What happens to planes when they’re retired? – World Economic Forum

The worlds biggest operator of the Boeing 747 has announced it is withdrawing its entire fleet of the planes. But does retirement mean the end of the runway for airliners?

The iconic jumbo jet is the latest victim of the slump in air travel caused by the pandemic that has seen passenger numbers decline by almost two-thirds. British Airways is retiring its 31-strong 747 fleet, the worlds largest, with immediate effect.

This is how much the COVID-19 pandemic has caused passenger numbers to decline.

Image: ICAO

Dutch airline KLM, Air France, Delta and United in the United States and Australias Qantas have already retired their 747s. Boeing is reportedly considering ending production of the 747 in 2022 when outstanding orders for freighter versions are completed.

Here's the world's largest Boeing 747 operators.

Image: Statista

As other sectors proceed to decarbonize, the aviation sector could account for a much higher share of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by mid-century than its 2%-3% share today. With the number of air travel passengers expected to double by 2035, there's a strong urgency for the aviation industry to act to ensure it can meet this demand in an environmentally sustainable manner.

Sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) can reduce the life-cycle carbon footprint of aviation fuel by up to 80%, but they currently make up less than 0.1% of total aviation fuel consumption. Enabling a shift from fossil fuels to SAFs will require a significant increase in production, which is a costly investment.

Launched in September 2019, the Forums Clean Skies for Tomorrow (CST) Coalition is a global initiative driving the transition to sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) as part of the aviation industrys ambitious efforts to achieve carbon-neutral flying.

Run in collaboration with the Energy Transitions Commission and the Rocky Mountain Institute, with the Air Transport Action Group as an advisory partner, CST brings together government leaders, climate experts and CEOs from aviation, energy, finance and other sectors who agree on the urgent need to help the aviation industry reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Learn more about the Clean Skies for Tomorrow Coalition's impact and contact us to find out how you can get involved.

So what happens to planes when they retire? Some will live on flying for other airlines, although in the case of the two jumbo types that might be unlikely.

A second option is to use them as freighters. Cargo conversions of the smaller Boeing 777 and 767 have proved popular and a freight conversion of the A300 the original Airbus, first built in 1972 is still flying parcels for DHL.

Boeing 747 freighters, with hinged noses to admit bulky cargoes, are likely to outlive their passenger counterparts by years. Some passenger versions may be converted by adding large side doors.

Aircraft all have finite lives the period they are safe to fly before metal fatigue poses a safety threat. When their time is up there is still value in a planes many systems and parts and breaking them up for spares is increasingly profitable.

Thats because while the plane itself may need retiring, most parts will have been replaced many times. Everything from the engines and undercarriages to the seats and window blinds may have years of life left when the plane is scrapped.

The global population is expected to reach close to 9 billion people by 2030 inclusive of 3 billion new middle-class consumers.This places unprecedented pressure on natural resources to meet future consumer demand.

A circular economy is an industrial system that is restorative or regenerative by intention and design. It replaces the end-of-life concept with restoration, shifts towards the use of renewable energy, eliminates the use of toxic chemicals and aims for the elimination of waste through the superior design of materials, products, systems and business models.

Nothing that is made in a circular economy becomes waste, moving away from our current linear take-make-dispose economy. The circular economys potential for innovation, job creation and economic development is huge: estimates indicate a trillion-dollar opportunity.

The World Economic Forum has collaborated with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation for a number of years to accelerate the Circular Economy transition through Project MainStream - a CEO-led initiative that helps to scale business driven circular economy innovations.

Join our project, part of the World Economic Forums Shaping the Future of Environment and Natural Resource Security System Initiative, by contacting us to become a member or partner.

The second-hand aviation spares market is so big that Honeywell, which also makes new aircraft parts, set up a blockchain-based online marketplace to allow airlines to buy validated used parts. It sold $5 million worth of spares last year.

Airbus subsidiary Satair, which specializes in recovering parts from retired Airbus airliners, says the total market for recycled airliner parts will reach $6 billion by 2022 70% of that coming from the sale of used engines and their parts.

End of life: planes being recycled in a boneyard.

Image: Reuters/Bruno Martin

Not all retired airlines live on or become donors. Some simply go into storage. The dry atmosphere of the Southwestern US makes it a popular location for aircraft boneyards, such as in Californias Mojave Desert, where planes wait in the often forlorn hope of a recall to the skies.

Others end up as museum exhibits. The prototype 747 serial number 001 has been restored at Seattles Museum of Flight. When the museum reopens after the pandemic, it may be among the last places you can climb aboard a jumbo jet.

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What happens to planes when they're retired? - World Economic Forum

The handful of countries still welcoming US tourists – CNN

(CNN) Once one of the world's most powerful travel documents, the might of the US passport has shriveled under the cloud of coronavirus, with doors slammed shut across the planet to American travelers.

Even as restrictions ease up in some places, Americans are still on the danger list. Earlier this month, the European Union omitted the United States from its list of 15 countries whose tourists are permitted to visit.

While most US travelers are staying close to home this summer, preferring short-distance car trips to international air travel, some voyagers won't let a global pandemic curb their travel plans.

And there are still a handful of options.

Most of the Caribbean, for example, is open for US tourists. Other countries -- including Mexico, Maldives and Turkey -- aren't exactly welcoming US travelers with open arms (more like a temperature check and a Covid-19 test), but they are allowing visitors to cross their borders for the first time since coronavirus shut down much of the world.

Whether travel to "open" international destinations is responsible or advisable is up to individuals to decide. But it's worth noting that since the pandemic is ongoing, anything can change at any time.

While there may be bookable international flights to restricted countries, any outbound US passenger should check with the US Embassy and the airline before finalizing travel plans.

Here are the countries where it's still possible for US passport holders to visit.

Albania

Across the Adriatic Sea from Italy, the former communist country of Albania resumed international commercial flights as of June 15.

"Travelers should be prepared for travel restrictions to be put into effect with little or no advance notice," it states.

Antigua and Barbuda

Turners Beach on Antigua's southwest coast.

Shutterstock

Further to that, visitors are subject to monitoring by local health officials for periods of 14 days and another Covid-19 test may be required while visiting, which could mean quarantining while waiting for the test result.

Aruba

Visitors to Aruba will be required to undertake a Covid-19 test.

Courtesy of Aruba Tourism Authority

Travelers arriving from the other 26 states can opt to have a test taken upon arrival, though the test must be prepaid and there is a mandatory quarantine while awaiting test results.

Aruba also requires travelers to be insured so that they are protected from medical expenses should they test positive for coronavirus during their stay.

The Bahamas

The Bahamas had been allowing US tourists to enter. But on July 22, that comes to a stop.

Melissa Alcena/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The Bahamas reopened to international travel on July 1. Then on July 19, they announced a ban on US travelers "due to the continued increase in Covid-19 cases in the United States, as well as an uptick in cases in The Bahamas," a news release said.

The Bahamas then pivoted from an outright ban on US tourists to implementing a mandatory 14-day quarantine for inbound passengers. Visitors must request a health visa prior to travel, upload and later present negative Covid-19 PCR test result -- the date of the test cannot be more than 10 days prior to travel.

Barbados

Barbados opens to tourists on July 12.

Marnie Hunter/CNN

The form includes health questions, including whether the traveler has a negative Covid-19 test result.

Travelers can opt to take a Covid-19 PCR test upon arrival, though travelers from the United States who wish for a more seamless travel experience are strongly encouraged to pre-submit their negative test results via the immigration portal and arrive with proof of those results in hand.

Belize

Belize encourages visitors to take a Covid-19 test 72 hours before arrival.

Shutterstock

When Belize reopens its airport on August 15, inbound US passengers will have to have downloaded the new Belize Health App (not currently operational) and supply the required details before boarding a flight to Belize.

The app provides travelers with an identification and QR code that will be used for contact tracing while in country. The app will check in daily to confirm visitors do not have symptoms.

Visitors should book hotels that have received Belize Tourism's "gold standard certificate of recognition." Only those hotels will be open as of August 15 and guests will be screened before checking in.

Belize also encourages visitors to take a Covid-19 PCR test at least 72 hours before travel and to present negative results in order to fast-track entry.

Bermuda

Travelers will have to pay fees to cover the cost of testing when heading to Bermuda.

Alex Rosen / CNN

Visitors who do not have a negative Covid-19 PCR test result will not be given authorization to travel to Bermuda.

Upon arrival, passengers must present the pre-departure negative test results, submit to an additional Covid-19 test and quarantine in their accommodation until the results are ready, which takes between six and eight hours.

Additional testing is required after day three, seven and 14, depending on the length of stay, at various testing sites around the island.

The fee for the travel authorization covers the cost of testing.j

Cambodia

Visitors to Cambodia will need to pay a deposit of $3,000 to cover the cost of testing and quarantine if necessary.

Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP/Getty Images

If you're sitting on $3,000 and want to fly to Phnom Penh International Airport to embark on a Cambodian adventure, this is now an option.

In a June 10 statement, the airport's director, Sao Wathana, announced, "Upon arrival, all foreign passengers are required to deposit $3,000 at the airport to pay for the virus prevention services."

Visitors will be required to take a Covid-19 test, and if negative, the remaining funds will be returned minus $160 to cover the cost of the test and a fully catered day in a waiting center.

A positive test result carries serious financial and social consequences, involving hospitalization and medical care, and the 14-day quarantine of all fellow inbound flight passengers and additional affiliated expenses.

Croatia

Ignoring the EU ban Americans traveling to Europe, Croatia began welcoming US tourists on July 10.

Dominica

US travelers should expect to be subject to further testing and screening.

Dominican Republic

Travelers to the Dominican Republic will be temperature-tested.

Dominican Republic Ministry of Tourism

However, anyone presenting symptoms or registering a temperature above 100.6 F (38 C) will have to be tested. Passengers who test positive will be isolated and treated.

Visitors also need to provide contact information, but the gist is that when it comes to Covid-19 symptoms and testing, the DR is willing to take your word for it.

Dubai

Tourism to Dubai resumed on July 7.

GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP via Getty Images

Dubai resumed tourism on July 7. Visitors to the UAE are required to have medical travel insurance to cover any necessary Covid-19 treatment and present a negative Covid-19 PCR test result within 96 hours of arrival.

Travelers must complete a "health declaration form" before departing to confirm they are not experiencing any coronavirus symptoms.

Passengers can expect temperature checks and mandatory testing if they display symptoms.

Ecuador

The Galapagos islands' tourist sites reopened to visitors on July 13, though at present, with the quarantine rule is in effect, a visit to the UNESCO heritage site is a major time investment.

Egypt

Egypt is reopening its border with the hope of revamping a tourism industry that's been severely hurt by the coronavirus lockdown. But what will it take to get Egypt's tourism industry going again? CNN's Michael Holmes reports.

Egypt relaxed restrictions on tourism July 1, and there are regular direct flights on EgyptAir from New York City and Washington, DC, to Cairo.

In terms of precisely what awaits US passport holders upon arrival, details are hard to come by. Coming prepared with a negative Covid-19 test result that is at most 48-hours old and proof of medical insurance is advisable

French Polynesia

French Polynesia is welcoming tourists from July 15.

Suliane Favennec/AFP/Getty Images

Travelers seeking the ultimate in tropical isolation are now welcome to the islands of Tahiti and Bora Bora.

Passengers must also complete a "sanitary entry form" (one per family), detailing their current state of health and agree to report symptoms and submit to additional testing should it be deemed necessary upon arrival or during the stay.

Ireland

US travelers were never banned from visiting Ireland -- they just have to submit to a mandatory, 14-day quarantine.

Jamaica

Golden Eye, Jamaica.

Island Outpost

Due to the increase in coronavirus cases in the United States, passengers arriving from New York, Florida, Arizona and Texas are required to upload negative Covid-19 test results to receive travel authorization. The test date must be within 10 days of arrival.

Each passenger must present the travel authorization along with their passport at the point of departure.

All travelers "from areas where there is high community transmission of the virus" will be tested at the airport upon arrival and required to quarantine in their chosen accommodations until the results are ready, usually within 48 hours.

Only hotels, villas or guesthouses within the "resilient corridor" are accepting guests. According to Visit Jamaica, "the resilient corridor includes the coastline from Negril to Port Antonio. Only businesses within the corridor that have been trained and assessed for adherence to Covid-19 protocols are allowed to open to tourists."

Kosovo

No testing or quarantine is required for travelers arriving in Kosovo.

"Despite being open to tourists, the Embassy strongly suggests US visitors cancel or postpone any travel plans to Kosovo this summer."

The Maldives

The Maldives is wide open to visitors from July 15.

Shutterstock

One of the world's most desirable holiday destinations, the Maldives is reopened to all international tourists. US travelers are not required to be tested prior to departure, but will need to complete a health declaration upon arrival.

All tourists must have booked their accommodations in advance.

Mexico

Balandra beach in La Paz, Mexico

Alfredo Martinez/Getty Images

Though the land border between the United States and Mexico remains closed, US travelers can fly to Mexico.

No testing requirements are currently in place, although Mexico's recent reopening has coincided with increased cases of coronavirus.

Travelers can expect temperature checks and other additional screenings upon arrival.

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The handful of countries still welcoming US tourists - CNN

Providing High-Touch Through High-Tech: Resilience In Hospitality Through Human, Technology And System Convergence | By Ambika Gandhi, MRICS -…

The Covid-19 pandemic has taken a severe toll on the global hotel industry. In Canada alone, the accommodation and food services industry (the hospitality industry in a broad sense) accounts for 1.3 million jobs in the national economy, and contributed $44.6 billion to Canadian GDP in 2019. In Canada, as in all countries around the world, travel restrictions have led to staggeringly low occupancy levels, sometimes in the single digit percentage.

However, the pandemic is also accelerating our journey in an Industry 4.0 era that weaves artificial intelligence and digital technologies into the everyday lives of individuals, businesses and society. Can this advancement of technology provide a silver lining opportunity for one of the oldest industries - an industry positioned as a high-touch, customer-centric one, providing home and food away from home? Can technology also assist in connecting hotels, local businesses and global markets?

Uncertain times have been catalysts for the reimagination of traditional hotel operations. This pandemic will be no different. With volatile occupancy levels and average daily rates, hotel owners are adopting new technologies to mitigate risk and bring more certainty to hospitality. Key technological improvements help mitigate some operational challenges that arise due to the uncertainty surrounding the pandemic: a possible second wave, a possible vaccine with an uncertain timeline.

Utilising technology within a hotel has for long been viewed by customer and hotelier alike contrary to traditional hotel operations. Pre-pandemic, customer care through constant contact was the essence of the hotel business. Using technology within operations was perceived to be an expensive proposition.

This transformation is not unique to the hotel business. Several key industries including retail, banking, and logistics have deployed technology within their daily operations to cope with restrictions on travel and trade. Industry 4.0 digitization is enabling finer-grained links between human behavior (be it the customer, staff or management) and the ever more dynamic and interconnected real-world contexts created in real time by delivery systems, supply chains and markets.

The hospitality industry is not lagging behind. During Covid-19, technology can help make guests feel safer and more comfortable, playing a key role in hoteliers' management of risk and recovery. This special market report highlights how technology can be used within daily hotel operations, while also understanding its impact on productivity and consumer beliefs.

The hotel industry is one the largest affected industries by the first wave of this pandemic; yet the hotel industry is adopting new best practices to become more resilient to possibilities of a second wave. This is visible when observing trends within the Chinese hotel industry. At first, as early as in January and February of 2020, Chinese hotels experienced steep occupancy rate declines, down to 14% (as compared to 58% in February 2019). Since then, the Chinese hotel industry has regained strength, ending the month of June at a 47% occupancy rate; even as concerns of a possible second wave persist.

The United States and Canada implemented travel restrictions only by mid-March; yet occupancy rate declines preceded policy interventions. In the United States, occupancy levels decreased from a high of 62% in February 2020, to a low of 25% in April, gaining strength in May and June to end at 42%. Similarly, in Canada, where travel restrictions are more stringent than in the US, occupancy levels decreased from a high of 58% in February, to a low of 14% in April, gaining to 25% in June 2020. This compared to occupancy levels being approximately 74% in June 2019.

The following Exhibit highlights the evolution of hotel occupancy levels in China, United States and Canada for the months of January to June, for 2019 and 2020.

It is evident the hotel industry is facing the need to manage both declines in demand and increases in uncertainty. In each of the previous crises - September-11, SARS, the 2008-09 Financial Crisis -- hotels adopted an approach combining i) targeted marketing and communication, ii) reimagination of customer experience, and iii) rethinking of efficient hotel operations. Customers' tastes change, with a greater demand for security, convenience, and comfort - and hoteliers respond.

The question remains, can technology assist hotels as travel opens up when the Covid-19 pandemic is contained? Today's hospitality industry is being transformed into a technology-based one, supported by artificial intelligence (AI), Cloud Computing, and various mobile applications. Aspects of traditional hotel operations have continued to use technology-enabled hardware and software. Technology enables hotel operations to become adequately contactless, thereby ensuring social-distancing between guests and staff. The following section highlights how technology can be effectively deployed, to assist hotel operators during such times.

Consider retail, another industry where operations are consumer centric. Businesses are exploring the "frictionless store", a notion that will potentially disrupt the industry (Selena Zhu et al, 2019-2020). The frictionless store caters to the high-tech lifestyles of consumers, looking for flexibility, convenience and security. Amazon with Amazon-Go, Walmart with Innovative Retail Lab and Alibaba with Hema, have turned their operations "frictionless".

Similarly, can the hospitality industry, one that was traditionally high-touch in nature, turn into a hi-tech one, where contactless or "frictionless" service is encouraged. So, what does a contactless-hotel look like?

Designing "Socially-Distanced" Spaces - From High-Touch to High-Tech

In new age "lifestyle" hotels such as citizenM, where guests sleep, work, play and meet like-minded people in a highly social and high-touch environment.

The citizenM hotel brand designed spaces that were communal, allowing for greater connectivity between people. Smaller room sizes, with larger and more integrated lobbies where guests can work, get a drink, and connect with like-minded travellers were some key highlights of citizenM hotels. In the times of a pandemic, where mass gatherings are restricted and a minimum distance of 6 feet is required between guests, the integrated and highly connected environments might need to be reimagined.

When designed for the first time, citizenM hotels developed the technique of "reverse-thinking", where targeted guest needs and motivations were placed at the centre of the design process, and where spaces were designed to meet their needs. A similar technique maybe utilized within the pandemic-proof hotel, where designing spaces takes into account enhanced safety, security and sanitization measures - catering to today's guest needs.

Spaces larger in nature, with more distance and less people are the future. Seamless and integrated barriers within the design could enhance the distance between various guests. Contactless service, enabled through technology can be utilized throughout the hotel.

Lobby and Reception Areas in a High-Tech World

Structurally, the lobby area will continue to look welcoming. The traditional reception desk is replaced by a much smaller counter. Going "frictionless", several self-check-in free standing kiosks, placed 6-feet apart, are placed within the lobby area.

Similar to the airport self-check-in kiosks, the hotel kiosks function with a unique verification ID, followed by a government issued ID card as validation. Several companies, such as Hilton, Linq Hotels, Yotel and Premier Inn have implemented this technology, and it is bound to expand. These kiosks are linked to loyalty programs, using facial recognition technology.

For independent hotel owners, cost-effective technology providers such as Fuel, Hello Guest and others allow application driven self-check inns and outs for guests, with or without the need of a physical kiosk. These kiosks would be able to assign a clean room to guests, process payments using credit or debit card reader, and pay for any additional amenities or services required during the guests' stay.

Lobby areas will also become more multifunctional, allowing for greater flexibility through furniture and fittings. Discrete barriers blending with the overall design can also be installed.

Checking into your Room

The technology of utilizing your phone to open a hotel room has been available since the last decade, but it took a Covid-19 pandemic to make this trend go mainstream. The technology has steadily grown over the years, with more than a million hotel rooms worldwide utilizing this technology as of 2019.

Several hotel brands such as Hilton, Marriott, Disney Resorts and MGM Resorts have also deployed this technology within various properties in their portfolio, while also linking it to their loyalty programs. It is estimated Hilton has deployed this technology in over 4,000 properties worldwide, as of 2019.

In-Room

In-room facilities and amenities are unlikely to change dramatically. Prevailing in-room technology such as personalised welcome screens, smart lighting, smart TVs to access various streaming services, will continue. The aspect that could change is using technology to enhance guest experience. Examples include using app-based technology to provide guided mediation, lighting that assists in syncing Circadian rhythms, and using virtual assistants to close curtains.

Restaurant and Bars

Emerging from a lockdown, restaurants and bars are gradually opening with limited capacity and enough space between tables enabling safe distancing. In a post-pandemic world, terraces and outdoor seating is expected to gain in popularity, even in colder temperatures by using outdoor heating facilities. Technology can ensure "frictionless" processes, thereby increasing safety. Examples include:

Sales and Marketing

Reimagining Traditional Operations:

The robots do not necessarily reduce staff count, but allow hotel staff to focus on the delivery of essential tasks. Such robots also work well in the economy and midscale hotels - where they lead to additional cost savings.

Hotel owners and developers may be hesitant to deploy technology if Covid-19 is only a temporary phenomenon. After all, the upfront set-up costs are not trivial. Owners and developers are also skeptical, given how much and how frequent technology can change. Given the advancement of technology in recent years, these set-up costs have significantly reduced. Embracing technology has long term benefits beyond Covid-19, such as:

Higher Communal Outreach: A hotel has always been a place where people would connect, but its no longer a place for only guests and staff to connect. Mobile app technology also allows locals to interact with the hotel and their staff. AccorLocal, the app developed by Accor Hotels, does exactly that. The app allows local residents to be connected to merchants rendering their services at the hotel, allows concierges to assist with any enquiries and provide services, make restaurant reservations (usually within the hotel), book yoga and other fitness classes, pick up breakfast on their way to work, pick up and drop off dry cleaning (without a time limit as hotels operate 24/7), amongst others. Spending money on such services allows locals to gain loyalty points on the respective loyalty programs, thereby enjoying perks while on holiday.

Environmentally Sustainable: Convenient technology is saving the environment. The use of technology allows for a largely paper and plastic-free work environment. When technology is utilized in inventory management, staff scheduling, check-ins and check-outs, menus etc. several tonnes of paper and plastic are saved. According to the New York Times, Hilton estimates approximately 40 tons of plastic were saved by over 7 million Digital Key downloads.

Enhanced Guest Retention: Guests now have access to hotel properties and hotel brands, at any given point and at their convenience. This allows for the hotel properties to directly communicate with the guests, prior to, during and after their stay. Increased information sharing allows guests to expect a certain level of service and engagement with staff, while also allowing hotels to plan a guests' stay in advance.

Increase Employee Engagement: Easier staffing schedules, allocating duties to staff, tracking performance goals and achievements, and using AI and technology to allow employees to have access to several online training modules, allow staff to be engaged at work. The easy access to schedules also means staff have more control on their work-life, knowing how hard this can be with traditional operations.

Additionally, when technology is used to replace more mundane tasks such as check-ins and check-outs, staff can focus more on guest needs, while also personalizing their stay and overall experience.

Reduced Overall Cost: Replacing some functions with technology leads to additional cost savings as well. For instance, the digital key technology is far less expensive than the older RFID plastic key-card technology for door locks. The newer technology is also highly energy efficient, thereby reducing utility costs - one of the largest line items in a profit and loss statement within a hotel. Hotel developers and owners are typically charged with an upfront cost at the beginning of switching to newer technology, where benefits and cost savings are higher in the long run.

Resilience is the capacity for complex systems to survive by adapting, evolving and growing their operations in the face of turbulent change. In the hospitality industry, as with any other modern or traditional sector, the resilience lies in being human-centered, risk intelligent, flexible and agile for real-time and long-term market outcomes -- ensuring financial viability.

The COVID-19 pandemic is just another manifestation of our now-normal turbulent times. This special market report illustrates the acceleration and deepening of the convergence of human-touch and technology through Industry 4.0 digitalization. This enables the hotel business to provide a home away from home, while allowing for sustained growth.

Technology assists in providing safer accommodations and dining options. For the hospitality industry, it's generating systemic change as guest preferences and priorities evolve. Technology facilitates financial sustainability even as operating conditions remain drastically altered; and as we witness reductions in capacity for revenue generating spaces (i.e. Lobbies, F&B outlets and event spaces).

Technology is not about technicality - it's about being more creative when we use our spaces, our precious human capital; it's about maintaining the high-touch nature that defines our hospitality business.

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Providing High-Touch Through High-Tech: Resilience In Hospitality Through Human, Technology And System Convergence | By Ambika Gandhi, MRICS -...

Prince William and Kate Took Their Kids on a Special Family Vacation to Tresco – Observer

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge havent left their Norfolk country home, Anmer Hall, much since they began quarantining there with Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis back in March, but this week, they took their kids on a quick family vacation.

Prince William and Kate Middleton headed to Tresco, in the Isles of Scilly, with their three children, where theyve been on a relaxing family getaway.

SEE ALSO:Prince William and Kate Did Host Prince Harry and Meghan at Anmer Hall

The Cambridges wanted to get in a short trip before George and Charlotte go back to school, per theMirror, so perhaps that means that the two eldest Cambridge kids are definitely returning to Thomass Battersea after months of homeschooling at Anmer Hall.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge decided against traveling abroad, as the possibility of having to quarantine upon their return to the United Kingdom could impact their ability to get back to work and attend public engagements. They also wanted to show their support for the U.K. travel industry, which, like the rest of the worlds travel sectors, has been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

Prince William and Kate wereriding their bicycles, having a laugh. They looked so happy enjoying the weather, a fellow vacationer told the Mirror. They greeted locals, and [t]hey were really friendly and said hello.

The Cambridges took a private helicopter to Tresco, per theSun, and took family boat trips to secluded parts of the island for some casual dolphin spotting.

Prince William and Kate have traveled to Tresco, which is near Cornwall, in the past. They visited together in 2016, when they went to Tresco Abbey Gardens, rode bikes and went aboard a boat to St. Martins. Its an extra special place for Prince William, who first visited the island with his parents, Prince Charles and Princess Diana, and his brother, Prince Harry, in 1989.

The Cambridges short getaway is already coming to an end, as theyre expected to return to their Norfolk home today. Theyll likely spend the rest of the summer at Anmer Hall, aside from a trip to Balmoral to visit Queen Elizabeth.

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Prince William and Kate Took Their Kids on a Special Family Vacation to Tresco - Observer

10 Worst Fathers In Avatar: The Last Airbender And The Legend of Korra – Screen Rant

Despite being afranchiseabout element-bending teenagers fighting to end wars, bothAvatar: The Last Airbender as well asThe Legend of Korraput a fair amount of emphasis on families. Fathers, in particular, play a prominent role in the storyline, often influencing their children for better or for worse. However, the franchise boasts an abnormally huge roster of fathers that just dropped the ball when itcame to how they handled their children.

RELATED:Avatar The Last Airbender: 10 Non-Benders That Don't Get Enough Credit

Below are ten of the worst fathers in thefranchise who not only remained ignorant of their child's emotions during a crucial time of their youthful development, but even exercised violence against their children, scarring their bodies just as much as their minds.

Hakoda wasn't a terrible guy. After leaving his family to lead the Southern Water Tribe'sfight against the Fire Nation, he embodies sacrifice. Unfortunately for him, part of being a good father is being aware of your child's feelings, and as Book 3's first episode showed, he wasn'tawareof the tensionthat existed between he and Katara until she blatantly spelled it out for him.

Most fans can easily understand Katara's frustration: Hakoda left his children for years without even returning home for a visit, nor did he even write home.Nobody can blame Hakoda for leaving, but he could've made more of an effort to remain in his daughter's life.

Lao Beifong meant well for Toph, but he put her in a box that she was forced to conform to by only viewing her through the lens of her inability to see. He stated that she was weak and helpless, which meant that despite being her father, he never picked up on the fact that his daughter was one of the greatest Earthbenders of all time.

He restricted her freedoms and kept her hidden from the world, which was why she didn't think twice about traveling the world with Aang, Katara, and Sokka. Sure,Lao only wanted to protect her at the end of the day, but overprotective parents never lead to a child with a healthy social life.

After Tonraq's past, as well as the Red Lotus's previous attempt on Korra's life, it makes sense that her father would remain so protective of his only child. Still, due to Tonraq deciding for her, Korra was forced to remain in the Southern Water Tribe for her Avatar training instead of traveling the world like other Avatars before her, depriving her of the autonomy that a young woman like her, especially one who's destined to serve as a bridge between two worlds, should possess.

RELATED:Avatar The Last Airbender: 5 Relationships Fans Were Behind (& 5 They Rejected)

After their falling out throughout Book 2, he did his best to become one of Korra's most reliable supporters, aiding her in battles against the Red Lotus and remainingastable emotional pillar for herafter her fight with Zaheer.

The Mechanist did everything he could to give his son, Teo, a good life, but he did so at the cost of deceiving him, along with everyone else who lived with him at the Northern Air Temple by giving his inventions to the Fire Nation. Compared to some other names on her though, The Mechanist is a saint.

InThe Legend of Korra's Book 2, after being introduced to his oldest child, Bumi, and his only daughter, Kya, fans, as well as Tenzin, were forced to face the harsh truth that Aang wasn't a perfect father. After the Hundred Year War's conclusion, Aang still remained the only Airbender in existence, so it makes sense that an Airbending child would quickly become his top priority, since this washis part to play toin order to rebuild his culture. Tenzin was his only Airbending child, and Bumi and Kya revealed that Aang barely spent time with them while he essentially spoiled Tenzin with years of quality time and world travel.

Aang wasn't malicious to his other children; he merely showed more affection to the one that was the most similar to him. This was a hard pill to swallow for everyone involved and definitely made a lot of fans look at the selfless monk they'd met back inAvatara bit differently. Aang might be one of the greatest Avatars tohave ever lived, but it's clear that he fell short when it came to being a dad.

At first glance, Hiroshi Sato seemed like he'd be a great ally toTeam Avatar. WhentheFire Ferrets found themselves lacking the cash they needed to compete in Republic City's Pro-bending Tournament, he graciously sponsored them, butall this was negated when his more hateful, vengeful side was revealed. He was an Equalist who used hisbrillianceto aid Amon's movement and was justly locked up for the damage to Republic City he caused.

RELATED:Avatar: The Last Airbender - The 10 Best Side Characters, Ranked

He redeemed himself in everyone's eyesaftersacrificing himself to carve an opening into Kuvira's giant mecha suit, giving Korra, Bolin, Mako, Lin, and Suyin the opening they needed to get inside anddo some real damage, proving that at the end of the day, Sato truly did want the best world for his daughter, whether he was in it or not.

Not much of Azulon was seen in the series, but that doesn't erase how terrifying he was in the scenes that he was featured in. Like any other Fire Lord before him, he was just as powerful as he was foreboding.

When Ozai attempted to usurp Iroh's birthright in a brazengrab for power, Azulon ordered Ozai to murder Zuko. Onlysomeone with a twistedmoral view would order his own son to kill his grandson, so it's no surprise why Ozai became such awicked, heartless man as well.

After Aang deprived Yakone of his Waterbending, he settled down in the Northern Water Tribe where he trained his sons in the art of Bloodbending. It became clear that he only saw his children as objects of his own personal revenge, and barely cared about the damage his training was doing to their psyches. He forced his own sons to Bloodbend one another, a feeling that no good father would ever want his children to experience.

He constantly put Tarrlok down due to his hesitance to Bloodbend at such a young age,showing that his respect for his sons only went as far as their Bloodbending prowess.While he gave up his quest for revenge after his oldest son ran away from home,the damage done to them remained long after he died.

Fire Lord Ozaitreated Zuko with contempt for much of his younger life, and instead gave Azula all his praise.When Zuko spoke out against a Fire Nation general's plans, Ozai's way of teaching him respect was to challenge him to a one-sided Agni Kai. Even if Zuko did stand and face his father, he wouldn't have won the battle. Despite his son pleading for forgiveness,Ozai didn't hesitate to permanently scar Zuko and banish him from the only place he called home.

It's because of Ozai that Zuko was filled withso much rage for most of the series.Fortunately for everyone, Ozai rightfully rotted in a cell not only for his role in the Hundred Year War, butalso for the terrible job he did as a father, especially given that his other child, Azula, turned out to be nothing short of a monster.

Unalaq makes everyone else on this list look like a saint. His attempt to become the Dark Avatar was a grasp for power that would've left his own children living in a world of darkness.Like Yakone, Unalaq only saw his children as tools to aid him in his exploits.

Whileattempting to open the Northern spirit portal,Eska was wounded by an unexpected backlash of energy.Although Desnawarned thathe needed a healer immediately, Unalaq didn't so much as look back at his son's injuries.And this was before a powerful spirit of darkness possessed him!

NEXT: Legend Of Korra: 10 Worst Things Korra Ever Did

Next How I Met Your Mother: 10 Things About Robin That Would Never Fly Today

Lavell Nero is a lover of good films and stories that seek to challenge how we view the world around us. His goal is to go the extra mile and write articles that include extra tidbits of information that other sites often gloss over. When he's not watching his favorite TV shows and movies, he's either working as an active member of New York's TV scene, or playing the latest PS4 release.

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10 Worst Fathers In Avatar: The Last Airbender And The Legend of Korra - Screen Rant

Top 10 economies that rely the most on tourism – ValueWalk

In 2019, the travel and tourism industry contributed $1.8 trillion to the US and $1.58 trillion to Chinas GDP. Worldwide, the tourism sector contributes a little over 10% to all the economic output. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought the travel and tourism industry to a standstill. It has forced hundreds of millions of people out of jobs. Here we take a look at the top 10 economies that rely the most on tourism.

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According to the non-profit World Travel and Tourism Council, the tourism sector employed 330 million people worldwide in 2019. That's one out of every 10 jobs on the planet. Last year, it contributed $8.9 trillion to the world's GDP. The tourism industry creates jobs in a variety of forms including local guides, restaurant workers, hoteliers, tour operators, and more.

There are at least 44 countries where the tourism industry employs more than 15% of the workforce. Most of them are island nations such as Antigua & Berbuda, Aruba, the US Virgin Islands, Maldives, Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, and Anguilla. They have suffered massive economic damages due to the lack of a steady tourism revenue.

But the small island nations are not where your tourism dollar goes the farthest. A more objective way to find which economies rely the most on tourism is to look at the number of tourism jobs created for every 100 visitors.

The Official Esta analyzed data from the World Bank and Knoema to find out how much tourism contributes to employment figures in more than 170 countries. In 2019, there were a record 1.5 billion international tourist arrivals. The figure was expected to rise 4% in 2020, but the coronavirus pandemic has changed everything.

The Official Esta found that the economy of Bangladesh relies the most on tourism. The country has a staggering 944 tourism related jobs for every 100 visitors. It makes Bangladesh highly vulnerable to unemployment caused by the steep decline in tourism.

India is the distant second with 172 tourism related jobs per 100 visitors. Given India's population of 1.3 billion, roughly 26.7 million people work in the tourism sector. India is not only a popular tourist destination but also has a large number of outbound tourists, thanks to its growing middle-class.

Pakistan is ranked third with 154 jobs per 100 visitors. Venezuela is the only South American nation on the list with 101 tourism jobs. The list is dominated by Asian and African countries. It indicates that even though the Western countries attract a lot more tourists than Asian and African nations, there are proportionately fewer people employed in tourism related businesses.

The World Travel and Tourism Council sheds light how how dependent large economies are on tourism. Many small island nations are almost entirely reliant on tourism. But the pandemic's impact on larger economies is affecting far more people than in tiny island nations. Large economies are feeling the impact of travel restrictions to contain the pandemic.

Several European nations depend heavily on the inflow of international tourists. France, Spain, Italy, Germany, and Greece are among the world's most popular tourist destinations. According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, Spain alone would lose $68 billion if the travel restrictions remain in place through September.

Topping the list is Mexico. Tourism contributes 15.5% to its GDP. It is followed by European nations Spain (14.3%) and Italy (13%). Tourism accounts for 11.3% of Turkey's GDP.

China occupies the fourth spot with 11.3%. According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, travel and tourism contributed $1.58 trillion to China's GDP in 2019. Tourism contributes roughly 9% to the UK, Germany, and Saudi Arabia's economic output.

The United States is the only country that gets more tourism revenue ($1.8 trillion) than China. But tourism makes up only 8.6% of the US GDP. The US has become the global epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic with more than 4.3 million confirmed cases and 150,000 deaths.

South Korea is one of the least affected large economies. Travel and tourism industry contributes merely 2.8% of its GDP. The country has also eased some travel restrictions by setting up a travel corridor.

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The untold truth of Castle Rock – Looper

If you're at all familiar with the wondrously creepy worlds conjured by Stephen King, you know there are literary horrors too numerous to count available forCastle Rock's creative team to borrow from. And setting the series within the town of Castle Rock itself puts pretty much all of them at the fingertips of the show's writing team. If the first two seasons are any indication, Castle Rock's creatives may well try to use the entirety of those twisted tales (and the characters within) in crafting their own.

True to that concept, in its first two seasons, the series has already included elements, narratives, and characters from some of King's best-loved tales, including Rita Hayworth and the ShawshankRedemption,TheBody(akaStand ByMe),Salem's Lot,Misery,Cujo,Needful Things, and more.

Unlike other King adaptations, Castle Rockis not a straight-up re-telling of those stories, and typically uses them as a sort of entry point into the tangled universe of King's books. So far, that tactic has found the series putting wild new spins on familiar tropes, and molding them into a timeline-smashing narrative that's positively overflowing with all manner of King-tinged mirth and menace. That was particularly true of Castle Rock's second season, which found series writers blending a narrative mashup featuring King stalwarts like the Merrill family (The Body) and Annie Wilkes (Misery) with that of the body-snatching beasts first glimpsed inSalem's Lot.

General setting aside, those narratives had never crossed over in the pages of any of King's stories. Interwoven as they are inCastle Rock, those stories bring new depth, and some seriously sinister edginess to King's already unsettling creations, which makes Castle Rock a series at once boldly original, and singularly familiar.

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The untold truth of Castle Rock - Looper

How the pandemic is piquing UHNW interest in private islands – – Spear’s WMS

Safety concerns raised by the pandemic have sent private islands to the top of UHNWsshopping lists, writes Catherine Moye

Before the pandemic struck, as Knight Franks March 2020 Wealth Report showed, the real estate trend among UHNWs was for investing in wellness. Now Covid-19 has made the highest-rollers thoughts travel far beyond spa treatments, towards the isolated allure of desert island life.

Take Little Pipe Cay in the Bahamas. Along with incredible seascapes and pristine sandy beaches, it boasts a nine-bedroom mansion, several hundred feet of dock frontage and a large staff and operations village spread over its lush 68 acres.

This is one of the most special properties that Ive been involved with, says Edward de Mallet Morgan, a London-based partner at Knight Frank. He is marketing the island for $85 million, and since the crisis more of the ultra-rich have wanted to view it.

This is a very low-volume market, he adds. When youre talking about property in the $50-70 million-plus range, its about approaching clients to see if they might be interested.

Yet the pandemic has enhanced awareness of those places where people can spend time with their families that are safe.

We have a number of clients from Asia who are looking at private islands, says de Mallet Morgan. They mostly lead stressful lives in polluted cities with a lot of heavy industry, and where theyre not sure where their food comes from. Increasingly, they seek the opposite of that.

Acquiring a private island is not all barefoot chic, however. Unless you are buying one thats plug-in-and-play ready, the considerations are manifold. A decent dock or a landing pontoon for a seaplane is crucial. It needs electricity and network connectivity. Maintenance and supplies are other factors. Most owners house engineers and managers on their island.

A well-run private island is like a military operation, notes de Mallet Morgan. It also demands a certain amount of environmental responsibility because youre nurturing a landscape for future generations. Its not something you take on lightly.

But it is increasingly something that UHNWs are looking to take on. Especially post-Covid-19, as Jacques Menahem, the Papeete-based owner of French Polynesia Sothebys International Realty, has found. His agency has several private islands on the market, some with permission to develop boutique hotels.

I used to get around two enquiries a day, but now Im getting around ten from the USA, UK, France, Dubai and Italy, he says.

Farhad Vladi of Vladi Private Islands (vladi-private-islands.de) has a range of European islands for sale, especially in the Aegean and Ionian Seas, where a scenic island of around 1,100 acres has an asking price of 45 million.

Or theres Santa Maria Island in Sicily, which comes with a mansion and olive groves, for 17 million. Escaping to an unsullied corner of planet earth has always been romantic. Whoever would have thought a virus would make it wise as well.

This piece first appeared in issue 74 of Spears magazine.Click hereto buy and subscribe

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How the pandemic is piquing UHNW interest in private islands - - Spear's WMS

Private island retreat project launched in the Abacos – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Montage Hotels & Resorts yesterday announced Montage Cay, a 48-acre private-island resort and residential community in The Abacos Islands in the Bahamas.

Owned in partnership with Sterling Global Financial, the project will see the rebranding and complete redevelopment of the private island of Matt Lowes Cay in The Abacos.

We are honored to partner with the team at Sterling Global to bring Montage Cay to life and introduce our first Caribbean resort, said Alan J. Fuerstman, Founder, Chairman and CEO of MontageInternational.

Surrounded by calm waters, warm breezes and panoramic beauty,MontageCaywill perfectly combine its breathtaking setting with signatureMontageamenities and service.

We have designed the resort to take full advantage of the islands natural beauty, setting the stage for one of the finest ultra-luxury resorts in the Caribbean. We are grateful to the Bahamian community for their warm welcome and look forward to bringing Montage to this special part of the world.

Montage Cay is located less than one mile off the coast of Marsh Harbour.

The private island features seven pristine beaches, varied topography with elevated sight lines for expansive sunrise and sunset views, mature and diverse landscaping, and stunning scenery of the surrounding cays, all in the tranquil turquoise waters of the Sea of Abaco.

Poised to become one of the most exclusive ultra-luxury resort destinations in the Caribbean, Montage Cay will blend Montages unparalleled service with the serene, natural beauty of the region and offer a contemporary execution of traditional Bahamian architecture.

The private-island resort will feature 50 all-suite accommodations and a limited collection of Montage Residences built in harmony with the islands seven white-sand beaches against a tranquil backdrop of the Sea of Abaco and the stunning surrounding cays.

A 46-slip marina accommodating vessels up to 110 feet anchors the resort, allowing guests and residents of MontageCay exceptional access to an array of world-class boating, fishing and water sports activities.

The 50-room, all-suite resort will feature light and airy ocean-view rooms with luxury outdoor amenities including plunge pools, outdoor showers, private gardens and lounge areas, creating an unmatched resort experience in the Bahamas.

Montage Cay will also boast an array of unique restaurant and bar experiences including all-day dining, a signature dinner-only restaurant, two beach bar and grilles, lobby and pool bars, as well as a spa caf and juice bar.

Additional resort amenities include a full-service Spa Montage, an extensive health and wellness program, fitness center, swimming pools, and Montages signature Paintbox Childrens Club.

The resort will offer indoor meeting space, as well as wedding and social-event lawn space with unobstructed views of the clear blue sea.

We are honored to be partners with Montage International in the development of this spectacular project, saidDavid Kosoy, Executive Chairman & Founder of Sterling Global Financial.

I am confident that the combination of Sterlings development expertise and Montages operational expertise will result in an unparalleled private island escape and community that will set a new standard for luxury living.

According to a statement, Montage Cay guests and residents can easily access the resort through the extensive direct flights offered from major American and European markets to the Bahamas, as well as a modern FBO that welcomes private jets and charters.

After arriving on Marsh Harbour,MontageCayguests and residents will take a brief 10-minute boat ride to the resorts exclusive oasis or dock a private boat at theMontageCaymarina.

Sea plane access directly to theMontageCaydock will be available.

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SpaceX Crew Dragon Departs, Carrying NASA Astronauts Toward Home – The New York Times

Two astronauts who took the first commercial trip to orbit have left the International Space Station. They are scheduled to return home on Sunday.

The astronauts, Robert L. Behnken and Douglas G. Hurley, traveled to the space station in May aboard a Crew Dragon capsule built and run by SpaceX, the private rocket company started by Elon Musk.

The Crew Dragon undocked from the space station at 7:35 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday, with brief thruster firings pushing the spacecraft back.

As the capsule backed away from the station, Mr. Hurley thanked the current crew of the space station and the teams on the ground that helped manage their mission.

We look forward to splashdown tomorrow, he said.

If the weather conditions remain favorable, it will splash down in the Gulf of Mexico off Pensacola, Fla., at 2:48 p.m. on Sunday, NASA announced.

A safe return would open up more trips to and from orbit for future astronaut crews, and possibly space tourists, aboard the spacecraft.

Isaias is forecast to sweep up along the Atlantic coast of Florida over the weekend. NASA and SpaceX have seven splashdown sites in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic, but the track of the storm ruled out the three in the Atlantic.

We have confidence that the teams on the ground are, of course, watching that much more closely than we are, Mr. Behnken said during a news conference on Friday, and we wont leave the space station without some good landing opportunities in front of us, good splashdown weather in front of us.

NASA Televisions coverage of the undocking will continue through splashdown. You can watch it in the video player below.

The capsule is now performing a series of burns to move away from the station and then line up with the splashdown site.

For much of the trip, Mr. Behnken and Mr. Hurley will be sleeping. Their schedule sets aside a full night of rest.

Any return journey that exceeds six hours has to be long enough for the crew to get some sleep between undocking and splashdown, Daniel Huot, a NASA spokesman, said in an email.

Otherwise, because of the extended process that leads up to undocking, the crew would end up working more than 20 hours straight, which is not safe for dynamic operations like water splashdown and recovery, Mr. Huot said.

Just before a final burn that will drop the Crew Dragon out of orbit on Sunday afternoon, it will jettison the bottom part of the spacecraft, known as the trunk, which will then burn up in the atmosphere.

At re-entry, the Crew Dragon will be traveling at about 17,500 miles per hour. Two small parachutes will deploy at an altitude of 18,000 feet when the spacecraft has already been slowed by Earths atmosphere to about 350 miles per hour. The four main parachutes deploy at an altitude of about 6,000 feet.

Once the capsule splashes in the water, it is expected to take 45 to 60 minutes to pluck them out.

The storm complicated where splashdown could take place. At the splashdown site, winds must be less than 10 miles per hour for the capsule to land safely. There are additional constraints on waves, rain and lightning. In addition, helicopters that take part in the recovery of the capsule must be able to fly and land safely.

The first landing opportunity will aim for only the primary site, Pensacola. If weather there is inconsistent with the rules, the capsule and the astronauts will remain in orbit for another day or two, and managers will consider the backup site, which is Panama City.

Spacecraft can safely return to Earth in either environment.

During the 1960s and 1970s, NASAs Mercury, Gemini and Apollo capsules all splashed down in the ocean while Soviet capsules all ended their trips on land. Russias current Soyuz capsules continue to make ground landings, as do Chinas astronaut-carrying Shenzhou capsules.

When Boeings Starliner capsule begins carrying crews to the space station, it will return on land, in New Mexico. SpaceX had originally planned for the Crew Dragon to do ground landings, but decided that water landings, employed for the earlier version of Dragon for taking cargo, simplified the development of the capsule.

After launch, re-entry through Earths atmosphere is the second most dangerous phase of spaceflight. Friction of air rushing past will heat the bottom of the capsule to about 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit. A test flight of the Crew Dragon last year successfully splashed down, so engineers know the system works.

A successful conclusion to the trip opens the door to more people flying to space. Some companies have already announced plans to use Crew Dragons to lift wealthy tourists to orbit.

In the past, NASA astronauts launched on spacecraft like the Saturn 5 moon rocket and the space shuttles that NASA itself operated. After the retirement of the space shuttles in 2011, NASA had to rely on Russia, buying seats on the Soyuz capsules for trips to and from orbit.

Under the Obama administration, NASA hired two companies, SpaceX and Boeing, to build spacecraft to take astronauts to the space station. NASA financed much of the work to develop the spacecraft but will now buy rides at fixed prices. For SpaceX, the trip by Mr. Behnken and Mr. Hurley the first launch of astronauts from American soil since the last space shuttle flight was the last major demonstration needed before NASA officially certifies that the Crew Dragon is ready to begin regular flights.

The astronauts are Robert L. Behnken and Douglas G. Hurley, who have been friends and colleagues since both were selected by NASA to be astronauts in 2000.

Both men have backgrounds as military test pilots and each has flown twice before on space shuttle missions, although this is the first time they have worked together on a mission. Mr. Hurley flew on the space shuttles final mission in 2011.

In 2015, they were among the astronauts chosen to work with Boeing and SpaceX on the commercial space vehicles that the companies were developing. In 2018, they were assigned to the first SpaceX flight.

Originally, the mission was to last only up to two weeks, but Mr. Behnken and Mr. Hurley ended up with a longer and busier stay at the space station. Because of repeated delays by SpaceX and Boeing, NASA ended up short-handed, with only one astronaut, Christopher J. Cassidy, aboard the space station when the Crew Dragon and its two passengers docked.

They stayed two months, helping Mr. Cassidy with space station chores. Mr. Behnken and Mr. Cassidy performed four spacewalks to complete the installation of new batteries on the space station. Mr. Hurley helped by operating the stations robotic arm.

The men have also been contributing to science experiments in low earth orbit. They assisted in a study of water droplet formation in the low gravity environment of the space station using a shower head, and another that used fruit punch and foam to look at how to manage fluids in space. They also helped install new equipment inside the station that will be used in future scientific research.

Mr. Cassidy will remain aboard the station with two Russian astronauts, Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner. All three are to stay on board through October when another crew of one American and two Russian astronauts will replace them.

The first operational flight of the Crew Dragon will launch no earlier than late September. It will take three NASA astronauts Michael S. Hopkins, Victor J. Glover and Shannon Walker and one Japanese astronaut, Soichi Noguchi, to the space station.

The second operational flight, tentatively scheduled for February 2021, will carry two NASA astronauts, Robert S. Kimbrough and K. Megan McArthur; Akihiko Hoshide of Japan; and Thomas Pesquet of the European Space Agency.

Ms. McArthur is married to Mr. Behnken.

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SpaceX Crew Dragon Departs, Carrying NASA Astronauts Toward Home - The New York Times

Bitcoin Association hires Patrick Prinz as Europe & Operations Manager to further advance Bitcoin SV – PRNewswire

ZUG, Switzerland, July 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Bitcoin Association, the Switzerland-based global industry organization that advances Bitcoin Satoshi Vision (BSV), has named Patrick Prinz, CFA as its new Europe & Operations Manager. Working out of the Association's headquarters in "Crypto Valley" Zug, Switzerland, Prinz will serve two roles advance the business growth ofBitcoin SV throughout Europe and support the operational needs of the organization globally.

Bitcoin Association supports Bitcoin SV because it is the only blockchain protocol adhering to Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto's original design and vision for Bitcoin to become a peer-to-peer electronic cash system and global data ledger for enterprise.The Bitcoin SV ecosystem has rapidly grown to over 428 known Bitcoin SV projects and venturesworldwide.Developers and businesses are discovering the value of the Bitcoin blockchain when it massively scales a public ledger capable of huge transaction volumes, micropayments, greater data capacity, smart contracts, tokenization, and many advanced applications.

A true believer in this Satoshi Vision for Bitcoin, Prinz has a strong background in financial services and strategy consulting.Most recently, he worked as a senior investment advisor for a global asset management group.Prinz advised on emerging technologies, and discovered the benefits of having a single, massively scalable, public, auditable ledger for storing any type of data and allowing value transfer at a micropayment level only possible using the Bitcoin SV blockchain.

Previously, Prinz was a consultant at a leading strategy consulting firm acting as advisor to international banks on how to incorporate complex regulatory requirements and adapt business models to industry paradigm shifts.He began his career in corporate and investment banking, working at Deutsche Bank and Citi. Prinz holds a Master of Science degree in Banking and Finance and a Bachelor of Science degree in International Business Administration.

Speaking on his appointment, Prinz said: "Bitcoin SV is finally fulfilling the potential that initially excited me about Bitcoin many years ago to achieve efficiencies as the single public data ledger and micropayment system for the world. As I was puzzled by the fact that innovation and development were not happening on BTC, I did my own extensive research and realized that Satoshi Nakamoto's original design and the Bitcoin white paper always had the answers to achieve a massively scalable global public blockchain. With scaling comes efficiency, and with efficiency come innovation and entrepreneurship which is all happening on Bitcoin SV with the emergence of completely new business models powered by microtransactions and the immutable public ledger that Bitcoin is. I am thrilled to join Bitcoin Association to work with businesses and entrepreneurs to educate them on the transformative power which Bitcoin SV brings to the world."

Jimmy Nguyen, Founding President of Bitcoin Association, commented: "With Patrick's addition, we welcome to our team another high-caliber professional with international business experience. Patrick will play a vital role in operational management as we grow our headquarters in Zug, Switzerland.He will also be a strong business voice for Bitcoin SV across Europe with his financial services knowledge, effective communication skills, and passionate belief in Bitcoin's true power."

Patrick's hire is the latest step in the global expansion of Bitcoin Association.He joins two other regional business managers - Lise Li (China) and Ella Qiang (Southeast Asia, based in Singapore) - all with considerable experience in both Bitcoin and business. Additional team members come from the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, China, and New Zealand.The staff is further supported by Bitcoin Association Global Ambassadors in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Israel, Japan, Netherlands, Panama, Russia and CIS region, the Scandinavia region, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, and the United States.

About Bitcoin Association

Bitcoin Associationis the Switzerland-based global industry organization which advances the Bitcoin SV digital currency and blockchain. Trading as BSV, Bitcoin SV (Satoshi Vision) is the original Bitcoin protocol created by Dr. Craig S. Wright. The Association brings together enterprises, start-up ventures, developers, merchants, exchanges, service providers, blockchain transaction processors (miners), and others in the Bitcoin SV ecosystem to advance the growth of Bitcoin commerce. The Association seeks to build a regulation-friendly ecosystem that fosters lawful conduct while encouraging technology innovation.

To hear from Bitcoin SV industry leaders, attend or watch the CoinGeek Liveconference September 30-October 2, 2020. It will be a hybrid live + virtual event, with live venues in New York, USA and London, UK.

SOURCE Bitcoin Association

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Bitcoin Association hires Patrick Prinz as Europe & Operations Manager to further advance Bitcoin SV - PRNewswire

Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation Market Predicted to Witness Sustainable Evolution in Years to Come by Cytec Solvay Group, Adama Agricultural…

Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation Market Research Report presents a complete market scope and growth rate throughout the past present and forecast period 2020-2027. With concise study, Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market effectively describes the market value, volume, price trend, and growth opportunities. All the commanding players of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation, their company profile, product portfolio, market share, and revenue from Calcium Phosphide Fumigation are bestowed in this study. The important peculiarities contributing to the growth of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation industry along with the barriers and risk factors are included in this study.

Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market is broken down on the basis of product type, application, regions to offer a comprehensive market summary. To start with, the report presents the key market overview, product definitions, classification, and study objective. Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market size evaluation is conducted to foretell the strength and development analysis. Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation value and growth trend is presented from 2015-2019.

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Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market Key manufacturers (Sales Revenue, Price, gross margin, main products, etc.):

Cytec Solvay GroupAdama Agricultural Solutions Ltd.Rentokil Initial PlcUnited Phosphorus Ltd.BASF SE

Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market By Product Types(Market Size & Forecast):

LiquidSolid

Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market By Applications(Market Size & Forecast):

SoilWarehouses

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The geographic presence of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation industry is examined for the areas particularly Asia-Pacific, North America, Europe, South America, Middle-East & Africa, and Latin America. The global and regional level examination of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation will support the market players for judging the investment feasibility and development situation over several areas and countries. Calcium Phosphide Fumigation production value and growth rate from 2013-2018 is predicted for all-region. The countries studied in this report include United States, Canada, Germany, UK, France, Spain, Belgium, India, Japan, Korea, China, South Africa, Brazil, UAE, Singapore, and others.

The analysis of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market share, revenue, pricing analysis, SWOT analysis is covered for all the key market players. The most recent developments in Calcium Phosphide Fumigation industry, industry plans, and policies, upcoming trends are presented in this report. All the product segments and sub-segments are studied in detail in this report.

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Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market drivers, emerging industry verticals, limitations, risk analysis, and development opportunities are analyzed. The analysis of industry chain structure analysis, upstream raw materials, manufacturing capacity, labor cost, cost of raw materials, production process analysis, and the downstream consumer is explained. The import-export scenario, consumption and production capacity and sales channels of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation are elaborated in this report.

Research Methodology Conducted For The Analysis of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation Industry:

The initial step is to know Calcium Phosphide Fumigation industry, based on the definition, applications, type, key players, and geographical appearance. This data is gathered based on the following sources like magazines, company websites, Bloomberg, and paid websites.

To determine the Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market size, revenue, production capacity, import-export statistics, and market share a combination of primary and secondary research is implied. Minimum 70 to 80 paid primary interviews are conducted with the Calcium Phosphide Fumigation manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, and resellers. The paid primary interviews are conducted with the marketing and sales managers, VPs, procurement people, and senior engineers.

Calcium Phosphide Fumigation report can be divided into following 12 sections

Section 1, Declares the objectives of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market, overview, introduction, product definition, growth features, and business behavior

Section 2, Presents the Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market based on leading players and their market share, sales volume, business profiles, Calcium Phosphide Fumigation competitive market outline and pricing structure from 2015 to 2019

Section 3, Examinethe Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market at a regional level based on sales ratio and market size from 2015 to 2019

Segment 4, 5, 6 and 7, explains the Calcium Phosphide Fumigation market at the country level based on product type, applications, revenue analysis

Section 8 and 9, describes the Calcium Phosphide Fumigation industry overview during past, present and forecast period from 2020 to 2027

Section 10 and 11, Explains the market status, plans, expected growth based on regions, type and application in detail for a projection period of 2020-2027

Section 12, Includes the marketing channels, wholesalers, producers, dealer, merchants, consumers of Calcium Phosphide Fumigation.

Finally, valuable conclusions, tables, and data sources are presented.

Table of Content & Table Of Figures

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Global Calcium Phosphide Fumigation Market Predicted to Witness Sustainable Evolution in Years to Come by Cytec Solvay Group, Adama Agricultural...

Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed – Destin Log

This story is part of The Confederate Reckoning, a collaborative project of USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South to examine the legacy of the Confederacy and its influence on systemic racism today.

The white men stand, immortalized in metal and stone, in parks, public squares and the halls of government.

Statues of prominent figures in the Confederacy are a common sight in the South. But the visibility of their monuments often belie the way their lives and legacies are obscured by myth.

Like other symbols of the Confederacy, such memorials have been defended for generations as pieces of Southern heritage, or simply uncontroversial artifacts of history. But for many people, they are ever-present reminders of racial discrimination and violent oppression that has never gone away.

The removal of statues of Confederate leaders as well as those of others who promoted or profited from slavery and racism has become a focal point of calls for a true confrontation with racial inequality in the United States. As part of that conversation,USA TODAY Network newsrooms across the South are taking a critical look at several such figures to understand who they were and what they believed.

***

For more than four decades, a bronzesculpture of thebust of Confederate Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest has been featured prominently in the Tennessee state Capitol.

A statue portraying Forrest was one of three removed in Memphis in late 2017 afterthe city found a loopholeto legally take down the monument that residents widely agreed should not stand in a public park.

But as the fate of the Capitol bust hangs in the balance pending a state commission meeting later this year and after years of debate among Black and white lawmakers, and Democratsand Republicans who was Forrest and why is he so controversial more than 150 years after the Civil War?

Among the most notorious parts of Forrest's legacy is his reported involvement leading Confederate soldiers in the West Tennessee Battle of Fort Pillow in April 1864, which has commonly become known as a massacre of surrendered Union troops, many of whom were Black.

Primary documents from a variety of sources refute argumentsmade by some Forrest apologists including some who have raised the possibility during conversations at the legislature about the bronze bust and Forrest's legacy that he was not responsible for the mass killings at Fort Pillow.

"We've been going through these excuses for Bedford Forrest for the longest while, and none of them are holding up under scrutiny," said Richard Blackett, a history professor at Vanderbilt University.

In 1868, Forrest gave an interview with a Cincinnati Commercial reporter that was widely published in newspapers around the country. In the interview, he said the Ku Klux Klan had "no doubt" been a benefit in Tennessee. While he denied being an official member, he said he was part of the organization "in sympathy," and later when Forrest testified before Congress about the KKK he eventually disclosed that he was familiar with rituals and practices.

Repeatedly in the 1868 interview, Forrest tried to suggest that he had more disdain for white Radical Republicans and Northerners trying to infiltrate Southern politics than he did African Americans, but he still remained fiercely opposed at that point to Blacks gaining the right to vote or having equal standing in society.

"I am opposed to it under any and all circumstances," Forrest said.

"And here I want you to understand distinctly I am not an enemy to the negro.We want him here among us; he is the only laboring class we have."

***

Jefferson Davis was a man of many words. He literally wrote volumes during his lifetime and spent the last decade of his life writing about the history of the Confederacyandan in-depth analysis of the Civil War.

But Davis (1808-1889) most notably is known for his role withthe Confederate States of America, of which he was named its first and only president.

Susannah Ural,professor of history and co-director of the Dale Center for the Study of War and Society at the University of Southern Mississippi, said Davis seemed to be a natural choice for president of the Confederacy.

Although he did not support secession, he felt duty-bound to represent his state, which voted to secede, and the new government to which he was appointed president. However, he also believed secession was a right afforded tothe states.

Davis wrote in his book,"The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government," that slavery "was not the cause of the war, but an incident."

In his preface to the bookhe said,"the States had never surrendered their sovereignty," and that states should be allowed to make their own decisions regarding slavery.

Davis saidthe federal government was usurping its authority by forcing unwanted laws on the states, first and foremost the abolition of slavery, which was an integral part of the Southern states' agricultural economy.

"(Slavery is) the primary cause, but it's not the only cause," Ural said. "When you talk about states' rights, when you talk about what powers the federal government should have versus state authority, one of the centralissues to states' rightswas the right to slavery."

However, she said, determining the Civil War happened because of slavery isn't entirely accurate.

"There's never one cause ofa war, and things thatmotivatepeople to fight in a war change over the course of time," she said. "To boil the Civil War down to slavery is problematic, but the bigger problem was that for decades, we just kind of pushed slavery aside and didn't really talk about it."

***

Even in his last days, Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general, had already become a myth a myth that gave a defeated South something to cling to; a means of understanding its defeat.

In 1865, Lee surrendered to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia. His exploits during the war and his canonization by defeated Southerners have rendered him among the most famous losers in military history.

To Emory Thomas, who wrote "Robert E. Lee: A Biography,"published in 1995, historical evidence shows Lee was a man who lived by a strict moral code, a sense of honor and duty; a great soldier and engineer who rose to the challenges he faced.

He was also a slave-owner and a white supremacist. While Lee believed slavery was morally wrong, he did not believe the abolition of it should come through the works of man, but, instead, the will of God.

In an interview, Thomas referenced a famous letter Lee wrote about slavery in 1857. In it, Lee distilled his views as a slave owner on race.

"In this enlightened age, there are few I believe, but what will acknowledge, that slavery as an institution, is a moral & political evil in any Country. It is useless to expatiate on its disadvantages. I think it, however, a greater evil to the white man than to the black race," Lee wrote. "The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, socially & physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instruction as a race, & I hope will prepare & lead them to better things. How long their subjugation may be necessary is known & ordered by a wise Merciful Providence. Their emancipation will sooner result from the mild & melting influence of Christianity, than the storms & tempests of fiery Controversy."

In that letter, and other moments throughout his life, including testimony before Congress after the Civil War, Lee displayed views on race that Thomas described as compatible with social Darwinism a worldview that arose later in the 19th century and early 20th that Western governments, particularly that of the U.S., used to justify colonization, war and imperialism.

In 1862, he wouldfree his father-in-law's slaves, as required by the man's will, a matter of weeks before the Emancipation Proclamation took effect.

"He anticipated social Darwinism In the evolutionary pyramid of human beings, I think he saw white folks like himself at the top. And African Americans somewhere down the ranks, above American Indians whom he really thought were dreadful," Thomas said.

***

Known as the "Boy Hero of the Confederacy," Sam Davis' story was resurrected from obscurity in the late 1800s by journalist Archibald Cunningham, founder of the Confederate Veteran magazine. There are monuments erected in Sam Davis'honor. His boyhood home is on the National Register of Historic Places and operates as a museum.

Barely 21 in 1863, Davis was hanged for his refusal to give Union Army Gen. Grenville Dodge the names of Confederate spies. "I would rather die a thousand deaths than betray a friend," Davis said moments before he was hanged on the Public Square in Pulaski, Tennessee.

Davis wasnt a boy, but a young man whose bravery is immortalized as a symbol of the Confederacy and the Lost Cause, said Brenden Martin, a Middle Tennessee State University history professor. The underpinning of the Lost Cause was that the Confederacy was "right all along" and had a right to secede from the United States.

"All youve got to do is look at the (Confederate) Articles of Secession. The people who brought about the secession (from the United States) made it clear it was about preserving the institution of slavery," Martin said.

Slavery was the backbone of the Southern economy, Martin said.

And the Davisfamily plantation was steeped in that economy.

Data from the American Battlefield Trust notes that Charles and Jane Davis, Sam Davis' parents, originally owned a830-acre plantation located in Smyrna. By 1860, there were 51 enslaved people owned by the Davis family. Sam Davis also had his own slave, named Coleman Davis,who was gifted to him when he was a boy.

***

Anarcha was at least 17 when the doctor started experimenting on her. The year before, she suffered terrible complications during a 72-hour labor that opened a hole between her bladder and vagina and left her incontinent.

The man who held Anarcha in bondage outside Montgomery sent her to Dr. J. Marion Sims sometime in 1845. She was one of at least seven enslaved women sent to Sims by white slaveholders. They had the same condition as Anarcha, known as a vesicovaginal fistula.

Sims wanted to find a way to address it. From 1845 to 1849, the enslaved women became experiments.

By Sims own account, Anarcha underwent 30 operations as Sims tried different approaches to repairing the fistula.

These women could not say no. Neither Sims nor the white men who held them against their will showed interest in their opinions. Deirdre Cooper Owens, a professor of medical history at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and author of "Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology," said if the women protested, they "could get beaten, or they could get ignored."

Anesthesia, Cooper Owens said, was not in wide use at this time.

Despite that, a statue of Sims unveiled in 1939 remains on the grounds of the Alabama Capitol in Montgomery. A bust of Sims also stands in Columbia, South Carolina. New York City officials removed a statue of Sims in Manhattan in 2018.

***

Andrew Johnson considered himselfa champion of the common man but only when those common men were white.

The 17th president of the United Stateswas a common man himself. Born into poverty in 1808, he escaped indentured servitude in North Carolinabefore moving to Greeneville, Tennessee, where he worked as a tailor,owned slaves and launched his political career as a Democrat.

When President Abraham Lincoln died from an assassin's bullet just six weeks after Johnson took office, a fractured countryfound its stubborn new president lacked Lincoln's ability to navigate theend of the Civil War with nuance and sensitivity.

Although Johnson had helped Lincoln end slavery across the land, he nowclashed with the Republican-controlled Congress by planting himself firmly in the way of rights for newly freed slaves. He soon grew widelyunpopular and became the first president ever to be impeached.

Johnson believed in what's called "herrenvolk democracy" the idea that the lowest white man in the social hierarchy should beabove the highest Black man, said Aaron Astor, ahistory professor at Maryville College who researches the Civil War-era South.

In 1860, the year before the Civil War broke out, Johnson said white Southernersfelt so threatened by the prospectof Black freedom that poor men would unite withslave ownersto exterminateslaves rather than see them freed.

***

Albert Pike is a name well-known in Arkansas history as both a Civil War general of Native American troops and a newspaper editor.

Although Pike was known nationally after the Civil War for his involvement with the Freemasons, he gained national attention again on June 19, 2020, when a statue dedicated to him in Washington, D.C.,was toppled by a group of Black Lives Matter demonstrators. The monument to Pike was the only one of a Confederate Civil War general in the District of Columbia.

Pike was a Boston transplant to Arkansas who initially resisted secession, but followed the lead of his fellow Arkansans in fully supporting the Confederacy and even servedas an appointed brigadier general in at least one battle in Arkansas.

By the end of his life, Pike had risen among the highest ranks of the Freemasons.

Before the Civil War, he had moved from the Fort Smith area to Little Rock to pursue a career as a journalist. He eventually became editor and owner of The Advocate where he reported on the Supreme Court of Arkansas.

When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Pike was called up to be a brigadier general over a troop made up of several Native American Tribes. He was cited as being an advocate for Native Americans and the wrongs they suffered at the hands of the white man.

When it came to African Americans, however, Pikes view of slavery was one that claimed it was a "necessary evil." He claimed that slaves would not be able to hold any other job and that they were treated well by their masters. He even admitted to having his own slave for "necessary" work.

***

Gen. Alfred Mouton has become one of Acadianas most polarizing historical figures. His statue, standing on city property in the heart of downtown Lafayette, has been the focus of public outcry, protest and legal battles for decades.

As support is increasing to remove the statue, most of the controversy over Mouton has focused on the fact that he owned Black peopleas slaves and fought for white supremacy during the Deep South's most oppressive era.

While Mouton is hailed by some as a hero from Lafayette's oldest family who fought to defend his hometown from Union forces during the Civil War, the famous son of former Gov. Alexandre Mouton helped wage another civil war here.

Mouton, along with his father, trained the "Vigilante Committee" in Lafayette Parish, a group that would carry out their own form of violent justice against Black residentsthrough whippings, expulsions and lynchings.

From the late 1850s to the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, Mouton-backed vigilantes fought against other groups in Lafayette Parish's own civil war.

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This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed

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Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed - Destin Log

Will eating at college be more akin to prison fare? – The Riverdale Press

By ROSE BRENNAN

The resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement has seemingly created gaps between various institutions and law enforcement, whether justified or not. Schools are ending their relationships with local police departments amid calls to cut budgets. And mass incarceration is facing renewed criticism for its role in racial injustice.

While the countrys prison population is currently the largest its ever been with as many as one in every 100 American adults behind bars its still seemingly an issue, which disproportionately targets Black communities. As many as a third of Black men can expect to be incarcerated at some point in their lives, according to the NAACP, compared to 1-in-6 Latino men and 1-in-17 white men.

And while mass incarceration might not be a predominant issue here at home, it could feel like it. One giant in the prison industry is making its way to the neighborhood, albeit not without a fight.

Manhattan College will depend on Aramark Corp., for its dining needs beginning this fall. The Philadelphia-based company will replace both Gourmet Dining and Sodexo, beginning first with managing dining and non-residential custodial services on campus. Eventually, its responsibilities will also include facilities, energy management and residential custodial services.

The company maintains a large roster of clients employing more than 200,000 people and earning billions each year. But Aramark is probably more commonly known for its contracts providing similar services to prisons.

And thats proven to be unpopular among students who took time to research the company over the summer. As one of the largest food providers to American prisons, Aramark also is entrenched in various other controversies when it comes to employees and the inmate population of those prisons.

Aramark is known to be (a) union buster, said Brandon Martinez, a senior communications major at the school. When Aramark takes over, its only a matter of time until they try to bust the Manhattan College physical plant union.

Manhattan Colleges physical plant and residence life housekeeping employees are members of the Office and Professional Employees International Union, with Local 153 serving the tri-state area.

In an email announcing the deal earlier this month, Manhattan president Brennan ODonnell reassured students and union members Aramark will recognize unionized physical plant and housekeeping employees, ensuring theyll retain certain benefits theyve acquired in past collective bargaining, like free tuition.

Aramark is no stranger to the controversy surrounding the companys name. In fact, the company website has an entire page titled Get the Facts addressing those controversies and clarifying the role it plays in prisons.

While we understand and respect the passionate debate around our nations prison system and its disproportionate impact on Black and other non-white populations, we disagree with how Aramark is being characterized and cast as part of the problem, according to the website. We are actually part of the solution with a strong commitment to rehabilitating incarcerated individuals so they can transition back to their communities.

The page lists several of these rehabilitation efforts, including providing vocational training, scholarships and trust accounts for inmates efforts Aramark claims reduce chances inmates will return to prison by at least 30 percent.

Martinez, introduced a resolution in Manhattan Colleges student government calling on administrators to cease contract negotiations with Aramark. It earned the support of more than 500 students and alumni, and more than a couple-dozen faculty members.

Although the company has a reputation with prisons, Aramarks new relationship with Manhattan College is far from unique. The company says its partnered with 500 other colleges and universities, impacting more than 3 million students.

It also will launch something it calls Create Kitchen, where its on-campus chefs will teach students how to make their own meals.

And with students expected to return in the fall in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, Aramark also says its implementing a set of social distancing and sanitation procedures it calls EverSafe.

Still, having a contract with Aramark is directly contradictory to the message of social justice the college preaches, Martinez said.

It goes against all the things were taught at Manhattan College, especially the Lasallian core principles, he said.

Since the Institute of the Brothers of Christian Schools better known as the Lasallian Brothers, after founder St. Jean Baptiste de la Salle began establishing schools worldwide, its emphasized five core principles in its pedagogy: Faith in the presence of God, respect for all persons, concern for the poor and social justice, inclusive community and quality education.

Guelybel Capellan hasnt been a regular fixture on Manhattan Colleges campus since earning her masters degree last year, yet believes Aramark profits from mass incarceration, something she has described as modern-day slavery.

Aramarks response has been that they help some prisoners by giving them an education, Capellan said. Basically, youre profiting from slavery and then youre saying, Oh, but we help some of our slaves, and thats not the response people are looking for.

Those claims stretch back to the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which outlawed slavery, except as punishment for a crime. While inmates do often receive some compensation for jobs they hold behind bars, its a far cry from the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. In 2017, inmates received typical wages ranging from 63 cents to $1.41 per day, according to the Prison Policy Initiative.

We recognize that we need to work with Aramark over the coming weeks to represent the fuller story with respect to these allegations, ODonnell wrote in his email announcing the Aramark deal. This will include opportunities for members of our community to meet with Aramark leadership to discuss these concerns.

Aramark says it will form a dining committee that will meet regularly, providing real-time feedback both in-person and through digital surveys.

Martinez plans to organize protests against the Aramark contract once students return to campus in the fall.

Our voice isnt going to be pushed to the side, he said. Something like this isnt going to be just swept under the rug.

Originally posted here:

Will eating at college be more akin to prison fare? - The Riverdale Press

UK’s first anti-slavery commissioner: There will be no change until a CEO is in the dock – The National

After three years of being raped, starved and passed between families like a possession, an enslaved Indian domestic worker finally seized her moment and fled the 2 million home that had been her prison.

The woman, 40, had tried to flee before but her pleas for help had been ignored and she had been sent back to her abusers.

This time, her support team of lawyers and charities took her to a police unit specialising in human trafficking.

Everybody was speaking for her, said Kevin Hyland, then the head of the unit run by Londons police force.

I just told everyone to stop and asked her what she wanted.

She said: I just want them to go to prison. Thank you for listening to me, and she started crying.

Nobody had actually taken the time to tell her that everybody worked for her.

The case was a formative experience for Mr Hyland who after a successful police career became the UKs first anti-slavery commissioner and an advocate for its voiceless victims.

The position was created in 2014 when the UK, under prime minister Theresa May, introduced what it claimed was the first law in Europe to address slavery and trafficking in the 21st century.

It was designed to help protect victims, make it easier to prosecute traffickers and hold to account businesses that failed to ensure workers were not being abused, while reaping the profits of exploited labour.

Its limits came to light last month when reports exposed how workers in the cut-price garment trade in the central English city of Leicester were being paid below the statutory minimum wage.

Some of the citys garment factories, which employ 10,000 people, had few measures to protect against the spread of Covid-19.

The biggest loser was cut-price chain Boohoo, which after conducting its own investigation dropped two suppliers and pledged 10m (Dh47.2m/$12.8m) to tackle malpractice by its suppliers.

Its share price fell sharply but is still higher than a year ago.

Until we see a CEO in the courtroom facing the jury, then there will always be excuses, Mr Hyland said.

And of course, some of these companies have very wealthy legal teams.

Mr Hyland has been lobbying for companies to be banned from securing public contracts if their suppliers are found to be tainted by labour abuse.

He highlighted the action taken after two 737 Max planes crashed in 2018 and 2019, leading to a crisis for aircraft maker Boeing.

The whole fleet was grounded, the chief executive was fired and legal action is running into billions of pounds.

That was because of 346 lives, Mr Hyland said. Its estimated that about 22,000 children lose their lives in bad working conditions every year but theres no sanction.

The failure of companies and states to live up to their pledges rankles with Mr Hyland.

His tenure as commissioner included the flight of millions from war and poverty in the Middle East in 2015, which contributed to the exploitation of migrants.

Mr Hyland told the UN Security Council in 2017 that conflict was a major driver of modern slavery around the globe.

Terrorist organisations openly advocated slavery as a tactic of war. ISIS used minority groups for forced labour and sexual exploitation.

Mr Hyland said extremists established slave markets where women and children are sold.

He told the Security Council of meeting a girl, 15, at a reception camp on the Italian island of Lampedusa.

She had fled conscription in her native Eritrea before being held in Libya where she was sexually abused daily for three months.

Then her captors deemed that she had earned enough for a place on an inflatable dinghy across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe.

Halfway across the migrants fired a flare and waited for rescue.

She talked to me about bodies floating in the Mediterranean, Mr Hyland said.

Six months after his address, his message was reinforced with the death of Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi during a failed attempt to reach Europe.

A photograph of his lifeless body lying on a Turkish beach captured headlines around the world.

The Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, declared that humanity has drowned in the Mediterranean Sea.

The French government called for a Europe-wide mobilisation and Irelands prime minister Enda Kenny spoke of a human catastrophe.

Where are these people now? Mr Hyland asked. Where are the leaders?

At the height of the crisis, he travelled to the Greek city of Thessaloniki where he met a Syrian family who had fled war and were living in an aircraft hangar in one of 1,500 tents.

The family was sharing their accommodation with another who had a six-day-old baby.

The father was a civil engineer while his wife was a newly trained doctor, and they had a young child with them.

He was reduced to earning 10 a week from gang masters who took advantage of his stateless situation.

I want to go home, the man told Mr Hyland. I just want to keep my child breathing and my wife breathing, and thats why Im here.

Forced labour brings annual profits of about $150 billion, the International Labour Organisation says, but convictions are shockingly low and efforts to tackle the problem are going backwards in some countries.

Mr Hyland resigned his role in 2018 and now advises governments and the G20 group of nations to try to persuade them to address the issue.

He said there were too many vested interests.

Businesses are saying we're fighting this, but then on the other hand they're profiting from it, Mr Hyland said.

He said he had tried to calculate how much industrialised nations had put into battling the trade and concluded that it was less than 1 per cent of the $150bn.

That compared woefully to the sums ploughed into tackling climate change, the ill-fated war on drugs, and the response to the Black Lives Matter campaign after civil rights protests.

The death of unarmed African American George Floyd at the hands of white Minneapolis police was a moment where every business, no matter what business you were, felt compelled to make some statement and to take some action", Mr Hyland said.

If you're comparing it to Black Lives Matter, if you're comparing it to the environment, we're a long way off of that.

We need to start talking about this for what it is. This is child abuse. These are child soldiers.

"These are children dying down mines. These are men and women who are being exploited.

Mr Hyland gave the case of the Indian domestic worker whose abuse he investigated.

She had on 12 occasions appealed to police and other organisations before her story was taken seriously.

Mr Hyland and his teams investigation led to the successful convictions of three people responsible for her abuse.

We should be convicting more now, he said. We know that is one of the biggest problems that the victims aren't getting a proper response.

"We always talk about listening to victims but nobody is really listening.

Updated: July 28, 2020 12:22 AM

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UK's first anti-slavery commissioner: There will be no change until a CEO is in the dock - The National

Laura Whateley: our slow realisation to the flaws of fast fashion – Big Issue

The scandal of working conditions at a Leicester factory used by clothing giant Boohoo made many people sit up. But we all have a stake in this

Most of the brands that line our high street and internet shopping baskets dont own the factories that make their clothes, author Lauren Bravo points out in her book published in January, How to Break Up with Fast Fashion. As a result they often wash their hands of responsibility for how they are run. We didnt know, comes the response every time some terrible truth is revealed about pay or conditions, she writes.

Fast forward to July and Boohoo has expressed shock at the findings of an undercover report by The Sunday Times alleging a Leicester factory, used to manufacture many of Boohoos garments, pays workers less than half the minimum wage.

In a statement on its corporate site the online retailer, known for its 5 bikinis and ultra-fast turnover of stock (which netted it 4.6bn last year) said: if [the conditions] are as described by the undercover reporter, [they] are totally unacceptable and fall woefully short of any standards acceptable in any workplace.

Meg Lewis, campaigns manager for Labour Behind the Label, which believes no one should live in poverty for the price of a cheap T-shirt, says brands have hidden their supply chains for a long time, distancing themselves from the conditions in which their clothes are made.

Influential Instagrammers denounced Boohoos practices, and its share price plummeted

With evidence of illegal wages and conditions of modern slavery in [Boohoos] supply chain, this should be a big wake-up call for the industry as a whole to commit to transparency.

She believes there needs to be better government regulation of the industry.

But it should also be a wake-up call to us complicit compulsive internet shoppers to hold brands that are squeezing their supply chains to account.

We are increasingly shopping without thinking. In the last 15 years, clothing production has doubled, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, but UK adults wear only 44 per cent of the clothing they own, says WRAP, the Waste and Resources Action Programme.

The way we shop has made it easier to disconnect from how products we buy are made: on our phone, when were bored, via an Instagram link with one eye open. We dont even need to wait for payday. Most fashion brands now offer several buy-now-pay-later options at the checkout. Boohoo has three including Klarna, Europes most valuable fintech start-up last year, worth $5.5bn, which has thrived during lockdown.

The obvious solution is to avoid impulse-buying cheap clothes that were going to chuck away after a couple of wears, behaviour that drives the ultra-fast fashion market. But it is not that simple.

Fast fashion has democratised access to stylish clothes during a time of austerity, and more people are going to be struggling with living costs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. There is also a huge amount of pressure on young women in particular to care about how they look and dress when everything is photographed and documented online.

More expensive doesnt guarantee better treatment of those working in garment factories, anyway.

Luke Smitham, of sustainability consultancy Kumi, says many brands claim they have audited suppliers and factories, but many of the audits are not fit for purpose. Hes visited factory sites that have passed audits but, within minutes of walking through the door, he could tell there are serious issues with the way theyre run.

DID YOU KNOW

Our vendors buy every copy of the magazine from us for 1.25 and sell it on to you for 2.50. Which is why we ask you to ALWAYS take your copy of the magazine. We believe in trade not aid.

Labour Behind the Label does not advocate boycotting companies whose supply chains exploit workers, unless the workers themselves have called for it, warning boycotts lead to workers losing their jobs.

But we should expect transparency and ask difficult questions, publicly. Lewis warns that if something is unrealistically cheap, there is a high possibility of exploitation within the supply chain.

Look at the impact of the scandal on Boohoo so far. Influential Instagrammers denounced its practices, and its share price plummeted. It now has a financial incentive to reconsider its model, as long as we keep up the pressure.

We should also engage more with how we might be inadvertently supporting exploitative business practices with our savings.

Do you know where your pension or Isa is invested? Many of us will own tiny slices of fast fashion companies. As Laura Suter of investment company AJ Bell says, if you are a shareholder in a company you believe is making profit through unethical behaviour you can lobby for change. Investors only need to own one share to be able to attend an AGM and while there they can ask questions of company management and start debate in the room.

Be distrustful of any brand that declares its ethics based on a third-party audit of its suppliers, says Smitham, and support innovative brands.

Rapanui, for example, which sells T-shirts from 12, believes lots of companies cut costs by cutting corners. Instead it keeps costs low with a circular model. All Rapanuis clothes are made to be sent back via freepost if you no longer wear them (with a 5 credit for doing so) and it makes new products from the materials it recovers. This saves money that it invests in things that other companies may consider uneconomical, including more rewarding jobs for those who make its clothes.

The high street is struggling to survive the impact of lockdown and needs our support, but we all have a responsibility to rein in the urge for a next-day delivery dopamine hit, and question where our clothes were made.

Laura Whateley is a journalist and author of Money: A Users Guide

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Laura Whateley: our slow realisation to the flaws of fast fashion - Big Issue

Slavery, Racism and the Church – Catholic Citizens of Illinois

By Paul de Lacvivier, The Remnant, July 22, 2020

I am always surprised to note how often mediocrity is praised as though it were absolute truth. Today it is racism, tomorrow it is democracy, the next day it is eco-theology. It never ends.

On the racism front, the time has come to make clear some historical facts and Catholic common sense about race and slavery. The truth may be surprising to some.

In all of human history, only the Catholic Church teaches unequivocally that there are no longer Greeks or Romans, Jews or Gentiles, men or women in the economy of salvation. It doesnt depend on what you look like or what is stamped on your passportevery human being, without exception, is called to eternal life and can achieve it through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

In all of human history, only the Catholic Church teaches unequivocally that there are no longer Greeks or Romans, Jews or Gentiles, men or women in the economy of salvation. It doesnt depend on what you look like or what is stamped on your passportevery human being, without exception, is called to eternal life and can achieve it through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

The talk about Christs skin color is blasphemous and also theologically nonsensical. God makes no distinction among anyone on the basis of any criterion other than holiness in His Son, the Head of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. This is in the Creed that Catholics recite at every Mass. It is recited by Catholics of every conceivable skin tone in every corner of the world. Christ died for all of us, period. My brothers and sisters in the faith and I are one in the Person of Our Lord.

Another fact we must remember is that, apart from Christian Europe, nearly all civilizations have instituted slavery as a legitimate system of labor provision and social control. There are still slaves in Muslim countries, following a very long tradition of slaving and slave-holding in Islam. The Egyptians enslaved the Hebrews. The Greeks and Romans enslaved virtually everyone they conquered in their endless wars. Native Americans enslaved one another. Sexual slavery is a scourge on every inhabited continent. Historians in China and Japan dont often mention it, but slavery was legally recognized in those places, too. The untouchables of India have been civilizationally enslaved since time immemorial.

The pagans have been, and continue to be, profligate slavers and enslavers. If we are going to judge civilizations for slavery, let us apply the judgment evenly and fairly to all.

Not only did Christendom never legally institute slavery, it also is the only religion to have eradicated it. It took the Church nearly ten centuries, through a cautious apostolate, to have the practice outlawed, but eventually, thank God, the breakthrough was achieved. It is only the West that considers slavery morally repugnant, and this is due entirely to Christianity.

It is only the West that considers slavery morally repugnant, and this is due entirely to Christianity.

What took the Church so long, you might ask? Pagan practices are deeply rooted, and eliminating evil from society is a never-ending task. Also, the Church is not a social justice organization, but a mission to save souls. By civilizing men in the Faith, the Church attained to the ancillary benefit of freeing them from Hell and from the hell they create on Earth by offending against one anothers imago Dei. Only Christianity did this. No other religion was able to render the horrors of slavery unthinkable to an entire civilization. No other religion upended a culture to put the human person, made in Gods image and likeness, at the top of the civilizational hierarchy.

The fight continues today, against abortion and other sins against Gods loving creation, but the Church does not yield to temporary setbacks. Grace is working on fallen humanity through the Person of Jesus Christ, and this will go on until the end of time.

Slavery in the New World was less an export from Christendom than a lapse into the sins of old pagan Europe and a tragic adoption of the ways of the Indians themselves. The Church, weakened by the Protestant heresy at home, was forced to do battle in Europe as well as in European holdings in the Americas and in Africa. People in those places were already selling human beings. Corrupted Christians bought those human beings, a terrible testimony to the fallenness of mankind. The Church strove mightily against sin wherever it arose, whether in the Americas and Africa or in the Lutheran states in Europe.

There is also the fact, which almost no one today speaks of, that the Church has always been more interested in souls than in bodies. The Church wants to save the souls of everyone, regardless of whether he or she is or was master or slave. Unable to eradicate slavery right away, the Church concentrated on persuading masters to allow the Sacraments to be administered to their slaves, and to treat the slaves as human beings, providing them with an education for instance. And of slaves the Church asked that they offer up their sufferings in communion with Jesus Christ, Who alone has the power to overcome the evils of the world, the evil that men do to one another and in their own heart of hearts. The slave can imitate the poor, broken Christ, due to the slaves terrible condition on earth. The fact is that ours is a broken humanity, and we are all born to suffer and die.

The Church went into the world as it found it, and aimed at the core of man, his immortal soul, hoping to win for him eternal life despite the horrors of the fallen state in which we all find ourselves.slavery 1

Slavery is not intrinsically bad, then? The hard truth is that it is not. There is no perfect condition on earth. Of course all prefer to be free. Consider the opposite problem, which is the same: those who run wild, whose freedom enslaves them like bondage of labor never could. Look at the world todaythe devils who cry freedom and who destroy their souls in their endless sinning. Me, I would infinitely rather be a slave, crushed and scratching at the dry ground in forced servitude, and yet holy and offering my life up to God, than a libertine and a criminal, a freedom-worshiping idolater with hatred in my heart and pride before my Creator. What we have today is much worse than slavery. What we have is willingness to sin, enthusiasm for it. This is worse than slavery ever was, because the sinner will die eternally, while the slave may die and be saved. Lets also remember that there are degrees of slavery, and that all of us, in one way or another, are enslaved.

But only faith in Christ allows people to really assume true freedom of the soul. This is shown most by the witness of the martyrs, who gave up everything preferring holiness and God. Many martyrs have been slaves. There has never been a martyred libertine.

Here is the very harsh reality: we are all slaves!

Masters of old were slaves as well. Of their pride, of their superstitions, of their ambitions and desires, of their domination over others. There is no one so enslaved as a slavedriver. No one is so thoroughly roped to his sin.

Slavery is a kind of social order. It is fit for pagans, who know nothing better. Only Christians have been exempted from slavery as a public institution. Why? Because only faith makes people free.

But even this doesnt mean that we have no bounds. On the contrary. Christians demand good boundaries, such as monks and nuns demanding the boundaries of the religious life, or couples demanding heartful boundaries of the marriage, or children who crave the boundaries provided by the family and society. Give anyone unlimited freedom, and he or she will be miserable. It is the boundary that makes us happy.

But we are throwing off all this wisdom even as we speak. Our age is apostate, and quickly going to pagan seed. Slavery is coming back into the world because we would have pagan unfreedom rather than Christian freedom in charity and Truth. It is a kind of natural law.

Look at the economy, for example. Wage slavery is not a euphemism, it is a real thing. So is the corruption and petty patronism that are now dominating commercial interactions among people. We are treating each other as objects again, and not as persons created by the Living God.

As for me, as a Catholic, I am proud to say that I am a slave. I am the slave of Jesus Christ, true God and true man. It is precisely because I am slave of Jesus Christ that I am free. That is true freedom, the only freedom worth anything in the end.

Secular freedom is not possible. The fall has undone us. We are weak and we tend toward sin. Our center of gravity is off, and we easily fall again, just as our first parents did. Only the charity of the Faith can restore the natural hierarchies that help us live full and holy lives without the rough aspects that those hierarchies assume in the pagan world.slavery 2

Among the pagans there is justice, to be sure, but no charity or mercy. This is what we are seeing again today. Our modern age denies charity and has therefore abandoned true justice. The result is disorder and chaos. Just turn on your television if you dont believe me. Or, for many, just open your curtains and look outside.

Such disorder cannot last long. A new order is coming. If this order is not nourished by Faith then it will be harsh, as in pagan countries. And if the order is against nature, it will be tyrannical, illegitimate, and also not last long. The cycle of violence and domination will continue, and worsen. There will be some kind of order. But if it is solely of human devising, then it will be an order that exploits and destroyslike slavery.

Lets pray to become everyday more and more the slave of our Lord, to do what He wills for salvation. And lets not forget St. Pauls order, to respect authorities even if they persecute us. But let us also remember that respect towards authorities doesnt mean surrendering to them in mind or spirit. We must always speak the truth, we must never just accept the wrong that we see. If doing this leads to our martyrdom, then let us give thanks to Almighty God and ask him for the Grace to endure what He sends our way, and to testify to the Truth that we might meet Him in the Heaven He created for us.

This article first appeared HERE.

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Slavery, Racism and the Church - Catholic Citizens of Illinois

After Years of Resisting, Snapchat Finally Released its Diversity Report and The Numbers are Telling – Grit Daily

Snap inc., the social media company behind Snapchat, has been facing pressures to release a diversity report and offer transparency of the companys makeup for years now. The companys CEO, Evan Spiegel, informed employees in a meeting this past June that releasing the companys diversity report could perpetuate the belief that Silicon Valley companies arent diverse.

According to The Verge, these comments by Spiegel were prompted by a Mashable report that outlined the claims that Snap is not at all inclusive, and that the popular social media company in fact breeds a racist and sexist environment. The report contained statements from employees that claimed a manager had told them that a story was too black-heavy and requested that some snaps containing Black faces be replaced with people of other races.

Though Spiegel was concerned of his workplaces stats perpetuating stereotypes, the company has finally succumbed to such pressures and decided to release its first diversity report and to no surprise, the numbers are staggering.

The report reveals that out of the 3,195-person company, only 4.1% are identified as Black and African American and only 6.8% are identified as Hispanic/Latinx. The report also reveals that a mere 3.2% of the companys leadership roles are filled by PoCs. Further statistics suggest that white males dominate the companys makeup; as women only account for 32.9% of the workforce.

With the exposure of these stats, Snap has also announced that its setting some goals to raise these numbers; by 2023, Snap is committing to doubling the number of women in tech positions and doubling the number of underrepresented races and ethnic minorities by 2025. Snap aims to reach these goals by executing initiatives, including expanding its mentorship programs and preventing bias through machine learning tools.

Accompanying the diversity report is Snaps 50-page CitizenSnap report, which details the companys work in both social and environmental issues; including their move to provide a robust living wage of $70,000 (to be adjusted based on location) for its employees who work within their Santa Monica headquarters.

But the numbers only solidify what many already assumed; just last month, Snapchat released a filter for Juneteenth, and while Snapchat creators may have thought they were celebrating the US emancipation of slavery, it was doing something quite different. The filter, an augmented reality lens, displayed chains breaking once the user offered up a smilea pretty distasteful way to commemorate the end of slavery. Snap found themselves apologizing, yet again, for another offensive filter.

Hopefully this long-awaited transparency will be Snaps effort to be held accountable by the public and to take greater action in becoming a more inclusive and diverse environment.

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After Years of Resisting, Snapchat Finally Released its Diversity Report and The Numbers are Telling - Grit Daily

Removing monuments is the easy part. We must make America a real democracy – The Guardian

One hundred and fifty-five years after Confederate troops surrendered at Appomattox and Bennett Place, their battle flag has finally come down in Mississippi and their statues are retreating from courthouse squares and university quads. As the children of generations of Black southerners who fought against the lies of the Lost Cause, we celebrate this most recent surrender and look forward to walking down streets that are not shadowed by monuments to men who claimed to own our ancestors. But we cannot understand why these monuments lasted so long without challenging the inequities they were erected to justify. In fact, many who support flags and statues coming down today also advocate voter suppression, attack healthcare and re-segregate our schools. We must attend to both the systems of injustice and the monuments that have justified them if we are to realize liberty and justice for all.

If you examine the bases of statues that are being hauled away, most bear a date between the 1890s and 1920s. These monuments did not rise in defiance of the federal troops who were sent by Congress and Ulysses S Grant to enforce Reconstruction and guarantee political power to the new Black citizens of the south in the 1860s and 1870s. If a statue of Robert E Lee or Jefferson Davis had been proposed during Reconstruction, the very suggestion would have sparked a riot. But after the compromise of 1876, when Rutherford B Hayes agreed to remove federal troops from the south, newly established Black and white political alliances were subjected to the violence of white terrorist organizations and the propaganda of white supremacy campaigns.

As Martin Luther King Jr taught on the steps of the Alabama state house in 1965: To meet this threat, the southern aristocracy began immediately to engineer this development of a segregated society. Black people were driven from public life and blamed for the troubles of a society that had invested its resources in treasonous rebellion against the United States. Jim Crow laws went on the books to offer a legal structure for the caste system that had built plantation wealth with enslaved labor. If it may be said of the slavery era that the white man took the world and gave the Negro Jesus, then it may be said of the Reconstruction era that the southern aristocracy took the world and gave the poor white man Jim Crow, King said. And when his wrinkled stomach cried out for the food that his empty pockets could not provide, he ate Jim Crow, a psychological bird that told him that no matter how bad off he was, at least he was a white man.

George White, the last Black congressman from the south during Reconstruction, finished his term representing North Carolinas second congressional district in 1902. Five years later, the United Daughters of the Confederacy petitioned the University of North Carolina to erect a memorial to alumni who had fought for the Confederacy. With Jim Crow established, their cause was no longer lost. In the Jim Crow south, these veterans and their descendants celebrated the sacrifices their fathers and grandfathers had made to defend white supremacy. Before a cheering crowd of more than 1,000 people who gathered to dedicate their new Confederate Monument, Julian Carr recalled how 100 yards from where we stand, less than 90 days perhaps after my return from Appomattox, I horse-whipped a Negro wench until her skirts hung in shreds, because upon the streets of this quiet village she had publicly insulted and maligned a southern lady, and then rushed for protection to these University buildings where was stationed a garrison of 100 federal soldiers. Like Confederate monuments in almost every southern community, this one was erected to celebrate that no federal authority was willing to challenge white supremacy.

After the Brown v Board of Education decision rendered Jim Crow unconstitutional in 1954, Black and white people in the civil rights movement worked tirelessly to demand federal enforcement of Reconstruction-era promises: Black citizenship, equal protection under the law and the right to vote. As in the moral struggle of the civil war, our parents and their colleagues risked their lives in non-violent struggle to make the promise of America real for all of her citizens. As Coretta Scott King said: Struggle is a never-ending process. Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every generation.

While the gains of the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act and the Fair Housing Act transformed the horizon of possibility for millions of Americans, the Second Reconstructions work of establishing a genuine multiethnic democracy was not completed before calls for law and order, traditional values and a tax revolt rallied a Confederate resistance once again. By uniting white voters in the suburbs, the sun belt, and the south, the Southern Strategy promised white people political power in an increasingly diverse America for the next 50 years.

While the divisive politics of Trumpism may be the last gasp of the Southern Strategy, the question of whether America can do the work of becoming a genuine democracy still remains. Removing monuments to the lie of white supremacy is an important step, but a shared future depends on redistributing power and resources so that every American, no matter their race, income, geography or immigration status, has access to healthcare, public education, affordable housing, a living wage, clean water and a livable planet.

In this moment when millions of Americans are suffering from a triple crisis of poverty, Covid-19 and police brutality, we need more than a conversation about monuments. We need concrete action to address the incredible disparities in death rates among Black, brown and poor people. This pivotal moment for our nation and our world is beckoning us to dismantle injustice and rebuild with love as the foundation. We can build a more just, humane, equitable and peaceful world. But, as King so prophetically admonished us: The hour is late. And the clock of destiny is ticking out. We must act now before it is too late. We must act now, America.

Bishop William J Barber, II is president of Repairers of the Breach and co-chair of the Poor Peoples Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival. He is author of We Are Called to Be a Movement

Dr Bernice A King, the youngest child of Dr Martin Luther King, Jr and Coretta Scott King, is a global thought leader, orator, peace advocate and CEO of the King Center, which was founded by her mother

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Removing monuments is the easy part. We must make America a real democracy - The Guardian

Opinion | The parenthood version of gambling – Livemint

At 7 every evening, my husband and I feel a simmering thrill. Will the kids be asleep in 30 minutes and leave us with a free evening ahead to read and write and watch television and drink stiff cocktails or are they going to run wild up and down the hall and finally collapse into bed in a flurry of emotion and tears and overstimulation at 10.30pm? Theres no way to know.

This is the parenthood version of gambling. Where will the dice fall? Will we win or lose? Tonight will we celebrate (I use the term loosely to mean will I read a few pages of a book) or will we also collapse into bed moments after our children do? The parenting roulette.

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Like many new parents, we build a life based on routine. Routine, routine, routine. We use routine to protect ourselves from all the unknowns.

By 7pm on most nights, dinner is finished, baths are wrapping up and we are cosying the kids up in their pajamas with a stack of books and cups of milk on hand.

But then, a few pages into Horton Hears A Who!, the almost two-year-old will climb off the bed and go running down the hall shrieking in excitement. Why? I do not know. About what? I could not say. The three-year-old follows immediately on her heels.

Ill calm her down for bedtime," shouts the three-year-old, immediately doing exactly the opposite. Moments later they are both wrestling in the hallway and then trying to pull their paints off the shelf to set up a painting session. A Montessori-approved home in which they have access to their toys and get to pick what they want to do doesnt seem like a brilliant idea at bedtime, when you are hoping against hope that they wont pick the messiest activity on hand.

We can try for routine all we want but routine is, I have learnt, a way to establish a sense of control in a situation where we have almost none. Parenting is difficult and unpredictable and every little thing we do to try and establish a sense of control is an elaborate display of smoke and mirrors.

Planning not to give them sugar until they are 2? Guess whatthe grandparents are handing them large bars of chocolate.

Giving them only organic food? Theyre still going to lick the slide on the playground and get sick.

No screen time? Jokes on us, parents. Theres a global pandemic and playschool is on Zoom and an iPad is the only childcare we have. Good luck to us all.

I learn mini-versions of this every time we travel and have flights to catch at 3am, airport food to eat, new city streets to stroll for hours. Bedtimes and diets go for a toss and the kids eat ice cream until their stomachs hurt and we are all fine, happy and exhausted, the parents more exhausted than usual, realizing a holiday is very different than what it was in the pre-parenting years.

But of course for now, there is no travel anyway. There is no letting the kids sit with us on a cobbled sidewalk somewhere while we eat new food late into the night and then carry them back to our Airbnb fast asleep and drop them into bed without brushing their tiny teeth or putting them into matching pajamas.

It is terrifying to realize how little control we have, in parenting and in life. But it is also so freeing. It is so nice to know, at 6pm, that it doesnt matter if we have a perfectly balanced hot meal on the table. It doesnt matter if we want to chat with each other and let them watch Peppa Pig while they eat. At bedtime, it doesnt matter how perfectly we choreographed and controlled the dayif they want to run wild through the house for 3 hours at night, thats what they are going to do. And it may be exhausting but its also delightful and I will chase them around for hours because the one thing I know I definitely cannot control is that some day they will be sullen teenagers who retreat to their bedrooms and stare at their screens.

And of course, the larger metaphor for life in general. Who cares if I waste another 30 minutes on a new episode of 90 Day Fianc, Im still going to die some day (I apologize for the unexpectedly dark turn this has taken in the end).

Diksha Basu is the author of The Windfall (Bloomsbury). Her new book, Destination Wedding (Bloomsbury), released on 28 July.

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Opinion | The parenthood version of gambling - Livemint