Short may not be sweet – The Indian Express

Written by Pratik Datta | Published: July 31, 2020 12:40:36 am The proposal to cap the tenure of a bank CEO needs to be supported by adequate empirical evidence rooted in Indian realities. (Representational image)

Last month, the Reserve Bank of India released a discussion paper on governance in commercial banks in India. The apparent objective is to align the current regulatory framework with global best practices while being mindful of the context of the domestic financial system. However, the proposal to cap the tenure of a bank CEO needs to be supported by adequate empirical evidence rooted in Indian realities.

The paper proposes to cap the maximum tenure of a promoter/major shareholder of a bank as a CEO or a Whole Time Director (WTD) at 10 years. The rationale offered is that 10 years is an adequate period for a promoter/major shareholder of a bank as CEO/WTD to stabilise its operations and to transition the managerial leadership to a professional management. The corresponding limit for a CEO who is not a promoter/major shareholder is 15 consecutive years. Thereafter, that individual is eligible for re-appointment as CEO or WTD only after the expiration of three years.

Ordinary corporate governance norms exhort managers to run a company in the interest of shareholders. Global experience suggests that this approach may not be suitable for all types of banks. First, banks are highly leveraged, creating powerful incentives for shareholders to engage in risky strategies at great risk to creditors, including retail depositors. Second, bank failure could involve systemic risk, which could result in a government bail-out. This moral hazard creates even more high-powered incentives for shareholders to engage in risky strategies. Third, financial assets held by a bank are hard to monitor and measure. Consequently, external scrutiny of a bank by depositors and creditors, among others, is difficult. Overall, these unique factors are likely to encourage bank managers to take excessive risks to maximise shareholder value.

Bank governance seeks to curb such excessive risk-taking. It encourages prudent risk-taking by bank managers such that shareholders interests are secondary to depositors interests. This is the main logic for regulating the banks board structure and managerial compensation, as suggested in the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision guidelines and the Financial Stability Board principles respectively. From this perspective, it is unclear whether imposing a maximum cap on CEO tenure to separate ownership from management would encourage prudent risk-taking by the management.

Research suggests that CEO tenure could have important implications for corporate performance. This is because the managers decision horizons are usually shorter than the investment horizons of other corporate stakeholders, which may encourage myopic decisions by a CEO.

For Indian banks, the limited empirical evidence seems to suggest that bank performance improves with increasing CEO tenure. For instance, a paper by Jayati Sarkar and Subrata Sarkar (2018), published in International Journal of Financial Studies, examines whether board governance structures (including CEO tenure) impact the performance of Indian state-owned and private commercial banks both in terms of asset quality and profitability. It uses a sample of 25 state-owned banks, 14 old private banks and seven new private banks for a period of 12 years from 2000 to 2012.

The paper finds that an increase in CEO tenure is associated with significant improvements in asset quality with an accompanying increase in the overall performance of the bank. Moreover, the effect of CEO tenure increases rapidly with the year of CEO tenure. Consequently, the later years of a CEOs tenure are more effective than the initial years in affecting bank outcomes. Further, CEO tenure effects are stronger in private banks, both old and new. These findings seem to be at odds with RBIs suggestion to cap CEO tenure.

Concerning public sector banks (PSBs), the P J Nayak Committee report had identified shorter tenure of chairmen and executive directors as a key reason for weaker empowerment of their boards. This conclusion was based on a working paper from ISB-Hyderabad authored by Krishnamurthy Subramanium, Arkodipta Sarkar and Prasanna Tantri (2014). This paper argues that an incoming CEO in a PSB is likely to be wary about the quality of bank assets during his predecessors tenure. Given the threat of prosecution, the incoming CEO is unlikely to lend until he understands and obtains full information about the banks existing assets. Accordingly, the paper finds that the quarter in which a new CEO takes charge, market-adjusted lending declines by 1.7 per cent and the stock price also falls by 1.1 per cent. In such circumstances, a shorter tenure creates incentives for the incoming CEO to engage in earnings management to present an overtly positive view of the banks business and financial position. In contrast, CEOs with longer tenure have lower incentives to engage in earnings management. Although these findings do not apply to private banks, they seem to suggest a case for a minimum CEO tenure but not maximum CEO tenure.

To clarify, this is not to suggest that the proposal on CEO tenure cap in the RBI paper is incorrect. What is merely being highlighted is that the proposal does not appear to be supported by any cogent evidence, empirical or otherwise, which is available in the public domain. This assumes significance in light of the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Internet & Mobile Association of India (IAMAI) v. RBI. In this case, the Court struck down an RBI circular prohibiting dealing or settling in virtual currencies on the ground that RBI did not adduce any cogent evidence of the likely harm that its circular sought to address. While there is no direct parallel that can be drawn, it may be prudent for the RBI to publish an empirical study on the impact of CEO tenure on bank performance before translating this proposal into an enforceable regulation.

The writer is senior research fellow at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., New Delhi. Views are personal

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Short may not be sweet - The Indian Express

Mariam Nasrri is taking a stand as a voice for the voiceless through her creativity and courage – Vancouver Is Awesome

This Content is made possible by our Sponsor; it is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff.

Mariam Nasrri is the 2020 Courage to Come Back award recipient in the Medical category.

Growing up in the 1980s, Mariams childhood was influenced by a civil war that had devastated her birth country of Afghanistan.

During the war, her parents tried to protect her and her siblings by moving constantly and providing the children with shelter and education at every chance. However, Mariam couldnt avoid traumas she both witnessed and experienced. By the time she reached young adulthood, she had survived a school bombing, molestation, physical abuse, illness caused by starvation and dehydration, an abusive marriage arrangement and house imprisonment, and other unthinkable traumas.

After I witnessed the bombing and killing of my classmates and friends, I started to suffer from survivors guilt. Although they were loving and caring, they could not shield me from the horrors of war no matter how deep they dug or how far they ran from city to city.

In December 2000, Mariam sought asylum from the United Nations in India. Hungry, alone, and scared, she sat outside the office for days on end until she got the attention of a UN worker. Within forty days, she was placed with a refugee family, but she was soon stigmatized, alienated, and assaulted by the community who did not approve of her and her actions.

The next year, Mariam turned to the Canadian Embassy and received sponsorship from the Canadian government to move to Vancouver to live with relatives. Her battle with the challenges of emigration, such as language barriers and community ostracism, continued. Despite this, Mariam finished high school, enrolled in university in Victoria, and found a paralegal assistant job in the government.

Then, in 2009, Mariam fell down a flight of stairs and sustained a concussion, spinal injuries, and damage to the left side of her body.

Over the next year, as matters deteriorated and her immune system suffered, Mariam became increasingly isolated and immobile, finding it difficult to get out of bed, let alone venture outside. She went through various states of mind during this time, from numbness to self-pity to frustration.

The bitter reality dawned upon Mariam that she may have to live with these life-long injuries and chronic pain. She also struggled with PTSD, as the horror of the years of war and hardship she endured as a refugee added to her loneliness, guilt, hopelessness, and depression. Mariam tried as hard as she could to fight back by processing her emotions and finding solace and strength in her situation.

In the present, I felt completely lost and in a dark place. In order to go forward, you have to know where you came from. I was given a new life, I was given an opportunity to be here in this country. Giving up wasn't an option, and that thought kept me alive.

With her future and her family as her motivations, Mariam decided to reach out for social support and accept the assistance available to help her heal mentally and emotionally.

With the help of medical specialists, physiotherapists, and chiropractors, she was able to persevere through lengthy and painful physical rehabilitation. Slowly, she felt the effects of the therapies, and she felt hopeful again. Mariam found people who became part of her healing journey and made friends that loved her unconditionally. The care and support she received restored her faith in humanity and as she excelled in her recovery, she regained her confidence.

Marian Nasrri. Photo: Avrinder Dhillon.

While in recovery, Mariam had time to reflect on who she really was today and where she wanted to go next.

From there, she decided to make big changes in her education and career pursuits. Fuelled by her passions for writing and the creative arts, Mariam returned to university and switched to a creative writing program, She also earned a certificate from Harvard University online, studying the works of Shakespeare. Currently, with support from Bard on the Beach, she is writing an adaptation of Romeo & Juliet set in Afghanistan.

After the fall of the Taliban regime, Mariam reunited with her family in Afghanistan in 2012. Here, she was inspired to move onto her next mission in life using the creative skills and humanitarian spirit she developed in Canada to help give Afghan women a voice.

She video documented the personal stories and struggles of women from different walks of life. Behind veils, she interviewed women who live in remote regions to hear their stories, uncut and uncensored.

As her profile began to rise, she began facing retaliation from those in the society who were against her actions. She recounts being shot at, being attacked, and receiving threats and almost being kidnapped by the Taliban, she began receiving threats from the Taliban.

Mariam refused to let anything stop her from pursuing her goals, seeing an amazing opportunity to bring greater awareness. She continued to return to Afghanistan over the years to give Afghan women a prominent voice on the international stage.

Mariam is the founder of a Canadian non-profit called Nahz Empowerment of Women and Girls, an organization that facilitates opportunities for vulnerable women and girls in Afghanistan to improve their literacy skills, to help them find sustainable employment, and ultimately, to teach them how to become independent.

Trained in the 12 Steps program for addiction and trauma therapy in Canada, Mariam brought her knowledge over to Kabul, where she volunteered at a women and childrens hospital for the homeless who suffer from substance abuse, drug addiction, and mental illness. Mariam was the first woman to organize the 12 Steps program for Afghan women in Kabul, and held the first-ever all-womens meeting for those who suffer from substance abuse.

If I could educate women, they'd be able to influence their children, and give them choices. I want to forge that path for those families in need of support.

In an effort to help those who have gone through personal trauma, Mariam decided to share her story openly with others.

When you have a second chance in life, what do you do with it? I want to do my part to give others hope through sharing my experiences, and especially with the younger generation. They are our future.

She has been a guest speaker for various organizations, focusing on mental health, emigration challenges, and violence against women.

As the world endures the effects of COVID-19, Mariam remains optimistic for the days ahead.

We're facing a very uncertain future due to the pandemic. Human history makes me feel absolutely and utterly sure that we will persevere. Human beings have survived many pandemics before, and it's because of our humanity. We're a global community right now. With todays technology and medical advancements, a cure will be found.

In overcoming war trauma and migration, Miriam has struggled and triumphed over remarkable obstacles by following her dreams. In choosing to look ahead and give back to her communities in Afghanistan and Canada, Mariam is an example of resilience in the human spirit.

I want to be a voice for the voiceless. I want to be part of a force that helps restore faith in humanity. I hope others can find a way home as I have a safe place where their spirits can be free and safe, where they are free to love and live.

The Courage To Come Back Awards celebrate British Columbians who have overcome significant adversity, injury or illness and who inspire and give back to others.

For the past 20 years, the Courage To Come Back Awards have raised more than $18.5 million for Coast Mental Health to support people recovering from mental illness in the Lower Mainland, through housing, support services and employment.

The awards celebration is a major fundraiser for Coast Mental Health, which believes that, through compassionate care and support, everyone can recover. This year, instead of the in-person gala, Coast Mental Health is celebrating Courage To Come Back Month in July.

Find more inspirational stories and to find out how you can support, visit: couragetocomeback.ca.

This Content is made possible by our Sponsor; it is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff.

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Mariam Nasrri is taking a stand as a voice for the voiceless through her creativity and courage - Vancouver Is Awesome

Watch live: SpaceX’s Crew Dragon returns to Earth from ISS on August 2 – Business Insider – Business Insider

SpaceX made history in May when it became the first company to launch a crewed spaceship to the International Space Station. In doing so, Elon Musk's rocket company also revived the US's ability to launch its own astronauts into space, which hadn't been possible since the Space Shuttle program ended in 2011.

Two months later, the mission's astronauts, Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, are about to come home in the same spaceship, which they've named Endeavour. Their journey includes a fiery return through Earth's atmosphere.

NASA will stream that flight, as well as the process in which the spaceship undocks from the space station, live this weekend you can watch below via NASA TV. Here's the schedule:

On Saturday, August 1, the astronauts will participate in an ISS farewell ceremony around 9:10 a.m. ET. Then NASA's undocking coverage starts at 5:15 p.m. ET, ahead of the astronauts' scheduled 7:34 p.m. departure.

Then on Sunday, August 2, assuming all goes well, the Crew Dragon should splash down in the Atlantic Ocean around 2:42 p.m. ET. A news conference later in the day will begin at 5 p.m. ET.

It's possible, however, that Tropical Storm Isaias could get in the way, forcing SpaceX and NASA to change the schedule. The storm's wind and rain are expected to hit Florida on Saturday.

The first phase of the astronauts' return journey, undocking, calls for them to enter the Crew Dragon, after which the spaceship should retract the hooks that connect it to the ISS. Assuming all goes according to plan, it's engines would then gently propel the ship away from the station. Once it's flying free, the ship is programmed to fire its engines more aggressively to put it on the path toward its splashdown location off the Florida coast.

Then after it's en route, the ship is expected to shed its trunk, which should burn up in the atmosphere. After the separation is complete, Crew Dragon should hurtle towards Earth at up to 17,500 miles per hour, or nearly 23 times the speed of sound.

An illustration of SpaceX's Crew Dragon spaceship returning to Earth with a blaze of plasma ahead of its heat shield. SpaceX via YouTube

During this fall, the spaceship's heat shield will have to protect the hardware and crew from temperatures of up to 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit. Musk has called this part of the journey his "biggest concern."

After the Crew Dragon reenters the thicker parts of Earth's atmosphere, it is programmed to deploy two sets of parachutes. The first opens at 18,000 feet, then another set comes at 6,000 feet. After that is the splashdown: The capsule is expected to land in the ocean some 22 to 175 nautical miles off of Florida's coast.

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Watch live: SpaceX's Crew Dragon returns to Earth from ISS on August 2 - Business Insider - Business Insider

Congress can’t agree on the next coronavirus stimulus deal as relief funds dry up – CNBC

A coronavirus relief agreement in Congress looked illusory Thursday as new economic data showed a U.S. economy buckling under the pandemic's weight.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., tried to unanimously pass an extension of the weekly enhanced federal unemployment insurance Thursday afternoon that would slash the benefit from $600 to $200 per week.Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., rejected it.

Schumer then attempted to unanimously approve the $3 trillion rescue package House Democrats passed in May. That legislation also failed, leaving Congress no closer to breaking an impasse over how best to boost a health-care system and economy ravaged by the pandemic.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. will hold a meeting in her office at 8:00 p.m. Thursday night with Schumer, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, NBC News reported.

Democratic leaders and Trump administration officials left a meeting Wednesday saying they had not come close to bridging a gulf in their priorities for an aid package.

Congress is struggling to find common ground on coronavirus relief as statistics show an economy still experiencing damage from an outbreak spreading throughout the country. Initial jobless claims climbed to 1.43 million last week, rising for the second straight week. U.S. GDP also fell by a record 32.9% in the second quarter during the peak of pandemic-related shutdowns an expected but still devastating plunge.

Congressional leaders are now tossing blame for the inevitable expiration of the $600 per week enhanced federal unemployment insurance. The policy ends after Friday, though states stopped paying out the extra benefit last week leaving millions of Americans facing a sudden and sharp drop in income.

On Thursday morning, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Democrats of refusing to "engage" with the GOP after it released its coronavirus relief proposal on Monday. Republicans unveiled the plan more than two months after the House passed a rescue package, which Democrats considered their opening offer in the next round of aid discussions.

"Either our Democratic colleagues come to the table, or the American people won't get the help they need," McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said on the Senate floor.

The sides will have to resolve differences on a range of issues, most notably the unemployment insurance extension. Democrats want to maintain the $600 per week jobless benefit, on top of what recipients get from states, into next year. Republicans want to cut it to $200 per week through September, then set it at 70% wage replacement.

Democrats have also criticized the lack of several other provisions in the GOP plan, including direct aid for state and local governments and funds for rent, mortgage and food assistance. They also oppose liability protections for businesses, doctors and schools, which McConnell has said will have to be in any bill he brings to the Senate floor.

On Thursday, Schumer said the lack of a Republican consensus on pandemic aid has hindered progress toward a deal. Multiple GOP senators have said a large share of the caucus does not support the legislation Republicans released this week.

"Our friends on the other side now are scrambling," he said on the Senate floor.

As they moved closer to Friday's deadline without a comprehensive deal, both President Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin floated the possibility of passing a short-term deal to extend the unemployment insurance and a federal eviction moratorium on Wednesday.

Schumer and Pelosi have both shot down a temporary fix.

Even as the progress of talks looked bleak Thursday, Schumer said he believes the parties can still reach a deal.

"It's never easy, it's never painless, but it can be done," he said.

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Congress can't agree on the next coronavirus stimulus deal as relief funds dry up - CNBC

Disney’s Carousel of Progress Closed for Unknown Reasons – Inside the Magic

Walt Disneys Carousel of Progress in Magic Kingdom park is down for unknown reasons. Tomorrowlands rotating theater audio-animatronic stage show attraction has been reported closed for most of today, July 30, and the My Disney Experience app confirmed this news.

It is unknown at this time how long the attraction will be down. We at Inside the Magic will continue to update this story as more information comes to light.

Now, this attraction could be due for some refurbishment. We have covered a few stories lately where the original Walt Disney has faced some notable glitches. One of the latest being when John, the animatronic narrator, had his hand come flying off mid-show.

Read More: Animatronics Hand Falls Off Mid-Show at Carousel of Progress at Disney World

However, Walt Disney World has not yet announced that its beloved Magic Kingdom show is closed for refurbishment or that its schedule is unavailable beyond today.

Related: Tomorrowland PeopleMover Remains Closed for Now

Walt Disney World Resort describes Walt Disneys Carousel of Progress as the following:

Follow an American family over 4 generations of progress and watch technology transform their lives.

During each era, learn how the technological marvels of the day made life more comfortableand paved the way for unimaginable innovations.

Discover how gas lamps, the hand-cranked washing machine and gramophone made the pre-electric era a breeze.

Watch the advent of electricity give rise to modern conveniences like the electric iron, the radioand the simple, revolutionary light bulb.

See how the automatic dishwasher and television set transformed the American household.

Todays high-tech marvels include virtual-reality games, high-definition televisions and voice-activated household appliances. Imagine the wonders the next hundred years may bring!

The show originally debuted at the 1964 Worlds Fair and prides itself in being the longest-running show in American theater. Added to Disneyland park in 1965, the show was moved to Walt Disney World Resort in 1975 where it was reworked to replace its iconic anthem Theres a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow, with the new The Best Time of Your Life. The original song was put back in the show in 1994, and you can still hear the tune playing in Tomorrowlands ambient music.

Related: VIDEO: Guests climb on stage during Disneys Carousel of Progress

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Disney's Carousel of Progress Closed for Unknown Reasons - Inside the Magic

Newlyweds Brought Closer Together by Husband’s Heart Transplant – Wgnsradio

Monica and Kevin felt an immediate spark when they met at a mutual friend's birthday party in 2012. But before they could schedule their first official date, Kevin was rushed to the hospital. As the Memphis-area couple's relationship grew, Monica learned that Kevin suffered from a chronic condition called congestive heart failure. Despite the fact that he led a heart-healthy lifestyle, the 34-year-old barber periodically experienced episodes of extreme shortness of breath and severe pain caused by fluid buildup in his lungs and other organs. Lying in bed sometimes hurt Kevin so much that he had to stack pillows around his body for support and sleep with his chest bent to his knees. At some points, Kevin was in too much pain to go work. He took a variety of medicines and had regular cardiology appointments, but the bouts persisted as the couple married and built a life together in Olive Branch, Mississippi, with Kevin's young daughter.

In April 2019, the couple drove to Nashville for their first consultation with Dr. Warren Stribling of Ascension Saint Thomas Heart. Dr. Stribling surprised the couple by asking Kevin to stay in Nashville for about a week of observation. Although Kevin didn't have any clothes packed for a lengthy stay and Monica hated leaving town without her husband, she says now that "it was the best decision we could have ever made for our family."

During that first stay at Ascension Saint Thomas West, Dr. Stribling mentioned that Kevin might ultimately need a transplant. After testing, observation, paperwork, and a short return to Olive Branch, Kevin was officially added to the transplant wait list in July 2019. On August 22, 2019, Dr. Ashok Babu announced that a heart had arrived for Kevin. Monica recalls that she was "a big ball of emotions" as she sat waiting during Kevin's operation. After the successful surgery, the couple stayed at the Hospitality House of Nashville for three months as Kevin regained his strength.

Today, the family of four is thriving. Monica, now 37, gave birth to their youngest daughter in 2016 and teaches personal finance to juniors and seniors at a Germantown high school. Kevin, now 42, has returned to his beloved job as a barber. Monica jokes, "I call Kevin my 'Tin Man' because he got his new heart." The couple celebrates little victories like the moment in February 2020 when Kevin was finally approved to drive his car again. They are taking extra precautions during the pandemic to keep Kevin safe, as being a recent transplant recipient puts him at higher-risk for developing Covid-19 complications.

"I used to wonder 'Why me, God'?" says Kevin, adding: "Now I think to myself, 'Why not me'? Why can'tIbe an example to others? I enjoy every day I get with my family and my job, and I ask God to use me however He wants."

The couple has now been married 4 years and they will celebrate Kevin's 1-year "heartiversary" on August 23.

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Newlyweds Brought Closer Together by Husband's Heart Transplant - Wgnsradio

Supreme Court blocks Idaho group from gathering ballot initiative signatures online – CNN

The order concerning the ballot process in the age of Covid-19 comes as the court's conservative majority has turned away other attempts to ease voting-related restrictions because of the pandemic.

The case stems from the actions of Reclaim Idaho, a political action committee that seeks to increase funding in K-12 education. It had attempted to gather the necessary signatures for a ballot initiative, but had to suspend its campaign because it felt uncomfortable seeking signatures during the pandemic.

It claimed its First Amendment rights were violated when Idaho law was not suspended to allow the group to collect signatures electronically. A district court judge extended deadlines and ordered the state to accept electronic signatures.

Idaho Gov. Brad Little, a Republican, accused the court of seizing "control of Idaho's initiative process" and contravening "an almost century-old principle of Idaho law requiring in-person collection of petition signatures."

"No system of checks and balances can support such an arbitrary abandonment of constitutional and statutorily-assigned election responsibilities," his lawyers told the justices in court papers.

Thursday's order was unsigned. Chief Justice John Roberts, joined by Justice Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, wrote to explain their thinking as to why they voted to block the lower court order.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, dissented.

It is unclear how the other justices voted but it would have taken the votes of five justices to block the order.

Sotomayor noted that the lower court had required Idaho to "accommodate delays and risks" introduced by the coronavirus. She noted that a federal appeals court is due to hear the case on August 11 and if it determines that the lower court's injunction was "improper" the state could still omit the initiative from the November ballot.

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Supreme Court blocks Idaho group from gathering ballot initiative signatures online - CNN

Militias’ warning of excessive federal power comes true but where are they? – Jacksonville Journal-Courier

(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

Amy Cooter, Vanderbilt University

(THE CONVERSATION) Militias and many other Second Amendment advocates have long argued that their primary desire to own firearms often, many of them is rooted in a need to protect themselves and their families from a tyrannical federal government, or to discourage the government from becoming tyrannical in the first place.

But with the mayor of a major U.S. city warning that tyranny and dictatorship have already arrived on the streets in the shape of unidentified federal troops using questionable tactics militia groups appear reluctant to throw their lot in with protesters. In fact, many have been supporting government action to suppress peaceful demonstrators.

Certainly the scenes in Portland have alarmed civil liberties groups:Heavily armed and camouflaged federal officers, wearing no name tags or other insignia, are on the streets of Portland, Oregon, and have teargassed and arrested seemingly peaceful protesters with little or no provocation. President Donald Trump has said similar forces are coming to other cities many run by Democrats.

To some, it may look exactly like what the militias have been warning of.

As a scholar of the U.S. domestic militia movement, I have seen in recent months a new divide emerging in these groups.

Some, often calling themselves the boogaloo movement, see the current political unrest as an opportunity to wrest power from an overbearing federal government. Others support police and their enforcement of strict law and order, even if that means authorities using powerful weapons and overwhelming force.

Shifting online dynamics

Assessing what these groups are doing, and how they are discussing recent events, has become more difficult for observers like me in recent weeks. On June 30, Facebook announced it had removed hundreds of accounts and groups allegedly related to the boogaloo movement.

The move came in the wake of several arrests of alleged boogaloo adherents across the country, including three in Nevada accused of plotting to firebomb federal land and one in Texas accused of killing one police officer and critically injuring another.

Boogaloo groups still have a social media presence and, until recently when the portion of the site they used was closed, a large presence on the Reddit discussion site, where comments are loosely regulated and people can post anonymously.

Now the movements public face is smaller and harder to find without insider knowledge. For instance, until recently it was common to see groups with the words big igloo in their names, a play on the word boogaloo. After Facebooks crackdown, some groups are using the word icehouse or other synonyms that may not be as obvious. They are therefore harder for algorithms to find, but also for people to find whether to observe or to join in.

Backing the boog

The groups who back the boogaloo imply, or even outright declare, that the U.S. is no longer a free country, and generally call for supporters to oppose, violently if necessary, federal forces and the government they represent.

In the days after George Floyds death, I saw some of these groups call for members to participate in protests opposing police violence. But I have not seen similar calls in response to federal officers violence in Portland.

That may change if federal forces do appear in other places, especially areas geographically closer to active back the boog supporters. It is also possible that the groups are discussing protests or other actions in less public ways, in private messages or on platforms like Parler, that have marketed themselves as friendlier toward a variety of conservative views.

Backing the blue

There are still militia members who support police, often called back the blue groups. Commentators have observed that silence from them and other Second Amendment supporters certainly seems to be hypocritical, at best, and possibly supportive of tyranny in the current context.

Thats not the way they see it. They argue that one of the few legitimate functions of the federal government is to protect citizens from others who might infringe on their rights or safety. They support police who say that Portland authorities have failed to protect regular people from violent protesters.

Thats also what these groups claimed happened in Seattles autonomous zone though they rely on news sources that describe the protesters as inherently dangerous and hampering business and free association. They seemingly ignore or discount other reports that these characterizations are exaggerated. In my research, I found that militia members were likely to exclusively trust sources like Fox News or even more conservative sites for their information, and recent data confirms that such sources may strongly shape viewers understanding of political and other events.

Mistaken perceptions?

This view of protesters as violent is amplified by some back the blue members belief that the demonstrators are Marxist members of antifa, a mostly nonviolent leaderless collective movement generally opposing fascism.

For example, one Facebook group shared a video of Christopher David, the Navy veteran beaten by federal officers in Portland, talking about his experience. A commentator responded, The end of the video tell[s] the tale, hes going to raise money for [Black Lives Matter]! He is a liar he went there to stand with his commie comrades.

Scholarship on conservative groups argues that they use anti-communist language to cast political opponents as not real Americans who have thus have forfeited any protections U.S. citizens should have.

Anti-liberal rhetoric

Some other back the blue members see hypocrisy in liberals, noting that few, if any, on the left objected when federal officers killed LaVoy Finicum during the 2016 standoff between federal officials and armed supporters of rancher Cliven Bundy during a land dispute elsewhere in Oregon.

There are sharing pages like one on a well-known conservative satire site that suggests the same Oregon authorities opposing federal officers tolerate violent behavior from protesters because of identity politics the idea that certain groups favored by liberals, in this case, Black people, are held to a different and more lax standard.

Several Facebook pages shared an image of a modified Gadsden flag, with a Black Lives Matter fist and promising we will tread as proof that Portland protesters would take away others rights, including the right to bear arms, if given the chance and thus do not deserve protection themselves. One comment in support of such a post read, I[m] glad to see Im not the only person happy to see these commies being snatched up and dragged away. Yes, I know that this could just as easily be turned around and that we could also be dragged away in broad daylight. But if they arent stopped now, and they do somehow manage to gain complete power, well get dragged away anyways. Better them than us, before its too late.

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Federal intervention has not stopped the Portland protests from growing, but some analysts expect Trump to increase the response in an attempt to appeal to his supporters as the country heads into the November election. Many people fear that move would spark violence.

The back the blue militia members generally respect law and order enough to not fulfill their threats of violence or criminal action but the back the boog groups may not be so restrained. The back the blue groups may also act if federal action escalates, and members believe they are needed or useful to help defend the interests of average citizens.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/militias-warning-of-excessive-federal-power-comes-true-but-where-are-they-143333.

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Militias' warning of excessive federal power comes true but where are they? - Jacksonville Journal-Courier

Ethics commissioner expands probe of Morneau on eve of PM’s WE testimony – The Outlook

OTTAWA Federal ethics commissioner Mario Dion is widening his investigation of Finance Minister Bill Morneau's dealings with WE Charity.

Dion was already investigating Morneau and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for possible violations of the Conflict of Interest Act for not recusing themselves during cabinet discussions about an agreement to have WE Charity run a federal volunteering program for students who couldn't find work in the COVID-19 pandemic.

Both have apologized for not doing so.

Morneau's problems grew bigger Wednesday over his repayment of $41,000 in WE-sponsored travel expenses for family trips three years ago, with Dion telling the opposition parties he would look into that potential ethics violation.

Rules prohibit ministers or their families from accepting free travel, lest it be seen as buying influence in government policy.

In letters released by NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus and Conservative critic Michael Barrett, responding to their complaints, the commissioner wrote he will look into whether Morneau ran afoul of that rule and a separate one for "failing to disclose these gifts" that could lead to a fine, albeit not a large one.

For Trudeau, the issues stem from speaking fees and related expense reimbursements the WE organization paid to his mother, brother, and wife, amounting to over $500,000 based on testimony the charity's co-founders provided to the House of Commons finance committee Tuesday.

During an afternoon news conference Wednesday, Conservatives said the new numbers related to the travel expenses also demand an additional investigation by Dion to see if the payments violate conflict-of-interest rules.

Dion rejected a call from the Tories to look into whether Morneau has failed to publicly declare previous recusals from cabinet decisions, saying they offered him no reasonable grounds to believe that had happened.

It all landed on the eve of Trudeau's own appearance at the Commons finance committee about the events that led to his cabinet to ask WE Charity to oversee a program that provides grants to students and graduates for volunteering if they couldn't find work this summer due to the pandemic-related economic slowdown.

His chief of staff, Katie Telford, is also to appear.

The two were originally scheduled to appear separately for one hour each, but opposition MPs on the finance committee voted Wednesday evening to have Trudeau appear for at least three hours and Telford for at least two each of them alone.

The partisan barbs and rhetoric on display Wednesday set the stage for a potentially contentious and rare prime ministerial appearance.

"We want the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth," Conservative finance critic Pierre Poilievre said in Ottawa.

He warned the Opposition would look to pry more testimony out of Trudeau this fall if he didn't provide detailed answers.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he wanted Trudeau to explain why the Liberals opted to have the charity run a service program when there were other, potentially easier, avenues to help financially strapped students.

He cited increasing student grants or putting more money into the Canada Summer Jobs program as examples.

"This was never about helping students," Singh said Wednesday in Burnaby, B.C.

"This was about helping close friends of the Liberal government and of Prime Minister Trudeau and that is deeply troubling."

The Liberals budgeted $912 million for the student-volunteer program, but only agreed to pay a maximum of $543 million to WE. That included about $43.5 million in administration fees to the group, with the remainder to be spent on the grants.

The program is to pay eligible students and graduates $1,000 for every 100 hours of volunteering, up to a maximum of $5,000. The government has yet to roll it out nearly a month after WE backed out over the controversy.

On Tuesday, WE co-founders Craig and Marc Kielburger told the finance committee they expected the program to cost up to $300 million because the majority would earn between $1,000 and $3,000, with few hitting the maximum amount.

They also spoke about the expenses paid to Trudeau's family members, and the $41,000 in travel expenses for Morneau and his family, which the finance minister paid back last week.

Their message to the committee was that it was their history as an organization that earned them the deal, not any political ties. Similarly, the Liberals say they acted on the advice of the non-partisan public service.

The ethics committee is meeting separately to look into the conflict-of-interest safeguards around government spending decisions.

While its members have asked Trudeau to testify there, a Conservative proposal to have cabinet ministers declare whether any of their relatives have ties to WE failed to land the necessary votes.

The Conservatives' Barrett argued opposing the motion amounted to "complicity in a cover-up," prompting Liberal MP Greg Fergus to argue the committee shouldn't be used for a political witch hunt where MPs investigate each other.

Angus, the New Democrat on the committee, cautioned against forging ahead with any probe against MPs or ministers absent a specific reason: "Fishing expeditions, I believe, are beyond the purview of the committee."

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

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version said the commissioner is expanding investigations of both Bill Morneau and Justin Trudeau; however, he is only expanding his investigation of Morneau.

Link:

Ethics commissioner expands probe of Morneau on eve of PM's WE testimony - The Outlook

Planting Justice’s Prison Abolition Work Starts at the Root – KQED

The same thoughts keep running through his mind. That guy sitting in his cell wondering if hes going to outlive his sentence, all the amends he made or wants to makewill he get to see that through? Will he get to be like me and the numerous other people who are formerly incarcerated and are doing great things in the community right now? I think about them and that my voice has to be in advocacy for them.

B

eyond the urgency of the San Quentin COVID outbreak, Lockhearts day-to-day work at Planting Justice is about the longterm project of prison abolition, which means working with people to build healthier communities. The definition of that is manifold. It means helping formerly incarcerated people get on their feet through green jobs at Planting Justice, awakening them to a new sense of purpose by building raised flower beds for clients and tending to plants at the organizations nursery and farm. It means teaching about sustainability and food justice in public school classrooms, juvenile detention centers, jails and prisons. It means helping people who live in food deserts start urban gardens. It means handing out free kale smoothies at Castlemont High School during a time when many are going hungry because of the pandemic-induced recession.

If we go in and teach these people how to grow their own food and how to be sustainablethe Black Panther Party got it right, Lockheart says. With no food and no options, [people are] gonna go get it how they can. And unfortunately, thats crime. And crime equals prison. We wanna abolish the prisons, we wanna abolish all these systems, but we first have to plant the seeds of love, trust and sustainability.

Lockheart and his fellow reentry coordinator Diane Williams sow those seeds by helping their colleagues get acclimated to life outside of prison, sometimes in ways people whove never been incarcerated may take for granted. Planting Justice gives former residents, as formerly incarcerated people are called there, clothing and food stipends; Lockheart and Williams help them navigate bureaucratic tasks such as reinstating a drivers license after a DUI. They offer emotional support too. Meditation circles are as much a part of the workday as pulling weeds and watering strawberries and squashes.

Really its believing in them and whatever they bring to the table thats positive, encourage that, says Williams, who brings 40 years of social work and substance-abuse counseling experience to Planting Justice. So much stuff that happened to us as a little kids, we keep recycling it as adults until we process it and move on. So were just helping each other move on here.

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Planting Justice's Prison Abolition Work Starts at the Root - KQED

Exeter vigil will mark 75th anniversary of Hiroshima bomb – In Your Area

InYourArea Community

Exeter Quakers are hosting a socially distanced peace vigil on Sunday, August 9, from 10:45am until 11:15am, at the Exeter Peace Tree in Southernhay

A service marking 75 years since the second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki is being held in Exeter, Devon.

Exeter Quakers are hosting a socially distanced peace vigil on Sunday, August 9, from 10:45am until 11:15am.

The vigil will be held at the Exeter Peace Tree in Southernhay, opposite the United Reform Church, exactly 75 years since the second atomic bomb was dropped on the Japanese city.

The atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9 1945 killed up to a quarter of a million people, half of them instantly, leaving shadows of some people etched on the ground.

A spokesperson from the Exeter Quakers said: Ever since they have been a reminder of the immorality of nuclear weapons.

The vigil will take place in front of the Japanese Cherry Tree planted by the Lord Mayor of Exeter in February 2005 to mark Exeter joining mayors of towns and cities around the world, including 90 in the UK, to declare a commitment to work for a nuclear free world.

The organisation, based in Hiroshima, declares: We pledge to make every effort to create an inter-city solidarity, transcending national boundaries and ideological differences, in order to achieve the total abolition of nuclear weapons and avert the recurrence of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki tragedies.

The spokesperson added: As Quakers we hold working for peace as one of our core testimonies and have been prominent in the peace movement in Britain and around the world.

The event will be introduced by Exeter Quaker Laura Conyngham, who will recall her powerful visit to Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

She said: While I was at the tomb, a group of citizens asked me to lay a bouquet for a photograph to illustrate a guidebook for tourists. I felt utterly guilty.

For further information contact Ian Martin on 07980 301058 or Laura Conyngham on 01363 773000.

See the latest news, information, conversations and much more, all tailored to your neighbourhood, in your InYourArea live feed here.

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Exeter vigil will mark 75th anniversary of Hiroshima bomb - In Your Area

Locals call for end to ICE contract with McHenry County – Northwest Herald

Although there was a demonstration Saturday in the historic Woodstock Square calling for the abolition of ICE, it might have looked a little different than previous protests and rallies that have been held earlier this year.

People still held signs, saying "America Runs on Immigrants," "Humans, not Aliens" and demanding the end of McHenry County's contract with ICE.

However, protest organizer Tony Bradburn said Saturday's event was a little less "rah-rah" and more about learning and growing.

"ICE is not just about the borders," Bradburn said. "ICE is right here in McHenry County."

Through its agreement with the U.S. Marshals Service, McHenry County earns $95 a day for each ICE detainee held at the McHenry County Jail.

Sponsoring organizations of Saturday's protest included Activists for Racial Equity (Crystal Lake and Surrounding Communities), Elgin in Solidarity with Black Lives, Standing up Against Racism (Woodstock), McHenry Direct Action, Warp Corps of Woodstock and Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist: Social Justice.

"We want to make sure that people know about the stories of the voiceless," Bradburn said.

One of the stories told by Bradburn, submitted by someone before the rally, was about someone who's father was deported in 2013, when they were 10.

This person had to celebrate their quinceanera and graduation without their dad.

Several other people told stories at Saturday's rally, documenting tales of those who were afraid to get domestic violence help because they were undocumented, of a 15-year-old who spent their first Christmas in the U.S. in a detention center, and one person who said it would cost them $10,000 to become documented.

Luis Aguilar, a teacher in McHenry High School District 156, said a lot of his students are Hispanic, and some of them are DACA recipients, or DREAMers, who commit to work, school or the armed forces.

When he tells students there's an ICE detention center in Woodstock, he can see the fear reflect off their eyes, Aguilar told attendees.

"We must recognize that any profit made off of that detention center is made off of human misery," he said.

Amanda Garcia, an immigration lawyer from Crystal Lake, said people do not have a good impression of a community that supports an ICE detention facility.

Garcia spent 18 months working in McHenry County Jail, visiting there twice a week to provide legal orientations to those who did not have immigration attorneys.

When taking their information down, Garcia would ask where they lived before they were detained," she said.

"McHenry, Woodstock, Crystal Lake, Elgin, Carpentersville. They would tell me all the little towns they came from, and I knew where they were because that's where I go grocery shopping. That's where I live. That's where I come to spend the Saturday," Garcia said. "So these are real people in our community."

Adi Jimenez, of Woodstock, said she wanted to support immigrants in the community.

"I know a lot of people who are affected by this," she said. "They're afraid to go out and stand up for themselves because they don't know what's going to happen."

This is why Jimenez said she wants to use her privilege from being born in the U.S. to stand up for people.

" [ICE] is attacking a lot of people that don't really deserve to be targeted," she said. "There are a lot of children right now that are locked up in cages without their family members without their parents. They're just all alone and It's just really sad."

Woodstock resident Mariam Figueroa held a sign with the Bible verse Isaiah 1:17 written on it, which read "Learn to do right, speak justice defend the oppressed."

"This verse is so significant for why it's important to abolish ICE," she said. "People are coming, children, mothers without protection. They're seeking asylum, but they're turned away. But to be Christ-like, to be a Christian, means to help them.

"To be a real Christian, you need to really love and embrace everyone, even if they're different than you," Figueroa said. "Even if you're not a Christian, to love everyone is essential."

Haidy Perez, from Crystal Lake, said she has a lot of family who are immigrants and DACA recipients.

"ICE is something our country really doesn't benefit from anymore," Perez said. "If anything, I would say it is more fear-mongering than it is protecting us."

Perez said her father, although he is in the U.S. legally, has still gotten questions about his background and been detained.

"We're a nation of immigrants," she said. "Everyone comes from different backgrounds. I just feel like ICE has targeted my community and has really struck fear into the hearts of innocent people."

A resolution to cancel the intergovernmental agreement between McHenry County and ICE is on the agenda of the next Law and Government Committee meeting for the McHenry County Board, at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday.

At the event, attendees were encouraged to call members of the committee to encourage them to end the contract, and were given sheets of paper with their contact information.

Lillian Purich, with McHenry Direct Action, was disappointed with the response she got when she called McHenry County Board Member Bob Nowak.

She said when he picked up, he said: "What the [expletive] is going on?"

"Then I went to start talking and he just hung up," Purich said. "It's just not what I was expecting. You'd think if someone was on the board they'd be a bit more welcoming with a phone call from someone from the public."

Requests for comment from Nowak were not returned.

Organizers told people to be respectful, and only call board members from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, Purich said.

She's not discouraged, however, adding that it just makes her want to call more.

"It's horrible that families are being torn apart from each other," Purich said.

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Locals call for end to ICE contract with McHenry County - Northwest Herald

Vast Increase in Police Taser Use a Threat to Life, Report Warns – VICE

ABritish police officer uses a Taser during training. Photo:Finnbarr Webster / Alamy Live News

Taser use by British police forces in Manchester and London has increased rapidly, posing a growing threat to life, a new report published by Resistance Lab warns.

The report details how police use of the electric stun guns has increased by more than 500 percent in England and Wales over the last ten years, with particular focus on Manchester and London. Using police use of force statistics from the Home Office, the report states that the Metropolitan Polices use of Tasers increased by 49 percent in the last year, while use by Greater Manchester Police increased by 73 percent. Both figures are higher than the national average of 39 percent. In Greater Manchester, the number of Taser incidents rose from 832 in 2017/18 to 1,442 incidents in 2018/19. Greater Manchester also had the second-highest use rate of Tasers of any police force in England and Wales, other than the Met.

Resistance Lab, a Manchester-based group of academics and activists working to confront state violence, warns that this increase in Taser use poses a growing threat to life. This is in part due to the risk of cardiac complications associated with the weapon.

Police use of Tasers also disproportionally affects Black people. According to Home Office stats, highlighted by the report, Black people are four times more likely to be Tasered by police than white people.

The report comes at a time when increased scrutiny has been placed on police treatment of Black people following the death of George Floyd in the US. The pandemic has also resulted in an increased use of police force. The number of stop and searches has risen dramatically during the pandemic, and BAME people are more likely to be fined under coronavirus legislation than white people.

In June, rapper Wretch32 shared a video on Twitter of his 62-year-old father, Millard Scott, being Tasered by police in his home. The video was widely circulated at the time, drawing criticism for the perceived unnecessary use of a weapon. In an interview with ITV News, Scott said: Im lucky to be alive.

The only people who have invaded our space are the Metropolitan Police, he continued. The only people who seem to ignore the guidelines put out there are the Metropolitan Police. It seems at this moment in time we are being singled out and targeted.

Dr. Kerry Pimblott, author of the study and lecturer in international history at the University of Manchester, told VICE News: Since the introduction of the weapon in 2003, at least 18 people have died following Taser usage by police and many more have sustained serious injury and lasting trauma. These individuals and their families have, in many cases, fought protracted battles to secure justice and to alert the wider public to the very real threat to life that these weapons pose in the hands of police.

Unfortunately, an examination of the Home Offices own use of force data indicates that these warnings have not been heard, she continued. Tasers are being rolled out to more and more frontline officers around the country and their use is becoming increasingly routinised.

Resistance Lab states that more cases in which members of the public suffer serious injury or death from Tasers are to be expected, and is calling for the abolition of the weapon.

VICE News contacted the Metropolitan Police. A spokesperson said: Taser is a vital tool in keeping safe both members of the public and police officers. Officers undergo rigorous training before they are allowed to use Taser and are required to pass an annual refresher course to ensure they remain competent in its use.

Officers know and expect to be held to account for their actions. We welcome scrutiny around the use of Taser, and examine our processes regularly to ensure it is being used in an appropriate manner. We also work close [sic] with policing nationally to discuss and take forward matters that have an impact on policing across the UK and link in with our dedicated firearms and Taser independent advisory group members for their valuable help and guidance. We always take concerns about disproportionality seriously and this forms part of our regular scrutiny within the Met around the use of Taser.

Looking closely at London Taser data from the Home Office reveals many incidents in which Tasers were deployed by police officers who had not received official training. According to Gavin Haynes, an independent researcher of policing, a breakdown of the stats reveals 98,017 incidents where Tasers were used by officers who were not recorded as being Taser trained. This is larger than the number of officers who were recorded as Taser trained who used the weapon (63,002 cases). Out of those 63,002 incidents, 16,816 occurred when officers were not recorded to be carrying the weapon while on duty.

VICE News also contacted Greater Manchester Police for comment but had not received a response at the time of publishing.

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Vast Increase in Police Taser Use a Threat to Life, Report Warns - VICE

The Case for Replacing the Bar Exam With "Diploma Privilege" – Reason

By now, almost everyone recognizes that large gatherings in confined, indoor spaces risk spreading the Coronavirus pandemic. Nonetheless, 23 states are currently conducting or planning to soon conduct in-person bar exams for new applicants for licenses to practice law. Even with precautions, putting hundreds of people in indoor spaces together for many hours at a time creates serious risks of exacerbating the pandemic.

Admittedly, the danger is smaller because most bar exam takers are young and healthy. However, there are still some older bar applicants, such as lawyers moving from one state to another, who need to be licensed in their new homes. And, of course, some young exam takers have health conditions or weakened immune systems, that make them especially vulnerable, as well. In addition, exam takers could potentially spread the disease to others, including some who are older or otherwise more vulnerable to Covid.

I am not one to say that all seriously risky activities should be avoided so long as the pandemic continues. There is, I think, a strong case for moving forward with those that create enormous benefits that cannot be achieved in another way. That, however, is not true of the bar exam, where there is the obvious alternative of "diploma privilege"giving bar cards to anyone who has graduated from an accredited law school. Four states Utah, Washington, Oregon, and Louisiana, have adopted this approach in various forms, joining the state of Wisconsin, which has had it for in-state law schools for years. Other states should follow this example.

The standard argument against diploma privilege is that the bar exam requirement is needed to protect consumers from incompetent lawyers. But there is no evidence that bar exams actually achieve that goal, as opposed to serving as a barrier to entry that protects incumbents in the profession from competition. The quality of legal services in Wisconsin has not suffered from its longstanding diploma privilege policy. Bar records indicate that attorneys in that state have disciplinary records similar to those in other states.

Such results are not surprising. The truth is that the bar exam is a test of arcane memorization, not a test of whether the applicant is likely to be a good attorney. That's why, as my co-blogger Orin Kerr puts it, "when it [the exam] is over you can forget everything you just learned."

For that reason, I have long advocated the abolition of bar exams, most recently here:

The reason why you can "forget everything" immediately after the exam is that very little of the material on the exam is actually needed to practice law. It's a massive memorization test that functions as a barrier to entry, not a genuine test of professional competence. That strengthens the case for my view that the bar exam should simply be abolished.

My general view on bar exams is that they should be abolished, or at least that you should not be required to pass one in order to practice law. If passing the exam really is an indication of superior or at least adequate legal skills, then clients will choose to hire lawyers who have passed the exam even if passage isn't required to be a member of the bar. Even if a mandatory bar exam really is necessary, it certainly should not be administered by state bar associations, which have an obvious interest in reducing the number of people who are allowed to join the profession, so as to minimize competition for their existing members.

Defenders of bar exams argue that consumers would otherwise have little or no way to tell whether a given lawyer is competent or not. But, in reality, there are many other signals to determine that. Often, clients hire not a specific lawyer, but a firm. In that event, the firm's reputation is a signal of quality, and firms have an incentive to protect that reputation by avoiding the hiring of incompetents. Even with solo practitioners, quality can be discerned by consulting past clients, and a variety of other mechanisms.

Legal scholar Gillian Hadfield has an excellent article making the case that barriers to information can be further reduced by eliminating prohibitions on the corporate practice of law. If corporations were allowed to provide basic legal servicesas they currently do with many other professional services, such as accountingthat would reduce cost and also make it easier to signal quality. When you hire H&R Block to do your taxes, you are relying on the overall reputation of the firm, not on that of the specific person who handles your case. Legal services can work similarly.

These methods are not perfect. But they are likely to be far better than relying on bar exam passage as a signal of quality, since the latter is really just a test of memorization.

One possible alternative to "diploma privilege" is simply postponing bar exams, as some states have done. But that prevents thousands of recent law graduates from earning an income in the meantimeand blocks clients from using their services. If states are unwilling to forego the bar exam entirely, they should at least provide temporary diploma privilege for a period of, say, three years, by which time the pandemic is likely to be over, and bar exams can be safely administered.

Online bar exams are another possible solution. The obvious objection to them is that it is extremely difficult to prevent cheating on an online "closed book" exam. It may well be impossible to ensure that a test-taker doesn't have study guides or reference books with her as she takes the exam. That doesn't bother me too much, because I believe bar exams are a sham credential in any case. But even I recognize there is some unfairness in a format that rewards those most willing to cheat. In addition, not everyone has access to software and internet connections that are likely to be reliable through many hours of exam taking.

On balance, online exams seem preferable to in-person ones, or to keeping law school graduates in limbo until in-person exams become safer. But diploma privilege is a better approach than either.

For those states that stubbornly insist on holding in-person exams during a pandemic, I am tempted to revive my "modest proposal" for bar exam reform (first developed many years ago):

Members of bar exam boards and presidents and other high officials of state bar associations should be required to take and pass the bar exam every year by getting the same passing score that they require of ordinary test takers. Any who fail to pass should be immediately dismissed from their positions. And they should be barred from ever holding those positions again untilyou guessed itthey take and pass the exam.

After all, if the bar exam covers material that any practicing lawyer should know, then surely the lawyers who lead the state bar and administer the bar exam system itself should be required to know it. If they don't, how can they possibly be qualified for the offices they hold? Surely it's no excuse to say that they knew it back when they themselves took the test, but have since forgotten. How could any client rely on a lawyer who is ignorant of basic professional knowledge, even if he may have known it years ago?

Of course, few if any bar exam officials or state bar leaders could pass the bar exam without extensive additional study (some might fail even with it). This material isn't on the exam because you can't be a competent lawyer if you don't know it. It's there so as to make it more difficult to pass, thereby diminishing competition for current bar association members..

My proposed reform wouldn't fully solve this problem. But it could greatly diminish it. If bar exam board members and bar association leaders were required to take and pass the exam every year, they would have strong incentives to reduce the amount of petty trivia that is tested. After all, anything they include on the exam is something they themselves will have to memorize! As prominent practicing lawyers, however, they presumably are already familiar with those laws that are so basic that any attorney has to know them; by limiting the exam to those rules, they can minimize their own preparation time. In this way, the material tested on bar exams might be limited to the relatively narrow range of legal rules that the average practicing lawyer really does need to know.

If the knowledge tested on bar exams is so important that we must ensure all practicing lawyers know iteven at the risk of exacerbating a deadly pandemicthen surely that principle applies with extra force to prominent leaders of the legal profession, particularly those responsible for setting professional standards for others. By this reasoning, they should have to take the exam on the same terms as they impose on new bar applicants. If that means taking an in-person exam during a pandemic, then so be it!

On balance, however, I will not insist on this idea, so long as the pandemic continues. I recognize that many bar association leaders are likely to be at special risk, due to age and health conditions. The "modest proposal" might be a useful reform under normal conditions. But it would be wrong to impose it now.

We should not require bar leaders to risk their lives and health for no good reason. But they, in turn, should not impose such risks on others.

Finally, critics may argue that, as a law professor, I have a self-interest in promoting "diploma privilege." My brief response is that I have also long advocated abolishing or at least reducing the requirement that all lawyers attend ABA-accredited law schools, as well. I have also long advocated a variety of other reforms that would have the effect of reducing the demand for law school education and legal services generallymost notably reducing the number and complexity of laws. I don't claim diploma privilege is the optimal regulatory regime, merely that it's superior to system under which lawyers are required to both have a diploma and pass a worthless bar exam.

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The Case for Replacing the Bar Exam With "Diploma Privilege" - Reason

Prince Harry warned rash action will ‘add fuel to fire’ after Duke ‘surprised’ by backlash – Express

Anti-monarchy group, Republic, have referred the Royal Foundation to the Charity Commission, claiming money given to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's charity endeavours was an "inappropriate use of charitable funds". The Duke of Sussex's response to the accusation was said to have "made more of this story than necessarily warranted".ITV Royal Rota podcast hosts Chris Ship and Lizzie Robinson noted the difference in responses between the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

A spokesperson for Kate and William said: "The grants made to Sussex Royal were to support the charitable work of The Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

They were fully in line with governance requirements and were reported transparently.

Prince Harry issued a significantly longer response through his legal team.

Ms Robinson said that they may have felt that due to the nature of the accusations they wanted to provide a further comment.

READ MORE:Camilla, Duchess' hidden message in 'specially made' outfit revealed

She told listeners: "A lot of people have said the response made more of this story than necessarily warranted.

"The Royal Foundation's had two lines. That deals with it, and it goes away.

"But by putting out paragraph after paragraph, there is much more that can then be reported and said about this.

"So it's sort of adding fuel to the fire."

Excerpts from Harry's statement include saying it was "deeply offensive to see false claims made about the Duke of Sussex and his charitable work".

They continued: "It is both defamatory and insulting to all the outstanding organisations and people he partnered with.

"To suggest otherwise in unequivocally wrong and will be acted on accordingly with the weight of the law."

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Mr Ship said: "Republic isn't going to put out reports or press releases that support the monarchy.

"It's whole purpose is for the abolition of the monarchy, I don't know why Harry was so surprised about that.

"It is the job of pressure groups to create publicity around their cause, and they have successfully done that. Or you could say Harry has successfully done that."

A legal letter will be issued to Republic in due course.

The Charity Commission put out a statement saying they have not made any determination of wrongdoing.

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Prince Harry warned rash action will 'add fuel to fire' after Duke 'surprised' by backlash - Express

Motorway roadworks speed limit raised to 60mph – What Car?

The news comes soon after the Governments recent pledge to invest 1.7 billion into repairing local roads and speeding up work on major road networks.

The 60mphlimit in roadworks is likely to have the biggest impact in areas where smart motorways are being introduced. New safety measures, including the abolition of dynamic hard shoulder sections and an increase in the number of Highways England traffic officer patrols, have been introduced on smart motorways in response to concerns over their safety.

Jim OSullivan, chief executive of Highways England, said: All of our research shows that road users benefit from 60mph limits in roadworks. They have shorter journey times and feel safe.

Road users understand that roadworks are necessary, but they're frustrated by them. So testing 60mph has been about challenging the norm while ensuring the safety of our people working out there and those using our roads.

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Smart motorways are a response to increasing congestion on UK motorways; they use cameras and remotely-controlled speed limit signs to control the flow of traffic, and many allow cars to be driven on the hard shoulder either all or some of the time.

The thinking behind them is toadd an extra 33% of capacity to our motorway network at a fraction of the cost in money and to the environment of physically adding another lane to every stretch of motorway. They also improve traffic flow, helping to compensate for the 2 billion a year that the UKs economy losesdue to congestion caused by long-term underinvestment in roads and increased traffic volume.

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Motorway roadworks speed limit raised to 60mph - What Car?

Trans Women Are Still Being Held in Men’s Prisons. Is Changing That Enough? – VICE

I've been down too many years. I've been raped and assaulted. This ain't nothing new, C Jay Smith told her attorneys in March of 2019. Smith, a Black transgender woman currently incarcerated at San Quentin Prison, has served over two decades behind barsalways among men. She would have been eligible for parole in 2023, but now faces up to 10 extra years behind bars, for what she says were infractions correctional officers gave her unfairly, as a form of retaliation for coming forward about being severely and consistently harassed and sexually assaulted by fellow prisoners. Now, shes suing California prison officials for the alleged retaliation, and for claims that officers continually refused to investigate her reports of assault.

The complaint filed by Smiths attorneys against the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is extensive. Nearly forty pages long, it lays out how, when Smith first arrived at a CDCR Reception Center 1998, she was raped by multiple male inmates consecutively over the course of four days. It then goes on to detail her 22 year history of incarceration in mens prison, which includes indecent exposure and lewd sexual acts by many men in custody and another instance of rape by other prisoners.

In early March, Smith told her Mental Health Primary Clinician that she was being repeatedly sexually harassed and assaulted by another prisoner who raped her seven years prior. Her report initiated a mandatory investigation. But instead of starting a process to determine whether Smith needed additional protections, the complaint states that prison guards interrogated her for hours and referred to her with transphobic slurs. The guards caged Ms. Smith like an animal, verbally berated her, threatened her with physical assault, sexually harassed and assaulted her, and issued her multiple fabricated Rules Violations Reports (RVR) riddled with glaring inconsistencies and due process violations, the complaint reads.

I just want to walk out of prison one day, Smith told her attorneys last year. I dont want to be rolled out of here.

Smiths experiences are endemic to trans women, and particularly trans women of color, in the prison system. A 2007 report looking at sexual assault in Californias prisons found that the rate of sexual assault for trans women was 13 times higher than for men in the same prisons. Other studies have found that correctional staff themselves can be a major obstacle to preventing sexual violence in prisons because of their lack of acceptance of trans people, tolerance of sexual violence, unwillingness to intervene, and lack of interest in informing inmates about its prevalence. But a new law seeks to change the experiences of people like C Jay in the state of California.

State Bill 132, the Transgender Respect, Agency, and Dignity Act, would require that prisons appropriately gender and house incarcerated people based on their identity and preferences. It would further require that trans people have their perception of health and safety given serious consideration. The bill is currently in the assemblys appropriations committee after being passed by the state senate in May. All legislative business in California must conclude by August 31st, which means SB 132 could be passed in a matter of weeks. California State Senator Scott Wiener, who proposed the bill, said hes hopeful about its chances of passing, but cant yet be sure that it will.

California is not alone in considering gender based reforms in prisons to protect transgender people. New York, Washington DC, Massachusetts and Connecticut have already taken similar legal and informal steps. But in an abolitionist future, SB 132 is caught in a familiar paradox of either going too far, or not far enough. Jennifer Orthwein, one of Smiths attorneys, said Smiths experience is common.Their first time down, theres generally a hazing that happens, she said. Trans women are assaulted when they get inside, then its a matter of navigating safety once theyre inside.

The extremely limited research on incarcerated trans people reveals that trans prisoners in general endure disproportionate levels of sexual assault. A 2015 report found that trans respondents who had been held in jail, prison, or juvenile detention in 2014 were over five times more likely to be sexually assaulted by facility staff than the U.S. population in jails and prisons, and over nine times more likely to be sexually assaulted by other inmates. Meanwhile, national incident-level data has shown that when trans prisoners are sexually assaulted by another prisoner, the incident is more likely to involve weapons yet less likely to evoke medical attention if needed.

Senator Wiener says this particular form of violence is precisely what SB 132 seeks to stem. Trans women in particular are at such high risk for severe violence, he said. Transgender community members and advocates came to speak with Wiener years ago about the horrific experiences of trans people in California prisons, and opened his eyes to issues such as lack of healthcare access, to being misgendered, to staff using the wrong pronouns, to the housing issue. Wiener believes SB 132 provides a corrective. While trans people are incarcerated, SB132 will ensure they be treated with the dignity that they deserve, he said.

But activists, and Smiths own lawyers, know that SB 132which relies on legal compliance, training, and cultural change within the prison industrywalks a fine line between cosmetic and seismic change. Especially at a time when closing prisons and defunding police has become a part of the national political conversation, some greet reforms like SB132 with reservation.

Part of that skepticism comes from the fact that prison guards, like those who allegedly perpetrated much of Smiths trauma, would be the ones tasked with implementing SB132. Thats not necessarily promising, considering that 37 percent of trans people who served time in jail reported having been harassed by correctional officers.

We see this [retaliation] all the time, Orthwin said, particularly with trans women who raise concern and dissent over their safety.

Felicia Medina, Smiths other attorney, added: The fact that people [outside of prisons] think theyre safer with police or corrections officers who function like a gang to terrorize people kills me.

Still, activists see the importance for such reforms as a form of harm reduction. Freddie Francis is a member of the Transgender Advocacy Group (TAG), a coalition based in California that supports, advocates for, and organizes with members of the trans community behind bars with the long-term vision of abolishing all carceral systems. Francis is also one of the many organizers who have been pushing for SB132 in the last few years. Its been complicated, they said, but [SB132] has the potential to set the stage for how trans people are imprisoned on a national basis.

At the same time, Francis is concerned. [SB132] makes me nervous because I dont want people in institutions to get the impression that there is a safe, just, or humane way to imprison people.

Eric Stanley, a longtime community organizer and co-editor of the landmark anthology Captive Genders, which traces the relationship between transness and the prison industrial complex, agrees. Is the thing were fighting for the thing that we have to be fighting against in five years? they asked.

Still, Stanley added: "If this is something people inside really want or ask for, its something we have to support."

Bamby Salcedo, the CEO and President of the TransLatin@ Coalition, spent 14 years in and out of prison. For her, abolition is a dream and SB132, which she helped create, is a reality. How can we support individuals who are incarcerated? she asked. Many who have life sentences will continue to be incarcerated. We do our best to support them until we finally get to the abolition of the prison industrial complex.

A staggering one in every two Black transgender people has been behind bars. Such statistics highlight the myriad pipelines to prison that trans people of color face, and the reasons that trans activists of color are fighting for widescale changefrom decriminalizing sex work, to gaining access to housing and education. This week, Salcedo became one of only two people she knows in her community to have earned a masters degree.

Salcedo wants to see a sweeping systems-level overhaul. Im hoping that people understand the fact that our community continues to be criminalized because of who we are and how we have to resort to street economies to survive and get arrested and incarcerated, she said. Next, were going to push for what is just, what our communities deserve, and to seek the dignity we deserve.

Similar to Salcedo, Medina said Smith is a leader who protects other trans women incarcerated at San Quentin. Her life before incarceration was of marginalization and oppression, Medina added. She never should have been locked up to begin with.

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Trans Women Are Still Being Held in Men's Prisons. Is Changing That Enough? - VICE

"Unrest" Is Not the Enemy. Fascism Is. – Truthout

A federal officer tells the crowd to move while dispersing a protest in front of the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse on July 21, 2020, in Portland, Oregon. State and city elected officials have called for the federal officers to leave Portland as clashes between protesters and federal police continue to escalate.Nathan Howard / Getty ImagesNote: This is a rush transcript and has been lightly edited for clarity. Copy may not be in its final form.

Kelly Hayes: As Black Lives Matter protests continue to play out around the country, images of protesters squaring off with police in Portland have inflamed debates about peacefulness, violence and respectability. Some liberal figures have argued that Trumps law and order narrative is facilitated by imagery of police dueling with protesters, and that unity will be needed to halt the march of fascism. Such critics have pointed to the riots of the late 60s, claiming that the Civil Rights Movement was derailed by those who resorted to violent tactics in the streets.

As someone who has been calling on people for years to lock arms against the threat of fascism, regardless of personal difference, I can appreciate some of the sentiments behind these assertions. But I, too, see some tired historical patterns at work. It is very easy, as Nathan J. Robinson recently wrote in Current Affairs, to blame groups whose actions frustrate us for larger outcomes that disappoint us. This phenomenon can be observed in arguments that particular riots derailed the Civil Rights Movement, despite innumerable efforts to derail civil rights organizing, and a disastrous presidential campaign waged by Hubert Humphrey against Richard Nixon. Some people have blamed those who riotously rebelled against anti-Black violence for Nixons election, despite the many factors working in Nixons favor, including Humphreys incompetence as a candidate.

We are seeing a similar narrative being spun now. Even though Biden is not a terribly formidable opponent, we are told that if Trump wins, it will be the fault of people who threw soda cans at police after being brutalized and terrorized their entire lives, rather than the fault of people who have enabled Trump, and those who paved the path to his violence. We are told that if Trump wins, it will be the fault of Black protesters, and others acting against the anti-Black violence of the state, rather than the violence of white supremacy itself.

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We have similarly seen claims that the L.A. Rebellion of 1992 led to a newfound enthusiasm for mass incarceration and austerity among Democrats, even though such accelerations had been well underway throughout the 1980s. Even historic romanticizations of the idea of general strikes a tactic we may well need in order to remove Trump often strip away the reality that the labor movement is, itself, rooted in a great deal of rebellion and historical violence. But blaming rioters for the outcomes of presidential elections is much worse than whitewashing the history of the labor movement in the U.S. Because blaming those with the least power for what unfolds at the highest levels of government is an abdication of responsibility.

Why would I trust someone who paints the marginalized as the problem because they are demonized? Why would I trust people who say that our communities must be controlled in a manner that demonization dictates? Demonizing people while demanding their votes is, to put it mildly, a flawed strategy. Its also absurd. When water sits too long on the stove and boils over, do we lecture the water for jumping out of the pot? Black people are tired of being murdered without consequence. They are tired of employing all manner of protest, only to be briefly applauded or spit at, and then cast aside. Decrying a lack of nonviolent direct action training among people who are tossing plastic bottles at police will not transform them into Alinsky-style organizers which also shouldnt be the goal.

It takes a certain belief in liberal politics to blame those who benefit the least from such politics for the failures of the Democratic Party. Many of us are unlikely to survive another four years of Trump without winding up in a cage. Many will not survive at all. There are horrors ahead regardless of who wins, to be sure, but the importance of derailing fascism is not lost on me. But how the Democrats win, and who is ground under or sold out in the process matters. I will not sanctify this system to save it from a fascist because burying the truth about how we got here will not help us escape.

Folks who have positioned leftists as the problem in this moment have found an easy mark in Portland and this is true of both conservatives and liberals who are taking aim at direct actions that they consider violent. Portland is largely white, which allows people to attack the actions of protesters without directly criticizing Black protesters around the country who may also have destroyed property or thrown objects at police. But the targeted goal is the same: to foster the idea that good liberals arent like that, so centrists should relate to them and share their goals.

Liberals are demanding cooperation from the left and from the most oppressed people in the U.S., not just at the polls, where our executive options are extremely limited, but also in how we endure an era of collapse. The idea that unrest can be kept at bay as a society falters is folly. Unrest will be part of the current political moment. Pivots in energy and expression are important, because narratives are easily lost amid chaos, but if unrest is the key to Trumps victory, then liberals need to figure out how to leverage unrest, and the potential for unrest, to their own advantage, because they simply do not have the power to wish it away.

I will organize for collective survival and for collective liberation, but as someone who wants to dismantle the oppressions that uphold this system, I will not play into ahistorical notions of what these institutions are, in order to rally people to protect them. I will not insult Black and Native people who have righteously rebelled by asking them to pledge allegiance to a country that has violently excluded them from its social contract since its bloody inception. I believe that marginalized people are capable of processing the need for a united front, and if I am wrong about that, it wont be because the mythological unity that some are proposing would have persuaded people.

I do think imagery of street fights between Trumps fed squads and protesters could help reelect Trump. But Trump will also win if this political moment becomes a duel between liberals and the left over respectability and peacefulness. I think this is a good time to examine the lessons of history and also to ask questions. Why did people in the 1960s riot rather than uniformly committing to nonviolence? How did nonviolence fail them? How did white people who demanded an adherence to nonviolence fail them? Was measuring the utility of their efforts in electoral outcomes alone true to the needs or the aims of Black people? Why are some liberals so sure that it was the riots of the late 60s, as opposed to a historically inevitable white fatigue around Black-led protest, or the horribly run campaign to elect Humphrey, that delivered us to Nixon? History is a progression of events, but it is also a jumble of actions and reactions that cannot be cleanly divorced from each other.

Trump sows chaos. Liberals attacking the left over a peacefulness that will not come is part of that chaos, although to them, it may feel like order because it is an effort to impose order. In an unjust society, restoring order is often the work of maintaining injustice. If you want people who are inclined to break things, to do something else, then organize something meaningful and invite people to direct their energies there.

Lets hold direct actions that invite people to do more than just show up for the next march. Lets plan actions that invite people to defend tenants from eviction. Lets invite people to actions that become blockades against ICE. Lets invite people to actions that encourage networks of care in our communities, where we meet our neighbors and align against the forces that are harming them. Militancy has a place, and that place is the discipline with which we sustain one anothers survival. Because even larger storms are looming in the distance, and we need to be anchored to one another when they arrive.

As an organizer, I will not ask people to claim unity where it does not exist. I will not ask people to pledge allegiance to anything or romanticize anything that would kill them. I will not tell people they must publicly fetishize social contracts that were never meant to include them and rarely have.

What I will do is tell people that living to fight another day is always part of my strategy, and that come what may, and whatever tactics we must employ we are worth it. The things we believe in are worth it. The future that could be is worth it. And survival is worth it, because without that, there is nothing else. So whether we are taking on police violence, evictions, federal relief, ableism or any of the other issues we must face, when I step into the fray, I am inviting folks to join me in an act of survival in the pursuit of collective liberation. So lets dream new worlds into being with the protests we stage, and lets survive together, so that we might live to see those dreams realized in a freer, more beautiful world.

To those of you who are in the streets protesting, whether you are marching, setting up mutual aid tents or squaring off with Trumps feds, my heart is with you, and with everyone who would be there if they could. Onward to Black liberation, the destruction of capitalism and white supremacy, and the abolition of the prison industrial complex. Until next time, Ill see you in the streets.

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"Unrest" Is Not the Enemy. Fascism Is. - Truthout

Aerospace Composites Market Set to Reach $41.4 Billion by 2025 – Revenue Breakdown by Fiber, Matrix, Application, Manufacturing Process, Aircraft and…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Aerospace Composites Market by Fiber Type (Carbon, Ceramic, Glass), Matrix Type, Application, Manufacturing Process, Aircraft Type (Commercial Aircraft, Business & General Aviation, Civil Helicopter, Military Aircraft), and Region - Global Forecast to 2025" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The global aerospace composites market size is projected to grow from USD 23.8 billion in 2020 to USD 41.4 billion by 2025, at a CAGR of 11.7% during the same period.

The aerospace composites offer exceptional properties, such as low weight, stiffness, strength, tenacity, density, thermal & electrical conductivity, fatigue, and corrosion resistance. Owing to these outstanding properties, conventional materials, such as aluminum and steel, are less preferred in high-performance applications such as aircraft interiors and exteriors. However, the global pandemic disease COVID-19 has forced the aerospace component manufacturers to shut down their operations partially, which is expected to decrease the demand for aerospace composites in 2020.

The ceramic fiber composite segment of aerospace composites to be the fastest-growing segment in terms of value.

The aerospace composites in the ceramic fiber composite segment are expected to register faster growth. There is a high demand for ceramic fiber composites for making jet engines from commercial, military, civil, business, and general aviation aircraft. On account of the development of production facilities by major companies and increased investments in R&D, these fiber composites have a significant market share in Europe and North America.

Ceramic matrix composites to be the faster-growing matrix type, in terms of value.

Ceramic matrix composites are reinforced with discontinuous reinforcement, such as particles, whiskers or chopped, fibers, or with continuous fibers. The matrix is used to keep the reinforcing phase in the required orientation, which acts as a load transfer media, and protects the reinforcement from the environment. The ceramic matrix composites offer properties such as high damage tolerance, fracture toughness, and high temperature, wear, and corrosion resistance, which are driving the use of ceramic matrix composites in the aerospace composites market.

Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, the new aircraft deliveries are expected to reduce in 2020, which will result in reduced less demand for ceramic matrix composites from gas turbine engines, nose caps, and exhaust nozzles applications. The demand is expected to recover after 2020.

The commercial aircraft segment to be the fastest-growing aircraft type, in terms of value, in the aerospace composites market.

The commercial aircraft segment is the fastest-growing aircraft type in terms of value, of the overall aerospace composites market in 2019. There is a high demand for carbon fiber composites in commercial airliners as they enable reduction of weight, increase fuel efficiency, reduce assembly time & maintenance, and improve performance. A large number of commercial airplane deliveries in the single-aisle, widebody, twin-aisle, and regional jet segments are expected to increase the demand for carbon fiber composites during the forecast period. Due to COVID-19, the travel restrictions are affecting negatively, which has resulted in fewer aircraft deliveries and expected to reduce composite demand in 2020.

APAC is projected to be the fastest-growing aerospace composites industry.

APAC is projected to be the fastest-growing aerospace composites market during the forecast period. The region comprises countries, such as Japan, China, and India, having significant potential owing to the presence of established raw material suppliers, product manufacturers, and increasing new aircraft deliveries in the region. There is a high demand for aerospace composites from the aerospace industry in the region. However, COVID-19 has negatively affected the aerospace industry in the APAC region. Japan, China, and Malaysia provides various components to aircraft manufacturers; the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in less demand for the new aircraft, which is expected to reduce composite consumption in these countries in 2020.

The report provides a comprehensive analysis of company profiles listed below:

Key Topics Covered

1 Introduction

2 Research Methodology

3 Executive Summary

4 Premium Insights

4.1 Attractive Opportunities in the Aerospace Composites Market

4.2 Aerospace Composites Market, by Fiber Type and Region, 2019

4.3 Aerospace Composites Market, by Matrix Type

4.4 Aerospace Composites Market, by Application

4.5 Aerospace Composites Market, by Manufacturing Process

4.6 Aerospace Composites Market, by Aircraft Type

4.7 Aerospace Composites Market, by Key Countries

5 Market Overview

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Market Dynamics

5.2.1 Drivers

5.2.1.1 Government Stimulus Packages for the Aerospace Industry Amid the COVID-19 Crisis

5.2.1.2 High Demand for Composite Materials from the Aerospace Industry

5.2.1.3 Development of Fuel-Efficient Aircraft

5.2.2 Restraints

5.2.2.1 Decrease in the Number of Commercial Aircraft Deliveries

5.2.2.2 Disruption in the Supply Chain and Lower Production Capacity Utilization due to the COVID-19 Pandemic

5.2.3 Opportunities

5.2.3.1 Reduction in the Cost of Carbon Fiber

5.2.3.2 Development of Advanced Software Tools for Aerospace Composites

5.2.4 Challenges

5.2.4.1 Maintaining Uninterrupted Supply Chain and Operating at Full Production Capacity

5.2.4.2 Liquidity Crunch

5.3 Porter's Five Forces Analysis

5.4 Value Chain Analysis

5.5 Ecosystem/Market Map

5.5.1 Raw Material Analysis

5.5.2 Manufacturing Process Analysis

5.5.3 Final Product Analysis

6 Macroeconomic Overview and Key Trends in the Aerospace Industry

6.1 Macroeconomic Overview and Key Trends

6.1.1 Introduction

6.1.2 Trends and Forecast of GDP

6.1.3 Trends in the Aerospace Industry

6.1.3.1 Disruption in the Industry

6.1.3.2 Impact on Customers' Output & Strategies to Resume/Improve Production

6.1.3.3 Impact on Customers' Revenue

6.1.3.4 Most Affected Countries

6.1.3.5 Short-Term Strategies to Manage the Cost Structure and Supply Chains

6.1.3.6 New Opportunities

7 Aerospace Composites Market, by Fiber Type

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Carbon Fiber Composites

7.3 Ceramic Fiber Composites

7.4 Glass Fiber Composites

7.5 Others

8 Aerospace Composites Market, by Matrix Type

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Polymer Matrix Composites

8.3 Ceramic Matrix Composites

8.4 Metal Matrix Composites

9 Aerospace Composites Market, by Application

9.1 Introduction

9.2 Interior

9.3 Exterior

10 Aerospace Composites Market, by Manufacturing Process

10.1 Introduction

10.2 AFP/ATL

10.3 Lay-Up

10.4 Resin Transfer Molding

10.5 Filament Winding

10.6 Other Processes

11 Aerospace Composites Market, by Aircraft Type

11.1 Introduction

11.2 Commercial Aircraft

11.3 Business & General Aviation

11.4 Civil Helicopter

11.5 Military Aircraft

11.6 Others

12 Aerospace Composites Market, by Region

12.1 Introduction

12.2 North America

12.3 Europe

12.4 APAC

12.5 MEA

12.6 Latin America

13 Competitive Landscape

13.1 Introduction

13.2 Competitive Leadership Mapping

13.2.1 Visionary Leaders

13.2.2 Dynamic Differentiators

13.2.3 Emerging Companies

Original post:

Aerospace Composites Market Set to Reach $41.4 Billion by 2025 - Revenue Breakdown by Fiber, Matrix, Application, Manufacturing Process, Aircraft and...

Impact of Covid-19 on Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials Market is Projected to Grow Massively in Near Future with Profiling Eminent…

The Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials market report by Reports and Data provides an extensive overview of the vital elements of the Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials market and factors such as the drivers, restraints, latest trends, supervisory scenario, competitive landscape, technological advancements, and others. The report proposes a full-fledged solution for all your business needs and helps understand the overall dynamics of the market. The market report offers an in-depth evaluation of all aspects that are expected to impact the growth of the market in a constructive way.

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The report studies the following companies:

Precision Castparts Corporation, Aperam SA, AMG, Alcoa Inc., Allegheny Technologies Incorporated, Carpenter Technology, Haynes International Inc., Hitachi Metals Ltd., Outokumpu, Timken Company, and VSMPO-AVISMA Corporation.

This market report shows that the Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials industry has achieved remarkable growth. The data provided in the report is based on an in-depth and extensive assessment of the Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials industry. The analysis mentioned in the report delivers useful insights that will help the readers determine new and powerful strategies. In conclusion, the analysts provide unbiased information about the overall market in the report.

Type(Revenue in USD Million; 20162026)

Industrial Grade,

Technical Grade

Applications(Revenue in USD Million; 20162026)

Aircraft Type Outlook (Volume, Kilo Tons, and Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

Regional Outlook (Revenue in USD Million; 20162026)

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Research Methodology:

The market engineering process has used a top-down and bottom-up approach as well as the data triangulation methods to analyze and evaluate the size of the overall market and several other dependent sub-markets listed in the report. Both qualitative and quantitative analysis has been conducted in order to list key information and insights.

Key questions answered in the report:

Read the Full TOC of the Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials Market Research Study @ https://www.reportsanddata.com/report-detail/steel-alloys-aluminum-alloys-aerospace-materials-market

All the percent shares, breaks, and classifications included the report are determined using various secondary sources and are then confirmed through the primary sources. All factors that might affect the overall market dynamics are mentioned in the report and have been extensively researched and reviewed. This study includes both quantitative and qualitative insights through interviews with industry experts, including the CEOs, vice presidents, directors, and marketing executives of several companies, as well as the annual financial reports of the top market participants.

Essentials of the TOC:

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The Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials Market report delivers the principle locale, latest economic situations with the item value, benefits, production capacity, demand and supply, market development rate, and others. Additionally, the report also performs SWOT examination, speculation attainability investigation, and venture return investigation.

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Impact of Covid-19 on Steel Alloys Aluminum Alloys Aerospace Materials Market is Projected to Grow Massively in Near Future with Profiling Eminent...