Mali: New witness testimony reveals horrors of protest shootings – Amnesty International

Dozens of witnesses to the shootings of protesters in Mali last month told Amnesty International they had clearly identified some of the perpetrators as the bodyguards of Manassa Danioko, President of the Constitutional Court.

The protests between 10 and 12 July were organized by the Mouvement du 5 Juin-Rassemblement des forces patriotiques (M5-RFP), that has been demonstrating against poor governance and electoral fraud in Mali since 5 June and has called for the resignation of President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita. The demonstrations coincided with the call for civil disobedience by the M5-RFP, but they were brutally repressed by the security forces across Bamako, the capital, resulting in the deaths of at least 11 protesters and bystanders, and dozens being injured.

Rumors of the arrest of the leader of the M5-RFP, Imam Mahmoud Dicko, led on 11 July, to a mobilization of demonstrators and residents in the neighborhood of Badalabougou. Some of them moved towards the house of Manassa Danioko, which is not far from Dickos residence.

Rumors of the arrest of the leader of the M5-RFP, Imam Mahmoud Dicko, led on 11 July, to a mobilization of demonstrators and residents in the neighborhood of Badalabougou. Some of them moved towards the house of Manassa Danioko, which is not far from Dickos residence, said Ousmane Diallo, Amnesty Internationals West Africa Researcher.

This led to the firing of live ammunition by security guards and by the police, at the protesters, causing the deaths of four individuals during that incident alone. A fair and impartial investigation into these deaths must urgently be launched, and those responsible must be brought to justice.

Amnesty International interviewed 41 respondents, including witnesses to the violence, injured demonstrators, journalists, opposition leaders and public officials. Witnesses and families of victims shared horrific accounts of the violence perpetrated by police in Badalabougou and Sogoninko neighborhoods where protests were held on 11 July, along with the responsibility of bodyguards to the President of the Constitutional Court in the deaths of protesters in Badalabougou.

The organization also collected photos and video evidence of the injuries sustained by the protesters, of the impact of bullets on civilian buildings, and of the clashes between demonstrators and security forces, which all concord with the testimonies collected.

Several of those killed during the three days of repression were not involved in the protests. Fayal Ciss, 25, was the first victim of the lethal use of force. He was a former madrassa student who was not part of the protest and was at a mosque around 300 m from the National Assembly. A relative told Amnesty International that he was hit by a bullet fired from the National Assembly, while he was between the ablutions area and the prayer room. He fell in the courtyard of the mosque and died subsequently of his wounds.

A 37-year-oldprotestor told Amnesty International how they were dislodged from the public broadcasters premises by security forces who startedbeatingand injuring many of them, including women.They hit them on their heads and arms with sticks. They were dispersed by the security forces who fired live ammunition at the protestors, causing one death near the National Assembly.

Among those killed was HalidouBouar, 21. Like Sidi Mohamed Doumbia, Bouar was working when he was struck by a bullet, fired by security forces.

One of his relatives, who witnessed the incident from outside his house, told Amnesty International:

HalidouBouarwas shot while he was at the carwash where he worked. He wasnt demonstrating but since he was close to scene, he was hit by two bullets, one in the stomach and one in the shoulder, while he was doing his work. He lostconsciousnesswhile I was transporting him to the hospital. Blood was flowing from his mouth. He died at the hospital soon after our arrival.

The violence escalated on 11 and 12 July, following news that security forces planned to arrest Imam Mahmoud Dicko after they had arrested several other M5-RFP leaders. Amnesty International spoke to several witnesses who identified the bodyguards of Manassa Danioko, the President of the Constitutional Court, as shooting at protesters on the afternoon of 11 July. Aly Sylla, 29, was among the victims.

A relative of his told the organization:

During the clashes with the police, Aly was shot in the head. Several youths identified the gunman as one of Manassa Danioko's bodyguards. He was with one of his friends who took pictures of the bodyguard and identified him He told the shooter that he took a good picture of him and that he would pay for this crime. The police tried to arrest him, but he escaped.

I remember my son telling me Daddy, I cannot breathe anymore.

While Aly Sylla died on the spot, two other victims of the same incident died at the hospital from their wounds.One of them was Sidi Mohamed Doumbia, a 16-year old student who was at work in Badalabougou, repairing motorcycles when he was shot. He was hit in the stomach and arm while he stood at a good distance from the policemen and the demonstrations. His father recounted the heartbreaking experience of watching his son die:

I remember my son telling me "Daddy, I cannot breathe anymore". I could see that he was dying in front of me, while at the hospital. I don't know who fired, but the children around said it was one of the bodyguards .

The role of the FORSAT, a special government antiterrorist unit in the arrests of leaders of the M5-RFP and in the assault of the mosque of Imam Mahmoud Dicko is also of grave concern and deserves thorough investigations.

Several witnesses told Amnesty International that during an 11 July meeting of M5-RFP, hooded men in heavy gear suspected to belong to FORSAT arrived heavily armed in two unmarked public buses to disrupt the meeting.

Other witnesses recounted seeing FORSAT members deployed to arrest the leaders of the M5-RFP on 11 July. They also were witnessed launching an assault on the mosque of Imam Mahmoud Dicko during the evening, said Ousmane Diallo.

The deployment of the FORSAT to maintain public order during the demonstrations is a clear violation of its mandate. Another red line was crossed when the security forces fired live ammunition at protesters.

The deployment of the FORSAT to maintain public order during the demonstrations is a clear violation of its mandate. Another red line was crossed when the security forces fired live ammunition at protesters.

In an official letter dated on 14 July addressed to the Ministry of Public Security, the Prime Minister asked for the reasons behind the deployment of the FORSAT and who authorized it. While welcoming this development, Amnesty International calls for responsibilities to be clearly established regarding who gave the security forces order to fire at the demonstrators, when they presented no danger to them.

While trying to control demonstrators and destroy barricades, police also killedMamadou Ba, a doctoral student in medicine, who was called by a health center to support them in their work.

According to a witness, Mamadou Ba was shot near the health center by policemen positioned a hundred meters further from the street. The bullet caused serious injuries and after losing much blood, he died of his wounds in the hospital during surgery.

In addition to Ba, at least four people were shot and wounded at that scene. In the same area a building was hit by the bullets of the security forces when they were responding to the demonstrations.

Koudedja Doucour, a 22-year old woman was wounded by a bullet to the chest when she went to her window to inquire about the commotion. Amnesty International obtained pictures of bullet impact on the windows and walls of a building next to where security forces were positioned.

Journalists also came under attack during the protests.

Accordingtoonejournalist, police officers prevented him from doing his job while he was capturing the evidence of the ill-treatment of three youngsters on 11 July. He told Amnesty International that when he refused to hand over his cellphone, policemen started beating him with a baton on his head, back and hips. They forcefully took his cellphone, deleted all evidence of their conduct, accused him of being a member of the M5-RFP, before eventually letting him go with his cellphone.

The UN Human Rights Committee states that peaceful assemblies can play a critical role in allowing participants to advance ideas and aspirational goals in the public domain, and to establish the extent of support for or opposition to those ideas and goals. Where they are used to air grievances, peaceful assemblies may create opportunities for inclusive, participatory and peaceful resolution of differences. A failure to respect and ensure the right of peaceful assembly is typically a marker of repression.

The freedom of peaceful assembly must be respected by the authorities and it is outrageous that security forces, including special forces, fired live bullets at the demonstrators. No citizen deserves to die for expressing their opinion, or for denouncing the poor governance of their own country.

The lethal use of force by the security forces must be investigated. Protesters and their families deserve to know who gave the license for the security forces to fire at them and their relatives, and there cannot be any credible solution to the political crisis if human rights are not respected and justice is not delivered, said Ousmane Diallo.

The freedom of peaceful assembly must be respected by the authorities and it is outrageous that security forces, including special forces, fired live bullets at the demonstrators. No citizen deserves to die for expressing their opinion, or for denouncing the poor governance of their own country.

Originally posted here:

Mali: New witness testimony reveals horrors of protest shootings - Amnesty International

Book review: There’s so much more to the beautiful wood duck – PostBulletin.com

That's pretty much a given among bird lovers, and that alone makes this duck so appreciated.

But there is so much more to the wood duck. For example, they are the only ones on the continent to be members of their genus; they have an unusually large tail for a waterfowl; they helped defeat German U-boats in World War I; and the species that was once given up as lost has staged a momentous comeback.

Greg Hoch gives us that whole picture and more in his new book With Wings Extended: A Leap Into the Wood Duck's World. Its a true treat to read in this often dark time of coronavirus and roiling politics. Its a success story that shows we can help endangered species.

The author is a Minnesota Department of Natural Resources prairie habitat supervisor and author of books on the greater prairie chicken and woodcock. In his third book, he brings us into the world of a duck we have been seeing more and more around here, and which hunters relish putting in the bag. In some states, its the most common duck shot.

He mostly uses research from many other sources, some going back to the 1800s; the bibliography covers 18 pages.

Here are some things Hoch found through his research:

He encourages people to get involved, often by making boxes. That might be one of the great benefits of the book it not only lays out the past problems, but also ways people can help today. We can do it by ourselves or in civic and scout groups.

It cant stop there, however, Hoch writes. If nest boxes are a gateway, the gateway must lead to other involvement.

That could be recording how many birds are fledged, funding conservation groups, talking with politicians, or volunteering to help wildlife agencies.

Wood ducks allow us into their lives as few other wildlife and almost no other duck allow, he writes.

The ducks will live close to people, often in towns or next to homes, when nesting. But their living habitat tends to be messy, swampy, buggy and muddy, so be prepared to get wet.

Hoch concludes: Go find the place where your wood duck drake rests in his beauty.

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Book review: There's so much more to the beautiful wood duck - PostBulletin.com

The UK’s Huawei ban risks crippling its ambitions in technology and science – Business Insider

Visiting China last year, I knew the country excelled at technology and innovation.

But it was a pleasant surprise to find that its science parks were not only world-leading R&D centers but also welcoming to UK startups and set up to add value for companies entering the market.

I also met investors with a significant appetite for UK innovation especially in medtech, AI, IoT, and other areas of deeptech.

The UK government's ban on the use of Huawei 5G equipment has, therefore, been hard to stomach. The decision has soured UK-China relations, endangering UK startups' access to Chinese growth funding and the world's largest market.

The government risks throwing the baby out with the bathwater, jeopardizing its own vision of building a prosperous future economy on the back of early-stage deeptech R&D.

It's not that we weren't warned.

Until the recent escalation of the ongoing trade war, the US had a secure position as the leading foreign recipient of Chinese venture capital.

Now, many Chinese funds both state-run and privately-held have become significantly less active in the US.

Rhodium Group, which tracks US-China investment trends, identified 236 rounds into US companies featuring at least one Chinese investor in 2018, amounting to $10.8 billion. In 2019 there were just 163, totalling $6.5 billion.

The UK had been well-positioned to capitalize on the cooling of the US-China relationship, with Chinese investment into the UK growing in recent years. Indeed, China has put more money into the UK economy over the past five years than in the previous 30.

During his 2015 state visit, President Xi Jinping called for more "mutually beneficial cooperation" on innovation; significant Chinese investment into UK funds and startups followed, with technology and media conglomerate Tencent a bellwether.

2019 was its most active year, including a $24 million round into Cambridge AI company Prowler, a $35 million investment in fintech firm Truelayer, a $20 million round for Everledger, a blockchain company, and a $10 million investment into spacetech startup SenSat.

It also launched an AI lab with medtech startup Medopad, and invested in Oxford Sciences Innovation , the University of Oxford's fund.

My conversations in China certainly reflected a preoccupation with the UK and deprioritization of the US.

Since the Huawei ban, however, some contacts have alluded to a hedging strategy, lining up operations in competing ecosystems such as France, Germany, Finland, and Poland alongside prior plans for the UK market.

By banning a company crucial to China's global brand as a tech pioneer, the government risks triggering a similar response to that which has hit the US, stunting the inflow of Chinese money to support the growth of innovative UK companies.

Recent UK government policy announcements from Chancellor Rishi Sunak's Budget speech in March to more recent statements from Boris Johnson have focused on "leveling up" investment in early-stage R&D to fuel high-tech innovation.

China has played a significant role in building the infrastructure to facilitate such a strategy, partly through the formation of academic joint ventures such as a 25 million Marine Research Centre with the University of Nottingham and, in deeptech, the York-Nanjing Joint Centre for Spintronics and Nano Engineering.

Such is the level of UK-China academic collaboration that China is one of the UK's most important partners for research, innovation, and education, according to the Russell Group, and its second-strongest research partner. The UK has also overtaken Japan to become China's second-most popular partner.

Huawei itself has led projects intended to contribute to the UK ecosystem including a 1 billion initial investment into a new chip R&D centre in Cambridge and surrounding infrastructure, and a 5 million investment into a new 5G-enabled tech hub at Imperial's West London campus.

It remains to be seen whether either project will go ahead following the government's decision and wider investment and collaboration on R&D must be in question, with the potential to put a significant dent in the government's "science superpower" plan.

The Huawei ban came with the concession that it would set back rollout of 5G by two to three years significantly delaying the windfall of 15.7 billion by 2025 forecast by Barclays Corporate Banking.

While major cities have already received considerable investment to make them 5G-ready, early coverage of the regions has been limited. This further delay will prove a significant barrier to increasing productivity as we enter a future in which workforces and therefore innovation become increasingly distributed.

"Industry 4.0" technologies that enable everything from remote patient assessment and monitoring (which O2 estimates could free up over a million hours of GPs' time) to autonomous vehicles and smart traffic management depend on 5G's faster, more reliable connectivity and lower latency.

The UK has world-leading expertise in many such technologies. But the impending delay might give founders pause could they commercialize and get to market quicker somewhere else, unencumbered by the fallout of political decisions?

It's too early to say for certain whether the Huawei ban will trigger an exodus of Chinese investors and home-grown innovators but on the first count the data from the US tells a cautionary tale, and the second could ultimately come down to a question of pragmatism and ambition.

At the very least, we should expect UK startups to start finding it much more difficult to sell and expand into China as the backlash to the Huawei ban becomes apparent. The repercussions of this decision could deal a major blow to the government's economic vision for the UK.

Stephen Page is the founder and CEO of SFC Capital.

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The UK's Huawei ban risks crippling its ambitions in technology and science - Business Insider

Peterson has a slight lead in the Gilbert mayoral race. Here’s a closer look at mayoral and council results – AZCentral

Gilbert voters will elect a new mayor, but whether that happens on Tuesday depends on if one of the fourcandidates snags enough votes to avoid a runoff in November.

Brigette Peterson held a steady lead over Matt Nielsen and Lynne King Smith as results rolled in Tuesday. But Maricopa County elections officials continue to count ballots.

It's the first-time mayoral run for all four candidates, as Mayor Jenn Daniels is not seeking reelection.

Peterson who watched results come in with her husband athome and on Zoom with friends said she was really excited about the initial results butverycautiousbecause she knows there are many morevotesto be counted.

Its really too soon to know, Peterson said. I'm hoping that the lead remains. If we can win this outright, that would be even better, but if we go on to the general, I'm ready for that.

Gilbert mayoral candidate Brigette Peterson checks results on primary election night.(Photo: Courtesy of Brigette Peterson)

If no one mayor candidate getsmore than 50% of the vote in the Aug. 4 primary election, the top two vote-getters will squareoff in the general election on Nov. 3.

Three town council seats also were on the ballot.

Four candidates competedfor two council seats with the usual four-year terms.Kathy Tilque and Scott Anderson are leading, followed by Tyler Hudgins and BusolaObayomi, initial returns show.

If no one gets more than 25% of the votes, all four will go on the November ballot.If one candidate gets enough votes, the next two top vote-getters will face off inNovember.

Laurin Hendrix and Bill Spence were practically tied fora council seat that carries a two-year term, according to early ballot returns.

If no one gets more than 50%of the votes, the top two vote-getters will go to a November runoff.

The initial results include nearly all ballots cast before election day andmail-in ballots, apart from those dropped off at the polls on Tuesday.

Early results show the town's new General Planhas a large margin of voter approval.

Voting got underway in early July and wrappedup Tuesday atvote centers throughout metro Phoenix.

ELECTION RESULTS:See who won in Arizona's August primary election

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King Smith, who handily outraised the other mayoral candidates, is the founder of a ticketing software company and co-working space in Gilbert.

She campaigned on providing strong leadership as Gilbert approaches build-out, supporting businesses and building a "Gilbert for all."

King Smith hosted a Zoom watch party with friends, family and supporters as results came in Tuesday evening.

Nielsen, a charter school management executive, is a political newcomer, as is King Smith.

Nielsen is focused on returning government to a more limited role and campaigned on conservative values. He said he wants to maximize individual liberty and minimize government interference.

Peterson resigned from her Town Council seat, as the law requires, to run for mayor. She has said she would bring the necessary experience to the mayoral seat. Her priorities are job growth, public safety and responsible growth.She's an advocate for transportation and planning improvements.

Joshua Lipscomb, the write-in candidate,wants to investin south Gilbert, diversifythe town, expandtwo-lane roads, protectfarmers and increasepublic safety, according to his campaign on Instagram.

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Thecandidates in the race for two Town Council seats with full, four-yearterms are:

Tilque, who led the pack in initial results, said she was excited, but waiting eagerly for more of the vote count to roll in.

We have a lot more votes coming in, so were hoping that were going to be able to maintain that lead and kind of wrap this up for the primary, she said.

Tilquesaid she was confident going into theprimary, butdidnt know what to expectgiven how unique campaigning was during the pandemic.She expressed gratitude for her opponents behavior during the race.

In myparticular race, I felt that everybody was runningareally honestrace, talking about their credentials and thequalities that they bring, and there wasnt that negative politicking going on. I was really thankful for that.

Anderson, also in the lead, said he was pleased with the early results and hopes the race will be decided at the primary, without a November runoff.

The candidates vying for the council seat with a two-year term are:

Have election thoughts fromGilbert? Reach the reporter at Alison.Steinbach@arizonarepublic.com or at 602-444-4282. Follow her on Twitter @alisteinbach.

Support local journalism.Subscribe to azcentral.com today.

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Peterson has a slight lead in the Gilbert mayoral race. Here's a closer look at mayoral and council results - AZCentral

Peterson concerned about COVID-19, ‘but work is work’ – NBC Sports Washington

Ron Rivera refuses to name Dwayne Haskins the starting quarterback for the Washington Football Team, but listening to the coach's comments about the second-year passer, it sure sounds like it's Haskins job.

"Hes done a great job of studying, preparing and getting himself ready for this. Hes been great," Rivera said Tuesday morning. "Hes been on the field, doing the things weve asked of him. Hes done the extra stuff that he and I talked about in the offseason. Hes done the things that, I think, puts him right there where he needs to be at this junction of where we are in our training, having only been able to do zoom and now only having four days of work on the field."

Much has been made about veteran QB Alex Smith's return from injury.

Smith's story has been incredible, working his way back from a compound fracture in his leg and 17 surgeries as his body was ravaged by infection. Now Smith is able to work out with trainers at the Washington practice facilities for multiple days without setbacks. It's a remarkable story.

But there are still major hurdles for Smith to get back on the field, not the least of which is clearing a football physical from the Washington doctors.

"For him, its really just a matter of, can he do the movements he needs to do?" Rivera said. "Can he protect himself when hes on the field more so than anything else?"

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There's another important element to point out and that's the advantage - real or perceived -that Kyle Allen has over Haskins.

Allen started nine games for Rivera and new Washington offensive coordinator Scott Turner last season in Carolina, and found some success. The Panthers won Allen's first four starts, and in those games, he threw no interceptions. Conversely, Carolina lost the last six games Allen started and he threw 11 picks in those contests.

RELATED: RIVERA PLEASANTLY SURPRISED BY ALEX SMITH IN CAMP

Earlier this offseason Rivera suggested that Allen could have a "leg up" on Haskins based on knowledge of Turner's system. Asked on Tuesday if Haskins still trailed in that department, Rivera did not seem concerned.

"I dont think Dwayne is very far behind, I really dont."

Rivera wants open competition across his football team. No player gets named starter, rather that player earns the job.Sure sounds like Haskins is doing just that when it comes to the starting quarterback spot.

Stay connected to the team with the MyTeams app.Click hereto download for comprehensive coverage of your teams.

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Peterson concerned about COVID-19, 'but work is work' - NBC Sports Washington

Angler Shows the Benefits of Fishing With a ‘Tiny Child Rig’ and What it Looks Like Underwater – Wide Open Country

Anglers know that fishing with soft plastics often necessitates creativity. Thankfully,Wired2Fish Field Editor Kyle Petersonhas outlined his new spin on a creation combining aNed riglure with a reverse Texas rig,Neko rigcombination.

Dubbed the "tiny child rig" because it'sso easy even a "tiny child" could catch fish with it, Peterson's rig is able to easily slip in and out of cover to hook even the most difficult to catch fish.

Peterson explained that he created the rig whiletargeting walleye living in a log jam. He quickly realized heneeded something that would plunge straight to the bottom.

"I also needed something that would come back up," Peterson says. "It needed to snake its way back up through the trees and the limbs and this was about the only way that I could see a bait coming back up through, but then having a small profile -- something a walleye would eat. As it's proven, it's show us that it's a multi-species catcher."

Peterson adds that the tiny child rig is"the most fish-catchingest little thing I've ever seen in the world."

Sure enough, the rig not only catches walleye, but alsobass, bluegill, crappie, pike and more.

Peterson also takes you through the material you can use for your own tiny child rig.

"I like using just the original Neko hook. What happens for me is I'll hook a fish and the bait will slide up my line. That's what I really like about it -- the lure will slide up my line. The fish doesn't have leverage over the bait as much. It helps kind of keep the weights inside of the bait as well from being thrown by the fish."

"The great thing about this 'tiny child' is it's very streamlined and hydrodynamic, it throws far and you can just fish it in a variety of different cover," Peterson continues.

For more fishing tips, visit Wired2Fishand follow Wired2Fish onFacebook.

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Angler Shows the Benefits of Fishing With a 'Tiny Child Rig' and What it Looks Like Underwater - Wide Open Country

Bush shocks Clay in congressional primary: ‘We the people have answers’ – Cherokee Tribune Ledger News

UPDATEDat 11:30 p.m. Tuesday

Activist Cori Bush on Tuesday unseated longtime U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay, ending his 20-year hold on Missouri's 1st Congressional District and putting her on a path to become the first Black woman to represent Missouri in the nation's capital.

Before Clay's tenure, his father William Clay held the seat for three decades. That makes Bush, whose campaign grew out of protests against the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson in 2014, the first to topple the Clay political dynasty in 52 years.

Bush, 44, of Florissant, first challenged Clay in 2018. She returned this year with the same message that Clay hadn't been bold enough in tackling the district's challenges but with more campaign funds and support fromprogressive groups challengingestablishment Democrats in a bid to pull the party left.

"Tonight, Missouri's 1st District has decided that an incremental approach isn't going to work any longer," Bush said in a victory speech late Tuesday. "We decided that we the people have the answers, and we will lead from the front lines."

Bush, who has spoken openly about being evicted and failing to pay taxes, has said her background as a single mother of two children, connects her to working families in the district. She has promised to continue participating in street protests as a sitting member of congress.

In her speech Tuesday, Bush said Black Lives Matter "are not just words. It is historic that this year, of all the years, we're sending a Black, working-class, single mother, who's been fighting for Black lives since Ferguson, all the way to the halls of congress."

Bushs campaign focused on universal health care, radically reforming police departments, free public education and raising the minimum wage policies advocated by U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent who describes himself as a democratic socialist. Bush thanked Sanders for his endorsement and support Tuesday.

In their first matchup in 2018, Clay defeated Bush by more than 28,000 votes a 20-point margin that was the closest any challenger had come to unseating Clay until Tuesday night.

This year, she defeated Clay by a 3-point margin, 72,812 votes to 68,201.

Bush had more than triple the campaign donations than in 2018, and more name recognition from an appearance in Knock Down the House, a 2019 Netflix documentary that followed Bush and three other candidates seeking to replace incumbent Democrats with progressive women, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.

Her campaign was supported by Justice Democrats, which elevated Ocasio-Cortez, and more recently, former school principal Jamaal Bowmans upset against 16-term incumbent Rep. Elliot Engel in New York. Bush's campaign sought to leverage the wins, as well as inequities highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic and the police killing of George Floyd.

Clay, long a solid vote for Democratic policies, had touted his support for Sen. Bernie Sanders Medicare for All plan, Ocasio-Cortezs Green New Deal, and for impeaching President Donald Trump all positions that put him left of other centrist Democrats like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Clay has also pointed tohis role in bringing the multimillion-dollar National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency campus to north St. Louis.

The winner of Tuesday's primary is expected to coast to victory in November's general election, as the district typically votes overwhelmingly Democratic.

A third candidate for the Democratic nomination, Katherine Bruckner, had captured about 6.3% of the vote 5,142 votes as of 10:30 p.m.

Winnie Heartstrong and Anthony Rogers both filed for the GOP nomination but did not mount active campaigns. Rogers was on track to win Tuesday with 25-point margin.

District 2

There were no intraparty competitions in Tuesdays primary for Missouris 2nd Congressional District, where Democrat State Sen. Jill Schupp is challenging U.S. Rep. Ann Wagner.

Libertarian Martin Schulte, of Ballwin, is also running in the Nov. 3 general election.

The 2nd Congressional District includes much of St. Louis County, and parts of St. Charles and Jefferson counties.

District 3

In Missouris 3rd Congressional District, U.S. Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer soundly defeated four Republican challengers in a five-way primary.

Luetkemeyer, of St. Elizabeth, had captured nearly 75% of the vote.

Luetkemeyer is heavily favored to win the Nov. 3 general election in theheavily Republican district against the Democratic nominee and Libertarian,Leonard Steinman, who ran unopposed in the primary.

Megan Rezabek, of Imperial, defeated Dennis Oglesby, of Warrenton, for the Democratic nomination. Rezabek won with a 29-point margin.

The 3rd Congressional District includes parts of St. Charles County and Jefferson County and all of Warren, Franklin and Lincoln counties.

Cori Bush, a Democratic candidate for Missouri's first congressional district, poses for a portrait outside of her campaign headquarters on election night in Northwoods on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. Bush is challenging Democrat Lacy Clay, the first district's representative since 2001. Photo by Chris Kohley, ckohley@post-dispatch.com.

Cori Bush, a Democratic candidate for Missouri's first congressional district, waves to her supporters outside of her campaign headquarters on election night in Northwoods on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. Bush is challenging Democrat Lacy Clay, the first district's representative since 2001. Photo by Chris Kohley, ckohley@post-dispatch.com.

Cori Bush, a Democratic candidate for Missouri's first congressional district, cheers outside of her campaign headquarters on election night in Northwoods on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. Bush is challenging Democrat Lacy Clay, the first district's representative since 2001. Photo by Chris Kohley, ckohley@post-dispatch.com.

Protest leader Cori Bush works the bullhorn as marchers gather in The Loop for a rally and march against police brutality on Friday, June 12, 2020. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for US Congress in Missouri's first district, stands for a portrait during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Masks are mandatory at all indoor polling locations. Other health precautions are being taken as well including regular sanitization of communal spaces and plexiglass dividers. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for US Congress in Missouri's first district, waves at voters during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Masks are mandatory at all indoor polling locations. Other health precautions are being taken as well including regular sanitization of communal spaces and plexiglass dividers. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for U.S. Congress in Missouri's 1st district, waves at voters during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for U.S. Congress in Missouri's 1st district, bumps elbows with supporter Ziah Reddick, left, during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for US Congress in Missouri's first district, stands for a portrait during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Masks are mandatory at all indoor polling locations. Other health precautions are being taken as well including regular sanitization of communal spaces and plexiglass dividers. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, democratic challenger for US Congress in Missouri's first district, stands for a portrait during the 2020 Primary Elections at the AAA Busch Middle School polling location in South St. Louis on Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Masks are mandatory at all indoor polling locations. Other health precautions are being taken as well including regular sanitization of communal spaces and plexiglass dividers. Photo by Colter Peterson, cpeterson@post-dispatch.com

Protest leader Cori Bush works the bullhorn as marchers gather in The Loop for a rally and march against police brutality on Friday, June 12, 2020. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com

Protest leader Cori Bush works a bullhorn as marchers gather in The Loop for a rally and march against police brutality on Friday, June 12, 2020. (Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com)

Activists Cori Bush, right, and Rev. Darryl Gray, hold a press conference, Monday, July 6, 2020, in front of the Florissant Police Station to talk about the 17 people arrested during protests the previous night. Photo by Hillary Levin, hlevin@post-dispatch.com

Nnamdi Ihenacho embraces U.S. House of Representatives candidate Cori Bush after she gave a sidewalk speech on Friday, June 19, 2020, outside St. Louis City Hall during a Juneteenth celebration organized by ExpectUs police reform activists. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Reginald Garth stands by as U.S. House of Representatives candidate Cori Bush gives a speech on Friday, June 19, 2020, outside St. Louis City Hall during a Juneteenth celebration organized by ExpectUs police reform activists. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Protest leader Cori Bush works the bullhorn as marchers gather in The Loop for a rally and march against police brutality on Friday, June 12, 2020. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, former candidate for a U.S. House of Representative and Bernie Sanders supporter, watches the returns on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, at a campaign volunteer watch party at Blueberry Hill in University City. The news had already broke that Sanders lost to fellow Democrat Joseph Biden in Missouri's presidential primary. Photo by Christian, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, former candidate for a U.S. House of Representative and Bernie Sanders supporter, watches the returns on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, at a campaign volunteer watch party at Blueberry Hill in University City. The news had already broke that Sanders lost to fellow Democrat Joseph Biden in Missouri's presidential primary. Photo by Christian, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, left, former candidate for a U.S. House of Representative seat and Bernie Sanders supporter, gets a hug from fellow volunteer Skye Smith on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, at a campaign volunteer watch party at Blueberry Hill in University City. The news had already broke that Sanders lost to fellow Democrat Joseph Biden in Missouri's presidential primary. Bush is running again for the same seat she lost to U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay in 2016.

Photo by Christian, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush sparks up the a crowd before Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. takes the stage at a Sanders campaign rally at the Stifel Theatre on Monday, March 9, 2020, in downtown St. Louis. The Missouri presidential primary is Tuesday, March 10. Bush is a nurse, single mother, ordained pastor and community activist running for US Congress in Missouri's 1st District. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush sparks up the a crowd before Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. takes the stage at a Sanders campaign rally at the Stifel Theatre on Monday, March 9, 2020, in downtown St. Louis. The Missouri presidential primary is Tuesday, March 10. Bush is a nurse, single mother, ordained pastor and community activist running for US Congress in Missouri's 1st District. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. walks on the stage after being introduced by Cori Bush, right, at a campaign rally at the Stifel Theatre on Monday, March 9, 2020, in downtown St. Louis. The Missouri presidential primary is Tuesday, March 10. Bush is a nurse, single mother, ordained pastor and community activist running for US Congress in Missouri's 1st District. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, left, drops paper rose petals around the memorial to Michael Brown on Canfield Drive in Ferguson as she and others members of the community rebuild the memorial on Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2019. Friday is the fifth anniversary of Michael Brown being shot and killed by Ferguson Police officer Darren Wilson on this exact spot. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, left, adds flowers to the memorial for Michael Brown on Canfield Drive in Ferguson as it is rebuilt on Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2019. Friday is the fifth anniversary of Michael Brown being shot and killed by Ferguson Police officer Darren Wilson. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com

Corzell Love, left, looks over the memorial to Michael Brown on Canfield Drive in Ferguson as it is rebuilt on Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2019.Friday is the fifth anniversary of Michael Brown being shot and killed by Ferguson Police officer Darren Wilson. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, center, brings a balloon and stuffed animals as she and others start the process of rebuilding the memorial to Michael Brown on Canfield Drive in Ferguson on Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2019.Friday is the fifth anniversary of Michael Brown being shot and killed by Ferguson Police officer Darren Wilson. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush hits a piata with the words "smash the patriarchy" and "stop rape culture" written on it during a protesters held outside of of Sen. Roy Blunt's office in reaction to the Senate confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, in Clayton, Missouri, on Saturday, Oct. 6, 2018. Photo by Johanna Huckeba, jhuckeba@post-dispatch.com.

Cori Bush is embraced after she hit a piata with the words "smash the patriarchy" and "stop rape culture" written on it during a protesters held outside of of Sen. Roy Blunt's office in reaction to the Senate confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, in Clayton, Missouri, on Saturday, Oct. 6, 2018. Photo by Johanna Huckeba, jhuckeba@post-dispatch.com.

Cori Bush is embraced after she hit a piata with the words "smash the patriarchy" and "stop rape culture" written on it during a protesters held outside of of Sen. Roy Blunt's office in reaction to the Senate confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, in Clayton, Missouri, on Saturday, Oct. 6, 2018. Photo by Johanna Huckeba, jhuckeba@post-dispatch.com.

Community activist and congressional candidate Cori Bush talks about the times she was sexually assaulted on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018, during a protest against the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court at the Clayton office of Sen. Roy Blunt. Bush was making the point that many women have been assaulted and Kavanaugh's accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, should be believed. Bush said it should not be business as usual if Kavanaugh is nominated. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@post-dispatch.com

Community activist Cori Bush talks about the times she was sexually assaulted on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018, during a protest against the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court at the Clayton office of Sen. Roy Blunt. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@post-dispatch.com

St. Louis Alderwoman Megan Green hugs community activist Cori Bush on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018, during a protest against the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court at the Clayton office of Sen. Roy Blunt. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@post-dispatch.com

Community activist Cori Bush talks about the times she was sexually assaulted on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018, during a protest against the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court at the Clayton office of Sen. Roy Blunt. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@post-dispatch.com

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (in purple with clipboard), who gained national attention with her recent defeat of a longtime Democratic U.S. House member in a New York primary race, campaigns with local Congressional candidate Cori Bush (in purple next to Ocasio-Cortez) on Saturday in the 4100 block of Kossuth Avenue in St. Louis. Bush is challenging U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay in the Aug. 7 Democratic primary here. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (left), who gained national notoriety by upsetting a popular Democratic incumbent in her New York Congressional district primary race, speaks to supporters of Cori Bush (right), before walking down a street in a neighborhood near Fairground Park on Saturday, July 21, 2018. Bush is Rep. William Lacy Clay's primary opponent for Missouri's 1st Congressional district. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who gained national notoriety by upsetting a popular Democratic incumbent in her New York Congressional district primary race, campaigns for Cori Bush on Saturday, July 21, 2018, at Sqwires restaurant in St. Louis' Lafayette Square neighborhood. Bush is Rep. William Lacy Clay's primary opponent for Missouri's 1st Congressional district. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

"We don't want police to control and purge," said organizer Cori Bush (left), who was among than three dozen protesters who set up an open phone bank in front the St. Louis police headquarters to make phone calls to residents against Prop P on Thursday, Nov. 2, 2017. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

"We don't want police to control and purge," said organizer Cori Bush (left), who was among than three dozen protesters who set up an open phone bank in front the St. Louis police headquarters to make phone calls to residents against Prop P on Thursday, Nov. 2, 2017. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, a congressional candidate running against Lacy Clay in the democratic primary, addresses about a 1,000 people gathered at Kiener Plaza in St. Louis on Saturday, June 30, 2018 to protest the Trump Administration's policy of family separation and detention. The St. Louis rally was part of the Families Belong Together demonstrations held across the country to protest the Trump Administration?s policy of forcibly separating children from their parents, the detention of families and calling for children to be reunited with their parents now. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com

City leaders, (left to right), St. Louis Treasurer Tishaura Jones, State Rep. Bruce Franks, Jr., Cori Bush, a U.S. congressional candidate for the 1st District of Missouri, St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson, St. Louis Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards, St. Louis Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed and Democratic Committeeman Danny Sample, 24th ward, celebrate a second ribbon cutting for the reopening of renovated museum at the Gateway Arch on Friday, July 6, 2018.

Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

(Left to right), State Rep. Bruce Franks, celebrates a second ribbon cutting on Friday, July 6, 2018, with Farrakhan Shegog, candidate for state representative in Missouri's 86th district, Cori Bush, a U.S. congressional candidate for the 1st District of Missouri, the Rev. Darryl Gray, St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson, St. Louis Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards, St. Louis Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed, and Democratic Committeeman Rasheen Aldridge Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, a U.S. congressional candidate for the 1st District of Missouri, speaks at a ceremony and second ribbon cutting for the reopening of the renovated Gateway Arch museum on Friday, July 6, 2018, Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

(Left to right), State Rep. Bruce Franks, celebrates a ribbon cutting on Friday, July 6, 2018, with Farrakhan Shegog, candidate for state representative in Missouri's 86th district, Cori Bush, a U.S. congressional candidate for the 1st District of Missouri, the Rev. Darryl Gray, St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson, St. Louis Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards, St. Louis Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed, and Democratic Committeeman Rasheen Aldridge Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

From left to right, inside circle of arch, (foreground) Tishaura Jones, City of St. Louis Treasurer, Susan Saarinen, daughter of Arch designer Eero Saarinen, State Representative D 78th Dist, Bruce Franks, Jr., Community Activist and congressional candidate, Cori Bush, and St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson, and City of St Louis Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

Protest leaders Rev. Darryl Gray (center) and Cori Bush joined a group demonstrating outside The Ritz-Carlton in Clayton where Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens was holding a fundraiser on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2017. Clayton police officers were on hand to stop protesters from entering the hotel. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com

Activist Elizabeth Vega (center) is helped by Rasheen Aldridge (left) and Cori Bush as she is released from the Buzz Westfall Justice Center on Sunday, Sept. 24, 2017. Twenty-two people were arrested Saturday during a march through the Galleria. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com

Cori Bush, a Democratic candidate for Missouri's first congressional district, greets supporter Cathy Daniels outside of her campaign headquarters on election night in Northwoods on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. Bush is challenging Democrat Lacy Clay, the first district's representative since 2001. Photo by Chris Kohley, ckohley@post-dispatch.com.

Cori Bush, left, former candidate for a U.S. House of Representative seat and Bernie Sanders supporter, gets a hug from a fellow supporter on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, after giving a morale-boosting speech at a campaign volunteer watch party at Blueberry Hill in University City. The news had already been reported that Sanders lost to fellow Democrat Joseph Biden in Missouri's presidential primary. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com

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Bush shocks Clay in congressional primary: 'We the people have answers' - Cherokee Tribune Ledger News

Elon Musk says Tesla headquarters may still leave California – Los Angeles Times

Despite winning a standoff with local health officials over reopening his factory, Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk is sticking with his threat to move company headquarters to another state.

Theres no question that our headquarters will remain in California for the short term, he said in a recent interview with Automotive News. Long term, well have to wait and see.

He didnt specify what he meant by short term and long term, or what might eventually prompt such a move.

Musks take-his-ball-elsewhere warnings first came in a May 9 tweet, after Alameda County officials ordered him not to reopen Teslas Fremont assembly plant until COVID-19 closure restrictions were lifted. The county had agreed to a May 18 reopen date, not soon enough for Musk.

Musk tweeted hed move the companys headquarters out of California for Texas or Nevada immediately if county health officials did not relent. He said hed think about closing the Fremont plant, too, depending on how Tesla is treated in the future. He reopened the plant a week earlier than the county allowed, and dared the county to arrest him.

Alamedas health officer, Erica Pan, relented, and Tesla resumed operations on May 12. Pan was later appointed state epidemiologist by Gov. Gavin Newsom and sworn in on July 15.

Musks comments came in a three-part report on Automotive News Daily Drive podcast recorded on July 26 and released over several days ending Tuesday.

The interview covered a wide array of topics including Teslas recent choice of Austin, Texas, as the site for a new vehicle manufacturing plant. Other states including Oklahoma were considered. When talking to key members of the team that would need to move to Austin from California in order to get the factory going, Austin was their top pick, Musk said. I guess a lot of people from California, if you ask them whats the one place you would move outside of California, its Austin .... I went to our team and said, Where do you want to spend time? And where would you potentially move? And they were like, Well, Austin is just the No. 1 choice.

Musk is selling his houses in Bel-Air and recently applied for a Texas drivers license.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

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Elon Musk says Tesla headquarters may still leave California - Los Angeles Times

Why Elon Musk Is The Marketer Of The Moment – Forbes

CAPE CANAVERAL, FL - MAY 27: Elon Musk, founder and CEO of SpaceX, participates in a press ... [+] conference at the Kennedy Space Center on May 27, 2020 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley were scheduled to be the first people since the end of the Space Shuttle program in 2011 to be launched into space from the United States, but the launch was postponed due to bad weather. (Photo by Saul Martinez/Getty Images)

For many years, automobiles was the most boring category to cover from a marketing/advertising perspective. Thats partially because there were no new entrants, merely new sub-brands from the big industry players.

But the lack of competition in autos was only one factor. The environment was another. There was a cognitive dissonance between the idea of taking to the road while imperiling the planet. Half-measures like raising mileage and hybrid engines didnt satiate that inner voice that prevented consumers from fully embracing a joyride. For some, there was always that nagging sense of willful obfuscation that meant you werent dealing with life on its own terms.

For decades, it seemed like there was no way around it. There was no alternative to gas engines. Electric cars were a curiosity, not a solution. My father was a car salesman. I remember in the late 1970s he had a demo car that hed plug in to the garage outlet. He didnt think much of them, certainly not as a replacement for gas-powered models.

In the early 2000s, it became clear that battery technology had improved so much that an electric car was plausible. Yet none of the big playersFord, GM, DaimlerChrysler or any of the foreign automakersplanned to make an electric car.

The problem was that electric cars were seen as green and the idea of one going fast and offering thrills for the driver was off the table. It seemed incongruous to market a vehicle that was both green and had strong performance.

But where others saw reasons for despair, Elon Musk saw an opportunity. Electric cars could be quick off the line (0-60 in 2.3 seconds) and look flashy.

Tesla

It worked. In July, Tesla became the largest automaker by market value. Moreover, Tesla owners are free of the worry and expense of gassing up and the guilty feeling of polluting the planet.

Tesla could not have done this without Musk. The former PayPal exec is well-known in tech circles and respected as an autodidact with a range of interests (his other projects include SpaceX, Solar City and Open AI, among others).

But at the moment it seems that getting American consumers to take seriously the idea of electric cars is his greatest accomplishment.

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Why Elon Musk Is The Marketer Of The Moment - Forbes

There’s a Theory That Elon Musk Is Digging a Tunnel Between LA and Vegas – Futurism

Digging a Tunnel

Photos have emerged online of large tents and heavy tunneling machinery belonging to Elon Musks Boring Company in the California desert north east of Los Angeles, as Teslarati reports.

The machinery could suggest that the Boring Company is setting up to dig a tunnel connecting Los Angeles and Las Vegas, but neither the company nor Elon Musk have made an announcement about any such plans.

Teslarati argues the photos suggest a possible tunnel between the two cities, mainly due to the geographical location where the machinery was spotted Adelanto, California, about an hour and a half in the direction to Las Vegas from LA.

The news also comes after the Boring Company made headway in digging a tunnel connecting high-trafficked locations in Las Vegas. Musk recently showed off a concept of what a finished passenger station in the system could look like. The tunnel is scheduled to be done by January 2021.

Officials in charge of the Las Vegas Loop have also mentioned possible future service expansions on their website, with a map showing a conceptual future expansion along the Las Vegas strip. At the bottom, bolstering Tesleratis theory, is a blue arrow indicating that this conceptual expansion could even go to Los Angeles.

Service along these tunnels could operate at speeds of up to 155 mph, according to The Boring Companys website, which could end up making a big dent in the four hour car journey.

Job postings on The Boring Companys website also suggest that the company is looking to fulfill roles at Adelanto, including a machinery operator.

READ MORE: Elon Musk has a secret Boring Company station between LA to Vegas in the works [Teslarati]

More on the Las Vegas tunnel: Elon Musks New Tunnel Render Makes No Sense

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There's a Theory That Elon Musk Is Digging a Tunnel Between LA and Vegas - Futurism

Elon Musk says DeepMind is his ‘top concern’ when it comes to A.I. – CNBC

SpaceX owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk gestures during a conversation at the E3 gaming convention in Los Angeles, June 13, 2019.

Mike Blake | Reuters

Elon Musk believes that London research lab DeepMind is a "top concern" when it comes to artificial intelligence.

DeepMind was acquired by Google in 2014 for a reported $600 million. The research lab, led by chief executive Demis Hassabis, is best-known for developing AI systems that can play games better than any human.

"Just the nature of the AI that they're building is one that crushes all humans at all games," Musk told The New York Times in an interviewpublished on Saturday. "I mean, it's basically the plotline in 'War Games.'"

DeepMind declined to comment when contacted by CNBC.

Musk has repeatedly warned that AI will soon become just as smart as humans and said that when it does we should all be scared because humanity's very existence is at stake.

The tech billionaire, who profited from an early investment in DeepMind, told The New York Times that his experience of working with AI at Tesla means he is able to say with confidence "that we're headed toward a situation where AI is vastly smarter than humans." He said he believes the time frame is less than five years. "That doesn't mean everything goes to hell in five years. It just means that things get unstable or weird," he said.

Musk co-founded the OpenAI research lab in San Francisco in 2015, one year after Google acquired DeepMind. Set up with an initial $1 billion pledge that was later matched by Microsoft, OpenAI says its mission is to ensure AI benefits all of humanity.In February 2018,Musk left the OpenAI boardbut he continues to donate and advise the organization.

DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis at a 2017 event in China.

Source: Alphabet

Musk has been sounding the alarm on AI for years and his views contrast with many AI researchers working in the field. In May, CNBC reported that Musk's relationship with the AI community is complex.

"A large proportion of the community think he's a negative distraction," said an AI executive with close ties to the community who wished to remain anonymous because their company may work for one of Musk's businesses.

Building machines that are just as smart as humans is widely regarded as the holy grail of AI. But some, including Musk, are concerned that machines will go on to quickly outsmart humans when human-level AI is achieved.

Last October, AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio told the BBC: "We are very far from super-intelligent AI systems and there may even be fundamental obstacles to get much beyond human intelligence."

At the Beneficial AI conference in 2017, Musk and Hassabis sat on a panelalongside Oxford professor and Superintelligence author Nick Bostrom; Skype cofounder Jaan Tallinn; Google engineering director Ray Kurzweil; Berkeley University computer scientist Stuart Russell; and several others.

At the start of the panel titled "Superintelligence: Science or Fiction?" everyone agreed that some form of superintelligence is possible, except Musk. However, he appeared to be joking.Asked whether it will actually happen, everyone said "yes". When asked if they would like superintelligence to happen, Hassabis said "yes" while others gave a more nuanced "it's complicated."

In 2016, Bostrom said he believed DeepMind is winning the global AI race. Asked about the matter again earlier this year, Bostrom told CNBC: "They certainly have a world-class, very excellent, large and diverse research team. But it's a big field so there are a number of really exciting groups doing important work."

AI consultant Catherine Breslin, who used to work on Alexa at Amazon, told CNBC: "There's an idea that's popular, of raising concerns about AI by imagining a future where it becomes powerful enough to oppress all of humanity. But, projecting into an imagined future distracts from how technology is used right now. AI has done some amazing things in recent years."

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Elon Musk says DeepMind is his 'top concern' when it comes to A.I. - CNBC

Bill Gates on Elon Musks controversial coronavirus comments: Stick with electric cars and rockets – MarketWatch

Elons positioning is to maintain a high level of outrageous comments, Hes not much involved in vaccines. He makes a great electric car. And his rockets work well. So hes allowed to say these things. I hope that he doesnt confuse areas hes not involved in too much.

Thats Microsoft MSFT, -1.50% co-founder Bill Gates explaining to CNBC why Tesla TSLA, +0.13% boss Elon Musk should perhaps focus on his job and let the experts focus on theirs.

Musk has courted controversy ever since the coronavirus first broke out across the U.S., having suggested deaths have been overcounted and lockdowns were unnecessary. He also called Californias approach to combatting coronavirus fascist and drew an F-bomb from a politician.

Gates pointed out that facts travel slowly across social media compared with misinformation, which poses a challenge to Facebook FB, -0.84% and Twitter TWTR, -0.11% .

When you let people communicate, you have to deal with the fact that certain incorrect things that are very titillating can spread very rapidly compared to the truth. And weve always seen that with vaccines, Gates, whos been the subject of conspiracy theories, told CNBC. To the degree to which these media companies can see whats being said on their platform and take things that are absolutely wrong and get rid of those things or slow those things down, thats very tough.

Heres a clip from the interview:

Meanwhile, the number of U.S. cases rose to 4.29 million and the death toll hit 148,056. Texas became the fourth state with more than 400,000 cases, joining California, Florida and New York. The global tally for confirmed cases of COVID-19 climbed to 16.5 million on Tuesday, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University, while the death toll rose to 654,327.

However, Gates offered up an optimistic take in the interview.

You can see the therapeutic benefit faster than the protective benefit, he said So I think theres a good chance well have substantial death-rate reduction by the end of the year.

He did, however, admit hes worried the public is concerned about the safety of the first vaccine.

Hopefully theyll look to the facts, understand the values of the people that theyre thinking about and understand that were in this together and we need to protect each other with masks and eventually probably with herd immunity with a vaccine, he said

As for the stock market on Tuesday, Tesla shares opened lower, as the Dow DJIA, +0.61% , S&P SPX, +0.36% and Nasdaq COMP, +0.35% all drifted into the red.

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Bill Gates on Elon Musks controversial coronavirus comments: Stick with electric cars and rockets - MarketWatch

India and Elon Musk show Asia the way in discount race to Mars – Nikkei Asian Review

Andrew North has reported widelyfromacross India,Pakistan, Afghanistan and central Asia, and is a regular commentator on Asian affairs.

For the first time, Arabic was the countdown language when a Japanese rocket blasted off on July 20 carrying a probe built by the United Arab Emirates toward Mars. China was close behind with its own Mars rocket loaded with a surface rover and an orbiter. NASA capped off the month with the launch of its most ambitious Mars mission yet.

One reason why it has been such a busy month for Mars missions is that the red planet's orbit has brought it much closer to Earth right now, so everyone is taking advantage of the shorter journey time. The bigger driver behind the rush to Mars is that joining the space race has never been so affordable. No longer an elite superpowers' club, the UAE's Mars mission cost the ultrarich oil state only $200 million, well within the means of many countries.

With six probes already orbiting Mars and sending back data -- variously belonging to Russia, the U.S., the European Space Agency and India -- the scientific merits of so many Mars ventures is questionable. Still, the prestige value for the UAE is incalculable -- both at home and abroad. While the UAE had some help from the U.S., its Hopeprobe was built by Emirati scientists inside the UAE, with the hopethat it will inspire more homegrown technological enterprise. And even though the spacecraft is not due to reach Mars until February 2021, the Emiratis are basking in their newly-won status as the Arab world's space leader. Watch for even more countries to follow their example.

Elon Musk, of Tesla and SpaceX fame, has been one of the pioneers in opening up the space club, starting with renting rocket space to launch satellites at cheaper rates than many governments could offer. This May, SpaceX became the first private corporation to send humans into space, costing around $55 million per astronaut, compared to the average $1.7 billion cost of NASA's space shuttle launches. Among governments, it is India that has done most to show you can do space on a budget. Its most notable success was its own Mars mission, launched seven years ago for $73 million, less than half the cost of the UAE project. This month, its Mangalyaan probe was still sending back data and photographs.

Then, too, there were questions as to the project's scientific value, and about the government's spending priorities, given the number of Indians living in poverty. I witnessed the launch from India's coastal space center in November 2013. Its space scientists testily rejected suggestions from Indian reporters that beating archrival China to the red planet was a motive -- saying that the probe would be searching for key gases in the Martian atmosphere that could support human life.

But it wasn't lost on anyone that China's first attempt to reach Mars had failed only the year before. And there was nationwide celebration at what one Indian media outlet called the "symbolic coup" of beating China and Japan to the red planet.

With the recent spike in India-China tensions, this jockeying over space achievement has intensified. "We are all wishing very bad luck to the (sic) China in this expedition," said one Indian-flagged post under a Chinese media announcement of its July 23 Mars launch. Indian online trolls also did their best to disrupt the celebratory mood on CGTN, China's international television network, deluging its launch coverage with vitriol.

Chinese viewers hit back, calling India "the world's No. 1 poverty superpower." Indians had a put-down for that too, with repeated posts of this line: "Even with no toilets and food, India still beat China." The UAE's wealthy rulers also attracted plenty of online abuse for their own Mars mission. If China does succeed in putting its rover down on Mars early next year, it will vault ahead. For the moment, this remains a one-country club of the United States. Landing and exploring the planet is both harder and pricier. The budget for NASA's Perseverance Mars mission is $2.7 billion. China has not revealed the cost of its Martian bid.

But this exclusive club is likely to be forced open too. Musk wants to send "1 million people to Mars" by 2050, along with a plan to create jobs there. Amazon's Jeff Bezos is projecting a series of floating colonies in space.

The United Arab Emirates also says it is looking to build a city on Mars, by 2117. And with the COVID-19 pandemic making the threat of global civilizational meltdown seem more real, it could act as further fuel for a new era of space exploration. The road to Mars could yet become a space highway.

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India and Elon Musk show Asia the way in discount race to Mars - Nikkei Asian Review

UAE space sector launches mission to find next Elon Musk with millions in funding – The National

The UAE is on a hunt to find its own Elon Musk with a new programme that aims to transform space project ideas into business start-ups.

Four teams have been chosen to be part of the UAE NewSpace Innovation Programme, run by the UAE Space Agency and start-up incubator Krypto Labs.

The three-month-long project is worth Dh2million and is currently in the incubation phase, where the teams are connected to mentors, investors, customers and potential partners from space and related fields.

For decades, space activities have been government-run, but private firms are making their mark with ground-breaking technologies and ideas. Recently, billionaire Elon Musks SpaceX became the first private company to launch human spaceflights.

The programmes participants spoke to The National about how they think they could transform the Emirates space sector.

To help improve the quality of satellite performance, Canadian-national Zaid Al Rayyes, 24, has invented sensors that send and receive noise-free signals.

Firms currently use standard sensors in satellites, such as inertial measurement units and microelectromechanical systems, that produce noisy data and is worsened by interference from magnetic disturbances in space. The data is then filtered by engineers on the ground using a software a method that is costly and time-consuming.

We are reinventing the sensors used in satellites by combining concepts in chemistry with machine dynamics, said Mr Al Rayyes, a mechanical engineer.

Were aiming to be the UAEs first producers of satellite sensors and with this achievement the UAE space sector will expand its industrial reach.

When we think of pioneering companies like SpaceX we automatically think of Elon Musk. Innovation starts with the entrepreneur behind the product, so the next success story in the UAE will also begin with the people creating the technology.

Emirati engineer Hamad Saif Alteneiji, 47, has invented solar panels that he said will cost half the price of existing technology and are easier to develop.

His solar panels generate energy from the sun by using a method called the Light Trapping Dynamic Photovoltaic Module.

The light trapping is achieved by incorporating solar reflector strips within module glasses. Their function is to trap sun light inside photovoltaic module glasses and creates internal light concentration. This leads to reduction on the expensive solar cells quantity up to 50 per cent, hence, reducing the overall cost by up to 40 per cent, said Mr Alteneiji, who works as a manager at Sharjah Electricity and Water Authority.

Today, solar panels can cost Dh1,000-1,500 per watt. For example, the Hope probe uses 1,800 watts from two solar panels.

The technology has a dynamic response feature, which includes internal cells that protect the solar panels from any internal or external impacts. There is also a passive heat dissipation system that uses metallic solar reflective strips to convert internal waste heat into usable energy ultimately extending the lifespan of a spacecraft.

The start-up space industry is becoming an important source of innovation for the government. Governments have an opportunity to leverage emerging start-up space companies to do more while spending less, he said.

Mustafa Alhashmi launched a start-up, called Smart Navigation Systems, in 2015 that is run by Emirati engineers.

The company is part of Abu Dhabi's Hub71 incentive programme and it has now become part of the UAE NewSpace Innovation project.

Mr Alhashmi said his firm offers remote-sensing services using artificial intelligence.

Our main products developed locally are based on spatial data, providing applications that serve the local community and are directed to federal and local authorities in general, he said.

Regional municipalities, educational and environmental sectors benefit from our services, increasing people's convenience and security.

He said his remote-sensing technology can offer satellite imagery that can be used by authorities for disaster mitigation planning and recovery, coastal change detection, building permit verification, measuring post Covid-19 impact, among others.

As of now, authorities use images provided by government satellites DubaiSat-1 and 2 and KhalifaSat for such services.

Another team is offering a group of mini Earth-observation satellites that will continuously gather data on the Middle East and Northern Africa region.

It will use a Synthetic Aperture Radar, a technology that offers a 2 or 3-D version of satellite images. The product is useful for municipalities for urban planning.

CubeSats - micro-satellites the size of a box - are gaining popularity in the UAE, especially among university students, who are building and launching them with the help of the space agency.

The devices are much cheaper than conventional satellites and sit in low orbit.

Updated: August 4, 2020 09:27 AM

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UAE space sector launches mission to find next Elon Musk with millions in funding - The National

Elon Musk and Tom Cruise now have a studio backing their space movie, report says – CNET

Doing stunts in a helicopter won't be enough training for this gig.

Backing from Elon Musk helped Tom Cruise secure a roughly $200 million commitment from Universal Pictures for the first feature-length movie shot, at least in part, in space.

That's according to a report in Deadline Friday. Musk and SpaceX didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

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We've previously known that Musk and his rocket company could be involved in the project, as NASA confirmed it was working with Mission Impossible star Cruise on a plan to film aboard the International Space Station.

News that a major studio has committed to the project, even before a script has been written, makes it seem like a little more than just pie in the... uh, space?

We don't know the extent of Musk's partnership, but kicking in some free flights to the ISS aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon in exchange for a stake or just some epic product placement could save the production millions.

SpaceX made history in May when it successfully sent NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken to the ISS aboard a commercial craft for the first time. The duo are set to return in the Crew Dragon and splashdown in the ocean on Sunday.

Musk has often repeated the mantra that "space is hard," and he and Cruise are likely to find out that filmmaking in space is even harder. We'll certainly still look forward to seeing whatever the finished product is.

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What will happen when Tesla hits the S&P 500 – The Australian Financial Review

Theres no template to follow for Vanguards two dozen US traders plus a team of analysts who work on keeping transaction costs down when it comes to efficiently handling a stock as big and volatile as Tesla. Nor is it easy to predict the ripple effects in the overall market.

A shift in the index composition could be announced any time. The addition theoretically could happen along with the departures of E*Trade Financial or Tiffany & Co, which are being acquired, or as part of a routine quarterly rebalancing in September.

Index funds may get as few as a couple days notice of the switch. So they need to decide if they should start buying before the addition, the day the stock is added, or afterwards. Picking which approach is not as simple as it sounds. While Teslas stock may be bid up by traders trying to take advantage of demand from indexers, other investors may treat it as what OReilly calls a super liquidity event. That is, longtime Tesla shareholders who are looking to trim positions may try to get out when they know index funds have to buy.

The two kinds of investors could cancel each other out. There are all sorts of crosscurrents, OReilly says. He says hes confident Vanguard will be able to handle the switch without a big tracking error that is, a dislocation between the performance of the index and the funds that follow it.

Like many things about Tesla chief executive Elon Musk, his companys path into the S&P 500 is unconventional, which explains how Tesla became the gorilla in the room for the index fund crowd. Investors simply believed in the Tesla story enough to bid the share price into the stratosphere despite a record dotted with more quarterly losses than profits.

The S&P 500 is weighted by market capitalisation and the most highly valued companies take up the largest share of the index. If that were the only standard, Tesla would have qualified a while ago. The threshold to be added is a market value of a little more than $US8 billion.

The committee that decides the membership of the S&P 500 is keeping mum about when or even if it plans to add Tesla.

Companies who meet the eligibility requirements are not automatically added to the index, an S&P Dow Jones Indices spokesman said in an emailed statement. They join a pool of other eligible candidates and are considered for inclusion when an opportunity presents itself, at which point the index committee takes several factors into account, such as sector balance and size representation.

When figuring out how to weight companies in the index, the S&P adjusts their value to reflect the number of shares available for trading. Using that standard, Tesla would probably be the 17th-largest company in the S&P 500 if it were included now, with an index weight of about 0.8 per cent between PayPal Holdings and Pfizer.

One of the largest additions to the benchmark in recent history occurred a decade ago with Warren Buffetts Berkshire Hathaway, which at the time had an adjusted market value of $127 billion, far less than Teslas today. But it represented a bigger weight in the index then.

While indexers strategise about how to handle this shake-up to the passive investment world, traders with a more active approach will try to figure out how to profit from price swings created by the potential announcement. The trade would basically be; buy Tesla, sell everything else, and youd start to see that in the market, says Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers.

Still, its possible that expectation is priced into Teslas shares after a gain of as much as 293 per cent this year. A working paper posted by the National Bureau of Economic Research in July found that stock pops linked to the announcement of index inclusion have gone away, and the lasting effect on price in recent years has been downwards.

Since Tesla reported earnings, its shares have fallen 6.6 per cent. Firms included in the index perform extremely well in the year before they are included in the index, says Ren Stulz, a professor at Ohio State University and one of the papers authors. Our results would also imply that getting into the index would not lead to another boost in Teslas stock price.

Bloomberg Businessweek

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What will happen when Tesla hits the S&P 500 - The Australian Financial Review

Ascension Public Schools disinfecting all campuses ahead of new school year – WBRZ

ASCENSION PARISH Teachers and staff in Ascension are getting ready to get back into the classroom.

They'll be returning next week to prepare for the upcoming school year, which starts on Aug. 10. But before that can happen, all of the buildings are getting a deep clean to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

This company we've used actually for several years. We first engaged them in our high school locker rooms to try to help reduce staff infections for our high school athletes, Public Information Officer for Ascension Public Schools Jackie Tisdale said. "We found that this product really really worked for us."

For the very important task of keeping schools clean amid the pandemic, Tisdale says they turn to a company called DIS.IN.FX.

We expanded it to our pre-k kids, and we saw a drastic reduction in student illnesses once we started using this, Tisdale said.

Last year was the first year every school was disinfected, and this year will be the same.

According to DIS.IN.FX, the solution they use to spray down every table, chair and water fountain is a razor antimicrobial coating. It kills 99.9 percent of germs when wet, and leaves a film that prevents microorganisms to grow on surfaces.

It protects the surfaces for up to three months, Tisdale said. They come in every single month, and they actually take swabs and they test to see if the product is still working. If it shows signs of it not working, they come back and re-treat the entire school."

The disinfecting happened back in March when schools closed, again in May and now right before students are expected back on Aug. 10.

"We really think this extra disinfectant safety measure is going to help us combat the spread of any illness in the schools, Tisdale said.

All campus will be disinfected every three months during the school year. Surfaces will also be wiped down on a regular basis.

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Ascension Public Schools disinfecting all campuses ahead of new school year - WBRZ

195 Acres Rezoned Along Latson Road In Genoa Township – WHMI

By Jessica Mathews / news@whmi.com

A large rezoning has been approved for 195-acres off Latson Road, south of the I-96 interchange in Genoa Township.

The township board met Monday night and unanimously approved a rezoning ordinance, planned unit development agreement, environmental impact assessment and conceptual PUD plan. Treasurer Robin Hunt was absent. The rezoning was from country estates to interchange campus PUD and interchange commercial PUD. The applicant was Todd Wyett of Versa Development. The area west of Latson Road is intended for high-tech or light industrial use. The area east of Latson Road is intended for supportive commercial use. An application for rezoning states there is demand for different types of uses on the site and noted that having such a large land areas under single ownership sat a newly constructed interchange to I-96 presents a unique opportunity. The proposed design guidelines of the PUD also place certain restrictions on lighting and buffers between adjacent uses.

Supervisor Bill Rogers says the rezoning is consistent with the township master plan and can accommodate a number of different uses, especially considering the freeway proximity. Rogers tells WHMI theyre excited about the opportunity to potentially attract new businesses and get more people employed closer to home, which will be a big benefit.

With the rezoning, Rogers says there is the potential for multiple types of things there that couldnt be developed in the past but now totally fit in the overall scheme of things especially something like a large office building or a packing facility similar to UPS. He says theyve allowed for flexibility yet also added constraints for aesthetics and other things so there can be some amenities and attractions, especially with the expressway, and attract large businesses that need that kind of access. Rogers says the primary acreage is geared toward large commercial and could be set up to house something like a Ford, Amazon or Apple facility that involves office space and light production such as shipping but nothing industrial. As for potential building heights, Rogers says theyre anticipating three or four stories, comparable to the newer Ascension Medical Center.

Rogers said theyve been working on this for more than two years and commended staff and everyone involved. He noted there arent any specific projects tied to the rezoning that hes aware of but everyone has been working toward this for two years and getting that flexibility to attract people. He said it is right by the freeway and not interfering with neighborhoods and while he doesnt know what Wyett has planned, he hopes some things are in the works to move to Genoa Township and create jobs. Rogers noted another big benefit tied to the rezoning is that the area will be served by public utilities, meaning surrounding properties and residents can tap into water and sewer. He says Wyett paid for all of that internal work and getting the utilities across the road, which can be extended and those who desire can tap in.

A public hearing was held and one resident who lives next to the property raised some concerns about buffers, building heights and LED signage. Wyett attended the meeting by video call and didnt discuss the project but at the end instructed the board to provide his contact information to the resident.

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195 Acres Rezoned Along Latson Road In Genoa Township - WHMI

Will Karofsky Rebalance the WI Supreme Court? – Urban Milwaukee

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Wisconsin Supreme Court. Photo by Dave Reid.

A new justice joined the Wisconsin Supreme Court over the weekend, and experts are watching closely to see how partisan dynamics on the states highest court may shift just as its poised to rule on several high-profile cases.

When liberalJustice Jill Karofsky was sworn into the court over the weekend, its partisan makeup shifted from a 5-2 conservative majority to 4-3.

Some have pointed out that thenarrower conservative majority means better odds for liberal rulings from the court, because only one conservative would now need to defect from his or her colleagues to swing an opinion.

Alan Ball, a professor of history at Marquette University who runs SCOWstats, a blog that tracks and analyzes the courts decisions, said its possible conservative justices will show more of what he calls bloc cohesion in their coming term.

In an April analysis for SCOWstats, Ball found justices Rebecca Bradley and Brian Hagedorn were more likely than other conservative justices to break from their ideological colleagues in the past court term.

Ball found longtime conservative justices Patience Roggensack and Annette Ziegler ruled the same way on 96 percent of cases, but Bradley only agreed with Roggensack 67 percent of the time and Ziegler 60 percent. Hagedorn agreed even less oftenonly 64 percent of the timewith Roggensack and 55 percent with Ziegler.

Brian Hagedorn seems to be the least predictable,Ball said in an interview. Hes the one that seems most likely to go his own waythe one (who is), to put it another way, most difficult for conservatives to keep in the fold.

Notably, Hagedorn broke from his fellow conservatives inthe courts ruling on the Evers administrations safer-at-home order in May.

Douglas Hoffer, an Eau Claire attorney who closely follows the court and writes about it onSCOWISblog, agreed with Ball.

I think it is likely there will be less split decisions (in the coming term),Hoffer said.

Hoffernoted there have been a number of complicated rulings from the court recently, includingone issued in July about the governors veto powers.In that case, a majority of justices agreed on an outcome, but not why they reached it. He said thatkind of fractured ruling leads to confusion.

The newly restructured court is already poised to hear at least one high-profile case. It is set to hear arguments in the coming months in a challengebrought by a conservative advocacy group against the Wisconsin Elections Commission that could remove up to 129,000 votersfrom the states voter rolls. The court agreed to take the case in Junebut said it will not hear oral arguments before Sept. 29.

Any legal challenge to Gov. Tony Evers new statewide mask mandate would go before the court as well. Some speculate Evers timed his order to align with Karofksys ascension to the court and its new partisan balance, but he rebuffs the claim.

There is also possibility that the court could take up a legal challenge to Wisconsins next set of legislative district maps, which are scheduled to be drawn next year.

Experts: Slimmer Conservative Majority On Wisconsin Supreme Court Could Unite Justices was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.

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Haynes: Beatles peace and love truly found in Jesus – Amarillo.com

On July 7 this year, Ringo Starr hosted an online music show to highlight his 80th birthday.

(Ill give my fellow baby-boomers a few seconds here to get over the fact that one of the Beatles has turned 80. OK, while were at it, know that Paul McCartney is 78, John Lennon would have been 79 and the baby, George Harrison, would have been 77 this year.)

Paul and Ringo, the surviving Fab Two, still are going strong as solo performers, and during Ringos birthday celebration, he flashed the "Peace" hand sign and ended the show saying his now-trademark, "Peace and Love."

I couldnt help thinking of Ringo when I heard the July 19 sermon by one of our pastors. Discussing Jesus promise of the Holy Spirit to believers, he quoted John 14:27: "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid."

The pastor continued, and Im paraphrasing, that in our chaotic 2020 world and throughout history, people have sought peace but often dont look for it in the person who IS peace: Jesus Christ, who is God and the Prince of Peace.

My thoughts jumped to the Bibles statements that not only is God peace, but God is love, too. "Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love." (I John 4:8) "And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them." (I John 4:16)

Peace and love. Those are wonderful concepts to strive for. And I wonder exactly what Ringo means when he repeats the words and asks people to say them at noon every year on his birthday.

I like Ringo. He seems to have been the Beatle who was most agreeable most of the time when the others were squabbling. And Im sure he sincerely wants peace in the world and wants love to spread.

Im not sure, though, whether true peace and love can take root without the spirit who created them in the first place.

Our pastor pointed out that often, people try to maneuver their surroundings to produce peace in society, hoping that in turn, individuals will have peace within. He said thats backward. The biblical model is that peace within a person will radiate out to create peace in that persons environment. And that idea involves the Holy Spirit.

The pastor said that to have peace within, a person has to invite Jesus into his or her heart, which is the equivalent of having the Holy Spirit inside. That Christian definition of peace is appealing, especially this year when it seems no one can gain control of the division and hatred that spiral around us.

I would be stretching it to say the Beatles music is Christian, but much of it expresses a yearning for something better a yearning that writer C.S. Lewis believed was hard-wired into all of us by the creator of the universe. Lewis said the only true attainment of our deepest desires, of which peace and love are among the most important, is in another world, the one where Jesus promised he has prepared a place for us.

George Harrison was influenced by Eastern religions, but his song, "Within You Without You" reflects what our pastor said about the Holy Spirit. His "My Sweet Lord" has been used in Christian contexts. Paul McCartney sang for "Peace in the Neighborhood." Some of the Beatles most familiar music prods us toward compassion. "The love you take is equal to the love you make" is another way of stating the Golden Rule.

Another pastor, my cousin, says "All You Need Is Love" pretty well sums up his preaching during the past 25 years.

I havent heard Ringo expand on the meaning of his "Peace and Love" mantra, but I appreciate his intentions. And I dont know what would happen to our world if Christians everywhere let peace surge from their hearts.

But lets give it a chance.

Mike Haynes taught journalism at Amarillo College from 1991 to 2016. He can be reached at haynescolumn@gmail.com. Go to http://www.haynescolumn.blogspot.com for other recent columns.

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