Coronavirus and Weddings: Take It Seriously – The New York Times

Rules and Regulations Vary by State

State laws vary when it comes to weddings. Some wedding spaces are governed by the same rules as restaurants, meaning they can accommodate a certain percentage of their overall capacity. In Arkansas, for example, you can fill venues to 66 percent capacity. So an event in a 1,000-person ballroom can legally host 666 guests. In other states events are limited to the size of the group. In parts of New York, for example, gatherings are limited to 50 people regardless of the space.

Ms. Bett said many of her clients feel safer with smaller affairs. I have clients doing private, intimate ceremonies, because no one is making a big stink about those, she said. No one wants to be the new epicenter of the outbreak.

But even weddings with the tightest guest list arent immune to the coronavirus.

Sunshine Borrer, 26, a veterinary technician in Houston, attended her sister-in-laws wedding in Crockett, Texas, which has a population of 6,000. It was a real small town, she said. Covid wasnt something I was super concerned about. The 30-person wedding was held outdoors, but the after party was in a small bar area of an indoor restaurant.

It took about a week for her symptoms to develop. She tested positive for Covid-19, along with the bride and groom, another couple, and the brides daughter. Fortunately all cases were mild.

She noticed there is no etiquette for how to communicate a coronavirus outbreak to wedding guests. The bride and groom maybe told the people they were living with, but that was it, she said. They told one of my other sisters-in-law, and she is a nurse, so she took it upon herself to tell people.

Ms. Chism said it was her oldest son, not the bride and groom, who alerted wedding guests to the virus exposure. If it were me I would have been on the phone calling every single person, she said. But it wasnt me.

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Coronavirus and Weddings: Take It Seriously - The New York Times

What exactly is ‘old growth’ BC forest, and how much is protected? – Terrace Standard

B.C. Forests Minister Doug Donaldson has had an independent report on old-growth forest preservation on his desk since May, but it will be some time before it is released and longer before any of its recommendations are acted upon.

Donaldson appointed two experts to conduct the strategic review in October, with the forest industry struggling with poor economic conditions, the B.C. governments latest logging restrictions and continued protests calling for a moratorium on old growth logging.

Questioned on his ministrys $489 million budget at the B.C. legislature, Donaldson said the report is expected to be released soon, but that will be followed by engagement on the recommendations. The terms of reference require government-to-government talks with first nations before any decisions are made, which is expected to take several months.

Donaldson made a couple of things clear in his answers to B.C. Liberal MLA John Rustad. He isnt considering any change to the provinces definition of old growth forest, or a moratorium on old-growth logging for an industry that has seen steady increase in protected areas and restrictions on the Crown land base.

B.C.s definition of old growth is 250 years old in the Coast region, and 140 years old in the Interior. Overall, about 13.7 million hectares or 23 per cent of the total B.C. forest base is considered old growth, and 3.75 million hectares, 27 per cent of the old growth, may be harvested, Donaldson said.

Asked by Rustad if he is considering a short-term moratorium on old-growth logging until the report is considered, Donaldson responded: I have never used, and weve never used as a government, the word moratorium.

RELATED: B.C. has the most sustainably managed forests in the world

RELATED: Teal-Jones shuts down B.C. coast logging operations

The Coast region, which includes Vancouver Island, the Central Coast area designated as the Great Bear Rainforest timber supply area and Haida Gwaii, has 7.55 million hectares of forest, with 42 per cent old growth. And 33 per cent of the west coast region is protected or reserved, Donaldson said.

Vancouver Island forests are 73 per cent Crown land and 27 per cent private, much of it the legacy of colonial Governor James Douglas 1850s deal with coal baron James Dunsmuir to trade land for construction of the Esquimalt and Nanaimo (E&N) Railway.

A focus of anti-logging protests for decades, Vancouver Islands Crown forests are 39 per cent old growth, nearly half of which are protected or reserved.

The review was completed in January by Garry Merkel, a professional forester and member of the Tahltan Nation in northwest B.C., and Al Gorley, a professional forester and former chair of the Forest Practices Board that audits logging in B.C.

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What exactly is 'old growth' BC forest, and how much is protected? - Terrace Standard

Lord Ram not the ”property” of BJP: Tharoor – Outlook India

New Delhi, Aug 5 (PTI) With the Congress under attack from various quarters over what was seen by many as a subtle shift in its position on the Ram temple issue, senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Wednesday rejected allegations that the grand old party was being "BJP-Lite" and asserted that Lord Ram is not the "property" of the saffron party.

Seeking to clear the air on what he said were "widespread misrepresentations" he had heard during the course of the day, Tharoor put out a series of tweets to spell out his party''s stand on the Ram temple issue.

In his tweets, Tharoor also addressed those Muslims who say that they feel let down by the Congress and cited verses from the holy Quran, asking "who exactly betrayed you?"

"Not those who stand for an inclusive India, who have neither attacked you nor preached hatred against you," he said, addressing the section of Muslims riled by the Congress'' stand.

Tharoor''s remarks assume significance as they came after Indian Union Muslim League, a major ally in the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance, passed a resolution expressing displeasure over Priyanka Gandhi Vadra''s statement on the construction of Ram temple in Ayodhya.

Ahead of the ''bhoomi pujan'' ceremony in Ayodhya, the Congress general secretary in-charge of Uttar Pradesh issued the statement, hoping that the groundbreaking ceremony becomes "a celebration of national unity, fraternity and cultural affinity". Priyanka''s remarks were seen by its allies, including the Muslim League, as a subtle shift in Congress'' position on the emotive issue.

Several Congress leaders had also welcomed the "bhumi pujan" ceremony and hailed the Ram temple construction.

Former party president Rahul Gandhi said Lord Ram is the ultimate embodiment of supreme human values and can never appear in cruelty, hatred or injustice.

Hitting out at the BJP, Tharoor said, "Shri Ram is not the property of BJP. He is the ideal man whose image is deeply etched in the hearts and minds of millions. Gandhiji always sang his hymns and died with "Hei Ram'' on his lips. He talked about a Ram Rajya where all would live in peace and prosperity. Can''t let his name be hijacked!"

The universal appeal of Ram and Sanatan Dharma cannot be commandeered by those who chant either hymns or slogans, he said, asserting that Lord Ram belongs to all humanity.

For Hindutva, Ram is a God to be worshipped; for Gandhi, Ram represented ideal qualities that every person should practise and seek to emulate, he said.

"Let''s be clear: @INCIndia was NEVER opposed to the construction of a Ram temple in Ayodhya, but to the criminal demolition of the Babri Masjid. In 1989, Rajiv Gandhi ji allowed VHP to do shilanyas on non-disputed land nearby as an alternate site: At the same time it was NOT Rajiv Gandhi who ordered opening of the locks at the masjid, but the district judge of Faizabad who ordered the locks to be opened in 1986!!" Tharoor said in his tweets.

"Whatever you feel about today''s events, the Masjid''s demolition is a blot on our conscience. As Rahul Gandhi said in 2007, ''My father said to my mother that he would stand in front of Babri Masjid. They would have had to kill him first''," the MP from Thiruvananthapuram said.

Hitting out at some Left-liberal intellectuals accusing the Congress of being "BJP-Lite", Tharoor said many leaders welcomed the Ram temple after the Supreme Court judgement, but they did not instigate Hindus against Muslims.

"They did not make hate speeches against the Muslim community. They hailed the ideal Ram ji," he said.

"To those who insist there is no difference between the political parties in India, I ask: is there is no difference between those who would respectfully have come to an accommodation with the Muslim community on a Ram mandir, and those who, with rage and hate, destroyed the mosque?" the former Union minister asked.

Earlier in the morning, ahead of the foundation laying ceremony, Tharoor tweeted, "Lord Shri Ram epitomises justice for all, righteous conduct, fairness and firmness in all dealings, moral rectitude and courage."

"These values are much needed in such dark times. If they spread throughout the land, Ram Rajya would not be an occasion for triumphalist bigotry," he said, using the hash tag ''JaiShriRam''.

In a highly-anticipated event watched by millions on television, Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the day laid the foundation of the Ram temple in Ayodhya.

The wait of centuries has ended, Modi said after performing the groundbreaking ceremony, made possible by a Supreme Court verdict last year that allowed the construction of the temple at the site where the Babri mosque was demolished by kar sevaks in 1992. PTI ASK ZMN

Disclaimer :- This story has not been edited by Outlook staff and is auto-generated from news agency feeds. Source: PTI

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Guest Editorial: Life on Mars? The science-affirming mission we need right now – York Dispatch

Baltimore Sun Editorial Board Published 3:30 a.m. ET Aug. 4, 2020

FILE - In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers monitor a driving test for the Mars rover Perseverance in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The robotic vehicle, scheduled to launch on July 30, 2020, is planned to touch down in an ancient river delta and lake known as Jezero Crater, not quite as big as Floridas Lake Okeechobee. (J. Krohn/NASA via AP, File)(Photo: J. Krohn / AP)

From writer H.G. Wells to filmmaker Ridley Scott, the possibility of life on Mars hassparked the public's imagination for generations. And if there ever was a time when a world could use a demonstration of the power of science, or at least a hopeful distraction, it is in the Year of Oh-My-Lord 2020.

Earth is caught not only in a raging COVID-19 pandemic but in an extraordinary rejection of the systemic study of the natural world. When a sitting member of Congress who openly defies social distancing norms contracts the virus and then blames mask-wearing for his fate, as Texas Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert did, while a sitting president promotes videos of a woman who believes the coronavirus has already been cured (and warns about having sex with demons), as Donald Trump did, then maybe it's time everyone got back in the classroom for some remedial instruction.

Perhaps a NASA mission is just what the doctor ordered. Certainly, Thursday's launch was not as dramatic as aliens landing in New Jersey bent on destroying mankind or astronaut Mark Watney getting stuck on the red planet in the movie "The Martian" and forced to MacGyver his survival, or even the antennae rising from the back of Uncle Martin's head in "My Favorite Martian." But at least the Perseverance rover now headed to Mars is real and not fictional.

Its mission is to closely examine the rocks and soil beginning with the Jezero Crater while the companion drone helicopter Ingenuity hovers 15 feet above the surface to check out the challenges of the Martian flight. It's entirely possible Perseverance will uncover signs of ancient microbial life on Mars as it roams the planet.

It's not the first such U.S.-led effort (four others, Curiosity, Opportunity, Spiritand the original Mars rover, Sojourner, came before it) but it's the most capable, with the ability to drill and store core samples and ramble across the landscape for the equivalent of two Earth years. It's a shame that now comes the boring part.

Perseverance won't land until February. In movies, this is usually the moment where there's a montage of rocket hurtling clips interspersed with scenes of NASA personnel hunched over computers before a landing takes place about 30 seconds later.

Still, this gives everyone time to marvel at how human ingenuity and knowledge has reached the point where a remotely controlled robot stuffed with all kinds of technology, from lasers to drills, cameras and microphones, sitting on top of a powerful Atlas V rocket can be launched into space with the press of a button on a mission that will take years to complete. Isn't that amazing?

This isn't science fiction. It's a product of a Mars exploration effort decades in the making. And this time the United States is not alone.

Studying Mars is now an international effort, with the United Arab Emirates' Hope and China's Question to Heaven spacecraft already on their way, the former destined to circle the planet to study its weather and the latter to send its own rover to the surface.

Now, cut to the final reel and imagine if Perseverance discovers evidence of some one-celled organism that lived on Mars 3.7 billion years ago, when the planet was more habitable with a watery surface.

Fossils? Maybe not, but some trace of organic chemicals could exist. Will third planet inhabitants see such a breakthrough as the answer to the eternal question, is there life beyond Earthor as a fraud perpetrated by the liberal eggheads with their fake news co-conspirators?

Here's a good pretest: Is the person reacting to such an event wearing a mask to prevent the virus from spreading or still insisting that hydroxychloroquine is a cure so why bother?

Sometimes reality truly is stranger than fiction. Onward.

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Guest Editorial: Life on Mars? The science-affirming mission we need right now - York Dispatch

Health care in WA prisons leaves inmates waiting months or years for help – Crosscut

A question of necessity

The departments priorities often diverge from those of the women and men in its care. Common, debilitating ailments go unaddressed because treatment, by the prisons standards, is not medically necessary.

One inmate with a hernia that caused him daily pain could not get surgery because treating his injury was not necessary in the departments calculus. In a court declaration, he recounted crying as he tried to push the hernia back in during a visit with his wife; he worried the visit would be cut short if he called for help. Another described medical staff denying surgery to remove objects embedded in his temple even though he struggled to eat, sleep or walk, while a man who struggled to breathe after his nose was badly broken said the department refused to pay for a specialist to examine him.

In a deposition filed with U.S. District Court, a physician treating one prisoner with ulcerative colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease, recounted asking to conduct a biopsy to confirm the diagnosis. The doctors request was denied and, as he feared, the mans colon ruptured through his abdominal wall and nearly killed him.

This is not how you treat human beings, said Allen, who led the failed class action lawsuit in which those stories were collected.

A lot of this stuff has life or death implications, he continued. If you're not taking it seriously, if you're treating folks as other, that's going to result in unnecessary and preventable death.

If not death, then pain.

Incarcerated since 2007, Michael Sublett has served nearly all his time in grinding pain. A decades-old motorcycle injury that flared not long after he arrived at Washington Corrections Center in Shelton has left him unable to walk. A marathon 8 hour back surgery performed in 2016 left him worse off than ever, Sublett said. Spacers placed between his vertebrae attached to two, 10-inch metal rods near his spine began to painfully fail almost immediately.

I lay in bed and screamed for more than three hours before anyone came to my aid, said Sublett, describing the night seven months after surgery that the screws failed.

Its been a nightmare of pain and anguish, he continued in a 14-page handwritten letter detailing his treatment.

Sublett said he spent years begging prison medical providers to allow him to have his back examined. When the scans were ultimately conducted, Sublett said by letter, doctors at Providence St. Marys Medical Center in Walla Walla found that his spine had collapsed, and that four of 10 screws had failed.

Currently receiving bone strengthening treatment at UW Medical Center, Sublett said he expects to undergo three surgeries to correct the failed attempt to fix his back. The 61-year-old credited Dr. Sara Kariko, the departments chief medical officer, with personally intervening in his case to get him the corrective surgery he has needed for nearly four years.

In a recent interview, Kariko said there is always room for improvement within the departments medical system. But, she argued, many prison care providers see themselves as advocates for underserved and vulnerable populations and pursue the work passionately.

Sublett relies on a wheelchair, a device that prison staff can take away from him at any time. He may never walk again, he said, and faces the prospect of becoming quadriplegic in prison.

I am incarcerated to pay for crimes against society, said Sublett, who was sentenced to life without parole under Washingtons three strikes law after being convicted of murdering aThurston County man. I was not sentenced to be physically and mentally punished for over a decade with debilitating pain.

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Health care in WA prisons leaves inmates waiting months or years for help - Crosscut

How Times of Crisis Spur Needed Change in Healthcare Delivery – HIT Consultant

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to change healthcare operations in the world, foundational systems are being adapted to meet these new demands. Sometimes it takes extreme circumstances to see the cracks in a system. COVID-19 has exposed areas with more room for improvement in the healthcare system, such as optimizing operational efficiency. Organizations and individuals have changed their interactions, processes, ways of working, treatment plans, and even foundational technology. As the United States is beginning to reopen, many questions arise namely, are these changes temporary fixes during the pandemic, or are they here to stay?

Physicians have been inundated during this time of crisis, and their ongoing main priorities amplified: saving as many lives as possible and providing the best patient care. Recent estimates from the beginning of July say, worldwide there have been more than 10.7 million COVID-19 cases and at least 516,000 deaths from the disease, according to Johns Hopkins University (JHU). JHU also revealed that in the United States, there have been 128,000 deaths out of a total of over 2.6 million cases. To say this has been a time of great stress and pressure for physicians who are on the frontlines is an understatement.

This pandemic has increased providers already heavy workload, amplifying where physicians need support. Patients need to remain the top priority, even in the first generations of the digital age where the list of backend administrative tasks and paperwork can feel endless, thus reducing the number of patients physicians can see each day. Finding a way to streamline administrative tasks with advanced technology can bring physicians back to why they went to medical school in the first place: to help patients.

One example of an important, and time-sensitive task is communicating with payers around treatment plans and reimbursement. Using technology to streamline this process to get the patient the optimal treatment and maximize use of their insurance coverage is essential, especially in this time of crisis where there is an increased number of patients in need and a depressed economy. Whether processing prior authorizations or checking eligibility, hospitals and health systems need technology to keep operations efficient, including smooth payer-provider communication to ease physicians workload, help to ensure providers will be reimbursed for care, and optimize business operations, ultimately providing an improved patient experience.

Three foundational ways in which payer-provider information exchange technology provides immense value to healthcare organizations are:

Creating Administrative Efficiency: To help physicians stay focused on patients, administrative efficiency is key. Solutions can come in many shapes and sizes technology can help to automate workflows and avoid care delays. Modernizing the prior authorization workflow can shorten average time to care, reduce the risk of treatment abandonment, and improve the quality of care. With changing legislation, updated laws encourage the use of technology to increase efficiency while keeping data secure in near real-time exchanges.

Streamlining Exchange of Information: Interoperability and the technology standards needed to achieve it is an ongoing discussion in healthcare. Technologies that provide efficient, secure, and near real-time and even automated exchange of information are in high demand and will bring about the next era of healthcare. For example, technology has the power to align providers and payers efficiently and consistently, create an open exchange of information, centralize information, provide rapid and organized data transfer, ensure appropriate reimbursement by treatment plan, show pre-authorized treatment plans for the most successful and affordable care and aid health plans adaptability in health crises, like COVID-19.

Increasing Value-Based Care: Optimizing the quality and cost of patient care is a leading principle of healthcare. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed areas of healthcare where improvements in patient experience and provider reimbursement desperately need to be accelerated. Using technology with built-in normative databases of accepted treatment paths allows for evidence-based treatment decisions, which in conjunction with efficient payer-provider communication to ensure reimbursement, allows for optimal patient outcomes creating value for all stakeholders.

Adopting technology to provide administrative efficiency, streamline information exchange and increase the value of all aspects of care will continue to be a fundamental pillar of healthcare; the pandemic has ignited a critical need for even faster change. COVID-19 has brought with it increased stress and uncertainty across the healthcare industry, amplifying the burden on physicians and their staff. Organizations have moved quickly to adopt technologies, such as those that provide a more efficient way to organize and analyze massive amounts of treatment plan decision inputs and aid communication between stakeholders, in order to better support physicians, and ultimately patients.

Tools and technology that automate processes, streamline communications and provide dynamic solutions have proven their value and are now need to have rather than nice to have for providers. These technologies are foundational to the healthcare system, providing the base from which all stakeholders operate. The pandemic has helped to realize the true value of efficiency technologies, galvanizing the adoption of these tools. Ultimately, more operational efficiency can bring the focus of care back to the patient.

About Christina Perkins

Christina Perkins is VP of Product Management and Strategy for NaviNet at NantHealth.She joined NaviNet in 2003 and has spent the last 17 years expanding the companys products and services. Prior to joining NaviNet Christina spent seven years designing and building web-based solutions for Partners Healthcare and other hospitals in the Northeast U.S. and Ontario, Canada. Christina on LinkedIn.

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NAC Architecture merges with Ohio-based health care, analytics, design firm – The Spokesman-Review

NAC Architecture has merged with an Ohio-based health care analytics, planning and design firm, the company announced Monday.

Under the merger with Trinity: Planning, Design, Architecture, existing NAC Architecture offices in Spokane, Seattle and Los Angeles will operate under NAC. Trinitys Columbus office and NACs health care studio will become Trinity: NAC, according to a news release.

Trinitys leadership team will join NACs executive team and board of directors, according to the release.

The merger allows both firms to expand design work in the health care and higher education sectors.

This merger is not about getting bigger, Dana Harbaugh, NAC president and CEO, said in a statement. Trinity and NAC share a common cultural commitment to personal service, quality, and design innovation. Trinitys strength in analytics complements our focus on research.

Financial details of the merger were not disclosed.

NAC and Trinity have a decadelong relationship and previously partnered on the Kootenai Health medical office expansion in Coeur dAlene.

The combined firm employs more than 230 people.

NAC, founded in 1960, has designed numerous projects in the Spokane area, some of which include Joel E. Ferris and Shadle Park high schools as well as the Riverfront Park Looff Carrousel facility and Pavilion. The firm also renovated the Martin Woldson Theater at The Fox and redeveloped a former Macys building into The M building in downtown Spokane.

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NAC Architecture merges with Ohio-based health care, analytics, design firm - The Spokesman-Review

Health care provider severs ties with Mississippi prisons after Jay Z and Yo Gotti lawsuit – CBS News

A health care provider has terminated its multimillion-dollar relationship with the Mississippi Department of Corrections. The provider, Centurion, faces aclass-action lawsuit, and allegations of negligence along with the department itself.

The announcement comes after Team ROC, the philanthropic arm of Jay Z's company, Roc Nation, and rapper Yo Gotti teamed up to hire lawyers for 227 Mississippi inmates over conditions in the prison.

Centurion, part of the Centene Corporation, said in a July 7 letter to the department, obtained byCBS affiliate WJTV, that it was terminating its relationship, effective October 5, 2020.

"As we previously shared, we do not believe we can further improve the effectiveness of our level of care without additional investment from the Department in correctional staffing and infrastructure along the lines of what we have already recommended," wrote Steven H. Wheeler, CEO of Centurion.

Marcy Croft, the lead attorney for Team ROC, said she hopes Centurion's decision to end the relationship "sends a clear message to Governor Tate Reeves it's time to invest in the health and well-being of the people in your prisons."

"There is no excuse for the 53 deaths across the Mississippi prison system over the past several months, many of which were preventable," Croft said in a statement. "We will not stop until the incarcerated receive consistent and competent medical care, especially now with the COVID-19 crisis. This must be a priority."

Violence, understaffing and a deteriorating infrastructure have plagued Mississippi's prison system. Over 50 people have died in state facilities since December 29, a figure that includes suicides, homicides and cases that were classified as "natural deaths." The suit claims the plaintiffs' lives are in peril while inside.

A doctor hired by lawyers suing Mississippi said the conditions at the state penitentiary are the worst he's seen at any jail. Dr. Marc Stern, who specializes in correctional health care and has evaluated dozens of similar facilities across the country, said he witnessed exposed electrical wiring inside Parchman one of the state's prisons some of it near standing water.

"The conditions under which residents exist in Parchman are sub-human and deplorable in a civilized society," Stern said.

The attorneys also claim there was a lack of COVID-19 testing protocol or medical attention for the inmates, as well as a lack of social distancing protocols and personal protection equipment.

According to Centene'swebsite, the company "provides correctional healthcare and staffing services to government agencies" in 17 states. "By combining sound financial discipline with the delivery of appropriate care, Centurion is gaining recognition among states as a top correctional healthcare provider," reads the website.

Justin Carissimo contributed to this report.

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Health care provider severs ties with Mississippi prisons after Jay Z and Yo Gotti lawsuit - CBS News

Lynn Hundley named American Heart Association Volunteer of the Year – Norton Healthcare

The American Heart Association (AHA) has named Lynn Hundley, director of clinical effectiveness and stroke care at Norton Neuroscience Institute, as its 2020 Volunteer of the Year.

Lynn hopes to be able to accept the award in person in Texas this October.

Lynn began volunteering for the heart association over a decade ago and cant even guess the number of hours shes contributed.

Its not something I do for recognition; I do it for the sole passion I have to help, she said.

Lynn volunteers in part by speaking at boot camps for stroke coordinators each year. The camps provide training for new coordinators and advance the skills of veteran coordinators. These coordinators help to provide patient and community education on symptoms and treatment of strokes.

Held in person in pre-pandemic times, theyve moved to webinars to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus/COVID-19. The webinars are live on the AHAs site and are open for registration and available for continuing medical education credit.

I believe that no matter where you are you should receive the best care possible, Lynn said, adding that the boot camps/webinars are a step in that direction.

AHA has had a dramatic impact on her work at Norton Neuroscience Institute, giving her access to a growing network of providers who can offer best practices advice and consultations on a range of issues.

Lynn founded a stroke survivors dinner, which invites stroke patients to celebrate with those who helped them. For the annual event, Lynn and her staff sometimes can find the emergency medical technician who helped save a patient.

It is my favorite night of the entire year by far. I simply cannot get enough! Lynn said.

While the coronavirus pandemic forced cancellation of this years dinner, shes looking forward to the next one that can be held.

Congratulations to Lynn for all of her hard-work, dedication and efforts she has put into volunteering for the AHA. Norton Healthcare is beyond thankful for employees like her!

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Lynn Hundley named American Heart Association Volunteer of the Year - Norton Healthcare

Buchalter COVID-19 Client Alert: Doing Business with a Customer in Bankruptcy in the Time of COVID-19: Administrative Expense ClaimsTake Them to the…

It is no secret that business bankruptcies are surging in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, chapter 11 filings increased 26% in the first half of 2020,[1] and some expect the number of cases to increase even more in the coming months.[2] From retailers to airlines to telecommunications companies, few sectors of the economy are immune. As a result, more and more businesses will face the prospect of one or more of their customers filing chapter 11.

When a customer files for bankruptcy there are many issues to consider, which vary depending on the nature of a businesss relationship with the bankrupt customer, the debtor. One consideration common to all businesses, however, is whether the debtor will pay for goods and services while the bankruptcy is pending. The Bankruptcy Code provides that debtors must pay certain obligationssuch as nonresidential lease obligationsas they come due. Debtors may pay other creditors in the ordinary course, but they are not specifically required to do so.

What may a business do if a bankrupt customer fails to pay for goods and services provided during the bankruptcy proceeding? One option is to file a request for an administrative expense claim with the bankruptcy court. Courts grant these claims to creditors that provide valuable goods and services to the debtor as an incentive for creditors to continue doing business with the debtor.[3] These administrative claims receive higher priority for payment than general unsecured claims that accrued prior to the bankruptcy, thus providing greater assurance of payment. In order to confirm a chapter 11 plan of reorganization, a debtor must pay all administrative expense claims in full on the effective date of the confirmed plan, unless a creditor agrees to accept a lesser amount.

Holding an administrative expense claim can be a valuable safeguard against the failure of a bankrupt customer to pay for goods and services during its bankruptcy, but there is no assurance the claim will ultimately be paid. For one, it is often uncertain ifand whena debtor will confirm a plan of reorganization, the trigger that requires the debtor to pay administrative expense claims. The debtor may not be able to confirm a plan or, if it does, it could take months or years to do so. In the meantime, a debtor customer may accrue significant liabilities.

This is currently playing out in the bankruptcy of Dean Foods, the largest milk producer in the country, which filed for bankruptcy in the Southern District of Texas in November 2019. In that case, Dean Foods sold substantially all of its assets through a bankruptcy sale process, with the largest portion of those assets sold to Dairy Farmers of America (DFA). Dean Foods ceased paying many of its equipment lessors, vendors, and other creditors around the time it consummated the sales. As a result, many of Dean Foods creditors filed applications for administrative expense claims for millions of dollars worth of goods and services, much of which were provided in the months leading up to the sales. As of the writing of this article in July 2020, Dean Foods has not filed a plan of reorganization and it is uncertain whether there will be enough funds to pay all administrative claimants in full upon confirmation of a plan. Instead, the bankruptcy court has authorized an administrative claims protocol under which creditors may opt in to the protocol and agree to waive at least 20% of their administrative expense claim in exchange for an immediate payment of 30% of the claim.

Even when a debtor does reach the plan confirmation stage, it may attempt to confirm a plan that provides for less than full payment of administrative expense claims. Despite the requirement that administrative claims be paid in full upon confirmation, debtors have been able to side step this requirement in some cases by providing that holders of administrative claims are deemed to consent to less than 100% payment of their administrative expense claims unless they timely file an objection to that treatment. Thus, unwary creditors may find themselves holding administrative expense claims that ultimately receive less than the 100% payment they may have expected.

The bottom line is that businesses must be proactive when their customers file bankruptcy. While administrative expense claims provide an incentive to continue doing business with a customer during its bankruptcy proceedings, they are not a panacea and even have their own pitfalls. Businesses should consider taking the following actions during their customers bankruptcies:

Which option to exercise will vary from case-to-case, so it is highly recommended that you speak with an attorney experienced in bankruptcy and restructuring matters who can advise you as to the best possible option based on your particular circumstances.

[1] Chapter 11 Business Bankruptcies Rose 26% in First Half of 2020, Wall Street Journal, https://www.wsj.com/articles/chapter-11-business-bankruptcies-rose-26-in-first-half-of-2020-11593722250.

[2] A Tidal Wave of Bankruptcies is Coming, The New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/18/business/corporate-bankruptcy-coronavirus.html

[3] Despite the Bankruptcy Code requirements to pay certain obligations as they come due, some debtors refuse to do so and the courts remedy is often to grant the creditor an administrative expense claim. Thus, even creditors that would expect to be paid in the ordinary course may nonetheless end up in the same position as creditors which are not required to be paid in the ordinary course.

[4] Reclamation rights must be asserted shortly after the commencement of the case so it is imperative to evaluate this option as soon as possible after the bankruptcy filing.

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Buchalter COVID-19 Client Alert: Doing Business with a Customer in Bankruptcy in the Time of COVID-19: Administrative Expense ClaimsTake Them to the...

American Farm Bureau: Mixed news on farm bankruptcies amid pandemic – Drgnews

Farm bankruptcies increased 8% over a 12-month period, with 580 filings from June 2019 to June 2020. A six-month comparison, however, shows the number of new Chapter 12 filings slowing. Several contributing factors are likely at play as farmers struggle to stay afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Midwest, Northwest and Southeast were hardest hit, representing 80% of the filings across the U.S. Wisconsin led the nation with 69 filings, followed by 38 in Nebraska. Georgia and Minnesota each had 36 filings.

A closer examination of the numbers shows that while year-over-year filings increased for the month of June, filings slowed during the first six months of 2020 compared to the first half of 2019. The latest AFBF Market Intel, written jointly with the Association of Chapter 12 Trustees, shows from January to June 2020, there were 284 new Chapter 12 bankruptcy cases, 10 fewer than the same time in 2019. The reduction in filings coincides with aid distributed in the CARES Act that compensates farmers and ranchers for losses incurred from January through mid-April of this year. According to the Association of Chapter 12 Trustees, approximately 60% of farm bankruptcies are successfully completed the highest successful percentage of all the reorganization chapters.

Every farm bankruptcy potentially represents the end of a familys dream, said American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall. The fact that we saw bankruptcy filings slow in the first six months of 2020 shows how important the economic stimulus alongside the food and agricultural aid from the CARES Act have been in keeping farms above water, but the economic impact of the pandemic is far from over. Its imperative that Congress addresses the challenges facing farmers and ranchers in current coronavirus relief legislation.

As of August 3, $6.8 billion in CFAP payments have been delivered to farmers and ranchers. Many farmers, particularly those who are not regularly eligible for aid, have not applied for assistance or may not know the assistance is available. Farmers can learn more about coronavirus assistance at http://www.farmers.gov/cfap.

AFBF Chief Economist John Newton said, The bankruptcy numbers dont tell the whole story. The fact that the bankruptcy process is now virtual probably contributed to a decline in numbers. CARES Act assistance was also a bandage that slowed the bleeding on many farms, but those protections will soon expire. Without more help we could expect to see filings begin to rise again.

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American Farm Bureau: Mixed news on farm bankruptcies amid pandemic - Drgnews

These restaurants have filed for bankruptcy and many more are at risk – Yahoo Finance

The COVID-19 pandemic is also cooking up some high-profile restaurant bankruptcies.

California Pizza Kitchen filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday. The mostly sit-down pizza outfit with some 200 locations has been crippled by the pandemic, noting in its bankruptcy filing sales were down about 40% year-over-year in the last week of June.

The company will look to cut $230 million in debt via its trip through the courts.

There have now been nine bankruptcies of outright restaurant chains or operators of franchises since early April (graphic below). With each month that has passed, the filings have become prominent as restaurants struggle with weak traffic after being allowed to reopen by states, piles of debt and sky-high rent. Besides California Pizza Kitchen, the other two high-profile names include childrens fun house Chuck E. Cheese and Wendys and Pizza Hut franchisee NPC International.

Chuck E. Cheese operates 555 locations in the U.S., which hang in the balance as it looks to restructure in courts. NPC International maintains a portfolio of 1,600 locations that also have a questionable post bankruptcy future.

Credit rating agency Fitch has warned more bankruptcies in the restaurant space wait in the wings.

Less frequent visits due to shifts in dining to delivery service or to increasingly popular healthier quick-service options will put more pressure on traffic at some brands at the same time the restaurants face increased competition from ready-to-cook meals available in supermarkets or via home delivery,' said Fitch director Lyle Margolis in a recent report.

Fitch warned that Checkers Drive-In Restaurants and Steak n Shake Operations are at risk of default. The Wall Street Journal reported in late June that Checkers had hired restructuring advisors to explore a potential restructuring.

Ultimately, in life after COVID-19 the local restaurant scene may be no more than a KFC, McDonalds, Burger King and one or two overpriced craft cocktail bars serving tapas which somehow managed to survive the financial distress from the pandemic.

We have to have a bailout [of the restaurant industry], said celebrity chef and owner of restaurant Blue Dragon Ming Tsai onYahoo Finances The First Trade. I dont know if the government understands the severity of this problem. We may be left with just chain restaurants and fast-food restaurants if the government doesnt react.

With government assistance nowhere in sight, Tsai may not be too far off the mark as seen through the rising number of restaurant bankruptcies.

Tsai thinks when its all said and done with the pandemic, some 50% of the countrys 1 million restaurants may no longer be open. His estimate is in line with others Yahoo Finance has talked with in recent months. All experts agree that fresh dine-in restrictions by states on fears of a second wave of COVID-19 infections would be the final straw for small- to mid-size restaurants and even franchisees of well-known chains.

You dont know how long it lasts, the predictions are going to be unreliable for the next couple of quarters, said long-time Dennys CEO John Miller on the industry upheaval. There are PPP loans, Main Street lending, a number of programs to help people get through the difficult time. As long as it recovers as fast as the virus is arrested one way or another, then we believe certainly within a year to a year and a half, things could be in pretty good shape and not as damaging as people might believe at the moment. There will be some shakeout.

Brian Sozziis an editor-at-large and co-anchor ofThe First Tradeat Yahoo Finance. Follow Sozzi on Twitter@BrianSozziand onLinkedIn.

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These restaurants have filed for bankruptcy and many more are at risk - Yahoo Finance

ANTIFA.COM | Join Us & Take Action Now

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Antifa, short for anti-fascist, is a broad, community-based movement composed of individuals organizing against racial and economic injustice. Those who identify with the label represent a large spectrum of the political left. The Trump administration frequently uses the term to describe any group or individual that demonstrates in opposition to its policies. Far-right extremists usesimilar tactics.

Since the election of Donald Trump, acts of racist violence have proliferated across the United States. Racists and misogynists feel emboldened to express and act on their views. White nationalist groups and resurgent traditional white supremacist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan have used Trumps victory to gain new recruits.

All that stands in their way are the groups of anti-fascist and anti-state resistors who have taken it upon themselves to prevent fascism from becoming a powerful political force in the United States. The story of what Antifa is, and why people are joining the movement to confront racism and fascism in the United States today is unprecedented.

Who are the anti-fascists? What motivates them to risk their lives to fight the far right? What is the history of anti-fascism and why is it relevant again today? How is anti-fascism connected to a larger political vision that can stop the rise of fascism and offer you visions of a future worth fighting for? Learn More

You will connect with anti-fascist organizers, historians and political theorists who will provide their expert advice, you will explore the broader meaning of this political moment. You will be able to help others understand the past scenes of street battles from Washington to Berkeley and Charlottesville What caused them? How to prevent them in the future? You will own your piece of the resistance by taking an active consistent role in promoting & growing Antifa.com.

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What or Who is Antifa?

This article is republished here with permission from The Conversation. This content is shared here because the topic may interest Snopes readers; it does not, however, represent the work of Snopes fact-checkers or editors.

The movement called antifa gets its name from a short form of anti-fascist, which is about the only thing its members agree on.

President Donald Trump and some far-right activists and militants have claimed antifa is allegedly conspiring to foment violence amid the protests sweeping the U.S. In my forthcoming book, American Antifa: The Tactics, Culture, and Practice of Militant Antifascism, I describe antifa as a decentralized collection of individual activists who mostly use nonviolent methods to achieve their ends.

Their goal is to resist the spread of fascism. That word can be an inexact term, but generally antifa activists see fascism as the violent enactment and enforcement of biological and social inequalities between people.

Fascists go beyond viewing particular categories of people as inferior, based on gender identity, race and ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation. They believe it is imperative to use violence to oppress and ultimately eliminate those groups. In addition, they use violence to oppose their ideological enemies, even if they are from groups they believe are not inferior, such as heterosexual white men.

The initial anti-fascist movements were founded in Europe and North America between the world wars, and were primarily organized by anarchists, communists and socialists three groups that were frequently targets of fascist violence.

The modern-day anti-fascist movement in the United States, including antifa, grew out of the Anti-Racist Action Network, a decentralized activist movement resisting racist skinhead subcultures and public demonstrations by neo-Nazi and Ku Klux Klan organizations in the 1980s and 1990s.

Anti-fascists objections arent simply that they disagree with fascists. Their problems with fascism are much more fundamental.

My own research has found that a significant proportion of anti-fascists are women, people of color, members of LGBTQ communities, or otherwise have some characteristics fascists seek to control or eliminate.

These anti-fascists, therefore, often see fascists as a threat to their personal existence, and their physical and emotional well-being as well as presenting threats of violence or vandalism to their communities and shared gathering spaces. They perceive their opposition as very much in personal and collective self-defense.

Because opposing fascism is a viewpoint rather than a formal organization, peoples actions vary widely. Informal or everyday anti-fascism can include speaking out against bigotry, standing up for victims of fascist harassment or confronting fascists in public places. Generally, these are relatively spontaneous actions that happen when anti-fascists encounter fascism in the normal course of their regular lives.

More formal anti-fascism can include large, well-funded mainstream organizations like the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center, who monitor fascist activity and provide the public information on its scope.

But the antifa label is most often applied to smaller-scale groups of like-minded people who live in the same community, working to prevent fascists from threatening their targets and from attracting new followers.

These groups are rarely militant or violent. Most of them engage in commonly accepted forms of political activism. For instance, anti-fascists often work to find out where fascist groups and people are active in an area, and then share that information with the wider community, bringing that activity to public attention.

Anti-fascist activists also take advantage of the general social stigma associated with being a fascist, and identify people who participate in fascist events or post fascist messages online.

Culture is another part of anti-fascist work, including art and music. By creating T-shirts and stickers with inclusive messages, and hosting concerts, film screening and art shows, anti-fascists work to create an environment of inclusion and equality that doesnt directly attack fascism but simply exists in opposition to it.

There are more militant anti-fascists, too, who mostly engage in non-militant activism but are willing, at times, to use more confrontational tactics. These people are more open to counterprotesting, sabotage and the use of force, which includes acts of violence.

The varied and decentralized nature of anti-fascist efforts means it includes virtually anyone who opposes violent enforcement of social inequalities to engage in activism. A diverse range of participants and tactics falls under the umbrella of a broad effort to stop fascism.

Stanislav Vysotsky, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminology, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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What or Who is Antifa?

Antifa Is Mostly Made Up Of Privileged White Dudes

Many in the media treat Antifa as a diverse group of warriors against fascism and racism. This is an absolute fabrication.

At Occupy Wall Street, there were two very distinct groups. On one side of the park were the peaceful intellectuals. They ran the library and the general assembly, and organized services in the park. On the other side was the black bloc, a collection of black-clad punks, often with bandanas ready to serve as masks, who mostly engaged in drug use and drum circles. The latter group is directly related to the movement we now know as Antifa.

One thing that both of these groups hadand continue to havein common is that they are mostly young white people. This is not surprising; poll after poll shows us that the vast majority of far-left progressives are white. The intellectuals at Occupy understood and tried to address this, giving special treatment to the speech and ideas of their small cadre of non-white participants. The Black Bloc and Antifa take a different approach; they just cover their faces.

But when members of Antifa are arrested, the masks come off. And, as recent mugshots of Portland Antifa members show, these people are about as diverse as the Washington Generals.

At a time when many on the left are rightfully concerned about far-right white violence, why do so many seemed so nonplussed by far-left white violence, in most cases even refusing to acknowledge that thats exactly what Antifa is?

One sociologist writing in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz attempts to prove fanciful claims that Antifa is a rainbow coalition of the oppressed desperately fighting in their own immediate self defense. Stanislav Vustotsky writes:

Many militant anti-fascists become involved in this form of activism because aspects of their identity are directly targeted by fascist violence; they are queer, transgender, gender non-conforming, people of color, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, and certainly identified in ways that intersected across these categories.

For them, anti-fascism was a means of ensuring their safety from a movement that threatens their very existence and venerates violence as the highest form of action. Even the Antifa activists who identify as cis heterosexual white males are the targets of fascist violence as race and gender traitors.

Vusotsky claims to have formally studied Antifainterviewing them, attending meetings, and engaging in the culture of anti fascism. Needless to say he doesnt exactly come off as a neutral party to all this. But what is stunning is what is not in his piece. He claims to have conducted ethnographic research, on the group. If so, where are the numbers that back up his assertion that Antifa is wildly diverse?

Anyone with even a passing knowledge of Antifa has seen videos of their violent antics and can see for himself or herself that almost all of them are white dudes. Anyone who has ever been in their presence knows this too. I would be very interested to see this ethnographic research, and I am curious if Haaretz looked at it before publishing the authors bizarre claim. It strains credulity to believe that if Vusotsky had hard numbers to back up his assertion he would have simply left them out of his article.

The reason this point is so important is that it betrays a double standard that many in our media use regarding violent white activists. On the right, their whiteness is front and center; part of the toxic brew that stews their hate. But this is equally true of Antifa, which has its roots in the far left of the English punk scene in the 1980s.

Antifas goals are not those of most non-white Americans. Most non-white Americans dont want to destroy the systems of government, abolish the police, end capitalism, or cripple corporations. The group is absolutely trying to impose a style of anarchy that is steeped in (and almost unique to) whiteness.

When cowards wear masks to engage in violence, we must remove the masks to see who we are actually dealing withnot the fairy tale of diversity version. When Andy Ngo, a minority gay man, is mercilessly beaten up by white activists, the fact that the activists are white is a big part of the story in todays landscape. Dont believe the progressive narrative: Antifa is mostly a bunch of privileged white dudes.

David Marcus is the Federalist's New York Correspondent. Follow him on Twitter, @BlueBoxDave.

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Antifa Is Mostly Made Up Of Privileged White Dudes

Cruzs antifa hearing erupts in sniping as Dems accuse him of giving Trump cover for abusive tactics – The Dallas Morning News

WASHINGTON Having railed for months against protesters he depicts as violent Marxist anarchists, Sen. Ted Cruz led a hearing Tuesday that exposed a deep schism between Republicans impatient with unrest in U.S. cities and Democrats who see heavy-handed police tactics as a far bigger threat.

As the Texan painted Democrats as antifa sympathizers, they hit back, condemning him for stoking irrational fears and giving cover to a president with an authoritarian streak.

Cruz called the hearing to put a spotlight on the antifa and the Black Lives Matter movements, groups that President Donald Trump blames for endangering law enforcement in the guise of protesting racism and police brutality.

But this was as much a political skirmish as a fact-finding hearing about those groups.

Cruz repeatedly accused Democrats of demonizing federal law enforcement as storm troopers and Gestapo.

Elected Democrats want to ignore the violence of antifa. They want to ignore the violence on the left and they just scream `white supremacist, white supremacist, " he insisted.

Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat whose hometown of Portland has been the epicenter of clashes between protesters and police for two months, decried the presidents enablers an obvious reference to Cruz who pump up anxiety about mobs and anarchists while offering little concern about the heavily armed secret police who snatched Portlanders off the streets.

I agree theres a serious danger to American constitutional rights at this moment in history, Wyden said, and its caused to a great extent by the president and his enablers who are calling peaceful protesters anarchists and terrorists, and sending paramilitary forces into American cities.

Protests erupted nationwide after the May 25 police killing of George Floyd, a black suspect who died after an officer pinned his neck to the ground with a knee.

Tensions quickly escalated and on June 1, federal police used tear gas, flash bangs and other tactics to clear Lafayette Square Park outside the White House, where thousands had gathered to protest police brutality and racism. Trump then strode through the park, posing for photos outside historic St. Johns Church while holding a Bible.

Accusing mayors in Portland and other cities of weakness, Trump has threatened to send in troops, and has deployed camouflage-uniformed federal officers from the Bureau of Prisons and Department of Homeland Security.

There was no anarchist violence in Lafayette Square. The only ones using force were federal law enforcement, said Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, the senior Democrat on the Judiciary subcommittee that Cruz chairs. If this subcommittee wants to protect Americans right to peacefully assemble, we should be focused on preventing federal officers from beating up protesters, tear gassing them, and shooting them in the face.

She called the hearing an effort to deflect attention from systemic racial injustice. President Trump is deliberately trying to undermine the massive protests for racial justice by dismissing them as anarchists.

The culture clash persisted throughout the three-hour hearing.

Cruz and allied witnesses promoted a vision of America and its police agencies under siege by anti-government radicals.

Democrats and their witnesses blamed right-wing provocateurs and an overly aggressive federal response for violence.

Cruz displayed video showing protesters attacking law enforcement.

Democrats countered with footage of protesters being beaten without provocation by officers, or detained by camouflage-clad federal agents driving unmarked cars.

Throughout, the Texan needled his adversaries.

Not a single Democratic senator condemned antifa. Not a one of them condemned antifas violence and terrorism, Cruz said as the hearing neared the end.

By then, Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, the deputy Democratic leader, among others, had offered condolences for police injured or killed in the line of duty, and explicitly denounced any form of violence by protesters: Neither violence or vandalism are acceptable in the exercise of ones constitutional rights.

Hirono took umbrage at Cruzs insinuations and dressed him down for posturing and poor listening skills.

No one is condoning any violence, she said. I dont think you listen. How many times have I had to say that we all should be denouncing violent extremists? You arent listening.

I hope that we dont have to listen to any more of your rhetorical speeches, she said. Im leaving.

For several months, Cruz has been at the forefront of the GOP effort to discredit antifa and Black Lives Matter. In July, he introduced a bill to let business owners and others sue local governments for property damage if they fail to stop riots.

Sen. Jeff Merkley, another Oregon Democrat, displayed a photo of right-wing militia dressed in camouflage and below it, a photo of federal agents in nearly identical gear, echoing complaints from protesters and local officials about unidentifiable, unaccountable federal forces.

These features -- officers with no identity attacking protesters, sweeping some into unmarked vans, are the features of secret police tactics from around the world. I never thought an American president would bringing such tactics to the streets of America. But Trump has, he said. Using secret police tactics against peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters doesnt make him a defender of law and order. It makes him a violent suppressor.

Cruz defended the use of unmarked vehicles, noting that during some riots, marked police vehicles have been firebombed.

We have no secret police, testified Ken Cuccinelli, acting deputy secretary of Homeland Security.

The top federal prosecutor in Dallas, Erin Nealy Cox, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Texas and head of a Justice Department task force on anti-government violence, was among the witnesses.

She recalled the June 2019 shooting at the Dallas federal courthouse, and the July 2016 killing of five police officers during a Black Lives Matter protest in Dallas.

Unlike the lawful protesters whose demonstrations they undermine, these anti-government extremists aim to tear down the rule of law in America, she said. They are drowning out the voices of the protesters that this country wants to hear.

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., lauded law enforcement for the restraint shown at protests, given they cant always tell at a glance who is peaceful and who are the disruptors and the destroyers that show up.

But Michael German, a fellow at the left-leaning Brennan Center for Justice, testified that Trump and others focused on antifa see a threat where none exists.

Misinformation about antifa spread by white supremacist trolls has diverted law enforcement resources and encouraged armed vigilante groups to patrol streets, he told senators, and the Trump administration has amplified this misinformation.

Not one homicide has been attributed to anti-fascists in 25 years, he noted.

But a witness invited by Cruz, Kyle Shideler, a counterterrorism expert at the Center for Security Policy, a Washington-based conservative think tank, described antifa as a shadowy network of cells and chapters dedicated to vandalism and assault, intent on overthrowing the Constitution.

The fact that antifa uses an elaborate but non-hierarchical structure thats hard to understand or penetrate is no excuse for law enforcement to ignore the threat, he warned.

Hirono objected to Shidelers presence, noting that major conservative gatherings have shunned the center because its founder has demonized Muslims, and it has been labeled an anti-Muslim hate group.

We reject this claim, Shideler said when Cruz offered him time to rebut. We are particularly proud of our work trying to understand the ideology of jihadist terrorism. He accused groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center and Anti-Defamation League that apply the hate group label of engaging in antifa-like tactics to discredit opponents.

Andy Ngo, a conservative journalist from Portland who has devoted himself to documenting antifa, called it a violent insurrectionary group. He recounted an assault and urge lawmakers to take action.

Portland is the canary in the coal mine for America, he said. Look to my city to see what happens when a group like antifa is left unchecked.

Washington correspondent Paul Cobler contributed to this report.

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Cruzs antifa hearing erupts in sniping as Dems accuse him of giving Trump cover for abusive tactics - The Dallas Morning News

Communist ISIS Antifa: Homeland Security’s Confused Pursuit of Pro-Kurdish Americans – The National Interest

The FBI had a question for Jhats mother. They wanted to know if her son was trying to join an Islamist group.

Three years later, the Department of Homeland Security was worried about Brace Belden. Officials said that the minor criminal and drug addict who started reading Marx and Lenin in drug rehabilitation was part of a nexus between Antifa activists and the Syrian Civil War.

Jhat and Belden were both American fighters in the same U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led force in Syria.

Dozens, if not hundreds, of Americans have joined the Peoples Defense Units (YPG) and its successor, the Syrian Democratic Forces, as volunteers in the fight against ISIS. And the Department of Homeland Security has struggled to make sense of these foreign fighters, often attempting to tie them to the terrorist threat of the day, leaked documents show.

Its not terribly surprising that authorities were collecting this information,said Jason Fritz, a Johns Hopkins University lecturer who has researched foreign fighters in the YPG. Anybody that mobilizes to fight in a warthey dont have to, getscombat experience, theres probably some concerns.

But Fritz hasnt seen any cases of [YPG volunteers] being any kind of security threat over the past six years of the Syrian Civil War, particularly the leftists.

The YPG first gained prominence in the summer of 2014, when the left-wing rebel group was fighting a desperate battle against ISIS, now known as Islamic State. YPG guerrillas successfully turned the tide in Syria and even intervened in neighboring Iraq to prevent a genocide against the Yezidi people.

The group ended up taking in scores of volunteers from the West, both right-wing militants who want to defend Western civilization and left-wing militants who thought here are some people I agree with, theyre getting massacred, maybe I can help, according to Fritz.

Homeland security officials first took note of these volunteers in early 2015, an August 2015 field analysis report obtained by theNational Interestfrom theBlueLeaks archiveshows.

It was legal, albeitdiscouraged, for Americans to join the YPG. Although the U.S. government considered the closely-alignedKurdistan Workers Partyto be a terrorist group, it was backing the YPG with weapons and advisors.

But authorities were alarmed by veterans and active-duty service members who wanted to join the fight against ISIS.

U.S. Army veteran Jordan Matson had grabbed headlines with the Lions of Rojava, an online network he created to recruit Americans to fight for the YPG, and it seemed that many veterans were interested.

One active-duty Ohio National Guard member even inquired with his chain of command about transferring his status in order to travel to Syria, according to the field analysis report.

Homeland security officials biggest worry was that some of these American volunteers might actually be trying to join ISIS.

Analysts with Homeland Security Intelligence and Analysisassessed that homegrown violent extremists (HVE) intent on traveling overseasin support of [ISIS] or other Syria-based violent extremist groupspotentially could seek to circumvent U.S. law enforcement and travel restrictions by masking their true intentions and using the Lions of Rojavas [sic] facilitation network.

The analysts did make it clear that they had no information aboutISIS fighters actually using this route, but said it was an additional pathway to get into Iraq and Syria.

Robert Rnas Amos, an American who joined the YPG in early 2015, says that it would have been logistically difficult to join ISIS from within YPG-held territory.

I could understand that people who were not educated on the particulars of the situation could come to that conclusion, he told theNational Interest, but everybody knows, if they had [passport] stamps with Turkey, they could have been in ISIS, if not, they probably didnt, because thats the only way in.

Indeed, ISIS had awell-established routefor foreign fighters through the Turkish border.Foreigners who wished to join the YPG, on the other hand, would have to travel through Iraqi Kurdistan.

Nevertheless, U.S. authorities continued to act as if the YPG fighters were potential members of ISIS.

An American foreign fighter who would only be identified by his Kurdish codename Jhat said that FBI agents visited his familys home in 2017 while he was in Syria, supposedly [because] my passport was scanned entering Iraq but not exiting.

They asked them if Id expressed any interest in Islam [a]t which point my mom was like, no the opposite, he wrote in an encrypted text message. Frankly Im unsure if theyre truly so incompetent, or if my opsec [operational security] was just really on point, or if they knew enough and it was a feint to get more info.

Brace Belden, another American volunteer in the YPG, confirmed that some of his comrades-in-arms had like 8 hour interrogations by either the FBI or the Department of Homeland Security [w]here it was implied that they were in ISIS.

Belden now hosts the podcast TrueAnon, a talk show dedicated to investigating sex trafficking conspiracies by elites. But he says he has been interrogated by U.S. law enforcement every time he flies internationally and on some domestic flights as well.

They did ask about Isis [sic] slightly but mostly PKK/YPG, he wrote in an encrypted text message, using the Kurdish acronym for the Kurdistan Workers Party. They kept pressing me for troop strength which isnt generally something the equivalent of a grunt ever knows about in any war.

YPG fighters became attached to an entirely different security threat in 2020.

President Donald Trump wanted to crack down on ANTIFA, a vaguely-defined movement of militant left-wing anti-fascist protesters, in the wake of civil unrest around the police killing of George Floyd.

The United States of America will be designating ANTIFA as a Terrorist Organization, hedeclaredon Twitter on May 30.

There was one problem: only foreign groups can be designated as terrorist organizations underU.S. counterterrorism laws.

Turkey, which is opposed to the YPG and Syrian Democratic Forces, tried to provide a solution.

The Turkish government began to release supposedevidencethat Antifa militants were trained by the YPG. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan evenpersonally calledTrump to tell him of this theory.

The Syrian Democratic Forces political arm denied these claims.

Syrian Kurdish diplomat Sinam Mohamad told theNational Interestat the time that YPG volunteers were in Syria to fight the fascists of the terrorist group ISIS, not any other state. She added that the Syrian Democratic Forces had no interest in interfering in Americas internal affairs.

The Trump administration had found its hook, and the Department of Homeland Security began to compile dossiers on returning YPG fighters, according to anintelligence reportobtained by Ken Klippenstein ofThe Nation.

The reportstated that there was a clear connection in imagery between ANTIFA ideology and Kurdish democratic federalism teachings [sic] and ideology.

It disparagingly refereed to Belden, who has been open about his struggles with substance abuse,as a drug addict.

The report also stated that an unidentified Colorado-based individual who was in Northern Syria...posted an announcement to a popular anarchist extremist website seeking funds to return to the United States in October 2017.

Any unused money from the fundraising campaign would be funneled to Kurdish solidarity or ANTIFA efforts, according to the report.

A former YPG fighter who fits the description in the report spoke to theNational Intereston condition of anonymity, citing legal concerns.

The former fighter said he had been trapped in neighboring Iraqi Kurdistan when apolitical crisisshut down the regions main airport. He eventually escaped to Baghdad International Airport in a 250-mile taxi ride, paid for with money he raised online.

None of the money was ever funneled to ANTIFA, the former fighter claimed, because he had to spend the rest of it on a plane ticket home from Iraqis capital.

Landed in Qatar or [whatever] with like 10k Iraqi dinar [$8.40] in my pocket, the former fighter wrote in an encrypted text message.

He added that ANTIFA is a political idea, not a group that could receive material aid like a political organization or army can receive, denouncing the obviously unconstitutional witch hunt by one of the most strategically backwards and incompetent administrations in history.

European countries havecriminalized fightingfor the YPG as well as prosecuted the people who havefinanced them.

But the United States is much more unlikely to do so.

For one, the Trump administration has been trumpeting itssupposed dealwith the Syrian Democratic Forces to extract Syrian oil, making it unlikely that the administration would turn around and declare Syrian Kurdish militants to be terrorists.

And the United States is unlikely to pass laws against fighting in foreign forces in general, as it approves of its citizens volunteering in the Israeli military, Fritz explained.

Instead, the Department of Homeland Security seems more focused on the message it can send with its search for terrorists in the YPGs ranks.

Its mostly to highlight that there are leftists who have gone and done something that most of the population considers extreme, Fritz said.

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Communist ISIS Antifa: Homeland Security's Confused Pursuit of Pro-Kurdish Americans - The National Interest

Cruz’s antifa hearing erupts in sniping as Democrats accuse him of giving Trump cover for abusive tactics – Newsbug.info

WASHINGTON - Having railed for months against protesters he depicts as violent Marxist anarchists, Sen. Ted Cruz led a hearing Tuesday that exposed a deep schism between Republicans impatient with unrest in U.S. cities and Democrats who see heavy-handed police tactics as a far bigger threat.

As the Texan painted Democrats as antifa sympathizers, they hit back, condemning him for stoking irrational fears and giving cover to a president with an authoritarian streak.

Cruz called the hearing to put a spotlight on the antifa and the Black Lives Matter movements, groups President Donald Trump blames for endangering law enforcement in the guise of protesting racism and police brutality.

But this was as much a political skirmish as a fact-finding hearing about those groups.

Cruz repeatedly accused Democrats of demonizing federal law enforcement as "storm troopers and Gestapo."

"Elected Democrats want to ignore the violence of antifa. They want to ignore the violence on the left and they just scream 'white supremacist, white supremacist,'" he insisted.

Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat whose hometown of Portland has been the epicenter of clashes between protesters and police for two months, decried "the president's enablers" - an obvious reference to Cruz - who pump up anxiety about mobs and anarchists while offering little concern about the "heavily armed secret police who snatched Portlanders off the streets."

"I agree there's a serious danger to American constitutional rights at this moment in history," Wyden said, "and it's caused to a great extent by the president and his enablers who are calling peaceful protesters anarchists and terrorists, and sending paramilitary forces into American cities."

Protests erupted nationwide after the May 25 police killing of George Floyd, a black suspect who died after an officer pinned his neck to the ground with a kneed for nearly nine minutes.

Tensions quickly escalated and on June 1, federal police used tear gas, flash bangs and other tactics to clear Lafayette Square Park outside the White House, where thousands had gathered to protest police brutality and racism. Trump then strode through the park, posing for photos outside historic St. John's Church while holding a Bible.

Accusing mayors in Portland and other cities of weakness, Trump has threatened to send in troops, and has deployed camouflage-uniformed federal officers from the Bureau of Prisons and Department of Homeland Security.

"There was no anarchist violence in Lafayette Square. The only ones using force were federal law enforcement," said Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, the senior Democrat on the Judiciary subcommittee that Cruz chairs. "If this subcommittee wants to protect Americans' right to peacefully assemble, we should be focused on preventing federal officers from beating up protesters, tear gassing them, and shooting them in the face."

She called the hearing an effort to deflect attention from systemic racial injustice. "President Trump is deliberately trying to undermine the massive protests for racial justice by dismissing them as anarchists."

The culture clash persisted throughout the three-hour hearing.

Cruz and allied witnesses promoted a vision of America and its police agencies under siege by anti-government radicals.

Democrats and their witnesses blamed rightwing provocateurs and an overly aggressive federal response for violence.

Cruz displayed video showing protesters attacking law enforcement.

Democrats countered with footage of protesters being beaten without provocation by officers, or detained by camouflage-clad federal agents driving unmarked cars.

Throughout, Cruz needled his adversaries.

"Not a single Democratic senator condemned antifa. Not a one of them condemned antifa's violence and terrorism," he said as the hearing neared the end.

By then, Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, the deputy Democratic leader, among others, had offered condolences for police injured or killed in the line of duty, and explicitly denounced any form of violence by protesters: "Neither violence or vandalism are acceptable in the exercise of one's constitutional rights."

Hirono took umbrage at Cruz's insinuations and dressed him down for posturing and poor listening skills.

"No one is condoning any violence," she said. "I don't think you listen. How many times have I had to say that we all should be denouncing violent extremists? You aren't listening.

"I hope that we don't have to listen to any more of your rhetorical speeches," she said. "I'm leaving."

For several months, Cruz has been at the forefront of the GOP effort to discredit antifa and Black Lives Matter. In July, he introduced a bill to let business owners and others sue local governments for property damage if they fail to stop riots.

Sen. Jeff Merkley, another Oregon Democrat, displayed a photo of right-wing militia dressed in camouflage and below it, a photo of federal agents in nearly identical gear, echoing complaints from protesters and local officials about unidentifiable, unaccountable federal forces.

"These features _officers with no identity attacking protesters, sweeping some into unmarked vans, are the features of secret police tactics from around the world. I never thought an American president would be bringing such tactics to the streets of America. But Trump has," he said. "Using secret police tactics against peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters doesn't make him a defender of law and order. It makes him a violent suppressor."

Cruz defended the use of unmarked vehicles, noting that during some riots, marked police vehicles have been firebombed.

"We have no secret police," testified Ken Cuccinelli, acting deputy secretary of the Homeland Security Department.

The top federal prosecutor in Dallas, Erin Nealy Cox, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Texas and head of a Justice Department task force on anti-government violence, was among the witnesses.

She recalled the June 2019 shooting at the Dallas federal courthouse, and the July 2016 killing of five Dallas police officers during a Black Lives Matter protest.

"Unlike the lawful protesters whose demonstrations they undermine, these anti-government extremists aim to tear down the rule of law in America," she said. "They are drowning out the voices of the protesters that this country wants to hear."

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., lauded law enforcement for the restraint shown at protests, given they can't always tell at a glance who is peaceful and who are the "disruptors and the destroyers that show up."

But Michael German, a fellow at the left-leaning Brennan Center for Justice, testified that Trump and others focused on antifa see a threat where none exists.

"Misinformation about antifa spread by white supremacist trolls has diverted law enforcement resources and encouraged armed vigilante groups to patrol streets," he told senators, and "the Trump administration has amplified this misinformation."

Not one homicide has been attributed to anti-fascists in 25 years, he noted.

But a witness invited by Cruz, Kyle Shideler, a counterterrorism expert at the Center for Security Policy, a Washington-based conservative think tank, described antifa as a shadowy network of cells and chapters dedicated to vandalism and assault, intent on overthrowing the Constitution.

The fact that antifa uses an "elaborate but non-hierarchical structure" that's hard to understand or penetrate is no excuse for law enforcement to ignore the threat, he warned.

Hirono objected to Shideler's presence, noting that major conservative gatherings have shunned the Center for Security Policy because its founder has demonized Muslims, and it has been labeled an anti-Muslim hate group.

"We reject this claim," Shideler said when Cruz offered him time to rebut. "We are particularly proud of our work trying to understand the ideology of jihadist terrorism." He accused groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center and Anti-Defamation League that apply the hate group label of engaging in antifa-like tactics to discredit opponents.

Andy Ngo, a conservative journalist from Portland who has devoted himself to documenting antifa, called it a "violent insurrectionary group." He recounted an assault and urge lawmakers to take action.

"Portland is the canary in the coal mine for America," he said. "Look to my city to see what happens when a group like antifa is left unchecked."

(Washington correspondent Paul Cobler contributed to this report.)

The rest is here:

Cruz's antifa hearing erupts in sniping as Democrats accuse him of giving Trump cover for abusive tactics - Newsbug.info

Left-wing journalist alerts Antifa to Andy Ngo’s location, then they try to blind him with lasers – The Post Millennial

Alex Zielinski alerted Antifa militants to Andy Ngo's whereabouts during rioting in Portland where Ngo was reporting undercover. Zielinski's revealing of Ngo's location endangered both Ngo and those around him. Shortly after, Ngo was attacked by lasers in an attempt to blind him.

Ngo, editor-at-large for The Post Millennial, has been reporting on the Portland riots which have been going on nightly for two months.

"Heads up all, it looks like Andy Ngo is here, wandering around with @KOINNews reporters. I don't think they're aware," Zielinski tweeted mid-riot on June 20th. She is undoubtedly aware that Antifa brutally assaulted Ngo last year, leaving him with a brain hemorrhage.

Zielinski also knows that Antifa grunts terrorized Ngo's family's home, wearing print-out masks of Ngos face.

Still, Zielinski pointed a digital finger to where Ngo was. Antifa immediately tried to blind him with pocket lasers, damaging his eyes and scarring him with light sensitivity. Then they confronted him.

Earlier this month, federal agents were blinded by these lasers, and may never recover their eyesight.

Scientific American reported that green light pointers are not manufactured under federal regulations, are improperly imported to the US, and far exceed safety limits.

However, Ngo had to plead with local news crew to leave the scene with them or face another violent attack that could lead to physical violence against him.

"Even though Zielinski & I disagree on politics, I would never try to hurt her. I'm airing this now because the public should be aware of how local journalists work hand-in-hand w/antifa," Ngo explained on Twitter.

Last year, Zielinski interviewed a pseudonymous Antifa informer who made a sensational claim that Ngo was secretly collaborating with right-wing group Patriot Prayer. Ngo denies the allegation. He was never contacted for comment by Zielinski. Reason reported that Portland Mercurys alleged video evidence did not support the explosive accusation.

The Antifa activist, who sleuthed as a Patriot Prayer prayer member, stated to Zielinski at the Portland Mercury "that Patriot Prayer protects [Ngo] and he protects them."

Ngo allegedly tagged along with Patriot Prayer to film a violent scuffle with Antifa at Cider Riot, a left-wing sympathetic restaurant, only turning his camera on Antifa when members entered the scene.

"Right-wing writer Andy Ngo is with the PP group the entire time as they plan out their attack," wrote Zielinksi on Twitter. "He smiles as they joke about being outnumbered. There's no way he couldn't know the group was planning on instigating violence against people at Cider Riot."

The lie was then propagated everywhere and widely cited in Vice, The Daily Dot, and The Inquisitr as leftist propaganda, asserting that Ngo was a co-conspirator with the right-wing group. Ngo maintains that he was not.

Ngo acknowledged that he was never reached for comment and has had no opportunity to date to respond to the pseudonymous accuser.

"It appears that now Alex Zielinski is trying to get me killed because she was unable to stop me from reporting," Ngo tweeted.

The Post Millennial reached out to Zielinski for comment about her actions in outing Ngo and she replied "I don't know him. Sorry!" When asked for clarification of that, she said "I don't know him or have anything to say about his comments about my month old tweet."

Later, she tweeted that she had been offline for a few days, but that she had tweeted "during a protest" that "someone with a history of putting Portlanders' lives in danger" was "filming protestors in the crowd while 'undercover.'"

See the article here:

Left-wing journalist alerts Antifa to Andy Ngo's location, then they try to blind him with lasers - The Post Millennial

We must teach students to navigate through misinformation, fake news: VP – Times of India

NEW DELHI: In an inspiring address to 200 Times Scholars handpicked from among over 3 lakh students who enrolled for the programme, Vice-President M Venkaiah Naidu said students should set high goals in the careers they choose and follow through with self-discipline, hard work and perseverance.

Delivering a virtual address at an event to felicitate winners of the 2019 Times Scholars programme, a Times of India initiative that seeks to inculcate the reading habit among the young, Naidu said students must not look at education merely as a means to get a job, but as a path to get enlightened and to become good human beings.

I am happy to know that at the heart of the programme is an endeavour to promote reading, especially reading of newspapers among students. I have always believed that a well-read student is definitely better prepared to overcome challenges in life and seize every opportunity that comes his or her way, he said.

Naidu also emphasised the need to teach children to be intelligent and discerning readers. Circumstances also demand that we teach them to navigate through all the misinformation and fake news that infest the media landscape, especially the new media environment today. Like the legendary bird, the hamsa, our children must be able to assimilate and absorb the truth and discard the lies, the VP said.

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We must teach students to navigate through misinformation, fake news: VP - Times of India