Florida Teenager Is Charged as Mastermind of Twitter Hack – The New York Times

OAKLAND, Calif. One by one, the celebrity Twitter accounts posted the same strange message: Send Bitcoin and they would send back double your money. Elon Musk. Bill Gates. Kanye West. Joseph R. Biden Jr. Former President Barack Obama. They, and dozens of others, were being hacked, and Twitter appeared powerless to stop it.

While some initially thought the hack was the work of professionals, it turns out the mastermind of one of the most high-profile hacks in recent years was a 17-year-old recent high school graduate from Florida, the authorities said on Friday.

Graham Ivan Clark was arrested in his Tampa apartment, where he lived by himself, early Friday, state officials said. He faces 30 felony charges in the hack, including fraud, and is being charged as an adult.

Two other people, Mason John Sheppard, 19, of the United Kingdom, and Nima Fazeli, 22, of Orlando, Fla., were accused of helping Mr. Clark during the takeover. Prosecutors said the two appeared to have aided the central figure in the attack, who went by the name Kirk. Documents released on Friday do not provide the real identity of Kirk, but they suggest that it was Mr. Clark.

Mr. Clark was skilled enough to go unnoticed inside Twitters network, said Andrew Warren, the Florida state attorney handling the case.

This was not an ordinary 17-year-old, Mr. Warren said.

Mr. Clark convinced one of the companys employees that he was a co-worker in the technology department who needed the employees credentials to access the customer service portal, a criminal affidavit from Florida said. By the time the hackers were done, they had broken into 130 accounts and raised significant new questions about Twitters security.

Despite the hackers cleverness, their plan quickly fell apart, according to court documents. They left hints about their real identities and scrambled to hide the money theyd made once the hack became public. Their mistakes allowed law enforcement to quickly track them down.

Less than a week after the incident, federal agents, search warrant in hand, went to a home in Northern California, according to the documents. There, they interviewed another youngster who admitted participating in the scheme. The individual, who is not named in the documents because he or she is a minor, gave authorities information that helped them identify Mr. Sheppard and said that Mr. Sheppard had discussed turning himself in to law enforcement.

Because Mr. Clark is under 18, he was charged by the Florida state attorney in Tampa, rather than by federal authorities. His age also means that many details of his case are being kept under wraps.

Federal authorities were already tracking Mr. Clarks online activity before the Twitter hack, according to legal documents. In April, the Secret Service seized over $700,000 worth of Bitcoin from him, but it was unclear why.

The documents released on Friday largely repeat what several hackers involved in the attack told The New York Times two weeks ago: The hack began early on July 15 as a quiet scheme to steal and sell unusual user names.

But as the day wore on, the attack, led by Kirk, took over dozens of accounts belonging to cryptocurrency companies and celebrities. Bitcoin flowed into the hackers accounts. The scheme netted Bitcoin worth more than $180,000, according to a New York Times estimate.

A special agent with an Internal Revenue Service investigative unit said in a court filing that Mr. Sheppard participated in the hack while using the screen name ever so anxious. A person using that name told The Times a few days after the attack that he got involved because he wanted to acquire unique Twitter user names.

i just kinda found it cool having a username that other people would want, ever so anxious said in a chat with The Times. He ultimately brokered the sale of at least 10 addresses, such as @drug, @w and @L, according to the indictment against him.

Mr. Fazeli is also accused of serving as a middleman, helping to sell stolen Twitter accounts on the day of the attack under the user name Rolex. But the indictment provides few details on Mr. Fazelis work as a middleman.

By the time Twitter finally managed to stop the attack, the hackers had tweeted from 45 of the accounts they had broken into, gained access to the direct messages of 36 accounts, and downloaded full information from seven accounts, the company said.

Mr. Fazeli and Mr. Clark were arrested on Friday. Mr. Sheppard has not been arrested but is expected to be taken into custody, the F.B.I. said.

While investigations into cyber breaches can sometimes take years, our investigators were able to bring these hackers into custody in a matter of weeks, said John Bennett, a special agent in charge with the F.B.I. The investigation is still underway, and it is possible there will be additional arrests, a bureau spokeswoman said.

The young men who participated in the breach come from a loose-knit community of hackers who focus on account takeovers, cybersecurity experts said. Using a practice known as SIM-swapping, they often target telecom companies to compromise victims phone numbers and intercept login credentials.

The attackers targeted Twitter employees, stealing their account credentials in order to gain access to an internal system that allowed them to reset the passwords of most Twitter users. (Some users, like President Trump, have extra security on their accounts to prevent takeovers.)

These people come trained to be efficient and creative at their attack methods, said Allison Nixon, the chief research officer of the security firm Unit 221B. Theyve realized theres this world of soft targets.

These hackers often focus on financial fraud, but their ability to gain access to the accounts of political figures could attract new and dangerous customers, Ms. Nixon said.

One of the things that concerns me is that, as these actors continue to refine their techniques and learn, theyre going to realize that there are other customers who will pay a lot more for things other than a single-character user name, she said. I dont think theyve even scratched the surface of how much damage they could cause.

In a statement, Twitter thanked law enforcement for its swift actions and said it would continue to cooperate with the investigation.

The relatively young age of the hackers did not come as a surprise to security professionals who monitor the SIM-swapper community. Many of the people drawn to it are teenagers who pursue unique user names because controlling them conveys a sense of importance and clout.

This activity is addictive in a way, its a thrill, Ms. Nixon. Breaking into gigantic companies and stealing ridiculous amounts of money is a huge thrill for them.

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Florida Teenager Is Charged as Mastermind of Twitter Hack - The New York Times

Cars Will Soon Be Able to Sense and React to Your Emotions – Singularity Hub

Imagine youre on your daily commute to work, driving along a crowded highway while trying to resist looking at your phone. Youre already a little stressed out because you didnt sleep well, woke up late, and have an important meeting in a couple hours, but you just dont feel like your best self.

Suddenly another car cuts you off, coming way too close to your front bumper as it changes lanes. Your already-simmering emotions leap into overdrive, and you lay on the horn and shout curses no one can hear.

Except someoneor, rather, somethingcan hear: your car. Hearing your angry words, aggressive tone, and raised voice, and seeing your furrowed brow, the onboard computer goes into soothe mode, as its been programmed to do when it detects that youre angry. It plays relaxing music at just the right volume, releases a puff of light lavender-scented essential oil, and maybe even says some meditative quotes to calm you down.

What do you thinkcreepy? Helpful? Awesome? Weird? Would you actually calm down, or get even more angry that a car is telling you what to do?

Scenarios like this (maybe without the lavender oil part) may not be imaginary for much longer, especially if companies working to integrate emotion-reading artificial intelligence into new cars have their way. And it wouldnt just be a matter of your car soothing you when youre upsetdepending what sort of regulations are enacted, the cars sensors, camera, and microphone could collect all kinds of data about you and sell it to third parties.

Just as AI systems can be trained to tell the difference between a picture of a dog and one of a cat, they can learn to differentiate between an angry tone of voice or facial expression and a happy one. In fact, theres a whole branch of machine intelligence devoted to creating systems that can recognize and react to human emotions; its called affective computing.

Emotion-reading AIs learn what different emotions look and sound like from large sets of labeled data; smile = happy, tears = sad, shouting = angry, and so on. The most sophisticated systems can likely even pick up on the micro-expressions that flash across our faces before we consciously have a chance to control them, as detailed by Daniel Goleman in his groundbreaking book Emotional Intelligence.

Affective computing company Affectiva, a spinoff from MIT Media Lab, says its algorithms are trained on 9.5 million face videos (videos of peoples faces as they do an activity, have a conversation, or react to stimuli) representing about 5 billion facial frames. Fascinatingly, Affectiva claims its software can even account for cultural differences in emotional expression (for example, its more normalized in Western cultures to be very emotionally expressive, whereas Asian cultures tend to favor stoicism and politeness), as well as gender differences.

As reported in Motherboard, companies like Affectiva, Cerence, Xperi, and Eyeris have plans in the works to partner with automakers and install emotion-reading AI systems in new cars. Regulations passed last year in Europe and a bill just introduced this month in the US senate are helping make the idea of driver monitoring less weird, mainly by emphasizing the safety benefits of preemptive warning systems for tired or distracted drivers (remember that part in the beginning about sneaking glances at your phone? Yeah, that).

Drowsiness and distraction cant really be called emotions, thoughso why are they being lumped under an umbrella that has a lot of other implications, including what many may consider an eerily Big Brother-esque violation of privacy?

Our emotions, in fact, are among the most private things about us, since we are the only ones who know their true nature.Weve developed the ability to hide and disguise our emotions, and this can be a useful skill at work, in relationships, and in scenarios that require negotiation or putting on a game face.

And I dont know about you, but Ive had more than one good cry in my car. Its kind of the perfect place for it; private, secluded, soundproof.

Putting systems into cars that can recognize and collect data about our emotions under the guise of preventing accidents due to the state of mind of being distracted or the physical state of being sleepy, then, seems a bit like a bait and switch.

European regulations will help keep driver data from being used for any purpose other than ensuring a safer ride. But the US is lagging behind on the privacy front, with car companies largely free from any enforceable laws that would keep them from using driver data as they please.

Affectiva lists the following as use cases for occupant monitoring in cars: personalizing content recommendations, providing alternate route recommendations, adapting environmental conditions like lighting and heating, and understanding user frustration with virtual assistants and designing those assistants to be emotion-aware so that theyre less frustrating.

Our phones already do the first two (though, granted, were not supposed to look at them while we drivebut most cars now let you use bluetooth to display your phones content on the dashboard), and the third is simply a matter of reaching a hand out to turn a dial or press a button. The last seems like a solution for a problem that wouldnt exist without said solution.

Despite how unnecessary and unsettling it may seem, though, emotion-reading AI isnt going away, in cars or other products and services where it might provide value.

Besides automotive AI, Affectiva also makes software for clients in the advertising space. With consent, the built-in camera on users laptops records them while they watch ads, gauging their emotional response, what kind of marketing is most likely to engage them, and how likely they are to buy a given product. Emotion-recognition tech is also being used or considered for use in mental health applications, call centers, fraud monitoring, and education, among others.

In a 2015 TED talk, Affectiva co-founder Rana El-Kaliouby told her audience that were living in a world increasingly devoid of emotion, and her goal was to bring emotions back into our digital experiences. Soon theyll be in our cars, too; whether the benefits will outweigh the costs remains to be seen.

Image Credit: Free-Photos from Pixabay

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Prevent moves that can fracture historic ties with Bangladesh: Foreign Minister – The Hindu

The Indian government and society have an obligation to prevent any development that can fracture the historic ties with Bangladesh, Dhakas Foreign Minister A.K. Abdul Momen said on Sunday.

The statement was in response to the August 5 inauguration of construction of the Ram temple in Ayodhya which, according to commentators of Bangladesh, will give a new political opportunity to the hardline opponents of Sheikh Hasina. The Minister also defended last weeks phone conversation between Prime Minister Hasina and her Pakistan counterpart Imran Khan saying there was nothing unusual in that discussion.

India and Bangladesh share a historic and arterial relationship. We will not allow this [temple construction] to hurt ties but I would still urge that India should not allow any development that can fracture our beautiful and deep relationship. This is valid for both our countries and I would say both sides should work in such a way so that such disruptions can be averted, said Mr. Momen regarding the position of Bangladesh about the beginning of the temple construction.

Muslim devotees of Lord Ram gear up to celebrate temple bhoomi pujan in Ayodhya

The Minister told The Hindu over telephone from Dhaka that every section of India and Bangladesh should play a role in fostering good relationship. Your society also has an obligation to ensure good relationship with us. Governments alone cannot deliver on such matters. People and media are also part of this endeavour to ensure ties remain on track and the focus remains on development activities, said Mr. Momen.

The comments have added to the concern from the veteran experts of international affairs and the civil society of Bangladesh who have cautioned that the construction though an internal matter of India will have an emotional impact on the people of Bangladesh.

This will of course give an opportunity to the politics of singularity in Bangladesh which moved away from the two-nation theory in 1971. We are not comfortable with this theory but evidences suggest that India is moving towards the two-nation theory, said Prof. Imtiaz Ahmed of the University of Dhaka who urged India to prevent any spillover effect of the Ram temple episode from hitting ties with Bangladesh. Barrister Tureen Afroze of the Alliance against Extremism and Terrorism said the fundamentalist forces in Bangladesh will get a new lease of life in the coming weeks because of the planned event in Ayodhya. Common people of India and Bangladesh suffer whenever fundamentalist forces prosper and this event will dramatically increase the strength of the singularity lobby in Bangladesh.

Also read:Ayodhya mosque trust yet to be constituted

Mr. Momen blamed vested interests for trying to highlight a series of developments in Dhaka which indicated increasing differences between the neighbours. It was reported in these columns earlier that outgoing High Commissioner Riva Ganguly Das could not meet Sheikh Hasina despite repeated efforts. Diplomatic sources from Dhaka said the meeting did not materialise because of the threat of COVID-19. Most of the PMs engagements have shifted to digital platforms as we are prioritising the leaders safety and health in this time of pandemic, said a source arguing that the meetings will resume once the pandemic scenario improves.

Dr. Momen said Bangladesh supports regional peace and expects dialogue with all and said last weeks phone call between Sheikh Hasina and Mr. Khan was a matter of courtesy.

Whats wrong if Pakistan dials us? Why should there be any problem if they make a telephone call? After all we both live in the same world, said Mr. Momen blaming the media for spicing up reports on the call during which both the leaders discussed the COVID-19 scenario. Pakistan said Mr. Khan had raised the Kashmir issue.

Also read:Ayodhya verdict | Supreme Court agrees Muslims were wronged but allows Ram temple

Bangladesh however has maintained silence about Kashmir and said the conversation was COVID-19-related. India subsequently appreciated the position as Dhaka considers it an internal matter of India.

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Expressions of color, comfort, and creativity in the fight against COVID-19 – Penn Today

With many summer internships disrupted by the pandemic, the Architecture Department at Penn partnered with Surface magazine to create theSummer School at Penn, a month-long virtual lecture series and design competition. During the four-week program, 76 students from the Stuart Weitzman School of Design listened to public lectures by world-renowned architects, educators, graphic and industrial designers, and doctors and submitted their designs for a mobile-testing unit. Their colorful and comforting creations showcase the rigorous in-depth research and power of optimism and demonstrate how architects and designers can help support the ongoing fight against the novel coronavirus.

Architecture Department Chair Winka Dubbeldam was inspired by the many students who made face shields for health care workers and wanted to find a way to give something back. I was impressed that the students, outside of having to do online coursework for the last half of semester, were also doing this. They really inspired us with their courage and empathy and willingness to help, she says. Dubbeldam initiated this summer school for the students and was able to quickly find a wide range of designers and professors eager to support the students whose summer plans had been disrupted.

During the month-long Summer School, lecturers provided guidance on designing buildings with a small footprint that can be assembled on site and also challenged students to be empathetic and inclusive. While the speakers came from a wide range of areas of expertise, Dubbeldam says she was surprised that one of the common themes was to understand it was really about the people who visited the pavilion and for the students to also simply enjoy the process. Almost all of them ended with, And knowing all that, just have fun designing this, she says.

In addition to lectures covering topics such as the parallels between white supremacy and COVID-19 and how the pandemic unfolded in Guayaquil, Ecuador, several Penn professors shared their insights: Thom Mayne discussed the importance of problem formulation. Ferda Kolatan encouraged students to take inspiration from personal protective equipment to create mobile-testing stations that are somewhere between design, utilitarian, and art objects.Marion Weiss told students how much their talents are needed at this challenging time, saying, You all have gifts to bring to the world that could be small and impactful by their distribution in the millions or impactful in their singularity to change a city.

The Summer School Super Jury received 35 submissions for creating a mobile-testing facility that could be reused after the pandemic. Seven winners were announced earlier this month: Hanqing Yao for FLIP IT in first place, Lauren Hunter and Valerie Pretto for Community Cumuli in second, and Jiewei Li and Mrinalini Vermas UNFOLD and Hillary Morales and Molly Zmichs Dimensioning Remembrance tied for third place.

Inspired by Thom Maynes idea of combining a testing center with an ice cream stand as well as Weiss concept of the playscape, masters of architecture student Yao designed a mobile-testing unit with versatility and comfort in mind. Using simple and playful geometries made from prefabricated components, FLIP IT is designed to, quite literally, flip in different directions to serve different functionsbe it a walk-through testing site or, post-pandemic, a childrens play area.

The space is also designed to provide shaded spaces in soft, pastel colors to make the setting comfortable and relaxing. I am trying to create a more enjoyable and safer space for patients going through a serious medical process and the doctors who dedicate so much to the control of the disease, says Yao. The unique views and forms give people a refreshing and positive experience while being tested in a pandemic.

While trying to empathize with the experience of those being tested, masters of architecture students Hunter and Pretto wanted to provide an environment that was universal and calming. Community Cumuli embodies the softness and lightness of clouds and is made of a light yet durable plastic, one that can be easily cleaned when used as a testing site and also able to be reshaped into something new. We imagined this as being something that existed beyond COVID for disaster relief, temporary housing, or a pavilion where people gather. We also designed several different pieces that could be linked together, allowing people to have control over what they want and what they need, says Hunter.

Hunter and Pretto set out to stay engaged, to learn as much as they could from the program, and, overall, to have fun. I think that attitude has definitely shown through the design, says Pretto. Its playful, its fun, its lighthearted, and that attitude really did influence the design of the project.

While developing UNFOLD, environmental building design masters students Jiewei Li and Mrinalini Verma were inspired by Yves Behars lecture on how to rethink design problems. They came up with a two-layered structure made of composite paper, which is easy to pre-fabricate and also has low virus retention. The outer layer, where people wait to be tested, is separated yet interwoven with the inner layer where the procedure takes place. We first looked at how people get tested now: They build a tent, and you wait in line. When its raining, it will be difficult, and we felt that there must be some shade, says Li about their dual-layered design. We want to build a good environment for people while they are waiting to be tested.

Prototyped using paper and inspired by origami structures, their final design also incorporates basic principles of upward ventilation to provide a space where people could still be safe from exposure even if they were less than six feet apart. We brought in the design question of how we can challenge social distancing norms, says Verma of how Behars lecture inspired them to think about how to address design challenges differently.

Inspired by V. Mitch McEwens presentation on the dual pandemics of COVID-19 and racism, masters of architecture students Morales and Zmich created a testing site that could serve as a memorial for those who lost their lives to COVID-19. We took this project as an opportunity to start a conversation: how to make this space for the present in terms of the health necessities but also in terms of remembrance because our process of mourning is restricted. Its a very reflective project, says Morales.

As their design began to take shape during recent protests around racial injustice, they also realized how important site selection would be. With a national movement supporting the removal of racist monuments, they found an opportunity to turn these newly emptied public spaces into testing sites. We are facing two pandemics, social and health, and that is something that, as a designer, is unusual to address, Zmich says. We also realized the importance of creating public space, which is now the space where people can be together, and that was what drove our idea.

Dubbeldam enjoyed being able to stay connected to and to give back to the students that have always been an inspiration to her and to so many others in the School. We had a lot of conversations about all the issues that were going on, and it was nice to be close in this very difficult period, she says.

Many participants credit the diverse set of speakers as a great feature of the program and one that they hope to see continue in the future. We as architects need to involve other professions throughout our design process in order to accurately inform our projects, projects that can be attentive not only to the user experience but to their functionality in the future, says Pretto.

Its also apparent that cities are actively transforming, from outdoor seating at restaurants to changes in everyday social interactions, and how important these smaller scale interventions will continue to be. Building a bunch of buildings is not the answer right now, but our creative problem solving, thinking about how to readjust space, is something that architects are going to need to help with going forward, says Zmich.

Inspired to join the Summer School to find ways to address the coronavirus crisis, Verma is now interested in using her skills to think about new ways to retrofit existing spaces so they can be more open and healthier. Staying indoors for so many months made a question of what spaces are really essential and how spaces that cant be used during a pandemic like this could be redesigned to adapt to more essential functions.

Hunter says that because people want to be able to experience places beyond their sense of sight, being mindful of peoples interactions with public spaces will need to be a key consideration for designers in the future. We really have to think about how people interact with architecture: how you open a door or flip on a light switch, especially when you are in a public place she says.

Li agrees that re-thinking how to use existing spaces will be essential in the future and is thankful that, as an architect, he knows that he has a role in the ongoing fight against the novel coronavirus. When the pandemic started, I was very lost. I felt like only medical people are fighting the virus. I felt like for architects, it was hard to take part, but in this competition, I feel like we can do something by our design.

Morales emphasizes that encouraging designers to be more conscientious will also be essential. The community is something that people should be aware of during the design process. We are serving people and making things for people, and we need to think about them and their lives not as a secondary thing but as something thats integral to the design process, she says.

After deciding to stay in Philadelphia because of the uncertainty around the pandemic, Yao joined the Summer School because of her optimism that things could get better through everyones effort, an optimism that shows through in her and the other students designs. The Summer School was a great opportunity to make a positive voice in the pandemic and to rethink what design can bring to society, says Yao. Architects are taking more responsibility for making people safer.

Winka Dubbeldam is Miller Professor and Chair of the Department of Architecture in the Stuart Weitzman School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania.

The Super Jury included Winka Dubbeldam, Annette Fierro, Ferda Kolatan, Thom Mayne, and Marion Weiss from the Stuart Weitzman School of Design; Yves Bhar from Fuseproject; Marc Miller from Pennsylvania State University; Susan Sellers from Yale University; Mark Gardner, a masters of architecture alum who graduated in 2000; and Joseph Scharzkopf from Uribe Schwarzkopf.

For the complete list of lecturers and links to recordings, visit the Surface Summer School at Penn event website.

Participants receiving honorable mentions are Beikel Rivas, Miguel Matos, and Dario Sabidussi for Personal Protective Pod; Fang Cheng, Shifei Xu, and Chengzhe Zhu for Breezing/Breathing Cloud; and Hadi El Kebbi, Nicholas Houser, Anna Lim, and Danny Ortega for Matryoshka Kit. All participants in the program are graduate students in the Weitzman School of Design. Images from proposals can be viewed on the Weitzman Flickr.

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Expressions of color, comfort, and creativity in the fight against COVID-19 - Penn Today

Cyberpunk 2077 is "not a political statement" says CD Projekt Red – KitGuru

Though the Cyberpunk genre often lends itself to great political discourse through the unique allegorical debates within its futuristic yet dystopian lens, it would appear as though CD Projekt Red are aiming to avoid this aspect to the genre, revealing in an interview that the game is not a political statement.

In an interview with the Polish website Spiders Web, CD Projekt Reds Lead Quest Designer for Cyberpunk 2077 (Pawe Sasko) revealed, in response to a question regarding whether the game would touch upon current real-world political issues, that (as translated by Google) For me, the most important thing is that our game is a closed work and it is not a political statement, a political thesis.

This is interesting, especially as previously mentioned the Cyberpunk genre has historically embraced politics, with the creator of the Cyberpunk pen-and-paper RPG (Mike Pondsmith) himself admitting that the IP is political saying Somebody asked me a while back if Cyberpunk was political and I said inherently its always political.

Though of course there is the possibility that Saskos comments may have been misconstrued, it is nonetheless interesting to see that the developer appears to be shying away from one of the genres core traits.That being said, well have to wait and see how CD Projekt Red broaches the topic, when Cyberpunk 2077 releases on the 19th of November.

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Iranian professor: Space travel will only be possible after Hidden Imam’s arrival – Cleveland Jewish News

Irans former Deputy Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance said during a recent interview that the moon landings are a lie, and that travel to other planets will only become possible once the Hidden Imam arrives.

Mohammad-Hadi Homayoun, a professor at Imam Sadegh University, told Irans Channel 4 on July 17 that when this happens, there will be no more diseases and people will be able to communicate with jinns.

Enormous things are going to take place, said Homayoun. Those who want regimes that are just must know that this will certainly happen [when the Hidden Imam appears]. If somebody wants to travel to other planetsthis is also going to become possible. People say that [man] has gone to the moon and stuff like that, but they are almost certainly lying. Man has not yet left planet Earth. We have not yet gone to the moon.

Homayoun added that according to our tradition, we will be able to go to other planets only after [the Hidden Imam] appears.

Communicating with jinns will also become possible, and the jinns will serve man, said Homayoun. We wont be afraid of the jinns like we are now. I am talking about God-fearing jinns.

He added that once the imam arrives, there will be no more disease.

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Iranian professor: Space travel will only be possible after Hidden Imam's arrival - Cleveland Jewish News

Save Space Camp: The crowdfunding campaign to save a NASA institution – CNET

Space Camp and U.S. Space and Rocket Center Museum in Alabama is in danger of closing for good.

Space Camp is the ultimate destination for kids with stars (and planets) in their eyes who want to learn all about space travel. However, since the coronavirus quarantine, youngsters wanting to train to become future astronauts have had to stay home.

Space Camp-- hosted at the US Space & Rocket Center at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama -- has for 38 years educated and inspired students from all over the world, but now it's in trouble due to loss of profits from having to close its doors to visitors during the quarantine.

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"Due to the coronavirus pandemic, we have seen a dramatic reduction in attendance at the US Space and Rocket Center museum and Space Camp, leading to a significant decrease in revenue and operating capital," the crowdfunding page stated. "With limited admission from international students and school groups this fall and winter, we're forced to close our weeklong camp programs again until April 2021. These ongoing challenges have meant a devastating loss of two-thirds of our revenue."

TheSpace Camp started a crowdfunding campaignin hopes of raising $1.5 million to help pay for operating costs while the coronavirus lockdown continues. The US Space and Rocket Center and Space Camp aren't federally funded and are ineligible for state or local financial relief, so the money will need to be raised, or both will be forced to close this October.

"The coronavirus pandemic has devastated our revenue stream, and without your support, we're on a trajectory to have to close the doors of the US Space and Rocket Center Museum, Space Camp, and its sister programs sometime in October of this year,"Space and Rocket Center Education Foundation chair Ben Chandler said in a video posted on July 27. "Raising the funds would allow the camp to remain open through spring of next year, just in time for what organizers hope is a busy, pandemic-cleared summer attendance season."

Here's a closer look at the realistic setting for training at Space Camp hosted by the U.S. Space and Rocket Center Museum.

If the campaign reaches its crowdfunding goal, it will not only save Space Camp but also the US Space and Rocket Center itself, which is a popular tourist destination for space lovers. So far, the crowdfunding campaign has raised $549,021 of $1,500,000 goal.

This Space Camp isn't just a fun way to spend the summer; it can inspire kids to pursue careers with NASA. The astronauts Sandra Magnus, Robert Hines, Kate Rubins, and Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger have all attended Space Camp.

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Save Space Camp: The crowdfunding campaign to save a NASA institution - CNET

Down The Dark Alleys Of Sesame Street – CFJC Today Kamloops

Can You Tell Him How To Get, How To Get a Space Shuttle Seat

Perhaps one of the most iconic characters on the Street, aside from our red puppet friend Elmo, is the 8-foot 2-inch, yellow giant we lovingly call Big Bird. Your friend and mine, Big Bird is one of the original puppets on the Street and still graces our television screens with love, compassion, and happiness. But, should he be a few inches shorter, this happy-go-lucky friend may not be around today.

In the early 1980s, NASA reached out to the creators of Sesame Street with an interesting proposal. As space travel was still new and uncertain, the NASA team was eager to gain some public attention and affection for their newly developed space shuttle. The Challenger mission was sure to be one for the books, and what better way to get young children excited about space than by sending their good friend, Big Bird, up into the galaxy.

Luckily, Big Bird and his puppeteer, Caroll Spinney were unable to join the Challenger mission. While the exact reasoning is not quite defined, its safe to say that the puppets towering heights were the main contributing factor. Lets be real, an 8-foot, 4000-feathered bird is not quite an essential when it comes to compact space travel. As we know today, the tragic mission of The Challenger would have resulted in the devasting loss of our yellow friend, and Sesame Street as we know it would never be the same.

So Big Bird continued his residency on Sesame Street with all of his friendsreal, and once imaginary. From 1971 to 1985, the shaggy brown monster, Mr. Snuffleupagus, was a totally ambiguous character. He was introduced to the show as an imaginary friend that only Big Bird could see. The two became extremely close during this time. In fact, when other characters appeared on-screen, Snuffy shuffled off or totally missed everyones arrival each and every time. Big Bird insisted that Snuffy was real, but no one ever believed him.

This tricky friendship raised an eyebrow or two after some disturbing storylines started hitting the front page. In the early 1980s, an episode of 60 Minutes gave the showrunners a reason to think twice about the portrayal of Snuffy as Big Birds imaginary friend. The issue of child abuse became particularly prominent. The last thing writers wanted was kids thinking that they couldnt come to their parents with important or difficult information in the fear that they wouldnt be believed.

The Executive Producer of Sesame Street, Carol-Lynn Parente said The fear was that if we represented adults not believing what kids say, they might not be motivated to tell the truth. And so, with careful planning and storytelling techniques, the writers developed a two-year scheme, introducing Snuffy as a real character to the rest of the members on Sesame Street. In this iconic episode, Bob McGrath, one of the human residents, tells Big Bird: From now on, well believe you whenever you tell us something, driving home the main point of this storyline change.

While Big Bird and Snuffy maintained their friendship on the Street, theyre accompanied by a whole melting pot of characters: Elmo, Cookie Monster, Oscar the Grouch, and the cloak-wearing Count.

While Count von Count was originally modeled off of Bela Lugosis Count Dracula, we do have some reason to believe that this cape-wearing, castle-dwelling puppet is a vampire. According to many claims on the Muppet Fan wiki page, the character has been described as a number-friendly vampire and a Numerical Vampire. However, according to The Counts official biography, he is not specifically listed as such. But, why is Sesame Street so set on their Dracula-inspiration?

Perhaps its because, in traditional folklore, vampires are said to have severe arithmomaniaa type of compulsive disorder where individuals become obsessed with counting absolutely everything around them. Aside from the fact that vampires also, quite obviously, have huge fangs and are known to puncture humans and drink their blood, this wouldnt be a good look for our friend The Count. To be safe, were going to stick with his official About Me, and opt for the Dracula inspirationbut hey, you be the judge!

If near-death explosions, imaginary friends, and OCD werent enough, a few characters are worth mentioning for other eyebrow-raising reasons. While only on screen for a short period of time, Don Music, became a quick fan favorite. Writing hit songs like Mary Had a Bicycle, and Drive, Drive, Drive Your Car, he was quite the clever lyricist. However, as a musician, he was bound to make a few frustrating mistakes at the piano. And to voice this frustration, he often began shouting and throwing his head against his instrument. Naturally, kids at home began to follow this behavior leading to some headaches and injuries. Needless to say, Don Music was retired from the screen.

Sesame Street will always be a sunny place we can call home. With an eclectic group of residents, theyve certainly made bright turns out of dark alleys or crooked storylines and it continues to be a place of acceptance, learning, and joy for viewers today.

Source: Down The Dark Alleys Of Sesame Street

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Down The Dark Alleys Of Sesame Street - CFJC Today Kamloops

How will private space travel change the way we explore the Solar System? – BBC Focus Magazine

Gary Martin is the Vice President for North American operations for the International Space University, but before that he was a senior advisor to the Luxembourg Space Agency and spent more than 30 years at NASA, advising on space science missions, advanced technology development, and human spaceflight.

He explains the significance of the recent SpaceX launch, what private space travel can do that governments cant, and why we need sci-fi to inspire our engineers.

In the past, national space agencies have built and launched the spaceships that carried astronauts into space. Recently, we saw a private company, SpaceX, launch American astronauts to the International Space Station on behalf of NASA for the first time ushering in a new era of private space travel.

SpaceXs Crew Dragon successfully docked with the International Space Station on 1 June 2020 NASA

Were starting a whole new chapter in humanitys quest to move off this planet, to actually start things weve seen in science fiction.

The SpaceX launch, although it was still bought by government funds, is a huge change. Its something Ive been waiting for all my career in that before, only governments had the kind of money, could take the liability, and actually had permission to go into space and explore this frontier.

Now weve got a commercial company that has shown it can take an astronaut up to space into low Earth orbit.

Read more about space exploration:

There are a couple of private space station companies out there [for example Axiom Space and Bigelow Aerospace] but until now you had no way to get there, because you would have had to get a government to sell you a seat and the governments have other priorities and seats are precious.

Now SpaceX could sell you a trip to your private space station. And if all these countries are going to the Moon, there are a number of companies that are interested in providing communications around the Moon, providing resources and fuel and water and power.

Theres all kinds of economic possibilities in the next couple of decades that are now empowered. This is very exciting; this is a milestone that we will look back on and say, This is when it started; this is when it really took off.

Gary Martin in 2004 when he held the role of Space Architect at NASA David Paul Morris/Getty Images

At the beginning of the Internet, you would never ever think of what a role it plays in our entire world right now. This is what I believe space is going to be like.

So how do you start that? Well, this is where governments absolutely do work. It was NASA putting so much money into SpaceX that allowed it to have the capability to take humans into space. Now, SpaceX can amortise [pay off] that investment to give anyone a ride, if they pay the price.

And thats the difference, the government would never have that capability, theyre not going to become an operational activity. But SpaceX is a private company that has motivations to do private things in space.

Read more about Moon bases:

In Luxembourg, we looked at where are the places you could make money in space. Well, its very expensive to take things from the Earth and use them in space. So, if you assume that governments are going to the Moon, you need to make everything you want for civilisation in space at some point.

At these Moon bases, youre going to want to not only be out there doing science, exploring or having tourism there, youre going to want to go have a beer at night, youre going to want to have a pizza, youre going to want a comfortable, safe room.

SpaceX expect that one day their Starship could carry passengers to the Moon SpaceX/Flickr

All of these materials and things and ideas have to be constructed by people in businesses. So the business opportunities at some point, maybe two decades or so from now, are actually limitless.

Once theres a foot hold of people on the Moon, then people will be going to Mars. Well learn how to live safely, well learn how to do things in space. Theres a lot to learn, and theres a lot of business opportunities in learning those things.

Every day I read a number of clippings to try to stay current and Ill tell you, theres a new launcher system proposed every week. There are launcher systems all over the world in many, many countries, mostly though, those are to put things in low Earth orbit.

The countries that can launch people are China, Russia, and the US. India is working towards that capability.

In the commercial role, only SpaceX has launched people into orbit, in addition theres only a few other US companies working to develop the capability: Blue Origin, Sierra Nevada, and Boeing. Its a handful but you wouldnt expect it to be a lot till theres a lot going on and then people will rush to the marketplace.

BlueOrigin, owned by Amazon boss Jeff Bezos, is also working to launch humans into space BlueOrigin

Think about it, if youre a country, lets say youre a Middle Eastern country with a lot of money, in a few years you could automatically go into the space age by just buying a private space station and buying tickets to get there from SpaceX.

Now youre in a country that went from no human spaceflight to your own space station. Because you can buy it.

If you look at Star Wars movies and you look at Star Trek, whatever these inventive writers envision for the future, it gives the real engineers something to aim for and some of it comes true.

Star Treks USS Enterprise might be a work of fiction, but it has inspired many to push us further into space Alamy

So, in a way, Elon [Musk, SpaceX CEO] is setting a vision, and engineers, like myself, all want to do exciting things. And so whether 100 people are going to be going to Mars anytime soon, that may or may not happen.

But theres a lot of engineers and a lot of people who want to dedicate their lives to doing something exciting, that is different and that has never been done before. And so he energises amazing people who have already shown the amazing things theyre able to do in space and hes gotten their creativity working.

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How will private space travel change the way we explore the Solar System? - BBC Focus Magazine

Space Equals Luxury in the New Normal – TravelPulse

Luxury means something a little different to each traveler. Some people scope out the fanciest resorts and spas, and others are all about beachfront access, massive pools and the best dining available.

Moving forward with vacations in the new normal, luxury for a lot of travelers means having space to travel without constantly worrying about crowded areas. Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit have travelers covered in this department.

Although these destinations are growing to be popular tourist hotspots, they still boast plenty of wide-open spaces. Travelers will have no problem finding a place to relax and enjoy the warm weather and gorgeous scenery without the crowds.

Ways to easily social distance in this destination include finding a spot on one of the many expansive beaches and booking a stay at an exclusive resort. There are also several outdoor activities to take part in such as hiking and snorkeling.

Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit recently reopened to visitors, and this Pacific Coast paradise is eagerly awaiting your next visit.

Contact a travel advisor to begin booking your next adventure.

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Space Equals Luxury in the New Normal - TravelPulse

Kentucky Bankruptcies Dropped Last Quarter. Its The Calm Before The Storm – 89.3 WFPL News Louisville

The U.S. economy shrank by 33% from April to June, the worst quarterly plunge ever.

Yet, in Kentucky, bankruptcy filings actually dropped.

There were 34% fewer bankruptcy petitions from the first to the second quarter of 2020, according to new data from the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. The filings were also down more than a third when compared to the same period last year.

If that sounds like good news, experts warn the worst is yet to come. As the COVID-19 pandemic forces millions of Americans out of work and into debt, some Kentuckians are scraping by on unemployment insurance. Others might be waiting for their situation to bottom out before filing bankruptcy.

Weve got a tidal wave of bankruptcies coming, said Peter Brackney, a bankruptcy attorney in Lexington. The waters often recede before the wave comes in.

There are likely many reasons for the bankruptcy downturn. As the pandemic drags on for months longer than first anticipated, indebted consumers and business owners might be awaiting their financial nadir before petitioning a court for a discharge, or release from certain debts. Some debtors might be waiting for their employment situation to straighten out before entering bankruptcy proceedings. Others might be hoping for further relief from policymakers such as student loan debt forgiveness, considered a hail mary.

Some experts credited the governments emergency relief measures for mitigating the worst of the economic fallout. The centerpiece of the federal response was the $2.2 trillion CARES Act, which included the $669-billion Paycheck Protection Program, stimulus payments, forbearances on mortgages and student loans, and expanded unemployment benefits. A state moratorium on evictions has also staved off personal disaster for thousands of Kentuckians.

But relief measures arent expected to be permanent, and financial calamity continues to threaten those unable to make ends meet.

Steve Vidmer, a bankruptcy attorney in Murray, saw a clear lag in bankruptcy filings after Mattel closed its local Fisher-Price toys plant in 2002. Nearly 1,000 employees were laid off.

Here I assumed the floodgate was opened, Vidmer recalled. But it took a long time before people realized they might need to file for bankruptcy. Sometimes its not until months or years later that they realize theyre in a pickle they cant get out of.

Since April, bankruptcy filings are trending upward, if slowly. In April, there were 809 bankruptcy petitions filed in Kentucky; in June, there were 948.

Still, Junes filing total was 24% lower than June of last year. Meanwhile, theres some evidence consumer debts are getting worse. Americans will rack up an estimated $80 billion in new credit card debt in 2020, a roughly 8% increase, according to an analysis from WalletHub.

The debt is there, but people havent paid the consequences yet, said Ed Flynn, a consultant with the American Bankruptcy Institute. After unemployment benefits expire and after foreclosures pick up again, he predicts bankruptcy filings will really go through the roof.

The typical debtor is not very high income, in Kentucky or anywhere else, Flynn said. It may take a year to really play out, but at some point, people are really going to feel the pain.

Graham Ambrose is an investigative reporter covering social services and youth issues. He is a Report for America Corps member. Contact him at gambrose@kycir.org.

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Kentucky Bankruptcies Dropped Last Quarter. Its The Calm Before The Storm - 89.3 WFPL News Louisville

Confederate monuments: What the men honored by statues did and believed – Apalachicola Times

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 - Apalachicola Times

Letter: Democrats are still the party of slavery – Hickory Daily Record

Did you ever wonder why the Democrats (and their armed militias Antifa and BLM) want to erase history? It's because they own the party of slavery, Jim Crowe, segregation, KKK, lynching, poll taxes and literacy tests for voting. Read actual history, not their revisionist version. They remain today the party of oppressing minorities but cleverly disguise it.

Just look at the decay of every big city in America. Inner city neighborhood public schools populated mostly by African Americans are total disasters. Reading and math competency among high schoolers are at fourth grade levels. Yet teachers unions, totally behind the Democrat party, vehemently oppose letting these kids have a choice of schools and a shot at a decent education. (Incidentally, Blacks overwhelmingly support school choice ... their kids do matter.) Crime, especially shootings, is out of control. Gangs and fascist Marxists like Antifa and BLM, are ardent supporters of the Democrat party. They loot, destroy, assault and murder. Democrat mayors call their riotous takeovers the summer of love and do nothing to protect their own law-abiding citizens, their homes or businesses. What's the common denominator among these cities? Democrat rule for decades. How's that working out for the people the Democrats claim to champion?

Layer on Democrats' support of open borders. If elected, Biden pledged to enact amnesty for 25,000,000 illegals (aka Democrat voters,) not to mention giving them "free" health care, college tuition, etc. No one can legitimately argue that this would not exacerbate the depression of wages for American citizens and negatively impact low wage unskilled American workers. Democrat strategy: corporations keep their cheap labor, and the American underclass becomes even more dependent on the welfare state rather than being helped to emerge from poverty.

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Letter: Democrats are still the party of slavery - Hickory Daily Record

Who owns America What’s it worth? – The Tryon Daily Bulletin – Tryon Daily Bulletin

Betsy Burdett

Conservation Corner

Last months Corner was about sustainable land use, based upon economic principles. I must admit that economic theory is not my strong point, but understanding the basics is important since our entire society seems to be controlled by economics. After reading through John Ikerds article Who Owns America Land Use Planning for Sustainability several times, I think that I can relay the basics to you in a few paragraphs.

The three cornerstones of sustainability are ecological soundness, economic viability and social justice.

Because we live in a capitalist system, economic viability pretty much determines the land use choices that we make. The easiest way for me to understand economic theory as it relates to land use is to use the example of a small parcel of land. Lets pretend that were taking about a small farm. In order for a farm to pay for itself, to make a living for the farmer or landowner, it must make a profit.

For the past 75+ years, fertilizers and additives have been used to increase yields. Farm laborers get paid very little, so smart farmers have been able to make a profit and survive. There is a problem with this, however: commercial fertilizers, fossil fuels, pesticides, and machinery are all finite, non-renewable resources. Therefore, this form of farming is not sustainable, either for a small farm or huge mega-farms. If we can no longer count on fertilizers, etc. to sustain our farms, and we can no longer pay our farm workers a living wage, well need to cultivate more land.

Back in the 1700s, the production problem was solved by using slave labor on huge plantations to harvest cotton. South Carolina at the time was the richest state in the Union. But, slavery conflicted with the sense of social justice, so it was not sustainable. Now we use fertilizers and fossil fuels, yet they violate the 1st requirement for sustainability: ecological soundness. Weve got problems for sure, and they are not easily solved.

Organic farming has made a big impact recently because it is environmentally sustainable, if we can figure out how to make if economically viable. Currently, the average Polk County farm owner is over 55 years old, so the transition to organic farming will depend upon the feasibility of a younger generation taking over at the helm.

As you can guess, there are problems making this transition difficult, the first hurtle being the high cost of land. That gets us right back to the problem of economic viability. Our local land values are skyrocketing through the roof nowadays, making it virtually impossible for young farmers to even begin to try to make a living if they do not already own the land. Organic farming is labor intensive, so the farms tend to be smaller than farms using traditional, mechanical farming techniques. And, if the organic farm is less than 10 tillable acres, that farmland is not eligible for a North Carolinas Present Use Value (PUV) agricultural property tax deferment, so the young farmer may not be able to pay the Polk County land taxes each year.

Please take time to look back at Wed., July 29th edition of the Tryon Daily Bulletin, at the article on page 4 Polk in top 5, Polk ranks 5th in state for the most value for their property. Note that all the other counties in the Top 10 are mountain counties. All of these counties have lots of land and low populations. What pays for most of our county services? Property taxes. How does that work? Property values are assessed according to highest and best use, and that is based solely on economic viability. The higher land prices get, the more tax dollars are brought in to pay for community services.

Let me give you an example of how sometimes works. A seven acre parcel of farmland that is eligible for a PUV agricultural tax deferment has a taxable value of approx. $6,055. If that same seven acre piece of land is not eligible for an agricultural deferment, the property tax value is $115,000. That equals a 95% difference for the property tax bill. Even though the abovementioned seven acres has been used to raise cattle for the past 90+ years, it is not eligible for a PUV deferment because it is less than 10 acres, the state minimum for eligible farmland. The owner of this seven acres was smart enough to encumber his farm with an agricultural conservation easement, which lawfully restricts its use to agriculture only and thus legally restricts the propertys highest and best use value.

Yes, by taxing so much of our rural land according to potential development value we have great schools. Thats because we have so much open land to tax and so few people to serve. This is not sustainable. Think of sustainability (visually) as a box, with ecological soundness, economic viability, and social justice just being the three dimensions of a box: height, width, and length.

Our box is collapsing, slowly but surely, unless we work together to make some changes.

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Who owns America What's it worth? - The Tryon Daily Bulletin - Tryon Daily Bulletin

Stuart Wilson is running against the status quo personified in his House District 19 run – Uprise RI

The more I watched what was happening with Rep McNamara and the rest of the leadership in the General Assembly, the more convinced I became that I could do a better job. I want to serve my community, and I believe many in my district are ready for a new voice.

Stuart Wilson is challenging incumbent Joseph McNamara for his House District 19 seat in the Democratic primary on September 8. McNamara has represented the district for a quarter of a century and hasnt had a primary challenger in well over a decade. McNamara is a close ally of Rhode Island Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, chairs the House Health, Education and Welfare Committee, and is the chair of the Rhode Island Democratic Party. McNamara is Rhode Islands political status quo personified.

Wilson grew up in Rhode Island, and has worked in education throughout the state, teaching with organizations like Providence CityArts!, The Gamm Theater in Pawtucket, Ella Risk Elementary School in Central Falls, and others. One of the drivers of his decision to run was seeing the challenges facing schools across the state and in Warwick specifically, and understanding that the work being done currently by the states legislature hasnt been sufficient to meet and solve those challenges. Wilson married to Nicky Mariani and has two children.

UpriseRI conducted the following interview by email.

UpriseRI: What made you decide to run for State Representative in House District 19?

Stuart Wilson: Ive had ideas for education in the state during my career as a teacher and artist. Ive always been interested in what I can do to make life better for people. In 2018, I was very disappointed that my supposedly Democratic State Rep endorsed a Trump supporter over an incumbent Democrat in the Democratic primary. Shes a strong progressive woman and the kind of representative we need more than ever. The more I watched what was happening with Rep McNamara and the rest of the leadership in the General Assembly, the more convinced I became that I could do a better job. I want to serve my community, and I believe many in my district are ready for a new voice.

Funding for our reporting relies entirely on the generosity of readers like you. Our independence allows us to write stories that hold RI state and local government officials accountable. All of our stories are free and available to everyone. But your support is essential to keeping Steve and Will on the beat, covering the costs of reporting many stories in a single day. If you are able to, please support Uprise RI. Every contribution, big or small is so valuable to us. You provide the motivation and financial support to keep doing what we do. Thank you.

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UpriseRI: Do you think the Rhode Island General Assembly has been serving the people of your District?

Wilson: No. When schools are failing in Warwick and Climate Change is directly threatening our coast? I dont believe theyre being served. There are lots of working class families in the district; I talk to them every day. They dont make a living wage and the General Assembly refuses to make a plan to get them there.

UpriseRI: Your opponent is an incumbent Democrat, a committee chair with close ties to Speaker Mattiello and House leadership, and he chairs the Rhode Island Democratic Party. How has he not been serving his constituents?

Wilson: He takes money directly from both the Speaker and House Majority Leader Joseph Shekarchi. Its almost impossible to separate McNamara from the leadership. Hes happy to talk about money he brought in for a local playground, but thats not enough.

UpriseRI: What issues are motivating you? What are you hearing from people as you go door to door, or however outreach is done during this pandemic?

Wilson: Education remains as important to me as ever, and I hear about it far more than anything else as I talk to people. (I do go door-to-door with a mask, sanitizer, and three big steps back after I knock on a door.) People have no idea what school is going to be like when it reopens. Theres a lot of very valid concerns on all sides of the issue of reopening versus distance learning.

Im disappointed that we havent been prioritizing schools more. It motivates me to work on education long term because I see the current crisis related to pre-existing issues. I want to do a better job of pooling resources and knowledge at the state level. I would like to see more funding from the state to eliminate disparities in education throughout the state. Schools need money to run safely and the state needs to ensure that schools in low-income areas are safe.Im also interested in workers rights and protections. The pandemic has revealed holes in the social safety net. We need to fill the holes.

UpriseRI: In addition to the crisis of COVID, Rhode Island is facing a reckoning with our history of racism and slavery, as well as an economic crisis, a housing crisis and an unemployment crisis. Its a big job right now. What are your instincts as to what should be done in the short term and the medium term?

Wilson: Its a big job and it needs big, new ideas. Right now were spending far too much money treating the symptoms instead of the causes. Long-standing racist institutions need to be rebuilt. We need to reinvest money on direct support for low-income communities and minority communities. Providing housing for the homeless isnt just the right thing to do; it saves money. We should have cooling centers for anyone who needs them. We need more affordable housing throughout the state. We need to be asking, who will be building that housing? Who will be renovating an empty building into a cooling center? (Thats an idea from a neighbor by the way thanks, Gary) Who will we send when a social worker would be more appropriate in a situation than a police officer? Rhode Islanders need jobs. Solving these problems arent mutually exclusive goals. Many of these ideas would help all Rhode Islanders, but we need to always be looking for ways to ensure minority voices are specifically being heard. In the medium term lets definitely elect some more BIPOC!

UpriseRI: Let me ask about particular subject areas. Where do you stand, and what are your ideas on the Environment:

Wilson: We need a state-wide Green New Deal. Emphasizing jobs in sustainable energy. I happen to edit a chemistry magazine. Climate Change is very real and we need to be mobilizing immediately.

UpriseRI: Health Care

Wilson: All Rhode Islanders should have access to affordable healthcare. Expanded Medicaid has helped many people here, but the state needs to fill in the gaps.

UpriseRI: Reproductive Rights

Wilson: I firmly support a womans right to choose. I was incredibly proud and grateful for the work of the women that pushed to establish Roe v Wade protections as law in the state.

UpriseRI: LGBTQ rights

Wilson: Yes! Like with abortion rights, I think we should ensure that these are encoded into state law as a backstop against any homophobic or transphobic laws made in Washington.

UpriseRI: Policing

Wilson: Lets completely overhaul the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights to start. We need much more civilian oversight so we can actually get rid of bad cops. We should also be reallocating money spent on militarized police departments towards mental health service and other, more effective methods to actually serve our communities.

UpriseRI: Guns

Wilson: Ive been named a Candidate of Distinction by Moms Demand Action, which Im very proud of. We need an assault weapons ban and strong background checks. Guns need to be taken away from domestic abusers.

UpriseRI: Housing

We need more homeless shelters, but also publicly-funded long-term affordable housing.

UpriseRI: Education

Wilson: Ive taught throughout the state. Ive seen the disparities first hand, and Ive also seen a lot of great ideas that arent being shared. The state should be addressing the funding disparity better. We need to do a better job of working between districts as well. For example, teachers should be able to take a job in another district without losing their tenure, seniority and other benefits.

UpriseRI: What other areas do you feel need attention?

Wilson: I have no idea why we cant make sure every kid in this state has a healthy breakfast and lunch. Hungry kids cant learn. Its shameful.

UpriseRI: Is there anything I should have asked that I didnt, or anything else you want to say?

Wilson: We have our own one percent in Rhode island. Lets raise the income tax on those making a half million a year to 9%.

Originally posted here:

Stuart Wilson is running against the status quo personified in his House District 19 run - Uprise RI

Indian Inc has to move towards decarbonisation: Thermax MD & CEO – The Financial Express

Decarbonisation will soon be part of the Indian boardroom agenda.

MS Unnikrishnan, managing director and chief executive of Thermax, said the country was at present dependent on equipment and technologies based on carbon while the world is moving towards decarbonisation so India needs to have a decarbonisation agenda in place in its corporate offices and boardrooms.

They would have to drive it down to individual decarbonisation and target reduction of carbon footprint of the company, the factories and its employees, Unnikrishnan said. He was speaking at the CII Green Conclave 2020 organized by the Confederation of Indian Industry over virtual platform.

In the coming days, CEOs will be rated not just for billions of top line or millions of bottom line created but for the amount of resources preserved, Unnikrishnan said.

What is recycled, whether whatever you have consumed is biodegradable and if in the process any harm has been cause to the earth will be looked at.

What carbon footprint the companys growth plans leaves will become important. The model of continued growth in top line, increased profits /profitability and a good shareholder return will no longer be enough, Unnikrishnan said.

According to Unnikrishnan, integrated reporting that goes beyond financial reporting and adopts sustainable development goals is becoming mandatory across the world and currently only top 500 companies in India have to do this but integrated reporting will soon be extended to every company in India.

Once that happens, only what is sustainable on earth will be permissible in the future so the capital that the industry will be utilising whether human capital, financial capital or any other capital has got to be sustainable, he said.

He suggested sustainable development goals will be the prime motive and mover for industrialised world in future so lets be prepared.

According to Unnikrishnan, the RBI governor, in a recent interaction with the Indian industry, articulated these very ideas and spoke on cleantech, green energy and climate change mitigation technologies being the second highest priority for country over the next 10 years.

Thermax MD said India was a water scarce and energy-deprived country and would have to move from a linear economy to a circular economy. Any resource taken from earth and used in the process of manufacturing cannot be linearly consumed every time so either you recycle or else whatever is remaining has to biodegradable and while doing this you cannot be causing damage to the earth anymore, he said.

In the next five to six years no industry would be allowed to release effluence into the clean water bodies nor will they be able to take fresh water, he warned Industry will not be able to consume any fresh water as availability becomes an issue and water gets reserved for people, agriculture and cattle. Industry will have to go for sea water desalination or zero water discharge.

When it comes to air pollution, Particulate Matter 2.5 is the greater challenge for the country and industry has to take care of this, too. As of now only larger polluters have to take care of SOx and NOx emissions but soon every chimney in the country will have to control these emissions and ensure clean air, Unnikrishanan said.

K S Venkatagiri, executive director of the CII-Sohrabji Godrej Green Business Centre, said there was a potential to have a $150 to $200-billion business of supplying these clean and green technologies to industries. The CII green council for entrepreneurship will help around 100 SMEs to scale up the green technologies market by three to five times in the next three years and the CII Green Business Council is ready to work with these companies, Venkatagiri said. Achieving efficiency on the environment front would need a lot of technology and these suppliers of these technologies would become extremely important for making companies efficient and innovative, Venkatagiri said.

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Indian Inc has to move towards decarbonisation: Thermax MD & CEO - The Financial Express

Seton Hall teams with East Orange to offer virtual summer work experience program – nj.com

Seton Hall University is working with the City of East Orange and the Mayors Office of Employment and Training on a Virtual Summer Work Experience Program.

The program, which started on July 1, runs through Aug. 21. It is being offered through VIP Online Academy, which was started in response to COVID-19 by author and entrepreneur Jamila Davis in partnership with civil rights activist Tamika Mallory and Love and Hip Hops Yandy Smith. The program is being directed by East Orange Mayor Ted Green and Juan Rios, director of the Department of Social Work at Seton Hall University.

The program was made available to 300 East Orange residents between the ages of 14 and 20. Participants are paid $10 per hour for a 20-hour work week. Capacity for the program was reached quickly.

Rios spearheaded the initiative at Seton Hall, identifying faculty presenters, assessing presentation themes from faculty and also presenting weekly workshops within the cohort.

In addition to workshops on the cultivation of mental well being and the benefits of higher education and job opportunities within the academic world, the presentations often highlight the narratives of faculty members of color at Seton Hall who have beaten the odds to take their place in the academic world. Faculty workshops have also included leadership training.

Rios has also developed the means to track and gauge the success of the program, measuring self-efficacy through a pre/post-test assessment model to provide data points on the outcome variables, thereby allowing for success-based adjustments in programming for subsequent iterations in East Orange and other cities.

This is an extraordinary opportunity for us to reach into the community and begin to make a real difference in the lives of our youth, said Rios. This isnt about preparing students to achieve only in the future, but now with real marketable skills and the wherewithal for them to flourish personally, within the community and in the economy at large. This partnership between community leaders, entrepreneurs, activists of color and a university is a model that is innovative, current and absolutely necessary.

Regular program participants and mentors from Seton Hall also include Majid Whitney, associate dean and director of Seton Halls Educational Opportunity Fund and freshman adviser and ROTC Military Science Instructor Julius Moore, who retired from the U.S Army with the rank of Sergeant First Class after 24 years of service, which included three combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The virtual Summer Work Experience program offers six modules:

Students choose one module and receive certification in that area upon completion of the six-week program. A small number of interested applicants have also received traditional on-site employment with the citys Department of Public Works and the East Orange Water Department.

I cannot tell you how excited I am to be able to provide our students with a relevant job training experience that can translate into income long after this summer program ends, Green said. Weve had to shut down and cancel so much over the past few months, but there was no way we were going to allow COVID-19 to stop us from giving our young people a chance to learn and earn this summer. He continued, As successful as this program has been so far, were looking for meaningful ways in which to expand this partnership with Seton Hall, VIP and some of the many business leaders that have expressed an interest in doing more to bring marketable skills and employment to our youth.

The online program, which emphasizes personal accountability, entrepreneurship and job training as well as academics, was started by Davis as a supportive resource to incentivize students to do well in school, discover viable career opportunities and learn to avoid poor choices. VIP Online Academy is the COVID-inspired virtual follow up to Davis work over the last three years with Smith and Mallory conducting community engagement services, providing workshops in schools, communities and cities throughout the country that teach students various specialized skills sets to help them to be successful and o make sound decisions.

Partnering with Seton Hall and the City of East Orange will allow us to empower our students to choose the right road, right now, Davis said. And now is the time. It costs more than $60,000 per year to incarcerate someone in New Jersey, and even more in New York as a society, we simply cant afford to lose another generation to the streets. How much better would it be to help create a generation of business owners, entrepreneurs and employees?

Those who would like more information or would like to talk about additional partnership opportunities are encouraged to contact the VIP Online Academy directly, which functions under the auspices of the nonprofit, Partners Uplifting Our Daughter & Sons, at info@viponlineacademy.com; or the City of East Orange at 973-677-8914 or eastorangeswep.org.

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Seton Hall teams with East Orange to offer virtual summer work experience program - nj.com

Food waste and plastic pollution: ‘The two key sustainability drivers are carbon and circularity’ – FoodNavigator.com

Plastic pollution is a big problem. Data from A Plastic Ocean reveals that 350 million tonnes of plastic is being produced each year, 8m tonnes of which makes its way into the ocean. At this rate, there will be more plastic than fish in the sea by 2050.

Plastic has become an integrated part of our lives. In the food and beverage sector, it is a cost-effective solution that protects food from contaminants and extends shelf life.

The use of plastic packaging is therefore closely linked to another important environmental issue: food waste.

Food waste is an economic, humanitarian and environmental crisis.

One-third of the food produced today is wasted. At the same time, around 800m people go to bed hungry every night. The FAO estimates food waste represents an economic loss of US$700bn globally each year.

If food waste was a country, it would be the worlds third largest emitter, behind only China and the US. Avoiding food waste can reduce our overall carbon footprint by up to 8%. Indeed, NGO Project Drawdown suggests that reducing food waste is 15.7 times more important to cutting our carbon footprint than recycling.

When we think about food waste and packaging, the two key sustainability drivers are carbon and circularity, Tony Kingsbury, Sustainability Director for EMEA at packaging company Dow observed.

When we waste food, we also waste all the energy and resources that go into bringing that food to market. The fertilizer, trucks, refrigeration and energy used to pump water are lost and cannot be recovered. Typically, the packaging makes up less than 10% of carbon in the total food system, he told FoodNavigator.

Research from sustainability consultancy Denkstatt confirms that the environmental cost of packaging is offset by its role in food waste reduction.

The environmental benefit of avoided waste is usually five to ten times higher than the environmental cost of the packaging. Product protection pays off especially for food products with resource intensive production.

Optimised packaging provides the required product protection, uses as little material as possible and is recyclable or reusable wherever possible, the Denkstatt Stop Waste Save Food report stated.

Noting that packaging material is not good or bad in itself, Denkstatt advises that packaging should be designed to provide the required product protection, using as little material as possible, and be recyclable or reusable wherever possible.

Circular models that support recycling are supported by regulators and consumers across Europe.

As part of the European Commissions Green Deal, the EC has adopted a new Circular Economy Action Plan. Provisions on packaging include new mandatory requirements on what is allowed in the EU, including the reduction of overpackaging. Specifically on plastics, the policy also includes mandatory requirements for recycled content and special attention on microplastics as well as biobased and biodegradable plastics.

This builds on the EUs Single-Use Plastic Directive, which states that where alternatives exist on the market, their single-use counterparts will be banned in all Member States.

The EU is also committed to meeting the UNs Sustainable Development Goal to halve food waste by 2030. Under its Farm to Fork strategy, also part of the Green Deal, the EC is stepping up action to address food waste.

Dows Kingsbury stressed that a joined-up approach should be taken to both objectives. Recycling or circularity is the other big driver right now. I am personally worried that in our quest to be more circular we may compromise the best packaging to reduce food waste. Governments dont tend to think in systems, and food is a system. The people thinking about food waste are not typically the ones thinking about how we can reduce packaging waste, he warned. We need to think in system terms here, not separately.

When determining the most climate-friendly way of delivering different food stuffs to consumers, many factors need to be considered, from the divergent requirements of different products for protection during transport and storage to variations in how consumers handle food in the home.

Packaging is often described as a big environmental problem. But is necessary for transporting and protecting the food. We should focus on the design of the packaging so that less food is wasted, since food waste has a much bigger impact on the climate, argued Heln Williams, associate professor of environmental and energy systems of Karlstad University in Sweden.

Kingsbury revealed the big innovations Dow sees emerging strive to create more recyclable packages [that] keep its contents safe. One way this is being achieved is by reducing the complexity of packaging.

We have a number of innovations moving into the market that take packaging with multiple layers and made from many different materials to now be made of all polyethylene or compatibilized with polyethylene, enabling content protection and recyclability, he explained.

For example, Dow partnered with Kelloggs Bear Naked Granola brand to produce recyclable pouches for its product.

Taking a similar approach, Danones evian bottled water brand is launching a new bottle with an engraved logo as a way to reduce the use of virgin plastic. The bottle took close to two years to develop and, excluding the cap, it is created from 100% recycled plastic.

Innovative packaging solutions are also being developed specifically to reduce food waste, according to Lux research analyst Dr Harini Venkataraman.

Were now seeing innovation and new solution development across the food supply chain, from pre-harvest preservation technologies to post-retail and in-home storage solutions, Dr Vebkataraman, who authored Luxs Preserving the Food Chain report, observed.

Technologies like modified atmospheric packaging (MAP) are used to adjust atmospheric gas content to optimise shelf life. However, developers are now looking beyond passive MAP to adopt active packaging methods, he noted.

Promising developments include academic research projects like EU-funded NanoPack, which has focused on flexible plastic food film with antioxidants and antimicrobial properties to delay food spoilage. Sensor-enabled smart packaging solutions are gaining importance for tracking the quality of perishable food products, with digital connectivity as a catalyst for the growth of these solutions.

CPG companies are also experimenting with the use of alternative materials that deliver the necessary protection for their products. For instance, a consortium including Diageo, PepsiCo and Unilever has developed a 100% plastic-free, paper-based bottle.

Announcing the breakthrough, Ewan Andrew, Chief Sustainability Officer, Diageo, said: Were proud to have created this world first. We are constantly striving to push the boundaries within sustainable packaging and this bottle has the potential to be truly ground-breaking.

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Food waste and plastic pollution: 'The two key sustainability drivers are carbon and circularity' - FoodNavigator.com

Kansas US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate Has Endorsed the Lawyers at Karst von Oiste to Ensure a Navy Veteran in Kansas with Lung Cancer Gets…

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire)

WICHITA, KANSAS, USA, July 31, 2020 / EINPresswire.com / -- The Kansas US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, "We have endorsed and we recommend the lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste to assist a Navy Veteran with lung cancer with possible compensation if this person had significant exposure to asbestos prior to 1982. The compensation for a person like this might be $100,000 or a lot more depending on how, where and when they were exposed to asbestos. The average person we are trying to help get identified is over 60 years old and it does not matter if they smoked cigarettes. For direct access to the lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste please call 800-714-0303 anytime.

"If a family discovers their husband or dad has mesothelioma-everyone starts calling attorneys-because they know there can be significant compensation for people like this. The $30 billion dollar-asbestos trust funds were also set up for people who had heavy exposure to asbestos and who now have lung cancer. If this sounds like you or your family member please call 800-714-0303 for direct access to the lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste. The law firm of Karst von Oiste is one of the nation's leading law firms for asbestos exposure lung cancer and mesothelioma and they produce significant financial compensation for their clients." [To enable links contact MENAFN]

The Kansas US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate's free services are available to people with asbestos exposure lung cancer or mesothelioma in Wichita, Overland Park, Topeka, Olathe, Lawrence or anywhere in Kansas. [To enable links contact MENAFN]

The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, 'If your husband, dad, coworker or neighbor has just been diagnosed with lung cancer and you know they had significant exposure to asbestos in the navy, at a shipyard or while working at a factory, at power plant, public utility, or as a plumber, electrician welder, mechanic or any kind of skilled trades group in any state please have them call us anytime at 800-714-0303. Most people like this never get compensated-even though the asbestos trust funds were set up for them too. We are trying to change this sad fact.' [To enable links contact MENAFN]

High-risk work groups for exposure to asbestos in Kansas include Veterans of the US Navy, one of Kansas's dozen plus power plants, manufacturing workers, industrial workers, aerospace workers in Wichita, public utility workers, plumbers, electricians, welders, auto mechanics, machinists, and construction workers. Typically. the exposure to asbestos occurred in the 1950's, 1960's, 1970's, or 1980's. [To enable links contact MENAFN]

According to the American Cancer Society for nonsmokers who have been exposed to asbestos in their workplace the risk of lung cancer is five times that of unexposed workers.[To enable links contact MENAFN] .

States with the highest incidence of lung cancer include Kentucky, West Virginia, Maine, Tennessee, Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Alabama, and Delaware. However, there are people with asbestos exposure lung cancer in Kansas. [To enable links contact MENAFN]

For more information about asbestos exposure please visit the NIH's website on this topic: [To enable links contact MENAFN] .

Michael ThomasKansas US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate+1 800-714-0303email us here

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Kansas US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate Has Endorsed the Lawyers at Karst von Oiste to Ensure a Navy Veteran in Kansas with Lung Cancer Gets...

Us Federal Court Ruling Bitcoin Is a Form of Money | News Bitcoin News – Bitcoin News

A US Federal Court said Friday that bitcoin is a form of money covered under the Washington D.C., Money Transmitters Act (MTA).

The court made this conclusion as it denied a motion to dismiss criminal charges against Larry Dean Harmon, the operator of an underground bitcoin trading platform.

In December 2019, a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia indicted Harmon for conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, in violation of state laws. However, Harmon moved to dismiss citing failure to state an offence.

Harmons move forced the court to determine if bitcoin met the definition of money for purposes of the District of Columbias MTA.

In its conclusion, the court states:

After examination of the relevant statutes, case law, and other sources, the Court concludes that bitcoin is money under the MTA and that Helix, as described in the indictment, was an `unlicensed money transmitting business under applicable federal law.

The court also points out that Harmon himself never disputes that bitcoin is money as that term is ordinarily used.

Harmons motion to dismiss all charges against him was denied.

According to court documents, Harmons operation, Helixa darknet serviceenabled customers, for a fee, to send bitcoins to designated recipients in a manner which was designed to conceal and obfuscate the source or owner of the bitcoins.

Helix was shut down in 2017 while Harmon was arrested in February 2020.

Meanwhile, the documents also reveal that before the launch of Helix, Harmon had written stating that the service was designed to be a bitcoin tumbler that cleans bitcoins by providing customers with new bitcoins which have never been to the darknet before.

Between 2014 and 2017, Helix was used to exchange approximately 354,468 bitcoins the equivalent of approximately $311 million.

What does this decision mean for bitcoin? Tell us your thoughts in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

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Us Federal Court Ruling Bitcoin Is a Form of Money | News Bitcoin News - Bitcoin News