Californias higher education leaders see an opportunity in crisis – Red Bluff Daily News

Colleges, students and faculty members may be unsure of what lies ahead as they brace for another mostly virtual academic term amid a pandemic, but the crisis could force Californias higher education systems to improve.

The states colleges and universities could use the current crisis to build better partnerships across the University of California, California State University, California Community Colleges and private institutions to increase access and improve graduation rates. That was the message from Lande Ajose, a senior policy advisor for higher education to Gov. Gavin Newsom, and ECMC Foundation President Peter Taylor during a webinar Wednesday hosted by California Competes, a nonprofit focused on improving graduation outcomes. The organization releaseda new data dashboardthat found uneven educational opportunities across the state. For example, Bay Area residents are most likely to have a bachelors degree, at 52%, compared to 17% of residents in the San Joaquin Valley.

In the midst of a global pandemic, its hard to imagine what could exist on the other side of it, said Ajose. But at some point, whether it is 12 months or 36 months from now, we are going to recover from the twin crises of the pandemic and economic recession We need a unified, cohesive and coherent vision of what higher education should be and look like.

Ajose said the pandemic is teaching Californians that basic needs for students dont just include food and housing, but access to broadband internet and digital devices.

Whats become clear is that if you are a student in California and would like to go to school this fall and dont have digital access, then you do not have access to education, she said.

Newsoms administration, along with California State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, has been working with internet service providers to continue offering low-cost plans to families that dont lead to significant price increases, Ajose said.

Theyre also focused on getting more tablets and computers into students hands and making people aware of the importance of broadband access.

Many families dont understand the need for broadband access, Ajose said. Well work with partners to push out the message that for telehealth, job searches, working from home, there are lots of reasons now where computer access and broad access is a basic need.

The urgent need to prepare for postsecondary digital instruction was underscored by aPublic Policy Institute of California briefissued Tuesday, which indicates that four out of five of Californias colleges and universities will open this fall operating primarily online or with a hybrid approach. That includes most of the states private colleges. Only a few are planning on mostly in-person instruction. That contrasts with what is happening nationally. At least for now, about half of the nations colleges are saying they will offer in-person instruction.

Besides improving access to technology and the internet, Ajose and Taylor, who serves as a CSU trustee, said forming a state higher education coordinating entity of college leaders would improve transfers and unify each college system in the state around shared goals of improving graduation rates and getting graduates into well-paying jobs.

The governors office and the legislature control funding, said Taylor who heads a foundation focused on improving postsecondary education outcomes. If all the college and university systems are in agreement on the goals, then they should be able to get together and pursue the funding under a joint strategy, he said.

Last year, Newsom launched theCouncil for Post-Secondary Education, an advisory board of education, business and labor leaders to discuss college access, success and financial issues. But the council doesnt have the power or resources of a statewide coordinating agency.

Ajose said creating that entity is still a priority for Newsom, but this years focus has been on building astatewide longitudinal data systemto track students through high school, college and into the workplace. California is one of a few states that doesnt have this type of system.

With more adult students turning to online education to add skills to help them get jobs despite the recession and the coronavirus, Ajose and Taylor said building quality online education should be a priority.

We need to do a better job focusing on the 27-year-old single parent, who is a part-time worker with childcare challenges, Taylor said. Our system isnt quite as adept at helping that student as we are the 18-year-old coming straight out of high school and going to college full-time.

One solution would be creating a better framework for awarding prior-learning credit, which would, for example, acknowledge the experience of someone who spent 10 years working on computers in the military, but then enrolls in a college Information Technology program to earn their degree, he said.

Given the economic dislocation were experiencing, we probably have many more people with experience interested in pursuing higher education than six months ago, Ajose said. Its incredibly timely to think about credit for prior learning.

Louis Freedberg contributed to this report.

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Californias higher education leaders see an opportunity in crisis - Red Bluff Daily News

Vessel detained near Rockall was allegedly involved in another confrontation off Scotland – Irish Examiner

A German-registered Spanish fishing vessel detained last week by the Naval Service near Rockall had been at the centre of an alleged confrontation off the Scottish coast last month.

The 29-metre Pesorsa Dos was detained by Irish navy patrol ship L William Butler Yeats some 250 miles off Malin Head, Co Donegal for alleged infringements of EU fishing regulations in Irish waters.

Orkney and Shetland MP Alistair Carmichael has highlighted the Irish detention of the Spanish vessel after the British authorities said they could not take any action over the incident off Scotland.

However, defence force sources have said the Irish detention was for a separate alleged infringement.

Video footage of the gill-netter, from the Spanish port of La Coruna, filmed on June 11, shows an interaction it had with a Scottish fishing vessel, Alison Kay, some 30 miles west of the Shetland Islands.

The British Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) was urged to investigate the incident, which Scottish skippers claimed to be the latest in a series of such confrontations over fishing grounds.

However, the MCA said it had no jurisdiction to investigate it as it was outside the 12-mile jurisdictional limit in which it could take action against foreign-flagged vessels.

It said its maritime investigations team has written to the German maritime administration to raise its concerns, as it was the responsibility of the flag state.

The German federal police department for maritime security has been reported as stating there is no suspicion of an offence under German law.

It is understood the vessel was gillnetting near Rockall and had ten tonnes of monkfish on board when it was boarded and detained by the L William Butler Yeats.

The vessel was escorted to Killybegs, Co Donegal and handed over to the Garda and the Sea Fisheries Protection Agency (SFPA).

Mr Carmichael said the fact that Irish authorities were able to detain the Pesorsa Dos entirely undermines the argument of the UK and German authorities that there was nothing to be done about what he alleged to be its "dangerous activities".

It is yet another reminder that local fishermen should not have to wait until next year for us to have proper enforcement of basic norms of safety at sea. We can and should be getting this sorted now, he said.

He told the MCA in a letter that the actions of Spanish fishermen had caused a great deal of anger and frustration for trawlermen in my constituency and across the north of Scotland in recent years, due to both aggressive acts such as those outlined, and the wider use of gill-nets which can cover large areas and thus prevent other fishermen from working in those areas.

The SFPA said that a 24-hour detention order for the vessel was granted on July 21st at Carrick-on-Shannon district court in Co Leitrim. It said it could not comment further as the case was before the courts.

It was the Naval Services seventh detention at sea this year.

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Vessel detained near Rockall was allegedly involved in another confrontation off Scotland - Irish Examiner

From ‘Hip Hop Hooray’ to ‘YMCA,’ the untold stories of Jock Jams, 25 years later – ESPN

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATER, the commemorative platinum-record plaque awarded for "Jock Jams, Volume 1" still hangs inside the New Jersey recording studio of KayGee from Naughty By Nature. It doesn't occupy the same prestigious wall space as the group's other hit records or even the large custom portrait of former Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison, but after all this time, Jock Jams remains nearly impossible to ignore -- no matter how hard we all might try. "Not to toot my own horn," says KayGee, while locating Naughty's "Hip Hop Hooray" (Track 11) on the original compilation of stadium anthems. "But I don't think I've ever been at a sporting event and not heard our Jock Jams song."

He's not the only one. Released on July 25, 1995, the collection opened with Michael Buffer's now ubiquitous "Let's Get Ready To Rumble" boxing howl and was overstuffed with an infectious, borderline-obnoxious mix of arena earworms such as "Get Ready for This," "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" and "YMCA." And while many sports and music fans are familiar with the carrot-colored CD case covered in airborne cheerleaders, or the seminal collection of stadium anthems once described as an "orgy of chantable hooks" and "adrenaline-fueled schmaltz," few know the actual creation story behind the project, the vision of the two women executives who made it all possible, or the stories behind the songs that have been echoing inside arenas and our collective sports brains for decades.

And so to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the original Jock Jams release, ESPN tracked down the key executives and artists and asked them to retell inspirations behind the greatest -- and strangest -- compilation of sports anthems in music history.

After gigs as a model and go-go dancer in her hometown of Chicago, Monica Lynch moved to New York, where she answered a want ad in The Village Voice in 1981 to become the first employee of the fledgling Tommy Boy record label. Four years later, after developing De La Soul, Digital Underground, Queen Latifah and others, earning her the title "The High Priestess of Hip-hop," in 1985 Lynch became president of Tommy Boy, which earned her access to the company's luxury box at Madison Square Garden. And it was in that luxury box, watching -- and listening to -- the Knicks and Rangers, that the idea for Jock Jams was born.

Inspired by childhood nostalgia for her hometown Chicago Blackhawks, and encouraged by Ray Castoldi, MSG's director of music and hybrid organist/DJ, Lynch set out to create the ultimate compilation of sports anthems -- a collection that would expand the genre beyond old-timey organ music and yacht rock. "It was a very simple idea, but sometimes those are the best," Lynch says. She already had the anthem part figured out. What Lynch and Tommy Boy needed was a business partner that could help with the sports side.

Monica Lynch, former president of Tommy Boy Records: Culturally, [ESPN and Tommy Boy were] very different operations. An independent record company in the mid-'90s, we were doing our own thing, running fast and loose, and didn't have to answer to anyone. Sharyn was just kind of bemused by us.

Sharyn Taymor, former director of ESPN Enterprises: In the 1990s, the ESPN brand was starting to be everywhere. ESPN2 had just started and there was talk of ESPN News and Classic, and we wanted to start licensing the ESPN brand to products and services. It was like the wild, wild west. We worked on dot-com, The Magazine, video games, fantasy sports, merchandise and music. We didn't even have to seek out that many opportunities; you just had to sit back and see what people brought to us. I remember having a fantasy football meeting with the NFL. I had no idea what I was talking about. It hadn't existed until then. To give you an idea of what it was like, the products and services we worked on are now entire divisions within the company.

And ESPN was kind of straight-laced and Tommy Boy Records was not. We weren't into being provocative at all, and Tommy Boy was totally the opposite. [But] it was an area that made sense for us because we hadn't done anything in that genre and music and sports are so closely tied together.

Lynch: My uncle was in charge of the ticket office at Chicago Stadium, so as a kid I got to go to a lot of Blackhawk games and sit in the front row right behind the goalie. I had the biggest crush on Keith Magnuson because he was the bad boy of that team and he was always spitting his teeth out on the ice, which I just thought was the sexiest thing ever. My uncle arranged for Bobby Hull to introduce us after a game. And when Bobby said, 'She's your biggest fan, Keith, and she wants to give you a great big kiss,' I was so mortified I turned around and punched Hull right in the stomach. I guess that's where this all started. I just loved hockey, the sights, the sounds, the energy; it was so violent and visceral.

KayGee, Naughty by Nature, "Hip Hop Hooray" (Track 11): A lot of musicians call themselves sports guys, and a lot of sports guys call themselves musicians. So there's a community between us, a natural connection that's embedded in all of us. When we first came out, one of our favorite teams was the Fab Five. We [KayGee and fellow group members Treach and Vin Rock] all started wearing baggy shorts on stage, and when we played in Michigan, they came to our show and I became lifelong friends with those guys.

Freedom Williams, singer, C+C Music Factory, "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" (Track 10): Sports is nothing but a dance. It's rhythm, right? Baseball is a slow dance. Football is a violent dance. Basketball is a quick dance. When you hit a ground ball to the shortstop and the shortstop hits the second baseman and the second baseman throws it to first, that's poetry, that's a dance they're doing.

Taymor: The first [sport-compilation project Tommy Boy did] was "Jock Rock," and it was all about rock and established sports anthems, you know, Queen, "We Will Rock You," that kind of stuff. It came out in 1994 and charted No. 79 on Billboard, and we knew we had something terrific. There was a record label called K-Tel, and they did compilations for many years, and we just kind of took their place. Tommy Boy was more of a hip-hop, rap and dance label, though, and they wanted to go more in that direction. That's where Jock Jams came from. We wanted to be the influencers of this kind of sports music instead of being influenced by it.

Castoldi: Hip-hop as a pop music form, that idea was still pretty new. My first bosses at MSG told me "Ray, we're not running a nightclub up there. These hip-hop records -- are they really the kind of music our audience is gonna groove to?" And the answer was: Of course! Absolutely! "Jock Rock" was almost entirely oldies. With Jock Jams, it was all about: Let's talk about the new stuff.

Did you know?On top of his MSG organist gig, Ray Castoldi also worked as a DJ under the name Frequency X alongside Joe Turri and Nicolai Vorkapich. He performed at the Limelight nightclubs and was signed by Radikal Records, which distributed the first import of 2 Unlimited's "Get Ready for This" (Track 2).

With the project approved, it was now up to Taymor and Patrick Edmonds, from Tommy Boy -- with an assist from Castoldi -- to curate the collection.

Taymor: Castoldi had a lot of influence on that list because he knew what songs were already being played at sporting events. Patrick would then give me a CD with 30 to 40 tracks on it and then we'd try to figure out what to put on the album. That was the really fun part. I'd listen to them in the office, at home, in the car, and go back to him and say, "OK, how about this group?" Or "I don't like this one." There was a lot of back and forth -- a lot.

Castoldi: One of the only debates we had was: Do we put KC and the Sunshine Band "Get Down Tonight" or the Village People's "YMCA" on Volume 1? I mean, they're both classics. But "YMCA" had the dance, so that's gonna win. KC ended up on Volume 2. Rock tracks like "Welcome to the Jungle" were hard to get, those bands just wouldn't do the licensing. I remember later on we wanted "Song 2" by Blur and they were like "Uh, no, we don't want to be on a sports-oriented record." More power to them. And now, it's weird, it's almost hard to hear that song anywhere else but in an arena.

Taymor: Monica and I had to work at always finding the right balance, and there was a lot of tugging and pulling from each side, whether it was a song, or a lyric, or the artwork or the commercials. That was always the issue: They wanted to go in that direction, and I was very, very paranoid and protective of the brand. There were just a bunch of things we had to say no to. I don't think a project like this would happen now. Now, things are just out there and blatant. Back then, it was all innuendo and double entendres, it could mean this or it could mean that.

Jay "Ski" McGowan, Quad City DJ's member and 69 Boyz producer: We just decided, Hey, if anyone from ESPN asks about 69 Boyz, just say the guys were all born in 1969 and "Tootsee Roll" (Track 5) is a candy and a fun dance and just leave it at that. A little bit more, we would have been in trouble with ESPN, but we stayed right there on that line. ... Yes [laughing], I do expect you to believe that! That's our story, and we're sticking to it. [Editor's note: McGowan and the 69 Boyz were not all born in 1969.]

Lynch: I love the 69 Boyz, that's the perfect answer. I guess a song like K7's "Come Baby Come" (Track 7) had a naughty tone to it. I suppose it's the double entendres that matter. But it was already a popular record, so it was the kind of thing, in a meeting at ESPN, you could say, "But I sing that song to my 2-year-old." And if the feeling was that "it's mom-friendly," it would be OK.

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Taymor: Tommy Boy once brought us a Coolio song, and I kind of read too much into it and pushed back. It was "one-two-three-four, get your woman on the floor..." I told them what I thought he was saying, and they all said, "That's not what it means!" So we put that song on Jock Jams 2.

Lynch: The throughline in the selection of the songs was these were all hits or were all about to be hits. We looked for high-energy records that had crossed over and were either being played or just starting to get played in sports arenas. Some of these records, like "YMCA," were already chestnuts in the stadiums, and with some of our artists, like K7, we wanted to use Jock Jams to usher a song like "Come Baby Come" into anthem status.

Did you know?When contacted by ESPN, a rep for the Village People's original lead singer Victor Willis, 69, responded: "What is Jock Jams?"

Castoldi: The lineup is all killer and no filler, like they used to say on the radio. Because it was the first one, there was so much low-hanging fruit that you could just pick the best of the best, the songs that we'd all consider late-game go-to songs, big anthemic songs that you want to play at key moments of a game. And these are all there on Jock Jams 1. You gotta remember, there was no iTunes, no YouTube, no internet, no Shazam, so part of the reason why this was so successful is Jock Jams put all of this stuff in one place for you. Otherwise, at the time, you would have had to go out and buy, like, 20 CDs to collect all these songs.

As the lineup began to take shape, Taymor still found herself facing a challenge.

Taymor: The challenge was how do we put an ESPN spin on it? How do we brand it with ESPN? That's when we came up with the idea of what we called interstitials, little sports-related sound bites you'd hear between songs.

Castoldi: The goal from the beginning was to make it an immersive sports experience, like you were actually at the game. I recorded my little "The Old Ballgame" organ riff (Track 19) at the Garden or maybe just in my apartment. We recorded cheerleaders, hot dog vendors at Yankee Stadium, marching bands, as well as personalities like Michael Buffer. I mean, how many people got married that year with Michael Buffer and 2 Unlimited kicking off their reception?

Lynch: That was not an inexpensive undertaking to get Michael Buffer and "Let's get ready to rumble" on the first Jock Jams. I don't remember what the number was, but I remember a gulp when I saw the number. He didn't come cheap. We decided to do it, and in hindsight I'm really glad that we did. He was "the" guy, the voice of sports, the voice of god. Having that as the opening was absolutely perfect. When you hear "Let's get ready to rumblllllle" within the first few seconds, everybody knew what this was.

Did you know?Buffer tried out "Man your battle stations!" and "Ladies and gentlemen, fasten your seat belts!" before settling on LGRTR, which was inspired by Muhammad Ali. Buffer trademarked the phrase in 1992, and it was estimated to be worth $400 million as of 2009.

The backstory of Jock Jams doesn't end, though, in New York City and Bristol, Connecticut -- where ESPN is located. The stories behind the songs are as compelling as the tunes themselves -- and reveal much about the music industry, and the culture, 25 years ago.

Rob Base, vocals, songwriter, "It Takes Two" (Track 8 | LISTEN):

We had to be in the studio that same night [in early 1988], so me and E-Z Rock went over to a friend's house, and we were just going through a bunch of different albums and he found a beat he liked and I found this Lyn Collins record I liked. That's where the "woo, yeah" comes from. We just blended them together, and that's how we came up with the song. It was quick. In that era of hip-hop, we were all digging through crates of old records trying to find beats and samples no one had used before, so that was the key -- if you found something that was hot, that no one had used, you pretty much had something, for sure. It worked out really well for us waiting to the last second. We had no idea what we were going to do in the studio that night, but the music just came together. I had the rap part already written, and it just all fit perfectly.

I was met with heavy resistance at the time about all the "woo, yeah"s, and I had to really fight for that. At the time Public Enemy had a record that had a siren that rode all the way through. That made that record stand out so much, and I was thinking to myself, If I leave the "woo, yeah" in the whole record, that's gonna make this record stand out too. They wanted to take it out at the beginning of the verses and bring it back in at the end. I put my foot down with management: It gotta stay. And I won.

Did you know?Rodney Bryce, aka DJ E-Z Rock, who became friends with Base in the fourth grade in Harlem, died in 2014 from complications of diabetes. ... Rolling Stone christened the repeating "woo, yeah" the "single greatest use of a looped drum break in rap history -- the hip-hop equivalent of the guitar solo in 'Stairway to Heaven.'" (Track 8).

Ian Dench, songwriter, guitarist, "Unbelievable" by EMF, (Track 15 | LISTEN):

When the record deal with my first band [Curse] came to nothing, there I was back in Gloucester, England, living in a little bedsit. My mum had a nice piano, and so I used to ride my bike over there and write songs. She was distraught. If my own son gets into Oxford and then gives it all up to play in a rock 'n' roll band, I would burst into tears as well. Anyway, I was riding my bike through the park, thinking about all these songs I was working on about my ex-girlfriend who dumped me. I was always looking for words and ways to say what I was feeling, and that's why "unbelievable" was such a great word because it had that double meaning to it where you're amazing but perhaps there's something underhand to you as well. I was on the bike trying to think of a way to say it, and that's when it just popped into my head -- "The things, you say; Your purple prose just gives you away; The things, you say" -- followed by that phrase and that stop: "bawm, badada-da-dat-dadadaa ... You're unbelievable." My place was not too far, five minutes away, so I just kept riding and humming it in my head, round and round, got back to my bedsit, pulled out my guitar and cassette, and there it was.

I do have to give a shoutout to Andrew Dice Clay [too] because that "Ohhh" is a wonderful sample and it's quite a funny story. Def Jam released his record -- It was really terribly misogynistic, wasn't it? -- and before our record came out, we kept trying to get ahold of Rick Rubin to clear the sample. But he never got back to us. Well, we were in L.A. for meetings before the release of the record, and we went into The Rainbow Bar & Grill on Sunset, which was quite the big heavy-metal hangout at the time, and there was [Def Jam co-founder] Rick Rubin. So I just went up to him and said, "Sorry to interrupt, big fan; we just made a record, and we're trying to clear this sample." And he said, "No problem, fax it to me in the morning." Sure enough, we faxed it to him, and he cleared it. I mean, talk about the stars aligning on a record.

Did you know?In 2009 Dench earned two Grammy nominations for collaborations with Beyonce ("Once in a Lifetime" and "I Am... Sasha Fierce."). ... A few years ago, he got a message from a student in Wales who said his teacher was claiming she was the inspiration for "Unbelievable." Dench did some checking and wrote back to the student "Yes, yes, that's absolutely true." (Track 15).

McGowan, Quad City DJ's, producer on "Tootsee Roll" (Track 5 | LISTEN):

We had just come off the road, back in Jacksonville, and I was with my son, who was 5, and we were in a Cracker Barrel -- or, in the store next to the restaurant walking around. I mean, we've all been in a Cracker Barrel with our kids, and they aren't as super excited about the meal as they are about running through that store. Well, I come across this thing, this piggy bank that was a long roll, painted like a Tootsie Roll and I thought, "This is cool, I'll get this for my son and have him start saving some coins." As I'm walking through Cracker Barrel, my son in one hand, the Tootsie Roll bank in the other, it just hit me: This would make a perfect concept for a record, a dance that's a play on the candy.

We always wanted to create the party and the club feel on record, so that's why we'd add those whistles and all that background crowd noise; we wanted them to be a signature. We came from the skate-rink era and they had whistles, and we'd grab our friends and say, "Hey, we're doing crowd vocals" and put everybody in the vocal booth, pitch down an octave or two, and mix it together and add effects, and before you knew it, it sounds like a party in there. And that's why our records worked so well on Jock Jams and in stadiums because it almost felt like, with all the crowd noise already on our records, all people in the stands had to do was just join in.

Did you know?Quad City DJ's was nominated for a Grammy for "Space Jam" off the 1996 "Space Jam" movie soundtrack, and McGowan now works as "Jay the EnterTrainer," speaking on leadership and innovation. ... The original Tootsie Roll bank is still at his son's grandmother's house.

Martha Wash, singer, "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)," (Track 10 | LISTEN):

I was in a studio in New York, and one of the producers, who had worked with Mariah Carey, was on the phone explaining what he wanted me to sing, and I said to him, "That key is really high for me." I remember on The Weather Girls' "Big Girls Don't Cry" album there was a song with a really high obbligato part at the beginning, and so we put the microphone on the floor and I bent over to sing on top of the microphone. We all laughed about it, how no one would have believed it, but that's how I got that note out of me. With "Everybody Dance Now," to get the power of those three words, I had to really, really almost scream it out. So I was in the booth reaching my hands up to the ceiling to try and see about getting those notes out correctly and in the right key without it sounding crazy.

People love that screaming part, OK? Yeah, it's hard to sing live. Can you do the same thing you were doing 30 years ago? OK then.

Did you know?In 2017 a Canadian man singing "Gonna Make You Sweat" in his car was issued a $118 ticket by police for "screaming in a public place."

Wash, singer, "Strike It Up," (Track 4 | LISTEN):

Believe it or not, that was never one of my favorite songs. What makes it so interesting is the music on that song. I won't say it's necessarily my vocals; it's more so the music for that particular song. When you put that together with an athletic situation and a game and you hear that bass line come in and it goes into that baump baump baump ba ba, the audience gets into that because it's a sports chant.

Did you know?Although Wash's thunderous, distinctive voice was easily recognizable from her No. 1 dance hit "It's Raining Men" with The Weather Girls and a dozen other No. 1 dance songs, she was not properly credited for her vocals in the original versions of "Gonna Make You Sweat" and "Strike It Up." In the age of Milli Vanilli, C+C Music Factory and Black Box attempted to cast slimmer, younger women to lip sync Wash's vocals.Says Wash: "I had just checked into a hotel, had the TV on, channel surfing, and I landed on this station that was playing the video for 'Gonna Make You Sweat,' and I'm seeing this thin, thin woman lip-syncing to my vocals, and I'm like, 'What is going on?' I was not happy about that." The ensuing legal battle inspired federal legislation mandating proper vocal credit on all published music. "Lots of people know the voice, know the songs, they dance to those songs and sing every word to those songs, but they don't know my name," she adds. "It's not fun. They know Beyonce, Ariana Grande, Lizzo. My goodness I've been doing this for 40 years and I've had a hit in every decade since the '80s, and John Q. Public still doesn't know my name."

Jean-Paul De Coster, producer, songwriter, "Get Ready for This" (Track 2 | LISTEN) and "Twilight Zone" (Track 18 | LISTEN):

In 1983 I was still in school, teaching mechanics and electricity, and I was wanting to quit to follow my passion. I knew Patrick [De Meyer] from Technotronic (Track 17: "Pump Up the Jam") for ages because I was coming into his record store in Antwerp [in Belgium] and asking him, "Can you explain to me how a record store works?" And he says. "How do you know?" And I said "How do I know what?" He was selling the record store because he was so busy with his own music and record company, and so I said, "OK, I'll jump in and have a coffee." And I bought his shop.

In 1987 we had the first Belgium music wave, which was inspired by New Wave, and they called it New Beat and they played records and slowed them down from 45 rpm to 33 rpm, with bpm 100 to 105, very dark and mellow and moody, like a fashion scene. When New Beat was over, I saw in my record shop and in the clubs when I was DJing that people were going crazy on this new Belgium House Sounds that had evolved from New Beat. I said to [Belgium DJ] Phil Wilde -- he is the computer wizard and studio guy -- "Something's happening with this sound, we need to make a record." And he said, "Fine, come in."

So on a Wednesday, I took a day off from my record shop. He would play riffs, and I would say, "No, no, play it more like this." We wanted more energetic, more pumping, and so we were twisting sounds together, layered and mixed. It was very important that we made sounds that were different from the rest. An early review called it an energetic, powerful, crispy sound.

KayGee, Naughty By Nature, "Hip Hop Hooray" (Track 11 | LISTEN):

We were on tour and Tommy Boy was putting pressure on us to hurry up and finish our second album. After the success of "O.P.P.," it was like, you guys need to keep it going. I had made a bunch of beats. But on our tour bus, Treach was just blasting that one beat over and over. It's the Isley Brothers, it's just playing on 45. Their song is slow, and I just sped it up real fast and that gave it a different sound and a new feel. That's the process of a producer: We chop stuff up, speed it up, slow it down, filter it, do a lot of things to it, because when you mess around with it, it turns into something different.

So we're on the tour bus, with Treach writing, and the whole concept of the chorus, they did that in parties back in New York when a good record would come on, they'd say "Heeey, hooo," like to say, "That's my joint." Treach remembered that, and he was like, "It would be dope to use that heeey, hooo they do in the clubs, but I'm gonna call it Hip Hop Hooray-Hooo and I'm gonna talk about the love of hip-hop and how we advanced as hip-hop artists."

We wrote the whole thing on the tour bus and we recorded it, and Tommy Boy didn't even know about that song. We performed it at KMEL [Bay Area] Summer Jam. It was packed; there must have been 25,000 people out there, and the very first time it was introduced, Treach and Vin put their hands up in the air and the whole crowd, I mean everybody, started waving side to side with the beat. We started in talent shows, getting the crowd involved to win those talent shows. It was so spontaneous the way the crowd followed along. So we knew not only did we have a song that connects we have a visual that connects with our audience too. The program director called Tommy Boy and said "Naughty performed a song last night, and if I don't have a copy of it on my desk Monday morning, I'm playing the live version." So Monica was calling me, yelling at me, "What song are they talking about?!"

Did you know?As a mental exercise while recovering from COVID-19, actress Rita Wilson posted an Instagram video of her near-perfect rendition of "Hip Hop Hooray," which she memorized while preparing for a 2019 movie role. After the video got 2 million views, Wilson teamed up with KayGee and Naughty for a remix to benefit MusiCares Covid-19 Relief Fund. "It's incredible," KayGee says. "She did better than I would have done trying to sing Treach's lyrics like that."

"Jock Jams, Volume 1" went platinum in just over a year and peaked at No. 30 on the charts. By expanding the definition of stadium anthems to include Eurodance, Latin music, pop, hip-hop and rap, Lynch and Taymor had ensured that Jock Jams would have an impact at the cash register and across the culture. (Despite all of Taymor's precautions, Jock Jams 1 was not completely controversy-free. The 20th and final track on the original compilation, "Rock and Roll Part 2," is by Gary Glitter, who, in 2015, was sentenced to 16 years in prison after being convicted of sexually abusing three young girls.)

"Jock Jams, Volume 2" was released in 1996, and thanks to the "Macarena" by Los Del Rio, it managed to crack the top 10 -- an extraordinary feat for a compilation album. But the series truly hit its Jock Jam peak with Volume 3, which included an "It's Awesome, Baby!" intro by Dick Vitale, "official" Jock Jams Cheerleader chants, a rendition of "The Chicken Dance" by Castoldi and a brain-searing sound salad called the "Jock Jam Mega Mix," featured in a classic series of infamous commercials that fused a public-access cable milieu with the low-key approach of a carpet liquidator.

The final Jock Jams was released in 2001, just as Napster, the online music-sharing (and piracy) service hit its peak. All told, the series sold more than 4 million copies and -- for better or worse -- helped pave the way for modern-day bands such as Fall Out Boy to integrate their songs into sports culture. "There is nothing like your song being played in a stadium; you get this whole different kind of shiver," FOB's Pete Wentz told ESPN in 2014. "Integrating your music into the texture of a larger experience, like a sporting event, is important. 'Empire State of Mind' and Jay-Z and the Yankees are a thing. Forever. The music and the experience become interwoven. That's powerful."

Castoldi: I ran into Naughty a few years ago at the Garden, and I was like, "You guys remember Jock Jams?" And they were all like, "Uh, yeah, we made some money off that one." Today recording artists are looking for any avenue, any outlet, to get their music out into the world and get it heard. And I think sports was on the leading edge of that, as an alternative outlet for artists to break new music and promote their material.

Lynch: Jock Jams had this enormous audience of women. It started getting used as a soundtrack for exercising and aerobics and cheerleading dance routines. At the time, we had no idea it was going to take on this whole other audience. The high school girls and the female component of the audience, we did not anticipate that part of the audience was going to explode that way.

Taymor: I would go to the Tower Records [near] Union Square -- this was not a not once-or-twice thing, I did it all the time -- and I would take all the Jock Jams and move them to the front of the stack so they would be more visible. We used to get Billboard magazine delivered to the office, and the first thing I'd do was go to the page with all the listings and see where we were that week. I used to rip out the page and tape it to the door of my office, and it was so much fun watching them climb the charts each week.

De Coster: Jock Jams introduced a lot of different music cultures to a big audience. In those days, in the 1990s, it was all rock music, Nirvana, Guns N' Roses, and we were struggling and fighting to have our records on the radio. So compilations like Jock Jams were very important to us because it introduced us to an audience we never could reach.

Freedom Williams: The first time I ever realized the song was gonna be big, I was walking down the block and everyone was jamming to it on the JumboTron on 42nd [Times Square]. They were playing the song -- "Jump to the rhythm, jump-jump" -- while NBA players were dunking and jumping to it. That's when I knew it was gonna be a big record.

KayGee: Before the COVID situation, I had to drive and pick up my daughter at Purdue, and on that ride we took her car, so she's the DJ, she's controlling everything, and I'm hearing a few of my records come on. That's pretty cool, and she's like, "Come on, Dad, you know you want to sing along."

McGowan: Jock Jams gave us more life. We played on the field in Philadelphia, at the top of the fifth inning in Game 3 of the World Series. That was mind-blowing. We played "Space Jams" as the intro for Zach LaVine when he won the NBA Slam Dunk contest. I just read in a book about Tiger Woods that after he won his first Masters at 21, he rode off down Magnolia Lane with the SUV windows down blasting "C'mon N Ride It (The Trainz)."

Base: I played some baseball growing up, a little third base, shortstop, outfield, and I always wanted to be a baseball player, but that didn't happen. I'm a big Yankees fan. I remember sitting at home watching my Yankees and they got a double play and they started playing "It Takes Two," and I jumped out of my seat and I started running around trying to call everyone I could, but they were all calling me at the same time going, "Yo, the Yankees just played your song!" I thought it would be a big record in the tri-state area. Once sports started playing this song, I was like, "That's it, this is a mega-song. Babe Ruth, Reggie Jackson and Rob Base?" Yeah, yeah, I like that.

Did you know?The NFL used "It Takes Two" in its 100-year celebration commercial during Super Bowl LIII, where a pickup football game breaks out in the middle of an anniversary banquet. And as for Base's commonly misheard "can't stand sex"? In the song, what he actually says he can't stand is "sess." "Don't smoke buddha, can't stand sess." It's a reference to sinsemilla, a strain of marijuana. "A lot of people have been singing that wrong for the last 30 years," Base says. Although it's frowned upon by die-hard fans in New York, Base roots for both the Giants and the Jets. "People get on me for that, but I've been like that forever," he says. In his defense, these days, for NFL fans in New York who want to watch a normal amount of success, it takes two (franchises). "It takes two? Oh, right, I'm gonna use that, thanks," Base says.

De Coster: [During the] Winter Olympics in Russia, they used one of our songs in the closing ceremonies. That was goose bumps. DJ Steve Aoki remixed it at Tomorrowland, and the whole festival went bananas. My daughter is 24, and she had her birthday party in the garden and I told her I would DJ for her. But I am an old guy, and in the beginning it felt very uncomfortable. Then I started playing some '90s music and they all knew all those records. So now when my daughter has a party, her friends want to know: Is your dad playing? It's all hip again. Very strange.

Lynch: At Tommy Boy, I always called Jock Jams "the love that dare not speak its name." It was funny because for a period of time, we were a label that had distinguished itself in hip-hop, and Jock Jams was like this big mainstream pop project, this juggernaut that was a huge record that didn't really have street cred. For years after, you'd say Jock Jams and people would laugh and say, "Oh, my mom loved Jock Jams." And then, funny enough, just a few years ago, for some reason, people were like, "Oh, Jock Jams was so cool." I think it was just one of those things that was so uncool it became hip.

Taymor: The Jock Jams franchise eventually went away because record labels got wise to it and said, "Why don't we take our own music and put out our own albums?" And those were the compilations called "Now That's What I Call Music!" But the first Jock Jams, you go to a game now and 75 to 80 percent of the songs you hear are from that era still. And those aren't going away. I still go to Madison Square Garden and brag, absolutely.

KayGee: We didn't understand the significance of being a part of Jock Jams at first, but as time went on, we got it. Our ultimate goal, we wanted to be able to rock sports arenas and rock stadiums, and that's what Jock Jams represented.

McGowan: You catch me riding in my truck, you'll catch me listening to those Jock Jam records. I could ride and listen to Jock Jams to this day, start to finish, from Track 1 to the end, because I genuinely still love that vibe. And I think a lot of people still do.

Dench: We've all grown up together, I suppose, haven't we? I've never been super sporty, so it has been wonderful to contribute to sports in some way, without ever having to actually break a sweat.

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From 'Hip Hop Hooray' to 'YMCA,' the untold stories of Jock Jams, 25 years later - ESPN

WW3: Dangerous space first as Russia fires weapon from one satellite to another – Daily Express

The aggressive act, authorised by Vladimir Putin, is being seen by defence experts as the first strike on a whole new battle front. Head of the UK militarys Space Directorate said debris resulting from the weapon's deployment was jeopardising satellites vital for the planet.

Precise details of the anti-satellite weapon are unclear but it was launched from Russias Cosmos 2543 satellite and it came close to a second Russian satellite. It is not known if the failure to strike a direct hit was seen as a failure of the test-launch.

But General John W Raymond, head of US Space Command, said: This is further evidence of Russias continuing efforts to develop and test space-based systems, and consistent with the Kremlins published military doctrine to employ weapons that hold US and allied space assets at risk.

The Kremlin has previously carried out low-level tests with weapons in orbit but nothing of this proportion.

One UK defence source said: This is using a satellite as a space weapon. It is a step in the direction of turning space into a new frontline.

A second added: Theyve crossed a line when it comes to the scale of this.

The UK relies on satellites for communications, navigation and weather forecasting.

Air Vice-Marshal Harvey Smyth, chief of the Ministry of Defences space directorate, said: We are concerned by the manner in which Russia tested one of its satellites by launching a projectile with the characteristics of a weapon.

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Actions of this kind threaten the peaceful use of space and risk causing debris that could pose a threat to satellites and the space systems on which the world depends.

He added: We call on Russia to avoid any further such testing.

We also urge Russia to continue to work constructively with the UK and other partners to encourage responsible behaviour in space.

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Cosmos 2543 was fired into orbit on a Soyuz rocket that was launched from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in north-west Russia on November 26.

A second satellite was linked to it, which separated from it 11 days after the release.

US President Donald Trump said in a phone call last night to Russian President Vladimir Putin that he hoped they could avert an expensive three-way arms race between the US, China and Russia.

General John Raymond, head of US space command, said it was consistent with the Kremlins published military doctrine to employ weapons that hold US and allied space assets at risk.

The US State Department has expressed its concerns that Russian satellites have traits of a space-based weapon.

Dr Christopher Ford, the US assistant secretary of state, said: This event highlights Russias hypocritical advocacy of outer space arms control, with which Moscow aims to restrict the capabilities of the United States while clearly having no intention of halting its own counterspace program.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told the House of Commons on Wednesday that the UK was deeply vulnerable in space.

He added: The threat against space is regretfully real, our adversaries are weaponizing space and we are deeply vulnerable in the West from those types of actions because we rely so much on space assets.

This is further evidence of Russia's continuing efforts to develop and test space-based systems, and consistent with the Kremlin's published military doctrine to employ weapons that hold US and allied space assets at risk.

The UK said the firing of the projectile with the characteristics of a weapon and warned that it could threaten the peaceful use of space.

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WW3: Dangerous space first as Russia fires weapon from one satellite to another - Daily Express

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Tesla is 2 years ahead of the industry in critical areas, Audi CEO says – Electrek.co

Audis new CEO willingly admits that Tesla is two years ahead of the industry in some critical areas of building electric vehicles.

Markus Duesmann, Audis new CEO, has been focusing on electric vehicles and he is taking inspiration from market leader Tesla.

The CEO recently said that he believes Tesla has a two years on the rest of the industry (via Reuters):

Currently, Tesla has larger batteries because their cars are built around the batteries. Tesla is two years ahead in terms of computing and software architecture, and in autonomous driving as well.

In order to close the gap, Duesmann has started a new group within the German automaker to develop a pioneering model for Audi quickly and unbureaucratically.

He wants to avoid the normal cumbersome process and instead move quickly in a more startup-way, like Tesla.

The new group, called Artemis, has for goal to develop a highly efficient electric car that is scheduled to be on the road as early as 2024.

Tesla has been known for its efficiency lead in the industry:

In comparison, Audi has disappointed in efficiency with its first electric vehicle built from the ground up, the e-tron.

However, the electric SUVs lack of efficiency can be explained by the automaker being very conservative with energy capacity in its battery pack leaving a large buffer.

On the software front, Volkswagen Audis parent company has been having a lot of issues with its own software in the ID.3 and admitted that Tesla has a lead in this area.

They even started to implement what is internally called the Tesla catch-up plan with a new software team earlier this year.

The way I see it, Tesla focused on critical differentiating features early on, like battery module, BMS, drive unit efficiency, thinking that battery cells would become a commodity.

This gave Tesla an important efficiency edge over other automakers making electric vehicles.

Cells havent evolved fast enough and in large enough volumes for Tesla and now they are trying to increase production with their own cells building to their existing lead in other critical electric vehicle technology.

As for Audi, its a great sign that they are looking at Tesla as the leader here. They are looking in the right direction.

I am not worried about them. They are making the right move, and they are already having decent success with the e-tron in Europe.

I think their next-gen EV is going to be extremely competitive.

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Lucid unveils its driver-assist plan to compete with Teslas Autopilot – Electrek.co

Lucid has announced its driver-assist plan for its upcoming Air electric sedan to compete with Teslas Autopilot features.

While Lucid insists that it isnt competing with Tesla, many are seeing the latters Model S as the biggest competitor to the formers first electric car, the Lucid Air.

Thats especially true since the two vehicles programs, which were both started by now Lucid CEO Peter Rawlinson, were racing to be the first electric cars with a range of 400-mile on a single charge.

With the Air being delayed to 2021 and the Model S recently receiving an updated range made official by EPA, the latter won.

But Lucid has other tricks up its sleeve and plans to diffferentiate itself in other ways.

When it comes to driver assist features, it has now released its solution called Lucid DreamDrive.

Lucid Motors, which seeks to set new standards for sustainable transportation with its advanced luxury EVs, today announced Lucid DreamDrive, a new benchmark in advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS). The first-of-its-kind platform combines the most comprehensive sensor suite on the market with a cutting-edge driver monitoring system, all standard on the first versions of the Lucid Air. Taken as a whole, Lucid DreamDrive signals Lucids intent to deliver sophisticated assisted driving capabilities in its vehicles.

The system has features very similar to Teslas Autopilot, but it has a driver monitoring system and a sensor suite that includes high-resolution LIDAR two things that Tesla has stayed away from for its Autopilot and self-driving efforts.

Along with the Lidar sensors, the Air is equipped with 32 sensors including camera, radar, and ultrasonic sensors.

Here are the main features delivered by Lucid DreamDrive:

Safety:

Driving:

Parking:

Lucid says that the system is going to deliver more features through over-the-air software updates next year.

The automaker also says that the system is powered by what it calls a high-speed Ethernet Ring:

Lucid DreamDrive is also the first ADAS system built upon a high-speed Ethernet Ring, a unique cornerstone of Lucid Airs advanced electric architecture, which additionally serves as a fully redundant platform for key functions such as steering, brakes, sensors, and more. This includes redundant independent power sources and communications paths, fail-operational actuators, and fault-tolerant computation.

Peter Rawlinson, CEO and CTO of Lucid Motors, commented on the announcement of the new product:

Lucid Motors is laser-focused on delivering the worlds best luxury car, embodying the most advanced powertrain and safety systems possible, all designed and developed in-house. Our customers expect that philosophy to extend to the Lucid Airs ADAS, and for that weve developed a highly advanced, future-proof system that brings forth an unparalleled combination of sensors and software.

Lucid is going to unveil the production version of the Air electric car next month and should announce new production specs at the time.

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Review: In it to win it, the lawyers of the ACLU never give up ‘The Fight’ – MSN Money

(Magnolia Pictures) Joshua Block, left, and Chase Strangio in the documentary "The Fight.". (Magnolia Pictures)

This summer there aren't any superhero movies coming out (they've all been postponed), but there is one film this season that features real-life heroes. The filmmaking team behind the riveting political doc Weiner Josh Kriegman, Elyse Steinberg and Eli B. Despres have made the documentary The Fight, which follows a group of crusading American Civil Liberties Union lawyers as they defend some of the bedrock protections under attack from the Trump administration.

This lively and fast-paced doc opens with a rapid-fire split-screen montage that introduces the ACLU's 100-year history of defending civil liberties and introduces four specific cases of the hundreds the organization has brought against the Trump administration, regarding immigrants' rights, reproductive rights, voting rights and LGBTQ rights. The filmmakers, as well as editors Kim Roberts and Greg Finton (Despres also edited) do a Herculean job of weaving together a comprehensive patchwork narrative, as the ACLU jabs and parries with the administration and the courts on each issue.

The four cases are Garza v. Hargan, in which a teenage refugee was denied access to an abortion by the Office of Refugee Resettlement; Stone v. Trump, the controversial transgender military ban; Department of Commerce v. New York, about the citizenship question on the 2020 Census; and Ms. L. v. ICE, an asylum-seekers family separation lawsuit.

The filmmakers also sketch humane portraits of each case's tireless lawyers, who are almost constantly in motion. Immigration rights lawyer Lee Gelernt seems to run entirely on Diet Coke, adrenaline and many, many phone chargers; Dale Ho, director of the ACLU's voting rights project, is a charming, smiley man whom we get to see practice his remarks for the Supreme Court over and over; Brigitte Amiri, a dedicated and passionate defender of Roe v. Wade, writes briefs at midnight and enjoys well-earned train wine after a win; and Chase Strangio, a dedicated working parent, taking on the transgender military ban with Josh Block.

It's the fight that keeps them going: the hateful invective sent their way via postcards, emails, Facebook messages and voicemails only fans the flames of the fire that drives them.

Although The Fight is jam-packed with ups, downs, wins, losses, injunctions, stays, hearings and Trump speeches, the film is remarkably detailed and careful, and in fact, it reckons with the ACLU's dedication to defending civil liberties for all, not just the people we agree with. They've defended far-right and alt-right groups, radical Muslims and Nazis from Skokie, Ill. But their defense of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., where Heather Heyer was murdered by white supremacist James Fields Jr., weighs heavy on many in the organization, who try to understand if there are limits to defending free speech, at least for them.

In this film, and in life, it often feels like the lawyers of the organization are the only ones standing in the way of the Trump administration's policies, many capriciously intended not only to strip human rights but to bully and intimidate the American public. They are the real heroes of this era, battling in court after court, armed with tote bags of documents, caffeine and a deeply unwavering and humanitarian sense of justice. But as Ho put it so frankly, lawyers and courts aren't going to change the world; people are. And it's up to us to do it.

Katie Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

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Review: In it to win it, the lawyers of the ACLU never give up 'The Fight' - MSN Money

The architectural association as the neoreactionary racist institution – Archinect

The architectural association as the neoreactionary racist institution | Forum | Archinect '); }, imageUploadError: function(json, xhr) { alert(json.message); } }}); /*$(el).ckeditor(function() {}, {//removePlugins: 'elementspath,scayt,menubutton,contextmenu',removePlugins: 'liststyle,tabletools,contextmenu',//plugins:'a11yhelp,basicstyles,bidi,blockquote,button,clipboard,colorbutton,colordialog,dialogadvtab,div,enterkey,entities,filebrowser,find,flash,font,format,forms,horizontalrule,htmldataprocessor,iframe,image,indent,justify,keystrokes,link,list,maximize,newpage,pagebreak,pastefromword,pastetext,popup,preview,print,removeformat,resize,save,smiley,showblocks,showborders,sourcearea,stylescombo,table,specialchar,tab,templates,toolbar,undo,wysiwygarea,wsc,vimeo,youtube',//toolbar: [['Bold', 'Italic', 'BulletedList', 'Link', 'Image', 'Youtube', 'Vimeo' ]],plugins:'a11yhelp,basicstyles,bidi,blockquote,button,clipboard,colorbutton,colordialog,dialogadvtab,div,enterkey,entities,filebrowser,find,flash,font,format,forms,horizontalrule,htmldataprocessor,iframe,image,indent,justify,keystrokes,link,list,maximize,newpage,pagebreak,pastefromword,pastetext,popup,preview,print,removeformat,resize,save,smiley,showblocks,showborders,sourcearea,stylescombo,table,specialchar,tab,templates,toolbar,undo,wysiwygarea,wsc,archinect',toolbar: [['Bold', 'Italic', 'BulletedList','NumberedList', 'Link', 'Image']],resize_dir: 'vertical',resize_enabled: false,//disableObjectResizing: true,forcePasteAsPlainText: true,disableNativeSpellChecker: false,scayt_autoStartup: false,skin: 'v2',height: 300,linkShowAdvancedTab: false,linkShowTargetTab: false,language: 'en',customConfig : '',toolbarCanCollapse: false });*/ }function arc_editor_feature(el) { $(el).redactor({minHeight: 300,pasteBlockTags: ['ul', 'ol', 'li', 'p'],pasteInlineTags: ['strong', 'br', 'b', 'em', 'i'],imageUpload: '/redactor/upload',plugins: ['source', 'imagemanager'],buttons: ['html', 'format', 'bold', 'italic', 'underline', 'lists', 'link', 'image'],formatting: ['p'],formattingAdd: {"figcaption": {title: 'Caption',args: ['p', 'class', 'figcaption', 'toggle']},"subheading": {title: 'Subheading',args: ['h3', 'class', 'subheading', 'toggle']},"pullquote-left": {title: 'Quote Left',args: ['blockquote', 'class', 'pullquote-left', 'toggle']},"pullquote-centered": {title: 'Quote Centered',args: ['blockquote', 'class', 'pullquote-center', 'toggle']},"pullquote-right": {title: 'Quote Right',args: ['blockquote', 'class', 'pullquote-right', 'toggle']},"chat-question": {title: 'Chat Question',args: ['p', 'class', 'chat-question', 'toggle']}, "chat-answer": {title: 'Chat Answer',args: ['p', 'class', 'chat-answer', 'toggle']}, },callbacks:{ imageUpload: function(image, json) { $(image).replaceWith('

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The architectural association as the neoreactionary racist institution - Archinect

First Mover: The Dollar Drop May Have Helped Push Bitcoin Past $11K – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

As the U.S. dollars value slides, prices aresuddenly rising for just about everything priced in dollars.

That includes bitcoin, which shot up some 13% on Monday for its biggest gain in almost three months. Prices soared past levels reached in February, prior to the pandemic-induced sell-off, reaching a new 2020 high of $11,180.

Youre readingFirst Mover, CoinDesks daily markets newsletter. Assembled by the CoinDesk Markets Team, First Mover starts your day with the most up-to-date sentiment around crypto markets, which of course never close, putting in context every wild swing in bitcoin and more. We follow the money so you dont have to. You cansubscribe here.

Joe DiPasquale, CEO of the cryptocurrency hedge fund BitBull Capital, told First Mover in an email that the latest move up appeared in sync with golds climb in recent days to a new record. Bitcoin is seen by many digital-asset analysts as a hedge against inflation and currency debasement, similar to the way investors in traditional markets have historically used gold.

Bitcoin sprung into action, DiPasquale said.

Its a remarkable development in the bitcoin market, where investors, as recently as last week, were despairing that the oldest and largest cryptocurrency had been stuck in a range between $9,000 and $10,000 for the past two months.

So for bitcoin bulls, the jolt out of the doldrums was welcome, especially when the pricewent up, not down. The days gain came on strong trading volume, with levels not seen since early June.

The trend is clear and we are headed higher, saidJack Tan, of Taiwan-based quantitative trading firm Kronos Research.

Bitcoin is now up 57% year to date, more than double the 28% gain this year for gold, which climbed in recent days to a record. The Standard & Poors 500 Index of large U.S. stocks, meanwhile, is roughly flat for the year.

Given gold has just set a new all-time high, and with bitcoins correlation to stocks breaking down while being replaced by a strong correlation to gold, we envisage further tests to the upside this coming week, the cryptocurrency-trading firmDiginexwrote in a daily market report.

The U.S. Dollar Currency Index, a gauge of the greenbacks value versus other major currencies like the euro and yen, has fallen for seven straight sessions; the Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs predicts the dollar could lose another 5% over the next 12 months.

The U.S. dollar is eroding quickly, and people are starting to notice, wrote Mati Greenspan, founder of the cryptocurrency and foreign-exchange research firm Quantum Economics, in his daily email. Its plain to see that people are ditching the buck as fast as they can.

Thats good for bitcoin and gold:As the Wall Street Journal put it Monday, a weakening dollar mechanically pushes up the prices of the commodities invoiced in greenbacks.

Investors appear worried the global economic recovery is faltering, with cases on the rise and a death toll globally thatjust passed 650,000. In the U.S. Congress, Senate Republicans proposed a $1 trillion relief package following negotiations with President Donald Trump, but that amount falls far short of a Democrat-ledplan for $3.5 trillion in stimulus.

Jim Reid, strategist for the German lender Deutsche Bank, wrote in a report that the Federal Reserve, which has already expanded its balance sheet this year by about $3 trillion to about $7 trillion, might need to pump another $12 trillion over the next few years.

The Federal Reserve is scheduled to meet this week in closed-door discussions, with a statement due late Wednesday. With interest rates already close to zero, no major policy changes are expected, but the cryptocurrency investment fund Arca noted Monday that a sell-off in the U.S. stock market might provoke the U.S. central bank to respond.

A report on Thursday is expected to show that U.S. gross domestic product declined during the second quarter by a staggering 35% on an annualized basis.

With so much fragility in the economy, and things not improving quickly, the moral hazard is now so high that the stock market barely even has to blink, Arca wrote.

For bitcoin, according to Arca, the breakout was just a matter of time.

Tweet of the day

Bitcoin watch

BTC: Price: $10,773(BPI) | 24-Hr High: $11,395 | 24-Hr Low: $10,215

Trend:Bitcoin is witnessing a low-volume technical pullback on Tuesday.

The largest cryptocurrency by market value is currently trading near $10,850 down over 4% from the 11-month high of $11,394 reached on Monday.

The drop in price suggests bitcoin may be overvalued.The 14-day relative strength index jumped to 82 as prices surged 11% on Monday. An above-70 reading indicates overbought conditions meaning excessive demand has pushed prices unjustifiably high.

The pullback may be extended further, as the 14-day RSI is still hovering above 70. In addition, the RSI on the hourly chart has dropped into bearish territory below 50. That said, the bullish bias might be invalidated if prices finish below $10,500 (the February high) at the UTC market close.

That looks unlikely, as the decline from multi-month highs observed so far today is accompanied by a slide in trading volumes (above right). A low-volume pullback is often short-lived.

Besides, some analysts are convinced that Mondays bullish move has put bitcoin on the path toward record highs. [Mondays] daily close is amazing and could very well resemble April 2019s $1k candle that ended the bear market and fueled a rally to $13,000. Only this time, the rally should lead to new all-time-high for BTC, popular analystJosh Rager tweetedearly Tuesday.

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

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First Mover: The Dollar Drop May Have Helped Push Bitcoin Past $11K - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

The retreat of the liberal spirit – TheArticle

The fortified towers of the Mani in the Peloponnese, the four-fingered peninsula in Greece where Europe stops, are wild, grand and isolated.Unlike Patrick Leigh-Fermor, the travel writer who went to live (and die) among them, these symbols of strong, patriarchal clan power speak of closed societies, ruled for centuries by blood and gender. Today they lie abandoned and silent.

The Maniots, who built those towers, would relate to our changing world. Identity politics, nationalism and distrust of the other was, for them, the natural order of things.Like them, we are busy erecting towers. The architecture of the liberal world order, based on interdependence and mutual interest, is crumbling.

Despite the lessons of the 1930s, when fascism and totalitarianism led to collapse and conflict, we seem unable to work together, judging todays challenges too great, too risky. The world is too complex, too unpredictable.The organising principles for a stable and prosperous world, underpinned by tolerance and democracy, are being jettisoned and in their place is a growing void.

We dont have to look too far to see this playing out: Trumpism, Brexit, Turkey, Hungary and a European Union that is struggling to forge a coherent response to Covid-19. This disorientated international order is perfectly captured by the French term dboussol: a world whose compass is spinning.

Into this void has stepped first China and more recently Russia. The unipolar world greeted by many after the collapse of centrally planned economies in 1989 the end of history turned out to be a mirage.

Global hegemony by the US after the end of the Cold War, like any monopoly, was not a particularly healthy outcome. Certainly not with Donald Trump at the helm. Nowthe US flip flops between retreating from global leadership and squaring up to Chinas creeping imperialism, while cosying up to a roguish Russia. This is hardly a recipe for economic stability or peace.

The collapse of the Soviet Union lulled the West into a false sense of omnipotence. The hope that market forces would ineluctably lead to a corresponding loosening of political freedom in Russia and China is in tatters.

For China in particular the momentous events of 1989 were an emphatic warning which it has taken to heart: loosening the Communist Partys grip at home poses a mortal threat to its survival. The enemy for Beijing and Moscow was and remains liberalism. This is not a secret. It is a strategy.

Out of this realisation has emerged an approach adopted by both former communist adversaries increasingly in tandem: to create an alternative world order that actively undermines the liberal economic model and favours or at least does not oppose autocratic regimes that embrace capitalism.

This is not a coincidence. China and Russia now cooperate widely. The idea of re-creating a multipolar world was first discussed by the old communist adversaries in 1997, when Chinese President Jiang Zemin met his Russian counterpart Boris Yeltsin. Putin and Xi have taken it to the next level.

They are building a network of bespoke initiatives, institutions and regional organisations that will forge an alternative international coalition stretching from the Sea of Japan to the South Atlantic.

This accretion of soft power is backed by carefully military interventions, calculated to challenge (and rile) the west but not to provoke a conflict: Syria, Crimea, Ukraine, the South China Sea.Countries in the developing world with copious natural resources, strategic positions or both are being enticed with lucrative alternatives to the western patronage that defined the 20th century.

This assault on the liberal economic order is finding favour not just in the failed states of the Middle East, Africa or the favellas of South America. It is also garnering support among countries once solidly in the western fold: Turkey, Hungary, the Philippines. And strikingly it has also attracted the attention of Iran, where the theocratic mullahs are on the verge of signing a $400bn economic and security partnership with Beijings Godless communists.

The Belt and Road initiative, President Xi Jinpings signature project, is creating a vast network of client states often by pressuring poorer countries into accepting debt for equity swaps, which leave them in a debt trap.

Earlier this month Christopher Wray, Director of the FBI, said that China, now seen as Americas main military threat, is engaged in a whole-state effort to become the worlds only superpower.

Their methods are as follows:

Franklin Roosevelt defined the world order that rose from the ruins of World War II with this simple dictum: national well-being and international cooperation are two sides of the same coin.

Economic diseases Roosevelt wrote prophetically in his letter to the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, are highly communicable. It follows, therefore, that the economic health of every country is a proper matter of concern to all its neighbours, near and distant.Bretton Woods sought to end what then Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau called economic nationalism. That ethos now hangs by a thread.

Multiple shocks have accelerated this political and social introspection: the 2008 financial crisis; the uneven benefits of globalisation; the exodus of refugees from a fractured Middle East and failing states in Africa and Asia; and now the long-foretold pandemic wrapping itself around the globe, threatening yet another global economic downturn.

This collapse in trust is contagious. But it is not new. Even before Trump, the US was tiring of its hegemonic role as the leader of a liberal international order. Trump was pushing at an open door.

The retreat of the liberal spirit poses a danger to our well-being as free citizens. But it also makes it much harder to tackle the common problems we face. This requires the free exchange of ideas. Surely we have learnt this much from the pandemic.

The only power on earth that has the reach and the power, for the foreseeable, future to corral countries into renewing their vows to a liberal, tolerant, stable world order is the United States.Should he win in November and its a big if, given Trumps propensity for mischief one of Joe Bidens first acts should be to convene a meeting of the worlds principal democracies to do just that.

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The retreat of the liberal spirit - TheArticle

A timeline of the controversy around WE, the Liberals and a student program – Kamloops This Week

OTTAWA A timeline of events regarding the Canada Student Service Grant program, based on public documents, events and statements from cabinet ministers, government officials, and WE Charity:

March 6, 2020: WE Charity staff prepare a concept paper on service learning for public servants at Employment and Social Development Canada.

April 5: Finance Minister Bill Morneau and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talk over the phone about how to help students whose summer job and volunteer opportunities were vanishing due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Finance Department officials are tasked with considering options the next morning.

April 7: Small Business Minister Mary Ng and WE co-founder Craig Kielburger have an introductory phone call in which Ng asks WE to send what it calls a "pre-established proposal" to help young people launch businesses.

April 7 or 8: Morneau's office contacts the WE organization, among other groups, to get their input on potential programs. Morneau says the call was on April 7 while WE says it was April 8.

April 9: WE Charity sends the unsolicited proposal for a youth business program to Youth Minister Bardish Chagger, Ng, Morneau and Trudeau's office. The price tag is between $6 million and $14 million to provide digital programming and $500 grants, plus "incentive funds," for 8,000 students.

April 16: ESDC officials mention WE in the context of the student program in an email discussion with Finance officials.

April 18: Morneau's officials raise the idea of partnering with a non-profit, or for-profit group to administer the program. (ESDC officials suggest the same day that WE might be an option.) Morneau said it was the first time he was involved in any talk about WE and the grant program.

April 19: Wernick contacts Craig Kielburger. WE says the call was to discuss launching a youth service program in the summer and that Wernick asks Kielburger to develop a proposal to fulfil that objective. During the call, Wernick learns of the April 9 proposal for a youth business program and Kielburger agrees to send both proposals.

April 20: Morneau's office contacts WE to ask about its ability to deliver a volunteer program. An official's record of the call notes "WE Charity will re-work their 10-week summer program proposal to fully meet the policy objective of national service and increase their current placements of 8,000 to double."

April 21: Morneau approves going with an outside organization to run the volunteer program, but no specific group is chosen.

WE's youth entrepreneurship program proposal is included in annex nine of a briefing package about a student aid program that goes to the Prime Minister's Office, chief of staff Katie Telford later tells the finance committee. The proposal is declined.

April 22: Trudeau announces a $9-billion package of student aid, including the outline of a volunteer program paying students up to $5,000 toward education costs, based on the number of hours they volunteer. WE sends Wernick an updated proposal to reflect the announcement. The message is forwarded to Chagger, Ng and Morneau.

April 26: Morneau speaks with WE co-founder Craig Kielburger, but told the finance committee neither of them talked about the Canada Student Service Grant program. Craig Kielburger later tells the committee he only brought up the youth business proposal, not the grant program.

April 27: Volunteer Canada, a charity that promotes volunteering and helps organizations use volunteers well, meets Chagger and raises concerns about paying students hourly rates below minimum wage and calling it volunteering.

May 4: WE sends a third proposal to ESDC, this time with more details and specific to the grant program. Finance official Michelle Kovacevic, who was working on the program, told the finance committee she received it May 7.

May 5: Chagger goes to a special COVID-19 cabinet committee with the recommendation to go with WE for the program. Neither Morneau nor Trudeau is at the meeting.

The same day, a member of the Prime Minister's Office policy team speaks with WE as part of stakeholder consultation, but then directs the organization to ESDC.

WE begins incurring eligible expenses.

May 8: Trudeau finds out that WE is being recommended to run the student-volunteer program hours before a cabinet meeting. He later tells the finance committee that he pulled the item from the agenda and sent it back to the public service for more due diligence because of how the deal could be perceived.

May 21: The public service comes back to Trudeau, he tells the finance committee. The recommendation to go with WE doesn't change.

May 22: Cabinet, including Trudeau and Morneau, approved handing the reins of the program to WE.

May 23: The public service officially begins negotiating a contribution agreement with WE, which would have paid up to $43.5 million in fees to the group.

May 25 to June 3: In a series of meetings with Volunteer Canada, WE suggests the target for placements through the program had gone from 20,000 to 100,000.

June 12: WE co-founder Marc Kielburger says in a video chat with youth leaders that he heard from Trudeau's office about getting involved in the volunteer program the day after it was announced by the prime minister. He later backtracks, saying the contact came the week of April 26 from Wernick, and not the Prime Minister's Office.

June 23: WE Charity Foundation signs a contribution agreement with the federal government. WE signatories include Scott Baker, named as president of the one-year-old foundation and executive director of WE Charity, and chief financial officer Victor Li. Chagger signs for the government.

June 25: Trudeau unveils more details about student aid. A government release notes that WE will administer the student-volunteer program.

June 26: Facing questions about WE, Trudeau says the non-partisan public service made the recommendation, and the government accepted it: "As the public service dug into it, they came back with only one organization that was capable of networking and organizing and delivering this program on the scale that we needed it, and that was the WE program."

July 3: Citing the ongoing controversy, WE and the Liberals announce a parting of ways and the federal government takes control of the program. Ethics commissioner Mario Dion tells Conservative and NDP ethics critics in separate letters he will examine Trudeau's role in the awarding of the agreement because of the prime minister's close ties to the group.

July 9: WE says it has paid Trudeau's mother Margaret about $250,000 for 28 speaking appearances at WE-related events between 2016 and 2020. His brother Alexandre was been paid $32,000 for eight events, and Trudeau's wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau received $1,400 in 2012 for a single appearance. The organization says Trudeau himself has never been paid by the charity or its for-profit arm.

July 13: Trudeau apologizes for not recusing himself from discussions about WE over his family's longtime involvement with the organization. Morneau also issues an apology.

July 16: Dion says he will investigate Morneau's actions in the affair. Chagger testifies at the finance committee, saying Trudeau's office didn't direct her to go with WE.

July 21: Ian Shugart, clerk of the Privy Council, tells the Commons finance committee there is no evidence to suggest Trudeau spoke with WE before the organization was awarded the deal to run the student-volunteer program.

July 22: Morneau tells the finance committee he just repaid over $41,000 to WE for travel expenses the organization footed for the minister and his family. The Opposition Conservatives call for Morneau to resign.

Trudeau's office says he and Telford have agreed to testify before the committee with a date and time to be set.

The House of Commons ethics committee also calls on Trudeau to testify, and votes to seek copies of records for Trudeau and his family's speaking appearances dating back years. Six opposition members outvote five Liberals to have that committee start its own investigation.

July 23: Conservatives and New Democrats ask Dion to launch a new probe of Morneau over his travel expenses.

July 27: A copy of the contribution agreement with WE Charity Foundation is filed with the finance committee. It lays out the details of the program, including a provision for a maximum contribution of $543.53 million $500 million for grants, and $43.53 million to WE.

July 28: Craig and Marc Kielburger testify over four hours of sometimes testy interactions with MPs on the finance committee. The co-founders of WE Charity say their history and experience, not ties to Liberal cabinet ministers, landed the group the deal to run the volunteer program. They add they would have never agreed to take part in the program had they known it could jeopardize the work the WE organization has done over 25 years.

They also say WE estimated the cost of the program to be between $200 million and $300 million.

July 29: The Conservatives call on the federal ethics czar to widen his probe of Trudeau to include travel expenses WE covered in addition to speaking fees for his mother, wife and brother. Dion sends letters to the Tories and NDP saying he is expanding his probe of Morneau to look into the $41,000 in WE-sponsored travel.

July 30: In a rare event, Trudeau testifies before the House of Commons finance committee and lays out when he first learned about WE's involvement in the Canada Student Service Grant program. He says WE Charity didn't receive any preferential treatment in the process. He also says it is now unlikely the grants will be rolled out. Telford also appears before the committee.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 29, 2020.

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A timeline of the controversy around WE, the Liberals and a student program - Kamloops This Week

Newfoundland and Labrador Liberal leadership hopeful Andrew Furey’s vision for the future, plus a glimpse at his past – The Telegram

Andrew John Furey says he wants to be able to look his children in the eyes and tell them he did everything he could to help Newfoundland and Labrador navigate through troubled waters.

Furey is one of two people who could become the fourteenth premier of Newfoundland and Labrador should he win the leadership race for the Liberal Party.

Furey was born in St. Johns and resides in Portugal Cove-St. Philip's with his wife Allison and their three children.

The Furey name is well-known in Newfoundland and Labrador political circles. George Furey, his father, is the Speaker of the Senate of Canada, while his uncle Chuck Furey was an MHA and provincial cabinet minister, serving from 1985 to 2000.

Furey says he looks up to his father, but adds his grandmother Mary Furey had a profound impact on his life.

She left a relationship with eight children under her arm in the middle of the night, figuratively, and took ... the boys to Mount Cashel, the girls to Belvedere. Family was so important to her, she managed to keep that unit cohesive, said Furey.

Were talking about a single mom in the '50s in Newfoundland and Labrador; it couldnt have been easy. Somehow, she managed to keep the unit together as best she could and raise. I certainly stand on her shoulders every single day.

Furey says his familys good fortune and close connection to power gave him reason to want to give back to the province.

Ive been fortunate to grow up in a loving, nurturing family. My parents instilled in me from an early age the benefit of a solid education and the responsibility to use good fortunes to give back, said Furey.

Ive really taken example from my father, who as some may know grew up in Mount Cashel and fought his way to get an education, become a teacher, then return to law school, build a career for himself there, then enter public service. My family is filled with examples of people giving back to the community in large and small ways. Its really instilled in me that value to use the fortunes youve been provided to help others.

Furey has a bachelor of science and medical degree from Memorial University, where he is the director of orthopedic research. In 2015, he completed a diploma in organizational leadership from Oxford University.

"I dont intend to be a career politician for my entire life. Im parking my career right now and coming in to try and make a difference." Andrew Furey

Furey has been part of the board of directors of a number of companies both in and outside the province.

In 2010, Furey founded Team Broken Earth, a charity started after a devastating earthquake hit Haiti in 2010.

He joined the board of Sequence Bio in 2016, a bio-technology company seeking to collect genetic data in Newfoundland and Labrador, recently leaving the position.

Furey has a number of former board memberships for mining companies in Newfoundland and Labrador, including Alderon Iron Ore. Furey has also been on the board of Canada Fluorspar, which operates a mine in St. Lawrence.

Furey co-founded the Dollar a Day foundation with current Nalcor board of directors chair Brendan Paddick and musician Alan Doyle.

Furey says he would give up all existing board memberships should he be successful in the leadership race.

If Im successful, Ill leave those immediately, (although)theyre near and dear to my heart. said Furey, who also is on the board of directors of Medishare, a health-care volunteer provider group in the United States.

Furey says he recognizes how intertwined the business and political life of Newfoundland and Labrador can be, and says introducing an ethics officer is one step to ensure conflicts of interest are avoided.

Id also like to introduce an ethics officer to the executive and executive council. Newfoundland and Labrador is a small place. Everybody knows somebody whos involved in businesses along the way, said Furey.

We need that extra layer, that extra screen to ensure were making decisions, whether senior bureaucratic decisions or political decisions based on the right information thats being provided, in the most ethical and responsible way in the interests of Newfoundlanders and Labradorians.

The Telegram offered a series of rapid-fire policy questions to determine where Furey stands on some of our provinces greatest issues, beginning with the challenge to distinguish himself from the politician he seeks to replace.

Here are his replies.

Premier Ball has done a remarkable job, given the circumstances. I think I bring a different approach. Were Liberals, we share the same ideology. Hes done a great job and I guess being different, um, I bring a different lens. Im not a career politician, I dont intend to be a career politician for my entire life. Im parking my career right now and coming in to try and make a difference. I guess were a little different in that respect.

I do recognize the fiscal challenges we face and how government has expanded over the years. I do realize we have to correct that. That correction needs to be done so that government is providing the services to the communities around our province in a responsible and balanced way. I recognize that theres tough decisions in there. But thats something were going to have to face collectively together moving forward.

Furey says the current attrition model for reducing the amount of public servants may not be his only approach.

I understand attrition has its limits. Of course, we still need the basic services and we need to look at the distribution throughout government programs. Im more interested in looking at a program triage to see- do a full, healthy review of what programs were delivering and what returns on investments were getting whether social or economic to see if were spending money on those programs in a responsible way.

First, we need to diversify the economy so that were not subject to massive commodity fluctuations. I think we can do that in a healthy and visionary way. Youve heard me talk before about the technology space and the arts and entertainment space and how we can grow those into thriving industries so we can provide a pipeline with respect to technology for young people so they know if they do their targeted education which well have to invest in (that) therell be an ecosystem to support them on the other end. Technology is geography independent, which is one of the challenges of Newfoundland and Labrador.

The second piece to deal with the demographic issue is immigration. We need a more robust, healthy immigration target. We need to capitalize on immigrants wanting to come to Canada and stay and live here in N.L.

I think systemic racism is prevalent throughout our society and institutions. Its unfortunate, but I think it would be wrong to ignore that it exists. It doesnt just exist south of the border, it does exist here. I would never pretend to fully understand all the issues of racially suppressed people and Id like to listen to them, understand what their issues are. Itss the job of any leader to understand the barriers they face and try to have a better understanding of the issues and the feelings they have, and to use every tool available in the office to change that, to ensure that we have a public service and a legislature that reflects the diversity that exists in Newfoundland and Labrador.

My primary focus is going to be ensure (the Muskrat Falls project) gets done in the most timely fashion, with the least amount of further cost overruns so that we can return the value of that project and that asset to Newfoundlanders and Labradorians to the best of our ability. With respect to Phase Two (Gull Island), the province is not in a fiscal or financial position right now to develop that project. Thats not to say it wont be done in the future or is totally off the table, but right now we need to get the first project done ... get it done in an efficient and effective manner so we can stabilize the ship with respect to the debt.

I think that the minimum wage should be tied to the CPI (Consumer Price Index). I think its important to have regular evaluations of the minimum wage. But I also realize that its a political football. I dont think it should be. I think this independent evaluation needs to do their job and take politics out of the minimum wage. I recognize even the regional politics involved in that. No one wants to be the last with respect to the minimum wage. One of the possible solutions is to work towards a harmonized approach with the (other) Atlantic provinces so that no one is last and were using all the tools available to us to provide a living wage and to help people rise out of poverty.

I think that donations to political parties need to be fully reviewed. That would be the first thing I would instruct the Liberal party president to do under my watch. Reviewed with action, of course.

I think taxes right now, as a general statement, are high enough. I think we can be doing better in insuring we review the metrics around the thresholds for some of the taxes with respect to small businesses. Ensuring that were providing an environment that allows them to grow and develop, Id have to get in and look at the books, but right now, my intent is not to make any drastic changes to income tax. I think were taxed high enough.

I think weve all learned the lesson that this province is big and diverse, but you can reach out fairly quickly and quasi in-person with Zoom and other means. I think thats a way that we can apply that technology, whether it be virtual care with medicine or in meetings, more regular meetings with the premier or executive throughout the province without having to assume the cost of travel. Its not going to replace everything altogether, but its a way (of using technology) to do more with less.

I think were positioned well for ocean-based aquaculture in Newfoundland and Labrador. There have been hiccups, theres no question, but were developing it. Its part of who we are. Ive seen firsthand how it can reinvigorate some of our rural communities in particular and lead to sustainable lives for families there. We just came from Harbour Breton and Bay DEspoir and to see the economic return to these communities is quite remarkable.

Frankly, patronage is never acceptable. Im committed to ensuring the best person for the job gets the job regardless of political stripe. I think Premier Ball made good moves in that direction with respect to the independent appointments process. I look forward to working with the clerk of the council to ensure that its a competence-based approach, not a political one, so were getting the best advice from the best people to make the best decisions.

We need to work with the framework thats there now and increase it with respect to ATIPP (Access to Information and Protection of Privacy). Thats up for renewal and Im committed to ensuring its the most open and transparent process available. Its a bit of a cultural shift occurring and its going to take time and I recognize that. People can expect an open, transparent and just government from me. One of the concrete examples would be the chief economic recovery officer who would provide regular updates on the economy from a non-political view, to give the hard goods on where the economy is,and where its going.

We need to change the culture of the House of Assembly so we can have healthy debate. There are bigger issues we all need to collectively face and debate in an open and respectful manner so we can come to the best conclusions for the people of the province. That involves a cultural shift in the House of Assembly and legislature. Premier Ball has done some good work, for example the all-party committee on the public health crisis. Symbolically building on those types of working groups can be beneficial in changing the culture and decorum of the House of Assembly.

Twitter: @DavidMaherNL

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Newfoundland and Labrador Liberal leadership hopeful Andrew Furey's vision for the future, plus a glimpse at his past - The Telegram

Rising Liberals jockey for position in fight over class actions – The Australian Financial Review

One of their complaints is the lack of any specific regulator of litigation funders. One in Sydney, Richard Hill, was banned as an auditor for 12 months and owed $319,000 in taxes, according to records cited by Mr Falinski, who then asked a representative of the corporate regulator, Daniel Crennan, "if Bernie Madoff was still alive, could he be running a litigation funder in Australia?"

Liberal senator James Paterson is chairing the inquiry into litigation funding.Ben Rushton

"Not from jail," Mr Crennan said.

"I should say for the record that I think Bernie Madoff is still alive," Senator Paterson said.

If they can convince the government and Parliament to impose restrictions on litigation funders, possibly similar to managed investment schemes, Mr Falinski and Senator Paterson could become heroes to the business community.

First they will have to get through Senator Deborah O'Neill, a battle-hardened veteran of Labor politics. In public hearings this week, Senator O'Neill, who faces internal competition for her seat, asked questions and made comments designed to bolster the case for leaving the industry untouched.

When Mr Falinski questioned the credibility of one of her witnesses, a legal academic, she complained to Senator Paterson, who as chairman of the committee is theoretically meant to be neutral.

"You might be advised to ask one of your colleagues on the committee to make points of order that you yourself have not recently breached in this committee," he replied. "At least then you won't open yourself up to accusations of hypocrisy."

Jason Falinski in the House of Representatives in 2018.Alex Ellinghausen

"I don't care if you call me a hypocrite," she said.

As five industry representatives there to give evidence watched, mute, Mr Falinski interjected: "But you didn't tell the truth."

Mr Falinski was referring to an insinuation by Senator O'Neill and labour law firm Slater & Gordon that the Liberals are operating on behalf of the US Chamber of Commerce.

As if there wasn't enough tension during the session, loud noises that sounded like construction burst over the broadcast. No one knew where they originated from until Louise Pratt, a Labor senator from Perth, apologised for leaving her microphone on and said they came from a neighbour's property. Senator O'Neill burst out laughing.

Independent sources of funding to pay the dozens of lawyers, experts and others needed to conduct complex civil litigation emerged in 2001, driving the popularity of class actions for victims who had few other options.

As the new industry developed, a striking economic trend emerged. The people on whose behalf lawsuits are filed got 51 per cent of the financial settlements (almost none of the lawsuits are ruled on) when the cases were funded externally. When they weren't, they got 85 per cent, according to the Australian Law Reform Commission.

Unaware that he had been cited in the hearings until told by this journalist, Richard Hill said that litigation funders expect to receive about 2 times the value of their investments, which is not a big return given the risk of losing all their money.

"That's similar to other industries such as property development returns based on a rezoning of land," he said.

He said his temporary ban as an auditor and tax bill were misunderstandings about arcane areas of the law that had been resolved many years ago.

The latest class action is against Carnival Cruises over a COVID-19 outbreak on the Ruby Princess cruise ship, which infected 700 people, according to Shine Lawyers.

Slater & Gordon, Maurice Blackburn, Shine and 11 other companies recently launched an advertising campaign called "Keep Corporations Honest" to mobilise public opinion against any measures that would make class actions less lucrative. The campaign cites a lawsuit against US company Johnson & Johnson's faulty pelvic mesh, which was designed to stop urinary incontinence.

Shine Lawyers won the case in the Federal Court last year on behalf of thousands of Australian women. (Johnson & Johnson is appealing.) On Monday, the firm's head of litigation and loss recovery, Jan Saddler, made an impassioned speech about the threat to future victims of corporate malpractice from changes to the system.

"I really don't want us to tinker with a system that works well and have unintended consequences that (mean that) cases like the pelvic mesh case can't be run, won't be run, will be stymied in their prosecution in the future," she said.

"I understand that," Mr Falinski said. "I just want to ask: is that case funded by a litigation funder?"

Ms Saddler replied: "No."

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Rising Liberals jockey for position in fight over class actions - The Australian Financial Review

Classes on the University of Macau to begin on 7 September – Macau News

The University of Macau (UM) announced on Wednesday that the classes for the upcoming academic year will begin on 7 September.

A note sent to all UM students said that all teaching activities will resume normally in the new academic year and classes will mainly be arranged on a face-to-face teaching basis.

The note, however, said that students should pay close attention to the Special Webpage against Epidemics of the Health Bureau of the Macao.

According to information released by UM, all current postgraduate students will be allowed to return to campus from 10 August 2020.

The university is closely monitoring the situation of the pandemic and will make necessary adjustments to the teaching arrangement in accordance with the announcements and prevention guidelines of the Macao government, the note said.

The notice by UM also asks students to wear a mask, wash hands frequently, maintain distance and avoid crowd gathering.

PHOTO University of Macau

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Classes on the University of Macau to begin on 7 September - Macau News

CISA, NSA warn of threat to ICS. Garmin incident may be ransomware. Blackbaud hack spreads. Sino-American cyber tension. – The CyberWire

A joint warning from CISA and NSA points out a heightened cyber threat to the industrial Internet-of-things. Recent months, the agencies say, have seen significantly increased attention paid to internet-accessible operational technology (OT) assets as cyber actors have demonstrated their continued willingness to conduct malicious cyber activity against critical infrastructure. Operators of such systems should be ready, CISA and NSA say, to protect themselves during a time of crisis.

The agencies dont name names in their warning, but the media have. WIRED, in a representative piece, calls out Fancy Bear, Russias GRU, as the cyber actor snuffling at US critical infrastructure.

Garmin took its servers offline yesterday for a multiday period of maintenance. The company called it an outage that affected GarminConnect and its customer call centers, but ZDNet reports that Garmin employees whove tweeted about the incident are calling it a ransomware attack.

The consequences of the Blackbaud hack have spread to more educational institutions in the UK, Canada, and the US. WION News gives the following list of known victims: University of York, Oxford Brookes University, Loughborough University, University of Leeds, University of London, University of Reading, University College (Oxford), Ambrose University in Alberta (Canada), Human Rights Watch, YoungMinds, Rhode Island School of Design in the US and the University of Exeter.

China orders the US consulate in Chengdu shuttered, Reuters reports, in response to the US closure of Chinas Houston consulate.

Concerns mount over the risk of data exposure through Chinese-manufactured DJI drones, CyberScoop and others write.

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CISA, NSA warn of threat to ICS. Garmin incident may be ransomware. Blackbaud hack spreads. Sino-American cyber tension. - The CyberWire

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Top 10 world news today: Trump`s NSA Robert O`Brien tests positive for COVID-19, Rohingya refugees found alive and more – WION

Trump's NSA Robert O'Brien tests positive for coronavirus

The White House has said staff is regularly tested for the virus, and O'Brien is the most senior official to be found positive amid the pandemic.

China plans to buy gold mine in Arctic; Trudeau government to decide deal

A Chinese stat-run company is planning to buy a gold mine in the Canadian Arctic which has sparked concerns for the Canadian government.

'Virtual kidnappings' warning for Chinese students in Australia

Over 1,000 "Chinese authority" scams were recorded last year by Australia's consumer watchdog.

US ambassador to South Korea shaves off moustache, guess why?

US ambassador to South Korea Harris whose mother was a Japanese had reportedly told the local South Korean media two years that he had decided to grow the moustache as a sign of starting a career as a diplomat.

Queen Elizabeth II becomes first Royal to attend virtual unveiling of portrait

The portrait shows the Queen sitting on a gilded chair in a blue knee-length dress, with a tea cup next to her on a table.

Malaysia: 26 Rohingya refugees found alive on a small island

Malaysia has been harsh on the undocumented foreign workers, especially the Rohingya refugees.

China to help Hong Kong in building emergency field hospital due to surge in virus

Since July, over 1,000 cases of coronavirus cases have been reported, which is more than 40 per cent of the total since the virus first hit the city in late January.

Turkey deports Uighur Muslims back to China via third countries: Reports

According to a report of The Telegraph, Turkey is helping China repatriate Uighur Muslims by sending them to third countries from which they can be extradited by Beijing.

Trump calls demonstrators 'terrorists' and promises 'retribution' against them

And at some point, theres going to be retribution because there has to be. These people are vandals, but theyre agitators, but they're really theyre terrorists, in a sense, he added.

18 of the worlds 20 most monitored cities are in China, 1 camera for every 4.1 people

According to an annual report published by the UK-based Comparitech, worldwide there are 770 million cameras in use, with 54% of them in China alone.

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Top 10 world news today: Trump`s NSA Robert O`Brien tests positive for COVID-19, Rohingya refugees found alive and more - WION

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Global Nootropics Market – What Industry Holds for the Future post Covid? Growth Analysis & Complete Insights 2020 – 2026 – Market Research Posts

TheGlobal Nootropics Market Is Set To Reach USD 5,959 Million By 2024report covers all of the aspects required to gain a complete understanding of the pre-market conditions, current conditions as well as a well-measured forecast.This report also researches and evaluates the impact of Covid-19 outbreak on theNootropics Market, involving potential opportunity and challenges, drivers and risks. We present the impact assessment of Covid-19 effects onNootropics Market growth forecast based on different scenario (optimistic, pessimistic, very optimistic, most likely etc.).

Theresearch report published by Zion Market Researchis a comprehensive study of the globalNootropics Market. The subject matter experts and team of highly-skilled researchers have put in hours of work to collate an authentic research report on the globalNootropics Market. Analysts have studied the various products in the market and offered an unbiased opinion about the factors that likely to drive the market and restrain it. For a detailed study, researchers have used primary and secondary research methodologies. Analysts have also studied the key milestones of achieved by the globalNootropics Marketand compared it to the current market trends to give the readers a holistic picture of the market.

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GlobalNootropics Market: Drivers and Restraints

This section of the report assesses various drivers, opportunities, and restrains that lie in the market. These drivers and restraints are determined by various factors such as region, key players, innovations, and others. The report will help readers determine the key drivers and solutions for restraints. It also highlights the possible opportunities. The drivers and restraints are identified by current trends and historic milestones achieved by the market. The chapter on drivers and restraints also offers an evaluation of the investments made in production innovation through the years. The changes in environmental perspective have also been factored in to understand their impact on the growth of the globalNootropics Market.

The Leading Market Players Covered in this Report are:

Accelerated Intelligence, Inc., Nootrobox, Inc., AlternaScript LLC, Onnit Labs LLC, Cephalon, Inc., Clarity Nootropics, Peak Nootropics

Analysts have also highlighted the potential restraints present in the globalNootropics Market. With the help of market experts the report points out what changes companies can make to overcome these hurdles over the forecast years.

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GlobalNootropics Market: Segment Analysis

The market has various segments such as applications, end users, and products. These help in determining the growth of a particular segment of a market. The readers can assess why a certain segment is performing better than the other and then make strategic investments. The type segment includes sales value for the forecast period of 2014 to 2025. The application segment includes sales by volume and consumption for the forecast period of 2014 to 2025.

Inquire More about Report:https://www.zionmarketresearch.com/inquiry/nootropics-market

GlobalNootropics Market: Regional Analysis

Different regions of the global market influence growth differently. Various factors such as economic growth, technological developments, government policies, availability of labour, and others are compared with each to determine which region will outperform other. The regions included in this report are North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, and the Middle East and Africa.

Here is the COVID-19 Impact Analysis :https://www.zionmarketresearch.com/custom/3593?covid19=true

Strategic Points Covered in TOC:

Chapter 1:Introduction, market driving force product scope, market risk, market overview, and market opportunities of the globalNootropics Market

Chapter 2:Evaluating the leading manufacturers of the globalNootropics Market which consists of its revenue, sales, and price of the products

Chapter 3:Displaying the competitive nature among key manufacturers, with market share, revenue, and sales

Chapter 4:Presenting globalNootropics Market by regions, market share and with revenue and sales for the projected period

Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9: To evaluate the market by segments, by countries and by manufacturers with revenue share and sales by key countries in these various regions

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The classification of the globalNootropics Marketis done based on the product type, segments, and end-users. The report provides an analysis of each segment together with the prediction of their development in the upcoming period. Additionally, the latest research report studies various segments of the globalNootropics Marketin the anticipated period.

Thanks for reading this article; you can also get individual chapter wise section or region wise report version like North America, Europe or Asia.

Note In order to provide more accurate market forecast, all our reports will be updated before delivery by considering the impact of COVID-19.

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Global Nootropics Market - What Industry Holds for the Future post Covid? Growth Analysis & Complete Insights 2020 - 2026 - Market Research Posts

Can happy hour lose the booze? – The Hustle

Too many Zoom happy hours making you feel not happy? As GQ reports, theres a wide and wonderful world of low- and no-alcohol cocktails to appeal to the sober-curious.

Lower in calories and less likely to leave you hungover, health-conscious sippers have been raising a glass with something other than LaCroix.

And we dont just mean White Claw. Nielsen recently called hard seltzer the most resilient alcohol category in the US notching a 4x sales increase over last year but theres a bevy of new craft bevvies behind the bar.

Though the companies we reached out to remained mum on exact dollar amounts, all reported huge growth this year.

Curious Elixirs makes pre-mixed nonalcoholic drinks. Its Cocktail Club memberships have spiked 600% since mid-March, a spokesperson said.

Haus ships low-ABV aperitifs D2C. The company launched last June and has seen orders grow 500% in 2020.

Kin Euphorics uses adaptogenics and nootropics botanic compounds said to boost brainpower for a booze-free buzz.

Kin told us D2C revenue nearly tripled between March and July 2020 compared with the same period last year.

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Can happy hour lose the booze? - The Hustle

A flood of business bankruptcies hit Houston and even more are on the way – Houston Chronicle

More Texas corporations filed for bankruptcy during the first half of 2020 than in any six-month period in the states history, and Houston has been hit hardest.

The number of businesses that filed to restructure between Jan. 1 and June 30 in the Southern District of Texas, which includes Houston, more than tripled from a year earlier, according to data from Androvett Legal Media research.

The data show that two bankruptcy judges in the Southern District of Texas have handled more complex commercial restructurings of large companies than any other federal district in the country.

On HoustonChronicle.com: Judge gives BJ Services a week to find bankruptcy alternative

The predicted wave of business bankruptcies is now hitting Texas full force, and legal experts suggested that just as many companies are likely to declare bankruptcy during the second half of this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the historically low oil and gas prices.

We are still in the early onslaught of this wave, said Munsch Hardt shareholder Kevin Lippman.

The uniqueness about this bankruptcy wave is the breadth of it, he said. It is hitting every business sector - energy, retail, hospitality, real estate, airlines. And it is hitting everywhere - it is not isolated to one or two regions of the country.

There were 815 companies that filed for bankruptcy protection in the federal courts of Texas during the first half of this year, which is 236 - or 40 percent - more than in the first six months of 2009, the heart of the Great Recession, according to the Androvett data.

While all parts of Texas are experiencing economic pain for businesses, no region is being hit harder than Houston.

The Androvett data shows that 602 companies filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the Southern District of Texas in the first six months of the year - a 234 percent increase from the 180 filings during the second half of 2019.

On HoustonChronicle.com: Energy company bankruptcies surge in 2nd quarter

By contrast, business bankruptcies in the Western District of Texas, which includes Austin, San Antonio and El Paso, jumped 33 percent in the period compared to the year earlier. Corporate restructurings in the Northern District, which includes Dallas/Fort Worth, witnessed a 19 percent increase in corporate Chapter 11 filings during the first half of this year versus the final six months of 2019.

There are still a lot of bankruptcies to be filed, said Hunton Andrews Kurth bankruptcy partner Tad Davidson of Houston.

On oil and gas upstream, I think we are in the middle of the bankruptcy wave. There are more restructurings in the pipeline, said Davidson, who is advising Sable Permian Resources in its multibillion-dollar restructuring.

Southern District Chief Judge David Jones of Houston said SDTX, as it is known in legal circles, has more complex corporate restructurings of $300 million or more than any other federal district in the nation.

The goal was never to be busier than other districts, the judge said. The goal was to develop a bankruptcy court that I always wanted when I practiced law. It is about the case and not about the judge. And to have a bankruptcy court that is accessible and predictable.

Alfredo Perez, a bankruptcy and restructuring partner at Weil, Gotshal & Manges in Houston, said the hard work of Jones and fellow bankruptcy Judge Marvin Isgur is the reason the Southern District is now one of the favored courts in the U.S. for large corporate restructurings.

Both judges have strong business and energy industry backgrounds, and they understand how businesses operate, Perez said.

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The bankruptcy judges in the Southern District, led by Chief Judge Jones, issued new rules and procedures in 2015 for complex corporate restructurings that nearly all experts believe are more accessible and predictable for debtors.

It worked.

The 602 corporate bankruptcy filings in the Southern District is nearly three times as much as filed in the three other Texas districts combined. Even so, SDTX actually ranks second in total business bankruptcies filed in the U.S. so far in 2020, according to the Androvett data.

Delaware, which is where so many businesses across the U.S. are officially incorporated, ranks No. 1 with 787 Chapter 11 filings so far this year. The Southern District of New York is third with 456 corporate restructurings during the first half of 2020.

These two judges are incredible, but they are handling such a large number of cases, Winikka said. If the rate of increase continues at this pace, there is going to be a backlog. It is going to be an issue.

Jones said there is no reason for concern at this point.

I dont know how close we are to capacity, he said. We have not pushed our limits at all so far. Whether it takes 10 or 20 more cases each for us to reach our limit, I just dont know.

For a longer version of this article, please visit TexasLawbook.net

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A flood of business bankruptcies hit Houston and even more are on the way - Houston Chronicle

Poker, Metacognition and ‘The Biggest Bluff’ | Learning Innovation – Inside Higher Ed

The Biggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win by Maria Konnikova

Published in June 2020

What if the best way to learn about learning is to play poker? Or maybe to read about learning to play poker?

This is the premise of New Yorker writer (and Columbia psychology Ph.D. trained) Maria Konnikova's new book, The Biggest Bluff.

Konnikova tells how she went in under a year from not knowing how many cards are in a deck to a tournament-winning professional poker player.

The Biggest Bluff is less a book about poker -- although we learn plenty about the subculture of professional poker players -- and more a book on metacognition. Poker, it turns out, is a vehicle for thinking about thinking.

The animating spirit underlying Konnikova's journey from a poker novice to expert is summarized in the advice that her coach, professional poker player Erik Seidel, repeats continuously:

"Less certainty. More inquiry."

In learning how to thrive in the hypercompetitive male-dominated (and incredibly sexist) world of professional poker, Konnikova must absorb many lessons beyond optimal betting, calling and folding strategies.

Over the book's chapters, Konnikova relates how poker uncovers and reveals one's blind spots, biases and mental fault lines.

It is hard to come away from reading The Biggest Bluff without concluding that poker should be integrated into the curriculum. At the very least, it seems as if Centers for Teaching and Learning should think about a faculty learning science reading group where the book is discussed, followed by some low-stakes Texas Hold'em.

CTLs, and the universities in which they are embedded, might want to think about adopting less certainty and more inquiry in their official mission statements.

The Biggest Bluff should be included in any bookshelf on learning about learning.

What are you reading?

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Poker, Metacognition and 'The Biggest Bluff' | Learning Innovation - Inside Higher Ed