As Congress Prepares To Recess, Millions Of Americans Fear Homelessness, Poverty, And Further Health Disparities – Forbes

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While Democrats and Republicans have taken the past several weeks to posture, negotiate, and dig their heels in on a variety of issues related to arevised stimulus package, the livelihood of many Americans and their families have been left to hang in the balance. This is especially true for many people of color and those who have been tasked with the arduous duty of navigatinglow wage jobs, discrimination in the workforce, and a host of other socioeconomic disparities that are rooted in systemic racism and classism. Although the White House, Senate Republicans, and House Democrats haveagreedto another round of $1,200 stimulus checks for qualifying Americans, they have not been able to reach a meeting of the minds about unemployment benefits, among other things. Some are now concerned that this may result in a failed negotiation, as congress is scheduled to begin their vacation today through September 8.

Earlier this week Republican White House Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows said, Ive become extremely doubtful that well be able to make a deal if it goes well beyond Friday." As of today, an executive order has been signed by the White House to temporarily extend unemployment emergency aid by reducing the benefit amount to $400 per week 25% of which states are being asked to pay as well as adding a payroll tax holiday for Americans earning less than $100,000 a year, and extending student loan relief and thelapsed eviction ban, so that congress can peacefully go into their recess. Some argue that this approach simply kicks the can down the road and adds further fuel to the fire of devastation that many Americans have experienced over the past five months due to the pandemic. The White Houseexecutive orderleaves several key areas lingering such as stimulus checks and funding for the CDC, schools, essential workers, the paycheck protection program, and treatment, testing and tracing until next month when congress reconvenes.

The Labor Department reports that over 31 million Americans were receiving unemployment benefits as of mid-July, which accounts for 1 in 5 workers being out of work since the start of the pandemic. As of late March, the average individual receivingunemploymentreceived around $930 a week due the extra $600 per week in emergency aid, whichexpiredlast week. Now, those funds have been cut by more than half to a meager $330 to $450 a week, which adds up to $1,320 to $1,800 monthly in cities where the average one-bedroom apartment cost a minimum of$1,300a month. Democrats have pushed to extend the extra $600 weekly aid through the end of the year and Republicans have proposed that aid be reduced to $200 per week. During talks, Republicans argued that the extra $600 aid incentivizes Americans to not look for employment while Democrats argued that there are not enough jobs available for everyone who is unemployed and that by providing sufficient financial support to unemployed individuals not only will families be kept out of poverty, but the country would also benefit in the long run by boosting the economy.

Last week, The Washington Post surveyed economists to get their thoughts and predictions about the countrys financial future. The findings overwhelmingly supported the extension of additional aid with some supporting $600 per week in emergency aid and others suggesting a slightly smaller amount such as The White Houses proposed $400. But what do the millions of unemployed Americans have to say about what appears to be a non-relenting partisan tug-of-war? They are begging for relief and rescue. This is a daunting reality for many who have not only found themselves unemployed, but also uninsured, and nearly homeless during apandemic issues of which people of color already disproportionately experience at higher rates compared to whites.

Although most Americans with low incomes are white, Blacks historically experience both lower incomes andshorter life expectancies. Although there are a multitude of factors that contribute to racial health disparities, research suggests that a central role is played by chronic financial hardship caused by a legacy of exploitation and segregation, as well as the direct toxic effects of discrimination on mental and physical health. These are issues that persist today and are enacted through a lack of access to education, credit, economic opportunity, and healthy environments. Consequently, its the intersection of both poverty and the effects of structural racism that create a perfect storm for the presence of significant and disproportionate mental and physical health disparities among Blacks and people of color overall.

Members of the Black and Latinx communities have historically experienced higher rates of unemployment.Last year, 6% of Blacks and 4% of Latinos were unemployed compared to 3% of whites. In less than 12 months, those numbers have exploded. As of early July, 16% of Blacks and 17% of Latinos were unemployed compared to 12% of whites. Blacks and Latinos combined also makeup almost50%of those living at or below poverty in the U.S. compared to 9% of whites. The net worth of white Americans is more than 15 times that of Blacks and 13 times that of Latinos. Most minority groups also experience higher rates of homelessness in the U.S., with Blacks making upmore than half of the homeless populationwhile only representing 13% of the general U.S. population.

Adding insult to injury, research has shown increased rates of behavioral risk such as smoking, obesity, substance abuse, and low levels of physical activity among individuals living at or below poverty. These are factors that are argued to be powerfully influenced by challenging home and community environments that many lower-income individuals live in. This is also in addition to certain businesses targeting financially vulnerable populations, which is evidenced by lower-income neighborhoods having ahigher densityof tobacco retailers andliquor stores, and the tobacco industryhistoricallytargetinglow-income people through various marketing and advertising strategies.

Many Blacks and Latinos also endure other structural barriers that are caused by poverty and living on a low income including limited access to fresh foods, living in communities that are not conducive to physical activity, and living in areas with a high presence of fast-food restaurants. More broadly, Blacks and Latinos living in impoverished communities often experience under-resourced school districts, environmental pollutants, and greater exposure to violence, trauma, and stress associated with lack of housing, heat, water, and electricity. For those living paycheck to paycheck, they might also feel the frequent threat of eviction and the current pandemic has only exacerbated these issues.

It has been well documented that exposure to racism, educational attainment, and employment can have severe physical and mental health implications on people of color. Similarly, its also no secret that poverty by itself can be a contributing factor to chronic stress, disease, and loweredlife expectancy. Both of these have led to an increased need to better understand the links between income, health, and race. The relationship between race, income, and health persists both within and across races. Experts argue that lower-income Blacks tend to live shorter lives than high-income Blacks, and affluent Blacks die earlier than affluent whites. Arecent studysuggests that race might be more important than family income particularly for men. Black young boys in wealthy households are more likely to become poor adults than affluent ones, while the opposite is true for white young boys.

That said, the impact of poverty across race is pervasive and can be thought of as both a cause and a consequence of poor health. Poverty increases the likelihood of experiencing poor health and, in turn, traps communities in poverty. Poor health can also impact an individuals ability to work, reduce economic opportunities, inhibit educational attainment, and force those who work in riskier professions` to work at any cost. This is especially true during the current pandemic. Blacks and Latinos make up a large number ofessential workerswho have been forced to work in positions that place them at greater risk of contracting the coronavirus to pay their bills, but have limited access to quality medical care if they become ill. This creates what has been referred to as a negative feedback loop or what epidemiologist Jacob Bor and Sandro Galea call thetwenty-first-century health-poverty trap.

Although the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was successful in insuring millions of uninsured Americans, more thantwenty-seven millionAmericans remain uninsuredthe majority of whom are low-income individuals. Those without health insurance areless likelyto have a regular source of medical care and more likely to forgo care because of cost concerns; and consequently, experience higher rates of health issues such as diabetes, high blood pressure, breast cancer, and maternal death. As the rate of infectious disease increases so does income inequality.

In 1978, 33% of the total income in the U.S. went to the top 10% of earners, but in 2014 that percentage grew to 50%. Over the past 30 years, the share of income earned by the 1% of earners doubled growing from 8% to 19% and the top 0.1% now earns 10% of all income. While some are basking in their financial spoils, the income of most Americans has declined or remained somewhat stagnant. Life expectancy differences by income have also grown. A recentstudyfound that since 2011, life expectancy has increased by almost 3% years for the top 5% of top income earners in America, but there have been no increases in the bottom 5% and men in the top 1% of income distribution can now expect to live 15 years longer than those in the bottom 1%. Among women, the difference is about ten years, which is equivalent to the life expectancy difference between a lifetime smoker and a person who has never smoked a day in their life.

There are also significant negative mental health effects associated with poverty. Although whites tend to experience greater mental health disorders, people of color tend to experience more severe and longer-lasting symptoms associated with mental health challenges. Overall, poverty in adulthood has been linked to depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, psychological distress, and suicide. Individuals in families that earn less than $35,000 a year are four times more likely to report being nervous or feeling sad most of the time compared to individuals in families earning more than $100,000 a year. These disparitiesemerge early in lifeand can bepassedintergenerationally.

Extending unemployment benefits will not solve the extreme poverty that exists in the U.S. nor will a second round of stimulus checks. Poverty, racism, and the structures that exist which maintain and perpetuate both require a complete ideological transformation, that arguably, might not happen in our lifetime. However, decisions can be made now to begin to pave the way to such transformation for future generations to come. The pandemic has presented the country with a fork in the road moment that could either mark the start of a restructure of financial stability for underrepresented groups or reinforce measures that further maintain the profound income and health inequalities and disparities that exist in America.Although to some this might be a matter of politics and partisanship, to millions of Americans this a matter of their survival and life and death.

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As Congress Prepares To Recess, Millions Of Americans Fear Homelessness, Poverty, And Further Health Disparities - Forbes

MIAA honors officials for their work – Boston Herald

The MIAA has recognized officials in a variety of sports for their outstanding service to all MIAA student-athletes and for their commitment to the promotion of Educational Athletics. This award has been established to recognize and acknowledge their individual achievement but also to validate the vital work our 6,000-plus officials do each and every season.

Listed below are the recognized officials, their region where they officiate and their personal philosophy.

BASEBALL

MIKE SULLIVAN: For every student that participates, high school athletics are an integral part of their maturation process. The lessons learned from a coach in practices and games, the interactions with teammates, and the ability to understand and respect the officials in a contest are going to be instances that one can draw from for the rest of their life. My goal is to ensure a fair contest where all participants are respected, while players learn from and enjoy the experience of participating in a competition.

BOYS BASKETBALL

BRUCE ANDERSON: The life lessons taught at every level are building blocks which teach social skills, teamwork, confidence, and sportsmanship. Athletics give us so much more than we could ever give the sport, providing invaluable life lessons that stay with us throughout our life.

GIRLS BASKETBALL

JULIE RUANE: Making commitments to ourselves, our teammates, coaches and parents requires many qualities, in particular, accountability. Developing those qualities at an early age is a solid start on the path to success. Building friendships and maintaining relationships is essential when part of a team.

CROSS COUNTRY

STANLEY LEY RICKER: Athletics offers the benefit of participation where students gain self-confidence, learn teamwork, sportsmanship and responsibility which are all life skills. Developing a strong work ethic and leadership skills are lifelong benefits on the road to succeed.

FIELD HOCKEY

JULIE HALLORAN: My philosophy on interscholastic sports has evolved throughout my years of playing, coaching and officiating. Interscholastic sports contribute in a major way to the physical, mental and social development of students. Everyone involved in interscholastic sports has a responsibility to instill and promote good sportsmanship and character by exhibiting behaviors of a positive role model. It is important that everyone embrace that role.

FOOTBALL

PETER OCHS: Interscholastic sport programs provide lifelong lessons that teach respect for self, teammates, and authority. To set life goals and achieve those goals; establish work ethic and the ability to work toward a common goal; and, lastly, the ability to deal with set-backs and overcome adversity in life.

GIRLS GYMNASTICS

JEANNE PECKHAM: Ive been committed to gymnastics since my young daughters began classes and when I received a judging rating to understand the scoring. As a director for a gym and dance program, I understand the work that went into this sport on the part of the girls and their coaches. Ive loved judging gymnastics and being a mother and coach has given me an understanding of the agony and ecstasy that is involved in this sport.

BOYS ICE HOCKEY

THOMAS FYRER: Watching young adults grow, compete and learn to work as part of a team, while both winning and losing, provides a solid foundation as any individual prepares for what is next in life. The challenge of being a role model for players, coaches and spectators on how to deal with difficult situations as they arise motivates me as I step on the ice for any contest.

GIRLS ICE HOCKEY

THOMAS MURRAY: My philosophy when I officiate an MIAA contest is to be fair to both teams, to be knowledgeable of the rules, and to hustle the entire game. I strive to create an atmosphere where the student-athlete can showcase their talents. I believe that playing sports allows the student-athlete to develop life-long learning skills such as teamwork, leadership, and communication that will guide them as they continue on their personal road to adulthood.

BOYS LACROSSE

TONI CARDANI: I believe athletics is the extension of the students education. The life lessons that sports teach will benefit the student-athletes for the rest of their lives. Learning to compete to the best of their abilities and work within a team, and facing adversity are all life-long skills.

GIRLS LACROSSE

TERI RIGGS: Athletics are an integral educational partner that enhances the lives of those involved, and greatly contributes to the overall physical, emotional and academic development of our youth. Athletics offer the opportunity to understand teamwork and commitment towards a common goal, these are learned skills that can be carried through an individuals lifetime.

BOYS SOCCER

RIC BEAUDOIN: I am a firm believer that all state high school athletics are an extension of physical education programs. This approach translates directly to the model that all athletic fields of competition mirror the classroom environment. Hence, as officials, we should all be guardians of fair play, good sportsmanship, and accountability for our behavior.

GIRLS SOCCER

LEAH MURPHY: I have thoroughly enjoyed the ongoing interaction with the youth and other referees. I have learned so much and taken advantage of the mentorship gained from all the veteran officials. To do your best in every aspect of life, including your representation on and off the court, is the most important thing to me.

SOFTBALL

LOUIS PEARLSTEIN: My philosophy of officiating sports has been to apply a pattern of behavior which supports the positive learning experiences in sports as an extension of our academic activities. I must create and maintain an environment which supports professionalism, hustle, sportsmanship and ethics in all my activities in my officiating or in my role as an official demonstrating my love of the game and respecting all the people who are necessary to create this learning activity.

FALL SWIMMING & DIVING

BARBARA CAM TOWNSEND: Athletics are a perfect complement to academics. They promote an active lifestyle which improves fitness, mental health, and reduces stress. Participants learn about teamwork and commitment, develop a sense of belonging, and develop lifelong friendships and skills.

WINTER SWIMMING & DIVING

WILLIAM BILL WHIGHAM: I believe that every athletic event is a macrocosm of life itself. Athletics is the place where kids learn how to love life. Athletics is the discipline where children learn the values of commitment, responsibility and cooperation. Athletics is where athletes learn how to respect each other in competition; that it is okay to fail and to win with humility and lose with dignity. Athletics is the place where children learn to manage their time and work with others as a team. I believe that all athletes, regardless of their level of ability and performance should have officials of the highest quality that model the values we strive to bring about in our students.

INDOOR TRACK & FIELD

MICHELLE COTE: Athletics brings a sense of pride to those who participate. Life lessons that you see the students learning during practice and competition such as empathy, perseverance and determination are miraculous to be part of and witness. I get no greater joy than to see the winner of a race remain at the finish line to congratulate fellow competitors. To watch a student with disabilities exude a sense of pride at the competition of a race cant be matched.

OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD

LINDA GEORGE: My philosophy is making track a positive experience so the student-athletes will continue with the sport. An athletes only competition is themselves and accomplishing their personal best.

BOYS VOLLEYBALL

KEVIN McDERMOTT: It is quite simple: do what you love, play/ref by the rules and with integrity and give back to your sport. I take the most satisfaction and pride in the training clinics for new officials which I and the other members of my board run. Volleyball officiating must keep pace with the rapidly improving skill level of todays players. While at the same time maintaining the integrity of how volleyball should be played.

GIRLS VOLLEYBALL

MICHAEL SIMMARANO: With the wide variety of sports being offered, we need to provide all student-athletes with a healthy, safe and competitive environment. Emphasis needs to be placed on good sportsmanship and leadership. Respect for teammates, opposing players, rules and officials, regardless of the level of competition, should be exhibited to provide a positive educational experience.

WRESTLING

DANIEL J. BUCKLEY, SR.: Athletics taught me self-discipline, hard work, the value of teamwork and mental toughness. Most importantly it taught me that you control your own destiny in life and that you always have control over what you do tomorrow. When officiating Im also cognizant of being fair, impartial and competent so that todays student-athletes learn the same life lessons that I did while participating in Athletics.

Originally posted here:

MIAA honors officials for their work - Boston Herald

There’s so much more that Rams’ Jalen Ramsey can do, and so much more money to make – Rome News-Tribune

LOS ANGELES On a late-January evening in Miami Beach, Fla., two days before the Super Bowl, Jalen Ramsey owned the spotlight.

The Rams' star cornerback was not in an NFL stadium; he stood alone before a rapt audience in an upscale store on South Beach's trendy Lincoln Road. The shop had been converted into a dimly lit performance space and quasi nightclub replete with bar, DJ and band.

Ramsey, draft prospect Tua Tagovailoa and former league most valuable player Cam Newton were on the bill for a "More Than a Football Player" storytelling event sponsored by Uninterrupted, a digital platform started by business partners LeBron James and Maverick Carter.

"On the field, my life is literally on the line," Ramsey began. "When I'm all alone on an island with whoever your favorite receiver is, I'm sure as hell not calling out an SOS."

In the next five minutes, Ramsey delivered a monologue as smoothly as he shuts down receivers.

Ramsey is a three-time Pro Bowl pick, considered by many the best player in the league at his position. And, as one of the NFL's elite trash talkers, he has no problem reminding opponents of his abilities.

But on this night he spoke playfully of adopting an alternate persona.

"Kind of like a shield or a mask," he said. "I kind of become somebody else. ... A Monstar, like in the movie 'Space Jam.' "

Ramsey earnestly recounted his parents' and older brother's influence. He spoke of his desire to become a businessman and to help friends succeed. He shared goals of becoming an expert traveler and virtuoso musician. And of his love of being "a girl dad" to two daughters.

In six months, he would report to Rams training camp.

At age 25, he is likely on his way to becoming the highest-paid player at his position in NFL history.

And, perhaps, more than a cornerback.

Recently, Ramsey arrived at camp in Thousand Oaks without fanfare.

It was a marked departure from 2019, when he showed up for Jacksonville Jaguars camp in an armored vehicle resembling a bank truck. The message at the time seemed clear: The fifth pick in the 2016 NFL draft wanted to get paid.

During the second game of the season, Ramsey got into a sideline argument with coach Doug Marrone. He reportedly asked to be traded, and he sat out three games because of a back injury, illness and the pending birth of his second child.

In October, after trading cornerback Marcus Peters to the Baltimore Ravens, the Rams made a rare NFL move. They gave up two first-round draft picks to acquire Ramsey.

Darius Slay of the Philadelphia Eagles will be the NFL's highest-paid cornerback this season, earning $16.7 million. That's just ahead of Byron Jones, who in March received a five-year, $82.5 million deal from the Miami Dolphins that includes $54.4 million in guarantees.

Ramsey, who is scheduled to earn $13.7 million in the final year of his rookie contract, is positioned for a more lucrative payday.

The Rams gave Ramsey "a ton of leverage" by not having a new deal in place at the time of the trade, said Joel Corry, a former agent who writes about contracts and the salary cap for CBSSports.com.

"He's got the hammer and I have a feeling his agent will be willing to use it," Corry said.

Ramsey is represented by agent David Mulugheta, who has negotiated record-setting deals for such players as safeties Landon Collins and Kevin Byard. A $20 million-a-year contract for Ramsey that resets the market for cornerbacks is not out of the question, Corry said.

And at $20 million, Ramsey would be underpaid, according to Hall of Fame cornerback Deion Sanders.

Sanders' relationship with Ramsey dates to 2013, when Ramsey committed to play at Florida State Sanders' alma mater after starring in high school at Brentwood Academy near Nashville.

Top NFL quarterbacks earn $30 million to $40 million per season. Why should a top cornerback be asked to play for less, Sanders wonders.

"How does it work that (for) a football player like Jalen Ramsey, we could be excited that he could make 15 million less dollars a year than a guy that's scared to throw at him?" said Sanders, an analyst for the NFL Network.

Sanders questions football's salary structure for different positions. "That's the ignorance of our game," he said, adding that basketball and baseball are different.

"If you're dominant," he said, "you make dominant money."

In June, Ramsey told reporters that the Rams "know where I stand" regarding a new contract. He said this week that he was not worried about it, that the Rams and his agent were "on the same page from the jump." He said he instructed Mulugheta to not call him until a deal was done.

The Rams have a recent history of awarding massive contracts to star players. In 2018, they gave receiver Brandin Cooks an $81 million deal, running back Todd Gurley a $60 million extension and defensive tackle Aaron Donald a $135 million extension. Last year, quarterback Jared Goff received a $134 million extension that included $110 million in guarantees.

Ramsey's impending deal, and the salary cap implications it will bring, led to the Rams releasing Gurley and trading Cooks.

If the trend continues, Ramsey will have a new deal in place before the Sept. 13 opener against the Dallas Cowboys.

"Whatever he's asking for today," Corry said, "won't be what he's looking for tomorrow."

New Rams defensive coordinator Brandon Staley does not consider Ramsey merely a cornerback. More like a multipurpose defensive back.

"This guy can do anything," Staley said.

Neither Staley nor Ramsey has specified how the 6-foot-1, 208-pound Ramsey will be deployed in the Rams' 3-4 hybrid scheme. But it is not difficult to envision Ramsey lining up at cornerback, deep as a safety, in the slot or as a linebacker.

Ramsey hinted as much in May "My talents will be shown thoroughly, not just in one aspect, if you're kind of catching my drift," he said and again this week.

"I don't really have like an exact, exact role on the defense yet," he said, adding, "Nobody's done what I'll be asked to do or what I'm going to try to do on this defense."

Said Rams general manager Les Snead: "There's a vision and goal to use to him in a way that's never been used before."

Nate Burleson was an NFL receiver for 11 seasons. As an analyst for NFL Network and CBS, he has watched Ramsey utilize his mind, speed, height and wingspan to evolve into one of the league's most dominant cornerbacks.

"When you face a guy like Jalen it's like you're facing a safety but he has the hips of a cornerback and the feet of a running back," Burleson said. "And he has those long, long Avatar-like arms."

An expanded role for Ramsey harkens to Charles Woodson, Burleson said, recounting a game he played against the Hall of Fame defensive back. Woodson, with the Green Bay Packers at the time, lined up deep at safety, as a slot cornerback, as a linebacker and on the edge of the line of scrimmage as a defensive end. All in the first half.

Ramsey could play a similar role, Burleson said.

"It's one thing to be one of the best cornerbacks in the league," he said. "It's another to be the best defensive player. So when you start to move a guy around like that that can do it, you really put him into that position-less category and that right there is some legendary stuff."

Hall of Fame defensive back Aeneas Williams played as a cornerback, safety and combination of both during his 14-year career. Williams said it took several seasons for him to develop the confidence needed to lock down an opponent's top receiver.

"Jalen," Williams said, chuckling, "he can wake up out of his sleep and think that."

Ramsey's new challenge and Staley's will be proving that he is capable of influencing the game from multiple spots on the field. Expect opposing coaches to test him, Williams said.

"I'm going to move my guy around to see if Jalen is comfortable doing that not just man to man, but if he's comfortable doing it in zones," Williams said.

Sanders has no doubt about Ramsey's football acumen and skill set. In his four NFL seasons, Ramsey has "matured in his understanding of the game," learning coverages, offenses, formations, personnel, quarterbacks and tendencies of opposing coordinators, Sanders said.

But he cautions that changing Ramsey's role might be a mistake in a league that features so many premier receivers.

"You don't have time to be moving a guy like Jalen to safety," Sanders said, "when you have a dog outside the numbers."

After playing eight games with Ramsey last season, his teammates are eager to benefit from his skills during a full slate of games.

"I'm definitely expecting huge things from him," said Donald, a two-time NFL defensive player of the year.

The COVID-19 pandemic forced NFL teams to conduct offseason programs virtually. They are in a training camp acclimation period and will not practice until Aug. 18.

Ramsey's first opportunity to rehearse his new role came during closed walkthroughs.

Brand-new SoFi Stadium will be Ramsey's home stage this season and, probably, for years to come. The venue is scheduled to host Super Bowl LVI to cap the 2021 season.

As he prepares for what could be a long run with the Rams, and rare use of his talents, it's worth revisiting Ramsey's night in the spotlight in Miami Beach before last season's Super Bowl.

"Every bit of life is a process," he told the audience, adding that mistakes will be made and there is no secret formula to success.

"The only answer really is having a commitment to growing," he said. "You can't just go through life you got to grow through life."

"Thank you all for your time," he said. "I'm Jalen Ramsey. I'm more than a football player.

"I'm anything I want to be."

(c)2020 Los Angeles Times

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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There's so much more that Rams' Jalen Ramsey can do, and so much more money to make - Rome News-Tribune

U of T researchers identify molecular switch allowing parasites to survive inside hosts without oxygen – News@UofT

Around one billion people are infected with parasitic helminths, round worms that live in soil and colonize the human gut through dirty water. Such infections are common in less developed countries where they can leave long-lasting consequences on child development.

Now, researchers at the University of Toronto have discovered that the helminths owe their ability to survive in the low oxygen environment of the human gut to a unique enzyme variantafinding thatraises hopes of new treatments to quell growing resistance of parasites to available medications.

When parasites are outside the body, which they are for a part of their lifecycle, they breathe oxygen just like we do, saysAndrew Fraser,senior author and a professor of molecular genetics at the Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research at U of Ts Faculty of Medicine. We were trying to understand how these parasites survive inside the human gut where theres almost no available oxygen.

The study,published ine-Life, an online journal for the life-sciences, was co-led by Gustavo Salinas, a professor at Universidad de la Repblica in Uruguay, and Jennifer Shepherd, a professor at Gonzaga University in the U.S.

COQ2 molecular structure with alternately encoded core (in pink) that flips between variants in response to oxygen.

Most animals, including humans, make energy through aerobic or oxygen-dependent metabolism with the help of a molecule called ubiquinone, or UQ. When they are inside their host, parasitic helminths switch to an unusual type of anaerobic metabolism that burns a related molecule called rhodoquinone, or RQ.

In aprevious study, Frasers team uncovered that UQ and RQ are made from different precursor molecules by the same enzyme called COQ2. But how does COQ2 know to use the UQ precursor when theres oxygen around but use the RQ precursor when theres no oxygen?

Somehow there has to be a switch, says Fraser. If we could understand how that switch works and if we could take a small compound and interfere with that switchprevent it from making RQ that might be a way to kill a parasite in humans.

First clues emerged whenMichael Schertzberg, a research technician in the lab, noticed that helminths produce two protein variants of COQ2. The variants are made by alternative splicing, a process through which gene coding segments, or exons, are variably included into templates for protein synthesis, allowing for diverse proteins to be encoded by the same gene. The two COQ2 variants are identical but for a small part encoded by two mutually exclusive exons, dubbed A and E. These are exactly the same size flipping from the A variant to the E variant is like switching a block in a complicated Lego structure.

The researchers next engineeredC. elegansworm strains producing either enzyme variant alone to test their ability to make UQ and RQ. Although not a parasite,C. elegansis a highly related helminth that also uses rhodoquinone. They found that the worms lacking the E variant lost their ability to make RQ and could no longer survive without oxygen.

Genome scanning across diverse animal lineages further strengthened the idea that the E variant is required for life without oxygen. The E variant is not even encoded in the COQ2 gene of most animals, including humans, who need air to live. It is only found in helminths and a few other species known to make RQ, such as oysters and other marine organisms, where it is likely an adaptation to changing oxygen levels in tidal environments.

Importantly, when they looked at the parasitic helminthsAscarisandStrongyloides stercoralis, they found that they also make and switch to the E variant when they are inside the host.

June Tan, a lead co-author and an expert in alternative splicing, has rarely seen in helminths two alternatively spliced variants with such distinct functions, like flipping a switch.

For me the most surprising finding was how restricted the E variant was to just those species that make RQ, says Tan, who is a post-doctoral researcher in the lab.

We think alternative splicing switches the enzyme core around the catalytic site so that it allows them to use a different precursor molecule to make RQ versus UQ.

WhenMargot Lautens, a PhD student in the lab, computationally laid each variant over the reference molecular structure of the enzyme, she found that the A and E exons encode a core segment that is crucial for the catalytic activity. The researchers think that when oxygen levels dip, the enzyme flips its inner core from the prevalent A form to the less common E form which can make RQ and sustain a parasites life.

The finding opens a therapeutic opportunity to specifically target the enzyme in the parasite without touching its counterpart in the host.

If you look at the A form of COQ2, it looks the same in every animal. An inhibitor would act on human too, says Fraser.

But the E variant has key differences and you could target just that form. This gives us a beautiful way to help us find inhibitors that will hit specifically the E form and thats what were doing now.

The research was supported by funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Agencia Nacional para la Innovacin y la Investigacin ANII in Uruguay.

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U of T researchers identify molecular switch allowing parasites to survive inside hosts without oxygen - News@UofT

NMSU’s Arrowhead Center signs agreement with Minerva Robotics to bring gourmet tortillas to the masses – Las Cruces Bulletin

NMSU News Release by Cassie McClure

When new technology meets ancient and revered culinary traditions, even classic handmade foods can be improved upon and made more efficiently.

Minerva Robotics, with the help of New Mexico State Universitys Arrowhead Center, aims to use computer learning and fresh ingredients to bring gourmet tortillas to homes and businesses in the United States and Mexico.

Minerva has shown an impressive skill set to launch a startup, developing a prototype, connect with local resources, and fundraising, said Carlos Murguia, director of Arrowhead Centers Foster Innovation Exchange (FIX) program. In July, Arrowhead Centers FIX signed an agreement with Minerva Robotics to continue their journey.

Minerva will be creating the first-of-its-kind tortilla subscription service. Customers will be able to subscribe and receive freshly made tortillas delivered to their homes or businesses. With robotics, Minerva wants to tailor the use of raw materials, like New Mexico heirloom corn, to each customers specifications instead of the typically used, highly processed flours commonly used.

Minervas smart tortilla machine, the NixMix, will take high-quality corn in order to replicate the handmade process of tortilla production. It gets its name from nixtamalization, the process by which corn kernels are cooked in an alkaline solution, changing the corns chemical structure. It is a critical step that gives tortillas its flavor and texture.

Unfortunately, its a labor- and time-intensive method taking up to nine hours from milling the corn to the hot tortilla on the table. While there are machines pumping out regular store-bought tortillas, the heavily processed ingredients are not like what is made at a home a flavor and consistency that the NixMix tortilla matches.

Whats in use now are outdated machines, unchanged technology from 50 years ago with a lot of inefficiency, said J.R. Rosillo, CEO of Minerva Robotics, who has been launching startups for the past 3 years. We want to cater to a growing Hispanic market in the U.S. Its the largest minority, approximately 18 percent of the U.S. population. We have an initial target of 50,000 Mexican restaurants in the U.S. and over 80,000 tortilla shops in Mexico with our product.

Rosillo, along with Chief Marketing Officer Renata Salcedo, Chief Technology Officer Marco Moreno and Country Director Fernando Nuez, will merge their resources with those of Arrowhead Center to make the move into the Mexican and United States markets.

Arrowhead is able to offer a soft landing for Minerva to launch the startup in New Mexico and take full advantage of our network of advisors who can guide the way, said Kathryn Hansen, director of Arrowhead Center. Minerva already has had the support of NMSU faculty to discuss different types of New Mexico-grown corn that would be a selling point for not only the product, but also valuable for our states economic development abroad.

Minerva Robotics looks to hire students and recent graduates of NMSU and become advisers for those interested in engaging the Mexican market with the benefits of the home base in New Mexico.

New Mexico is a fertile territory where community, agricultural diversity, and collaboration will create a scenario of innovation and progress, said Rosillo. Salcedo added, For us, we want to share, through technology, our traditional tortilla-making methods with the world.

For more information about Minerva Robotics, visit:www.minervarobotics.com. To learn more about Arrowhead Centers FIX program, visithttps://arrowheadcenter.nmsu.edu/program/fix/.

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NMSU's Arrowhead Center signs agreement with Minerva Robotics to bring gourmet tortillas to the masses - Las Cruces Bulletin

Soft Robotics Market to Witness a Healthy YoY Growth during 2017-2026 – Kentucky Journal 24

According to Stratistics MRC, the Global Soft Robotics Market is accounted for $308.05 million in 2017 and is expected to reach $5,776.59 million by 2026 growing at a CAGR of 38.5% during the forecast period. Some of the key factors influencing the market growth include increasing usage of medical and health care industry and the need for human safety in manufacturing units. However, the high cost of installation is restricting market growth.

Soft Robotics is the exact subfield of robotics commerce with constructing robots from extremely acquiescent equipment, similar to those established in alive organisms. It draws heavily from the way in which living organisms move and adapt to their surroundings. Indifference to robots built from rigid equipment, soft robots allow for increased suppleness and adaptability for accomplishing tasks, as well as improved safety when working around humans.

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Among Robot Type, Wearables (Exoskeletons) segment is expected to grow at the significant market share during the forecast period. The exoskeletons have been commercialized and the market diffusion is comparatively better compared to the soft grippers and soft co-robots. This is due to the concentrated research in the medical devices sector owing to the need for human assistance.

By Geography, Asia Pacific was the leading market and is expected to grow at the considerable market share during the forecast period due to increasing demand for latest technology and equipment such as the use of treatment robots, including exoskeletons, in private and public hospitals are expected to impact the market growth.

Some of the key players profiled in the Soft Robotics Market include ABB, Bionik Laboratories, Cyberdyne, Ekso Bionics Holdings, Empire Robotics, FANUC America Corporation, KUKA AG, Otherlab Orthotics, Pneubotics, Inc., ReWalk Robotics, RightHand Robotics, Inc., Soft Robotics Inc, SynTouch LLC, and Yaskawa Electric.

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Robot Types Covered: Co-Robots Inflated Robots Soft Grippers Wearables (Exoskeletons)

Applications Covered: Human Motor Assistance R&D of Humanoids

End Users Covered: Automotive Food and Beverages Logistics Medical and Healthcare Other End Users

Regions Covered: North Americao USo Canadao Mexico Europeo Germanyo UKo Italyo Franceo Spaino Rest of Europe Asia Pacifico Japano Chinao Indiao Australiao New Zealando South Koreao Rest of Asia Pacific South Americao Argentinao Brazilo Chileo Rest of South America Middle East & Africao Saudi Arabiao UAEo Qataro South Africao Rest of Middle East & Africa

What our report offers: Market share assessments for the regional and country level segments Market share analysis of the top industry players Strategic recommendations for the new entrants Market forecasts for a minimum of 9 years of all the mentioned segments, sub-segments, and the regional markets Market Trends (Drivers, Constraints, Opportunities, Threats, Challenges, Investment Opportunities, and recommendations) Strategic recommendations in key business segments based on the market estimations Competitive landscaping mapping the key common trends Company profiling with detailed strategies, financials, and recent developments Supply chain trends mapping the latest technological advancements

Free Customization Offerings:All the customers of this report will be entitled to receive one of the following free customization options: Company Profilingo Comprehensive profiling of additional market players (up to 3)o SWOT Analysis of key players (up to 3) Regional Segmentationo Market estimations, Forecasts and CAGR of any prominent country as per the clients interest (Note: Depends on feasibility check) Competitive Benchmarkingo Benchmarking of key players based on product portfolio, geographical presence, and strategic alliances

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Soft Robotics Market to Witness a Healthy YoY Growth during 2017-2026 - Kentucky Journal 24

Trends in robotics: Cobots, agribots and medical robots – Robotics Tomorrow

From recreational robots such as drones, to critical operational robots in the medical field, robotic technology is changing our daily lives. Here Stewart Goulding, managing director at precision drive system supplier Electro Mechanical Systems Ltd, explores some current trends in the industry.

Robots are everywhere from robotic wearables, hands, and arms, to companion robots, medical devices, and even biomorphic drones that model the behaviour of bees. Main developments in the industry include cobots, drones and medical robots.

Cobots in the workplace

Since arriving on the scene in the mid-2010s cobots, or collaborative robots, have taken the market by storm. Cobots offer a variety of opportunities for production lines, particularly to enable humans and robots to complement each other, all while working alongside one another safely. The new trend for these styles of robots is making them more accessible, with more cost-effective options now allowing for greater distribution and use.

However, this is not the only way in which robots are collaborating with workers on the production line. Exoskeletons are mechanical devices that assist workers with uniform movements, support workers when lifting heavy objects, as well as providing a portable seat, helping to prevent strain on the workers body.

These applications are both improving the strength of production lines while reducing the strain on human workers and as cobots, exoskeletons and future forms become commonplace, the benefits they will grant workers, production process and businesses will become even more apparent.

In fact, cobots can reduce the human input on production by up to 50 per cent. With the current skills gap having cost UK organisations billions, being able to integrate cobots and other robotic applications, has the potential to positively impact the economy.

Medical robots

In recent years, a significant focus has been placed on revolutionising non-invasive and minimally invasive surgery. As a result, a deluge of new surgical robots have become market-ready. For example, the i-Snake and Micro-IGES are both delicate robotic alternatives to traditional surgery.

Due to more accurate diagnosis methods, the amount of non-invasive and minimally invasive surgeries has skyrocketed. This is putting an increasing strain, both physically and organisationally, on surgeons that carry out these procedures. Robot alternatives, therefore, offer an advantage to the public health service.

As such, these robots must be as accurate and reliable as possible to ensure that they can help ease the strain on the medical system. For example, endoscopy, which is a minimally invasive surgery that allows doctors to inspect the inside of a patient, is one procedure that robots have been developed to support.

Endoscopy robots must be compact and consistently precise. For this reason, when French company EndoControl was developing its new endoscopy ViKY system, it chose a range of FAULHABER brushless DC-motors, which help to achieve the required precision and consistency.

With a complimentary gearhead fitted these motors have a broad selection of reduction ratios available ranging from approximately 3:1 to 1500:1, which gives extensive adjustment of the speed and torque of the device. In the ViKY systems up to 700 mNm of precise movement was achieved using FAULHABER drive systems.

These types of developments are crucial in ensuring medical facilities can cope with the rising number of surgeries, all while reducing fatigue, preserving surgeon wellbeing and avoiding burn out.

Robotics in agriculture

Its no wonder that more agricultural robotic applications are emerging, including biomorphic drones that model the behaviour of bees. Robots and drones could have a big effect on the effectiveness of farming. From drones that monitor and analyse crops, to automated tractors that can seed, fertilise and harvest, agricultural robot developments all mean that human labour can often now be devoted to more complex tasks.

These applications require precise actuation in order to raise the efficacy of the systems. Drone cameras need smooth tilt and panning motion to ensure that accurate and usable images are taken to help. FAULHABER ironless rotor DC motors are widely used in moving camera applications, including defence reconnaissance and movie or television filming, as they allow for accurate cogging free movements to capture vital information.

Therefore, cameras for agricultural drones and other agricultural monitoring systems is a natural extension for this style of motor. Though drones may be considered recreational toys, their ability to autonomously cover and observe large areas of land in small amounts of time, all while consuming less fuel, is immensely beneficial to reducing operational costs.

In fact, some rural farms in China are starting to use heavy-duty industrial drones to water crops in hard to reach areas. The method is proving to be more fuel-efficient than transporting workers and the computer-controlled sprayers waste fewer resources.

So, whether it's across production lines, in surgical theatres or across vast agricultural fields, robotic applications are helping to provide innovative and reliable methods of working for all involved.

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Trends in robotics: Cobots, agribots and medical robots - Robotics Tomorrow

COVID-19 Impact On Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market to Garner Brimming Revenues by 2017 2027 – eRealty Express

The Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market is an intrinsic study of the current status of this business vertical and encompasses a brief synopsis about its segmentation. The report is inclusive of a nearly accurate prediction of the market scenario over the forecast period market size with respect to valuation as sales volume. The study lends focus to the top magnates comprising the competitive landscape of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market, as well as the geographical areas where the industry extends its horizons, in magnanimous detail.

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In accordance with a competitive prospect, this Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics report dispenses a broad array of features essential for measuring the current Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market performance along with technological advancements, business abstract, strengths and weaknesses of market position and hurdles crossed by the leading Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market players to gain leading position. Other aspects such as customer base, sales reach, local coverage, production price trends, and production cost layout are also analyzed to bestow accurate rivalry perspective.

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The Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market report covers extensive analysis of the market scope, structure, potential, fluctuations, and financial impacts. The report also enfolds the precise evaluation of market size, share, product & sales volume, revenue, and growth rate. It also includes authentic and trustworthy estimations considering these terms.

The Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market has been reporting substantial growth rates with considerable CAGR for the last couple of decades. According to the report, the market is expected to grow more vigorously during the forecast period and it can also influence the global economic structure with a higher revenue share. The market also holds the potential to impact its peers and parent market as the growth rate of the market is being accelerated by increasing disposable incomes, growing product demand, changing consumption technologies, innovative products, and raw material affluence.

The study objectives are Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market Report:

In this study, the years considered to estimate the market size of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market:

History Year: 2014 2018

Base Year: 2018

Estimated Year: 2019

Forecast Year:2017 2027

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This report includes the estimation of market size for value (million USD) and volume (K Units). Both top-down and bottom-up approaches have been used to estimate and validate the market size of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market, to estimate the size of various other dependent submarkets in the overall market. Key players in the market have been identified through secondary research, and their market shares have been determined through primary and secondary research. All percentage shares, splits, and breakdowns have been determined using secondary sources and verified primary sources.

For the data information by region, company, type and application, 2018 is considered as the base year. Whenever data information was unavailable for the base year, the prior year has been considered.

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COVID-19 Impact On Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market to Garner Brimming Revenues by 2017 2027 - eRealty Express

Ascension Sacred Heart expands COVID-19 testing at three drive-thru sites – Pensacola News Journal

From staff reports Published 12:53 p.m. CT Aug. 7, 2020

Ascension Sacred Heart announced Friday that it wasexpanding eligibility for COVID-19 testing at its drive-thru sites in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties to include all people who want a nasal swab test, regardless of whether they have symptoms.

The testing sites previously limited testing only to people who reported having symptoms of COVID-19, including fever, cough and shortness of breath.

The expanded scope of testing will apply to the drive-thru sites at:

The Pensacola drive-thru sitehas tested more than 24,000 people since launching March 16.

The drive-thru clinics at Tiger Point and Milton started this week withfederal funds that Santa Rosa County allocated for additional testing locations in the county. The sites are open to any Santa Rosa County residents, regardless of symptoms or insurance status. Community Health Northwest Florida will partner Sacred Heart in staffing the testing locations.

Each of the three sites can provide up to 300 nasal swab tests per day with lab results back within 48 hours.

"As our community prepares to open schools and with residents trying to get back to work after an exposure to the virus or recovery from the virus, we saw the need to expand testing and get results quickly to individuals with and without symptoms," said Justin Labrato, chief operating officer of Ascension Medical Group Sacred Heart., in a the news release.

"The swab tests will be sent to our hospital laboratory which currently has the equipment and supplies to analyze a larger volume of tests and provide results within 48 hours. We're pleased to be able to expand testing and help to reduce the spread of COVID-19 in our area."

All individuals who want to be tested must call the Ascension Sacred Heart Screening Call Center at 850-746-2684 in advance.

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Ascension Sacred Heart expands COVID-19 testing at three drive-thru sites - Pensacola News Journal

The Stand: How One Gesture Shook The World – Film Threat

The image of John Carlos and Tommie Smith raising their fists at the 1968 Olympic Games is burned into the American zeitgeist. It is a symbol of the civil rights movement that will always be remembered for the subtle yet powerful message that Black folks were not okay in this country.

The Stand: How One Gesture Shook The World, by Becky Paige and Tom Ratcliffe, is a documentary that chronicles the backstory leading up to that famous moment. Racism was rampant in America, with Jim Crow laws and segregation being in full force in the South. 1968 was also the year Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F Kennedy were assassinated. The Vietnam War had been raging for thirteen years. And to add to all of that, the Mexico City Olympics were on their way.

The image of John Carlos and Tommie Smith raising their fists at the 1968 Olympic Games is burned into the American zeitgeist.

The film focuses not just on the lives of John Carlos and Tommie Smith, but the lives of those who helped the two men get to that special moment, including Martin Luther King himself before he was murdered. It brings to light the obstacles Black athletes faced, especially on the world stage. Post-Jackie Robison, Black players were still not welcomed by the fans of certain teams or even their White teammates.

The Stand: How One Gesture Shook The World does an exceptional job showing how complicated the road to the Mexico Olympics was.Black Olympic athletes that qualified considered boycotting the games to send a message to the country and the world. They were even threatened, along with their families, for trying to stand up. It took not only the Black athletes but also the help of White allies to get Carlos and Smith to Mexico. The Harvard crew team were some of the partners that played a big part in this. Then when things couldnt get worse, disaster struck when Smith pulled a groin muscle that threatened to take him out of competing all together.

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The Stand: How One Gesture Shook The World - Film Threat

Arcade Fires The Suburbs and Its Notorious Grammy Win, 10 Years Later – The Ringer

On February 13, 2011, Barbra Streisand stood on stage at Staples Center in Los Angeles, ready to announce the winner for the Album of the Year category at the 53rd annual Grammys. Pulling the slip from the envelope, she announced Arcade Fire as the winner from a field that included Lady Antebellum, Eminem, Katy Perry, and Lady Gaga, seemingly utterly confused as she stammered through the first consonant of the word suburbs.

The Canadian indie-rock collective made their way to the stage; vocalist Win Butlers first words as the band accepted the award were What the hell?, seemingly as caught off guard as the audience watching at home, many of whom were hearing the name Arcade Fire for the first time. He went on to thank the city of Montreal and the band members families, adding a holy shit, before saying, Were going to go play another song because we like music. The then-septet kicked into Ready to Start, the second track off of their third album, The Suburbs, which turned 10 on Sunday.

At the time, the win felt unlikely: Indie rock artists seldom gained recognition at the Grammys, let alone the Album of the Year category. Taylor Swift, U2, and the Dixie Chicks all won the award in the decade leading up to the Arcade Fires victory, so when a band more popular on blogs than on the radio won Album of the Year, many took to the internet to express their confusion. A Tumblr blog titled Who is Arcade Fire??!!? surfaced. Rosie ODonnell tweeted that she had never heard of them (though she knows who they are now). Kathie Lee and Hoda merely shrugged at the mention of Arcade Fires name. But while this discourse about the band was transpiring, The Suburbs climbed from no. 52 to no. 12 on the Billboard 200 two weeks following the ceremony. Alongside this sudden attention, Arcade Fire simultaneously sparked confusion and experienced commercial success. And the increased exposure marked an inflection point not only for Arcade Fire, but the changing landscapes of both indie music and the Grammys ceremony.

Some people still equate Grammys with good or valuable, Eric Eidelstein, author of the 33 1/3 book on The Suburbs, says. Its good when people are honored for their work and their artistry. Its not just the same commercial outputs winning everything.

Arcade Fires victory was the big bang for other similar victories at the ceremony. The following year, the Wisconsin-based indie outfit Bon Iver took home Best New Artist. Indie-pop songwriter Gotye won Record of the Year for that one song in 2013 before vanishing into obscurity once again. Alternative polymath Beck won Album of the Year in 2015 for the folk-influenced, earnest Morning Phase. The Black Keys, despite not winning many of the Grammys biggest awards, have made countless appearances at the ceremony from 2010 onward. These wins signified a larger cultural shift: In many ways, indie music had become mainstream.

Thats partially due to the fact that indie music was selling incredibly well in 2010. Both Vampire Weekends sophomore effort Contra and Arcade Fires The Suburbs debuted at no. 1 on Billboard. The genre had also reached an artistic zenith; Sufjan Stevenss sprawling The Age of Adz, Deerhunters psychedelic and hazy Halcyon Digest, and Beach Houses majestic Teen Dream were all released that year. Indie music had more cultural cachet than ever: LCD Soundsystems famous farewell show at Madison Square Garden in April 2011which followed their 2010 album, This Is Happeningsignified the genres import, particularly for that era of artists.

The bands win helped pave a path to the current zeitgeist, even in pop music. A decade ago, it was doubtful to think that an artist like Billie Eilish could have swept the Grammys, although thats exactly what the young songwriter did this year, taking home the prizes for Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best New Artist, among other categories. An indie band with more than four members won Album of the Year in 2011, and that moment cemented what could be Grammy-worthy and popular.

Weird and different is suddenly mainstream, Eidelstein says. People are into concept albums, and people are into thinking about music even on a very base level. Im not saying that Arcade Fire did that for everyone, but it just seems like a turning point.

Indie music had certainly undergone a change of sorts. Even the indie moniker at this point seemed contradictory. Bands once known as indie in the mid-aughts, such as Interpol and Bloc Party, were now signing to major labels. Death Cab for Cutie made the move from the Seattle-based Barsuk Records to Atlantic. The Shins subsequently moved from Sub Pop to Columbia. Arcade Fire went from Merge Records to Columbia.

Its no coincidence that artists such as LCD Soundsystem, Vampire Weekend, Bon Iver, Arctic Monkeys, and, of course, Arcade Fire, were listed as some of the biggest names on the biggest festival bills in recent years. Just one album cycle after The Suburbs, Arcade Fire were selling out notably larger venues when they toured in support of their 2013 record, Reflektor. They had three nights at Barclays [Center], and they were all sold out, Eidelstein says. Its hard to think that the Grammy win wasnt part of that.

With bigger sounds came bigger rooms. Indie music in the early 2010s had moved from its post-punk ethos to embrace synthesizers, drum machines, and pop-centric sensibilities. Bands such as Phoenix, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Vampire Weekend began relinquishing their rigid grips on their guitars to yield more synthetic approaches. What emerged was a blend of the two styles, a by-product rooted in a rock essence that didnt shy away from traditional features of dance music.

Take a song such as the penultimate Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains), an arena-sized indie-pop song replete with glittering synthesizers, a four-on-the-floor percussive backdrop, and an infectious hook. This wasnt the same Arcade Fire fans were familiar with from 2004s Funeral or 2007s Neon Bible, a band who crafted guitar-led rock songs with very few dance elements in sight. This was an Arcade Fire that you can dance to. During this era, their concerts evolved into more eventful, theatrical productions. The lighting was flashier, the stage production was more elaborate, and the venues were larger. The band took the stage at Madison Square Garden for the first time while touring The Suburbs. Emily Mackay, who reviewed the album for NME, giving it 4.5 stars out of 5, describes Arcade Fire as the perfect live band at that point.

It was so exhilarating to watch them at festivals, Mackay says. I think when people get to that point and they nail it, its so satisfying because its so easy to get to that point and completely fluff it. It takes some nerve to get that balance where youve got one foot in the indie world and one foot on the Bono [of U2] stage and make a really good record that doesnt betray what you are.

The songs on The Suburbs sound as though Arcade Fire were confident they would soon perform them in arenas, rather than the smaller venues and ballrooms they had become accustomed to. With the massive choruses of songs like the ones on Half Light II (No Celebration), Ready to Start, and Rococo, these songs were written to reverberate in large settings and take up as much space as possible. They arent domineering or ostentatious; rather, they showcase Arcade Fire in an even more grandiose light. The Suburbs highlights the indie rockers at their most resplendent.

I remember being so grateful that they came out with that record that seemed like, Hello! We would like to play in stadiums now, Mackay says. At the time, summer festivals got to a stage where it was the same bands headlining all the time, like Foo Fighters, Blink-182, Muse, or the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and they just seemed to rotate. It seemed like there wasnt a next generation of bands that was stepping up to the point where they could headline and sell the number of tickets required. Then it seemed that they were going to be that band.

The Suburbs also marked the beginning of Arcade Fires foray into multimedia endeavors. The music video for We Used to Wait used the then-new map-tracking technology to lend a more personal note, asking the viewer to enter the address of the home in which they grew up. The indie-rock collective also collaborated with filmmaker Spike Jonze, which resulted in the short film Scenes From the Suburbs.

The visual component is very striking to me, Eidelstein says. It felt like they were really playing with multimedia for the first time in a way I think they [hadnt] yet. I was in awe of that record feeling like it was a larger project, and there was this Jonze film.

Over roughly 30 minutes of footage, five suburban teenagers ride bikes throughout their neighborhoods, talk about sex, and attend house parties, all while a steadily burgeoning police-military force occupies their small town. Its a poignant exploration of loss of innocence, war, nostalgia, youth, and friendship. Win Butler and former member Sarah Neufeld make cameos.

Similar to that film, The Suburbs as a whole feels like some of Arcade Fires most personal work. Whereas Neon Bible was a critique of modernism, technology, and religious hypocrisy, The Suburbs is a rumination on Win and Will Butlers experiences growing up in the Woodlands, a suburb of Houston. Although the album isnt without its moments of corporate and technological finger-wagging (Modern Man, Deep Blue), Win Butler, Rgine Chassagne, and Co. spend most of the albums 64-minute running time reflecting on the deeply personal narratives of their youth. Despite its sonic size, The Suburbs emphasizes individual storytelling.

Those songs just carry so much weight and memory, Eidelstein says. Its that intimacy for me that really distinguishes it.

Leah Greenblatt, who reviewed The Suburbs with an A rating for Entertainment Weekly, says that this sense of earnestness and nostalgia has helped the album hold up well a decade later.

At the time that Arcade Fire started, there was a lot of ironic remove and winkiness happening in indie rock, Greenblatt says. At that point, I felt like it wasnt super cool to be that ambitious and that earnest, and I think that has aged well for them because sincerity usually does in a way that irony doesnt.

Wasted Hours tells a story of longing for meaningless time spent doing nothing: Wasted hours before we knew / Where to go and what to do, Win Butler croons in the songs chorus. Now our lives are changing fast / Hope that something pure can last, he laments in We Used to Wait. The Suburbs ultimately centers on looking at youth with nostalgic hindsight, and how those wasted hours are sorely missed when our lives are changing fast.

It leads you back to this moment where youre looking at your hopes and dreams of 10 years ago and your innocence, Greenblatt says. They were singing about what it means to be young in 2010.

But these songs are not merely tales of innocence, as the suburbs are not a purely innocent location. They are intrinsically nefarious, as their inception was the direct product of white flight and redlining. In Suburban War, Win Butler confronts some of those ideas head on, signing, This towns so strange they built it to change / And while we sleep we know the streets get rearranged. Its a subtle reference to perpetual construction and gentrification and the suburbs role in that. They build it up just to burn it back down, Butlers voice wavers in Rococo. In the potent final stanza of Sprawl I (Flatland), the frontman sulks: The last defender of the sprawl / Said, Well, where do you kids live? / Well, sir, if you only knew what the answers worth / Ive been searching every corner of the Earth.

In a July 2010 interview with NME, Win Butler described the album as neither a love letter to, nor an indictment of, the suburbsits a letter from the suburbs. Arcade Fire present the suburban upbringing as a multidimensional experience. The suburbs are not purely rosy, but the Butler brothers still have fond memories of them. Its where they grew up. Its their home.

The perfect encapsulation of this can be found in the third track, Modern Man. Although it scarcely touches on the suburban experience, its steady 4/4 time signature is occasionally interrupted by a measure of 5/4. This turns a relatively straightforward rock song into something tripping over itself, something slightly uneasy. The suburbs, on a superficial level, appear safe and welcoming to all, but on a deeper inspection, they possess myriad disquieting traits.

The Suburbs also remains the centerpiece of the bands discography and history. Before 2010, Arcade Fire were an established cult favorite, known for their emotional reminiscing on Funeral and their political, technological cynicism on Neon Bible. Their songs were anthemic but never pretentious, and their music had an unpolished production to it that lent it some of its charm. The Suburbs kept their exceptional songwriting intact while expanding upon it with glossier production and grander ideas, a bigger-budget mentality that would go on to pervade their next two records. They demonstrate how they grew as songwriters with the piano-led shuffle of the title track, the unabashed, emo-esque Empty Room, and the evocative ballad We Used to Wait. The Suburbs ushered in a new era of Arcade Fire.

They were aiming to make a real start-to-finish album, Greenblatt says. It seemed like they put a lot of care into the track sequencing, instrumentation, and epicness of it.

They followed The Suburbs with 2013s Reflektor, a double album featuring collaborations with David Bowie and LCD Soundsystems James Murphy and a wealth of songs running over six minutes. The band returned in 2017 with the polarizing Everything Now, which relied far too heavily on gimmicks, such as a $109 fidget spinner, a fictitious corporation, and a clunky social media campaign, instead of compelling songwriting. Though both of these albums reached dramatically different consensuses among fans and critics alike, these records share one trait: The album cycles were events. Both of those tours featured coordinated outfits (they asked fans to dress up too for the Reflektor tour), cryptic promotion, and gimmicks. Reflektor saw the band introduced as the Reflektors, in lieu of Arcade Fire, on The Colbert Report. For Everything Now they created a parody website, Stereoyum, and they reviewed their own album in a Premature Premature Evaluationa play off of one Stereogums signature columnsas well as a handful of secret Twitter accounts.

The launches for their albums have become more flamboyant and more of an ordeal, Eidelstein says. Maybe The Suburbs is a launching point of that Arcade Fire I think of now.

Arcade Fire was becoming part of a new era of indie music that was about more than just four-piece, guitar-led bands. Artists such as the XX, Dirty Projectors, LCD Soundsystem, and Panda Bear were part of a movement that widened the scope of what indie music meant. It could be something colossal, danceable, and unafraid of risks. Bon Ivers Justin Vernon abandoned his folk-influenced origins to embrace ambient synthscapes. Vampire Weekend expanded their sonic palette to incorporate drum machines and vocal samples. Tame Impala eventually swapped psych-rock for pop beats. The Nationals Aaron Dessner recently worked with Taylor Swift to create her latest record, Folklore (as did Vernon). Arcade Fire and their famous Grammy upset played a role in that cultural development toward a commercial acceptance of indie music.

Theres a reason these guys won the Grammy for best album, Eidelstein says. I know people were like, Who the fuck is Arcade Fire?, but Im sure they listened to Arcade Fire after that, realizing you dont have to just listen to the outputs of Billboards Top 10. And as a result of doing that, they become Billboard Top 10s. I think indie music in all its forms is being taken seriously not just by critics anymore.

In an interview shortly after the event, Win Butler said he believed the band won the award because they were going up against some of the larger names in music. People love underdog movies, he said, but Arcade Fire are no longer the underdogs. That transition to a big name started with The Suburbs win at the Grammys.

Grant Sharples is a writer based in Kansas City. He has written for MTV News, Consequence of Sound, Paste, and others.

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Arcade Fires The Suburbs and Its Notorious Grammy Win, 10 Years Later - The Ringer

Why it’s important to have a plan for your pets during the pandemic – KENS5.com

San Antonio Pets Alive! has taken in two dogs whose owner has died of COVID-19.

SAN ANTONIO San Antonio Pets Alive! is helping two furry family members move on after their owner died from the novel coronavirus, showing that it isn't just human relatives who are affected by loss during the pandemic.

Jase, a terrier mix, and Bentley, a purebred boxer, are going through a crisis.

Without their beloved owner, they were in need of a place to stay," said Olivia Schneider, SAPA! marketing and development director.

Theyve gone through so much. Its been a traumatic experience for these sweet animals to hope for their owner to come home that they love so much, she said.

The shelter took the pair in after the death of their human. Schneider said the shelter, known for focusing its efforts on animals at risk for euthanasia, is hard at work staying prepared for these situations.

We dont only just pull animals that are at risk of euthanasia. We also do public intake, Schneider said. Jase and Bentley were two animals that were public intake animals; they didnt come through the city shelter.

She said that the best things pet owners can do for their animals is take care of themselves so they can be there to take care of their animals. But, should the worst happen, SAPA! is prepared to step in and help displaced animals.

Especially in COVID-19, weve greatly shifted and adapted our operations, Schneider said. As always, were here to save lives in whatever way we possibly can.

Schneider, meanwhile, is also encouraging people to have a plan in place for their pets should something happen to them during the pandemic.

Make sure that, if you do fall ill, that someone can come and take care of your animals, and you do have almost a succession plan, she said. If you do pass away or youre unable to take care of them, (make sure) that those animals have a safe place to go.

Being together has been a comfort to Bentley and Jase, but Schneider says getting them into new homes is a top priority, even if that means they have to say goodbye.

"To be in a different place now, but still together, it would be really meaningful. But at the end of the day, we have to do whats best for Bentley and Jase, and thats getting them adopted.

San Antonio Pets Alive! assessed the dogs' medical needs when they arrived and found that Bentley was positive for heartworm, which can lead to serious complications. Jase appears to be healthy.

Anyone hoping to help with the animals medical bills can visit http://www.sanantoniopetsalive.org/medical.

People looking to adopt an animal can click here to begin filling out an application.

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Why it's important to have a plan for your pets during the pandemic - KENS5.com

Twelve Things that Caught My Eye Today: Preparing for a Post-Roe World & More (August 7, 2020) – National Review

1. Emma Green: The Anti-Abortion-Rights Movement Prepares to Build a Post-Roe World

Bachelder agreed to financially back an SBA List test program in Georgia called PLANthe Pregnancy and Life Assistance Networkthat would compile and publicize resources already available to women dealing with unplanned pregnancies, modeled after a version of the program in Northern Virginia. In theory, its an ambitious effort to find common ground between hard-core anti-abortion-rights activists and people who want to help pregnant women but may not be convinced that abortion should be completely banned.

2. The Jewish Case Against Abortion

Whatever few differences there are between Jewish morality and Christian morality, the issue of abortion is not one of them. That is why the NCJW statement is a great distortion of both Judaism and Christianity. Indeed, those Jews and those Christians who endorse abortion have been overly influenced by a secularist culture that is in principle hostile to the morality taught by both these great, often overlapping, traditions. On questions like abortion and euthanasia, it is what the late Pope John Paul II called a culture of death.

3. Kristen Day & Xavier Bisits: The Democrats Biden Doesnt Want

The Democrats of 2020 will barely give a thought to policies that make it easier for women to choose life, such as government-funded hospital care for women giving birth, or palliative care for infants with prenatal diagnoses. Such policies, previously central to Democratic values, violate the core tenet that abortion is normal.

4. BBC: Beirut Explosion

Whats really noticeable as you walk the streets here is that every second person seems to have a broom in their hand. There are clear-up teams everywhere, but its pretty low tech: tiny teams of people with pans and brushes to clean up an entire citys devastation.

5. Michael Gerson: Covid-19 threatens to overwhelm the developing world

Across Africa, health systems are already fragile. Covid-19 is like a battering ram against a paper wall. In crowded slums, the exhortation to socially distance is a cruel joke. And most African countries are already dealing with an assortment of deadly infectious diseases that are infinitely complicated by the addition of a new one.

6. Steven D. Mosher: Catholicism a Casualty of Chinas New Cultural Revolution

It is not merely that the CCP is suspicious of, or even hostile to, religious faith in China, although it is certainly both. Rather, it is the case that the party conceives of itself as a secular religion and is determined to impose that religion on the people of China by deploying all of the considerable resources that a hi-tech, one-party dictatorship has at its disposal. This is the environment in which Catholic bishops, priests and laity are forced to operate in todays China. It is an environment of constant propaganda, surveillance and intrusion by hostile agents of the state.

7. Stephen P. White: Waiting for the McCarrick Report

The longer the McCarrick report is delayed, the longer the open wound of distrust between the flock and the shepherds will fester.

This distrust, by the way, is damaging to the faithful and to the Church as a whole. It is also damaging to those whose names have been tainted by their proximity to McCarrick men who, if they are innocent of wrongdoing, deserve to have their names cleared.

8. Crux: Pope says fighting clerical abuse fosters deeper respect for life

Fighting abuse [means] fostering and empowering communities so that they are capable of keeping watch and announcing that all life deserves to be respected and valued, especially that of the most defenseless who do not have the resources to make their voice heard, Francis wrote.

9. We need to talk about what school closures mean for kids with disabilities

For a lot of families of kids with disabilities, virtual learning this spring meant nothing, Maria Hernandez, executive director of the nonprofit VELA, which helps parents in the Austin, Texas, area navigate special education for their kids, told Vox. It meant one phone call; it meant one packet.

And now, parents worry about a fall with more of the same uncertainty over whether schools will be able to provide from a distance the resources their kids need. At the same time, some students with disabilities also have underlying conditions and complex medical needs that make the physical reopening of schools a frightening prospect.

10. Fr. Wilson D. Miscamble: Mayor Pete at Notre Dame

The Buttigieg appointment illustrates that the universitys leadership has embraced a defective understanding of Notre Dames Catholic mission. Anyone can see that the Church suffers from significant challenges in restoring trust after the failure to address the clergy sexual abuse crisis, and a properly constructed course on trust, taught by someone with convictions in line with the Catholic faith, could do much good. But that is not what Our Ladys university has chosen to do.

11. Susan Codone: Public Theology Isnt Just for Academics

When I was given an opportunity to speak directly to the church culture that silenced me, I unearthed a deeply held personal theology of traumathat my relationship with God rests upon his grace alone, and that he redemptively rescues and restores me from suffering Ive experienced by the abuse of power.

12. The Washington Post: He asked to play a piano at a store. His performance went viral, and the owner gave him his first piano.

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Twelve Things that Caught My Eye Today: Preparing for a Post-Roe World & More (August 7, 2020) - National Review

Mike Ostrowski and John I. Snow III: Racism is all around us and New Hampshire is not immune – The Union Leader

WE FIND ourselves in a perfect storm with multiple flashpoints: a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic and a centuries-old struggle for justice. One is a public health emergency that has lasted for months and promises many future challenges: COVID-19. The other is the most insidious, long-standing public health emergency that has lasted for hundreds of years: racism.

Current events underscore the seriousness of the situation. The novel coronavirus has laid bare the health disparities and disproportionate impact on people of color across the nation. The data also show the same disparities and inequities at play here in the Granite State.

A recent report issued by the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute emphasized this. While non-Hispanic white residents make up 90 percent of the New Hampshire population, they constituted only 74 percent of identified COVID-19 infections. More than one in five hospitalizations were of someone who identified as something other than white. That is a stark example of disproportionate impact right here at home.

There is a hunger in this country and in our state to finally address these injustices. This has never been clearer than in the recent widespread protests following the murder of yet more unarmed Black Americans at the hands of law enforcement.

Yes, New Hampshire is still predominantly white, but our demographics are changing. If we want our state to prosper and to build a talented and vibrant workforce, we need to embrace this growing diversity and continue our efforts to make New Hampshire a welcoming place. Our states most respected demographers and economists agree.

But first, theres an institution we must collectively tear down: structural racism. Its the entrenched and rigged system designed to confer advantages on some, but not others. And its often hard to spot if youre someone who has always benefited from that system. People of color have long experienced systemic barriers to economic opportunity and financial independence, employment, education, criminal justice, housing, and health care, while bearing the disproportionate share of surveillance, mistrust and fear often with lethal results.

These inconvenient truths have led to statewide efforts to address the pandemic of structural racism, including the Advisory Council on Diversity and Inclusion, established more than two years ago in an effort to combat discrimination. More recently, a Commission on Law Enforcement Accountability, Community, and Transparency was formed to examine our states policing practices and develop recommendations for improving the relationship between law enforcement and the communities they serve.

In our respective roles as board members at the Endowment for Health, New Hampshires largest health foundation, we are particularly proud of leadership investments in programs for New Hampshire residents that examine racism, bias and privilege. We are also proud of the Race and Equity in New Hampshire Series. That work has spanned more than four years and has grown to include hundreds of Granite Staters from all backgrounds and walks of life. Were working together to promote race and equity in the domains of civic engagement, criminal justice/law enforcement, economic development, education, government, and health.

Getting involved is important. But its not enough to be an ally who stands in solidarity with people of color as they do the work of fighting racism. We must all be anti-racist partners willing to take action and ask the uncomfortable questions right here in New Hampshire.

We must be willing to confront the shopkeeper who is unnecessarily following people of color in the store. We must insist our school districts teach our children a more complete history of our state and nation. We must call for community policing and de-escalation training. And, hard as it might be, we must call out the neighbor who makes racist comments. We have to speak the truth even when it ruffles feathers.

None of us can be healthy without a culture free from the lie of racial constructs. Every one of us suffers from the societal setbacks of racism, no matter our background. We all play a part in shaping a future for our state where differences among our people are welcomed and celebrated. A future where geography, circumstance or skin color do not define our well-being.

Mike Ostrowski of Antrim served as interim CEO at New Hampshire Center for Nonprofits and as president and CEO of Child and Family Services of New Hampshire. He currently chairs the Endowment for Health. John I. Snow III is president and managing director of Quabbin Capital and grew up in Amherst. He serves on the Board and Investment Committee of the Endowment for Health. He lives in WInchester, Mass.

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Mike Ostrowski and John I. Snow III: Racism is all around us and New Hampshire is not immune - The Union Leader

The hidden crisis: Beneath the surface of Covid lurks a human rights crisis for women – The Financial Express

By Shriya Roy

The pandemic has unleashed a volley of troubles on the world. But while its impact on people, businesses and industries has been dwelt upon in detail, one issue that seems to have slipped through the cracks is its impact on women. From domestic abuse and mental stress to financial instability and lack of access to healthcare, the virus has dealt a severe blow to women of all ages and across countries.

The 2020 World Population report by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), in fact, warns that the pandemic could reverse all the gains achieved so far in the fight against harmful practices against women worldwide. Interestingly, data suggests that epidemics and pandemics have always affected women in far greater ways than men. The 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, for instance, destroyed the livelihoods of many traders in Sierra Leone and Liberia, 85% of whom were women, as per reports.

What makes the scenario more worrisome is that only a minority of governments collect and share aggregated sex and gender data during an infectious disease. Analysis is often conducted much later and with incomplete information. The truth, however, remains that beneath the surface of the current pandemic lurks a global human rights crisis for women.

Violence & abuseDomestic violence cases increased by 20% worldwide during the lockdown, as per the UN, which termed this rise a shadow pandemic. While many countries reported a spike in calls to domestic abuse hotlines, in many others, especially developing ones, reporting of cases was lower due to limitations on access to phones and helplines, and disrupted public services like police, justice and social services.

In India, the National Commission for Women received more than 300 such complaints from the start of the lockdown in March till April. As per their data, compared to the pre-lockdown period, the number of complaints doubled starting the first week of lockdown itself in late March.

Delhi alone saw around 1,600 women calling emergency helpline numbers between March and April to report domestic violence, as per various reports. The Delhi Commission for Women, however, maintains that there was a decrease in the number of such calls during the lockdown. It was seen that reporting of cases decreased manifold in the initial days of the lockdown, says Swati Maliwal, chief, Delhi Commission for Women. This decrease, however, could be attributed to women not being able to access help due to close proximity with their abusers. It becomes harder for women to get away from the house and so long as they are in the same space as the abuser, the violence continues, says Bengaluru-based activist Tara Krishnaswamy, a member of the civic group Citizens for Bengaluru.

Agrees journalist Namita Bhandare, who writes on gender issues: Empirical data on a wide scale is lacking. However, there is most definitely a domestic violence pandemic that is raging. Calls to helplines, in fact, may be down because, during the lockdown, women might have experienced lack of privacy to place a call. Moreover, due to economic hardships, many women might not have been able to recharge phones or even access phones, she says.

Shakti Shalini, a New Delhi-based NGO which operates shelter homes for women, said in a recent report that their helpline responded to 77 calls in April. That number, however, rose to 115 in May. Interestingly, through the lockdown, victims contacted majorly between 9 pm and 10 am when most of their family members would be asleep, the NGO said.

Noting the seriousness of the situation and in response to a petition filed by the All India Council of Human Rights, Liberties and Social Justice, the Delhi High Court directed the Delhi government and the Centre on April 24 to ensure effective implementation of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005. Other countries, too, are stepping up efforts to check the menace. While Italy has increased the number of helplines, Australia has boosted funding for anti-violence organisations, including those that offer safe accommodation. Kenya, too, has bolstered telephone counselling services for those facing domestic violence.

Healthcare disruptedDuring the lockdown in the country, there were several reports of women giving birth on Shramik trains that were arranged to transport migrant workers back to their home states. The access to maternal healthcare was close to nil, increasing the risk of infection to both mother and baby. Other pregnant women in the country, too, had to face a hard time as it became tough to get to the hospital due to lack of transportation. The lockdown also made it harder for women, especially those in rural areas, to access sexual or reproductive health services. When it came to availability of essentials like sanitary napkins, it was twice as hard for poor women as shops were shut. Those that were open ran out of stock. Plus, they had no access to delivery services, says Krishnaswamy.

Not just that, around 1.85 million women were denied access to abortion services in India due to the restrictions, as per a recent study conducted by Ipas Development Foundation (IDF), a Delhi-based non-profit organisation. In Italy, abortions were cancelled during the lockdown and still remain restricted in some parts.

Its a fact that global health emergencies limit and create a disruption in normal healthcare services. But one of the worst affected are women who suffer from a severe lack of access to sexual and reproductive health services. Researchers at UNFPA predict that 47 million women in 114 low- and middle-income countries could lose access to contraception in 2020, leading to unplanned pregnancies. Past pandemics such as Ebola have shown that there is a definite rise in unplanned and teen pregnancies caused by lack of access to birth control, says Bhandare.

Besides limiting access to healthcare, the pandemic is also disrupting supply chains. Many types of contraceptives are expected to be in short supply in the coming months in more than a dozen developing nations, warns the UNFPA, which says healthcare professionals may be too busy tackling Covid-19 to be able to provide other services.

Government response in countries around the world differs widely. While England changed its legislation in March to permit medical abortion at home through the use of pills, US states like Texas, Ohio, Iowa, Oklahoma and Alabama further restricted access to abortion, deeming it a non-essential service. Some states in the US, in fact, claimed that abortions need to be stopped altogether during the pandemic to preserve hospital beds. Closer home, ministry of health and family welfare guidelines declaring maternal health services as essential came only on April 13, the third week of the lockdown.

Mind & wellnessHistorically, women have played the part of primary caregivers in families. During the current crisis, though, the social isolation measures have resulted in women reeling under an increased workload as family members remain home-bound for a continued period of time. For women with jobs, it has become even more difficult, as they have to juggle work, household chores, domestic responsibilities and parenting duties. If we just talk of India, data collected over time by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development shows that Indian women do nearly six hours of unpaid care work each day. Men, on the other hand, spend less than an hour on an average doing the same. The task of taking care of kids and the elderly also falls upon the woman in the house. In most households in India, if a woman is working, there is this unsaid assumption that she wont drop household responsibilities unlike men, says Krishnaswamy.

This increased work load, however, is leading many women to experience stress, anxiety and other mental health issues. A lot of women have also experienced mom rage, anger as a result of social isolation, lack of support and high levels of frustration.

A London School of Economics student, who is from India and works as a healthcare volunteer in London, says gender gap in mental health existed before the lockdown, but the isolation has only widened it. Isolation is draining women disproportionately because our patriarchal society demands that they take on additional domestic chores, as well as child-care responsibilities. In many households, even though the male partners are contributing, the emotional burden still falls on women, says the student, who didnt wish to be named.

Agrees Japleen Pasricha, founder-director, Feminism in India, a feminist media organisation: Women are the primary caretakers in a family and since everyone is at home now, they have to manage household chores, online classes, the children, as well as the elderly. With increased household work, aggravated domestic violence and no leisure time for themselves, women remain one of the worst-hit sections of society, says Pasricha.

Home is also not a great support system for everyone. Many working women, for whom the workplace provided an escape, have been facing emotional abuse at home now. Work from home has made things worse because not only do I have to stay at home, but also undergo emotional abuse. I try to be as normal as possible for my daughter, but staying at home all the time is getting harder, says 38-year-old Amrita (name changed on request), a professional based in Delhi.

Financial falloutThe virus outbreak has also brought womens economic vulnerability to the forefront. According to a July 15 report by management consultant firm Mckinsey & Co, female job loss rates resulting from Covid-19 are about 1.8 times higher than male job loss rates in India and the US. As per various unemployment surveys in India, women account for 23% of the overall job lossesat least four out of 10 women in India lost their jobs due to the pandemic, reveals a survey by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy.

Globally, too, womens jobs are 19% more at risk than men, as per the report by Mckinsey & Co. Across the US, the impact on female jobs is already visible. The latest unemployment figures show that women held 55% of the 20.5 million jobs lost between April-May in the US.

Sectors which traditionally have a larger female workforce, such as retail, hotels, tourism, parlours, etc, also shut overnight. The latest International Labour Organization (ILO) report revealed that the proportion of women working in the hard-hit sectors was particularly high in Central America (58.9%), south-east Asia (48.5%), southern Europe (45.8%) and South America (45.5%). The bigger the loss in employment during the lockdown phase and the greater the scarcity of jobs in the aftermath of the crisis, the harder it will be for womens employment to recover, said the ILO in the report, adding that women were disproportionately affected post the lockdown around the world, with almost 40% of all employed women experiencing job loss compared to 36.6% of men.

This loss of financial independence may further threaten their safety and autonomy at home. Bhandare points out that frontline health workers like accredited social health activists (ASHA), who have been working without adequate protection gear or even compensation in the country, are all women. In many states, not only have their regular honorariums been delayed, but they havent also received the additional `1,000 a month promised to them by the Centre for their additional Covid-related work, she says. The ILO says women are also at greater risk of infection, as they make up the vast majority of health and social care workers globally.

Krishnaswamy warns that womens economic situation is going to get worse not only in formal, but informal labour too. People are paranoid about getting their house helps back, and the majority of them are women who come from abusive households. The two issues are, therefore, interconnected, she says.

Women working from home are also struggling to balance work and life, in some instances with less pay. Work from home is an attractive option for many, but it can work for women only if they get help with household work and it doesnt become an excuse for companies to pay them less for equal work, says Bhandare.

The depth and magnitude of the impact of the pandemic on women is yet to be fully discovered, but timely steps in the form of committed efforts by public and private institutions ranging across mental and physical healthcare, legal support, rehabilitation programmes, etc, may aid future response to such outbreaks.

20%: The increase in domestic violence cases worldwide during lockdown, as per UN

Around 1,600: Women in Delhi who called helplines between March and April to report domestic violence, as per reports

Around 1.85 million: Women who were denied abortions in India during lockdown, as per Ipas Development Foundation

Nearly 47 million: Women in 114 low- and middle-income countries who could lose access to contraception in 2020, as per researchers at United Nations Population Fund

Nearly 6 hours: Unpaid care work done by Indian women each day as opposed to men who spend less than an hour doing the same, as per data by Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

* Female job loss rates were 1.8 times higher than male job loss rates in India and the US, as per a Mckinsey & Co report

* At least 4 out of 10 women in India lost their jobs due to the pandemic, as per a survey by Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy

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The hidden crisis: Beneath the surface of Covid lurks a human rights crisis for women - The Financial Express

SC tells Prashant Bhushan there is a thin line between contempt and freedom of speech – Scroll.in

The Supreme Court on Tuesday told advocate Prashant Bhushan that there was a thin line between contempt and freedom of speech, Live Law reported. The top court was hearing a contempt case against the advocate from 2009.

Bhushan had allegedly made some objectionable remarks against Supreme Court judges in an interview to Tehelka magazine in 2009. The contempt of court case against him was filed by advocate Harish Salve.

The top court bench, headed by Justice Arun Mishra, told Bhushans lawyer Rajeev Dhavan that there should be a balance between the right to free speech on one hand and the need to safeguard the dignity of the judiciary, according to Hindustan Times. We are all for freedom of speech and then theres contempt, Mishra was quoted as saying by Live Law. However, theres a thin line that you [Bhushan] may have crossed.

On July 21, the Supreme Court initiated suo motu criminal contempt proceedings against advocate Prashant Bhushan and social media platform Twitter India. The next day, the top court issued notices to Bhushan and Attorney General KK Venugopal for the lawyers alleged derogatory tweets against the judiciary. The case will be heard again on August 5.

Another contempt case related to two tweets posted by him on June 27 and 29. The first tweet commented about undeclared emergency in India and the role of the Supreme Court and last four chief justices of India. The second tweet was about Chief Justice SA Bobde trying out a Harley Davidson superbike in his hometown Nagpur.

In a response to the notice against him, Bhushan had said on Monday that the power of contempt must not be used to stifle voices that seek accountability from a court for its errors. To prevent a citizen from forming, holding and expressing bonafide opinion in public interest on any institution and from evaluating its performance is not a reasonable restriction on fundamental right to free speech, Bhushan had said.

Bhushan had added that his tweet about the last four chief justices was his bonafide impression about them. He said that even though his personal views were outspoken, disagreeable or unpalatable, they could not be counted as contempt.

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SC tells Prashant Bhushan there is a thin line between contempt and freedom of speech - Scroll.in

TikTok to Trump: We’re Ready to Fight Your Executive Order in Court – PCMag

(Photo Illustration by Cindy Ord/Getty Images)

TikTok plans to resist President Trumps executive order by fighting it in court.

The executive order, which prohibits US transactions with the video-sharing app, sets a dangerous precedent against free expression and open markets, TikTok said in a statement Thursday night.

The order also arrived without any due process, it said. So in response, TikTok is gearing up to wage a legal battle against the White House.

We will pursue all remedies available to us in order to ensure that the rule of law is not discarded and that our company and our users are treated fairly if not by the Administration, then by the US courts, TikTok said.

The Trump administration has yet to define which transactions fall under the executive order, and if US-based TikTok users will be ensnared. But US app stores, cloud providers and credit card companies would almost certainly need to stop doing business with TikTok, or risk facing hefty fines and possible imprisonment.

Still, some legal experts say Trumps order is unconstitutional because it violates free speech protections under the First Amendment. This is another abuse of emergency powers under the broad guise of national security, said Hina Shamsi, a director at the American Civil Liberties Union.

Selectively banning entire platforms harms freedom of speech online and does nothing to resolve the broader problem of unjustified government surveillance, including by our own government, she added.

However, the real aim of Trumps executive order was probably to pressure TikTok into selling itself to Microsoft. The software giant is currently negotiating with TikToksChinese parent company ByteDance to take it over. However, the two parties only have 45 more days to reach a deal. If they don't, the executive order will take effect, and the White House can begin penalizing US companies and individuals that work with TikTok.

In the meantime, the video-sharing app is vowing itll remain in operation, despite the White Houses attempt to cripple its business. TikTok will be here for many years to come, the company said in its statement.

Trump is seeking to ban TikTok on claims the Chinese government will secretly use the video-sharing app to spy on millions of Americans. However, TikTok has been adamant its operating as an independent business free of Chinese control.

The text of the (Trumps) decision makes it plain that there has been a reliance on unnamed reports with no citations, fears that the app may be used for misinformation campaigns with no substantiation of such fears, and concerns about the collection of data that is industry standard for thousands of mobile apps around the world, TikTok added. We have made clear that TikTok has never shared user data with the Chinese government, nor censored content at its request.

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TikTok to Trump: We're Ready to Fight Your Executive Order in Court - PCMag

An Angel Investors Tryst With BYJUS And LinkedIn; The Free Speech Conundrum – Inc42 Media

LinkedIn banning angel investor Dr Aniruddha Malpani for posts critical of edtech giant BYJUS highlights the issue of social medias control over online speech

Beyond LinkedIn, the likes of Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and Instagram have also had to take down content on the behest of companies and brands

When authentic criticism can be suppressed without a public debate, is there any way that social media platforms can claim to be paragons of free speech?

Theres something to be said about freedom of speech online or lack thereof when a powerful startup can use its muscle to act against critics on social media. If indeed the so-called protectors of speech and expression in the digital age can be coerced into deleting posts and content to protect the interests of one company, then what hope do people have in getting their voices heard.

We have seen social media platforms being twisted and manipulated for political gain, but even companies have a lot riding on reputation management in the online world. As highlighted in the incident involving angel investor Dr Aniruddha Malpani, edtech giant BYJUS and Microsoft-owned professional social network LinkedIn.

Over the last few weeks, Malpani has been in the limelight for alleging BYJUS had got his LinkedIn account deactivated and banned for posting allegedly defamatory content against the edtech unicorn. I have a clear conscience about my posts on #LinkedIn about the #toxic #work #culture at #Byjus. I just said the truth, with the hope that this would goad them into action. Sadly, they have chosen to make matters worse by punishing me by forcing #LinkedIn to delete my account, Malpani tweeted on July 21.

Though there is no proof of BYJUS involvement in Linkedin taking down his account, it raises questions over why a platform run by a multinational company such as Microsoft should oppress the voice of any user, even if it may be critical of another business. Though LinkedIn is strictly limited to professional networking, deleting accounts is only seen when fake users pop up.

But its just not LinkedIn in question. According to a Medianama report, even Twitters legal team has sent notices to users talking against BYJUS, which noted that tweets critical of the company violated Indian law. The publication had reviewed four of these emails sent over the past few months which included off-the-cuff comments on its business and an allegation that it was promoting fake news.

Though BYJUS has declined to comment their involvement in the Twitter reports, it has maintained a studied silence on the LinkedIn fiasco.

The LinkedIn-Malpani-BYJUS debacle has thrown light on a larger issue on the internet freedom of speech and expression. Malpani told Inc42 that the problem in this issue is not that his account got banned, but the lack of accountability and answerability on LinkedIns part. He has been repeatedly trying to reach out to the company in an attempt to restore his account, but has only received templated responses time and again.

It raises questions on how social media platforms like LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook decide on what passes the test and what does not. It also raises questions over whats the redressal mechanism available on these platforms.

Further, theres the issue of Indias intermediary guidelines, which force social media companies to take down content on the request of the government and law enforcement agencies. If indeed companies have an issue with a particular series of posts, they can take it to court and get the content removed legitimately. Realising the implications of this power over customers and other businesses, even the US Congress recently probed tech giants like Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook over free speech and online privacy.

In 2018, PepsiCo sued Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and others for comparing snack brand Kurkure to plastic. Similarly, other content such as reviews of the Baba Ramdev biography Godman to Tycoon were deemed to be defamatory and taken down. As reported by Medianama, the Bombay high court had directed a YouTube creator in January this year to takedown a video reviewing Parachute coconut oil. In its decision, the high court had maintained that the fundamental right to freedom of speech and expression is not an unfettered right and that maligning a product may not be covered under any guarantees by the constitution.

YouTube was also caught in another BYJUS-related scandal where videos of a BYJUS sales manager abusing a junior employee were taken down indiscriminately. All instances of the video have been wiped out from YouTube, Dailymotion and Reddit, where it was being circulated. Users on Reddit have also alleged other instances of posts in relation to BYJUS being deleted or taken down.

Inc42 reached out to Linkedin seeking clarification, but the company sent a templated response, LinkedIn is committed to keeping our platform safe, trusted and professional. We have clear terms of service and professional community policies that we expect all of our members to adhere to. We can confirm that this account has been restricted and cannot comment further on member accounts due to our Privacy Policy.

LinkedIns professional community policies mostly include generic community guidelines like acting responsibly, being trustworthy, being safe, respecting others rights and following the law.

So on what basis was the account deletion enforced by LinkedIn? And shouldnt it have to furnish proof of said violations before deleting someones lifes work? If LinkedIn indeed wants to remain a career enabler, such moves rob it of credibility.

The pandemic has pushed social distancing to another level. In times like these, peoples dependence on social networking platforms has increased manifold. Though these platforms are owned by private multinational corporations, theyre still public in nature. Therefore, they need to be more accountable and responsible in terms of managing it and not oppressing voices.

According to Malpani, he has recommended that LinkedIn bring in a democratic solution which allows five representatives from the company and five users to decide what should be removed from the platform. This model is somewhat similar to Facebooks Oversight Board that reviews appeals from users, whose account has been removed from Facebook and its subsidiaries. This board is an independent body whose decision Facebook will have to follow unless it could violate any law.

On the other hand even the legal route is an impossible fight to win considering LinkedIns terms and conditions state, You are responsible for anything that happens through your account unless you close it or report misuse. With no redressal system, the only way to solve such problems on LinkedIn is to prevent it in the first place.

While reports about problematic work culture in unicorns and other prominent startups are no secret, there has not been much said about such a work culture, as it could damage the companys valuations and hamper its ability to attract further investments.

Malpani maintained that he does not have any problem with BYJUS, but has raised issues that he feels are symptomatic across the startup ecosystem and unicorns.

I have nothing against BYJUs, I just take BYJUs as representative (of the issue of corporate governance). I am sure others must be equally bad. You know why? Because everyone is now trying to copy BYJUs. So they put someone who used to work at BYJUs and they used to copy and paste all their mis-selling techniques and all the rubbish they used to do because this is the best way to make money very quickly, he said.

The investor also said while he is in a better position than others to take the fight to LinkedIn, others may not have the time, means or inclination to get into a protracted fight. And therein lies the major issue. This issue is not just about LinkedIn banning an individual, but shows a greater problem around freedom of speech without having any form of redressal mechanisms in place.

Social media platforms have too much power and at the same time none, at least as long as companies can stroll in and demand that criticism needs to be removed. Whereas the issue can be ignored to a certain extent, but when authentic criticism can be similarly suppressed, then theres no way that social media platforms can claim to be paragons of free speech.

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An Angel Investors Tryst With BYJUS And LinkedIn; The Free Speech Conundrum - Inc42 Media

SpaceX’s toasted Crew Dragon returns home after historic NASA astronaut splashdown – Space.com

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule cruised into its home port Friday evening (Aug. 7), secured to one of the companys recovery vessels.

Onlookers gathered at Jetty Park (while social distancing) in anticipation of the Crew Dragons arrival after the capsule's historic splashdown on Aug. 2 that returned NASA astronauts Bob Benken and Doug Hurley to Earth. The mission, SpaceX's first crewed flight, was NASA's first orbital crewed flight from U.S. soil since 2011.

Jetty Park a popular launch viewing location is located at the mouth of the port, and all marine traffic comes through this point. Typically packed with excited space fans waiting to see a launch, Jetty Park has been closed during most of the pandemic, but recently reopened in phases.

Related: 'It sounds like an animal': NASA astronauts describe Crew Dragon reentry

The SpaceX recovery ship carrying Crew Dragon, named GO Navigator, pulled into port just after 5:30 p.m. EST (2130 GMT) on Friday. Crew members on board the ship waved at onlookers as the vessel made its short trek through the channel.

The ship and Crew Dragon were quickly moved into a U.S. Navy submarine basin, where the vehicle would be offloaded and transported to SpaceX's Cape Canaveral facilities. (Typically, when SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket first stages arrive in port after landing on one of the companys drone ships, the boosters are towed to SpaceX's dock, further into the port).

Friday's arrival wrapped up SpaceXs historic first crewed mission, that began when astronauts Behnken and Hurley blasted off from Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center on May 30. Just over two months ago, a shiny new Falcon 9 rocket, adorned with NASA's retro worm logo, lofted the capsule into orbit. Crew Dragon then spent about a day chasing down the International Space Station, before delivering Behnken and Hurley to the orbiting outpost.

Full coverage: SpaceX's historic Demo-2 Crew Dragon astronaut test flight

The duo spent a total of 63 days on station, assisting fellow NASA astronaut, Chris Cassidy, with station maintenance, research experiments, and even a series of spacewalks.

Crew Dragon departed the space station Saturday evening (Aug. 1), splashing down off the coast of Pensacola, in the Gulf of Mexico at 2:48 p.m. EST (1848 GMT) on Sunday (Aug. 2). Recovery crews were waiting to pluck the capsule its previous stark white exterior now resembling a toasted marshmallow out of the water and haul it back to shore.

GO Navigator met the Dragon and hoisted the capsule aboard shortly after splashdown. After a series of checkouts, recovery teams opened the crafts hatch at 3:59 p.m. EDT (1959 GMT), extracting the two astronauts about 10 minutes later.

Once the astronauts were safely offloaded, GO Navigator began its journey back to Port Canaveral. The craft sailed around the Florida peninsula, arriving back at its home dock five days later. With the help of marine traffic sites, space enthusiasts were able to track Dragon on its journey home.

In photos: A behind-the-scenes look at SpaceX's Crew Dragon spaceship

It was a bright, beautiful Florida afternoon as SpaceX's Dragon-toting vessel appeared on the horizon, it' white paint gleaming in the sunlight. As the distance between GO Navigator and her awaiting fans closed, Crew Dragon came into view. Peeking out from the stern of the ship, Dragon's scorched appearance was visible as the vessel approached the Navy basin.

Once Dragon is offloaded, SpaceX engineers will take it apart so they can analyze how it performed. The craft is scheduled to fly again next spring, and this time with a crew of four. NASA officials expect to certify the craft for regular astronaut flights as soon as the end of this month. That certification will greenlight SpaceX's next crew of astronauts to fly on a long-duration mission to the space station.

In the meantime, SpaceX's drone ship, Of Course I Still Love You, is expected to return to port in a few days. Early Friday (Aug. 7), the company launched one of its Falcon 9 rockets, carrying a stack of Starlink satellites into space along with two small satellites for Black Sky Global.

Follow Amy Thompson on Twitter @astrogingersnap. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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SpaceX's toasted Crew Dragon returns home after historic NASA astronaut splashdown - Space.com

Golden Rule – Wikipedia

Principle of treating others as oneself would wish to be treated, found in many religions and cultures

The Golden Rule is the principle of treating others as you want to be treated. It is a maxim that is found in many religions and cultures.[1] It can be considered an ethic of reciprocity in some religions, although different religions treat it differently.

The maxim may appear as a positive or negative injunction governing conduct:

The idea dates at least to the early Confucian times (551479 BC), according to Rushworth Kidder, who identifies that this concept appears prominently in Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Judaism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, and "the rest of the world's major religions".[2] 143 leaders of the world's major faiths endorsed the Golden Rule as part of the 1993 "Declaration Toward a Global Ethic".[3][4] According to Greg M. Epstein, it is "a concept that essentially no religion misses entirely", but belief in God is not necessary to endorse it.[5] Simon Blackburn also states that the Golden Rule can be "found in some form in almost every ethical tradition".[6]

The term "Golden Rule", or "Golden law", began to be used widely in the early 17th century in Britain by Anglican theologians and preachers;[7] the earliest known usage is that of Anglicans Charles Gibbon and Thomas Jackson in 1604.[1][8]

Possibly the earliest affirmation of the maxim of reciprocity, reflecting the ancient Egyptian goddess Ma'at, appears in the story of The Eloquent Peasant, which dates to the Middle Kingdom (c. 20401650 BC): "Now this is the command: Do to the doer to make him do."[9][10] This proverb embodies the do ut des principle.[11] A Late Period (c. 664323 BC) papyrus contains an early negative affirmation of the Golden Rule: "That which you hate to be done to you, do not do to another."[12]

In Mahbhrata, the ancient epic of India, there is a discourse in which sage Brihaspati tells the king Yudhishthira the following

One should never do something to others that one would regard as an injury to one's own self. In brief, this is dharma. Anything else is succumbing to desire.

Mahbhrata 13.114.8 (Critical edition)

The Mahbhrata is usually dated to the period between 400 BC and 400 AD.[13][14]

In Chapter 32 in the Part on Virtue of the Tirukkua (c. 1st century BC), Valluvar says: "Do not do to others what you know has hurt yourself" (kural 316); "Why does one hurt others knowing what it is to be hurt?" (kural 318). He furthermore opined that it is the determination of the spotless (virtuous) not to do evil, even in return, to those who have cherished enmity and done them evil (kural 312). The (proper) punishment to those who have done evil (to you), is to put them to shame by showing them kindness, in return and to forget both the evil and the good done on both sides (kural 314).

The Golden Rule in its prohibitive (negative) form was a common principle in ancient Greek philosophy. Examples of the general concept include:

The Pahlavi Texts of Zoroastrianism (c. 300 BC1000 AD) were an early source for the Golden Rule: "That nature alone is good which refrains from doing to another whatsoever is not good for itself." Dadisten-I-dinik, 94,5, and "Whatever is disagreeable to yourself do not do unto others." Shayast-na-Shayast 13:29[19]

Seneca the Younger (c. 4 BC65 AD), a practitioner of Stoicism (c. 300 BC200 AD) expressed the Golden Rule in his essay regarding the treatment of slaves: "Treat your inferior as you would wish your superior to treat you."[20]

According to Simon Blackburn, the Golden Rule "can be found in some form in almost every ethical tradition".[21]

A rule of altruistic reciprocity was stated positively in a well-known Torah verse (Hebrew: ):

You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against your kinsfolk. Love your neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD.

Hillel the Elder (c. 110 BC 10 AD),[22] used this verse as a most important message of the Torah for his teachings. Once, he was challenged by a gentile who asked to be converted under the condition that the Torah be explained to him while he stood on one foot. Hillel accepted him as a candidate for conversion to Judaism but, drawing on Leviticus 19:18, briefed the man:

What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow: this is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation; go and learn.

Hillel recognized brotherly love as the fundamental principle of Jewish ethics. Rabbi Akiva agreed and suggested that the principle of love must have its foundation in Genesis chapter 1, which teaches that all men are the offspring of Adam, who was made in the image of God (Sifra, edoshim, iv.; Yer. Ned. ix. 41c; Genesis Rabba 24).[23] According to Jewish rabbinic literature, the first man Adam represents the unity of mankind. This is echoed in the modern preamble of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[24][25] And it is also taught, that Adam is last in order according to the evolutionary character of God's creation:[23]

Why was only a single specimen of man created first? To teach us that he who destroys a single soul destroys a whole world and that he who saves a single soul saves a whole world; furthermore, so no race or class may claim a nobler ancestry, saying, 'Our father was born first'; and, finally, to give testimony to the greatness of the Lord, who caused the wonderful diversity of mankind to emanate from one type. And why was Adam created last of all beings? To teach him humility; for if he be overbearing, let him remember that the little fly preceded him in the order of creation.[23]

The Jewish Publication Society's edition of Leviticus states:

Thou shalt not hate thy brother, in thy heart; thou shalt surely rebuke thy neighbour, and not bear sin because of him. 18 Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD.[26]

This Torah verse represents one of several versions of the Golden Rule, which itself appears in various forms, positive and negative. It is the earliest written version of that concept in a positive form.[27]

At the turn of the eras, the Jewish rabbis were discussing the scope of the meaning of Leviticus 19:18 and 19:34 extensively:

The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I the LORD am your God.

Commentators summed up foreigners (= Samaritans), proselytes (= 'strangers who resides with you') (Rabbi Akiva, bQuid 75b) or Jews (Rabbi Gamaliel, yKet 3, 1; 27a) to the scope of the meaning.

On the verse, "Love your fellow as yourself", the classic commentator Rashi quotes from Torat Kohanim, an early Midrashic text regarding the famous dictum of Rabbi Akiva: "Love your fellow as yourself Rabbi Akiva says this is a great principle of the Torah."[28]

Israel's postal service quoted from the previous Leviticus verse when it commemorated the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on a 1958 postage stamp.[29]

The "Golden Rule" of Leviticus 19:18 was quoted by Jesus of Nazareth (Matthew 7:12; see also Luke 6:31) and described by him as the second great commandment. The common English phrasing is "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you". A similar form of the phrase appeared in a Catholic catechism around 1567 (certainly in the reprint of 1583).[30]The Golden Rule is stated positively numerous times in the Old Testament: Leviticus 19:18 ("Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD."; see also Great Commandment) and Leviticus 19:34 ("But treat them just as you treat your own citizens. Love foreigners as you love yourselves, because you were foreigners one time in Egypt. I am the Lord your God.").

The Old Testament Deuterocanonical books of Tobit and Sirach, accepted as part of the Scriptural canon by Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy, and the Non-Chalcedonian Churches, express a negative form of the golden rule:

"Do to no one what you yourself dislike."

Tobit 4:15

"Recognize that your neighbor feels as you do, and keep in mind your own dislikes."

Sirach 31:15

Two passages in the New Testament quote Jesus of Nazareth espousing the positive form of the Golden rule:

Do to others what you want them to do to you. This is the meaning of the law of Moses and the teaching of the prophets.

And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.

A similar passage, a parallel to the Great Commandment, is Luke 10:25-28

Behold, a certain lawyer stood up and tested him, saying, "Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?"

He said to him, "What is written in the law? How do you read it?"

He answered, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind; and love your neighbor as yourself."

He said to him, "You have answered correctly. Do this, and you will live."

The passage in the book of Luke then continues with Jesus answering the question, "Who is my neighbor?", by telling the parable of the Good Samaritan, which John Wesley enterprets as meaning that "your neighbor" is anyone in need.[31]

Jesus' teaching goes beyond the negative formulation of not doing what one would not like done to themselves, to the positive formulation of actively doing good to another that, if the situations were reversed, one would desire that the other would do for them. This formulation, as indicated in the parable of the Good Samaritan, emphasizes the needs for positive action that brings benefit to another, not simply restraining oneself from negative activities that hurt another.[32]

In one passage of the New Testament, Paul the Apostle refers to the golden rule:

For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this; Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.

St. Paul also comments on the golden rule in the book of Romans:

The commandments, You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet, and whatever other command there may be, are summed up in this one command: Love your neighbor as yourself. Romans 13:8-9 (NIV).

The Arabian peninsula was known to not practice the golden rule prior to the advent of Islam. According to Th. Emil Homerin: "Pre-Islamic Arabs regarded the survival of the tribe, as most essential and to be ensured by the ancient rite of blood vengeance."[33] Homerin goes on to say:

Similar examples of the golden rule are found in the hadith of the prophet Muhammad. The hadith recount what the prophet is believed to have said and done, and traditionally Muslims regard the hadith as second to only the Qur'an as a guide to correct belief and action.[34]

From the hadith, the collected oral and written accounts of Muhammad and his teachings during his lifetime:

A Bedouin came to the prophet, grabbed the stirrup of his camel and said: O the messenger of God! Teach me something to go to heaven with it. Prophet said: "As you would have people do to you, do to them; and what you dislike to be done to you, don't do to them. Now let the stirrup go!" [This maxim is enough for you; go and act in accordance with it!]"

None of you [truly] believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.

Seek for mankind that of which you are desirous for yourself, that you may be a believer.

That which you want for yourself, seek for mankind.[36]

The most righteous person is the one who consents for other people what he consents for himself, and who dislikes for them what he dislikes for himself.[36]

Ali ibn Abi Talib (4th Caliph in Sunni Islam, and first Imam in Shia Islam) says:

O' my child, make yourself the measure (for dealings) between you and others. Thus, you should desire for others what you desire for yourself and hate for others what you hate for yourself. Do not oppress as you do not like to be oppressed. Do good to others as you would like good to be done to you. Regard bad for yourself whatever you regard bad for others. Accept that (treatment) from others which you would like others to accept from you... Do not say to others what you do not like to be said to you.

The writings of the Bah' Faith encourages everyone to treat others as they would treat themselves and even prefer others over oneself:

O SON OF MAN! Deny not My servant should he ask anything from thee, for his face is My face; be then abashed before Me.

Blessed is he who preferreth his brother before himself.

And if thine eyes be turned towards justice, choose thou for thy neighbour that which thou choosest for thyself.

Ascribe not to any soul that which thou wouldst not have ascribed to thee, and say not that which thou doest not.

One should never do that to another which one regards as injurious to ones own self. This, in brief, is the rule of dharma. Other behavior is due to selfish desires.

By making dharma your main focus, treat others as you treat yourself[47]

Also,

If the entire Dharma can be said in a few words, then it isthat which is unfavorable to us, do not do that to others.

Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama, c. 623543 BC)[48][49] made this principle one of the cornerstones of his ethics in the 6th century BC. It occurs in many places and in many forms throughout the Tripitaka.

Comparing oneself to others in such terms as "Just as I am so are they, just as they are so am I," he should neither kill nor cause others to kill.

One who, while himself seeking happiness, oppresses with violence other beings who also desire happiness, will not attain happiness hereafter.

Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful.

Putting oneself in the place of another, one should not kill nor cause another to kill.[50]

The Golden Rule is paramount in the Jainist philosophy and can be seen in the doctrines of Ahimsa and Karma. As part of the prohibition of causing any living beings to suffer, Jainism forbids inflicting upon others what is harmful to oneself.

The following quotation from the Acaranga Sutra sums up the philosophy of Jainism:

Nothing which breathes, which exists, which lives, or which has essence or potential of life, should be destroyed or ruled over, or subjugated, or harmed, or denied of its essence or potential.In support of this Truth, I ask you a question "Is sorrow or pain desirable to you?" If you say "yes it is", it would be a lie. If you say, "No, It is not" you will be expressing the truth. Just as sorrow or pain is not desirable to you, so it is to all which breathe, exist, live or have any essence of life. To you and all, it is undesirable, and painful, and repugnant.[51]

A man should wander about treating all creatures as he himself would be treated.

In happiness and suffering, in joy and grief, we should regard all creatures as we regard our own self.

Lord Mahavira, 24th Tirthankara

Saman Suttam of Jinendra Varni[52] gives further insight into this precept:-

Just as pain is not agreeable to you, it is so with others. Knowing this principle of equality treat other with respect and compassion.

Suman Suttam, verse 150

Killing a living being is killing one's own self; showing compassion to a living being is showing compassion to oneself. He who desires his own good, should avoid causing any harm to a living being.

Suman Suttam, verse 151

Precious like jewels are the minds of all. To hurt them is not at all good. If thou desirest thy Beloved, then hurt thou not anyone's heart.

Guru Arjan Dev Ji 259, Guru Granth Sahib

The same idea is also presented in V.12 and VI.30 of the Analects (c. 500 BC), which can be found in the online Chinese Text Project. The phraseology differs from the Christian version of the Golden Rule. It does not presume to do anything unto others, but merely to avoid doing what would be harmful. It does not preclude doing good deeds and taking moral positions.

The sage has no interest of his own, but takes the interests of the people as his own. He is kind to the kind; he is also kind to the unkind: for Virtue is kind. He is faithful to the faithful; he is also faithful to the unfaithful: for Virtue is faithful.

Regard your neighbor's gain as your own gain, and your neighbor's loss as your own loss.

If people regarded other peoples states in the same way that they regard their own, who then would incite their own state to attack that of another? For one would do for others as one would do for oneself. If people regarded other peoples cities in the same way that they regard their own, who then would incite their own city to attack that of another? For one would do for others as one would do for oneself. If people regarded other peoples families in the same way that they regard their own, who then would incite their own family to attack that of another? For one would do for others as one would do for oneself. And so if states and cities do not attack one another and families do not wreak havoc upon and steal from one another, would this be a harm to the world or a benefit? Of course one must say it is a benefit to the world.

Mozi regarded the golden rule as a corollary to the cardinal virtue of impartiality, and encouraged egalitarianism and selflessness in relationships.

Do not do unto others whatever is injurious to yourself. Shayast-na-Shayast 13.29

Here ye these words and heed them well, the words of Dea, thy Mother Goddess, "I command thee thus, O children of the Earth, that that which ye deem harmful unto thyself, the very same shall ye be forbidden from doing unto another, for violence and hatred give rise to the same. My command is thus, that ye shall return all violence and hatred with peacefulness and love, for my Law is love unto all things. Only through love shall ye have peace; yea and verily, only peace and love will cure the world, and subdue all evil."

The Way to Happiness expresses the Golden Rule both in its negative/prohibitive form and in its positive form. The negative/prohibitive form is expressed in Precept 19 as:

19. Try not to do things to others that you would not like them to do to you.

The positive form is expressed in Precept 20 as:

20. Try to treat others as you would want them to treat you.

One who is going to take a pointed stick to pinch a baby bird should first try it on himself to feel how it hurts.

Yoruba Proverb

See more here:

Golden Rule - Wikipedia