chain of Bitcoin called Bitcoin Satoshi Vision (Bitcoin SV), which he established with the support of Canadian-Antiguan entrepreneur Calvin Ayre in 2018.

Whilst most eyes in the crypto community have been on the Kleiman v Wright lawsuit, which is set for a jury trial beginning on 13 October 2020, our eye has been drawn to the libel lawsuits brought by Dr Wright against crypto critics who deny his claim to being the Bitcoin inventor.

Lis pendens: courting controversy?

The first claim (Craig Wright v Magnus Granath [2020] EWHC 51 (QB), [2020] All ER (D) 45 (Feb)) relates to Magnus Granath, a citizen of Norway, resident in Oslo, tweeting under the Twitter handle @hodlonaut. On 17 March 2019, he tweeted as follows:

The forensics to CSW's first attempt to fraudulently 'prove' he is Satoshi. Enabled by @gavinandresen. Never forget. @CraigWrightIsAFraud.

The innuendo meaning of this tweet, according to Dr Wright, was that Dr Wright had fraudulently claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto.

On 29 March 2019, Mr Granath received a letter of claim from Dr Wrights solicitors in relation to nine tweets, complaining specifically of libel in the 17 March 2019 tweet. The letter requested that Mr Granath identify himself, remove the tweets, undertake not to repeat the statements and apologise (including making a statement in open court).

Mr Granath deleted the tweets and, in May 2019, issued proceedings in the Oslo District Court seeking negative declaratory relief that he was not liable to pay damages for libel to Dr Wright.

On 26 June 2019, Dr Wright issued High Court proceedings against Mr Granath in relation to the 17 March 2019 tweet, seeking (i) damages for libel, (ii) an injunction restraining further publication, and (iii) an order that Mr Granath publish a summary of the judgment in the proceedings.

Mr Granath brought an application under Article 27 of the Lugano Convention 2007, challenging the jurisdiction of the English court, on the basis that there are ongoing proceedings in Norway related to the same cause of action (the lis pendens doctrine).

The case raised a novel point on the application of the lis pendens doctrine to defamation cases. In determining Mr Granaths application, the court considered:

On the first question, the court considered whether there was a significant or substantial degree of commonality or overlap between the two claims. A key issue in both proceedings was whether the tweet was defamatory. The objet in both proceedings was the same: establishing liability or non-liability for the tweet. As such, there was a risk of conflicting decisions, and Article 27 applied.

In relation to the second question, the court considered the three bases for jurisdiction over a libel claim concerning an internet publication:

Whilst the claim in the English court engaged the centre of interest and mosaic principles, the judge concluded that Mr Granath's claim in Norway was directed as a global claim that Mr Granath was not liable for any damage suffered across any member state. On that basis, Dr Wright had no substantive right to sue in the UK in a situation where the lis pendens provisions of Article 27 of the Lugano Convention applied.

Permission to appeal this decision has been granted and the appeal is expected to be heard in October 2020.

Jurisdiction and defamation

The second libel claim (Craig Wright v Roger Ver [2020] EWCA Civ 672, [2020] All ER (D) 42 (Jun)) was against Roger Ver, a bitcoin investor and commentator on cryptocurrencies. Mr Ver was born in California. He is a citizen of St Kitts & Nevis, but lives in Japan. Like Mr Granath, Mr Ver does not accept that Dr Wright is Satoshi Nakamoto.

Mr Ver and Dr Wright fell out in November 2018 as a result of their competing views on Bitcoin: Dr Wright supported the Bitcoin SV version; Mr Ver developed another version known as Bitcoin ABC (Adjustable Blocksize Cap).

Dr Wrights claim relates to a video posted by Mr Ver on the Bitcoin.com YouTube channel on 15 April 2019, Mr Vers tweet containing the YouTube video posted on 3 May 2019, and a reply on Mr Vers Twitter account posted on 3 May 2019 from @BkkShadow. Dr Wright claims that the innuendo meaning of these publications was that he had fraudulently claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto.

Mr Ver challenged the courts jurisdiction, on the basis of the Defamation Act 2013, section 9. Section 9 provides that where a defendant is not domiciled in the UK, another member state or a member of the Lugano Convention, the court does not have jurisdiction to hear the action unless it is satisfied that England and Wales is clearly the most appropriate place in which to bring an action in respect of the alleged defamatory statement.

At first instance, the court found that England and Wales was not clearly the most appropriate place in which to bring the libel claim in this action. Dr Wright appealed.

There were two questions on appeal:

The Court of Appeal concluded that England and Wales was not clearly the most appropriate jurisdiction to hear the claim, and that a state in the US is the most appropriate jurisdiction, based on the following:

The courts finding in Wright v Granath (assuming it is not overturned on appeal) that the lis pendens doctrine applies to claims in tort, and the analysis of the degree of overlap required between parallel proceedings under Article 27 of the Lugano Convention, sets a useful precedent for future tortious claims brought in multiple jurisdictions.

Wright v Ver sets out a useful, if non-exhaustive, list of the factors the court will consider when approaching section 9 of the Defamation Act 2013. In particular, claimants wishing to avail themselves of English defamation law should be prepared to produce strong evidence of the damage suffered in England and Wales, in comparison to any damage suffered abroad, or globally, in order to demonstrate that England is clearly the most appropriate jurisdiction to hear the claim.

Other libel lawsuits

As a result of the judgment in Wright v Ver, Dr Wright has reportedly dropped two other lawsuits he was pursuing against the CEO of Blockstream, Adam Back (based in Malta) and Ethereums co-founder, Vitalik Buterin (resident in Singapore), both of whom have publicly doubted his claim to be the inventor of Bitcoin.

There is one ongoing claim by Dr Wright against Bitcoin podcaster, Peter McCormack. Unlike all of the other potential defendants, Mr McCormack is resident in the UK, and so section 9 of the Defamation Act 2013 will not apply. If the claim proceeds, Mr McCormack will need to produce evidence of the truth of the allegedly defamatory statements.

Could this claim finally solve one of the greatest mysteries in the crypto world? Or will it be the Florida Kleiman v Wright lawsuit? Watch this space.

This article was originally published in New Law Journal.

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The crypto factor: investigating jurisdiction, lis pendens and the greatest mystery in the crypto world - Lexology

Coming Soon: Craig Wright The Movie (and Book) – Cointelegraph

Bitcoin SV benefactor Calvin Ayre has announced hes funding a documentary centered around the life and times of Craig Wright, the Australian man who claims to have invented Bitcoin.

According to an Aug. 12 tweet from Ayre, the billionaire BSV backer and nChain board member has already given the go ahead to filming and provided an in-production still. Ayre said he has hired a documentary film crew from London and they will dig through everything regarding Wrights claim to be Satoshi Nakamoto.

Reaction to the news was typically divided between BSV supporters like Neil Gallacher who said, the more exposure on this topic, the better for everyone, and doubters like Crypto Geek who labeled it a propaganda piece.

Ayre also revealed he has hired an investigative reporter to write a book about Wright, after the Australian publisher cancelled Behind The Mask: Craig Wright and the Battle for Bitcoin in January.

Craig Wright documentary filming. Source: Calvin Ayre

Affirm Press told local media at the time the book had been dropped because the threat of litigation was too high. Ayre offered to fund and publish the book himself, but nothing came of it. Asked about the incident this week, Ayre said he was now working with a writer on our own book:

They say it was not a catch and kill but they would have to if they were paid to ice the book I am suspicious, but we have a reputable investigative reporter who will dig into the history and do a book for us.

The authors of Behind The Mask are yet to release a statement on the matter, however if the book had provided evidence disputing Wrights claims of inventing Bitcoin, the publisher would have been wise to be cautious.

Wright is particularly litigious even when he doesnt have a particularly strong case and has filed lawsuits against Blockstream CEO Adam Back and Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin for defamation for doubting his claims, and subsequently dropped both cases. A similar case against Roger Ver was dropped by a U.K. court in May. A case against podcaster Peter McCormack is ongoing. McCormack was recently ordered to pay around $24,000 in costs to Wright. Discovery in the matter begins on September 4.

Wright is not the only member of his family with ambitions to feature in a crypto-related movie. His sister, Lisa N Edwards (who runs a trading group called Satoshis Sister), is developing a feature called CoinRunners based around her life as a Bitcoin trader. A work of fiction featuring such scenes as a Porsche going over a cliff, the movie has been put on hold until coronavirus is over, according to a May 4 update by Edwards.

In other movie news, Cointelegraph reported in June that Hollywood would be producing a movie based on the book Bitcoin Billionaires with Cameron and Tyler Winkelvoss. A recent release called Money Plane starring Adam Copeland featured a plot about a heist from a bulletproof casino in the sky carrying $1 billion in cryptocurrency.

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Coming Soon: Craig Wright The Movie (and Book) - Cointelegraph

Founding fathers ‘cut from similar cloth’ | Opinion | ehextra.com – EH Extra

Dear Editor,

After reading Flawed men, perhaps, but great deeds in the Aug. 8 EagleHerald, I got to wondering who would write such an editorial in defense of Columbus, an entrepreneur seeking great wealth and high office who would enslave, torture and murder the indigenous population to obtain his goals? And it struck me that it must be someone who makes a very large salary supporting the rich and powerful and making them look as good as possible when theyve done serious wrong. Columbus did more than just mistreat the indigenous population. He committed a crime against humanity and not a great deed.

And our founding fathers were cut from a very similar cloth as Columbus. They also aspired to high office and stockpiled fortunes through both chattel and wage slavery. They designed a government that would protect the rich and powerful and would pacify and hold down the working class, poor, and slaves who they considered to be beneath them. These were not great deeds, but great evils.

The founding fathers were the role models for governance that holds back real progress towards true democracy and continues to haunt us to this very day. President James Madison, considered to be one of the most important founding fathers, said that democracy needed to be limited and government designed to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority and that unchecked, democratic communities were subject to the turbulency and weakness of unruly passions See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federalist_No._10#Background.

Professor Noam Chomsky, who many consider to be this countrys greatest intellectual, described very accurately the thinking and behavior of the founding fathers in this regard in a YouTube video entitled Noam Chomsky - Madison vs. Aristotle.

The Bible also speaks against the great sins of the rich and powerful in no uncertain terms. Our founding fathers were much like the Pharisees that Jesus denounced and promised would never enter His Kingdom because of their material wealth. Luke 6:24; Matthew 19:23-24; 23:1-39. James warns us how these big-money types exploit the poor, slander the name of Jesus, and are destined for horrible destruction in the end times. James 2:5-7; 5:1-6.

The author of the Detroit News editorial should have dug deeper into the Scriptures and considered the Commandment against making and worshipping idols as applied to statues of rich and powerful men. Exodus 20:4.

William Swenson

Menominee

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Founding fathers 'cut from similar cloth' | Opinion | ehextra.com - EH Extra

It’s Time the Restaurant Industry Shed This Legacy of Slavery – Triple Pundit

No one questions the fact that restaurant employees, and owners as well, are suffering greatly due to the chaos COVID-19 has wrought over the past several months. But lost in the backbiting on Capitol Hill over whether we should pay a premium on unemployment benefits, or restore the three-martini-lunch deduction, is the fact that the restaurant industry could benefit from structural, financial and legal help during this crisis.

Meanwhile, essential workers including restaurant employees are facing threats of evictions and hunger.

To that end, last week a coalition of dozens of restaurant workers and leading restaurateurs in New York asked the states governor, Andrew Cuomo, to deploy his executive authority to push for changes thatboth benefit and reform the states restaurant industry.

The Safe and Just Reopening Plan looks out for restaurant owners and workers alike. For restaurateurs, the plan advocates for both tax relief for restaurants and the ability to charge a safe reopening fee if restaurants agree to certain health and safety protocols in the era of COVID-19.

For workers, such a plan would allow wait staff to tip out kitchen and other back-end staffand, most importantly, it eliminates the subminimum hourly wage that has long been the norm in most U.S. states.

The federal minimum wage for tipped workers is $2.13 per hour. While actual wages vary from state to state, all workers who receive tips are paid less than the state's minimum wage for otherworkers.Thissubminimum wage is a holdover from a long begone era,and its critics say that the federally mandated low hourly wage is part and parcel of the systemic racism endemic across the U.S.

According to historians who focus on the post-Civil War era, the subminimum wage has its origins in slavery. After Emancipation, there was plenty of low-wage labor available to businesses such as restaurants. The hospitality sector was quickto catch onto the idea that hiring Black people to work for tips would be a way to keep labor costs down. At the same time, growing trends in transatlantic travel introduced American travelers to a European custom that appeared sophisticated once U.S. citizens returned to their side of the pond. The problem with the sophisticated veneer of tipping was that whats nowconsidered etiquette has its origins in racism.

One company notorious for this practice during the later 19th century was the Pullman Company, which hired Black porters to cater to its well-heeled white customers who traveled by train across the U.S.

Fast forward decades later, and coalitions including One Fair Wage insist its time to rethink the way in which the restaurant industry pays employees.

The subminimum wage in New York State is higher than the U.S. federal rate ($11.80 versus $2.13), but in this day in age anyone knows the math doesnt add up to allow for a minimal standard of living. In New York, tipped workers, still subject to a subminimum wage by law, are more than twice as likely to live in poverty and rely on Medicaid compared to the rest of the state workforce, says the authors of the groups most recent report.

One Fair Wage also says its data show that, nationally, white male tipped workers make about $5 an hour more than their Black women counterparts; in New York City, the discrepancy is $8 an hour. And the gaps arent just in wages: The group's research shows that restaurants were twice as likely to hire white workers over people of color. Further, 40 percent of white managers in the restaurant industry demonstrated a clear preference to hire white people over Black peopleand other people of color.

To date, 50 restaurant owners and at least 200 workers have joined One Fair Wage to support the Safe and Just Reopening plan. Joining them are celebrity chefs David Chang of Momofuku fame, as well as Tom Colicchio and Danny Meyer.

Chang in particular has been vocal about the ravages COVID-19 has heaped on restaurant workers, and emerged as a leader when it comes to showing how restaurants can operate safely during this era. Forced to close some of his restaurants, he co-launched a fund to help employees make ends meet, and he directed his human resources staff to pay healthcare premiums for laid-off employees as long as it was financially possible.

As of press time, the One Fair Wage-led directive is focused on New York, but it offers a template of how all U.S.restaurants and their employees can survive during a pandemic that so far appears to have no end in sight.

Be sure to sign up for the weeklyBrands Taking Stands newsletter, which arrives in your inbox every Wednesday.

Image credit: Jason Leung/Unsplash

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It's Time the Restaurant Industry Shed This Legacy of Slavery - Triple Pundit

Brentwood couple charged with labor trafficking of nanny – thepress.net

A Brentwood couple, have been charged with conspiracy, extortion and labor trafficking of their in-house nanny, the district attorneys office announced in a press release Monday.

Ijeoma Chukwunyeluand Nnamdi Onwuzulike made their first court appearance last month, and entered pleas of not guilty in Contra Costa Countys first criminal labor trafficking case. In addition to labor trafficking under Penal Code section 236.1(a), defendants are charged with extortion and conspiracy to violate Labor Code section 1199 which requires employers to follow Californias minimum wage and hour requirements.

In this case, a woman was recruited from outside the United States to be a nanny for a family with young children in East Contra Costa County. Defendants instructed the victim to obtain her passport and visa fraudulently and claim she was coming to California for three weeks as a tourist to attend the wedding of her son and the defendants daughter. Because of her economic circumstances, and fear that the job opportunity would be given to someone else, the victim followed the instructions she was given. She was not aware of her legal rights to minimum wages, breaks, overtime or employment conditions under California law.

When the victim arrived in California in April of 2017, defendants took possession of her passport and visa. From the time she started until October of 2018, the defendants required her to perform work beyond what she was hired to do. She was required to sleep on the floor of the childrens room so she could care for them round the clock, to cook for the entire family and clean their 5-bedroom house for no additional wages. They did not provide the victim with breaks or days off from her work responsibilities as required by California Law. The defendants never paid her overtime for any of the additional hours she worked and continued to employ her with knowledge that her visa expired. This made the victim a particularly vulnerable worker without immigration status who was fearful of deportation.

This investigation was a collaborative effort between the Brentwood Police Department, the Contra Costa County District Attorneys Office, Homeland Security Investigations, the United States Department of Labor, and the California Department of Industrial Relations/Division of Labor Standards Enforcement and the Victim Witness Assistance Program within the DAs Office. The investigation began when American Medical Response (AMR) personnel recognized a victim in need of assistance and connected her to resources that could help her.

As the COVID-19 pandemic causes massive job losses and severe economic instability, California workers are more vulnerable than ever to exploitative employment practices. Our collaborative efforts on this investigation led to a successful filing of this case. I am proud to work with our partners at all levels of government to protect workers and seek justice for those harmed by predatory behavior, stated Contra Costa County District Attorney Diana Becton.

The California Labor Code and a series of 17 Wage Orders maintained by the California Department of Industrial Relations set forth state minimum wage and overtime requirements for nearly all types employees, including live-in domestic workers. The orders can be found here: https://www.dir.ca.gov/iwc/WageOrderIndustries.htm and information about worker rights can be found here: https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/dlse.html. These rights apply to California employees without regard to the persons immigration status. Such illegal practices by employers could carry both civil and criminal liability for the employer even if the worker agrees with the employment conditions out of financial desperation, concern for their immigration status, or simply because the employee did not know their rights.

The experience of this domestic worker represents countless more who are preyed upon because of economic desperation. These criminal acts are not only illegal but immoral, said California Labor Commissioner Lilia Garcia-Brower. Human trafficking is modern day slavery, an we are committed to stopping it by partnering with agencies to eradicate this horrific crime.

The case is being prosecuted by the DAs Office, which is a member of the Contra Costa Human Trafficking Taskforce. The Taskforce is comprised of local, state and federal law enforcement and community-based victim service partners. The Task Force works collaboratively to identify and investigate all forms of trafficking in our community while providing victims with culturally competent services and support.

Our agency remains relentlessly committed to dedicating resources to disrupt and dismantle organized crime associated with human trafficking, and will continue to work collaboratively with our Taskforce partners to make an even greater impact, said Investigations Lieutenant Walter OGrodnick with the Brentwood Police Department.

Any person who thinks they may be a victim of labor trafficking in Contra Costa County can make a report to the DAs Office Human Trafficking Tip Line at 925-957-8658.

HSI appreciates the opportunity to partner with the various agencies in the Contra Costa County Human Trafficking Task Force in order to provide victims with the resources they need and deserve and to hold the violators to account for actions akin to modern day slavery, said Tatum King, Special Agent in Charge - HSI San Francisco.

Case information: People v. Nnamdi Onwuzulike and Ijeoma Chukwunyelu, Docket Number 04-199478-9

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Brentwood couple charged with labor trafficking of nanny - thepress.net

‘Hamilton’ ignores the statesman’s strategy to fund genocidal warfare against Indigenous Peoples – The Conversation CA

The recent release of the musical Hamilton by the Disney+ channel on July 3 received favourable reviews across Canada and the United States.

Critics have lauded the musical for its innovative mash-up ofhip hop, jazz, blues, rap, R&B, and Broadway, and for how the show jubilantly demonstrates hip hops entwinement with American traditional ideals of self-invention and freedom.

The musical has also been praised for casting mostly Black and brown faces in roles of the American Founding Fathers, a move that underscored how political ideals in the United States belong to and are creatively advanced by all Americans.

What is especially interesting in the summer of 2020 is that Hamilton was presented at a time of intense political divisiveness and protest in the U.S. The streaming of Hamilton also gained dramatic significance in the context of the recent Black Lives Matter protests in face of racist police violence.

Many have interpreted the July 3 release, one day before American Independence Day, as intended to remind patriotic Americans of their ability to unite and work towards a fairer government and society.

Ever since the musical was originally staged in 2015, many professional historians were surprised that a musical about statesman and Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, mostly known for having his portrait on the 10-dollar bill, would be such a commercial and critical success.

Given Hamiltons interest in challenging traditional narratives, demonstrated both by shows largely Black and racialized cast and brilliant appropriation of diverse musical and theatrical traditions, some historians of the American Revolution have been puzzled that the show didnt explicitly address how the white historical figures were connected to the history of slavery and anti-Black racism.

Although the shows creator and star, Lin-Manuel Miranda, portrayed Hamilton as a man dedicated to the abolition of slavery, historians like Annette Gordon-Reed have argued that Hamilton was only moderately concerned about eradicating the institution of slavery in the U.S.

For Hamilton, ensuring the survival of the U.S. as a nation-state trumped any other concerns, including slavery. This meant making awkward compromises with the Southern slave-holding states.

Neither the musical nor most historians have addressed how Hamiltons political ideas affected Indigenous Peoples. Hamilton was not as directly involved in diplomatic negotiations with Indigenous nations, unlike President George Washington.

However, Indigenous Peoples cannot be separated from the story of the founding of the U.S. This claim is most recently put forth in a study suggesting Indigenous history is central to all U.S. history. This is particularly true for the first decade following the end of the American War of Independence.

After Britain had surrendered its claims to North America, with the exception of Canada, to the U.S. in 1783, a number of powerful Indigenous nations still occupied lands west of the Appalachians. These nations included the Cherokees and the Creeks in the Southeast as well as a confederacy of nations consisting of Shawnees, Wyandots, Lenapes (Delawares), Ojibwes, Ottawas and others in the Ohio region, known as the United Indian Nations.

Joseph Brant (Thayendanegea), the Mohawk leader who had been closely aligned with Britain since before the American Revolution, was one of the initiators of the United Indian Nations in September 1783. There was a constant fear among U.S. politicians that these Indigenous nations would align with Britain and Spain against the United States.

As historians Gregory Lablavsky and Jeffrey Ostler have shown, Hamilton advocated for a federal military force that would be able to confront the savage tribes on our Western frontier [who] ought to be regarded as our natural enemies during the constitutional ratification debate in 1788.

According to Hamilton, the Indigenous nations in the west would support the Spanish in Florida and the British in the Great Lakes region because they have most to fear from us and most to hope from them.

In Hamiltons opinion, a strong national army was necessary to deal with the European and Indigenous threats to the new nation. Once the U.S. constitution was ratified in 1788 with its emphasis on a strong central government, Hamilton became the first Secretary of the Treasury in 1789.

In that role, Hamilton ensured that the American government had an army at its disposal that could be deployed to wage genocidal warfare against Indigenous nations.

In June 1790, Brig.-Gen. Josiah Harmar, the commander in charge of the U.S. military efforts against the United Indian Nations in the Ohio region, received instructions from Secretary of War Henry Knox to go on the offensive to extirpate, utterly, if possible, the said Banditti. This was a demeaning reference to the Indigenous warriors who were defending their lands and families.

The verb extirpate was used in the 18th century as synonymous with exterminate.

Although the Indigenous confederacy was able to hold back the U.S. army for several years, the American military wore down the confederacy by 1794 by repeatedly destroying Indigenous villages and cornfields. The actions of the army forced Indigenous Peoples to surrender the fertile Ohio Valley to the U.S. in 1795.

Joseph Brant and his followers, mostly Mohawks and other members of the Haudenosaunee or Six Nations confederacy, escaped American expansion by resettling on the Grand River in Upper Canada. However, Brant and the Haudenosaunee soon became embroiled in complex negotiations with British officials over the meaning of the Haldimand Proclamation of October 1784 that originally created the huge tract of land for the Six Nations along the Grand River.

The Shawnees, Wyandots and Delawares continued to defend their lands against the United States until the end of the War of 1812. After 1815, many members of the United Indian Nations migrated to Missouri and Kansas to escape American expansion. During the 1830s, the remaining Indigenous Peoples in Ohio and Indiana were forcibly removed by the U.S. government to reserves in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma and Kansas). Their descendants still live there today.

Clearly, Hamiltons ideas of a federal army and an expanding nation had fateful consequences for the Indigenous Peoples who lived in what is now Ohio and Indiana.

Just like the musical could have dealt more fully with slavery, the inclusion of Indigenous perspectives would have forced audiences to grapple with the implications of Hamiltons policies.

For all its brilliant creativity, the musical missed out on the unique opportunity to inform the public about the impact of the new American nation upon the Indigenous nations of North America. Perhaps one day a new musical will be written about the origins of the U.S. that explicitly incorporates Indigenous perspectives and actors.

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'Hamilton' ignores the statesman's strategy to fund genocidal warfare against Indigenous Peoples - The Conversation CA

Sikoryak’s ‘Constitution Illustrated’ Pays Homage to Comics and the Constitution – PopMatters

Constitution Illustrated R. Sikoryak

Drawn & Quarterly

July 2020

How many artists have created their own genres? Robert Sikoryak may stand among few, especially for genres within the comics form.

He has an eloquently simple concept: combine a set of words with incongruous drawings in the styles of famous comics. For his first 2009 graphic novel, Masterpiece Comics, Sikoryak retold classic works of literature, such as The Scarlet Letter, Doctor Faustus, and Crime and Punishment, featuring Little Lulu as Hawthorne's Pearl, Garfield as Marlowe's Mephistopheles, and Batman as Dostoyevsky's homicidal protagonist.

In 2017, Terms and Conditions earned Sikoryak greater attention for an even stranger premise: the complete, unabridged iTunes user agreement with Steve Jobs drawn in 94 pages of constantly changing styles. For The Unquotable Trump, released later the same year, he applied his formula to political satire, inserting Donald Trump cartoon images and verbatim quotes into comic book covers, with an appropriate emphasis on supervillains.

Now Sikoryak delves even deeper into American politics by adapting the most central US text. Constitution Illustrated provides the complete, unaltered Articles and Amendments in 114 cartoon vignettes. The book is both Sikoryak's widest range of comics homages yet and, more oddly, his most practical. Where the iTunes contract was a comically absurd choice because so few people have ever bothered to read it, the Constitution is, of course, a keystone of US law and culture. Sikoryak even evokes a pocket-sized edition, that ubiquitous prop used by politicians and pundits in need of something to clench and wave above their heads.

I just used my copy to check whether the 19th Amendment established the right of women to both vote and hold office or just to vote. The page features a spot-on imitation of H. G. Peter, the first but uncredited Wonder Woman artist. That pairing is a good illustration of Sikoryak's logic and humor. Though unlike the adaptions in The Unquotable Trump, the page isn't an exact recreation (like John Romita's 1975 The Hulk on the Rampage cover), but a formally freer combination of style and subject. (The 19th Amendment, by the way, is just for the right to vote.)

If you're a comics aficionado, Constitution Illustrated is also the ultimate pop quiz. I didn't keep score as I flipped through the first time, but I chuckled when I recognized the logic behind each discordant pairing, especially the superhero motif. For Article I, Section I describing the division of Congress into the Senate and the House, Sikoryak draws two muscular and oppositely colored patriots sprinting in a mirrored pose cribbed from the 1976 cover of The Greatest Race of All Time! Superman vs. the Flash. The two DC heroes are allies on the same team, but they still compete against each other all too often. That antagonism increases when the House's Super Friends face a row of Senate supervillains in an illustration of the House's sole power to create tax-raising bills and the Senate's power to amend them.

Instead of Spider-Man's antagonists Prowler and J. Jonah Jameson watching Peter Parker fall from a window, Sikoryak draws a presiding Chief Justice and a Senator watching the President in the same posean apt illustration for the protocols for trying an impeachment. President Parker bears no resemblance to either Donald Trump or Bill CIinton, but Sikoryak kindly adds tingling spider senses emanata as a helpful clue (something artist Romita did not include on the original 1969 cover).

A 1943-based colonial Captain America blocks a spray of musket bulletsmetaphorically blocking the states' ability to wage war, a power exclusive to the federal government. Sikoryak leaps to 1992 for Article II, Section 2's description of the President's role as Commander in Chief. I admit I didn't recognize Jim Lee's Wild C.A.T.s cover, just the decade-defining style which I took for Rob Liefeld. Happily, Sikoryak provides a cheat sheet in the appendixes, listing the source for each of adaption.

The list of comics artists that get a respectful nod in Sikoryak's Constitution Illustrated is dizzyingly eclectic. It includes Alison Bechdel, Garry Trudeau, Roz Chast, Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Charles Schultz, Frank Miller, Scott McCloud, Adrian Tomine, and many more. This book could be used in courses in comics and cartoon history, as it features some of the earliest creators, like Richard Outcault (The Yellow Kid) and Windsor McCay (Little Nemo), and some of the most recent, like Noelle Stevenson (Lumberjanes) and Bianca Xunise (Six Chix).

Black artists George Herriman, Jackie Ormes, Matt Baker, Barbara Brandon-Croft, and Aaron McGruder are represented, as well as the presentation of Black characters by non-Black artists. The Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez tribute is the most diverse, implying a hope that the Electoral College, which it describes should reflect the same level of diversity. Less subtlety, Sikoryak draws a chain-breaking Luke Cage to illustrate the slavery-ending 13th Amendment. His 25th Amendment depicts a Black vice-president assuming the presidencyjust as the Black character John Stewart assumed the role of Green Lantern in DC comics.

My favorite, though it's disturbing, is Mandrake the Magician turning his African servant Lothar partially invisible beneath the census directive to count only "three fifths of all other persons", meaning, of course, slaves. The image unites the racism of the Article with the racism of the 1930s characters. It also highlights how any contemporary analysis of the Constitution must address its deep flaws too. Sikoryak's satirical pairings breathe new and sometimes uncomfortable life into the United States' most living document.

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Seafarers face welfare crisis as Coronavirus compounds appalling conditions – The Canary

Outbreaks of Coronavirus (Covid-19) on cruise ships are currently disrupting holidaymakers plans across the world. But away from the headlines of the inconvenience to privileged travellers, a global human crisis is unfolding. Seafarers are suffering. And they are largely unnoticed.

Pretty much every country in the world depends on shipping. Globally over 1.6 million people work as seafarers. Ships transport around 90% of the worlds trade. In 2016, then-United Nations general secretary Ban Ki-moon released a statement saying:

Everybody in the world benefits from shipping We ship food, technology, medicines, and memories.

He also said that the shipping industry has helped improve global living standards and helped lift millions of people out of acute poverty. But he acknowledged:

the vast majority of people are unaware of the key role played by the shipping industry, which is largely hidden from view.

This hidden from view situation has allowed the ongoing exploitation of maritime workers. Partly because of the international nature of shipping, its difficult to regulate.

Wages in the shipping industry are often shockingly low. Last year, the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) reported:

super exploitation on merchant ships in UK waters sees basic rates of pay as low as 1.83 per hour

This means UK workers are undercut by workers from overseas, which causes problems for both seafarers in the UK and in countries that supply the majority of crews. But the maritime industry isseen as a special case, which allows the exploitation to continue and causes discrimination against foreign workers.

But its not only financially that maritime workers suffer. A recent in-depth study found that seafarers are likely to suffer in five main areas. Personnel Todaylists them as:

Fatigue impact of long working hours, changes in working hours, shift work and overtime

Working environment heat, noise, ship movement, food quality, length of deployment, access to gym and exercise equipment

Role level of autonomy, task and skills variety, workload, job satisfaction and rank

Socialisation social interaction on board, cultural awareness, transient nature of crews on a ship, and openness of communication

Leadership the level of support offered and influence over conditions and culture.

In 2017, the maritime union Nautilus demanded action from the UK government to tackle exploitation of seafarers in the UK, many of whom were victims of modern slavery, and many more who were living in unacceptable conditions, with infestations and lack of fresh and nutritious food. In 2019, the RMT slammed the government for ignoring what it termed ships of shame. At the time, general secretary Mick Cash said:

Companies will trouser millions of pounds of taxpayers cash while they crew their ships with exploited seafarers from other countries.

Coronavirus has compounded all these issues, leading to port closures and travel restrictions. Crew changes were suspended in March 2020 as a short-term solution to stop supply interruption. But crew members still have no idea when they will be able to disembark and see their families. The International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) estimates:

300,000 seafarers are trapped working aboard these vessels, and another 300,000 are facing financial ruin at home, desperate to relieve these ships and start earning wages again.

Governments around the world recently signed up to an agreement at the UK-convened International Maritime summit on 9 July 2020. It seeks to safeguard seafarers rights and working conditions during the coronavirus crisis, and all 14 signatories recognise seafarers as keyworkers.

Even so, only 15 countries globally have opened their ports. So some crews are facing being trapped at sea indefinitely, while others are trapped at home. The ITF says:

Governments are the biggest barrier to resolving the growing crew change crisis.

Alarm bells should potentially ring when we consider that the top five suppliers of ratings (non-officer crew members) to the maritime industry are the Philippines, China, Indonesia, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine. China, Ukraine and Russia tend to rank pretty low in terms of human rights.

A similar group of countries supply the most officers to the maritime industry, with China topping the leader board and the Philippines, India, Indonesia and Russia following. In 2019, China had the worlds second-largest shipping fleet and constructed a third of all vessels globally. Around a third of all shipping routes pass through the South China sea.

So its problematic that China, Russia, and Ukraine were conspicuously absent from the International Maritime Summit in July. It doesnt take a big leap to see that without three of the top five crew suppliers involved, securing better rights for seafarers is likely to be near impossible.

But its not enough to point fingers at those countries which supply seafarers. In a global industry, all governments have a safeguarding duty to protect workers. And instead, wealthy countries are ignoring worker exploitation to make a better profit and undercut minimum wage contracts. They leave workers from poor countries with no choice but to get on board, because if they dont, they and their families will suffer even more.

For too long we have shuttered ourselves from the chronic conditions and poverty inflicted on people we rely on for all of our basic needs. It seems that shipping is yet another industry where profit is put so far before people that workers are drowning. And given how vital they are to humanitys access to fundamentally important supplies, its past time to pull the curtain back on the global conditions for maritime workers.

Featured image via Unsplash Andy Li

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Seafarers face welfare crisis as Coronavirus compounds appalling conditions - The Canary

The generation that won WWII made the world a better place. Better, but not perfect – The Boston Globe

No wonder that two of the top-10 songs of 1945 were My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time and Accentuate the Positive.

And yet this week, three-quarters of a century after the end of the conflict that left the United States preeminent in the world and the savior of Europe, the dreams seem darker and the positive, elusive. American citizens are banned from entering the Continent because of the rampant spread of the coronavirus in their homeland, the American president is reviled by most of the countrys traditional allies, and the institutions that far-sighted American statesmen used to construct the architecture of the post-war era diplomatic and economic structures are either in tatters, in turmoil, or in trouble.

For Americans, the long look back to the sense of infinite possibility of those days has become a sentimental journey the title, as it happens, of the number one song of 1945.

We talk loosely of the Greatest Generation, those who stepped into the breach to win the war and lived into the promise of the peace that followed. And many great things were in fact begun in those days:

The first slender slender and appallingly inadequate stirrings of justice for Black Americans, eight decades after the war that ended slavery. The making of an economic boom that seemed built to last forever, and that might even throttle poverty at last. And the necessary diminution of the power of corrosive nationalism around the world the malign force that fueled two catastrophic world wars with the birth, among other historic innovations, of the United Nations.

But retrospect makes it clearer by the day that this was work more begun than completed. Black lives still dont matter enough. Economic inequality is graver than ever. Nationalism of the most worrisome sort is on the rise, here and elsewhere in the world. And so on, missions still to accomplish.

Still, it is a good time to reconsider those days and those dreams.

That postwar world, weary from 2,194 days of brutal conflict and mechanized death, looked to America the postwar equivalent of what Churchill had called the sunlit uplands for leadership, and for inspiration.

The United States was not only ready to assume this role but it was totally rational that it should do so, said Jeremy K.B. Kinsman, who has served as Canadas ambassador to Great Britain, Russia, Italy, and the European Community. There was nothing bad about it, which is why the Trump phenomenon of America First is so troubling to so many of Americas closest friends.

In abandoning two centuries of isolation, the United States not only joined the international order but also reshaped it.

Despite all the mistakes and tragedies since then, including two long wars in Asia, there have been some phenomenal successes, said Adam Roberts, emeritus professor of international relations at Oxford. In 1989 and 1990 the Soviet Empire, and then the Soviet Union itself, collapsed, and now in 2020 we can celebrate the fact that major inter-state war has been avoided for 75 years. The trouble is that this is no time for celebration. The US, like the UK, is floundering in a COVID-19 mess largely of its own making.

* * *

And so this is a bittersweet anniversary, the sweet coming from the celebratory reflections; the bitter coming from the promise that went unrealized, and the promises unfulfilled.

I do believe the World War II generation was ideally suited to take on the historic challenge of a two-front war because so many members were hardened by the experience of the Depression, said broadcast journalist Tom Brokaw, who took the Greatest Generation tag for the title of his bestselling book, in an interview for this essay. But he added that when people question the label he has a ready response: I said greatest. I did not say perfect.

That great but imperfect generation was so powerful a presence in modern American life that for 14 consecutive elections in the 20th century, at least one of the major-party presidential nominees was involved in the war 50 percent more elections than those contested by the 18th-century Founders.

That group of politicians was marked by the war, as people involved in all-consuming events like war are, said Angus King, who taught a course in leadership at Bates College and Bowdoin College before being elected to the Senate from Maine as an Independent. We saw it in the Civil War... and today, when politicians who were in Iraq or Afghanistan have an aura. And certainly this is the case with the World War II presidents.

And would-be presidents.

World War II changed my life and the lives of countless other Americans, said the Republicans 1996 presidential nominee, former senator Robert J. Dole of Kansas, who was gravely wounded in the last days of World War II and at age 97 is one of the 300,000 veterans of the war still alive. We paid a heavy price I paid a heavy price but we prevailed. It took me years to recover. Im still recovering. But it was worth it. Fighting in that war was the most important thing I did in my life.

Just as important was what followed the war: the high hopes of the veterans, of those on the home front, of millions abroad, in displaced-persons camps, in the squalor of wrecked cities, in countries where the manufacturing base was destroyed and the agricultural prospects minimal.

On anniversaries like this, we salute how much was accomplished in those 75 years. And yet:

It would have been inconceivable to those imagining the postwar world, that life expectancy in the United States would be lower today than that of Poland, Germany, Italy, and Japan, countries left destroyed by ground combat and airborne assault. It would have been beyond comprehension that the cost of a college education, brought within the reach of millions because of the generosity of the GI Bill, would be beyond the grasp of millions in 2020. It would have beggared belief that American prosperity had not reached into the bottom quarter of the workforce. It would have astonished the 350,000 women who enlisted in the armed forces and the many hundreds of thousands who worked in wartime factories 310,000 of them in the aircraft industry alone, 65 percent of the total aviation-manufacturing workforce that 75 years later, women would still be fighting for equality in the workplace and were earning on average about 81 cents to the dollar that men were earning.

Very seldom do you get a crack in time when there is so much to be rebuilt, said Stephanie Coontz, a historian at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash. We blew it after World War I but after World War II it looked as if we might do it, though we did not include Blacks and women. At times like this we dont look back at the way things were, but at the way we hoped things were becoming.

Moreover, in the peace that emerged after the war it would have been difficult to imagine that Americans of color, many of whom joined in the fight for freedom around the world, still do not enjoy the fullness of freedom and equality at home or anything close to it and that the ethnic and religious hatred that the soldiers, sailors, and aviators of World War II thought they were eradicating from the face of the earth would have remained a scourge on the earth.

World War II uncovered laid bare for us that hate is capable of bringing on the greatest evil, said Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, where two years ago 11 Jews were murdered while he led them in Sabbath prayer. It makes me pause and wonder 75 years later whether we have accomplished all that much. The good people on this earth have been engaged for millennia in this work, and the anniversary of the end of the worst period of hate in history reminds us that there is so much more work to be done.

* * *

Three-quarters of a century is, to be sure, a long time. It is the distance between Shays Rebellion in Western Massachusetts and the outbreak of the Civil War in Charleston, S.C., between the election of Benjamin Harrison and the assassination of John F. Kennedy, between Pearl Harbor and the inauguration of President Trump.

The America of 1945 was without supermarkets, freezers, dishwashers, even ballpoint pens. Since then the shopping center sprouted, was converted to a mall, and then just about died. Popular music went from 78s to LPs to eight-tracks to CDs to iPods to streaming services. The births of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Trump, Dolly Parton and Cher were a year away.

But an economic explosion was imminent, fueled by consumer demand that had been building during the Depression and war years. In the immediate postwar period, personal consumption expenditures created an average annual growth rate of per-capita GDP of 2.5 percent, according to a study that senior analyst Nick Bunker prepared in 2014 for the liberal-leaning Washington Center for Equitable Growth.

But that galloping growth would not prove to be equitable growth not nearly.

The gap between those high on the income ladder and those in the middle and lower rungs did not change substantially from the end of the war until the 1970s, when the gap began to widen. The share of income growth captured by the top 1 percent in Massachusetts between 1945 and 1973, for example, was 2.9 percent. That figure rose to 50.4% in the period from 1973 to 2007, then to 58.4 percent in the eight years that followed, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

Today, in fact, the average income of the top 1 percent of Massachusetts residents is $1,904,805, while the average income of the other 99 percent is $61,694, a top-to-bottom ratio of about 30 to 1.

The result is a different United States from the one many dreamed of at wars end. In effect, the anthropologist and author Jared Diamond has written, the U.S. is a country of 328 million inhabitants that operates as if only 50 million of them matter.

All that, despite the massive exposure of Americans to education, regarded for generations as the sturdiest ladder of social and economic mobility.

In years leading up to the war, the United States, in the characterization of the Harvard economist Claudia Goldin in a 1998 study, pulled far ahead of the rest of the world in high-school graduation, with a rate of 50.8 percent. There are conflicting figures for high-school graduation today, but there is a consensus that the figure has risen by more than half since then and that the rate for Blacks and for Hispanics is lower than that of whites. An engine of opportunity has stalled.

The GI Bill opened the college gates to World War II veterans in what Ira Katznelson, the Columbia historian, called the single most important piece of legislation ever passed in America to create a modern middle class.

Today the typical college graduate earns about $80,000 while those with only a high school degree earn about $36,000.

But in education, as in all areas of American society, the cruelest dividing line was race.

The benefits of the GI Bill for Black veterans were, to be sure, substantial, but they were not equally distributed, in part because of the role the states played in the program. State legislatures, for example, voted enough money for every white person to attend universities in South Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi, but not enough for Black person to enroll in the states historically Black colleges.

It was a period when middle-class America was invented among whites, said Ivory Nelson, who was president of Lincoln University, a historically Black institution in Pennsylvania, from 1999 to 2011. But middle-class America for Blacks doesnt exist even now.

The effect was to cement, even to widen, the distance between white America and Black America, despite the achievements of the civil-rights movement and the advancements some now under siege of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

The country never dealt with the race question, said Larry Davis, founder of the Center on Race and Social Problems at the University of Pittsburgh. It didnt want to deal with it because it wouldnt admit guilt. We let the South have its way. ... After World War II the country continued to sacrifice Black people to keep the South happy. Can you imagine how much wealth of Black people was lost?

This failure cut especially deep for Blacks who had high hopes that World War II would be not just a chance to save the world for Democracy but to perfect our own. This was a vision captured poignantly in the so-called Double-V Campaign, begun after a 26-year-old wrote a letter to the Pittsburgh Courier, a Black newspaper, asking: Should I sacrifice to live half American?

What came of his question was a new push for two victories, one overseas, the other at home.

Some progress has been made, to be sure. But according to research by Patrick Bayer and Kerwin Kofi Charles set out in 2018 in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the Black-white wage gap has returned to Truman-era levels.

We may have won victory in World War II but we havent achieved the second V in the Double-V Campaign, said Rod Doss, the Couriers current editor and publisher.

* * * *

In no war was the home front more important than it was in World War II, and in no conflict did war produce more changes at home, including an increase in home ownership from about half of Americans in 1945 to two-thirds today, according to the Census Bureau.

And there were tremendous changes in gender roles inside those homes. The numbers of women at work went up during the war, the Harvard historian Nancy Cott said, but what was more important was the kind of work highly paid industrial work women were doing. By 1952, there were 2 million more working wives than there had been during World War II.

But another big change came shortly after the war, when changes in the federal tax code favored married couples who had one primary earner. The result was that a man who supported a woman not employed outside the home paid substantially less in taxes than a single man making as much money.

Womens gains were often sacrificed, said Rebecca Davis, a University of Delaware historian. It became clear that society thought it more important to preserve mens jobs.... It helped explain a lot of anger women had in the 1960s and even now.

And as the late 1940s rolled into the 1950s, vast transformations were underway in American domestic life.

The 1950s were a unique moment in the history of marriage and the family, said Christine Whelan, director of the Money, Relationships and Equality Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Madison. Never before had so many people shared the experience of courting their own mates, getting married at will, and setting up their own households. Never had married couples been so independent of extended family ties and community groups. Never before had so many people agreed that only one kind of family was normal.

There is, thankfully, no such agreement today.

Americans also roared out of World War II with enormous confidence in progress through science. Nuclear weapons technology could be used for peaceful energy. The DuPont Co. had spoken of better living through chemistry since 1935, but after 1945 it became a conviction rather than a slogan. Scientists began to understand DNA, to battle disease with new and more powerful tools, and to achieve remarkable feats of exploration through NASA.

The decade after the war was the true high point for doctors and scientists; the pinnacle may have been Jonas Salk and his polio vaccine, with research financed by the March of Dimes and its more than 100 million Americans contributors.

We came out of World War II with science in the ascendancy, said Richard Scheines, a Carnegie Mellon University expert in the philosophy of science. We thought we could feed the world. We thought there could be clean energy, It turns out that the world is more complicated than we thought. It turned out that we couldnt figure everything out.

That was never so clear as it has been this year, when the coronavirus consumed more American lives than the Korean and Vietnam conflicts combined.

There was confidence science could solve all the problems the world faced and that all infectious diseases could be taken care of, said Jason Opal, a McGill University historian who is writing a history of epidemic diseases in the United States with his father, Steven Opal, a clinical professor of medicine at Brown. Now we know better, and we have lost confidence in our ability to solve our problems. The decline in science is part of the decline in the morale of America.

That is not the only decline from World War II-era heights that America is experiencing today. Its decline in international prestige and global influence is one of the themes of the era.

The US was the key player in establishing a liberal international order, said Kiron Skinner, former director of policy planning in the State Department in the early Donald J. Trump years. Today the international order is adrift and the ideas the US helped shepherd are being contested not only by other powers but also inside the US.

Nowhere is that more apparent than at the United Nations, founded amid soaring rhetoric and hopes in the war-ending year of 1945.

It was the silver lining of the Second World War, said Stephen C. Schlesinger, author of a 2003 history of the San Francisco conference that created the UN. These people had seen 30 million people die in the First World War and 60 million in the Second World War and wanted to make sure that a Third World War would never happen.... Today nobody is happy with it today except that it has lasted 75 years.

When World War II ended, there was no doubt that the strongest economy was in the United States. It was the collective sense of the global markets that US government bonds were the most risk-free asset and that the dollar was the worlds reserve currency, notions codified in the fixed exchange rates that came out of the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944.

If we lost the war, none of that would have been the case, said Matthew J. Slaughter, the dean of Dartmouths Tuck School of Business Administration and a member of George W. Bushs council of economic advisors. A lot has changed, but the US dollar is still the worlds most important currency.

We had licked the Depression and won a just war, and the country was punch-drunk at VJ Day, said David M. Kennedy, the prominent Stanford historian. The world was wide open for those of that generation who survived. A lot of the aspirations of the moment were fulfilled. But we look a little less triumphant today. For sure we have some steps to go, and I wonder whether this journey ever ends.

And where it will take us. The generation that won the war and prospered in peace, made the world, in many ways, a better place. Better, but not perfect.

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The generation that won WWII made the world a better place. Better, but not perfect - The Boston Globe

MP Andrew BRIDGEN: Here’s The Truth About Illegal Migration And The Solution If We Want To Deal With It – The Pavlovic Today

The widespread media reporting of illegal migrants packed like sardines into dangerously overloaded dinghies making the dash across the English Channel from France appears to be a regular a part of our British Summer. It is almost as traditional as the local village fete and its best fruit and vegetable competition judging, perhaps even more so this year as the village fetes have mostly been canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic.

Our island has been looked upon enviously, throughout history, by those willing to cross treacherous seas in search of easy pickings. For almost 300 years from 793AD until 1066, the Vikings steered a course to our shores. The sight of their longboats striking fear into the indigenous population and signaling the start of another Viking Summer.

In recent days, the BBC has been filming the ruthless people traffickers plying their trade from a beach near Calais. The reporter claimed he had informed the French authorities of the imminent departure of the migrants and the presence of those organizing the trafficking, but no police or enforcement officers appeared.

Having in my early adulthood sailed on a reasonably sized yacht across the channel, which is the busiest sea lane in the world, I am well aware that the bow-waves from the large vessels which ply their legitimate trade through our waters are quite capable of overturning this barely floating death-traps. It is very telling that those who organize and profit from this misery dont travel in them.

I did have to laugh at the comments of Labour peer Admiral Lord West who as a former defense minister was gently stroked in a TV interview for his views on the use of our Navy to deter these little boats. The Europhile Lord claimed with a straight face that people will always want to get into the EU and wasnt picked up by the slow-witted interviewer on three obvious points:

Commentators remark that the record numbers of unconventional arrivals may be because of the fear of future changes to the UK's asylum laws. The fact is that when we are out of the current transition period of being under EU law on the 31st December 2020, we will be able to amend our legislation as we see fit to address this problem. However, the abandoned boats on our shores are just the visible tip of the iceberg concerning illegal migration. Most illegal migrants arrive in our country legally and are people who have arrived on an education or tourist visa and simply overstay. Those who travel to the UK illegally do so by many routes often hidden in vehicles with or without the drivers' knowledge.

The fact is that traveling from France to the UK illegally to claim asylum should not be grounds to remain in the UK, as asylum seekers are obligated to make their claim to asylum in the first safe country and it would be difficult for even the most ardent Francophobe to claim that France, by world standards, is not a safe country for asylum seekers.

It is illegal for anyone in the UK to employ or rent property to an illegal immigrant and fines on conviction for doing so are substantial. Why then, when their grounds for claiming asylum in the UK are so dubious,arethey coming here?

They come because we have a huge sub-culture of illegal workers and modern slavery in our country, a thriving sub-culture that I have recently been able to expose. Until recently the modern slavery unit at the Home Office maintained that there were about 8500 modern slaves in the UK, I can assure you that there are more than that number in the City of Leicester alone.

I estimate that there are at least 150 000 modern slaves in our country and possibly many more, We are victims of our success, free healthcare at the point of need, free education, a comprehensive benefits system and a high, by world standards minimum wage per hour. This offers huge opportunities to the unscrupulous employers and landlords and all they need is a constant flow of illegal migrants to exploit.

By the time those enticed to enter the UK illegally with the prospect of the land of Milk and Honey realize that the grass is not always greener, it is too late and they are in the system, or more accurately most of them are outside our system and its protections. They can try to get asylum, fail, and disappear into the UKs ugly exploitative sub-culture. It will take a long time to repay the traffickers working and existing, not living, in the UK on 3.50 per hour cash in hand.

Before you buy that 10 dress made in Leicester or have your car washed by hand cheaper than it can be done by the automated systems, that now appear redundant and unused, please remember as the Anglo-Saxons came to know in dealing with the Vikings, while ever you are willing to pay the Danegeld you will always have the Dane.

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MP Andrew BRIDGEN: Here's The Truth About Illegal Migration And The Solution If We Want To Deal With It - The Pavlovic Today

Hollywood is taking down blackface TV episodes, but Black creators say it’s not enough – Insider – INSIDER

As Black Live Matters protests spread around the world, TV episodes and films featuring blackface, anti-Black tropes, and inaccurate depictions of slavery resurfaced in the cultural conversation.

Many studios responded by pulling the episodes, cutting those scenes, or putting disclaimers before the original, unedited material. Episodes of "30 Rock," "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia," "Scrubs," "The Golden Girls," and "Community" were among those removed from streaming services for showcasing blackface. A scene from "The Office" was cut.

Meanwhile, "Gone with the Wind" exists in its entirety on HBO Max with a five-minute introduction about how it "denies the horrors of slavery." A season-three episode of "Mad Men" now has a disclaimer.

Insider spoke with five Black creators, writers, talent, and executives about the differing studio responses. They said the actions didn't address the larger issue of systemic racism that permeates Hollywood and enabled blackface to appear on contemporary TV in the first place and they outlined what studios need to do to make actual change.

Four episodes of "30 Rock" have been pulled from streaming services. Ali Goldstein/NBCUniversal Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Most of the people Insider spoke with said episodes shouldn't be pulled from streaming services it would be more harmful to sweep them under the rug. Rather, there should be a larger conversation about why they were allowed to be made in the first place.

"Pretending these episodes never existed doesn't change the fact that they did," Bianca Sams, a screenwriter who has written episodes of "The Originals" and "Titans," said in an email.

"They were written. They were shot. They were edited. Millions of dollars were spent on them," Sams said. "They got approved by studios, networks, producers. It happened. Taking them off the air doesn't change that. Because erasure and abdication of responsibility never fixes a problem it simply exacerbates the issue."

Anniwaa Buachie, a creative performer, said episodes with blackface should be removed from public viewing, though not from archives. Buachie added that many non-Black people fail to understand the severity of blackface, which dates back to the 1600s and involves white actors harmfully portraying Black people as one-dimensional stereotypes.

"I don't want it to be a situation where it's forgotten and we were just making all of this up," Buachie said, adding that pulling episodes isn't enough.

"It continues to disseminate really negative attitudes and perceptions worldwide about Black people," Buachie said. "It promotes this belief that Black people are racially and socially inferior."

"There needs to be accountability and acknowledgment of the material. In 2020, blackface cannot be seen as funny. It's not funny, especially when everyone around the world can see what's happening to Black women and Black men on a daily basis," she said, referring to the Black Lives Matter movement and the killings of Black people including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery.

Millicent Shelton who has directed over 100 episodes of TV for shows including "Black-ish," "P-Valley," and "The Flash" directed two episodes of "30 Rock," in seasons three and four.

But Shelton said that at the time, she wasn't aware of a season-three episode with blackface, in which Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan) and Jenna Maroney (Jane Krakowski) swap lives as a Black man and a white woman for a day.

Millicent Shelton is seen directing an episode of "Jessica Jones" with Krysten Ritter. Netfliix

"They certainly didn't ask me to direct it, because I would have said something," Shelton said.

"I respected people that worked on that show," Shelton said, adding, "But I question why those episodes were ever made and why they thought that was funny."

Shelton said that she doesn't believe in censorship and that she does believe there's a productive conversation to be had from looking at racist material to help educate people. But she said there's a difference between something like learning about the racist 1915 movie "Birth of a Nation" in film school and seeing blackface and racism in today's sitcoms.

"'Birth of a Nation' was racist, and it was openly so," Shelton said. "With the contemporary stuff that's come out, they're not attempting to be racist they're attempting to be funny. And you have to ask yourself, what kind of culture are we in where racism is something that's to be laughed at?"

A number of people in Hollywood need to see and approve a joke before its filmed. Reuters

"The fact that there are so many episodes featuring blackface at all is wildly problematic," Sams said, because a script goes through many hands before it makes it to the screen.

"No less than 50 to 75 people encounter the idea before it ever makes it to the actor, and another 50 to 75 before it makes it to the audience, which means that 100 to 150-plus people have allowed that image to make it to the screen," Sams said. "They were all tacitly complicit in that image making it to air."

In an essay on Deadline, Prentice Penny, the showrunner for "Insecure," said that in order for a joke to get on TV it needed to be approved by the showrunner, make it through script rewrites and a table read, and have both the studio and the network sign off before it's filmed. After that, an editor, the studio, and the network have to clear it, along with sponsors and local affiliate stations.

But there's a lack of nonwhite people involved in that process. A 2017 report from Color of Change titled "Race in the Writers' Room" looked at 234 shows across 18 platforms and found that 90% of the shows were run by white showrunners. More than two-thirds had no Black writers, while about 17% had one Black writer.

For example, "30 Rock" had an almost all-white writers' room for its seven-season run. Of the 42 producers on the show, Insider couldn't verify any are Black. Donald Glover was credited as an executive story editor on 22 episodes and a writer on two episodes in seasons two and three. Hannibal Buress was credited for writing one episode of season five.

Cast and crew members of "30 Rock" at the 2008 Emmys. The show won outstanding comedy series. Alec Baldwin and Tina Fey won outstanding lead actor and actress in a comedy series. Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

"When you look behind the scenes, there's no one in a position of power who is Black on that show," said Ron McCants, who in 2018 founded The Parity Project, a nonprofit fighting for equal representation and pay for Black creators in Hollywood.

"You're putting an unfair burden on the staff writer, story editor, editor, even coproducer to call it out," he said. "Your job is on the line, especially when you're the only one or the only two."

Sams said that racism appearing in TV shows despite the number of people a script needs to go through "tells you just how normalized and pervasive casual racism is within our industry and society."

While studios have removed some episodes with blackface from digital services, other episodes perpetuating harmful stereotypes remain. Hulu still has two "30 Rock" episodes featuring Alec Baldwin in forms of brownface. On a season-three "Golden Girls" episode, the women hire and later fire a Black housekeeper, accusing her of being lazy and placing a curse on them.

Representatives for Hulu and Tina Fey, the "30 Rock" creator, did not immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment. NBCUniversal declined to comment.

A thumbnail of "Generalissimo," the 10th episode of the third season of "30 Rock," on the Peacock TV app, shows Baldwin in brownface as an actor named Hector Moreda. NBCUniversal/Peacock

The people Insider spoke with said studios needed to go beyond pulling episodes or adding disclaimers to old content and instead focus on making tangible changes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color in Hollywood.

Four of the five people Insider spoke with recounted experiencing racism, sexism, and microaggressions in recent years, including being mistaken for someone with a lower position on set multiple times, having difficulty getting on a studio lot even with credentials, hearing a white executive story editor dropping the N-word casually, and having a white hairstylist use the wrong products on their hair.

Anniwaa Buachie, Millicent Shelton, and Bianca Sams said Hollywood needs to recognize what enabled racist TV episodes to air and prevent it from happening again. Anniwaa Buachie: @snvps; Millicent Shelton: Charley Gallay/Getty Images for NAACP Image Awards; courtesy Bianca Sams

"It's a limited gesture to add a disclaimer or pull material," Taylor K. Shaw, the CEO and founder of Black Women Animate Studios, said in an email.

"There are tons of shows in development, and when we recover from COVID-19, shows will be back in production," she added. "Now is the time to create a real plan of action for how your studio will shift industry culture, starting with your content and/or the content you stream."

Some of that change starts in the writers' rooms but talent and creators don't want to see a BIPOC voice here and there. They want to see more people with diverse backgrounds in positions of power so that others can feel safe voicing concerns without the fear of retaliation.

"If we are in the room when those decisions are made, we are not listened to when we speak up," Shaw said. "If we do speak up, we run the risk of being fired or blackballed."

Hollywood needs systemic change, not small gestures, creators say. Getty Images

"I don't want to be the only nonwhite or non-male person in a room. I don't want to be the 'other' in every space," Sams said. "Hollywood definitely needs Black and BIPOC decision-makers shaping content: showrunners, directors, C-suite executives, talent agents, producers, financiers. We also need Black crew and technicians executing these amazing projects."

Organizations like Color of Change, Women of Color Unite, Black Women Animate, and The Parity Project are working to make some of these changes a reality by seeking inclusion and equitable pay for Black artists, executives, and representatives in TV and film, as well as helping to tell authentic Black stories.

The Parity Project, for example, hosts annual town-hall meetings to discuss wage gaps and harassment in the industry and to network. It offers mentorship programs to Black creators and students which it plans to expand worldwide and works to track the racial diversity behind the scenes of every show on TV.

Ron McCants speaks to a group during a Parity Project town-hall meeting in 2019. Michelle Renee Jackson

"It's not just about pulling the episodes or a disclaimer," McCants said, adding that studios "can do whatever they want, in my opinion, about that."

"What they should be doing is saying, 'In order to make this right, we need to ensure that 40% of our staff is BIPOC. We need to set a date, and it can't be too far in the future. It has to be over two years that this needs to happen,'" McCants said.

"Give us the resources to tell the stories we know how to tell best," Shaw added. "If you truly want to support Black lives, go beyond words and small gestures. A shift in Hollywood culture will require financial investment and dedicated time."

If you have similar experiences you'd like to share or have experienced racism or sexism in the entertainment industry, please email kacuna@insider.com. You can also direct-message me on Twitter @KirstenAcuna or reach me securely on Signal.

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Hollywood is taking down blackface TV episodes, but Black creators say it's not enough - Insider - INSIDER

Siemens Energy delivers technology for seventh offshore wind farm connection in the North Sea – WorldOil

8/11/2020

Together with its partners, Siemens Energy has already built and installed five offshore HVDC connections in the German North Sea for TenneT. The DolWin6 and BorWin5 projects are currently being implemented.

MUNICH - Siemens Energy is supplying the high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) power transmission technology for a further offshore connection in the German North Sea. A corresponding contract was just signed by the German-Dutch network operator TenneT and the BorWin5 Offshore Consortium, consisting of Siemens Energy and Dragados Offshore. In 2025, the platform BorWin epsilon, which is part of the BorWin5 project, will begin the low-loss transmission of electricity produced by the EnBW He Dreiht wind farm off the island of Borkum to the Garrel/Ost converter station around 230 kilometers distant. The transmission capacity of 900 megawatts is calculated to serve over 1.1 million households with electricity. The project is a further contribution toward decarbonizing Germanys energy supply. BorWin5 marks the seventh HVDC offshore grid connection project undertaken by Siemens Energy in Germany with TenneT.

We are especially pleased that we can again join with TenneT to make an important contribution to the decarbonization of Germanys energy supply. The seventh order in the German North Sea underscores the great confidence in our HVDC technology, emphasizes Beatrix Natter, Executive Vice President of the Transmission Division at Siemens Energy. When DolWin6 and BorWin5 begin operation, well have installed a total transmission capacity for 5.6 gigawatts of wind power in the German North Sea. This could supply around seven million German households with green electricity.

The scope of supply for Siemens Energy and its Spanish partner Dragados Offshore S.A. includes the turnkey construction and installation of the offshore platform in the North Sea and the converter station on land. The offshore converter station will convert the three-phase alternating current produced by the wind turbines into direct current with a voltage of 320 kilovolts(kV) for low-loss transmission to land. The shoreside converter station in Garrel/Ost will then convert the electricity back into three-phase alternating current for feeding into Germanys power grid. Siemens Energy will supply the HVDC technology required for the project and build the shoreside station, while Dragados will be responsible for the design, procurement, construction and installation of the offshore converter platform.

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Siemens Energy delivers technology for seventh offshore wind farm connection in the North Sea - WorldOil

rsted Powers Through Pandemic – Offshore WIND

Worlds leading offshore wind developer rsted reported a 17 per cent increase in earnings from offshore and onshore wind farms in operation in the first half of 2020.

The earnings, which stood at DKK 8.2 billion (EUR 1.08 billion), were driven by the ramp-up of power generation from the Hornsea Project One offshore wind farm, and Lockett and Sage Draw onshore wind farms, together with high wind speeds.

The revenue from offshore wind farms for the period was DKK 17.3 billion, with gross investments amounting to DKK 7.1 billion.

The wind speeds in the first half of 2020 averaged 10.1 m/s, as compared to 9.2 m/s in the same period a year earlier.

Power generation from offshore and onshore wind increased by 42 per cent and totalled 9.8 TWh in the first half of 2020, mainly due to the ramp-up of generation from Hornsea One, Lockett and Sage Draw, and to some extent the Borssele 1 & 2 offshore wind farm, as well as higher wind speeds throughout the period.

Power generation offshore increased by 36 per cent to 7.2 TWh for the period compared to H1 2019 when it stood at 5.3 TWh.

The production-based availability offshore amounted to 93 per cent, up one percentage point compared to the same period last year.

Overall, rsteds operating profit (EBITDA) amounted to DKK 9.8 billion, an 11 per cent increase compared to the same period last year.

Net profit amounted to DKK 2.5 billion and return on capital employed (ROCE) came in at eleven per cent. The companys green share of the heat and power generation increased from 82 per cent to 88 per cent.

The EBITDA guidance for the year is unchanged and stands at DKK 16-17 billion in 2020. The expectations of gross investments were lowered by DKK 2 billion to DKK 28-30 billion in 2020 due to the changed timing of payments.

Despite the comprehensive health, social, and economic consequences of COVID-19, rsted has maintained stable operations and strong earnings during 2020. Our asset base has continued to be fully operational and we have maintained normal availability rates on our offshore and onshore wind farms, Henrik Poulsen, CEO and President of rsted, said.

We have however seen negative COVID-19 related effects on European power markets, especially in the UK, driven by lower demand for electricity. The negative impact on our Q2 earnings was approx. DKK 150 million. A contained impact which does not change our full-year expectations.

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rsted Powers Through Pandemic - Offshore WIND

Family discovers dog treading water 4 miles offshore in Lake Michigan – Detroit Free Press

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A family was boating from Grand Haven to Frankfort when they spotted the dog in the water.

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Associated Press Published 7:25 a.m. ET Aug. 11, 2020

FRANKFORT, Mich. A dog treading water nearly four miles offshore in Lake Michigan has been rescued by a family out on a boating trip.

The family was boating from Grand Haven to Frankfort in northwestern Michigan Friday when Jeannie Wilcox said she saw a "red animal in the lake" and started screaming, 'dog in the water!'"

They were able to get the dog onto the boat's swim platform and dried her off, Wilcox told WOOD-TV.

More: Carbon monoxide sickens 10 people on Lake Michigan boat

More: Paris Hilton spends time in Michigan with Traverse City-linked boyfriend, posts photos

The family was able to have the dog scanned for a microchip. The owners later were located and reunited with their dog.

"I just hope that if this was my dog, somebody would do the same for me," Wilcox said. "I would just be very grateful, happy because I know how rough Lake Michigan can be."

Read or Share this story: https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/08/11/family-discovers-dog-treading-water-4-miles-offshore-lake-michigan/3342254001/

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Family discovers dog treading water 4 miles offshore in Lake Michigan - Detroit Free Press

Diamond Offshore warned over spread of ‘asbestos debris’ on North Sea rig – News for the Oil and Gas Sector – Energy Voice

Diamond Offshore has received a warning from the safety regulator after asbestos debris was spread on a North Sea rig.

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) said Diamond Offshore failed to protect workers on the Ocean Valiant rig from exposure to asbestos fibres.

The incident, in September last year, took place on the Ocean Valiant while repairs were being made on a diesel engine which generates power on board.

However, insulation against asbestos had been damaged in the unit, leading to the debris being dispersed to the surrounding walkway and engine block thereby creating the risk of potential exposure of the crew to asbestos fibres.

The HSE has now issued an improvement notice stating Diamond Offshore did not take steps to protect employees.

The note, to the US firms Aberdeen office, pointed out a lack of training for workers and assessment of whether asbestos was likely to be present on board.

Asbestos is a strictly regulated substance that was once used widely in construction materials and is present on board some older offshore rigs.

Inhalation of asbestos fibres has been linked to several diseases including mesothelioma, a type of lung cancer which has a 40 year latency period before symptoms develop.

The HSE notice states that analysis of the fibres found chrysotile, exposure to which leads to an increased risk of lung cancer, according to the World Health Organisation.

Diamond Offshore has been contacted to comment.

The Asbestos Action charity, based in Dundee states: There is no safe type of asbestos and no safe level of exposure. Nearly all those with exposure history are potentially at risk of serious respiratory health complications.

Diamond Offshore has until October 1 to comply with the notice with improvements around asbestos assessment and training.

The firms North Sea operations are based out of its Dyce offices in Aberdeen.

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Diamond Offshore warned over spread of 'asbestos debris' on North Sea rig - News for the Oil and Gas Sector - Energy Voice

Bladt Names Offshore Wind Specialist as Its New CEO – Offshore Engineer

Danish offshore construction company Bladt has appointed Anders Se-Jensen, the former head of both Vestas Offshore Wind and GE Offshore Wind, as its new CEO.

He will be succeeding Klaus Steen Mortensen who has decided to step down due to a chronic but not a life-threatening heart condition. Mortensen has been in charge of the company specializing in the construction of steel structures for offshore renewables and oil and gas industry for almost three years.

Mortensen said: "My prime focus has been on creating a far more efficient, predictable and stable company that can compete without subsidies. We have achieved those aims with great success."

Mortensen will now concentrate on working on the Board of Directors and spending more time with his family.

Bladt Industries is a fantastic company with enormous potential that I am looking forward to unleashing in close cooperation with my new colleagues, business partners, and not least Bladts many Danish and international customers, says Anders Se-Jensen, the new CEO.

For the year 2019, Bladt reported a loss of DKK 42 million after-tax as a result of a DKK 85 million technical write-down concerning a pending arbitration case.

Excluding one-off costs relating to the pending arbitration case, the gross result totaled DKK 86 million.

Revenue at Bladt Industries rose by 49% thanks to a range of activities despite the negative effect from the postponement of the Vesterhav Nord and Vesterhav Syd offshore wind farms.

"Aside from the write-down, we are very satisfied with the results achieved by Bladts core business. Our healthy and customer-focused company is developing in the right direction, Mortensen said.

As a consequence of the reduced book equity caused by the write-down, in 2019, Bladts owners chose to invest and inject DKK 150m of additional equity to bolster the company and support its continued growth plans.

We are very pleased that our owners demonstrated such great faith in us in 2019 by increasing their investments in Bladt. That reinforces our robustness and shows that our owners have full confidence in the company. It also ensures that we can continue developing Bladt in an offshore wind power market with expected annual growth rates of more than 20% for as far as the eye can see, said Mortensen.

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Bladt Names Offshore Wind Specialist as Its New CEO - Offshore Engineer

Duke Energy expected to join Dominion as offshore wind debutant – Riviera Maritime Media

The company provides electricity to 7.7M customers in six states and has approximately 51 GW of electricity generating capacity in the Carolinas, Midwest and Florida. If it does include offshore wind in the integrated resource plan (IRP) it is working on, it would signify further interest from a major US electric company in offshore wind as a form of low cost, low carbon generation.

As highlighted by OWJ on a number of occasions, utility Dominion Energy recently completed installation of the two-turbine, 12-MW Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) pilot project 43 km off Virginia Beach. CVOW is the first offshore windfarm to be installed in federal waters and is the precursor to a much larger project of around 2.6 GW that it hopes to build.

Responding to questions after announcing details of the companys Q2 results, Duke Energy chief executive Lynn Good said the company has embarked on a strategy to modernise and strengthen the energy grid, generate cleaner energy and expand smart energy infrastructure, an ambition underpinned by a five-year US$56Bn capital plan.

On offshore wind, I think we will address offshore wind in the upcoming IRP. We think it might fit into the portfolio, she said.

It has not had as much visibility, she said of offshore wind. I think it will, through the IRP and the clean energy process.

It represents a future investment opportunity, and we will know more as this policy gets finalised and as we make further progress on the fleet transition.

In the IRP, which Duke Energy will file in early September, it will outline alternatives to achieving its carbon reduction goals as well as North Carolina Governor Roy Coopers executive order to achieve the 70% reduction by 2030.

The IRP filing follows a comprehensive stakeholder engagement process to identify the best potential path forward to achieve carbon reduction targets while also balancing reliability and affordability for customers.

The company highlighted that retiring coal plants and investing in replacement generation, coupled with investments in battery storage, the energy delivery system, energy efficiency and demand side management will underpin the states transition to a cleaner energy future and Duke Energys investment plans for customers and shareholders.

In the past Duke Energy has invested in a three-year study of the potential for offshore wind in North Carolina. And in 2016, the company signed an agreement with Deepwater Wind Block Island (as was) to undertake remote monitoring and control services for the first offshore wind project in the US.

In June 2020, the North Carolina Department of Commerce launched a project to assess the states inventory of businesses, organisations and physical infrastructure best positioned to promote offshore wind development in the state.

The move was the latest step in Governor Roy Coopers commitment to build a clean energy economy to fight climate change and grow clean-energy jobs in North Carolina.

To produce the supply chain report, the North Carolina Office of Science, Technology, & Innovation, an operating unit of the Commerce Department, issued a request for proposals seeking an experienced consulting partner to help the department develop and publish the study.

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Duke Energy expected to join Dominion as offshore wind debutant - Riviera Maritime Media

Rise in category B cases offshore attributed to Aberdeen Covid-19 outbreak – News for the Oil and Gas Sector – Energy Voice

An offshore safety boss has blamed a local outbreak in Aberdeen for a rise in the number of North Sea workers that have come into contact with people showing symptoms of Covid-19.

Trevor Stapleton, health and safety director at Oil and Gas UK (OGUK), revealed there was an increase in category B cases last week.

That involves an asymptomatic worker, who has been in contact with someone displaying symptoms of the virus, being removed from an offshore installation to self-isolate at home.

But hes confident its just a short term spike and said theyll be monitoring statistics closely over the next couple of weeks to ensure it levels off.

Health classifications were drawn up by OGUKs pandemic steering group at the beginning of the pandemic to establish guidelines for safe helicopter travel offshore.

They range from category A, a worker who is asymptomatic, to category D, a worker with life-threatening symptoms.

Its now a week since the Granite City was placed under local lockdown following an outbreak of Covid-19 at the Hawthorn Bar in the citys Holburn Street on July 26.

Mr Stapleton said: We did see an increase in suspected cases of Covid-19 offshore last week but were confident that was because of the hoo-ha in Aberdeen.

People suddenly get a bit nervous and say I think I might have been next to that person. We dont then interrogate them, our main priority is just to get them safely off the installation a category B classification.

Well look at it again this time next week to make sure thats levelled off and well begin to monitor that figure more closely. At the moment Im relaxed about it. The focus of the Aberdeen lockdown has been on hospitality and travel restrictions for leisure which I dont see as being too closely linked to the offshore workforce.

The first minister is due to give an update later today on current lockdown restrictions in Aberdeen.

But the continued uncertainty has had little effect on the oil and gas industry which has been operating as usual, albeit on a reduced manning level, for the duration of the pandemic.

Mr Stapleton said: The localised lockdown doesnt pose any real concerns. What well be looking at in the pandemic steering group is what further assessment should we be applying for someone that may be coming from a place where a regional outbreak has occurred.

Weve already had that in the early days of the pandemic with category 1 and category 2 countries. It was left to operators to undertake their own risk assessment on people travelling from different countries.

That disappeared when the UK became a category 1 country but, nevertheless, we have the framework for doing these risk assessments and its something that well take account of as we go through the coming months.

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Rise in category B cases offshore attributed to Aberdeen Covid-19 outbreak - News for the Oil and Gas Sector - Energy Voice

MingYang Hits 1 GW Milestone with CGN’s Nanpeng Island Offshore Wind Farm – Offshore WIND

MingYang Smart Energy now has 1,000 MW in installed offshore wind turbines, according to the companys social media post from 11 August.

The company reached the milestone with the YangjiangNanpeng Island offshore wind farm, owned by China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN), which will feature 73 MySE5.5-155wind turbines.

MingYang also said its order backlog in offshore wind stands at 5.94 GW.

OffshoreWIND.biz contacted the wind turbine supplier to get an update on the number of the wind turbines now installed at the YangjiangNanpeng Island site, with MingYang yet to respond.

Construction of the401.5MW wind farm started in mid-2018.

The first turbinewas installedin July last year, and the first batch of wind turbines began operating in October.

The wind farm, located the Guangdong Province, is expected to be fully operational by the end of the year.

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MingYang Hits 1 GW Milestone with CGN's Nanpeng Island Offshore Wind Farm - Offshore WIND

Projects to heat homes through disused mines and faster offshore wind farm construction win government backing – GOV.UK

Ambitious research and innovation projects across the UK will today (Tuesday 11 August) receive up to 50,000 each of government funding, supporting their aim to create high value jobs, upskill local workers and boost economic growth.

The 17 projects, running from Glasgow and Belfast, through to Nottingham and parts of Cornwall, will help the UK to respond to some of the worlds most pressing challenges from climate change to the production of medicines.

Projects include heating homes and businesses in Glasgow using energy from disused mines, digitising the UK construction sector so it is safer and more productive, researching quicker ways of diagnosing cancer, and accelerating building of large scale offshore wind farms in the South West of England.

Through the second round of UK Research and Innovations (UKRI) flagship Strength in Places Fund, each project will be able to apply for a further longer-term investment of 10-50 million later this year if the early stages of development are successful.

It follows the announcement by the government in June this year of the first wave of the fund, which saw 7 projects across the UK benefit from over 400 million of government and industry funding to develop their research and innovation projects.

One of these projects, Artemis Technologies, led a consortium that was awarded 33 million to develop zero emissions ferries in Northern Ireland a project which will be viewed first-hand by Business Secretary Alok Sharma during a visit to Belfast today. At the site in Belfast Harbour, the Business Secretary is expected to meet with partners of the project to hear how it plans to establish Belfast as a global leader in zero emissions maritime technology.

Business Secretary Alok Sharma said:

We are backing our innovators and with the support they need to turn great ideas into first-class industries, products and technologies.

From virtual construction projects to extracting clean heat from disused mines, the pioneering projects we are funding today will help create jobs and boost skills across the UK as we continue to drive forward our economic recovery.

Projects each receiving up to 50,000 of early stage government funding include:

HotScot will provide low-cost, low carbon heat to Scottish homes and businesses by extracting energy from disused, flooded mines in Glasgow. By overseeing 3 new geothermal minewater projects, the consortium aims to deliver economic growth equivalent to 303 million and around 9,800 jobs across the Central Belt of Scotland

This will build on Cornwall and Plymouths world-renowned excellence in offshore renewables business and research, to fast track the building of large-scale floating offshore wind farms in the Celtic Sea from 2025 onwards. This will enable the region to make a decisive contribution to Britains offshore wind target of 40 gigawatts by 2030, and also target a five-fold increase in Britains offshore wind exports

This project will bring together experts from industry, academia and the public sector to create, test, and bring to market new technologies involving 3D modelling, smart cities and cloud computing. This will help engineers to tackle potential problems before building has even begun, ultimately speeding up construction and improving safety on building sites. The project aims to create 500 jobs across the North East, making the construction industry cleaner, safer, and more productive

Trans-Mid will partner universities with transport technology businesses, as well as local suppliers to the vehicle, aerospace and rail industries to develop new green products, with the aim of establishing the Midlands as a supercluster for net zero transport. The project will form part of the UKs commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050, creating thousands of new and upskilled jobs.

This project bring partners from industry and academia together to develop new, more cost-effective targeted drugs and antibodies, as well as researching new, quicker ways of diagnosing cancer. The long term aim is to attract and secure highly-skilled jobs to the region while making Northern Irelands life and health science sector more productive.

Todays funding forms part of the governments ambitious commitment to increase public spending in research and development (R&D) by 22 billion by 2024/25, putting the UK on track to reach 2.4% of GDP being spent on R&D across the UK economy by 2027.

It also follows the publication of the governments R&D roadmap last month, which sets out plans to drive the countrys economic recovery through research and development and level up UK regions.

Further details about the projects receiving funding as part of Strength in Places Fund wave 2 can be found on the UKRI website.

Applications for the second wave of the Strength in Places Fund closed in October 2019. The winning projects will be awarded between 10 million and 50 million and is expected to be announced in Spring 2021.

The Strength in Places Fund is a UKRI flagship competitive funding scheme that takes a place-based approach to research and innovationfunding to support significant local economic growth. The fund supports collaborative bids from local consortia including both businesses and research organisations, with strong engagement from local leadership partners and alignment with local economic plans.

The Strength in Places Fund is delivered by UKRI in partnership with:

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Projects to heat homes through disused mines and faster offshore wind farm construction win government backing - GOV.UK