In the Wake of Protests – The New York Times

We are in a period of post-mortem reflection following the time during which racial justice protests were at their most intense. We now must ask ourselves: What has changed and what hasnt? Have power and privilege truly been disrupted? Has oppression been alleviated? What will be the legacy of this moment?

The historic protests in the wake of George Floyds killing were met with high hopes and soaring rhetoric. The protests were called a racial reckoning, a long-overdue racial accounting.

We painted murals on the streets and took down some statues. Companies committed to changing the Black faces on a bottle of syrup and a bag of rice. Athletes were allowed to kneel and racecar drivers held a racial solidarity parade.

There were television specials about injustice and expanded coverage of protests. Books about race rose to the tops of best-seller lists.

States like New York and California passed police reform legislation and scores of individual departments banned or restricted chokeholds and strangleholds and required officers to intervene when their colleagues use excessive force.

But, national progress, even on the issue of police accountability and reform, remained elusive. The slate of police reforms passed by the House is now bogged down in the Senate.

Donald Trump called the Black Lives Matter mural painted in front of Trump Tower in New York City a symbol of hate, one of his personal lawyers, Rudy Giuliani, called the group a domestic terror group, and his Justice Department began targeting demonstrators as terrorists.

On the Democratic side, Joe Biden quickly batted down any support of the move to defund the police, which is simply an effort to better allocate funding between police departments and social service agencies. There are also efforts at police abolition, but the defund movement is not synonymous with that effort.

More than 50 civil rights organization sent Joe Biden a scathing letter, chastising him for his involvement in mass incarceration and the war on drugs, and demanding that he:

Immediately incorporate the policies laid out by the Movement for Black Lives into your campaign platform, and announce the specific changes publicly. This includes their critical demands for interventions that will end state violence against Black people, end the economic exploitation of Black communities, advance reparations, and defund police, prisons and weaponry so we can fully fund health care, housing, education and environmental justice.

BLM co-founder and activist Patrisse Cullors spoke at the D.N.C.s virtual party platform meeting in July and said: Without the sea changes our movement recommended for the 2020 Democratic platform, any claims to allyship and solidarity with our work to fight for Black liberation are for naught.

While national political progress appeared tentative, mired or weakened by intense opposition, it did feel like personal progress, on a national scale, was made in some ways.

A Pew Research Center report in late June found that 6 percent of American adults said they attended a protest or rally that focused on issues related to race or racial equality in the last month. Thats about 15 million people, an astounding number.

Furthermore, the movement had multiracial participation. The percentage of protesters who were white was nearly three times the percentage who were Black. The percentage of Hispanics taking part was higher than the percentage of Black people as well.

But even as support for Black Lives Matter grew, many Americans still opposed the things the movement demanded.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll conducted in mid-July found that while nearly 70 percent of Americans believed Black people and other minorities are not treated as equal to white people in the criminal justice system, most still generally opposed calls to shift some police funding to social services or remove statues of Confederate generals or presidents who enslaved people.

Barack Obama issued a statement that read in part:

It falls on all of us, regardless of our race or station including the majority of men and women in law enforcement who take pride in doing their tough job the right way, every day to work together to create a new normal in which the legacy of bigotry and unequal treatment no longer infects our institutions or our hearts.

Im not sure that new normal is in the immediate offing. Much of what we saw in response to protests amounted to performative gestures, symbolism that cost nothing and shifted no power.

We must come to the conclusion that some of what we saw as a racial awakening was prone to wither. Some of what we saw was people cosplaying consciousness, immersing themselves in the issue of the moment.

I am very leery of tokenism, leery of the illusions of progress as the system holds fast. Im leery of appeasement, of being told that there is a change coming as a way of quieting me in the waiting.

America has a sterling track record of dashing Black peoples hopes.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

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In the Wake of Protests - The New York Times

Town of Hempstead Red-Flags Long Island Beaches After Fishermen Catch 4 Sharks – NBC New York

Officials in the Town of Hempstead red-flagged several beaches for the latest in a string of ongoing shark sightings off Long Island coastlines.

A tweet from the town's account said East Atlantic Beach and Atlantic Beach Estates were red-flagged after a fisherman caught a shark Sunday. A video by Pat York shows one of the four small sharks he caught on Long Beach.

All the sharks were safely released back into the water and then the red flags were issued to warn beachgoers of the potential hazards in the water.

"We've added more lifeguards on the stands, surfboards and added this week jet ski patrols again to monitor the shoreline because again that's where these sharks like to go and that's particularly dangerous for swimmers," said Hempstead Town Supervisor Don Clavin.

Hempstead officials say a local fisherman caught a shark - prompting a red-flag warning at East Atlantic Beach and the nearby estates. Adam Harding reports.

Nassau County Executive Laura Curran says the shark sighting has prompted swimming restrictions at Nickerson Beach. County residents enjoying the beach can only enter the waters waist-deep, Curran tweeted.

Shark sightings have become a semi-regular occurrence in the county, with officials modifying swimming restrictions or closing beaches entirely off-and-on for several weeks now.

Most sharks seen in the waters have been small. But one sighting last month prompted closures at Lido West and Nickerson beaches for reports of a large bull shark between 7 and 10 feet long. Town officials say they haven't seen a shark that size in the area in at least four years.

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Town of Hempstead Red-Flags Long Island Beaches After Fishermen Catch 4 Sharks - NBC New York

Israel turns a blind eye, and Palestinians revel in a weekend at Jaffa beach – Haaretz

This past weekend was very special for Siham, 45, and her five children, who live in the West Bank village of Bilin, and who crossed the separation barrier and traveled to the beach in Jaffa.

My children had never seen the sea as far as they were concerned it was as if they were coming to the most important attraction in the world, Siham said. To touch the salty water and play in the sand was the dreamiest and least expensive entertainment I could have offered my children.

LISTEN: Trump's tragedy, Netanyahu's debt and Jewish unityHaaretz

Sihams account is one of a thousand such stories of Palestinians, adults and children alike, who were allowed to cross the separation barrier and go to beaches in Israel over the past week. Anyone coming to the beach over the weekend couldnt miss the Palestinian families, especially in Jaffa but in Herzliya, Haifa and other beaches as well.

The average Israeli wouldnt be able to tell whether an Arab family came from Nablus or Tul Karm in the West Bank or Umm al-Fahm or Kafr Qasem in Israel, but a sharp eye could tell that the Palestinians were different, people for whom going to the beach is a rare treat and getting there involved some difficulty. We came to Kafr Biddu and we crossed the barrier at an opening not at a checkpoint or anything, just an opening in the [separation] fence like many others, said Inas, a mother of three who came to Jaffa. On the Israeli side there was a bus waiting for us I paid 30 shekels (nearly $9) and we went to Jaffa. There was nothing threatening. I was surprised when I saw the Jews [soldiers] looking at us without bothering us at all.

They told us just to just bring a mask and food, she said about the drivers waiting on the Israeli side. We havent been to the beach in years, certainly not the little kids. My husband and I were able to go years ago, but the kids were waiting for this moment. The coronavirus has left all of us financially stressed and apparently the Israeli economy needs us now. In Ramallah none of the parks, pools or even the zoo are open. Do you know how much it costs for the hotel pool in Jericho? Who has money, so what could be better than the sea?

The presence of Palestinian families at Israels beaches has been a topic of discussion on the West Bank, raising numerous questions. Was this a spontaneous act, or an act of protest by the population against the Palestinian Authority, which is trying to restrict movement and prevent gatherings as part of its battle against the coronavirus? On the other hand, why was Israel turning a blind eye and letting thousands of people cross through random breaches in the barrier without any supervision or inspection?

After Eid al-Adha, which straddled the previous weekend, a few Palestinians managed to get through the fence and reach Jaffa. This past weekend, the numbers grew considerably.

The Israel Defense Forces declined to comment.

A Nablus-area resident who was involved in arranging buses to the Jaffa beach said he didnt coordinate the trips with any Palestinian or Israeli entity. People are simply fed up and wanted to go to the beach, he said. The Palestinian government is imposing closures and Israel is apparently interested in taking in thousands of Palestinians to prove to the PA that it doesnt control anything. The fact is that thousands chose to defy everything and go, and theres always someone who takes on the role of organizer or the agent that helps people get to their destination.

Many people explained that the breaches in the barrier, near Farun, Biddu and Shuweika, are an open secret; people just come and cross. Araf Shaaban, a resident of Jenin who organized buses to the beaches at Jaffa and Herzliya, explained how it works.

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You advertise on social media and people register; then you bring a bus or minibus to an open point in the barrier, and people go there, cross and on the other side another bus is waiting that brings them to the beach and then returns them. The price is 150 shekels per person as part of a family, explains Shaaban, who didnt express any concern about being detained by the army.

What delays? In many cases they helped people cross or opened the gate, he said. The truth is, the soldiers also saw that these were families with flotation rings, beach balls and baskets of food, and not grenades.

Other people told Haaretz that the behavior of the Israeli security forces was surprising. We saw the army jeeps but we didnt feel any threat; on the contrary, in the evening, when we came back and it was dark, they turned on the lights so we shouldnt miss the opening in the fence.

In Jaffa itself, many residents said there was no sense of threat. In fact, there were those who acknowledged the presence of the visitors and opened kiosks, including merchants from East Jerusalem.

One West Bank resident who came with an elderly woman and wouldnt give his name, said, I dont know how Israel views this but as far as Im concerned, these are the beaches of Palestine. So we are at the beach with or without permission. They turned a blind eye or didnt enforce; who cares. The point is that we got here and it was fun.

The PA did not come out against these visits but some saw it as Israel poking a finger in the PAs eye. They want to prove to us that with or without coordination, they are letting in civilians, even at the risk of a coronavirus outbreak, even though they knew in advance that the Palestinians wouldnt mix with the Israelis, a senior Palestinian official said. Whats more, instead of Palestinians taking their leisure in the West Bank and spending their money there, they preferred having the money to spend in Israel and not the West Bank, even if we arent talking about large sums.

The coronavirus restrictions are continuing in the West Bank as part of the state of emergency declared by the PA, but many are now saying that keeping major leisure sites closed serves no purpose if thousands of people are going into Israel and returning.

Near the Meitar checkpoint there is another breach in the fence that four people can go through at once. At the edge of the road that leads from the crossing to the South Hebron Hills, cars stop every few minutes and men and boys get out carrying packs and suitcases. One of them, 16, said he was breaching the barrier to seek work in Israel, since the coronavirus eliminated most workplaces in the Hebron area.

Another man said he had worked in Israel in the past, but when the PA halted coordination with Israel he was unable to renew it. He crossed with his younger children. The soldiers just dont care, after all, they could stop this is a minute, said one of them.

On the other side of the barrier there are cars waiting, most of them driven by Israeli Arabs, to bring them the Palestinians to their destinations. Some of them even wait on the Palestinian side of the barrier, in full view of everyone. A guy just wants to work; if theres no money you find a way to work, said one of them.

One young hipster, carrying only a small pack, said he had crossed the barrier to have a good time. On the other side they bring us to Beer Sheva and from there well continue, maybe well get to Jaffa, he said, before crossing through the opening.

On the road, a Jewish woman from the area stopped her car to look at what was going on. This is crazy, she said. Every day I see them coming out in droves and Ive even reported it a few times and nobody cares. An elderly Palestinian man who works in construction in Jaffa stopped alongside her and started to argue with her.

Do you know how I live? Do you know I have a sick grandson and we dont have money for his treatment? he said angrily.

But this is a border, she replied.

For me this is no border, he said, and continued on his way.

Continued here:

Israel turns a blind eye, and Palestinians revel in a weekend at Jaffa beach - Haaretz

Jellyfish wash up on beaches of Yucatn The Yucatan Times – The Yucatan Times

In humans, the venom of the Portuguese frigate has neurotoxic, cytotoxic, and cardiotoxic consequences, producing very intense pain, and there have even been cases of death.

PROGRESO Yucatan (Times Media Mexico) The arrival of jellyfish in this port and some other areas of the Yucatan coast have caused an alert among fishermen and the population. These marine organisms can cause burns, scrapes, and constant and severe scratching and itching and even cause death among those allergic to their venom.

The alert regarding the jellyfish is also because, at this time, Yucatan is going through the most delicate moments of the coronavirus pandemic, so going to a hospital for a minor matter as it would be the infection that causes these organisms of the sea, would be quite complicated.

The arrival of jellyfish is a natural phenomenon that occurs every year, but this time it is less than that recorded in 2019.

The jellyfish, of the species fragata portuguesa in Spanish -Portuguese frigate- (Physalia physalis), can measure up to 10 meters, and when in contact with the skin, they cause burns, scratches, and intense itching.

This jellyfish is made up of colonies of marine organisms that live in its sail-shaped gelatinous pouch, which measures 15 to 30 centimeters.

The Portuguese Caravel is a carnivore. With poisonous tentacles, it traps and paralyzes its prey. It usually catches small aquatic organisms like fish and plankton.

Predators include loggerhead and hawksbill turtles, as their skin is too thick for the venom from the sting to affect them. The sea slug, Glaucus atlanticus, feeds on the Portuguese Caravel, as does the violet snail, Janthina janthina.

On the other hand, the manta octopus is immune to the venom of the Portuguese Caravel, and young individuals carry Portuguese Caravel tentacles, presumably for offensive and/or defensive purposes.

In the lower part, it has thin filaments measuring up to 10 meters with urticaria cells that, when in contact with the skin, produce a type of burn and use them to capture prey and defend themselves.

People know them as agua mala -bad water-, and you can see them floating like sailboats on the beach in Yucatan, they are colonies of polyps, and they are urticant, which mean it burns burns a lot,said Fernando Reyes, a marine biologist at the Autonomous University of Yucatan.

The Fishing Society of Puerto Progreso in the northern Yucatan, where there is a large population of this species, informed the residents of a series of measures to avoid their contact, among which are not to take them out of the sea, not to hunt them, and to prevent children from approaching them.

Even though it is the summer season, there is a considerable decline in the number of people along the Yucatan coast, due to the health contingency, the state authorities are extracting these jellyfish.

The Yucatan TimesNewsroom

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Jellyfish wash up on beaches of Yucatn The Yucatan Times - The Yucatan Times

Could Pacific Beach’s beloved mosaics soon leave the neighborhood? – pacificsandiego.com

If youre a Pacific Beach regular, youve likely seen the mosaics on the Chase Bank building along Mission Bay Drive.

Unlike other banks, these walls are decorated with decades-old artwork depicting the story of San Diego; pieces of colored glass hug together to form collages of the community and local landmarks.

But do you know the history behind this artwork and that it is now at risk of being torn down?

Earlier this year, JP Morgan Chase Bank applied for a Coastal Development permit to demolish the building of its Pacific Beach branch which also threatens the eight mosaics on the outside walls. If Chase Banks application is approved, the original 1977 building will be destroyed and replaced with two new structures.

However, that permit application has been met with some community push back.

Though many locals are now involved in saving the site, the story actually begins with a Manhattan College professor (and his blog).

Adam Arenson is a New York-based author who was raised in San Diego. He wrote Banking on Beauty: Millard Sheets and Midcentury Commercial Architecture in California, making him the official expert on Millard Sheets the man behind the Chase Bank buildings mosaics. Sheets was a mid-20th century artist who created a legacy of designing elaborate artwork reflecting California ... on bank walls.

Before it became a Chase Bank, the building on Mission Bay Drive was a Home Savings & Loan, once the largest savings and loan associations in the country that was also famous for its art.

Home Savings & Loan believed that being seen as a valuable community partner was critical to good business; to stand apart from its competitors, the corporation commissioned artwork for its branch buildings, eventually developing a partnership with Millard Sheets.

So from 1955 to 1980, Sheets was the master designer of all Home Savings & Loan buildings, including the Pacific Beach site. Sheets and his team of artists, also known as the Millard Sheets Studio, crafted mosaics, murals and sculptures on 200 structures throughout the state. According to Arenson, Sheets style was very representational; the designer was interested in using his art to tell local, site-specific histories.

One of two large-scale mosaics located on the Chase Bank building in Pacific Beach. Pictured is The Harbor, which portrays landmarks such as the Star of India, Point Loma Lighthouse and orcas from Sea World. The artwork was designed by Millard Sheets Studio in 1977.

(Adam Arenson)

These are works that are very familiar to people who have spent time in California, especially in Southern California, but I think that the memory of how they were created and who created them is fading just at the moment when a lot of them are being (faced) with preservation challenges, Arenson told PB Monthly.

These preservation challenges are what inspires Arenson to get involved in efforts to save Sheets work, and what inspired an April 28 blog post encouraging residents to advocate for Sheets buildings and art.

The Pacific Beach bank has two large-scale mosaics, both placed on the side of the building facing the parking lot. The first mosaic portrays the Childrens Zoo in Balboa Park; the second depicts the San Diego Harbor, complete with the Star of India, Point Loma Lighthouse and Sea World orcas.

Six smaller mosaics are placed above the banks front entrance, each installed as separate panels that highlight key figures in the citys history: San Diego-Native Americans, Spanish friars and vaqueros, a 49er, and members of fishing and construction trades.

Aside from the murals, there is also a sculpture of a sea lion situated in an old fountain bed (now a drought-resistant garden) and a mural painted inside the building.

The blog post caught the eye of Karl Rand, chairman of the Pacific Beach Planning Group and Pacific Beach Town Council member. When Rand heard about Arensons efforts to protect the art, he reached out to the professor to see if he could help keep the mosaics within Pacific Beach community.

It would be really nice if it could stay as a public display (in the area), said Rand, who has lived in Pacific Beach for 25 years.

Rand began brainstorming ideas in mid-May of where the mosaics could potentially be relocated. He soon saw a possible new home directly across the street from Chase Bank: the future Pacific Beach trolley station. Not only would this location allow the mosaics to stay within the neighborhood, but it would also allow passengers from all over the county to see the art.

San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) is in the process of constructing the Mid-Coast Trolley Project, which includes Balboa Avenue Trolley Station in Pacific Beach. When Rand reached out to SANDAGto see if there was a possibility to incorporate the artwork into the new trolley stations design, he said they were receptive to the idea.

SANDAG is in communication with the Pacific Beach Planning Group as they await word from the City of San Diego on how best to move forward in the effort to preserve the historic murals and mosaics, according to a statement PB Monthly received from SANDAG. We support the communitys dedication to this cause and are honored to have been approached with the prospect of incorporating the artwork into the future Balboa Avenue Trolley Station.

The mosaic relocation would also require cooperation from Chase Bank. According to Rand: I look at Chases situation as being either the villain or the hero when it comes to the mosaics, and I think they want to be the hero.

While the banks onsite team at the Pacific Beach branch was unable to discuss details on the project, Peter Kelley, JP Morgan Chases media relations spokesperson for California, said that the company is working with the City on determining the best approach to preserving the murals.

However, the mosaics are only one piece of the puzzle.

I think one of the things that complicates this (situation) the most is that there are two aspects to this: the building itself and then the mosaics, Rand said. In a way, each one could separately be subject to (historic) designation.

While Rands focus is on the artwork, there is also an ongoing effort to save the whole building. Both Arenson and San Diego nonprofit Save Our Heritage Organisation (SOHO) have asked the city to grant the entire structure historic designation, which could potentially make the mosaic relocation unnecessary.

Chase Banks Pacific Beach branch is located on Mission Bay Drive. Above the entrance is a series of six small mosaics; each panel features a key figure in San Diegos history. The artwork was designed by Millard Sheets Studio in 1977.

(Adam Arenson)

On July 8, Adam Arenson and SOHO both wrote letters to the city, asking officials to protect the building.

In Arensons request, he detailed the buildings historic significance, adding that other Sheets Studio sites in Southern California have been recognized as landmarks or preservation projects.

The letter from SOHO, written by executive director Bruce Coons, also noted that the prime location of the Pacific Beach structure is significant.

Located at a prominent intersection with monumental siting, this exquisite landmark is impossible to ignore because it is a unique and iconic work of art, Coons wrote.

The city responded to SOHO saying that the entire parcel will be evaluated under CEQA (California Environmental Quality Act), not just the mosaics.

However, this is still no assurance that the building would be retained instead of mitigated, which is where we are today, Amie Hayes, SOHOs historic resources specialist, wrote in the email.

One hurdle that might prove to be an issue in receiving designation is age. Since the Pacific Beach structure is only 43 years old, it will not be reviewed by Development Services Department (DSD) staff, which only reviews properties more than 45 years old.

However, sometimes younger properties including the Salk Institute in La Jolla are forwarded to the Historical Resources Board (HRB) for designation, which is the case with 4650 Mission Bay Drive.

Staff has engaged in discussions with SOHO about submitting a Historical Resources Research Report through the voluntary designation process. While the letters from SOHO and Arenson include compelling information, there is a formal designation process that must be adhered to, said Scott Robinson, senior public information officer of the city of San Diego.

Currently, the status of the historic designation request, mosaic relocation efforts or building demolition plans are all largely unknown.

Due to the capacity of staff and the volume of requests, Robinson said that the HRBs review process of historic designation requests do not have a standard timeline. Chase Developments Coastal Development permit application is currently pending, with an application expiration date of Aug. 21, 2022.

Even if the structure receives a historical designation from the city, it does not guarantee the original building will be protected, nor does it prohibit Chase Bank from moving forward with its proposed construction plans.

According to Robinson, if the structure does receive historic designation, Chase Bank would then need to apply for a Process 4 Site Development permit and would still need to prove that maintaining the building on site is infeasible to demolish.

Without a clear timeline on the Chase Bank buildings future, the mosaics may miss their chance to be incorporated into the Balboa Avenue Trolley station. Though SANDAG expressed interest in utilizing the artwork, the effort could fall through due to conflicting schedules, as The Mid-Coast Trolley Project is slated to finish construction in fall 2021. If the mosaics are saved but have not yet found an alternative home, the artwork could be temporarily placed in storage, a solution that has been successfully arranged for other threatened Sheets Studio work in the past.

I understand that people want to save the building, but I kind of wish if we knew if that was realistic or not, Rand said. And it doesnt seem like anybody is in a position to answer that question ... If we can save the building that would be great but if we can only save the mosaics that would be really, really good too.

Yet at the end of the day, everyone involved ultimately is after the same objective: to keep the Sheets Studio legacy alive by preserving Millard Sheets contribution to, and representation of, the city.

I think Sheets did such a good job of encapsulating the experience of California, Arenson said. And as a Californian, I think preserving these works that help shape San Diego and my childhood is something thats really been important to me.

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Could Pacific Beach's beloved mosaics soon leave the neighborhood? - pacificsandiego.com

‘They just pull up everything!’ Chinese fleet raises fears for Galpagos sea life – The Guardian

Jonathan Green had been tracking a whale shark named Hope across the eastern Pacific for 280 days when the satellite transmissions from a GPS tag on her dorsal fin abruptly stopped.

It was not unusual for the GPS signal to go silent, even for weeks at a time, said Green, a scientist who has been studying the worlds largest fish for three decades in the unique marine ecosystem around the Galpagos Islands.

But then he looked at satellite images in the area where Hope was last tracked more than a thousand nautical miles west of the islands and noticed the ocean was being patrolled by hundreds of Chinese fishing boats.

I began to look into it and found that at the very end of her track she began to speed up, said Green, co-founder and director of the Galpagos Whale Shark Project.

It went from one knot to six or seven knots for the last 32 minutes which is, of course, the speed of a fishing boat, he said.

The fishing vessels that Green saw on the satellite images are believed to belong to an enormous Chinese-flagged fleet which Ecuadorian authorities last week warned was just outside the Galpagos Islands territorial waters.

I dont have proof but my hypothesis is that she was caught by vessels from the same fleet which is now situated to the south of the islands, Green told the Guardian. She is the third GPS-tracked whale shark to have gone missing in the last decade, he added.

The Chinese fleet, numbering more than 200 vessels, is in international waters just outside a maritime border around the Galpagos Islands and also Ecuadors coastal waters, said Norman Wray, the islands governor.

Chinese fishing vessels come every year to the seas around the Galpagos, which were declared a Unesco world heritage site in 1978, but this years fleet is one of the largest seen in recent years. Of the 248 vessels, 243 are flagged to China including to companies with suspected records of illegal, unreported and unregulated, or IUU, fishing, according to research by C4ADS, a data analysis NGO.

The fleet includes fishing boats and refrigerated container or reefer ships to store enormous catches.

Transferring cargo between vessels is prohibited under international maritime law yet the Chinese flotilla has supply and storage ships along with longline and squid fishing boats.

There are some fleets which dont seem to abide by any regulations, said Wray.

One captain of an Ecuadorian tuna boat saw the Chinese fishing boats up close in early July, before the end of the tuna season.

They just pull up everything! said the captain, who asked not to be named. We are obliged to take a biologist aboard who checks our haul; if we catch a shark we have to put it back, but who controls them?

He recalled navigating through the fleet at night, constantly changing course to avoid boats, as their lights illuminated the sea to attract squid to the surface.

It was like looking at a city at night, he said.

The longline fishing boats had up to 500 lines, each with thousands of fishhooks, he estimated, and claimed that some of the vessels would turn off their automatic tracking systems to avoid detection, particularly when operating in protected areas.

Chinese fishing practices first caught the attention of Ecuador in 2017 when its navy seized the Chinese reefer Fu Yuan Yu Leng 999 within the Galpagos marine reserve. Inside its containers were 6,000 frozen sharks including the endangered hammerhead shark and whale shark.

It was a slaughterhouse, said Green, describing the images of the cargo hold. This kind of slaughter is going on on a massive scale in international waters and nobody is witnessing it.

The seizure prompted protests outside the Chinese embassy in Quito; Ecuador fined the vessel $6m and the 20 Chinese crew-members were later jailed for up to four years for illegal fishing.

The arrival of the latest fleet has also stirred public outrage and a formal complaint by Ecuador as its navy is on alert for any incursion into Ecuadorian waters.

The Chinese embassy in Quito said that China was a responsible fishing nation with a zero-tolerance attitude towards illegal fishing. It had confirmed with Ecuadors navy that all the Chinese fishing vessels were operating legally and dont represent a threat to anyone, it said in a statement last month. On Thursday China announced a three-month fishing ban in the high seas west of the marine reserve, but it will not come into force until September.

Roque Sevilla, a former mayor of Quito, who is leading a team in charge of designing a protection strategy for the islands, said the fleet practices indiscriminate fishing regardless of species or age which is causing a serious deterioration of the quality of fauna that we will have in our seas.

Ecuador would establish a corridor of marine reserves with Pacific-facing neighbours Costa Rica, Panama and Colombia to seal off important areas of marine diversity, Sevilla told the Guardian.

Protecting the Cocos Ridge, an underwater mountain range which connects the Galpagos Islands to mainland Costa Rica, and the Carnegie Ridge which links the archipelago to Ecuador and continental South America, could close off more than 200,000 sq nautical miles of ocean otherwise vulnerable to industrial fishing, he said.

He added Ecuador had called for a diplomatic meeting with Chile, Peru, Colombia and Panama to present a formal protest against China.

When the Galpagoss protected area was first created it was cutting edge, said Matt Rand, director of the Pew Bertarelli Ocean Legacy, but compared to other newer marine protected areas Galpagos is now potentially lacking in size to protect the biodiversity.

Milton Castillo, the Galpagos Islands representative for Ecuadors human rights ombudsmans office, said he had asked the prosecutors office to inspect the cargo holds of the Chinese ships based on the legal principle of the universal and extraterritorial protection of endangered species.

Chinas distant-water fishing fleet is the biggest in the world, with nearly 17,000 vessels 1,000 of which use flags of convenience and are registered in other countries, according to research by the Overseas Development Institute.

The fleet often fishes in the territorial waters of low-income countries, the report said, having depleted fish stocks in domestic waters.

Green said the explosion of life created by the confluence of cold and warm ocean currents around the Galpagos Islands is exactly why the Chinese armada is hovering around the archipelagos waters.

The Galpagos marine reserve is a place of very great productivity, high biomass but also biodiversity, he said. The longline fishing technique used by the fleet catch big fish like tuna, but also sharks, rays, turtles and marine mammals like sea lions and dolphins, he added.

This is not fishing any more, it is simply destroying the resources of our oceans, Green said. We should ask whether any nation on this planet has the right to destroy what is common ground.

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'They just pull up everything!' Chinese fleet raises fears for Galpagos sea life - The Guardian

Number of Bitcoin Cash Whales Drops Following 39% Price Surge – Cointelegraph

Following a 39% price surge at the end of July, at least 10 Bitcoin Cash whales have left the network, possibly trading or selling their millions in holdings.

According to Crypto Twitter user Ali Martinez, data from analytics site Santiment shows the number of investors holding between 10,000-100,000 Bitcoin Cash (BCH) roughly $3-30 million has fallen by 10 since Aug. 1. The drop comes after the token surged 38.7% from $224.46 on July 17 to a three-month high of $311.34 on July 31, implying that a number of whales could have sold their holdings.

BCH continues to be the fifth largest crypto asset by market capitalization at $5.6 billion, with Chainlink (LINK) trailing at $4.6 billion. At the time of writing, Bitcoin Cash is trading at $307.84, having risen 3% in the last 24 hours.

Bitcoin Cash uses the SHA256D algorithm the same as that used by Bitcoin. However, its hashing power is less than 5% of that of Bitcoin, which has sometimes left it vulnerable to a 51% attack.

In response, the BCH community has floated changing the algorithm as part of the networks November upgrade. Cointelegraph reported on Aug. 7 that developers have worked out a compromise between two proposed solutions. The network will implement the Aserti3-2d difficulty adjustment proposed by lead BCHN maintainer Jonathan Toomin, and an infrastructure funding plan.

Link:

Number of Bitcoin Cash Whales Drops Following 39% Price Surge - Cointelegraph

Turkish Aggression Is NATOs Elephant in the Room – The New York Times

NATO operates by consensus, so Turkish objections can stall nearly any policy, and its diplomats are both diligent and knowledgeable, on top of every ball, as one NATO official said. France has also used its effective veto to pursue national interests, but never to undermine collective defense, NATO ambassadors say. But Turkey has blocked NATO partnerships for countries it dislikes, like Israel, Armenia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.

More seriously, for many months Turkey blocked a NATO plan for the defense of Poland and the Baltic nations, which all border Russia. And Turkey wanted NATO to list various armed Kurdish groups, which have fought for their independence, as terrorist groups something that NATO does not do.

Some of these same Kurdish groups are also Washingtons best allies in its fight against Islamic State and Al Qaeda in Syria and Iraq.

A deal was supposedly worked out at the last NATO summit meeting in December in London, but Turkey created bureaucratic complications, and it was only in late June that Turkey relented after considerable pressure from official Washington, which has lost patience with Mr. Erdogan and is infuriated by his insistence on buying the S-400.

If deployed, the S-400 would put Russian engineers inside a NATO air defense system, giving them valuable insights into the alliances strengths while threatening to diminish the capability of the expensive fifth-generation fighter, the F-35.

The assumption is that Mr. Erdogan, who has grown significantly more suspicious since a failed 2016 coup against him, wants to be able to shoot down American and Israeli planes like the ones his own air force used in the coup attempt.

Every time we discuss Russia in NATO, everyone thinks of the S-400 and no one says anything, said one European diplomat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter. Its a major breach in NATO air defense, and its not even discussed.

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Turkish Aggression Is NATOs Elephant in the Room - The New York Times

Ron Paul, former GOP congressman: Trump should fire Dr …

Former Rep. Ron Paul on Thursday called for the firing of Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease specialist leading President Trumps medical response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Mr. Paul, a retired doctor who ran three times for president during his decades in politics, also called Dr. Fauci a fraud and encouraged Americans to quit listening to him.

The former Republican congressman from Texas made the remarks during an internet program he co-hosts, the Ron Paul Liberty Report, after Dr. Fauci slashed the number of Americans projected to die from COVID-19, the infectious respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

Even the bad guys are admitting it, and that is they made these dire predictions so that they could go ahead and destroy peoples civil liberties and spend a lot of money and make up an excuse on why the stock market actually went down all kinds of things by having this coronavirus event blown way out of proportion, Mr. Paul said.

He should be fired, Mr. Paul said about Dr. Fauci. But if you dont do it in the literal sense, the people have to fire him. And they have to fire him by saying hes a fraud.

Dr. Fauci, the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a member of the presidents coronavirus task force, told NBC during an interview aired earlier on Thursday that the coronavirus may cause far fewer deaths within the U.S. than previously estimated because of Americans following social distancing practices recommended to slow the spread of COVID-19.

The real data are telling us it is highly likely we are having a definite positive effect by the mitigation things that were doing, this physical separation, Dr. Fauci said on the Today show, adding that the number of deadly COVID-19 cases in country could be closer to 60,000 rather than the 100,000 to 240,000 projected by his task force days earlier.

Mr. Paul subsequently responded on his internet program by alleging that future efforts to curb the pandemic will further erode civil liberties.

The plan that they have is when things are getting back to normal, yes, people can return to their work, and they do things, and go to the golf course if you get a stamp of approval, Mr. Paul said. Your liberties are there if you get the proper stamp from the government.

Its an excuse to have total control over the people, Mr. Paul claimed during his podcast.

Mr. Paul, 84, previously referred to Dr. Fauci as the chief fearmonger of the Trump Administration in a column he published last month titled The Coronavirus Hoax.

He is the father of Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican, who tested positive last month for COVID-19 and has since recovered.

More than 466,000 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University. Of those, over 17,000 died and more than 26,000 recovered.

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Ron Paul, former GOP congressman: Trump should fire Dr ...

Ron Paul: Media Is Lying About ‘Second Wave’ Of …

by RON PAUL || For months, The Washington Post and the rest of the mainstream media kept a morbid Covid-19 death count on their front pages and at the top of their news broadcasts. The coronavirus outbreak was all about the number of dead. The narrative was intended to boost governors like Cuomo in New York and Whitmer in Michigan, who turned their states authoritarian under the false notion that destroying peoples jobs, freedom, and lives would somehow keep a virus from doing what viruses always do: spread through a population until eventually losing strength and dying out.

The death count was always the headline.

But then all of a sudden early in June the mainstream media did a George Orwell and lectured us that it is all about cases and has always been all about cases. Death, and especially infection fatality rate, were irrelevant. Why? Because from the peak in April, deaths had decreased by 90 percent and were continuing to crash. That was not terrifying enough so the media pretended this good news did not exist.

With massive increases in testing, the case numbers climbed. This is not rocket science: the more people you test the more cases you discover.

Unfortunately our mainstream media is only interested in pushing the party line. So the good news that millions more have been exposed while the fatality rate continues to decline meaning the virus is getting weaker is buried under hysterical false reporting of new cases.

Unfortunately many governors, including our own here in Texas, are incapable of resisting the endless lies of the mainstream media. They are putting Americans again through the nightmare of forced business closures, mandated face masks, and restrictions of Constitutional liberties based on false propaganda.

In Texas the second wave propaganda has gotten so bad that the leaders of the four major hospitals in Houston took the extraordinary step late last week of holding a joint press conference to clarify that the scare stories of Houston hospitals being overwhelmed with Covid cases are simply untrue. Dr. Marc Boom of Houston Methodist said the reporting on hospital capacity is misleading. He said, quite frankly, were concerned that there is a level of alarm in the community that is unwarranted right now.

In fact, there has been much reporting that the spike in Texas cases is not due to a resurgence of the virus but to hospital practices of Covid-testing every patient coming in for any procedure at all. If its a positive, well that counts as a Covid hospitalization.

RELATED || Coronavirus Death Toll Dramatically Lowered Again

Why would hospitals be so dishonest in their diagnoses? Billions of appropriated federal dollars are being funneled to facilities based on the number of Covid cases they can produce. As Ive always said, if you subsidize something you get more of it. And thats why we are getting more Covid cases.

Lets go back to the original measurements used to scare Americans into giving up their Constitutional liberties: the daily death numbers. Even though we know hospitals have falsely attributed countless deaths to Covid-19 that were deaths WITH instead of FROM the virus, we are seeing actual deaths steadily declining over the past month and a half. Declining deaths are not a great way to push the second wave propaganda, so the media and politicians have moved the goal posts and decided that only cases are important. Its another big lie.

Resist propaganda and defend your liberty. That is the only way well get through this.

(Via: Gage Skidmore)

Ron Paulis a former U.S. Congressman from Texas and the leader of the pro-liberty, pro-free market movement in the United States. His weekly column reprinted with permission can be foundhere.

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Ron Paul: Media Is Lying About 'Second Wave' Of ...

Ron Paul | Biography, Education, Books, & Facts | Britannica

Ron Paul, byname of Ronald Ernest Paul, (born August 20, 1935, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.), American politician, who served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (197677, 197985, 19972013) and who unsuccessfully ran as the 1988 Libertarian presidential candidate. He later sought the Republican nomination for president in 2008 and 2012.

Britannica Quiz

American History and Politics

What kind of government does the United States have?

Paul grew up on his familys dairy farm just outside Pittsburgh. He earned a bachelors degree in biology from Gettysburg College in 1957 and a medical degree from Duke University, in Durham, North Carolina, in 1961. He later served as a flight surgeon for the U.S. Air Force (196365) and the Air National Guard (196568). In 1968 Paul moved to Brazoria county, Texas, where he established a successful practice in obstetrics and gynecology.

Paul was inspired to enter politics in 1971 when Pres. Richard M. Nixon abolished the Bretton Woods exchange system. Paul believed that the abandonment of the last vestiges of the gold standard would lead to financial ruin for the United States. Though he was unsuccessful in his initial run for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1974, his opponent resigned before completing his term, and Paul won a special election to complete it. He lost the seat in the subsequent general election, only to regain it two years later. He chose not to seek reelection in 1984 and instead campaignedunsuccessfullyfor the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate. He broke from the Republican Party to run as a Libertarian in the 1988 presidential election, ultimately winning more than 430,000 votes. He returned to the U.S. House of Representatives as a Republican in 1997, though his votes were often at variance with the majority of his party; for example, in the early 2000s he voted against authorizing the Iraq War and the USA Patriot Act.

Pauls presidential campaign platform remained libertarian in spirit. It focused on free-market economics, a radical reduction in the size of government, increased privacy protections for individuals, and a reduction of U.S. participation in international organizations. Having claimed only a handful of delegates, he ended his bid for the White House in June 2008 and launched Campaign for Liberty, a political action committee. In April 2011 Paul, who was popular within the Tea Party movement, formed an exploratory committee to assess the viability of a third presidential run. The following month he formally announced his candidacy. In July 2011, in order to focus on his presidential campaign, Paul announced that he would not seek a 13th term in Congress. Although supported by a devoted and energized base, Paul was selective in the states where he actively campaigned. A second-place showing in New Hampshire was among his best performances in January 2012. He garnered a number of other second-place finishes before announcing in May that he would not campaign in the remaining states. Paul did not endorse the Republican nominee, Mitt Romney, and said on the night of the general election that he believed the only winner would be the status quo. He retired from the House in January 2013, at the age of 77.

Pauls views are outlined in Freedom Under Siege (1987), A Foreign Policy of Freedom (2007), and The Revolution: A Manifesto (2008).

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Ron Paul | Biography, Education, Books, & Facts | Britannica

Ron Paul Liberty Report

For our purposes, Fed bugs are peoplewith a faith-based belief in the power of central banks (and central bankers) to engineer economic growth using "monetary policy," despite decades of history and current evidence to the contrary. They believe tinkering with inputs and rates and velocity and flows somehow makes us richer in terms of productivity, goods, and services. They believe in financial alchemy, as economist Nomi Prinsputs it, rather than precious metals. They believe paper has value so long as government issues it and legislates its use. Most of all, they believe in technocratic control over money in the economy.

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Because no individual is all-knowing, it necessarily means that to a great degree, we are all ignorant. No matter how much knowledge we're able to cram between our ears during our time here, ignorant we will always be.

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According to media accounts, the Berlin protesters held signs reading We are being forced to wear a muzzle, Natural defense instead of vaccination, and We are making noise because you are stealing our freedom!

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The real damage is far deeper, however, and is reflected in millions of small businessespermanently destroyed, tens of millions of households wiped-out financially and thevicious daisy chain of delinquencies, deferrals and defaults just beginning to rip through

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Politicians and Central Bankers attempt to do the impossible. They believe that with dictates and counterfeit money they can control the economy. The reality is the exact opposite. They only destroy the economy. Is it any wonder that the ultimate international money - Gold - has hit all-time highs in terms of The Fed's debased dollars? Gold has no ties to any politician or central banker. It is a source of independence. More and more people are wanting that kind of independence.Streamed LIVE Aug. 7, 2020

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is desperately begging rich people to return to the state and to New York City. He's killed off the old people by sending Covid patients into nursing homes and he's killed off the economy by shutting down, but he's offered to cook a meal for any rich person who returns to the burned out shell of the former great city. Any takers? Plus in today's Report: LA Mayor: "Want to party? Try it without any electricity or water!" Houston begs people to get Covid tested after new "cases" continue to fall. And Sweden has advice on how to open schools. Should we listen to success?Streamed LIVE Aug. 6, 2020

The authoritarians who have locked this country down ostensibly to fight the outbreak of a coronavirus are not going to let up once a vaccine is ready. Already we are seeing additional qualifiers and contingencies being made that will only serve to prolong their rule-by-decree. A vaccine is not going to end it. Also today: More Americans are saying "no" to any vaccine; CDC Director admits a financial incentive to list deaths as "Covid"; Gov. Whitmer cracks down harder...but why? And more...Streamed LIVE Aug. 5, 2020

According to a recent Axio-Ipsos poll, Americans are increasingly skeptical of the official case and death reports being served up by politicians and the mainstream media. Are we getting closer to the awakening needed to put an end to Covid tyranny? Plus in today's program: New York Times admits that lockdowns will kill more than Covid; What is happening to Australia; Houston Mayor threatens residents; and the real danger to Americans is not Covid according to this important map.Streamed LIVE Aug. 4, 2020

They are rushing through a Covid vaccine at a blistering pace, while granting immunity to big Pharma for any damage it might do to the American people. They are lowering the minimum effectiveness level to 50 percent - like tossing a coin. The propaganda machine is in high gear. Should we line up for the shot? Also in today's Liberty Report: Massive anti-lockdown protests in Europe!Streamed LIVE Aug. 3, 2020

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Ron Paul Liberty Report

Europeans are waking up to COVID-19 tyranny – The Highland County Press

By Dr. Ron PaulFormer CongressmanThe Ron Paul Institutehttp://ronpaulinstitute.org/

Tens of thousands of Germans marched through Berlin on Saturday, proclaiming a Day of Freedom and demanding an end to government-mandated face masks and social distancing. The UK and Netherlands also saw large protests against their governments tyrannical actions in response to the coronavirus outbreak.

According to media accounts, the Berlin protesters held signs reading We are being forced to wear a muzzle, Natural defense instead of vaccination, and We are making noise because you are stealing our freedom.

Good for them!

The New York Times Tweeted that the masses of Berlin demonstrators were all Nazis and conspiracy theorists. Does the paper of record really want us to believe there were perhaps a million Nazis active in the streets of Berlin? Wouldnt that be alarming?

The fact is, Europeans are realizing that their government-mandated lockdowns did little or nothing to protect them from the virus, while causing economic catastrophe and untold human suffering.

They likely looked around and noticed that Sweden, which never locked down its economy, rejected face masks, and kept its restaurants and other places of business open, did not fare any worse than the countries that have been turned into open air prisons for much of the year. In fact, Sweden had a lower death rate from the virus than strict lockdown states like the UK and France. No wonder people are starting to get angry.

Unfortunately, while the Europeans are waking up, Americans are still asleep as our freedoms continue to be trampled. While Europeans demand an end to government tyranny, here we see states with minuscule new deaths returning to lockdown. It is as if all the wannabe tyrants from mayors to governors are finally realizing their secret dreams of ruling by decree. Their dreams are our nightmares.

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy put citizens on notice that he will lock the state back down if people dare to go outside without a face mask or even to have guests inside their own homes. What kind of politician puts his own constituents on notice?

It is not as if the experts are even looking into treatments for the viral infection. Doctors who report their own successful experience treating Covid patients with hydroxychloroquine, for example, are ridiculed, censored, and even fired from their jobs. The rush to silence Americas Frontline Doctors last week and to disappear their video down the memory hole should terrify anybody who still believes in free speech.

No, they say, we must keep locked down and masked until we have a vaccine. The US government is dumping billions into a vaccine that may be less than 60 percent effective to prevent a virus that has something like a 99.8 percent survival rate. What kind of math is that?

How many may be harmed more by the vaccine than helped? Well probably never know because the U.S. government has just granted big pharma immunity from liability claims if the vaccine produces damaging side effects.

They keep moving the goal posts to keep us terrified and isolated. First it was body counts and then cases. The numbers have been so wildly off that its hard to trust any reporting. People are getting angry. They are confused. They are facing an economic depression of historic proportions. But worst of all, they are watching as Leviathan government snatches every last bit of freedom.

Three cheers for the Europeans. Lets hope America wakes up soon.

Excerpt from:

Europeans are waking up to COVID-19 tyranny - The Highland County Press

Did Dems overplay their hand? – POLITICO – Politico

with help from Marianne LeVine and Heather Caygle

STIMULUS SCRUTINY -- Last week, we wrote about how Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was facing scrutiny for his decision to wait until July to start negotiating the next coronavirus bill. And now with a deal essentially dead and President Donald Trump moving ahead with executive actions Democratic leaders are facing questions of their own about their strategy.

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Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer were unyielding in some of their demands during the negotiations and were trying to hold out for more. The GOP did offer some concessions, including $400 per week in unemployment insurance until December. But Democrats rejected some of those proposals, calling them woefully insufficient and betting that Republicans would eventually back down.

But thats not what happened. Instead, White House officials involved in this round of negotiations which, for the first time, included conservative hard-liner Mark Meadows essentially walked away from the negotiating table, at least for now, and told Trump to follow through with unilateral action (more on that later).

Now, its unclear if lawmakers will still press for a deal before August recess or just try to pick things back up again in September (though notably, Pelosi said she doesn't want to tie the relief talks to the looming government funding debate). There were no meetings over the weekend, none are on the books for today, and Dem leaders have not been in contact with Trump despite what the president claimed last night. Meanwhile, the Senate is still technically in session, but most of the members are gone.

During an appearance on Fox News Sunday, Pelosi was asked by Chris Wallace if she made a mistake in the deal-making process. But the speaker wasnt having it. Her response: "Clearly you dont have an understanding of what is happening here. And during a Democratic caucus call over the weekend, frontliner Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) expressed concern that if they dont get a deal it will be a pox on both chambers of Congress, sources told Heather, which could be used against lawmakers in tough races.

Democrats, however, say Republicans are the ones to blame and point out they offered to come down on the overall price tag of the bill by $1 trillion if the White House came up by $1 trillion, but the GOP rejected it. And Pelosi emphasized Sunday that we have to reach an agreement" and stressed that theres room for compromise. Expect Dems to keep bashing the executive orders and call on Republicans to keep negotiating.

Related reads: Pelosi Is Playing Hardball on Coronavirus Relief. She Thinks Shell Win, via NYTs Emily Cochrane and Nicholas Fandos: https://nyti.ms/2PDWQCm; and Mark Meadows Brings Harder Spending Line to Coronavirus Talks, from WSJs Siobhan Hughes: https://on.wsj.com/2CfdFk3.

AND SPEAKING of Trumps executive actions Democrats are slamming the orders as weak and unconstitutional. And there are also legitimate questions about whether the actions are effective or even accomplish what Trump says they do. For example, Trump said he was extending unemployment insurance at $400 per week, but his order would require states to match part of it and administer a new program to get the extra federal benefits. And Trump also said he was extending the federal moratorium on evictions, but his order just instructs agencies to study whether a moratorium on evictions is feasible.

Some Republicans were also unhappy with Trumps unilateral moves. The statement from Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.): The pen-and-phone theory of executive lawmaking is unconstitutional slop. President Obama did not have the power to unilaterally rewrite immigration law with DACA, and President Trump does not have the power to unilaterally rewrite the payroll tax law. More from Nolan McCaskill: https://politi.co/2F90mCL.

Related read: Trump Relief Plan Faces Hurdles, by WSJs Sarah Chaney and Natalie Andrews: https://on.wsj.com/2PFUPFD.

President Donald Trump hold up one of the four executive orders that he signed that addresses the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic at his Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., Saturday, Aug. 8, 2020. Trump signed the executive orders and bypassed the nation's lawmakers as he claimed the authority to defer payroll taxes and replace an expired unemployment benefit with a lower amount after negotiations with Congress on a new coronavirus rescue package collapsed. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)| Susan Walsh/AP Photo

HOW DO YOU SOLVE A PROBLEM LIKE MARJORIE? -- When we uncovered racist Facebook videos from GOP congressional candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican leaders raced to disavow her, calling her comments disgusting and saying there's no tolerance for them in the GOP. But in the two months that followed, Republicans have done little to stop her from winning a seat in the House despite finally getting rid of Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), who also has a long history of controversial and racist remarks.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is staying neutral in Greenes runoff race and letting the primary process play out. In fact, Greene said she has spoken to McCarthy since the POLITICO story published; she claims they have a great relationship and that he told her his public rebuke was just a miscommunication. Meanwhile, there has been no major outside spending in the race. Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.) lobbied the conservative Club for Growth to get involved, which they considered doing, but they ultimately decided to sit out.

That being said, there have been about a dozen Republicans including House Minority Whip Steve Scalise who have worked to boost Greenes opponent, neurosurgeon John Cowan. But GOP lawmakers, donors and strategists still fear that Greene could actually win her runoff race in Georgia on Tuesday, which would almost guarantee that she comes to Congress since it's a deeply conservative district. The story from your Huddle host and Ally: https://politi.co/3ipRTcO.

Related read: A confluence of events has created a moment for a Georgia pastor to take a Senate seat away from warring Republicans, per WaPos Paul Kane: https://wapo.st/2XGFPM3.

HAPPY MONDAY! Welcome to Huddle, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this August 10, where your host hopes your week goes more smoothly than the Nats ground crew trying to unroll the tarp at yesterday's game.

FRIDAYS MOST CLICKED: The APs report on Congress urging the Postal Service to undo changes slowing mail was the big winner.

UNDER PRESSURE -- Democrats feel like their public pressure campaign on the intelligence community is paying off. Andrew and Kyle explain: Congressional Democrats stung by the Obama administrations soft-pedaled approach to Russian election interference in 2016 have a plan to prevent a repeat under President Donald Trump: make as much noise as possible, early and often. For weeks, top Democratic lawmakers in the House and Senate have been blaring warnings and demanding briefings and public disclosures from the intelligence community, shrugging off Republican charges that theyre politicizing intelligence.

And Democrats can now point to evidence that their pressure campaign might be working. On Friday, the Trump administrations counterintelligence chief publicly confirmed that Russia is attempting to harm Joe Bidens candidacy in 2020. The official, William Evanina, even singled out a pro-Russia Ukrainian, Andrii Derkach, as a key participant in the Kremlins new effort. The statement, which also indicated that Iran and China prefer a Trump loss in November, was hailed by Democrats as vindication of their strategy to lean on the administration for additional disclosures to help educate the public. More: https://politi.co/30JojZz.

Related read: Ron Johnson subpoenas documents from FBI director, via Betsy Woodruff Swan: https://politi.co/2XKU6rm.

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE -- WaPos Lisa Rein has a dispatch from Montana on the states Senate race: Republican Steve Daines, the freshman senator in this sparsely populated state of hunters, fishers and big-government skeptics where President Trump crushed Hillary Clinton four years ago, was supposed to coast to reelection in November. Democrats were mounting a modest field to oppose him. Daines, if not defined by legislative wins in Washington, had forged a close alliance with the president. Hes a reliable conservative in a state that has voted Republican for president every year since 1968, except for Bill Clinton 28 years ago.

Then came Steve Bullock and the coronavirus pandemic. And with less than three months until Election Day, the faceoff between the two-term Democratic governor from Helena and the wealthy former software executive from Bozeman has transformed into a margin-of-error race that has helped put Senate control within reach for Democrats. It will measure whether Montanas proud history of political individualism is sustainable in an era when voters are more polarized than ever. More: https://wapo.st/3kxEqRO.

Related read: Thom Tillis built the fire. Now it could consume him, by The Intercepts Paul Blest: https://bit.ly/2DKfw0x.

THE GOPS NEW BOGEYMAN -- After a brief period of playing nice with the Black Lives Matter movement, Republicans are now trying to villainize it in the run-up to November. The dispatch from Laura Barrn-Lpez and Alex Thompson: Facing possible electoral calamity, Republicans are now turning to a familiar playbook: stoking fear by trying to redefine the Black Lives Matter movement as a radical leftist mob looking to sabotage the white, suburban lifestyle.

Republicans are using two lines of attack: the Trump administration, candidates in safe red seats and right-wing social media channels seek to label the entire movement Marxist and anti-family as they try to energize their conservative base. Republicans running in swing districts and states, meanwhile, are tying their Democratic opponents to activists demands to defund police departments, while avoiding explicitly mentioning Black Lives Matter. Instead, Republicans running in competitive general election races have focused recent ads on more abstract targets like left-wing radicals and the liberal mob." More: https://politi.co/30IzOAF.

Related read: John Roberts emerges as a 2020 campaign issue, from The Washington Examiners W. James Antle III: https://washex.am/3aeuYhq.

IN IT TO WIN IT -- WinRed, the GOPs answer to ActBlue, brought in a whopping $164 million last month welcome news for the GOP as it fights to keep the Senate and not sink further into the House minority. More from The Hills Julia Manchester: Republican grassroots fundraising group WinRed raked in $164.3 million in the month of July, raising $15.7 million in one day alone, according to figures exclusively obtained by The Hill. The group received a total of 3.217 million donations, with the average donation given to the group coming in at $51.

The latest fundraising figures mark a major uptick for the group over the past year. WinRed raised just $31 million in July of 2019. The group raised a total of $275 million in the second quarter. The left-leaning group raked in $710 million during the second quarter from 5.7 million individuals donors. The development comes as fundraising heats up between Republicans and Democrats ahead of the general election in November. More: https://bit.ly/2XO5aUF.

Related: 2020 election ratings update: House more solid for Democrats, per Roll Calls Nathan L. Gonzales: https://bit.ly/3adHyh9.

WEEKEND WEDDING -- Rep. Abby Finkenauer (D-Iowa) and Daniel Wasta, the new Iowa political director for Joe Bidens campaign, got married Saturday at their home. A small group of family members and close friends attended the socially distanced, outdoor ceremony, with many more joining via livestream. Pic, via Roots + Wilds Photography

Scott Luginbill is now director of congressional affairs for the Trump reelect. He previously worked on congressional affairs for the GOP convention, and is a Mark Walker alum.

Chadwick Carlough is now campaign policy coordinator for the Trump reelect. He previously was chief of staff for Rep. Bradley Byrne (R-Ala.).

Subhan Cheema is now director of coalition comms and North Carolina press secretary for the Biden campaign. He previously was comms director/adviser for Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), and is a Richard Blumenthal and Obama HHS alum.

The Senate meets at 3 p.m.

The House is not in session.

Crickets.

FRIDAYS WINNER: John Pitney was the first person to correctly guess that JFKs presidential campaign was the first to rely on computer-driven simulations and big data analytics to inform policy positions and campaign strategy.

TODAYS QUESTION: From John: California Governor Jerry Brown got married in 2005. Which well-known California politician officiated at the ceremony? The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Huddle. Send your best guess to [emailprotected].

GET HUDDLE emailed to your phone each morning.

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Did Dems overplay their hand? - POLITICO - Politico

The GOP Is the Anti-Election Party – The New Republic

The nightmare scenario for liberals across Americawhat if a defeated Donald Trump refuses to leave office?reared its head last week when the president floated the idea of delaying the election. With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history, he tweeted and then wondered: Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote??? White House senior policy adviser Stephen Miller later defended the suggestion, saying it was shocking that nobody who mails in a ballot has their identity confirmed and that nobody checks if the voter is a citizen, which is not true. But many other Republicans disagreed with the president, if timidly; Senator Lindsey Graham told CNN it was not a particularly good idea.

If this specific suggestion went too far even for the Republicans, they should not have been surprised at what their partys actions had unleashed. There is a very fine line that separates the broader Republican Party position that American elections are seething with Democratic voter fraud and the Trumpian conclusion that we should therefore postpone them indefinitely. (Leave it to Trump to fail at Subtext 101.) But to pretend that walking right up to that line is acceptable, stopping just short of authoritarianism, legitimizes the longstanding Republican project of undermining elections, which began long before Trump.

The Republican Party has spent decades sowing doubt about the legitimacy of elections through high-level campaigns of propaganda about incredibly rare instances of voter fraud, successful purges and measures to restrict the vote under the guise of protecting the ballot, and racist fantasies about buses of immigrants showing up to vote for Democrats. They dont even seem to care whether undermining mail-in ballots will actually hurt them; they dont seem to care if the coronavirus kills their own constituencies, after all. The ones who do mewl, often anonymously, about how Trumps attacks on mail-in voting should realize that this is simply a taste of their own medicine, a poison that they have spent years dripping into our democracy. The Republican machine now has no other mode than to say that elections are fake. (Except, of course, the ones they winalthough sometimes those, too.) It will continue to churn on, even if it eats itself.

This did not start with Trumps candidacy in 2015 or even with the Tea Party in 2010. Republican schemes to purge black voters from the rolls have been defended as ballot security for decades, as Vann Newkirk reported in The Atlantic. In 1981, the Democratic National Committee sued the Republican National Committee for allegedly sending out off-duty cops as a National Ballot Security Task Force, a ploy to intimidate votersall in the name of protecting the ballot from voter fraud. In 1987, Democrats protested again after Republicans used letters sent to voters being returned as undeliverable as a pretext to challenge those voters eligibility to vote. A Republican spokesperson claimed the purpose of the program was to help election officials make certain that no dead or fictitious persons vote, but an RNC official said the quiet part loud in stating that these tactics would keep the black vote down considerably.

But the national partys rhetoric against voter fraud reached a new leveland this is undoubtedly a total coincidencein 2008, after the Democrats had chosen the first Black nominee for president. Most prominently, the Republicans accused ACORN, an organization that helped register voters in low-income communities, of trying to register fake voters and thus steal the election for their old pal Barack Obama, who had represented ACORN in a lawsuit and worked with ACORN-affiliated groups during his time as a community organizer. (As Zach Carter and Arthur Delaney covered in detail for Huffington Post, ACORN did not, in fact, intend to steal the election.) This campaign culminated in a hugely bipartisan congressional vote to defund the organization in 2009 when Democrats had solid majorities in both chambers. The organization folded in 2010.

Excerpt from:

The GOP Is the Anti-Election Party - The New Republic

The 40th annual St. Pauls Italian Festival continues this weekend – YourErie

Posted: Aug 8, 2020 / 03:16 PM EDT / Updated: Aug 8, 2020 / 03:17 PM EDT

Eries Little Italy is packed with cars this weekend. This is a new twist on a traditional Erie festival.

This weekend is the 40th annual St. Pauls Italian Festival where despite the pandemic, people made their way out to enjoy some Italian take out food.

Some of the food offered at the Italian Festival includes subs, pepperoni balls, pasta fagioli and cannoliis.

The online sales have sold out quickly, but there is also a walk up and drive thru option as well.

Chariman Ron Divecchio felt that it was the right move to keep the spirit of the festival moving forward.

Weve done well with our pasta fagioli dinners and we just wanted to keep it going, but it was a tough decision, said Ron Divecchio, Chairman at Saint Pauls Italian Festival.

On Saturday August 8th, the festival will go from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.

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The 40th annual St. Pauls Italian Festival continues this weekend - YourErie

Coronavirus in Jacksonville: What you need to know for Monday, August 10 – The Florida Times-Union

The Times-Union| Florida Times-Union

12:55 p.m. |Americans are sitting on record cash savings amid pandemic and uncertain economy

While millions of people could lose most or all of the $600 bonus in their weekly unemployment benefits, threatening to slow consumer spending and the nation's economic recovery, one thing could help cushion the blow: Americans have been saving lots of money during the COVID-19 crisis.

The savings rate the portion of monthly income that households are socking away hit a record 33.5% in April before edging down to a still outsized 19% in June, Commerce Department figures show. Before the pandemic, Americans were squirreling away an average 7.5% of income.| Read more

12:20 p.m. |Big Ten presidents have voted against playing college football this fall due to coronavirus concerns

The Big Ten presidents have votedagainst conducting a season in the fall, threepeople with knowledge of the decision confirmed to the Detroit Free Press.

The peoplerequested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the decision. A formal announcement is expected on Tuesday, the peoplesaid.The situation remains fluid as the details of what happens with a spring season remains unclear. | Read more

11:30 a.m. |Duval reports fewer than 100 new cases amid reduced testing

Duval County recorded fewer than 100 new COVID-19 cases for the first time in nearly two months in Monday's daily report, although the numbers were affected by asharply reduced volume of testing for the coronavirus pandemic.

The Florida Department of Health added 4,155 new cases of COVID-19 in Monday's daily report, for a new total of 536,961.Those were the fewest newly-added cases since June 23, when the health department tallied 3,289 new positive tests, but test volume sharply declined all across Floridato 58,153 laboratory results processed on Sunday.| Read more

9:35 a.m. |'Pragmatic and cautious': As some Americans avoid travel, others visit COVID-19 hot spots anyway

Jacqui Slay, a 38-year-old stay-at-home mom of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, planned her family trip toDisney World in Floridaa year ago. One month away from her scheduled tour in early September, she said she wasn't sure if she would go, citing recentrecord-high COVID-19 cases in Florida.

Slay is one of many Americans who faces a travel dilemma during theCOVID-19 pandemic: Is it worth therisk to traveland escape the monotony of quarantine life, or is it better to wait until the country has the coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, more under control? | Read more

EARLIER

State adds 77 deaths, none in Northeast Florida

Northeast Florida recorded no additional deaths from the coronavirus pandemic in Sunday's daily report, while statewide numbers were also reduced in comparison to recent levels as the United States surpassed the 5 million mark in COVID-19 cases. |Read more

COVID-19 outbreak expands in Baker County

Driven by a prison outbreak, Baker County has recorded surging coronavirus numbers over the past week, its COVID-19 totals more than doubling in the statistics of the Florida Department of Health.

Now, after months of ranking among the counties least touched by the novel coronavirus, Baker County is grappling with a fast-rising wave of infections, with 522positive tests within the past week to raise the county's cumulative total from 385to 907.| Read more

'Can you hear me?' America's first trial-by-Zoom comes to Duval County

Americas first Zoom trial with a binding verdict will come Monday to Duval County, to the courts remote civil division CV-E.

After months where criminal and civil justice has come to a halt, Duval County will see its first virtual trial Monday, a one-day affair for a lawsuit against a gentlemans club.| Read more

Mark Woods: More than numbers on the COVID frontline in Jacksonville

I wish everyone in Jacksonville couldve been on the line, listening to Dr. Jennifer Fulton.

I wish they couldve heard some of the stories behind some of our COVID numbers.

I wish they couldve heard her voice in April and now.| Read more

Brisk back to school sales tax holiday sales in Jacksonville despite COVID-19 pandemic

Saturday was the second day of the statewide Back to School Sales Tax Holiday, whichbegan Friday and concludes Sunday. During that period, residents won't have to pay state sales tax an approved list of back to school supplies.

This year the qualifying list of merchandise includes face masks and hand sanitizers because of the COVID-19 pandemic. | Read more

Disney World to cut theme park hours in September as visits drop amid COVID-19

The magic is back at Disney World, but for fewer hours a day.

Afterlower-than-expected attendance amid the coronavirus pandemic, Disney is scaling back operating hours at the Magic Kingdom and several other Florida theme parks.| Read more

'An administrative nightmare': Trump's executive action is a scramble for unemployment aid

President Donald Trumpsigned an executive orderand issued three memorandumsSaturday, including one that will provide an additional $400 per week in unemployment benefits to millions of out-of-work Americans following the economic fallout from thecoronavirus pandemic.

But theres a catch: Its unclear whether Trump has the authority to extend enhanced unemployment benefits by executive action while side-stepping Congress. It lowers the weekly bonus to $400 from the extra $600 that expired in late July, with states beingasked to cover 25% of the costs.| Read more

Family Dollar, Dollar Tree requiring masks for customers

Dollar Tree and Family Dollar havereversed course againabout the use of masks amid thecoronavirus pandemic.

The two retailers, both part of Dollar Tree, Inc., are now requiring shoppers wear masks likemost of the nation's largest retailers. | Read more

'Totally unacceptable': Testing delays force labs to prioritize COVID tests for some, not others

Federal officials and private labs acknowledge they must prioritize the nation's limited supply of coronavirus tests for hospitalized patients, health care workers and other high-risk individuals.But many Americans worried about contracting the sometimes deadly virus often must wait in long lines andseveral days for results.

Without a national plan on how to best allocate hundreds of thousands of COVID-19 tests each day, there simply is not enough capacity now to screen Americans who might unwittingly pass the virus to others.| Read more

Despite federal guidance, schools cite privacy laws to withhold info about COVID-19 cases

Thousands of American parents have already sent their children back to the classroom and millions more will soon join them amid fears about the raging pandemic and whether theyll even be notified when coronavirus hits their campuses.

School districts, health departments and state agencies across the country have provided mixed messages about whether they will release information about coronavirus cases in students, teachers and staff at K-12 campuses. | Read more

The deadly cost of COVID-19: Paul Simkonis was a retired Marine, woodworker

Paul M. Simkonis was a modest man devoted to his family, country and community.COVID-19 took his life March 18.| Read more

250 students and staff quarantined in Georgia school district after one week of school

After only one week of school, more than 250 students and teachers from one Georgia school district will be quarantined for two weeks after several teachers and students tested positive for COVID-19, according to the district's website.

Cherokee County School District, which is just north of Atlanta,is sharing regularupdateson coronavirus cases in its schools on its website.| Read more

12,000 crew members still on cruise ships in US waters months after COVID-19 pandemic shut cruising down

AkashDookhun, a Celebrity Cruises crew member from Mauritius, an island nationin southeastern Africa, has not set foot on dry land since he was on a port call in New Zealand in early March. And he doesn't knowwhen he'll stand on solid ground again.

Nearly five months after thecoronavirus pandemicshut down the cruise industry,more than 12,000 crew members remained on ships in U.S. waters, according to the U.S.Coast Guard. | Read more

'Feels like the world is against you': Young people struggle with finding mental health support amid COVID pandemic

Kathryn Boit feels "guilty for struggling so much" these past few months.

As the president of the Harvard Student Mental Health Liaisons, she has "college friends, acquaintances, and strangers reach out to me for resources and advice," she said. "I don't know the answers anymore."| Read more

Party killers: Colleges hope new rules will slow COVID-19 spread, students aren't convinced

Colleges want their students back this fall. That much is clear.

Whats less clear are the new rules for student conduct in the midst of a pandemic, and how universities will go about enforcing them, especially when the offensive behavior takes place off-campus or overnight.| Read more

Department of Health not giving schools guidance puts Duval in 'double bind situation'

When the Florida Department of Education ordered state schools to reopenthis fall, it was presented to superintendents as a choice: brick-and-mortar five-days-per-week orcoordinate with your local department of health

But a new review by the Gannett USA TODAY Network revealed that a directive from Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration suppressed county health directors' ability to adviseschool districts about remaining closed or reopening during a pandemic.

Jacksonville is no exception. | Read more

Gene Frenette:Momentum for college football season slipping away

Unmistakable cracks are forming across the college football landscape, and it almost feels like a matter of time before the dam starts breaking.

Look around, the momentum is heavily swinging more toward a canceled season than one in which all scheduled games would be played. | Read more

Health directors told to keep quiet as Florida leaders pressed to reopen classrooms

As Gov. Ron DeSantispushed this summerfor schools to reopen, state leaders told school boards they would need Health Department approval if they wanted to keep classrooms closed.

Then they instructed health directors not to give it.

Following a directive from DeSantis administration, county health directors across Florida refused to give school boards advice about one of the most wrenching public health decisions in modern history: whether to reopen schools in a worsening pandemic, a Gannett USA TODAY NETWORK review found.| Read more

1.8M jobs added in July, unemployment falls to 10.2% as some states halt reopening, others press ahead

The U.S. added 1.8 millionjobs in July as payroll growth slowed amid a split-screen economy that had employers stepping up hiring in parts of the country that continued to let businesses reopen, even as COVID-19 spikes forced Sunbelt firmsto pull back and lay off workers.

The unemployment rate fellto 10.2%from 11.1% in June, the Labor Department said Friday.| Read more

How do Duval students feel about going back to school? We asked them.

Worry. Masks. Dont feel safe. Sick.

Those are some of the words Duval County Public Schools students used most frequently when asked about returning to school.

With less than a month until the 2020-21 school year is supposed to start, the district has heard from hundreds of parents, teachers, bus drivers and other education stakeholders when it comes to its recently approved back-to-school plan. But what about the students? | Read more

Jacksonville distributing $3 million in additional COVID-19 aid

Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry said Wednesday that city officials are working to distribute additional financial relief forsmall businesses, senior citizens and residents with disabilities.

The City Council recently added$2 million into its small business relief fund and $1 million into its relief program for senior residents and people with disabilities. The money comes from the federal CARES Act grant the city received earlier this summer. | Read more

The rest is here:

Coronavirus in Jacksonville: What you need to know for Monday, August 10 - The Florida Times-Union

Global Connected Cow and Farm Market Report 2020: Market Size, Forecasts, Insights and Opportunities to 2025 – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Connected Cow and Farm Market: Market Size, Forecasts, Insights and Opportunities (2020 - 2025)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report on the connected cow and farm market provides an in-depth analysis of the market size, forecasts and opportunities of the various systems and services that cater to the connected farm ecosystem. The study includes market analysis of seven categories of systems - Health Monitoring, Mating Management, Herd Management, Automated Milking, Comfort and Cleaning, Automated Feeding, and others.

The study also covers the analysis of the market for services for the connected farm environment. Further to this, the report also provides the market data for systems across five regions - North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Central America and Latin America (CALA), and Middle-East and Africa (MEA).

The connected cow and farm market report also includes insights into key market requirements gathered from users, buyers, farmers, farm owners, and consultants. The report also provides their preferences, priorities and perception of the application of connected systems in this ecosystem. The study also covers key demand side ratings such as user ratings across regions for farm systems, services, dashboard features, and deployment timeframes.

The analysis in this report will help market participants, vendors, suppliers, system integrators, channel players, manufacturers, and value added resellers (VARs) to develop strategies, marketing goals and business decisions based on the actionable market intelligence from this report.

The connected cow and farm market is segmented into two categories - Systems and Services; by Regions.

Key Topics Covered:

1 Connected Cow and Farm: Research Overview and Summary

1.1 Research Design

1.2 Executive Summary

2 Connected Cow and Farm: Market Overview and Forces

2.1 Market Introduction

2.2 Market Forces

3 Connected Cow and Farm: Market Size and Forecast By Segments

3.1 Market Overview and Trends

3.2 Connected Cow and Farm Market by Systems

3.3 Connected Cow and Farm Market by Services

4 Connected Cow and Farm: Market Size and Forecast By Systems

4.1 Health Monitoring

4.2 Mating Management

4.3 Herd Management

4.4 Automated Milking

4.5 Comfort and Cleaning

4.6 Automated Feeding

4.7 Others

5 Connected Cow and Farm: Market Size And Forecast - By Regions

5.1 North America

5.2 Europe

5.3 Asia-Pacific

5.4 Central America/Latin America

5.5 Middle-East and Africa

6 Connected Cow And Farm: Market Supply and Demand Trends

6.1 Supply Side - Player Profiles and Markets

6.2 Demand Side Analysis

Companies Mentioned

- AMS Galaxy USA

- Afimilk

- Allflex

- Bella Ag

- BouMatic Robotics

- Brauer GmbH

- BvL Maschinenfabrik

- CattleMax

- Connecterra

- CowManager by Agis Automatisering BV

- Dairymaster

- DeLaval

- FarmWizard

- Fujitsu

- Fullwood

- GEA

- Hokofarm Group B.V.

- IceRobotics

- Lely

- Microsoft

- Moocall

- Nedap

- Pellon Group Oy

- Schuitemaker Machines B.V.

- Smartbell

- Sol Chips

- TrueNorth Technologies

- VitalHerd

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/mvw5rr

About ResearchAndMarkets.com

ResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

Link:

Global Connected Cow and Farm Market Report 2020: Market Size, Forecasts, Insights and Opportunities to 2025 - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire

Commentary: Universal health care system will save money and lives – Times Union

"I can't breathe" the last words attributed to two victims of police brutality, Eric Garner and George Floyd has become a haunting refrain of the Black Lives Matter movement. I was struck by the confluence of events we've witnessed in the past three months when I noticed someone wearing a mask emblazoned with that phrase.

"I can't breathe" were likely the last words uttered, or at least thought, by hundreds of coronavirus victims as they faced intubation and attachment to a ventilator. If and it's a big if they were lucky enough to be in a well-financed hospital with available ICU beds and staff to monitor them.

Data published in The New York Times revealed that, even accounting for differences in underlying health conditions and age, poor people living in communities with underfunded safety-net hospitals in New York City were up to three times more likely to die from their coronavirus infections than patients in hospitals managed by the same large corporations in wealthier parts of the city.

It's likely that this inequity held true in many socioeconomically and racially segregated cities from coast to coast as the pandemic spread.

And yet, both for-profit and nonprofit hospital systems have poured our health care dollars into capital improvements and continue to do so even during the pandemic, a direct result of the perverse incentives built into our health care system. When patients become customers, and health care is marketed as an exclusive luxury, public health concerns and stewardship of health care dollars fall by the wayside.

While the continuing efforts of President Donald Trump and his Republican apologists to dismantle the Affordable Care Act are reprehensible and shameful, it is also now quite evident that the accomplishments of that law were sharply limited by the concessions made to the insurance companies and other middlemen who contribute little value to our citizens' health needs.

I hope that the energy produced by the groundswell of indignation and outrage will not be wasted trying to shore up the ACA. We need a national health program that offers the same access and quality of care to every human being in America. The money saved by eliminating the health care profiteering of the pharmaceutical and insurance industries would amount to nearly $1 trillion annually. This is one-third of the country's total health care expenditures, and would easily cover the cost of extending coverage to 100 percent of Americans, with money left over to improve and expand what Medicare already guarantees.

The possibility of coverage for home care through the end of life would reduce the warehousing of our elderly in nursing homes, some of which became coronavirus death traps. Essential services like mental health care, dental and vision care should be universally available. Multiple studies have shown that a nationwide Medicare for All program would reduce the total cost of health care for over 90 percent of Americans, with any increase in taxes for the majority more than offset by lower out-of-pocket expenditures, the end of co-pays and constantly rising insurance premiums.

We must avoid the trap of allowing the for-profit hospitals and insurance companies to continue to connive to skim off the healthy, less-expensive patients, which they would certainly learn to do if we simply add a competing "public option" or "Medicare buy-in."

The health insurance industry has its knee on our necks. As surely as unregulated policing is a danger to the health of the most vulnerable among us (and by association, all of us), so unregulated profiteering in health care is making us sicker as individuals and as a society.

We must tell our elected officials to let us inspire equality, fairness, and hope for our own, our children's and our grandchildren's health by creating a system of equitable health care for all.

Dr. David Ray is chairman of the Capital District Alliance for Universal Health Care.

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Commentary: Universal health care system will save money and lives - Times Union

What’s it like to be an Arizona health care worker during COVID-19? Valley 101 digs in – AZCentral

Nasal swab test tubes sit read for COVID-19 testing at a drive through testing site hosted by the HeroZona Foundation in the South Mountain Community College parking lot in Phoenix, Ariz. on July 9, 2020. Tests were free and vehicles waited in a line that stretched nearly 1.5 miles from Broadway Road to Baseline Road along 24th street. Earlier in the week Arizona reached number one in the world for COVID-19 cases. (Photo: Thomas Hawthorne/The Republic)

Health care workers in Arizona are struggling throughthe burdens of a public health crisis that has hospitalized thousands of Arizonansand pushed emergency rooms and ICUs nearfull capacity.

With higher than usual patient-to-nurse ratios, stringent PPE protocols and looming fears over exposing their loved ones to the novel coronavirus, health care workers in Arizona are feeling tired, dejected and desperate for lawmakers and the public to take COVID-19 seriously.

"They've been trying to do two to oneICU patients to a nurse, but that's starting to be hard,"Miranda Dunkelbarger, an ICU nurse in Apache Junction, said. Some days shesaid she's had three patients at a time.

When New York emerged as a national hotspot in March and Apriland becamethe subject of eye catching stories about overwhelmed hospitals andmass graves for the dead, health care workers in Arizonawatched in both fear and trepidation How long before it came to Arizona?

By early August, the novel coronavirus infected more than 185,000 Arizonans and killed more than 4,000. In June and July, Arizonawas thrust in the national spotlight as a global hotspot, at one pointrecording a 25% positivity rate of tests conducted,a key COVID-19 metric.

This week's episode of Valley 101, a podcast from The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com, follows Dr. BradDreifuss and nurse Miranda Dunkelbarger. Dreifuss isanemergency physician based in Tucson and co-founder of HCWHosted, a coalition dedicated to building pandemic preparedness plans for communities.

Producer Taylor Seely dives into what they're experiencing and what they want people to know about their work.

Related: What's it like when you or someone you know gets COVID-19?

The best way to listen is to subscribe to Valley 101 on your favorite podcast app, but you can also stream the full episode below.

NOTE: Valley 101 is intended to be heard. But we also offera transcript of the episode.There may be slight deviations from the podcast audio.

Want to submit a question to Valley 101? Click here.

More from Valley 101:

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What's it like to be an Arizona health care worker during COVID-19? Valley 101 digs in - AZCentral