Researchers uncover how cells interact with supporting proteins to heal wounds | The Source – Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

When we get a wound on our skin, the cells in our bodies quickly mobilize to repair it. While it has been known how cells heal wounds and how scars form, a team led by researchers from Washington University in St. Louis has determined for the first time how the process begins, which may provide new insight into wound healing, fibrosis and cancer metastasis.

The team, led by Delaram Shakiba, a postdoctoral fellow from the NSF Science and Technology Center for Engineering Mechanobiology (CEMB) at the McKelvey School of Engineering, discovered the way fibroblasts, or common cells in connective tissue, interact with the extracellular matrix, which provides structural support as well as biochemical and biomechanical cues to cells. The team uncovered a recursive process that goes on between the cells and their environment as well as structures in the cells that were previously unknown.

Results of the research were published in ACS Nano on July 28. Senior authors on the paper are Guy Genin, the Harold and Kathleen Faught Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering, and Elliot Elson, professor emeritus of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at the School of Medicine.

Clinical efforts to prevent the progression of fibrocontractile diseases, such as scarring and fibrosis, have been largely unsuccessful, in part because the mechanisms that cells use to interact with the protein fibers around them are unclear, Shakiba said. We found that fibroblasts use completely different mechanisms in the early and I think the most treatable stages of these interactions, and that their responses to drugs can therefore be the opposite of what they would be in the later stages.

Genin, who is the co-director of the CEMB, said the process has stymied mechanobiology researchers for some time.

Researchers in the field of mechanobiology thought that cells pulled in collagen from the extracellular matrix by reaching out with long protrusions, grabbing it and pulling it back, Genin said. We discovered that this wasnt the case. A cell has to push its way out through collagen first, then instead of grabbing on, it essentially shoots tiny hairs, or filopodia, out of the sides of its arms, pulls in collagen that way, then retracts.

Now that they understand this process, Genin said, they can control the shape that a cell takes.

With our colleagues at CEMB at the University of Pennsylvania, we were able to validate some mathematical models to go through the engineering process, and we now have the basic rules that cells follow, he said. We can now begin to design specific stimuli to direct a cell to behave in a certain way in building a tissue-engineered structure.

The researchers learned they could control the cell shape in two ways: First, by controlling the boundaries around it, and second, by inhibiting or upregulating particular proteins involved in the remodeling of the collagen.

Fibroblasts pull the edges of a wound together, causing it to contract or close up. Collagen in the cells then remodels the extracellular matrix to fully close the wound. This is where mechanobiology comes into play.

Theres a balance between tension and compression inside a cell that is newly exposed to fibrous proteins, Genin said. There is tension in actin cables, and by playing with that balance, we can make these protrusions grow extremely long, Genin said. We can stop the remodeling from occurring or we can increase it.

The team used a 3D-mapping technique the first time it has been applied to collagen along with a computational model to calculate the 3D strain and stress fields created by the protrusions from the cells. As cells accumulated collagen, tension-driven remodeling and alignment of collagen fibers led to the formation of collagen tracts. This requires cooperative interactions among cells, through which cells can interact mechanically.

New methods of microscopy, tissue engineering and biomechanical modeling greatly enhance our understanding of the mechanisms by which cells modify and repair the tissues they populate, Elson said. Fibrous cellular structures generate and guide forces that compress and reorient their extracellular fibrous environment. This raises new questions about the molecular mechanisms of these functions and how cells regulate the forces they exert and how they govern the extent of matrix deformation.

Wound healing is a great example of how these processes are important in a physiologic way, Genin said. Well be able to come up with insight in how to train cells not to excessively compact the collagen around them.

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Researchers uncover how cells interact with supporting proteins to heal wounds | The Source - Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

Not all face masks are created equal 7 things to consider to protect yourself – CNA

SINGAPORE: Surgical masks are one of the most sought-after items in the world now.

Even with ST Engineering producing surgical masks here since February after a foreign supplier could not fulfil its contractual obligations to Singapore these are available only to front-line healthcare workers.

But there are alternatives out there. In the past few months, many people, from scientists to tailors, have tried to develop face masks that are both comfortable and safe.

Not all masks, however, are created equal. There are disposable three-layer masks, carbon filter masks, silicone gill masks, and even masks made of copper or nano-silver, said to kill viruses and bacteria.

With so many masks on the market, ranging in price from about 40 cents to S$76, this raises the question of how effective they each are.

The programme Talking Point finds out what science says about various masks and seven things people should consider to protect themselves. (Watch the episode here.)

1. DISPOSABLE MASKS MAY NOT BE MEDICAL-GRADE

Although there are many disposable masks, and some are labelled surgical masks, not all conform to international standards, said Gareth Tang, senior vice-president of technology and head of Innosparks at ST Engineering.

Tang, who led the setting up of its surgical mask production line in just two weeks, said the company has stringent, end-to-end quality control to ensure that its surgical masks are medical-grade.

This includes testing how breathable the masks are and how efficient the layers of filtration are.

The bacterial filtration efficiency of a surgical mask must be above 95 per cent, and it must be resistant to the penetration of bodily fluids, according to the Health Sciences Authority.

So the efficiency reading of 98 per cent for ST Engineering's mask material marks a level that blocks 98 per cent of bacteria and viruses, and that includes the COVID-19 virus, through the mask, Tang noted.

The company is now working on making its masks more widely available, he said. We hope to bring this mask to the general public in the near term.

2. COPPER AND SILVER CAN KILL BACTERIA

The most expensive masks are those containing copper or silver.

In ancient times, the Egyptians used these metals to treat wounds, noted Lam Yeng Ming, professor and chair of materials science and engineering at Nanyang Technological University. So copper and silver have been shown to kill bacteria.

Theyre effective in some circumstances, she said. That includes viruses, provided the copper or silver ions interact with the virus. For example, when a virus lands on a copper surface, the metals ions attack and kill the cells.

But this process takes time, anywhere from 30 minutes to a day. Another problem is that some face masks with copper woven into the fabric have spaces between the copper fibres.

Between these lines, you can fit quite a lot of the virus, she said. If this spacing is hundreds of microns, essentially it cant filter out (viruses).

A nano-silver mask Talking Point sent to her to examine, however, was found to be fully coated with the metal, so the virus should come into contact with these silver surfaces.

While nano-silver and copper have shown to be effective against different viruses, she said tests specific to the virus that causes COVID-19 are key.

That has to be conclusive. There are some studies being done, but I think more studies need to be done, she added.

WATCH: Reusable or surgical which is the right mask for you? (22:25)

3. STUDIES LACKING ON CARBON FILTER MASKS TOO

Some manufacturers claim that masks with a carbon filter are effective in filtering out bacteria and viruses.

Carbon filters are widely used in air purifiers to absorb and capture smoke and other gaseous pollutants but they are not any more effective than other masks when it comes to the coronavirus.

A carbon filter mask is effective (against) air pollutants, but for bacteria and for viruses, there definitely havent been many studies to show its effectiveness, said Lam.

4. DO HOME-MADE MASKS WORK?

The second government-issued reusable mask has antibacterial properties. But like some people, Chrissandra Chong finds that it sticks too closely to my face for me to breathe easily.

The freelance branding consultant sews her own masks with adjustable ear loops to cater for different face shapes and designed to be more breathable.

She has made more than 200 masks since February, and volunteers for Masks Sewn with Love, a grassroots initiative that has provided over 100,000 masks for vulnerable groups.

But are do-it-yourself masks good enough?

According to the World Health Organisation, the ideal fabric mask shouldhave at least three layers: An innermost layer of absorbent material like cotton and two other layers made of water-resistant material such as polypropylene.

5. AIRTIGHT MASKS CAN CAUSE SKIN IRRITATION

The mask that resembles the N95 respirator is called a gill mask, made from soft silicone material. It creates a seal on ones face.

But because it can offer relatively airtight protection, using this mask can lead to skin irritation, said Eileen Tan, a dermatologist who runs her own practice, Eileen Tan Skin Clinic and Associates.

It may not be suitable for everyday use or for people with sensitive skin, she added.

6. HOW YOU CAN TAKE CARE OF YOUR SKIN

Tan has seen a 15 to 20 per cent increase in the number of patientsseeking help for mask-related skin problems.

One can get skin inflammation, for example, from the build-up of moisture, heat and increase in sebum production, which can lead to clogged pores, she said.

She recommends changing ones mask every four to six hours if you can afford to, and taking mask breaks of about 15 to 30 minutes to allow your skin to rest.

Consider things like a cloth mask, which is a more breathable kind of fabric (and) more comfortable, she added.

7. KEEP GOOD MASK-WEARING HABITS

Senior consultant Kalisvar Marimuthu from the National Centre for Infectious Diseases uses five reusable masks each week.

It is important, he said, to wash ones mask every day, as that removes not only viruses, but also saliva stains and dust particles on the mask.

He also advises against touching the front of the mask when removing it, as the chances are people would touch their nose or mouth after that.

Watch this episode of Talking Point here. New episodes on Channel 5 every Thursday at 9.30pm.

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Not all face masks are created equal 7 things to consider to protect yourself - CNA

Virtual field trips, digital labs and global colleagues: U of T students to explore the world this fall – News@UofT

To take one existing example: More than 2,000 students a year enrol in Planet Earth, an online introductory course in geology taught by ProfessorNicholas Eylesof the department of physical and environmental sciences at U of T Scarborough.

They can go back and re-watch if theres anything they dont understand, and I have a lot of anecdotal evidence that the whole family gets involved, says Eyles, who explores new field areas on an orange BMW motorbike that he nicknamed the Pumpkin.

Nicholas Eyles, a professor at U of T Scarborough, teaches a popularonline introductory course in geology, featuring 3D virtual tours, that draws some 2,000 students each year(photo by Ken Jones)

An example of Eyless online course material from a module that looks at the urbanization of southern Ontario(deck courtesy of Planet Earth Online)

Yet, even if online learning at U of T is far from new, the scale and variety of approaches being developed at U of T for this fall is without precedent. And the desire to keep everyone in the U of T community safe, while delivering an engaging educational experience of the high quality for which U of T is globally renowned, is fueling creativity and innovation across all three campuses.

In the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, for example,Dawn Kilkennywill adopt a hybrid model to teach a third-year biomedical engineering course this fall. That includes in-person office hours, bite-size online lectures and virtual labs.

The lab simulations, made by the Denmark-based startupLabster, allow students to move around a digital lab space and carry out experiments.

It reminds students of the background theory as they go along and thats one of the benefits of the virtual simulation, says Kilkenny, an associate professor, teaching stream, in the Institute of Biomedical Engineering. A lot of [the simulations] bring up the biology on the micro-scale or the nano-scale, so they will intermittently show students whats happening on that small level.

It allows you to visualize what you normally cant see.

Dawn Kilkenny, an associate professor in the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, says virtual labs offer students additional context and background about the experiments they are pursuing(photo by Luke Ng)

The digital labs are also in use at other universities around the world, including Stanford University, Harvard University and MIT.

While Kilkenny already used the virtual labs in her pre-pandemic courses, she says she plans to rely on them even more heavily next semester.This has given us a push to examine digital tools that can enhance our courses, she says.

ForJoseph Wong, a professor in the department of political science and the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy in the Faculty of Arts & Science, the move to a digital space created an opportunity to foster closer ties between U of T students and university students in another country all while working together on projects related to COVID-19.

Students in his Munk One seminar, for example, will partner with students taking a public policy course at Mexicos Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education to discuss COVID-19s impact on food security, inequality and trust in government, among other topics. The themes will be addressed through policy briefs, photo essays, videos or op-eds in English and Spanish.

Its tapping into inter-cultural teamwork, and its also tapping into contemporary issues that span different national settings and, finally, it taps into [students] creative side, Wong said.

They will be interacting with students in a different country that has had a vastly different experience with COVID. Its one thing to read about Mexicos response to COVID-19 in the news; its an entirely different kind of experience when you can learn about it and discuss it with students in Mexico who are in fact living through it.

Elsewhere at the university, some professors have already reached out to students well before classes even begin to ensure their first year at U of T gets off to a strong start.

Along with his colleagueMarioBadr,David Liu, a teaching stream professor in the department of computer science in the Faculty of Arts & Science, created a summer prep course on Quercus to help incoming first-year students enrolled in a Foundations of Computer Science course get up to speed and become acquainted with the department. That includes introducing them to student clubs and other resources that are designed to help them find their feet on campus.

When it comes to teaching online, Liu says he andBadrwill continue in the departments longstanding tradition of encouraging active learning, which goes well beyond delivering lectures.

Lecturing for a full hour or two is tough enough on a student in person, Liu says. Its even harder on Zoom.

Instead, Liu says his classes will typically be split into mini-lectures of under 10 minutes, with the rest of the time dedicated to activities like analyzing program code, writing code and working on mathematical proofs with a partner. If students get stuck on a concept or problem, they can have their questions answered quickly by entering their questions in an online chat monitored by a TA in real time.

David Liu,a teaching stream professor in the department of computer science, helped create a summer prep course for incoming students to get them up to speed on the subject and acquainted with the department.

Active learning is also critical for the Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical EducationsDavid Frost.Never one tolecture at length in front of a blackboard, the assistant professor bridges theory and practice in his courses by encouraging students to learn through hands-on activities such as designing workout programs for real-life clients.

Frost, who has recorded videos of himself completing student-designed workout sessions and uploaded them to YouTube for the class to critique, plans to take a similarly dynamic approach to teaching this fall.

I guess the way were viewing this is there are actually things you can do online that you cant do in person, says Frost. This is an opportunity to learn in different ways.

From his introductory kinesiology course to more advanced seminars, Frost says the shift to online will come with a number of extras for students. For example, Frost and his co-instructors plan to produce a podcast featuring guest experts who will discuss coaching philosophies and other topics relevant to the course. He has also set aside two hours per week for a group activity over Zoom that asks students to design an exercise session and put it into practice: No special gym equipment required.

Another activity may involve a group workout; still another will take students through conducting a physical assessment.

Every week is going to be different, Frost says.

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Interview and photos: Renowned inventor and artist Tom Shannon’s first Oklahoma exhibit is on view at Science Museum Oklahoma – Oklahoman.com

"This is a Nano Earth - a one-billionth size Earth - and it's the same size as the iris of your eye," Shannon said, holding up a tiny piece of the sculpture. "This is human-sized, so you can go a billion down and get to the molecules and a billion up to get to the Sun. So, we're right in the middle - this shows that we're right midway between molecules and the Sun."

Oklahoma exclusives

On view through Oct. 25, the New York City-based artist's first Oklahoma exhibit provides museum visitors a chance to view some exclusive offerings.

"I think they'll get a better understanding of our size and place in this universe, seeing how small we really are in the scheme of things and seeing how everything exists in the universe and how we relate to it," Henderson said.

"Universe in the Mind | Mind in the Universe" features a new 6-foot edition of one of Shannon's signature works - the "Synchronous World Clock" - created especially for Science Museum Oklahoma. One of his numerous patented inventions, he created the original "Synchronous World Clock" in 1984 as a sculptural way of depicting the rotation of the Earth. He used a world map projection by the legendary inventor, artist and visionary R. Buckminister Fuller in the original, and a version of his "Synchronous World Clock" is in the Smithsonian Institutions collection.

"It rotates counter-clockwise ... but just once per day in synchronicity with the actual Earth. So, it gives the time in a very natural way because it's moving at the same speed that Earth is rotating," Shannon said. "If this thing is moving freely, it really keeps time perfectly. ... I'm always refining things and thinking about a new way to do it."

For instance, Shannon created his first magnetic array, "Compass Moon Atom Room," in 1991 for an exhibit at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden, where it is now part of the permanent collection. The "Atom Compass Array" in Science Museum Oklahoma's lobby is the first to be shown in the United States.

"Universe in the Mind | Mind in the Universe" also includes about 150 pages of sketches, notes and ideas he has jotted down from 1966 to present day. This display of "first drafts, ideas, dreams, observations, fleeting thoughts" ranges from drawings for a galactic mirror that would allow humans to get an outside view of our Milky Way galaxy to plans for a small, lightweight, electric "city car" that could collapse to the size of suitcase and be stowed in an apartment or office.

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Interview and photos: Renowned inventor and artist Tom Shannon's first Oklahoma exhibit is on view at Science Museum Oklahoma - Oklahoman.com

LaunchDarkly Hosting Trajectory Conference as a Live Streaming Interactive Event – PR Web

Leaders in the software space look forward to sharing how theyre working towards continuous delivery, and what can be done to continue that progress in the future. Were excited to bring together a growing community of software innovators to learn, belong and collaborate.

OAKLAND, Calif. (PRWEB) July 30, 2020

LaunchDarkly has announced the speaker lineup and agenda for Trajectory LIVE Conference 2020. This year the conference will be hosted on August 26-27, online as a live streaming event. Trajectory Conference focuses on how teams use modern development practices so they can continuously deliver the experiences their users have come to expect.

LaunchDarklys feature management platform currently has more than 1,300 customers globally, and serves more than three trillion feature flags each day. The company has seen that when development teams and business stakeholders collaborate effectively, they are ultimately able to make better software, faster.

Were thrilled to announce Trajectory once again! We want to provide a platform for the software community to explore how they can continue to improve software processes, said Edith Harbaugh, co-founder and CEO of LaunchDarkly. Its wonderful to see so many organizations share their own success stories.

TrajectoryLIVE will feature speakers who are pioneering modern development practices. Emily Freeman, Senior Cloud Advocate at Microsoft, will deliver a keynote focusing on DevOps, what it means as a concept and how teams can use people, process and tools to empower software delivery. And James Governor, Principal Analyst and Co-Founder of RedMonk, will share how the new term Progressive Delivery came to be.

In addition to talks and sessions with LaunchDarkly leadership including co-founders Edith Harbaugh and John Kodumal various sessions will be led by well-known software leaders including Michael McKay, Senior Development Manager at IBM; Liz Fong-Jones, Developer Advocate at Honeycomb; and Aaron Kraft, Director of DevOps and Test Engineering at H&R Block.

Attendees can expect to hear learnings and best practices, participate in open forum discussions, as well as network with peers. Community members familiar with LaunchDarklys Meetup, Test in Production, will appreciate the similarities in topics covered and engaging format. The agenda includes sessions on observability, release practices, hypothesis-driven development, chaos engineering, continuous deployment, and Progressive Delivery.

Leaders in the software space look forward to sharing how theyre working towards continuous delivery, and what can be done to continue that progress in the future, said John Kodumal, CTO & Co-Founder of LaunchDarkly. Were excited to bring together a growing community of software innovators to learn, belong and collaborate.

LaunchDarkly has decided to provide free access to this live streaming event. We were so excited to bring this rich content to our customers and community, we werent ready to cancel the event outright, said Zena Dav, Experiential Marketing Manager. We are pleased that we have been able to keep our original speaker lineup, and can now share these sessions with an even broader audience. People can tune in from where-ever they are, for free!

Trajectory Conference will kick off with our Trajectory Nano Series on July 29th. This will consist of 4 short coffee break-sized sessions, that will take place each Wednesday until the main event. On August 26-27, Trajectory LIVE will showcase 2 half days of talks and interactive sessions.

About LaunchDarkly Founded in 2014 by Edith Harbaugh and John Kodumal, LaunchDarkly is the feature management platform that software teams use to build better software, faster with less risk. Development teams use feature management as a best practice to separate code deployments from feature releases. With LaunchDarkly, teams control their entire feature lifecycles from concept to launch to value. Serving over 1300 customers, LaunchDarkly is used by teams at Atlassian, Microsoft, and CircleCI. LaunchDarkly is named on the Enterprise Tech 30 list, and on the Bay Area Best Places to Work list. Learn more at https://launchdarkly.com

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Psoriasis | Symptoms, Causes, Types and Treatments – DrugWatch.com

Psoriasis is a common disease, and more than eight million Americans have it, according to the National Psoriasis Foundation.

Psoriasis comes and goes in spurts. When the disease is active, it is called a flare. Flares can last for weeks or months and then go into remission or subside. Manifestations of the disease range from a few spots of scaly skin that resemble dandruff to more severe flare-ups that cover bigger areas of the body.

Its not contagious, but its more than a cosmetic problem. About 60 percent of people with psoriasis said the disease interferes with their daily lives.

There is no cure for psoriasis, but people with psoriasis have treatment options aimed at controlling symptoms. Common treatments include light therapy (phototherapy), ointments, and medications.

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Psoriasis signs and symptoms vary from person to person. Depending on the type and severity of the disease, it may manifest differently.

People with psoriasis are also more likely to have co-occurring health conditions, including cardiovascular problems, obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes.

Common signs and symptoms include:

Psoriasis can be mild, moderate or severe depending on the percent of body surface area affected. The scale goes from less than three percent to over 10 percent.

For reference, a hand is about the same as one percent of skin surface, according to The National Psoriasis Foundation. How a persons quality of life is affected is also a factor in classifying disease severity.

Expand

Scientists dont know exactly what causes psoriasis, but they know its an autoimmune disease. This means the bodys immune system overreacts, causing other health problems.

Immune cells called T cells become overactive and trigger immune responses such as swelling and abnormally quick skin cell growth, according to the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.

In people without psoriasis, skin cells usually take about a month to go through their life cycle. But in people with psoriasis, it only takes a few days. These extra skin cells grow deep in the skin and rise to the surface, causing red, scaly patches.

A few factors can cause flares.

Some things that trigger symptoms or flares include:

Research suggests that psoriasis is hereditary, meaning it runs in families. One in three people with psoriasis report having a family member with the disease.

A child with one parent with psoriasis has a 10 percent chance of also having it. If a child has two parents with psoriasis, the likelihood they will get the disease increases to 50 percent, according to the National Psoriasis Foundation.

Most of these types of disease are chronic, but not life threatening. The rarest type, called erythrodermic psoriasis, is a severe disease and is a medical emergency.

According to the National Psoriasis Foundation, there are five main types of psoriasis. Each type differs in severity and symptoms. Doctors will vary the treatment recommendations depending on the type.

Plaque psoriasis is the most common form. It appears as patches of red, raised skin covered with a silvery buildup of dead skin. These patches most commonly affect the scalp, elbows, knees and lower back.

Guttate psoriasis most often affects children or young adults. This type of psoriasis appears as small, red, scaly dots on the trunk, arms and legs. Strep throat infections are a typical trigger.

Inverse psoriasis affects the body in places with skin folds such as behind the knee, in the groin or under the arm. Unlike plaque psoriasis, it typically appears red, shiny and smooth. People who have this type of psoriasis usually have it on more than one part of the body at the same time.

Pustular psoriasis is a rarer type of psoriasis that manifests as red skin with pustules, or blisters, filled with non-infectious pus. It occurs most often on the hands or feet, though it can occur anywhere on the body. The liquid in the blisters is made of white blood cells, and despite how it looks it is not an infection nor is it contagious.

Erythrodermic psoriasis is a very severe, but rare form of the disease. Only about three percent of people with psoriasis have this type. It causes extreme, widespread redness over most of the body. Skin layers come off in sheets and cause severe itching and pain. It can also cause dehydration, body temperature changes, changes in heart rate and nail changes.

This is a medical emergency. Seek medical help right away if you think you have erythrodermic psoriasis because it can be life threatening.

Doctors diagnose psoriasis by examining the rash or lesions. He or she will look at the scales and plaques and where they appear on the body.

Sometimes, the doctor will take a skin sample and send it off to a lab, a procedure called a biopsy. This allows the doctor to rule out other skin disorders such as skin cancer.

Treatment for psoriasis includes topical therapy, phototherapy (light therapy) and medications. Sometimes, doctors may recommend a combination of treatments.

Topical therapies typically come in the form of creams, shampoos, lotions, gels or ointments applied directly to the skin.

Examples of topical therapy include:

Phototherapy is the go-to treatment for moderate to severe psoriasis. The doctor may recommend it alone or with medications. This type of therapy exposes the skin to controlled amounts of artificial or natural light to control psoriasis.

The light source may be natural sunlight, also called heliotherapy. Artificial light techniques include UVB broadband and narrowband therapy, Psoralen plus ultraviolet A and targeted laser therapy.

Side effects include skin dryness, itchy skin, skin burns, freckles, increased sun sensitivity and increased skin cancer risk. Moisturizing regularly may help with itchiness and dryness.

Medications for psoriasis include immunosuppressants and biologic agents that suppress the immune system to prevent psoriasis symptoms. These drugs reduce the bodys ability to fight off infections and may cause damage to organs such as the liver and kidneys.

Medications for psoriasis include:

Psoriasis and eczema both cause itchy, red skin and it can be difficult to tell these rashes apart. The biggest difference is that psoriasis is an autoimmune disorder, and eczema is not.

Psoriasis tends to have a milder itchiness, whereas eczema can be more intense. The places most commonly affected by psoriasis are the scalp, elbows, knees, buttocks and face. Eczema most often occurs on the inside of the elbows or the back of the knees.

The rash caused by eczema usually comes with fluid leaking through the skin, whereas psoriasis is a thicker plaque with dry scaling.

The best way to tell these two rashes apart is to see a dermatologist.

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Psoriasis | Symptoms, Causes, Types and Treatments - DrugWatch.com

Crew Dragon undocks from space station – SpaceNews

WASHINGTON A SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft carrying two NASA astronauts on a test flight undocked from the International Space Station Aug. 1 ahead of a splashdown less than 24 hours later.

The Crew Dragon spacecraft, named Endeavour by the crew of the Demo-2 mission, undocked from the stations Harmony module at 7:35 p.m. Eastern and started to maneuver away from the station. The undocking went according to plan and the spacecraft performed a series of thruster burns to move away from the station.

The spacecraft, with NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley on board, is scheduled to splash down in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast from Pensacola, Florida, at 2:48 p.m. Eastern Aug. 2, about 50 minutes after a deorbit burn. A backup splashdown zone is off the coast from Panama City, Florida. A recovery ship will pull the capsule out of the water a short time after splashdown and the astronauts will then disembark.

The Demo-2 mission is the final test flight of the Crew Dragon spacecraft before it is certified for routine crew rotation missions to the station. It started with a launch May 30 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, followed by a docking May 31.

Getting back to Earth, though, will be the biggest test for the spacecraft. The hardest part was getting us launched, but the most important part is bringing us home, said Behnken during a farewell ceremony on the station Aug. 1.

During their two months on the station, Behnken and Hurley supported station activities such as research and maintenance. That included four spacewalks by Behnken with Chris Cassidy, who has been on the station since April with two Russian cosmonauts, to complete the replacement of batteries in the stations power supply.

We effectively tripled our ability of our work done, and with all three of us having been here before, it was in short order that were running at full steam and getting as many science objectives completed as we could, Cassidy said during a July 31 media teleconference, adding that he appreciated having buddies at the chow table at the end of the day.

Astronauts also tested the spacecraft in orbit, confirming it was working as expected as well as checking how well four people the complement of future Crew Dragon missions can operate inside the spacecraft. For the most part weve had pretty good luck with Endeavour as far as on-orbit testing is performed, just like it did for launch and rendezvous, Hurley said at the July 31 event. So we expect nothing different for the splashdown.

Splashdown is closer than the last time we were asked questions about it, but I still dont feel nervous about it, Behnken said.

That splashdown will be the first for a NASA crewed spacecraft since the Apollo spacecraft that participated in the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project splashed down in July 1975. Besides the Demo-1 Crew Drahon test flight in March 2019, about 20 SpaceX Dragon cargo missions splashed down over the past 10 years, as well as the Orion spacecraft on the Exploration Flight Test 1 mission in 2014, but none carried people.

Hurley said July 31 that he reviewed the reports from the astronauts who flew on the Skylab missions in the early 1970s, which splashed down after missions of durations similar to Demo-2. The water landing portion is pretty challenging from a physiological standpoint, he said, particularly after spending a couple months in weightlessness.

That includes seasickness. Well both have the appropriate hardware ready should we start feeling a little bit sick on board while were in the vehicle after splashdown, Behnken said, but we know the team is going to get us pulled up and onboard the ship relatively quickly.

Asked later what that appropriate hardware was, Hurley said it was bags like sickness bags on airliners, along with towels. It certainly wouldnt be the first time that thats happened in a space vehicle. It would be the first time in this particular vehicle if we do.

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Crew Dragon undocks from space station - SpaceNews

Original sins and racial justice: What’s on the other side? – ABC News

The phrase original sin usually stops, not starts, conversations. Yet in these days of racial reckoning, its become powerful shorthand for the deep injustice suffered by people of colour at the hands of the white establishment.

The original sin of slavery stains our country today, said Democratic Presidential hopeful Joe Biden after the death of George Floyd. Even across the partisan divide, Republican and US Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell agrees. This kind of language, at least in the United States, approaches the status of clich.

Here in Australia, far more secular, we rarely tolerate such religious speak in public life. Yet the ripple effects of Black Lives Matter here like protests over Aboriginal deaths in police custody and our own statue wars show that even if Australians shy away from the language of sin, they still believe in it.

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Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald, Chris Uhlmann, Nine news political editor and former seminarian, declared, Aboriginal dispossession is the Original Sin of Australias settlement. He meant that stolen land, language, and identity had robbed generations of Aboriginal people of dignity, wealth, and a fair go. For Uhlmann, Indigenous disadvantage today traces back to the founding of Australia.

Or rather, these lands now called Australia, as Brooke Prentis often says. Shes a Wakka Wakka woman, Aboriginal Christian leader, and CEO of Common Grace, which campaigns for Aboriginal rights, refugees, the environment, and against family violence. Brooke is also the first Indigenous CEO of a Christian organisation in Australia.

For her, original sin language has its limits. Original sin focuses on first or foundational sin, she said, but we need to address many of the injustices: stolen land, stolen wages, stolen lives, the failure to close the gap, overrepresentation in prison systems, Aboriginal children in Northern Territory detention centres, the destruction of sacred sites.

But if pressed to name one overarching offense? The sin of this nation is the theft of the land, and thats something that hasnt been dealt with.

To speak of sin, or wrongdoing, in national terms makes for a vivid, if imperfect, metaphor, according to Esau McCaulley, an African American assistant professor of New Testament at Wheaton College, a Christian liberal arts university in Illinois. In America, slavery is the usual culprit. But our First Nations people might say the original sin of America was the taking [of the land] and the disruption of our native peoples, McCaulley said.

Then theres the way the metaphor makes use of, not entirely faithfully, the Christian idea of original sin: the idea that all of us are broken in ways we cant fix. Since that goes for individuals as much as for nations, theres nothing all that original, so to speak, about Americas or Australias original sins.

But one thing the metaphor gets right, McCaulley says, is the pervasive nature of sin. It doesnt just describe personal failure, but the disordering of all human relationships. Structural injustice that disadvantages particular people groups is part of that picture.

In the same way that sin in the Christian context impacts every aspect of the human experience, the racism that undergirded slavery still impacts America, he said, citing, for instance, housing discrimination and educational inequality disproportionately experienced by African Americans. This brokenness about our country stalks us from decade to decade, century to century. Unless this sin problem is dealt with in an intentional way, its going to continue to plague us.

No doubt this is a gloomy picture. But it need not be hopeless.

Christianity has, perversely, been used to justify the enslavement of African Americans, to baptise the removal of Aboriginal people from their lands and sometimes Aboriginal children from the care of their families all for their own good. But it has also given victims of historic and present injustice the language to contest their own oppression. Theyve appealed to God for justice: the same God they supposedly share with the slave-master, settler, and other white Christians.

When you call something sinful, youre speaking to a transcendent moral norm. This is something that is clearly outrageous, its not simply because it upsets us. It is wrong on a fundamental level. It offends God himself. Calling it sinful is what it is, McCaulley said.

Protestors marching on the streets against racism or calling for the removal of colonial statues may not typically label what theyre protesting against as sinful. But their instincts are easily translatable into religious concepts. Their rage channels what the Bible calls righteous anger. They want an honest accounting of our failures as a nation and as a people, followed by the desire to change and put things right. Christianity has typically called this repentance and restitution.

But what may be lacking, McCaulley says, is a vision of what comes after the rage, and even the prospect of forgiveness and friendship. Clearly, its too soon to have that conversation. The reckoning and hard work of repair and, in the United States, reparations has barely begun.

But Brooke Prentis hopes that all people can live into the reality of what she calls reconciliation with repentance. Aboriginal peoples know the results of the sin of this nation and we grieve for that, but we stand up for justice and still call all non-indigenous people into relationship even after all the hurt, she said.

For McCaulley, Gods guarantee of ultimate justice allows him to imagine peace with his antagonists. If there is no God, if there is no transcendent moral norm, then lets just get revenge. Why not? Why not burn everything to the ground? he said. But if there is this sense in which there is this moral order to the universe, then maybe there can be this brotherhood and sisterhood of humanity on the other side of what were experiencing now.

Justine Toh is Senior Fellow at the Centre for Public Christianity, host of the occasional Spiritual Lifehack series on ABC RNs Soul Search and, very occasionally, guest host of ABC RNs God Forbid.

Continued here:

Original sins and racial justice: What's on the other side? - ABC News

Campaign Beat: Money, Mobs And Corruption | MTPR – MTPR

Campaign Beat: Money, Mobs And Corruption

Montana's U.S. House race looks to be tight and maybe getting tighter. New ads in the Senate race allege corruption and kowtowing to the "liberal mob." And the candidates in that race agree to three debates this fall.

Listen now on Campaign Beat with Sally Mauk, Rob Saldin and Holly Michels.

Sally Mauk Rob, in the U.S. House race Democrat Kathleen Williams continues to outraise her Republican opponent Matt Rosendale, but The Cook Political Report continues to see the races "leaning Republican." And in part, that's because no Democrat has won that seat since 1994. So it's still, I think, Rob, seen as an uphill battle for Williams.

Rob Saldin Yeah, I agree, Sally. You know, both of them are doing well in terms of fundraising, and in fact, they're both among the handful of top-funded candidates in the country, which to me is a clear indication that both the Republicans and Democrats see this one as a competitive election.

Williams is actually doing a little better than Rosendale, but, you know, he's going to have plenty to do what he wants to in the campaign. There was also one poll out this month that showed it all tied up.

But, yeah, my own sense, though, is that Rosendale has to be a slight favorite in this one. All things being equal, Republicans have a significant built-in advantage in Montana.

And plus, Rosendale's been around longer, so he's already been elected statewide as auditor. He ran that high-profile Senate campaign against Jon Tester two years ago. And he's almost, because of all that, certainly got higher name ID than Williams, who I think remains a little bit undefined for a lot of voters. And additionally, one of Williams' strengths as a candidate two years ago was her retail campaigning, and of course, that's not possible this time.

But yet, you know, all that said, the broader backdrop for this election is about as good as it can get for Democrats, and it's not easy to see how things are going to improve all that much for Republicans between now and November, between the pandemic and the economy and President Trump's continued struggles.

And Rosendale, of course, has some weaknesses as a candidate. He sometimes comes off as a bit awkward, and on the issues, he sometimes comes off as pretty strident as an ideologue.

Mauk Rosendale continues to oppose the Affordable Care Act, Rob, and that now provides health insurance for tens of thousands of Montanans.

And that might have been a popular stance for Republicans at one time, but is it now, in the middle of a pandemic to be opposed to something that's providing health insurance for thousands of Montanans?

Saldin Well, yeah, exactly, Sally. I mean, his opposition to the Affordable Care Act, that's actually been one of his most identifiable positions, I'd say. And during his time as state auditor, which is the office tasked with regulating the insurance industry and protecting consumers, he's been right in the middle of it.

He's been a strong opponent of the Affordable Care Act, and as we talked about a couple weeks ago with regard to that Senate campaign, that position just isn't popular with the public anymore like it was a few cycles ago in the aftermath of Obamacare actually being passed. And, now on top of it, we're now in the middle of a pandemic and the various anxieties that that provokes. So this does have a potential, I think, to be a real weakness for Rosendale, and it's certainly one that the Democrats have identified and are trying to exploit.

Mauk Holly, the National Republican Senatorial Committee has a new ad out basically accusing Gov. Steve Bullock of corruption, and the ad accuses Bullock of steering millions of dollars worth of state contracts to a firm that was founded by Bullock's brother. Here's the ad:

Ad "We all know about Steve Bullock' government-run health care plan that will close rural hospitals and raise taxes, but there's more: Bullock has been accused of steering state grants to his brother's firm."

"It turns out a company founded by Bullock's brother received more than $14 million from state agencies."

"Steve Bullock: Steering hospitals away from Montana, and business to his own family. Think about that."

Mauk The ad, Holly, leaves out some important details, and the president of the firm referenced in the ad has demanded that it be taken off the air because, in his opinion, it is so erroneous.

Holly Michels Yeah. Right after this ad started airing - it's Pioneer Technical Services in Butte, which isn't directly named in the ad - but they sent a letter to TV stations around the state who are running it, asking them to take it down.

The letter said that Bullock's brother Bill resigned as CEO from Pioneer in 2004, and has sold his interest in the company to the employees by 2009, which is three years before Bullock was first elected to the governor's office.

I reached out to NRSC, and they said they stand behind the ad. They pointed to these corporate filings that show that Bullock's brother is still chairman of the board at Pioneer.

But Pioneer sent another letter to TV stations again on July 27, again saying the ad was false, misleading and defamatory. They say that Bullock's brother became chair of the board in 2017, and the next year he got a stipend of just $1,500. And they say that aside from this stipend, the governor's brother doesn't make any money from the company and has no financial stake in it. NRSC's trying to say as chairman of the board, he still has direction over it and would have interest in the company doing well.

I did reach out to TV stations that are running the ad. One replied that they got the letter from Pioneer, talked to their lawyers and decided to keep the ad on the air.

I think it's interesting. We did see an iteration of this ad in 2012, when Bullock was a first-time governor candidate, and it was pulled by NBC Montana over claims about money going to Pioneer. At that time, they pulled the ad saying that as attorney general, Bullock had no oversight over the grants the ad talks about.

I think it's unclear at this point. I think next steps, if ads I haven't heard from any other stations that they would take down the ads. Pioneer did warn that they would consider a lawsuit over defamation, so that might be the next step that we see if nothing else changes and this ad keeps airing.

Mauk The thing about ads that sling mud is that sometimes the mud sticks, no matter what the facts are. And, of course, that's the point.

Also this week, Holly, the Bullock campaign fired a young staffer for some offensive tweets he had posted some years ago.

Michels Yeah, this was Evan McCullers, who was a junior staffer who worked on communications for the campaign.

These tweets - in them, he made statements that made light of sexual assault. Some language is homophobic. There were statements that were derogatory toward black people and women. And he was fired just a couple hours after these tweets were surfaced online.

It looks like McCullers was a teenager at the time that these tweets were written, and he released a statement through the campaign after he was let go apologizing for them and saying that he's evolved since making them. But the campaign, you know, they also issued a statement saying the tweets are inappropriate, and once they learned about them, they did let McCullers go.

Mauk Well, Rob, again in the Senate race, Sen. Steve Daines has a new ad featuring Wibaux Sheriff Shane Harrington. Here's that ad:

Ad "These liberal attacks on law enforcement are a real threat to public safety, but Steve Bullock refuses to stand up for law and order."

"Bullock's campaign is being bankrolled by the liberal mob. That's why Bullock's been silent while left-wing radicals try to defund our police, erase our history and turn America into a socialist country."

"Steve Bullock doesn't share our Montana values: He's with the liberal mob."

"I'm Steve Daines and I approve this message."

Mauk And whew, Rob, this ad has all the catch phrases: socialism, liberal mob and left-wing radicals.

Saldin Right? Yeah, it's a real doozy. I'm a little skeptical, though, that this one is going to stick because it just seems a little over the top. You know, maybe this is the kind of thing that would work on a candidate that no one has heard of, but Bullock is well-known after his now nearly two terms as governor, one term as attorney general, the state's top law enforcement position. So this ad, which features all these images of just full-fledged rioting, it just doesn't seem consistent with what we know of Bullock. It just strains credulity a bit too much, it seems to me.

It also strikes me as unintentionally funny in its assertion that we should be scandalized by Bullock's silence in the face of the far left's excesses, right? Not the Democratic Party's left flank, mind you, but the violent rioters depicted in this ad. It's just a bit ironic, because Sen. Daines has - for nearly four years now - maintained his own silence in the face of routine outrages from President Trump. To my knowledge, he's never leveled any direct criticism of the president. And unlike the so-called liberal mob that this ad is trying to connect to Bullock, Daines is undeniably linked to Trump, right? They have this close personal relationship, Trump is a leader of Daines' party. So it's a little amusing to me to see the Daines campaign condemning someone for cowardly silence.

Mauk Holly, it looks like there will be three debates between Gov. Bullock and Sen. Daines this fall.

Michels Yeah, we saw this week the Bullock campaign agreed to three of the four debates that Daines had proposed. He came out less than 24 hours after the June primary, calling for Bullock to agree to participate in these four debates.

There'll be a Montana Broadcasters Association debate coming up Aug. 8, which is pretty soon here, a Montana PBS debate Sept. 28 and a Montana Television Network debate Oct. 10.

I think Daines' campaign was critical for Bullock's camp not expecting a Montana Chamber of Commerce debate.

I do think debates are going to be pretty important this year, with the coronavirus and campaigns limited from hosting in-person events like they would in a normal year. This gives voters a chance to see the candidates at their, you know, on TV at home, and sort of see how they interact together, so I think those will hopefully be pretty heavily watched this year.

Mauk Holly, there's been yet another campaign finance complaint filed in the governor's race, and this time it's by the Montana Democratic Party against Republican Greg Gianforte.

Michels Yeah. What this complaint is saying is that Gianforte coordinated with a political action committee to work around campaign contribution limits that a governor's campaign has.

It's referencing an invitation to a campaign event where Gianforte told people if they'd already maxed out giving to his campaign, they could give to this political action group.

It's going to be up to the commissioner of political practices to determine if that counts as illegal coordination, but I think the point of these complaints...

I don't think individual people and voters really track them much or watch what happens with them. It feels like, to me, sometimes this process is more about getting coverage of a candidate being accused of wrongdoing than the actual complaint itself.

There are, of course, genuine findings of candidates breaking ethics laws. We saw Lt. Gov. Mike Cooney get dinged with the maximum fine for participating in a campaign call from his official office. But we also saw, right after that and while the complaint was still filed and pending, a lot of attack ads about that.

I think, you know, looking at so far this year, just looking at campaign finance complaints: There's been 11 that are still pending, 19 already resolved, so it gives you an idea of the magnitude of how many we've seen.

It's also interesting to look at who's bringing these complaints. They're most often brought by political opponents, or political parties or figures adjacent to them. It's not members of the public really using this process to ask questions about things they think that might not be compliant with the law.

So you see a lot of coverage. I'm not sure if voters are really tracking the granular details of each individual complaint and the findings, but more seeing it when they pop up in campaign advertising.

Mauk Rob, here we are, just three months out from the election, and we're in the middle of a raging pandemic and fire season is just beginning. I wonder if voters are so overwhelmed, they just want 2020 and the election to be over.

Saldin Maybe, Sally, but it's a little hard to escape.

I actually think there is a higher level of engagement than normal - and part of that may have to do with people having more time on their hands - but we're also just living through such a crazy and incredibly politicized time right now, it's hard to get away from the politics.

And that's clearly immersed itself in the pandemic, and debates over masks and opening schools and everything else: it's all politicized. With that heightened level of engagement and awareness, though, I also get the sense that we're looking at an electorate in which there are just fewer undecided voters than normal.

So my sense is people are pretty dug in, even if they are paying more attention, or are just forced into not finding a place to get away from the politics of everything right now.

Mauk We're going to keep following it all from a safe distance, of course, and Holly and Rob, stay cool and I'll talk to you next week.

Campaign Beat is a weekly political analysis program produced by Montana Public Radio. Campaign Beat features University of Montana political science professor and Mansfield Center fellow Rob Saldin, and Lee Newspapers Capitol Reporter Holly Michels and host Sally Mauk.

What are "Montana Values"?

Every campaign season, we hear a lot about Montana Values. Things like liberty, opportunity, and love of public land. Ideas that supposedly define Montanans. But when elections come around, that language seems to do just as much to drive people apart.

For our elections coverage, our news team wants to know what values matter to you, and how candidates are talking about them in the run up to November. What do you think of when you hear Montana Values - and why?

Call us at 406-640-8933 and leave a message to share your thoughts.

Read more from the original source:

Campaign Beat: Money, Mobs And Corruption | MTPR - MTPR

The Struggle Against Dalit Oppression in India – Jacobin magazine

Review of Anand Teltumbde, Republic of Caste: Thinking Equality in the Time of Neoliberal Hindutva (Navayana, 2018)

Anand Teltumbde is a man of many shades. A senior professor at the Goa Institute of Management who identifies as a Marxist, Teltumbde has multiple qualifications: a degree in engineering from Nagpurs Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology, a management degree from the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, and a doctorate in cybernetics from the University of Mumbai.

But his public persona is that of a Dalit writer and intellectual, and a long-time activist concerned with Dalit and civil-liberties issues. In his long-running column for the Economic and Political Weekly, Teltumbde has often been critical of Indias existing Dalit leadership. He recently turned seventy in a Mumbai prison, having been taken into police custody three months earlier under preposterous terrorism-related charges filed by the National Investigation Agency.

His book Republic of Caste is a collection of essays, reworked for publication, that take up a set of key issues concerning the relationship between caste and class, and assesses where Dalits stand today. Teltumbde develops his own perspective on Dalit emancipation through a critique of Indias mainstream communist and Ambedkaritepolitical movements.

In a chapter on the relationship between Marxism and the Ambedkarite movements, Teltumbde explores the gulf between two currents that should be allies, but are quite often hostile to each other. The overwhelming majority of Dalits are working class, or rural proletarians and semi-proletarians. But there has been very little serious collaboration between the Dalit liberation movements and the Indian left.

Teltumbde argues that Marx was aware of caste as a major impediment to Indias progress; both he and Lenin stressed the need for Marxists to focus on objective reality. He criticizes the approach of the Indian communists to the caste question, which was shaped by two factors: practical and intellectual. One was the fact that the bulk of left-wing leaders were upper caste. An unconscious Brahminism made them ignore the special oppression of Dalits.

At a theoretical level, they sought to explain caste or explain it away through a crude application of Marxs base-superstructure metaphor. Their problem in making sense of Indias caste system was similar to the one facing Marxists in other parts of the world when dealing with questions of race, ethnicity, or gender forms of social oppression that cannot simply be subsumed under a reductionist class approach.

As Teltumbde shows, Dr B. R. Ambedkar, the most influential leader of the struggle for Dalit emancipation, demonstrated the possibility of class- and caste-based movements coming together. He tried to organize trade unions, formed an Independent Labour Party (ILP, named after the British party of the same name), and urged the communist-led Girni Kamgar Union to address the question of caste segregation in employment, which would help foster class unity on terms favorable to the most oppressed groups.

It is Indias communist organizations that Teltumbde indicts. Over the last thirty years or so, different sectors of the communist movement using that term in the widest possible sense have concerned themselves with Dalits and made demands relevant to their social condition. However, there remains a strong belief among them that caste as a special oppression can be solved within the limits of capitalism, through some sort of equalization process.

Teltimbde appears to side partly with radicals within the left-wing movements who want to overturn capitalism, and partly with Dalits who argue that caste oppression must be integral to any fight for emancipation. But he does so within a Marxist framework, suggesting that Marxists should see class unity as something that develops through a struggle against an enemy class, rather than as a pre-existing reality around which a movement can be built. In the course of that struggle, there will always be differences that have to be addressed and negotiated.

However, the points missing from his argument, or the simplifications that he makes, prevent him from proceeding further in his critique of Indias several communist parties. One such factor should be stressed here.

The bulk of the communist movement in India falls into one of two camps. First of all, there are those advocating for a basically parliamentary road, however dressed up with revolutionary rhetoric it may be. They are committed to a two-stage theory of revolution, according to which the enemy in the first stage is imperialism, semi-feudalism, and only particular sections of capital, rather than capitalism as such.

Second of all, there are those advocating for a Maoist-style revolution rooted in the countryside, favoring insurrection over parliamentary politics, but also see imperialism, semi-feudalism, and comprador capitalists as the enemy. The section of the far left which is oriented towards the urban working class and mass struggle is much smaller, and its arguments have very little impact on the political scene.

As a result, Indian Marxist analysis of caste has most often related to the problem of semi-feudalism. This means that a blindness to caste divisions within the working class has persisted, because they have trouble perceiving caste as something that survives under modern capitalism, rather than as a relic of semi-feudal conditions.

Even when Marxists formally acknowledged that such divisions exist, they do not take seriously the need for strategies to combat them in order to unify the class. As Teltumbde himself points out, if the communist movement had taken caste seriously from the beginning, a separate Dalit movement should not have been necessary.

Teltumbde also takes a critical look at Dr Ambedkar himself, and those who claim the mantle of Ambedkarism. He examines Ambedkars philosophical pragmatism, relating it to his teacher John Dewey, and presents Ambedkar as a kind of Fabian socialist. This explains his attitude to Marxian communism critical of their methods, while sometimes sympathetic to certain goals.

In the 1930s, when Ambedkar believed that reform within Hinduism to ensure equality for Dalits was not possible, he turned to class as a category, launching the Independent Labour Party (ILP). But the actual ILP candidates put up in the elections of 1937 mostly came from the Mahar sub-caste among Dalits: it was unable to attract support from other sections of the working class, even among Dalits, showing the gap between the partys ambition and its achievement.

Later, in 1946, when Ambedkar proposed a model of state socialism in the tract States and Minorities, he again came to use the language of class, although he wrote the treatise itself on behalf of the United Scheduled Castes Federation. Ambedkars differences with the communists also included his approach to the state, and to education. He was opposed to any violent revolution, hoping for change without bloodshed, and expected the educated middle-class intelligentsia to take the lead.

In spite of these differences, Teltumbde suggests, Marxism remained a reference point for Ambedkar, even if it was only to argue that his methods were better than those of the Marxists. This implies that he saw the Marxists as his competitors, albeit inferior ones.

One conflict zone between them was in Bombay, where both Ambedkar and the communists were active. In the citys textile mills, communists dominated the powerful union for half a century. Dalits found themselves debarred from jobs in the better-paid weaving section, as the non-Dalit workers believed they would be polluted if they touched threads that Dalits had woven.

As late as 1938, Ambedkar was still raising this issue. One would search in vain for any communist intervention here. The assumption that class unity could be achieved only by sweeping the caste fault lines under the carpet would eventually come back to haunt the communists. As Teltumbde notes, they tended to locate caste in the superstructure, even though caste locations were very often linked to production.

On the other hand, he is deeply critical of latter-day Ambedkarite groups for their preoccupation with electoral politics. They were as opportunistic as the mainstream electoral CPs, and were quite aggressively anti-communist, as well as hero-worshipping Ambedkar. He argues that Ambedkar himself would have firmly rejected this approach.

As the COVID-19 pandemic rages in India, memes have appeared on social media claiming that Indian doctors cannot treat patients properly because of reservations, which have supposedly eliminated the meritorious. This is a reference to the policy of affirmative action: the reservation of places in publicly funded schools and colleges for a range of socially deprived, historically oppressed and marginalized groups, with similar arrangements for public-sector jobs.

As Teltumbde correctly says, any discussion of caste in India soon enough becomes a discussion of reservations. One might gather the impression from such debates that casteism would not be a serious issue were it not for reservations.

Teltumbdes take is a complex one. He is sharply critical of the elite and forward caste critics of reservations, who talk of merit, ignoring the social hierarchies that surround each individual. He notes that opponents of reservations ignore the fact that their much-revered Hindu social order was based on reservations of the worst kind. Brahmins did not have to display any merit to assume dominance over society; the untouchables did not have to commit any crime to be condemned for generations to a societal hell.

At the same time, Teltumbde is skeptical about reservations based on caste, albeit for reasons very different from those of the Brahmanical elite. He points out that the logic of having a set of reserved seats in local, provincial, or central legislatures would have made sense only if there had been a separate electorate. Dalits being a small fragment of the population, even in reserved seats, and especially at the higher levels, the Dalit candidates most likely to win are those approved by the bourgeois parties, which are themselves dominated by the upper castes.

As a result, the policy of reservations, instead of becoming a way to build a strong Dalit fighting force, has led to the co-option of a small layer of Dalit politicians. He argues that Panchayati Raj a system of local self-government in rural districts has become de facto ruled by the dominant castes.

However, there are problems with Teltumbdes arguments about reservations. It would be one thing if all the places available through the reservations policy had been filled up throughout India. But as Maroona Murmu of Kolkatas Jadavpur University has shown, reservations have not been properly utilized, in spite of the egalitarian promises of the Indian constitution. Take one example Murmu gives from the higher-education system of West Bengal: in the 201415 academic year, out of 49,217 professors, just 3,037 came from Scheduled Castes (6.16 percent), and a mere 451 from Scheduled Tribes (less than 1 percent).

The core argument Teltumbe makes is for a strategy that brings class and caste together. This does not mean endorsing the fakery of economic reservation, whereby the authorities are to reserve seats for the poor, rather than simply on caste grounds. Since the reservation policy is intended to deal with forms of social exclusion that are similar to racism, it is not related to poverty. If poor students lack the necessary resources, the answer is to provide more funding for the education system.

Teltumbde believes that there is a need to reform reservation strategies at the very least. If caste has to be annihilated as Ambedkar demanded in a famous pamphlet then a caste-based reservation policy, operating in an environment where only untouchability is abolished, not the caste system itself, does not really seek to get rid of social inequality and oppression.

Dalit intellectuals and activists had hoped that the untouchable castes who were at the forefront of the original struggles led by Ambedkar would forge a broader unity among various oppressed Dalit subcastes. The Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) is based on this conception the term Bahujan referred to all non-elite castes. In practice, however, instead of building such unity, those castes projected themselves as superior and tended to concentrate advantages for their own benefit.

Although the BSP has been the most successful of all the attempts to build up a Dalit-based electoral party, it has disproportionately favored its core component, the subcaste of Jatavs/Chamars. The Hindutva forces identified this limitation better than anyone else. By supporting politicians of non-Jatav Dalit castes, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was able to eat dramatically into the electoral base of the BSP in Uttar Pradesh (UP).

One chapter of Teltumbdes book contains a valuable discussion of the BSP. It is not a Dalit party by self-definition: its name expresses its hope to constitute a majority bloc that would be wider than Dalits. In practice, even in UP where the BSP has been a regular fixture in coalition governments, it has not succeeded in winning support from shudras at the bottom of the caste hierarchy (now categorized among Other Backwards Classes or OBCs). Recent attempts to enlist Brahmins and other elite groups to the partys side have eroded the Bahujan identity.

Teltumbde does not make the same arguments as right-wing critics of the BSP, and points out the double standards of those critics, who never subject the BSPs rivals to the same harsh scrutiny. However, he believes that the BSP has largely ceased to be a vehicle that can truly fight for Dalit emancipation.

In several chapters, Teltumbde takes on the role of the Indian state, examining its violence towards Dalits and its handling of dissent, even though it routinely claims to be the worlds largest democracy. His book contains a detailed account of the Khairlanji massacre of September 2006. An upper caste mob murdered an entire family of Dalit Mahars, the Bhotmanges: the women were paraded naked and gang-raped before being killed, the genitals of the two boys were crushed with stones, and all the bodies were thrown callously into a canal.

In contrast with many other such cases, the government had to take action of some kind because of protests initiated by local Dalit women and taken up by Dalits elsewhere. Having been forced to assign the case to a fast-track lower court, the government made sure of the appointment of a public prosecutor who would present a weakened brief.

This court was supposed to apply the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act of 1989, which Rajiv Gandhis government had passed under pressure from Congress supporters among minority groups (Dalits, Adivasis, and Muslims). The legislation strengthened the penalties for discriminatory acts of various kinds. However, the court concluded that there was no caste angle to the crime, and so the Act did not apply.

Nor did it see any grounds to consider outrage to womens modesty (Victorian legalese for sexual violence). The court also ruled that the crime was not premeditated. As Dalit organizations and civil rights groups argued, all three findings flew in the face of the evidence.

Although several fact-finding reports had revealed that between 40 and 60 people were involved in the assaults, only 11 faced charges. The six who were sentenced to death had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment by the High Court of Bombay. It is not even clear if the principal culprits were put on trial.

In his analysis of the case, Teltumbde makes a number of points. The Bhotmange family had broken caste codes; they were assertive, and hence they had to be put in their place. At each stage, there were Dalits (Mahars) present in the administration and the local police force, and among the doctors who performed and supervised the autopsies. For Teltumbde, this shows that merely having some Dalits in important posts will not address the systemic oppression and violence suffered by Dalits as a whole.

Indias social transformation since independence had turned rural Dalits into a part of the agricultural proletariat. Violence against Dalits therefore often has a dual character, with a specific caste-based motivation and a broader class-based one, buttressed by the sense on the part of rural capitalists that Dalits in particular are deserving of such violent treatment.

Lax in its handling of violence against Dalits, the Indian state is quick to deploy repression against them for dissent. The authorities frequently label Dalits and other groups notably Adivasis as Maoist or Naxalite subversives if they protest about anything, using anti-sedition laws inherited from the colonial state, along with the more recent Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).

Arrests of Dalit activists under these laws are commonplace: many spend years in prison awaiting trial, denied access to bail, only to be released when the courts find them innocent. Teltumbdes own arrest under the UAPA is yet another confirmation of how accurate his indictment of the Indian state is.

Violence against Dalits is greatest in Narendra Modis own state of Gujarat. The author discusses how Gujarat became the region where Hindutva forces succeeded in winning support from Dalits, despite their own aggressive casteism. But the states experience also shows how Dalit politics can be shaped in a different way.

It is Dalits who flay and dispose of dead cattle. In July 2016, a so-called cow-protection group assaulted a Dalit family at Una because they were skinning a dead cow. Dalits, led by a young man, Jignesh Mewani, responded by boycotting this form of work, as well as the cleaning of sewers. They sought to earn their livelihoods in alternate ways by demanding land from the state government. The state government had formally allotted over 160,000 acres of land to Dalits three decades earlier, but the land was never actually handed over.

The agitation led to the immediate transfer of 300 acres, which did have a positive symbolic impact. As Teltumbde reminds us, while Ambedkar himself stressed the importance of land rights, the mainstream Ambedkarite movements have not pushed for this as a route to greater emancipation. By the end of 2019, Dalits had received about three thousand acres of land slight progress, albeit at great cost.

Elsewhere, the author explores the arguments put forward by a section of the Dalit middle-class intelligentsia, who depicts neoliberalism as a caste-neutral system. The Bahujan Samaj Party voted in favor of the proposal to open up Indias retail sector to foreign capital, which would allow companies like Walmart to enter the country. Defending this move, these intellectuals suggested that foreign investment would be beneficial for Dalit entrepreneurs, as it was not casteist.

Teltumbde rebuts the claim that neoliberalism has been or will be comparatively beneficial for Dalit capitalists. He looks at sectors where Dalit capitalism is meant to have been a success, suggesting that these are simply extensions of the old, caste-based Dalit occupations. And as Teltumbde points out, the Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry has acknowledged that there is really no level playing field, even among capitalists, by seeking to have the reservation policy applied. He compares the rhetorical function of Dalit capitalism in India to that of black capitalism in the United States, as a diversion from the real struggle for emancipation.

Teltumbde directly confronts the attempt by Hindutva forces to co-opt Ambedkar. M. S. Golwalkar was the second of the Supreme Leaders (Sarsanghchalak) of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), and the architect of its key theoretical ideas. When we look at Golwalkars writings, it is easy to see how he identified Muslims, Christians, and communists as the enemy. But Golwalkar and his co-thinkers also had to bring the Dalits into the fold, in order to construct a homogeneous Hindu majority against these alleged enemies. This posed a serious problem.

When Balasaheb Deoras was chief of the RSS, the groups leaders attempted to win over Dalits. In pursuit of this goal, they put about a fable concerning the alleged friendship between the RSS founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar and Ambedkar, and attempted to depict Ambedkar as having been hostile to Muslims and communists, and as a champion of Hindus. In response to this, Teltumbde cites Ambedkars 1945 work, Pakistan or the Partition of India, where he wrote the following:

If Hindu Raj does become a fact, it will, no doubt, be the greatest calamity for this country. No matter what the Hindus say, Hinduism is a menace to liberty, equality and fraternity.

Teltumbde presents a wealth of information to show that the practice of the RSSBJP is entirely at odds with Ambedkars thinking, and utterly hostile to any notion of genuine equality with or for Dalits.

He also puts forward stinging condemnations of the BJPs principal rivals, the once-dominant Indian National Congress and the recently formed Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). He criticizes the AAP, which mobilized support on an anti-corruption platform, for refusing to face up to caste and capitalism as structural realities in India, and attacks the Congress for its historic opportunism towards Dalits.

The party has treated them as vote banks, to be placated with tokenistic measures, without ever being allowed to stand on their own feet or to achieve meaningful equality. Teltumbde sharply disputes the Congress claim to have represented Dalit interests: despite decades of post-independence Congress rule, about nine Dalits in ten still lead impoverished lives as landless laborers, small-scale farmers, village artisans, slum-dwelling casual workers, and peddlers in the informal sector of the urban economy.

As the author recalls, Mahatma Gandhi rejected the idea of a separate electorate for Dalits. His 1932 agreement with Ambedkar, the Poona Pact, made Dalit representation subject to the votes of their oppressors, the upper castes, through reserved seats. The Simon Commission had proposed separate electorates, which would have meant Dalit voters alone would elect the Dalit candidates. Gandhi saw this as a blow to the Hindu community and religion. Bringing nation and religion together long before the current Hindutva leaders, he went on hunger strike, demanding an end to the separate electorate for Dalits.

Gandhis supporters threatened Ambedkar, warning that if their leader died, they would take revenge on people from the Depressed Class people. The result was the Pact, which Abedkar felt compelled to sign. It increased the number of Dalit seats; however, since the electorate was a common one, Dalits were mostly dependent on support from voters and parties of higher castes. This has remained the case to the present day.

Republic of Caste, on a careful reading, presents the reader with a picture that differs sharply from two forms of congealed orthodoxy: the rhetoric of liberal modernization, which deems Indian-style neoliberalism to be necessary for progress, or the kind of Marxism that presents India as a semi-feudal, semi-colonial economy.

Some questions remain. The most important is his critique of identity politics, and his desire that all subcastes of Dalits should be consolidated into a class. Yet Dalits are socially differentiated: as Teltumdbe himself records elsewhere, some 4 percent of the Dalits form a middle class. So who is a Dalit? The identity is actually a political project, as is the BSPs Bahujan.

Secondly, after years of Dalit feminism, it is disappointing that Teltumbde does not examine the relations between class, caste, and gender, apart from his examination of repression, rape, and sexual violence. Economic and Political Weekly has published several important essays on this triad, including a dialogue between Gopal Guru, Sharmila Rege and Chhaya Datar.

Overall, however, this is a careful work, which distinguishes between those the author sees as opponents within a zone of possible engagement, like the BSP and the Indian left, and those he considers forces of exploitation and oppression, namely Hindutva, the mainstream bourgeois parties, and capitalism. It should become a touchstone for discussion among radical Dalit organizations and sectors of the Marxist left.

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The Struggle Against Dalit Oppression in India - Jacobin magazine

Group of youth take on province to protect climate – Anishinabek News

A group of seven young people from across Ontario are hoping to proceed with a lawsuit that would force the Ontario Government to increase its targets for reducing greenhouse gases that cause climate change. Back row: Shelby Gagnon, Aroland First Nation and Thunder Bay (third from left), Shaelyn Wabegijig, Chippewas of Rama and Timiskaming First Nations (fourth from left). Front row: Beze Gray, Aamjiwnaang (far right). Photo supplied

By Colin Graf

AAMJIWNAANG FIRST NATION A group of seven young people, including three First Nation youth, lead efforts to prevent the Government of Ontario from weakening its climate change targets.

The young group, backed by the environmental law charity Ecojustice, are suing the government becausethey believe that lowering targets for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions will violate portions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that protect rights to life, liberty, and security of the person, and are therefore unconstitutional.

Lawyers representing the youth argued in court earlier in July againstgovernment lawyers trying to convince the court to strike down the lawsuit before the case is heard in full.No date has been set for a decision on the governments motion.

Beze Gray, 25, of Aamjiwnaang First Nation, says she is excited to join the case after several years of environmental activism in her community, which is located next to the cluster of refineries and petrochemical plants near Sarnia known as Canadas Chemical Valley.

Since I started in environmental work, people have been asking me, Why dont you take this to court? she says in an interview.

Citing financial support from Ecojustice, Gray is pleased she and the other applicants, some as young as 12, can finally get their day in court.

In 2018, Premier Doug Fords Progressive Conservatives repealed what Ecojustice calls relatively strong greenhouse gas reduction targets, set by the former Liberal government.By weakening the targets, the government will allow significantly more greenhouse gas emissions, contributing to climate change-related impacts such as heatwaves, floods, fires, and poor air quality, the group claims.

This court case echoes events around the world, according to Ecojustice lawyer Fraser Thomson.

Our young clients have seen and heard politicians promise things before, and theyve continued to see broken promises, and a failure to act on climate change.They are coming to the court in the same way youth from around the world are going to their own courts, as a last hope, he tells Anishinabek News.

The case came to be through connections some of the group made through the Fridays for the Future group, which organized student school strikes to protest against government inaction on climate change around the world. One of the youth, Sophia Mathur of Sudbury, Ont., was the first to stage a climate-change school outside of Europe, says Thomson. Members of the group saw there were legal cases in other countries, so, after a conversation between them and Ecojustice, the case against the Ontario government was launched.

Were in a climate emergency. The best available science is telling us we have 10 years to drastically cut our greenhouse gas emissions before we risk locking the planet into irreversible climate change, Thomson says. We have to act very quickly and our clients think going to court is one way to force this issue.

Georgian College Anishinaabemowin and Program Development graduate says her environmentalism comes from growing up feeling that she lived somewhere different situated amid the pipe structures, cooling towers, and flare stacks of the Chemical Valley.

What are those things that shot out fire? What are the things (smokestacks)that I thought were cloud-makers? What a pipeline was. I used to use them (pipelines)as bridges to cross the creek, Gray recollects wondering as a child. My parents would take me off reserve and we would see different towns and would see that not everyone had a refinery in their backyard.

At a young age, Gray and family were forced to evacuate their homes because of a chemical leak, but the next day in school, it was clear only the Aamjiwnaang students had that kind of experience the previous night.

Grays sister Vanessa was acquitted of charges with two other activists after being accused of criminal mischief when the Enbridge Pipeline Line 9 was shut off near Sarnia in 2015. More recently, Vanessa has worked with the University of Toronto to create a cell phone app that enables Aamjiwnaang and Sarnia residents to report chemical spills and leaks quickly and easily to the Ontario Spills Action Centre.

The young group is facing an uphill battle with the court case, admits Thomson.Similar cases have been launched around the world, he says, but Canadian courts have yet to rule on the issue.

The facts matter; the window in which governments and societies have to fix the climate crisis is rapidly narrowing, and I think judges understand that. Judges understand this is not a battle about science, this is about either the government accepting the scientific consensus on climate change or not.

Thomson thinks his clients have a good shot at winning their case.

Shaelyn Wabegijig of Peterborough grew up in Chippewas of Rama First Nation and joined the lawsuitfor everyone, for future generations and for our non-human relatives.

If I ever bring children into this world, I want to be able to share healthy air, land and water, a safe climate, and my culture. As a member of the Caribou Clan, my cultural identity is interconnected with Ontarios boreal caribou, and it risks disappearing if this species is wiped out, she says.

Another plaintiff,Shelby Gagnon, 23, Anishinaabe of Thunder Bay, says she is worried about how climate change will impact food sovereignty for Indigenous peoples across Canada.

This makes me sad for myself and for future generations, who may one day be unable to harvest traditional medicines.

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Group of youth take on province to protect climate - Anishinabek News

The true crime documentary crushing it on Netflix – Looper

Over a period of roughly 18 months, Heemeyer equipped the Komatsu with a full complement of concrete-reinforced steel armor, external cameras, and automatic weaponry. He detailed his progress and his belief that he was being actively assisted in his endeavor by God in a series of disturbing audio tapes of whichTread makes liberal use.

On June 4, 2004, Heemeyer climbed inside the cockpit of his creation and unleashed it on Granby. For over two hours, he tooled around the town at a leisurely pace straight-up demolishing any and every building associated with his tormentors: Granby's town hall and police station, a bank, the offices of the local newspaper, a hardware store, and more. The police were basically powerless to stop him (you can't really slow down a bulldozer with a handgun), and mostly tried to stay out of his way.

Heemeyer's rampage only ended when the Komatsu became stuck in the basement of a building Heemeyer had just destroyed. He used a sidearm to end his own life as police closed in; his was the only death to occur that day. In total, Heemeyer had caused upwards of $7 million worth of damage, and inflicted psychological wounds on the town and its residents that linger to this day (viaDenver Post).

Heemeyer's story inspired Russian film director Andrey Zvyagintsev to make the 2014 filmLeviathan, one of the most acclaimed pictures to come out of that country in the last decade. The real story, though, is more bizarre than anything that any screenwriter could have dreamed up andTread lays it all out in fascinating and engaging fashion. The flick is available to stream right now on Netflix.

Read this article:

The true crime documentary crushing it on Netflix - Looper

New UC-led institute awarded $25M to explore potential of quantum computing and train a future workforce – University of California

In the curious world of quantum mechanics, a single atom or subatomic particle can exist simultaneously in multiple conditions. A new UC-led, multiuniversity institute will explore the realities of this emerging field as it focuses on advancing quantum science and engineering, with an additional goal of training a future workforce to build and use quantum computers.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $25 million over five years to establish the NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institute (QLCI) for Present and Future Quantum Computation as part of the federal governments effort to speed the development of quantum computers. The institute will work to overcome scientific challenges to achieving quantum computing and will design advanced, large-scale quantum computers that employ state-of-the-art scientific algorithms developed by the researchers.

There is a sense that we are on the precipice of a really big move toward quantum computing, said Dan Stamper-Kurn, UC Berkeley professor of physics and director of the institute. We think that the development of the quantum computer will be a real scientific revolution, the defining scientific challenge of the moment, especially if you think about the fact that the computer plays a central role in just about everything society does. If you have a chance to revolutionize what a computer is, then you revolutionize just about everything else.

Unlike conventional computers, quantum computers seek to harness the mysterious behavior of particles at the subatomic level to boost computing power. Once fully developed, they could be capable of solving large, extremely complex problems far beyond the capacity of todays most powerful supercomputers. Quantum systems are expected to have a wide variety of applications in many fields, including medicine, national security and science.

Theoretical work has shown that quantum computers are the best way to do some important tasks: factoring large numbers, encrypting or decrypting data, searching databases or finding optimal solutions for problems. Using quantum mechanical principles to process information offers an enormous speedup over the time it takes to solve many computational problems on current digital computers.

Scientific problems that would take the age of the universe to solve on a standard computer potentially could take only a few minutes on a quantum computer, said Eric Hudson, a UCLA professor of physics and co-director of the new institute. We may get the ability to design new pharmaceuticals to fight diseases on a quantum computer, instead of in a laboratory. Learning the structure of molecules and designing effective drugs, each of which has thousands of atoms, are inherently quantum challenges. A quantum computer potentially could calculate the structure of molecules and how molecules react and behave.

The project came to fruition, in part, thanks to a UC-wide consortium, the California Institute for Quantum Entanglement, funded by UCs Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives (MRPI).The MRPI funding opportunity incentivizes just this kind of multicampus collaboration in emerging fields that can position UC as a national leader.

This new NSF institute is founded on the outstanding research contributions in theoretical and experimental quantum information science achieved by investigators from across the UC system through our initiative to foster multicampus collaborations, said Theresa Maldonado, Ph.D., vice president for Research and Innovation of the University of California. The award recognizes the teams vision of how advances in computational quantum science can reveal new fundamental understanding of phenomena at the tiniest length-scale that can benefit innovations in artificial intelligence, medicine, engineering, and more. We are proud to lead the nation in engaging excellent students from diverse backgrounds into this field of study.

The QLCI for Present and Future Quantum Computation connects UC Berkeley, UCLA and UC Santa Barbara with five other universities around the nation and in California. The institute will draw on a wealth of knowledge from experimental and theoretical quantum scientists to improve and determine how best to use todays rudimentary quantum computers, most of them built by private industry or government labs. The goal, ultimately, is to make quantum computers as common as mobile phones, which are, after all, pocket-sized digital computers.

The institute will be multidisciplinary, spanning physics, chemistry, mathematics, computer science, and optical and electrical engineering, among other fields, and will include scientists and engineers with expertise in quantum algorithms, mechanics and chemistry. They will partner with outside institutions, including in the emerging quantum industry, and will host symposia, workshops and other programs. Research challenges will be addressed jointly through a process that incorporates both theory and experiment.

Situated near the heart of todays computer industry, Silicon Valley and Silicon Beach, and at major California universities and national labs, the institute will train a future workforce akin to the way computer science training at universities fueled Silicon Valleys rise to become a tech giant. UCLA will pilot a masters degree program in quantum science and technology to train a quantum-smart workforce, while massive online courses, or MOOCs, will help spread knowledge and understanding of quantum computers even to high school students.

This center establishes California as a leader nationally and globally in quantum computing, Stamper-Kurn said.

The institutes initial members are all senior faculty from UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, the California Institute of Technology, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Southern California, the University of Washington and the University of Texas at Austin.

We still do not know fully what quantum computers do well, Stamper-Kurn said, and we face deep challenges that arise in scaling up quantum devices. The mission of this institute is to address fundamental challenges in the development of the quantum computer.

More information on NSF-supported research on quantum information science and engineering is available at nsf.gov/quantum.

Link:

New UC-led institute awarded $25M to explore potential of quantum computing and train a future workforce - University of California

IBM and the University of Tokyo Unveil the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium to Accelerate Japan’s Quantum Research and Development Leadership…

TOKYO, July 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Today, IBM (NYSE: IBM) and the University of Tokyo unveiled a landmark collaboration with the launch of the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium (QIIC). Expanding from the December 2019 JapanIBM Quantum Partnership initiative, QIIC, aims to accelerate the collaboration between industry, academia, and government to advance Japan's leadership in quantum science, business, and education.

QIIC's main goal is to strategically accelerate quantum computing R&D activities in Japan by bringing together academic talent from across the country's universities and prominent research associations and large-scale industry. The consortium plans to further develop technology for quantum computing in Japan and build an ecosystem to improve student skills and expertise, opening doors to future scientific discoveries and practical quantum applications.

Headquartered at the University of Tokyo, member organizations of QIIC will collaborate to engage students, faculty, and industry researchers with seminars, workshops, and events to foster new quantum business opportunities in Japan. Organizations in agreement to join the consortiuminclude Keio University, Toshiba, Hitachi, Mizuho,MUFG, JSR, DIC, Toyota, Mitsubishi Chemicals and IBM Japan.

These organizations in consortium will also be part of the IBM Q Network the world's first community of Fortune 500 companies, startups, academic institutions and research labs to advance quantum computing and the development of practical applications for it. As part of the network, they will have access to IBM's expertise and resources, and cloud development environment, as well as cloud-based access to the IBM Quantum Computation Center, which includes IBM's most-advanced quantum computers.

In addition to cloud-based access to the IBM's fleet of quantum systems, the QIIC will also have access to an IBM Q System One, a dedicated system planned for installation in Japan in 2021. The first of its kind in the region, and only the second such installation outside of the US, this system along with a separate testbed system to be part of a system technology development lab will support the consortium's goals of next-generation quantum hardware research and development, including cryogenic components, room temperature electronics, and micro-signal generators.

According to Professor Makoto Gonokami, President of the University of Tokyo:

"Society 5.0is the concept of a better future with inclusive, sustainable and a knowledge-intensive society where information and services create value underpinned by digital innovation. The key to realizing this society is to utilize real data in real-time. In order to achieve this, it is necessary to protect and nurture the global environment, an entity of physical space and cyberspace as one, by taking it as a global commons (a concept that encompasses global resources and the ecosystems) which is sustainable and reliable, while the fusion of physical space and cyberspace progresses.

"Quantum technology and quantum computers are indispensable technologies to make that happen. I believe that Japan will play an important role in implementing quantum computing technology to society ahead of rest of the world, and that industry-academia-government collaboration is necessary for this. The QIIC will accelerate quantum technology research and its implementation to the Society 5.0 while firmlysharing each other's wisdom and promoting the close sharing of information."

"Today, I am extremely excited and proud to launch this new consortium that will help foster economic growth and quantum technology leadership in Japan.The QIIC will greatly advance Japan's entire quantum computing ecosystem, bringing experts from industry, government and academia together to collaborate on researchand development," said Dario Gil, Director of IBM Research. "Quantum computing has the potential totackle some of the world's greatest challengesin the future.We expect that it will helpusaccelerate scientific discovery so that we candevelop vaccinesmore quickly and accurately,create new materials toaddressclimate changeor design better energy storage technologies. The potential is massive,andwe will only reach this future if we work together uniting the best minds from the public and private sectors. Universities, businesses and governments have to collaborate so that we can unleash the full potential of quantum computing."

QIIC's members are forging a path for Japan's discovery of practical quantum applications for the benefit of society. The cooperation between industry, academia, and government aims to create a new community for quantum computation research and use cases.

About IBM QuantumIBM Quantum is an industry-first initiative to build quantum systems for business and science applications. For more information about IBM's quantum computing efforts, please visitwww.ibm.com/ibmq.

For more information about the IBM Q Network, as well as a full list of all partners, members, and hubs, visithttps://www.research.ibm.com/ibm-q/network/

About The University of Tokyo

The University of Tokyo was established in 1877 as the first national university in Japan. As a leading research university, the University of Tokyo is conducting academic research in almost all fields at both undergraduate and graduate schools. The University aims to provide its students with a rich and varied academic environment that ensures opportunities for acquiring both academic and professional knowledge and skills.

Media Contacts

Chris Nay [emailprotected]

Miri Yasuhara IBM Japan +81 50 3150 7967 [emailprotected]

SOURCE IBM

http://www.ibm.com

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IBM and the University of Tokyo Unveil the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium to Accelerate Japan's Quantum Research and Development Leadership...

Microsofts plan to scrub carbon out of the atmosphere? Quantum computers – Yahoo! Voices

Quantum computers promise to be game-changers in fields where there are enormously complex calculations to be carried out. Hoping to use quantum computing to address one of humanitys biggest problems climate change investigators from Microsoft Research and ETH Zurich have developed a quantum algorithm they say is able to simulate catalytic processes extremely quickly. In doing so, they claim that it could be used to find an efficient method for carrying out carbon fixation, cutting down on carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by turning it into useful compounds.

At present, synthetic catalytic processes are discovered using laborious trial-and-error lab experiments. Computer simulations are much faster, but modern computers have a difficult job calculating the properties of very complex molecules. By contrast, Microsofts quantum catalytic simulation algorithm reportedly beats existing state-of-the-art algorithms by 10 times; boding well for the transformational possibilities of using quantum computing as a cornerstone of future chemistry.

Our unique approach pushes the boundaries to deliver the promise of quantum computing and to create unprecedented possibilities for our world, Matthias Troyer, distinguished scientist at Microsoft Research, told Digital Trends. Quantum computing is redefining what is possible with technology, creating unprecedented possibilities to solve humanitys most complex challenges. Microsoft is committed to turning the impossible into reality in a responsible way that brings the best solutions to humanity and our planet.

Troyer explained that the advancements in algorithms gained from this research will serve as a springboard for future work. Microsoft is hoping that it will be able to work alongside the chemistry community to find new ways for quantum computers to help develop new chemical processes, molecules, and, eventually someday, materials. The research is available to read via Microsofts blog.

This isnt the first promising quantum algorithm Digital Trends has covered this month. Recently we wrote about a quantum algorithm that could help revolutionize disease diagnosis. However, like all quantum algorithms, it is going to rely on quantum computers advancing sufficiently in order for researchers to be able to gain the most benefit from it. The hardware this will require is another topic Microsoft discusses in the research paper on this work.

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Microsofts plan to scrub carbon out of the atmosphere? Quantum computers - Yahoo! Voices

Insights & Outcomes: a new spin on quantum research, and the biology of sex – Yale News

This month, Insights & Outcomes will turn your head with spinning electrons, prolific plankton, and the biology of sex.

As always, you can find more science and medicine research news onYaleNews Science & TechnologyandHealth & Medicinepages.

The group of single-celled marine organisms known as planktic foraminifera are among the most prolific shell producers in the open ocean. They leave behind one of the most extensive fossil records on the planet, and they allow scientists to reconstruct Earths climate history. Yet little was known about their life history until now. A research team led by Yale paleontologistCatherine Davisgrew a generation of planktic foraminifera in the lab and documented the organisms full life cycle. The team confirmed the organisms apparent ability to reproduce both sexually and asexually, and found that the shells of cloned siblings grown together in the laboratory can look strikingly different from each other. These results have broad impacts on how foraminifera fit into food webs, how vanishingly small populations can rapidly respond to their environment, and perhaps even their long-lived success as a group, said Davis, a postdoctoral associate in the lab ofPincelli Hull, assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and co-author of the study.The study appears in Science Advances.

Since 2003, the lab of YalesMark Gersteinhas played a major role in an international effort to catalog data on the complex interactions between genes and the segments of DNA and RNA that regulate their functions. The latest findings of the ENCODE project were published July 29 in 30 papers, four spearheaded by Gersteins lab, in a variety of scientific journals.Jing ZhangandDonghoon Leefrom Gersteins lab have createda video illustrating sciences evolving understandingof the complex regulatory networks that can contribute to cancer and other diseases.The latest findings by the Gerstein lab and other major ENCODE contributors can be found on the Gerstein lab website.

YalesNina Stachenfeldbelieves that to understand disease, scientists must understand the biology of sex. So she is helping to launch a series of papers for publication in The FASEB Journal that explores the systemic role sex plays in human physiology. Stachenfeld, a fellow at the John B. Pierce Laboratory and professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences, has enlisted contributions from half a dozen scientists to explore a variety of topics, including the role sex plays in addiction and the biology of high blood pressure in people of different races. The series,Sex as a Variable in Human Research: A Systems Approach,will appear over the next few months in The FASEB Journal.

A research result by Yale physicists lends credibility to an exotic proposal for safeguarding quantum information called topological quantum protection. Topological quantum protection is an alternative to Yales primary approach to fault tolerant quantum computing based on active error correction. Rather, it involves a theoretically proposed entity called a Majorana quasiparticle, which has not yet been directly observed. A team led byMichel Devoret, the F.W. Beinecke Professor of Applied Physics and Physics, has applied the tools of circuit quantum electrodynamics to achieve the continuous monitoring of a quasiparticles spin, a promising step toward detection of Majorana quasiparticles. The Yale team includesMax Hays,Valla Fatemi,Kyle Serniak, andSpencer Diamond. Thestudy appears in Nature Physics.

When pathogens or cancer cells develop resistance to drug treatment, researchers usually try to develop new drugs. But a new study by Yale researchers helps bolster a new strategy taking advantage of evolutionary processes to combat drug resistance through drug-sensitive pathogenic cells. The new approach, known as adaptive therapy, offers an alternative to prolonged and high-dose drug treatment for cancer or infections. Adaptive therapy calls for an intermittent series of lower dose treatments that kill fewer disease-causing cells but also decrease the chances that those cells develop resistance to the drugs. In other words, as long as a pathogen or cancer remains responsive to a drug, it may be wiser, in some instances, to manage a disease rather than trying to eradicate it at the expense of an elevated risk of drug resistance evolution, saidSergey Melnikov, lead author of the new study. It is based on his work in the lab of YalesDieter Soll, Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry and professor of chemistry. In a laboratory experiment, Melnikov and Soll gave adaptive therapy a boost by adding the amino acid norvaline to the antibiotic tavaborole to combat drug-resistant E. coli. Norvaline impairs the ability of E. coli cells to produce cells resistant to tavaborole by hindering their ability to mutate, allowing antibiotic-sensitive cells to outcompete antibiotic-resistant ones. By integrating Darwinian principles of natural selection into therapeutic treatment of a disease,we can significantly prolong the effectiveness of drugs or give a second life for drugs that are currently abandoned due to rapid evolution of resistance, said Melnikov, now a group leader at Newcastle University.The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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Insights & Outcomes: a new spin on quantum research, and the biology of sex - Yale News

This simple explainer tackles the complexity of quantum computing – Boing Boing

Many videos describing quantum computers try to distill and oversimplify everything. Thoughty's takes its time and gives more historical and theoretical context than most.

Because it does take a while to get into the subject, here's a shorter explainer by MIT:

Today's computers use bitsa stream of electrical or optical pulses representing1s or0s. Everything from your tweets and e-mails to your iTunes songs and YouTube videos are essentially long strings of these binary digits.

Quantum computers, on the other hand, usequbits, whichare typically subatomic particles such as electrons or photons. Generating and managing qubits is a scientific and engineering challenge. Some companies, such as IBM, Google, and Rigetti Computing, use superconducting circuits cooled to temperatures colder than deep space. Others, like IonQ, trap individual atoms in electromagnetic fields on a silicon chip in ultra-high-vacuum chambers. In both cases, the goal is to isolate the qubits in a controlled quantum state.

The processing power possible through these controlled qubits will make today's fastest computers look positively archaic.

Image: YouTube / Thoughty2

Intelligence is a surprisingly difficult thing to define. Kurzgesagt jumps into the debate with an interesting overview of where intelligence begins. Is a slime mold intelligent? Are plants intelligent?

Wildfires are a natural part of many ecosystems, though more and more are human-caused. Wendover Productions takes a look at how firefighters work to minimize the spread of wildfires in grueling and dangerous conditions.

Because of its ubiquity, the landscape is littered with proposed etymologies of the term OK. This nice explainer clarifies the murky origins of one of the most widely spoken words in the world.

If you ever dropped a quarter into a Space Invaders game, youve likely fantasized about having your own arcade cabinet in your house. Of course, you likely thought better of it for several reasons, including the idea that a giant cabinet dedicated to just one game isnt very practical. Polycade understands the urge though very, []

Most of us have a love-hate relationship with banks. Okay, its actually probably more like a tolerate-hate relationship. We understand their role in holding and securing our money so we dont have to stuff it in a mattress somewhere. But we dont trust the bank not to gouge us on fees whenever they can. And []

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Trump’s Properties Are a Playground for White Nationalists, Far Right Extremists – Truthout

Conspiracy theorists, alt-right memers and prominent white nationalists have frequently appeared at properties owned by President Trump, where theyve hosted gatherings, mingled with officials and spent money, according to research obtained by Salon.

Trump properties are well-documented hot spots for MAGA-world luminaries and hangers-on, particularly Trump International Hotel in Washington, where the lobby is frequently a blur of lobbyists, administration officials, lawmakers, corporate leaders and foreign dignitaries the physical embodiment of the presidents numerous conflicts of interest.

But in a sense those properties are also real-world iterations of the presidents Twitter feed, a running scroll of the same groups. Both are also sprinkled to varying degrees with influential right-wing extremists and internet trolls (Diamond and Silk kicked off their 2019 Chit Chat Live tour at Trump Hotel D.C.), some of whom now are now moving into legitimate electoral politics under the auspices of the Republican Party in various states, including Oregon, Colorado, Georgia and Trumps new home state of Florida.

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And though Trump fandom is little more than an ironic lark to young fringe-right adherents, who see themselves as more pure, edgy and extreme, those places draw an older generation that has influence, but might be looking for someone who knows better how to wield it today.

Trump properties are the place to be if youre an elected Republican looking to dip your toe in alt-right waters. So no one should be surprised that once-mainstream Republicans and the NRCC are now backing the very QAnon supporters and fringe factions theyve mingled with for years, said Kyle Morse, an American Bridge 21st Century spokesperson.

The more high-profile of these patron-extremists include:

Trump properties are a particularly popular draw for the Fuentes-led Groyper movement, a loose affiliation of far-right and alt-right nationalists who peddle racist and anti-Semitic tropes while mocking mainstream conservatives including some less radical white nationalists as phonies.

As with most things born in the nether regions of the internet, the origins of the Groyper movement are not easy to understand. Its name is drawn from a specific Pepe the Frog pose, in which the alt-right cartoon mascot rests his chin on his interlinked hands.

Marilyn Mayo, senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism, described the movement in a 2019 interview.

What theyre trying to do, theres this whole grouping who refer to themselves as the dissident right, they want to move the Overton window, said Mayo, referring to the shifting spectrum of acceptable ideological and political discourse. They want to make racism and anti-Semitism mainstream.

Trump made waves this January when he retweeted a clip of Michelle Malkin, the self-described mommy of the Groyper movement, complaining about online censorship. Trump added his own caption, thanking her:

The Radical Left is in total command & control of Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Google. The Administration is working to remedy this illegal situation. Stay tuned, and send names & events. Thank you Michelle!

That Malkin clip was produced by Fuentes internet show, America First.

Donald Trump is watching America First Clips, Fuentes tweeted.

Fuentes has attended events at Trump International in Washington, including with friend and fellow Groyper Megan Harris, and both appeared there during the conservative gathering CPAC this year, as documented in a since-deleted Instagram post. The two were joined at CPAC by musician and Groyper Ricky Rebel, who shared a number of pictures from Trump International on his Instagram story.

Fuentes, like several other fringe-right personalities, has also patronized Trump National Doral, the presidents golf resort near Miami, where he appeared in an Instagram photo with alt-right internet personality Baked Alaska (Tim Gionet).

One of the more well-known names is alt-right personality, Pizzagate truther and noted misogynist Mike Cernovich, whom Gionet engaged in multiple projects. Cernovich has spent considerable time at Trump properties.

Gionet once spent Christmas with blogger Chuck Johnson, the aforementioned most hated man on the internet, who reportedly had a hand in vetting Trump Cabinet picks during the transition (working with Facebooks Peter Thiel) and may have acted as an inadvertent conduit between WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and Donald Trump Jr.

In January 2017, Johnson posted on Facebook that he was building algorithms to ID all the illegal immigrants for the deportation squads. HuffPost quoted a source claiming to have seen Johnson discussing that same project with a whole bunch of really important people at the Trump hotel in D.C. Former Breitbart editor Katie McHugh has said that Johnson asked to be connected with senior Trump adviser Stephen Miller so he could pitch a way to identify every illegal alien in the country.

In 2018, Johnson was also spotted at Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas.

Then theres the Posobiec, who while not exactly a Groyper is a fringe conspiracy theorist with anti-Semitic views whom Trump has retweeted a number of times. Posobiec and his wife met Brexit architect Nigel Farage at the Trump Hotel in Washington in February, 2017, and have spent both Christmas and New Years holidays there.

In July 2019, Posobiec joined QAnon acolyte Tracy Beanz, MAGA alt-right memesmith Carpe Donktum and former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders for a conservative conference called AMPFest, held at Trump National Doral. Documents obtained by The Washington Post showed that the Florida propertys revenues were in steep decline at the time.

Posobiec spread the debunked conspiracy theory that the Las Vegas mass shooter was affiliated with ISIS, but was challenged for credit by right-wing provocateur, Islamophobe and Trump patron Laura Loomer. The two seemed to smooth things over before AMPFest 2019, where Loomer appeared alongside Posobiec.

Loomer is currently running as a Republican congressional candidate in Floridas 21st district home to Donald Trumps private Palm Beach club Mar-a-Lago, where she appeared at a 2019 winter gala that featured Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, former White House staffer Sebastian Gorka and guest of honor Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky.

Just a few days after that, Trump tweeted his support for Loomers candidacy. And since the 21st is officially his district of residence, he will have the chance to vote for her should she appear on the ballot in November. (Her chances of winning are not strong: Incumbent Rep. Lois Frankel, a Democrat, was re-elected without opposition in 2018.)

On March 3, Loomer was back at Trump International in D.C.

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Trump's Properties Are a Playground for White Nationalists, Far Right Extremists - Truthout

Doomed To Repeat It? Historical lessons resonate in T2’s ‘The Interrogator’ – Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

"The Interrogator," the next installment in TheatreSquared's virtual 2020 Arkansas New Play Festival, is set in World War II. But it might not always feel like it. The playwright, Russell Leigh Sharman, says "whole sections of the transcripts [on which it is based] could be lifted out of context, and you might think they were recorded just yesterday. I began work on the story in 2015, but I returned to it as a play late last year. I was surprised, and honestly a bit disheartened, at how much more resonant the material had become in those four to five years."

The story is set at Fort Hunt, a top-secret prisoner of war camp built in the suburbs of Alexandria, Va., code-named PO BOX 1142.

"I first heard about PO BOX 1142 on the radio on a drive back from the Tulsa airport in 2015," Sharman explains. "NPR did a story on how the park rangers at Fort Hunt, now a national park in Alexandria, uncovered the secret history of the location: How it was used as an interrogation center by the U.S. Army and Navy during the war and immediately after. How thousands of Nazi officers and U-boat commanders passed through on their way to more permanent camps. And how the only interrogators they could find who knew the language and the culture well enough were recent immigrants, most of them German and Austrian Jews.

"The kicker was that there was no torture or physical duress of any kind permitted," he adds. "The interrogators had to use psychology, build rapport, establish trust. They basically hung out with these guys -- played cards, chess, table tennis. Sometimes even took them out to dinner. And then these men, and they were all men, stayed quiet about their service for more than 60 years. Never told a soul. I was floored."

Sharman was a successful Hollywood screenwriter, so of course his first thought was that PO BOX 1142 would make a great movie. But he also knew "it was going to be a hard sell in Hollywood -- a period film, mostly in German, and mostly in a windowless room with two men... talking. Still, I couldn't shake the story. So I dove in. I spent the next few years pouring over every shred of documentation I could find. And there wasn't a whole lot. ... I finished the screenplay version a couple of years ago, and as I suspected, it got a lot of compliments but not a lot of traction in Hollywood. It was then that I realized this story needed to live in the theater. All of the elements that made it a hard sell in Hollywood were what would make it compelling on the stage.

"I am amazed there has been no other formal account of PO BOX 1142 by now, no book, no documentary," Sharman adds. "It is such a rich and fascinating story, and I am beyond excited to get to tell it in this form."

Sharman says the moral -- that a group of young men could offer grace to their enemies -- resonates as strongly today as it did in 1944.

"The greatest triumph for these men was not the military intelligence they discovered, it was the ability to look their enemy in the eye whether that's a living breathing person or some past or present trauma and show beyond a shadow of a doubt they have not been broken, that they have not only survived, they have overcome. That is a truth that we can all aspire to."

But the transcripts of the interrogations also revealed "some truly frightening parallels between the rise of National Socialism in Germany and our current political reality, the rise of the alt-right and the deep cultural divisions in the United States."

"I began to see the interrogations in a new light, beyond their historical context," Sharman says. "There is always the temptation to hear a story like this one and think, 'Thank goodness all of that is in the past.' But that would be a perilous mistake. I hope these resonances with our current experience will give us all pause, that they will remind us to be vigilant, ruthlessly self-critical, and, ultimately, full of grace for each other."

"One reason we go to plays is to feel something, discover something, that puts our world, our troubles, in perspective and reminds us that we're not alone," says director Amy Herzberg, one of the founders of TheatreSquared. "This profoundly difficult, and I think hopeful, period of change we're experiencing wound up underscoring several aspects of the play that we otherwise might have taken for granted.

"This play takes this massive wrong from history and transforms it from the abstract into the profoundly personal. It helps us feel the meaning of that wrong by identifying with individual people. And then of course it leaves us with a hard-won sense of hope."

"It is a scary time in this country and around the world," says New York actor Joe Chisholm, pictured here in rehearsal for "The Interrogator" with Steven Marzolf and Matt Boston. "I think until a few years ago, most people would look at the megalomania that was Hitlers rise and see it as a fluke in fabric of human history. But political division and dangerous rhetoric in todays world have seen the embers of nativism sparked and flamed in a frighteningly reminiscent fashion. It adds a heavy layer of djvu to see some similarities in how the world was back then compared to where we are now, and just how much we failed to learn last time. It makes the immediacy and need within the play that much easier to hook into as an actor, and I hope as an audience member."(Courtesy Photo/T2)

FAQ

The Interrogator

WHEN 7 p.m. Aug. 7

WHERE Streaming at playarkansas.com

COST By donation

INFO theatre2.org

BONUS The reading will be followed by a conversation with the creative team. Encore streaming is available through Aug. 10.

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Doomed To Repeat It? Historical lessons resonate in T2's 'The Interrogator' - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Neuroscience, astronomy, animal behavior, and more: Black scientists are showcasing their research on social media – Massive Science

Eight years ago, I was packing my home and entire life in Mexico to move to the US to pursue a PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of California-Irvine. Those were easier times, although it did not seem like it at the time. I spent a few months worth of income to pay for paperwork to apply for an F-1 student visa, and to pay for other documents to enroll as a graduate student. This was after I dedicated months to emailing professors everywhere in the US, hoping that one of them would reply to my email and would invite me to apply to join their lab. It was also after spending time and money paying for standardized tests, official document translations, and application fees. It was a one-and-a-half-year process but in July 2012, I was finally moving to the USA to pursue my PhD. It was a dream come true.

It was also a dream come true for the University of California because I had a full scholarship from my home country that paid for the entirety of my international tuition and fees, which were around $35,000 per year. My scholarship allowed me to pursue my PhD in the USA, and to UC Irvine it provided basically free labor as well as prestige.

I paid taxes and did all of the typical graduate student responsibilities. I also dedicated a lot of my time to doing outreach to bring science to underserved communities around Orange County and Southern California. By the time I graduated in 2017, I was a stellar student, with three publications with UC Irvine's name on them. I co-organized summer science camps for middle school girls that brought money and a good reputation to my university and program. I mentored students of all ages. I was a good citizen of my program, of my university, and of Orange County.

Like me, most international students leave their families and everything that they are comfortable with to pursue the dream of graduate school. They bring with them the hope of being welcomed and treated fairly by their American peers. I have experienced this, but I am one of the lucky ones.

It is no secret that international students and postdocs will withstand abuse and other injustices just so they can keep their visa, which is always tied to their university. Many universities receive international students without having a system to deal with the unique challenges that international students face, such as having no credit history, which complicates finding a place to live and leaves international students vulnerable to landlord abuse. Many international students are people of color, and universities, especially predominantly white institutions, do not have resources to ensure safety of these students within the university and in the community at large.

These challenges are further complicated due to a lack of community and support. Making friends in the US, especially if you are coming from Global South countries and/or non-Westernized countries, is extremely challenging. Many times, I have seen how western Europeans, Australians, and Canadians are rapidly accepted in the local community, while many Latinx, Asians, and Middle-Easterners are not.

There are over one million international students in the US. The ICE Student Ban may no longer be a threat, but universities still need to change how they handle international students. We are people too, but many universities have historically valued us only by the amount of money we bring. We improve higher education not only by the money that we bring, but by our unique perspectives, our research productivity, and our willingness to give back to American society.

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Neuroscience, astronomy, animal behavior, and more: Black scientists are showcasing their research on social media - Massive Science