A troubling pandemic thought: Are THESE the good old days? – The Associated Press

HOPE VALLEY, R.I. (AP) News articles dont carry Hollywood-style viewer ratings or trigger warnings. Maybe this one should.

But consider this: What if THESE are the good old days?

Depressing as that might seem after the coronavirus pandemic has claimed well over 630,000 lives worldwide, cost tens of millions their jobs and inflicted untold misery across the planet, its entirely possible increasingly likely, some say that things will get worse before they get better.

Americans in particular have been optimists by nature for the better part of four centuries. But even here, a bleak dystopian vision is emerging in some corners. Its not pretty.

It imagines a not-too-distant future where well all look back with nostalgia at 2020 as a time when most of us had plenty of food and wine, could get many of the goods and services we needed, and could work from home at jobs that still paid us.

This could be as good as it gets, so lets take pleasure in what we have now, Katherine Tallman, the CEO of the Coolidge Corner Theatre, an indie cinema in Brookline, Massachusetts, told a recent Zoom roundtable.

The pandemic continues to buffet the planet economically, dashing hopes that the worst of the joblessness might be behind us.

For 18 consecutive weeks now, more than a million Americans have sought unemployment benefits. New infections have been surging in states like Florida and California that power the economy, threatening peoples health and livelihoods for the foreseeable future.

Thats bad. But in online forums and on social media, futurists see the potential for worse. Much worse. Their musings arent for the faint of heart.

Its likely that few, if any, of their forecasts will come to pass. This time next year, we may well marvel at how swiftly this existential threat was vanquished. But with the numbers going in the wrong direction, and collective confidence badly shaken, those given to ruinous thoughts can be forgiven for thinking the worst:

What if humanitys frantic efforts to produce a viable vaccine take longer than envisioned, allowing the virus to kill indiscriminately in the interim?

What if that coincides with a climate calamity that ruins crops and shatters supply chains, stripping supermarket shelves bare of much more than hand sanitizer and toilet paper?

For all our kvetching about masks, could we one day find ourselves having to don hazmat suits just to leave the house?

Is it such a stretch to imagine the economic fallout moving beyond jobs and 401(k)s and wiping out entire industries setting off a global Great Depression, Part Two?

The pandemic is going to get worse and worse and worse, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters last week. There will be no return to the old normal for the foreseeable future.

Even President Donald Trump, in a notable departure from his generally insistent stance that the U.S. has the outbreak under control, said the nasty horrible virus will probably unfortunately get worse before it gets better.

Margaret Hetherman, a New York City-based writer and futurist, thinks some of our darker pandemic experiences things like fighting over canned goods and hoarding toilet paper could foreshadow more dire years ahead if global warming continues unabated.

Were getting a taste of what could be ahead if we dont get control of ourselves here. The empty shelves could be just the beginning, she said. Its hard to imagine, but the climate crisis upon us is probably going to render this a piece of cake by comparison.

The Rhode Island village of Hope Valley mirrors the new COVID-19 landscape. More is closed than is open, including the local Grange community center, usually a beehive of activity and human connection.

NO YOGA, reads a plastic sign out front. BE HEALTHY BE HAPPY BE SAFE, it adds, though the hamlet like thousands of other small towns nationwide is powerless to help its people accomplish any of those things.

For businesses and consumers alike, a new order appears to be dawning one in which the risk of viral outbreaks increasingly is seen as perpetual, not a one-off.

These times were in right now perilous as they are will soon be looked back on fondly as the good old days. Prepare accordingly, tweeted Columbia University philosopher Rory Varrato.

The website Quartz.com asked experts in business, technology, food, the arts and other sectors how the world will be different in five years because of the coronavirus. Their responses? Largely grim.

My bet is that movie theaters wont exist, said one, University of Pennsylvania psychologist Adam Grant.

The pandemic has pummeled airlines and the hospitality industry. The American Hotel and Lodging Association warns that more than 8,000 U.S. hotels could close for good as early as September. Restaurants also are imperiled: Without government intervention, Democratic U.S. Sen. Edward Markey of Massachusetts cautioned this month, there could be an extinction experience.

Politics, too, cloud the horizon and moods. For some, a dystopian future includes four more years of Trumps chaotic presidency; for others, the election of Joe Biden and a sudden lurch back to the left.

As if all that isnt enough to bring down the room, people love to share word of random supposed signs of the apocalypse things that certainly arent, like the North American invasion of murder hornets and that squirrel in Colorado that was found to have been infected with bubonic plague.

That stuff we mostly shrug off. But the future, writ large, is serious business. It is, after all, where we pin our hopes and dreams.

If these do turn out to be the good old days, at least there are things for which we legitimately can be thankful: more time and meals together with loved ones; an extended reprieve from soul-sapping commutes; and for some of us a greater emotional investment in our children, if only because were seeing a lot more of each other.

Even now, we can find joy in a day, said Hetherman, the futurist. Even if were in a hazmat suit, God help us, well have to find what joy we can.

___

APs coverage of the virus outbreak can be found at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak. William J. Kole is APs New England editor; follow him on Twitter at https://twitter.com/billkole.

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A troubling pandemic thought: Are THESE the good old days? - The Associated Press

Images of first moments of sunrise from space station will make you gasp in wonder – Hindustan Times

Images of first moments of sunrise from space station will make you gasp in wonder - it s viral - Hindustan Times "; forYoudata += ""; forYoudata += ""; forYoudata += ""; count++; if (i === 7) { return false; } }); forYouApiResponse=forYoudata; $(forutxt).html('Recommended for you'); $(foruContent).html(forYoudata); } } }); } else if(forYouApiResponse!=''){ $(forutxt).html('Recommended for you'); $(foruContent).html(forYouApiResponse); } } function getUserData(){ $.ajax({ url:"https://www.hindustantimes.com/newsletter/get-active-subscription?usertoken="+user_token, type:"GET", dataType:"json", success: function(res){ if(res.length>0) { $("[id^=loggedin]").each(function(){ $(this).hide(); }); } } }); } function postUserData(payLoad, elm){ var msgelm=$(elm).parents(".subscribe-update").nextAll("#thankumsg"); $.ajax({ url:"https://www.hindustantimes.com/newsletter/subscribe", type:"POST", data:payLoad, contentType: "application/json", dataType: "json", success: function(res){ if(res.success===true){ $(msgelm).show(); 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Images of first moments of sunrise from space station will make you gasp in wonder - Hindustan Times

KULR Technology wins second US patent for its NASA-grade Thermal Runaway Shield – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

TRS suppresses potentially catastrophic thermal runaway (rapid jump in temperature) in lithium-ion battery packs and is now in use aboard the International Space Station

KULR Technology Group Inc () won a second US patent for its Thermal Runaway Shield (TRS) a passive propagation resistant solution designed to reduce the hazardous associated with thermal runaway (rapid jump in temperature) in lithium-ion battery packs.

The companys TRS is a sleeve-like shield that surrounds and separates individual cells in multi-cell packs and contains carbon fiber core and liquid coolant to keep an exploded cell from causing a catastrophic fire through the entire battery pack.

The unique combination and configuration of the shield passively draws intense heat of cell failures away from nearby cells while dousing the failed area in a cooling and fire-prevention liquid.

The TRS product is used by NASA to transport to and store batteries aboard the International Space Station.

Securing this patent is a substantial leap forward in our research and development of products that make batteries safer, Timothy Knowles, co-founder and chief technology officer of KULR, said in a statement Wednesday.

We are very pleased with the development of our patent portfolio. This new issuance expands the breadth and depth of our battery safety technology covering catastrophic battery failures.

In a comprehensive analyst report by Litchfield Hills Research last month, the firm estimated that KULR's technology has an addressable market of $8 billion.

Both the growth of electric-motor based transportation and demand for increased safety of lithium-ion batteries are key drivers for KULR, the report said. KULR has what we believe to be better and lighter materials for thermal management.

Michael Mo, CEO of KULR, added: Battery safety is a global concern across many large and rapidly growing markets such as electric vehicles, battery storage, 5G infrastructure, and space exploration. We continue to work with government agencies, regulators and commercial customers across the world to deploy our technology.

Campbell, California-based KULR's stock recently traded up by 1% to $1.31 a share in New York.

Contact the author: [emailprotected]

Follow him on Twitter @PatrickMGraham

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KULR Technology wins second US patent for its NASA-grade Thermal Runaway Shield - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Night-Time Exposure to Blue Light Including Many Tablet and Phone Screens Associated With Increased Risk of Cancer – SciTechDaily

International Space Station night image of Madrid, courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA. 12 February 2012. Time: 02:22:46 GMT (local time 03:22:46) (ISS030-E-82052). Credit: Courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA.

Blue light has become an increasingly common component of urban outdoor lighting. But how does it impact our health? A team led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a center supported by the la Caixa Foundation, has conducted the first study of the association between night-time exposure to outdoor artificial light and colorectal cancer. The findings, published inEpidemiology, show that exposure to the blue light spectrum may increase the risk of this type of cancer.

Previous studies have found associations between night-time exposure to artificial light especially blue light and various adverse health effects, including sleep disorders, obesity and increased risk of various types of cancer, especially in night-shift workers. Blue light is a range of the visible light spectrum emitted by most white LEDs and many tablet and phone screens. An earlier study by ISGlobal found a link between exposure to blue light at night and increased risk of breast and prostate cancer.

Using the same methodology as the previous study, we decided to analyze the relationship between exposure to artificial light and colorectal cancer, the third most common type of cancer worldwide after lung and breast cancer, explained Manolis Kogevinas, Scientific Director of the Severo Ochoa Distinction at ISGlobal and coordinator of the new study. The World Health Organisations International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies night-shift work as probably carcinogenic to humans; breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer are associated with the highest risk.

International Space Station night image of Barcelona, courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA. 18 April 2013. Time: 22:10:46 GMT (local time 00:10:46) (ISS035-E-23385). Credit: Courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA.

The authors analyzed data obtained through the MCC-Spain project on approximately 2,000 adults in Barcelona and Madrid, of whom 660 had colorectal cancer and the rest were randomly selected from the local population. Individuals with a history of working night shifts were excluded. Night-time levels of outdoor artificial light were determined using images from the International Space Station (ISS).

Results from both cities showed that participants with the highest exposures to blue light had a 60% higher risk of developing colorectal cancer than the less exposed population. No association was found with full-spectrum light.

Night-time exposure to light, especially blue-spectrum light, can decrease the production and secretion of melatonin, depending on the intensity and wavelength of the light, explains Kogevinas.

Because exposure to light was estimated using satellite images, this calculation did not take into account individual behaviors such as the use of rolling shutters, which is common in Spain and other Mediterranean countries. The estimate of exposure can therefore be interpreted as the amount of light people are exposed to when they are outside their homes a common pattern in Spain and inside their homes before closing the shutters and going to bed.

There is growing concern about the effects of light on ecosystems and human health, commented Kogevinas. Research on the potential effects of light exposure is still in its infancy, so more work is needed to provide sound, evidence-based recommendations to prevent adverse outcomes.

Reference: Association between outdoor light-at-night exposure and colorectal cancer in Spain (MCC-Spain study) by Garcia-Saenz, Ariadna; Snchez de Miguel, Alejandro; Espinosa, Ana; Costas, Laura; Aragons, Nuria; Tonne, Cathryn; Moreno, Victor; Prez-Gmez, Beatriz; Valentin, Antonia; Polln, Marina; Castao-Vinyal, Gemma; Aub, Martin andKogevinas, Manolis, 24 June 2020, Epidemiology.DOI: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001226

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Night-Time Exposure to Blue Light Including Many Tablet and Phone Screens Associated With Increased Risk of Cancer - SciTechDaily

One Direction’s Big Bang Read An Excerpt From ‘Larger Than Life’ – NPR

One Direction didn't win The X Factor in 2010, but filled stadiums, broke records and our hearts. Alex Fine/Courtesy of Black Dog & Leventhal hide caption

One Direction didn't win The X Factor in 2010, but filled stadiums, broke records and our hearts.

Ten years ago today, July 23, One Direction created the universe. Read an excerpt from Maria Sherman's new book, Larger Than Life: A History of Boy Bands from NKOTB to BTS, about 1D's formation and meteoric rise.

Once, there was nothing. Then there was something. There was everything. The big bang created the universe. The spectacular explosion, the smallest singularity, inflated for nearly 14 billion years. That time might as well have been filled with darkness, because it wasn't until 2010 that one Irish lad and four young Brits from working-class families Mullingar, Ireland's Niall Horan, the cute one; Wolverhampton's Liam Payne, the responsible one; Bradford's Zayn Malik, the shy one; Doncaster's Louis Tomlinson, the class clown/bad boy; and Redditch's Harry Styles, the heartthrob auditioned as soloists on the seventh season of The X Factor. Who could have known that the cosmic microwave called existence would zap up a reality singing competition show, leading to the most glorious time in the universe, the creation of One Direction?

Separately, X Factor judges Simon Cowell, Cheryl Cole, and Louis Walsh couldn't continue to advance the teenage boys in good faith. They were all talented, but not yet great, and they obviously couldn't dance. Malik especially. Then, an epiphany: Simon Cowell (or Simon Cowell and guest judge/Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger, if you take her account as the truth) had the idea to group Niall, Liam, Zayn, Louis, and Harry together to form a harmonic quintet, the youngest boy band the show had ever seen. That decision, rumored to have taken Cowell ten minutes to come up with, would prove to be one of the most rewarding, simple experiments in modern pop music history. After two weeks in the show's "boot camp" program after auditions an accelerated timeline for burgeoning friendships, let alone collaborative careers something clicked. A cover of Natalie Imbruglia's "Torn" later, and One Direction ("1D" if you're nasty) was official. They came in third place on the show, but that didn't matter.* They had something much more gargantuan in store.

Larger Than Life: A History of Boy Bands from NKOTB to BTS, by Maria Sherman Black Dog & Leventhal hide caption

Losing the X Factor in December 2010 was a pivotal moment for 1D. At the time, there weren't many popular male vocal groups in the U.K., save for an embryonic version of the Wanted and JLS. Short for Jack the Lad Swing, the R&B-pop group of adult men couldn't really be deemed a boy band, so the need was there. Cowell, an industry Svengali in his own right, instantly saw One Direction's potential. (Not to knock his know-how, but with hundreds of girls lining up for them outside of the X Factor studio during the competition, it would've been hard to miss.) He signed the boy band to his Sony Music record label imprint, Syco Records, in January 2011 in the U.K. Turns out, it was great timing for Cowell as well: another Syco boy band, Westlife, recently announced their retirement. He needed a new group just as much as One Direction needed to capitalize on their nascent popularity. A few months later, One Direction was signed to Columbia Records stateside. With the exception of the Jonas Brothers, American audiences really hadn't seen a monolithic boy band since *NSYNC. They needed them, too.

And so, at the beginning of 2011, One Direction got to work. Cowell put them in touch with hit American songwriter Savan Kotecha, a Max Martin protege, who, with a small team, produced their debut single, "What Makes You Beautiful." The song, released on September 11, was exactly what the young group required to not only sustain their hype postX Factor but deliver on it: an affirming, high-energy, no-nonsense, perfect piece of pop that made them appear sweet, sensitive, and attainable, the kind of boys who put women on a pedestal. If there is a better way of encapsulating exactly what a girl needs to hear while coming to terms with the absolute horror show that is heterosexuality during puberty, when the world begins to instruct her to hate herself, I have yet to hear it. The video, too, was playful with modest touches of sensuality (it doesn't hurt that it was filmed on the same stretch of beach as Blink-182's parodic "All the Small Things," an Easter egg for boy band fans if there ever was one). Kotecha told Billboard that the secret to "What Makes You Beautiful" and boy band music in general is doing "the exact opposite of what's going on... teenage girls need to feel it's their own thing." Radio was dominated by Rihanna, Adele, and LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem," so he certainly accomplished that.

A combination of marketing, momentum, and music so joyful it should come with a warning for serotonin secretions, One Direction released their debut LP, Up All Night, with "What Makes You Beautiful" and the lovelorn, rock-tinged "One Thing." The album shot up the charts in the U.K. in 2011 and in 2012, debuted at number 1 in the U.S., making them the first English group to ever debut atop the charts with their first album. Really think about that for a moment. The Beatles never even did this s***.

When One Direction voyaged to North America later that year, they inspired their own sort of Beatlemania. Actually, it might've been even grander because of the advent of social media and their brilliant utilization of it. One Direction's unedited Justin Bieberesque Twitter sharing led fans to believe they were close to the boys, an illusion of access more palpable than even what watching their X Factor auditions provided. Fans felt more like friends, a priceless connection in the boy band universe. As a result, every arena tour One Direction booked sold out in a split second. Women would camp outside their hotels waiting for a glimpse of the group, fully enamored with the chaotic boy band that couldn't even dance. There was no stopping them because their meteoric rise was completely unprecedented and unchallenged, minus a minor trademark infringement lawsuit from an American band also called One Direction. They settled, those nerds disappeared, and in May 2012, One Direction began recording their second album, setting the pace for what would become their normal: an exhaustive, accelerated album-tour-album-tour schedule that might even impress the boy bands who laid the framework a decade prior. Take Me Home was released in November. It, too, debuted at number 1 on the Billboard 200.

One Direction fever was unstoppable. "Live While We're Young" was a brilliant follow-up smash single to "What Makes You Beautiful." Lyrically, it was a brief detour from telling a girl she's great to having a wonderful time with her, free of the responsibilities of adulthood. Here, the One Direction boys' personalities really began to shine through. They were a bit anarchic. You could really get into trouble with them, with no bigger consequences than lunch detention. They even tamed the ever elusive rock ballad in "Little Things," which, in November 2012, they sang for the queen of England.

A year, a 3-D concert documentary so huge it was released in theaters, and a few massive arena tours later, One Direction released their third LP, Midnight Memories, in November 2013. Once again, as you most certainly guessed, it debuted at number 1, making One Direction the first group in history to debut atop the charts with their first three records. At this stage, 1D had graduated to stadiums, with tens of thousands of seats. A remarkable feat off the support of a few unrivaled singles, including their best-known track, the appropriately named "Best Song Ever." (It really was the best song ever.)

Harry Styles' impeccably-tailored style from the 2014 American Music Awards. Alex Fine/Courtesy of Black Dog & Leventhal hide caption

In 2014, keeping with their strategy, the band released their fourth album and once again, it debuted at number 1. The release, Four, is most noteworthy for the fan frenzy that turned the up-tempo, Louis Tomlinsonled song "No Control" into a single when it wasn't originally marketed to be one. (I'm no tinhatter, but perhaps it had something to do with the song's lyric of "Waking up / Beside you I'm a loaded gun," which is less like the Boyzone song "Loaded Gun" and definitely a metaphor for...One Erection.) Directioners demanded the track get a full release, and it did. That's paramount, and so is this: if you're into numerology-based foreshadowing, the album title suggested the heartbreak that was yet to come. In March 2015, after months of embarking on one of the largest, most successful tours of all time, attended by 3.4 million ticket buyers, a hubristic Zayn Malik announced he was leaving the group because he wanted to be "a normal 22-year-old who is able to relax and have some private time out of the spotlight," or so it was written in his official statement. Now there were only four.

Saddened by the loss of their bandmate and, well, best mate, Louis, Liam, Harry, and Niall went back into the studio and released One Direction's fifth and final album in 2015, without Zayn. Made in the A.M. (After Malik?) is a hybrid folk-rock-pop self-homage to the group's legacy and a gorgeous farewell to the fans responsible for their fame. The video for the single "History" made it clear that this was the end. Imagine an intimate slideshow, a collection of images of the boy band throughout their career, beginning with their X Factor auditions, and ending with the image of them hugging, the final four members walking away in separate directions and amicably waving goodbye to one another. Lyrically, "History" doubles as a grateful breakup anthem (clever boys, these) and possesses a chorus that reminds me of Randy Newman's Toy Story tune, "You've Got a Friend in Me." For 1D fans, thinking about it is enough to evoke tears. Not that I'm speaking from personal experience or anything.

One Direction announced they'd embark on a hiatus beginning in March 2016, exactly one year after Zayn left the group. In the time since, each boy has tried his hand at the solo music thing with varying degrees of success: Zayn pursued the R&B-affected pop that he always loved and 1D never attempted; Harry went full Bowie, desiring vintage rock-and-roll mystique that, as the most public face of 1D, he was never granted; Louis and Niall stuck to pop-rock; and Liam flirted with EDM and hip-hop. Styles is the closest to anything like a Timberlake, but they're much too different to really compare. The similarities start and stop at their like-minded star power and how, after leaving a boy band, they were able to transgress a fickle pop music space and become critically acclaimed without abandoning the fans that brought them to the top.

In their five short years as a band, One Direction became one of the biggest boy bands the world had ever seen, a big bang in their own right. But would anyone be able to do it like them again?

Maria Sherman is a senior staff writer at Jezebel and regular contributor to NPR Music. Larger Than Life: A History of Boy Bands from NKOTB to BTS is her first book.

* As Georgina Gregory notes, reality TV singing competitions allow fans to feel like they had some say in the formation of boy bands, that they were there from the very start. In the case of One Direction, fans got to see them learn to dance and sing together, the kind of insider-y rehearsals and early day footage previously unprocurable, let alone witnessed in real time. (Not to mention, they have bragging rights to lord over Directioners who got to the fandom late in the group's career.) Losing has a positive effect, too: who doesn't love to support an underdog? In fact, it's generally unremarked upon in their history, but the Backstreet Boys were rejected from 1993's version of The X Factor, Star Search. Clearly, there's a history of boy bands going and failing on these shows.

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One Direction's Big Bang Read An Excerpt From 'Larger Than Life' - NPR

Where to Look for John Boyega: From Becoming Human to Star Wars and Future Projects – Anglophenia

John Boyega has had a number of standout roles, with joiningStar Wars back in 2015 leading to his international breakthrough. Boyega portrayed the beloved Finn in the sci-fi trilogy, made-up of Episode VII, VIII and IX.

While its such an accomplishment to be part of this acclaimed franchise, Boyega is ready to move on, as he casually made clear in an Insta post.

Even though his run as Finn may be over, theres plenty more of Boyega to look for:

1. Becoming Human

At first glance, Becoming Human seems like a typical teen comedy, set at a high school. But, nope, some of these teens have supernatural powers. The story revolves around a vampire, a ghost and a werewolf, all in teen form, who work together to solve a mystery. Boyega steps in as Danny, an actual human teen, who is a bully. Oh no.

2. Attack the Block

Attack the Block, which has become sort of a sci-fi classic, is set in South London. A group of teens defend their neighborhood when invaded by aliens. In addition to Boyega, you can look for Doctor Whos Jodie Whittaker and Shaun of the Deads Nick Frost.

3. 24: Live Another Day

Remember when the TV series 24 landed in London? Well, Boyega was there awaiting their arrival and ready to join the crew as a computer tech. In 24: Live Another Day, we see Kiefer Sutherland reprise his role as Jack Bauer, picking up four years after the original series concluded. Bauer is once again a fugitive, and this time around hes gone international.

4. Major Lazer

Major Lazer is also an action series, but an animated one. Its so intense and life-like, we almost forget the characters are drawn. Set in the future, Major Lazer (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje) is a Jamaican superhero who fights to protect society from dystopian forces. Boyega takes on the role of Blkmrkt, a whiz-kid hacker.

5. The Circle

In 2017s The Circle, Boyega teams up with Emma Watson. Watson plays a young woman who gets a dream job at a tech company. But, dream jobs can sometimes turn into nightmares. Boyega plays a friend and confidant to Watsons character, who is struggling with unsettling information shes come across.

6. Pacific Rim: Uprising

In 2018, Boyega joined another sci-fi flick (were seeing a pattern here), Pacific Rim: Uprising. He takes on the role of Jake Pentecost, son of Stacker Pentecost (Idris Elba), who we met in the original film. Jake leads a group of Jaeger pilots in fighting against an alien threat.

7. Small Axe

Switching gears, aka not sci-fi, Boyega has signed on to star in the forthcoming miniseries Small Axe, based on real life experiences. The series centers on Londons West Indian community and the social strife that transpired between 1969 and 1982. We can look for Boyega in episode four, but his characters name and description have yet to be announced.

8. Naked Singularity

Also forthcoming, Boyega will take the lead in 2020s Naked Singularity. He portrays a public defender with a stellar track record, who has never lost a trial. Until he does. While that doesnt necessarily dictate the rest of ones career, his life begins to spiral. The movie is based on Sergio De La Pavas 2008 novel.

9. Rebel Ridge

Boyegas above tweet gives us an idea of what to expect for his role in Rebel Ridge that he needs to get buff. This action-drama is in pre-production, yet to receive a release date. Its described as a high-velocity thriller that explores systemic American injustices through bone-breaking action sequences, suspense and dark humor. Thats a lot, and we cant wait.

10. Borderland

And, finally, Boyegas latest project to be announced is Borderland. He will be teaming up with The Theory of Everything and Rogue One actress Felicity Jones. The story centers on an IRA member, whose wife is murdered. As he searches for her murderer, the killer is also looking for him. Its not clear what role Boyega will be playing but, we are intrigued.

Are you going to have a John Boyega marathon this weekend?

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Where to Look for John Boyega: From Becoming Human to Star Wars and Future Projects - Anglophenia

Twitter Just Deleted Thousands of QAnon Accounts – VICE

Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA (Sipa via AP Images)

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Surprisingly, Q didnt see this one coming.

Twitter announced on Tuesday night that it was taking the unprecedented step of removing or downgrading content and accounts linked to the conspiracy theory known as QAnon.

Twitter said that it had already removed over 7,000 accounts belonging to QAnon adherents and taken actions to stop the spread of the conspiracy theory that will impact some 150,000 accounts.

Weve been clear that we will take strong enforcement action on behavior that has the potential to lead to offline harm. In line with this approach, this week we are taking further action on so-called QAnon activity across the service, Twitter announced.

The company says that it will permanently suspend accounts that post about QAnon and are engaged in violations of our multi-account policy, coordinating abuse around individual victims, or are attempting to evade a previous suspension.

Twitter said it has seen more of this activity in recent weeks.

As well as suspending accounts, Twitter will no longer push QAnon accounts and content in its trending topics and recommendations. It will downgrade QAnon content in search results and block URLs associated with QAnon from being shared.

QAnon accounts that have not been suspended at already looking at ways of circumventing the ban, using hashtags like #CueAnon or #17Anon to avoid detection.

The Qanon conspiracy theory originated on the imageboard 4Chan, and broadly holds that President Donald Trump is waging a war against a shadowy deep state cabal. It also posits that members of the global elite, such as Bill Gates and Hillary Clinton, are running an underground child sex trafficking ring.

The theory is based on postings from a purported mysterious deep state operative known as Q who has made a series of predictions, like a 2017 post that claimed that Trump was days away from unsealing 25,000 indictments against deep state officials, a move that would trigger a state of temporary military control.

READ: The conspiracy singularity has arrived

While it began as a fringe conspiracy theory, in recent years Qanon has gained more mainstream attention, particularly in Trumpworld, where supporters regularly show up at rallies wearing QAnon t-shirts and waving Q flags.

QAnon followers have also been implicated in armed standoffs, attempted kidnappings, and at least one killing. This has led the FBI to designate the group a potential domestic terrorism threat.

But it is QAnons online harassment campaigns that have led to Twitters drastic action.

Recently, major QAnon accounts have begun harassment campaigns against celebrities perceived to be opponents of Trump. These accounts then direct their followers to harass the celebrities with coordinated attacks.

TV presenter Chrissy Teigen, who has been repeatedly targeted with harassment by swarms of QAnon followers, hit back at one Twitter account holder who said the move amounted to censorship.

You dont have a right to coordinate attacks and make death threats. It is not an opinion to call people pedophiles who rape and eat children, she tweeted.

Despite the negative coverage of QAnon, it has gained support among lawmakers. Former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn who many supporters believe could be the mysterious Q gave the conspiracy credence recently when he posted a video on July 4 showing him and his family swearing allegiance to QAnon.

There are currently 66 current or former 2020 congressional candidates who have endorsed or given credence to QAnon, according to a list kept by Media Matters. Trump has also retweeted multiple QAnon accounts to his 83 million followers.

But Twitter told CNN that for now, politicians wont be subject to the new rules.

Currently candidates and elected officials will not be automatically included in many of these actions broadly, a Twitter spokesperson said.

As the QAnon conspiracy theory moved from the obscure corners of the internet, social media platforms like Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube have helped propel its popularity far beyond what would have been possible otherwise.

The Q keyword has brought together a networked faction, aided by automation, that continuously spreads misinformation and inspires dangerous behaviors, Joan Donovan, a disinformation expert and director of technology and social change research at Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center, tweeted.

While Reddit banned QAnon two years ago, most social media platforms have been too slow to act, Donovan says, pointing out that some companies are not even trying.

Twitter is late out the gate. Facebook and YouTube arent even in the race.

Cover: A woman holds a QAnon sign as reopen protesters demonstrate at the capitol in Salem, Ore., on May 2, 2020. Governor Kate Brown announced a plan yesterday that could see some parts of the state reopen by May 15. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images)

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Twitter Just Deleted Thousands of QAnon Accounts - VICE

Guardians of the Galaxy Relaunch Leads Marvel Unlimited Update – Screen Rant

This week on Marvel Unlimited, Guardians of the Galaxy declares war on mad gods and the Prince of Darkness swoops in on Ruins of Ravencroft: Dracula.

This week on Marvel Unlimited, an ill-prepared Guardians of the Galaxy declares war on old gods reborn, while the Prince of Darkness swoops in on the Ruins of Ravencroft: Dracula, and Agents of Atlas rally against the Sub-Mariner as Atlantis Attack. After a fairly underwhelming week prior due to a staggered schedule, Marvel Unlimited returns with a major premiere from Guardians, as well as nine new ongoing titles including Black Panther #20, Captain Marvel #14, and Marauders #6. Each week, Screen Rant takes a look at the latest update to Marvel Comics' digital library, Marvel Unlimited - here are just a few of the standout titles in this weeks Pull List!

Richard Rider, last of the once legendary Nova Corps, wants Star-Lord and Rocket Raccoon to get the band back together in Guardians of the Galaxy #1, leading the titles new to Marvel Unlimited this week. As the threat of New Olympus, a floating city phasing between dimensions, and the rogue Olympian gods charged by a Reborn Zeus to bring on a new age of the Immortals emerges, a reluctant band of Guardians gather to counter the divine menace. The alternate-reality Captain Marvel, Phyla-Vell and a makeshift Guardians squad comprised of Moondragon, Marvel Boy, the parallel-universe Kree, Quill, and Rocket Raccoon set off with a singularity bomb and a sigh to face the might of Olympus Reborn, in Guardians of the Galaxy #1, Then Its Us.

Related:Marvel Theory: Black Panther 2 Sets Up Both X-Men & Fantastic 4 In The MCU

A new chapter in the morose and morbid saga of Ravencroft, Institute for the Criminally Insane arrives on Marvel Unlimited this week in the build up the Ravencroftlimited series. Having chronicled the ancient origins and the tormented prisoners of the Institute in Ruins of Ravencroft: Carnage and Sabretooth, writer Frank Tieri returns the eerie psychological-thriller to the recent past in Ruins of Ravencroft: Dracula. After unearthing the Journal of Jonas Ravencroft and disturbing the prison of The Unwanted, wretched test subjects left to wither in the darkest dungeons of the Institute, Misty Knight, John Jameson, the skinchanger known as The Man-Wolf, Mr. Fantastic, Iron Fist, Luke Cage, Falcon, and Winter Solider dig up the dirt on the Transylvanian count in Ruins of Ravencroft: Dracula, the final chapter of the miniseries. Dont miss the star-spangled Avenger, Captain America and true-blue Bucky take on the Prince of Darkness in the latest tale in the unsettling Ravencroft legend, new on Marvel Unlimited.

And, picking up after the events of Agents of Atlas #5 and the New Agents of Atlas, Amadeus Chos squad of heroes braces for the tsunami as Atlantis Attacks debuts on the Marvel digital archive this week. Writer Greg Pak and artist Ario Anindito pair up for a miniseries featuring the Sub-Mariner and Brawns awesome army of agents, Silk, Aero, Wave, Shang Chi, Luna Snow, Giant Man, White Fox, Swordmaster, Io, and Crescent. When The A-team learn the founder of the Pan-Asian Portal City of Pan has crossed Namor and that the Atlantean is seething for revenge, Brawn and the team are forced into confrontation with the monarch to prevent Pan from becoming another sunken city. And the surprise Jimmy Woo cliffhanger will have readers seeing double, in Atlantis Attacks #1, premiering now on Marvel Unlimited.

Marvels summer of superheroes continues with new premieres, new on-going titles, and additional archive updates on Marvel Unlimited available on theApp Store,Google Play, andonline.

Marvel Unlimted: Week of July 27, 2020/Street Date - January 22, 2020

More:Marvel's NAMOR is Actually The Little Mermaid (Yes, Really)

Source: Marvel

For Green Lantern, Beating Superman Is Hilariously Easy

SJ Twining is a Comics News/Features Writer at Screen Rant with a keen enthusiasm for Bronze Age comics, Dungeons & Dragons, Tolkien, Swords & Sorcery, Star Wars, Zenomorphs, Micronauts, Edgar Allan Poe, Elric of Melnibone, Maurice Sendak + collecting mushrooms. Contact: wanderingmonsters@icloud.com

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Guardians of the Galaxy Relaunch Leads Marvel Unlimited Update - Screen Rant

Washington’s NFL team should rebrand as ‘Washington FC’ – For The Win

On Thursday ESPNs Adam Schefter reported that, for the time being, Washingtons NFL team will lose the name Redskins but not yet embrace a new nickname, simply going by the Washington Football Team for the time being.

This is most likely just a way to buy time until they get a new nickname through the trademark process and produce a lot of merchandise. The team will play with just the name Washington on the jersey, and the player number on every helmet, for the time being.

They undoubtedly look cool plus lets the team create even more merchandise to sell in the process. (In theory, Washington could get fans buying old jerseys for nostalgia purposes, temporary jerseys for novelty factor, and new jerseys in the span of a year. This is grotesque and Im sure their marketing department is loving it.)

Anyway, thats not why I am writing this blog: I am writing to say that they should forget Football Team, change it to Football Club, and go by Washington FC.

Why? I have no reason, other than that I want to see what happens. I feel like itll either be beloved and quirky, or it will create a singularity of hate where soccer fans and American football fans will join together in a mass of disgust and stay up for days on end, possibly in shifts, screaming about it on Twitter.

Its all or nothing. That team either becomes a funky oddity that is adopted as the NFL team of Great Britain, or it leads to some kind of declaration of war from Premier League fans.

Weve decried all these MLS teams going with City + FC for their team names (most recently with Charlotte) but an NFL team? I have no idea. Thats where things get interesting.

Lets take a ride into the unknown, Dan Snyder. Lets make some memories.

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Washington's NFL team should rebrand as 'Washington FC' - For The Win

Ahead of hearing with big tech CEOs, Cicilline says a Biden presidency would lead to regulation next year – Yahoo News

WASHINGTON A top Democrat leading an antitrust investigation into the nations top technology companies said Wednesday his committee will release a report by the end of August with recommendations on legislation that Congress could pass into law as soon as next year.

Theres no reason to not expect a new administration to take this up in their first year, said Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., in an interview on The Long Game, a Yahoo News podcast.

Antitrust laws were developed during the railroad monopolies and the oil barons. Its a very different economy now. The question is, do we need to update and modernize our antitrust statutes to ensure that in the digital marketplace we have real competition? I think its pretty clear we dont have real competition, partly because of the size of these platforms, and partly because of the fact that they have essentially been unregulated, Cicilline said.

On Monday, the CEOs of the four biggest technology companies Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Sundar Pichai of Alphabet and Tim Cook of Apple will testify before the House Judiciary Committees antitrust subcommittee, chaired by Cicilline. Their testimony will occur via video link, though Cicilline and some members of the committee will physically be in a hearing room in Washington.

This hearing is the last in a series held by Cicillines subcommittee over the past year, and the stakes for the major tech companies are high, with significant implications for their businesses and revenues.

Cicilline indicated that he and other members of the committee will be asking the CEOs about aspects of their companies and business models that lawmakers suspect are suppressing competition from smaller companies and competitors. He said he wants to hear directly from the CEOs about decisions they might have made that have impacted competition, that may have favored their own goods and services, that bullied consumers or small businesses.

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The big tech companies are taking their monopolies in one market and leveraging them to take over new markets that depend on their platforms, making competition impossible, said Sally Hubbard, an antitrust expert at the Open Markets Institute, a think tank and advocacy group formed in 2017 to push for greater government oversight of big tech.

In the process, these platforms crush entrepreneurs and businesses of all sizes, Hubbard said in testimony before a Senate committee in March. Employees of those businesses lose jobs or get paid less. And this monopoly dynamic degrades the quality of offerings to consumers, who should get the most relevant product search results, not results that prioritize Amazons or Googles profits.

Hubbard said that Google, which is owned by parent company Alphabet, uses its dominance of the search market to box out competitors that might eat into its huge digital advertising revenues. Likewise, she said, Amazon uses its massive size and reach to identify products that are selling well online, put its own version of those products up for sale and then manipulate search results so customers buy its products and not the competitions.

Like Google, Amazon can also take other peoples businesses and ideas almost at will. Amazon can see that a product is selling well because Amazon has all the data on product sales and customers, so Amazon can easily cut innovators out of the equation and make the product itself, Hubbard said.

The other tech giants face similar allegations. Apple has been accused of discriminating against competitors to its Apple Music program, such as Spotify. And Facebook, while often the company that attracts the most attention, is probably the most complicated when it comes to antitrust law and regulation in general.

One of the biggest complaints against Facebook is that its business model prioritizes engagement, and the algorithms it uses to promote and demote content higher and lower in users feeds has a bias toward posts that are often untrue, misleading or incendiary and hateful, because those often provoke the strongest emotional responses among users. That emotion fuels longer stays on the page and increases Facebooks advertising revenue, critics say.

Cicilline and another Democrat, Rep. Anna Eshoo of California, have both introduced legislation that would prohibit tech companies like Facebook from using details about users to micro-target political advertisements to select niche audiences.

Usually if you do a fake ad thats false against me, I can do an ad in response to it, because I know its been shown to people on television or radio and I can do the same to respond to it. With micro-targeting, where all the information is so granular and so collected, so they send it to specific individuals, I dont actually have any way to know who saw that ad. I cant respond in the kind of normal marketplace of ideas where I can just do my own ad, Cicilline said. Thats what makes it so dangerous.

Cicilline has talked about removing protections from liability for tech companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, but has not yet done so. The law says online platforms are not publishers and are not liable for the content posted to them. Eliminating that protection would potentially open them up to lawsuits.

Conservatives like Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., have also targeted Section 230, but for different reasons, arguing that Facebook, Twitter and Google are censoring conservative voices. In late May, President Trump signed an executive order that, while largely symbolic, sent a signal that he might push for the tech companies to lose their Section 230 protections.

Cicilline dismissed the Republican complaints. I dont have any evidence to show that Facebook is discriminating against conservatives on speech at all, he said.

Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee have asked that Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey also testify on Monday, because much of the rights ire about content moderation is directed at that platform, even as Facebook has been accused of giving preferential treatment to Trump in particular. Dorsey has not been invited, a committee source confirmed.

The potential actions by Congress or regulatory agencies to deal with antitrust issues range from breaking up some of the companies into smaller pieces to imposing whats known as common carrier rules that try to cut down on discrimination against certain customers, to more aggressive enforcement of antimonopoly laws and greater scrutiny of mergers to prevent monopolies.

Cicilline said that in this area, European governments have provided elements of a road map.

I think some of our European allies have been sort of much further ahead on this issue and sort of recognized some of the privacy issues and competition issues, he said.

_____

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The Walking Dead, Vikings, Utopia Recap of all the new trailers released during Comic Con – The Saxon

It took place virtually across the United States and around the world, but the Comic Con of San Diego has still taken place despite the coronavirus. And like every year, this means that a lot of new trailers have been released for a few new features or series that are about to come back on our screens.

Credit : the walking dead, season 10, 1016, extract, first few minutes

A small promo video to extension of episode 16 of season 10 of The Walking Dead, which was supposed to be the final but who, finally, will be followed by 6 more episodes.

Credit : lovecraft country

Credit : marvels helstrom, trailer

Credit : the walking dead world beyond, trailer, comic con

The new spin-off of the franchise , The Walking Dead, arrives from the 4 October on AMC, just after the release of the highly anticipated final of the season 10 of The Walking Dead.

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Credit : for all mankind, season 2, trailer

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The Walking Dead, Vikings, Utopia Recap of all the new trailers released during Comic Con - The Saxon

Feds charge 8 in Pittsburgh protests that turned violent – TribLIVE

TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox.

About an hour ago

A federal grand jury indicted eight people in connection with alleged damage and vandalism during protests May 30 in Downtown Pittsburgh.

Most of those indicted were in some way connected to the destruction of a two Pittsburgh Bureau of Police cruisers that were set ablaze during protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody days prior.

The indictment was returned July 22 and unsealed Wednesday.

Those indicted are:

George Allen, 31; Nicholas Lucia, 25; Raekown Blankenship, 24; Devin Montgomery, 24; Brandon Benson, 29; and Christopher West, 35, all of whom live in Pittsburgh. DaJon Lengyel, 22, of McKees Rocks, and Andrew Augustyniak-Duncan, 25, of Carnegie, also were indicated.

The protests through Downtown carried on peacefully for much of the afternoon but turned violent after several people began damaging a marked police SUV. The marked SUV and an unmarked commanders SUV were eventually set on fire.

Throwing IEDs and bricks at police officers, throwing projectiles at and striking police horses, and setting police cruisers on fire are not the protected First Amendment activities of a peaceful protest; they are criminal acts that violate federal law, U.S. Attorney Scott Brady said in a statement.

He called those accused of sparking the violence agitators who hijacked a lawful protest and undermined a message of equality with one of destruction.

Michael Christman, Special Agent in Charge of the FBIs Pittsburgh office, vowed to continue making arrests when demonstrators spark violence. We are not done. We continue to use all of our investigative resources to find each person who chose to start a violent confrontation, he said.

Forty-six people were arrested May 30 in connection with the protest. District Attorney Stephen A. Zappalas office dropped charges against 39 of them.

Two days later, dozens were arrested during a protest in Pittsburghs East Liberty neighborhood, which had carried on peacefully for hours before the events turned violent. Zappala went on to drop charges against 22 who were arrested in that melee.

The lawlessness we saw on May 30 cannot be tolerated, said Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich.

All of those named in the indictment also face state charges.

Allen is alleged to have thrown something through the window of a police cruiser, leading to charges of interfering with law enforcement. Blankenship, Lengyel, Montgomery and West face a similar charge for their alleged roles in kicking, punching and setting fire to the cruiser.

Augustyniak-Duncan is charged with interfering with law enforcement for allegedly throwing things at officers, and Lucia is accused of throwing a homemade explosive device at an officer that bounced off his vest and exploded on the ground. Benson and Montgomery are alleged to have tried to break into the Dollar Bank on Smithfield Street.

Megan Guza is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Megan at 412-380-8519, mguza@triblive.com or via Twitter .

Categories:Downtown Pittsburgh | Local | Allegheny | Top Stories

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Kupchick Disheartened By Protesters At Fairfield Police Station – Fairfield, CT Patch

Submitted by the office of Fairfield First Selectwoman Brenda Kupchick

Since the murder of George Floyd, Fairfield has been host to protests and rallies. At each of these events, protesters were provided the opportunity to safely exercise their First Amendment right. There were no counterprotests or interruptions; just an engaged citizenry that attended peacefully, listened, and went home, myself among them. The Fairfield Police Department provided a safe environment for protesters by taking swift action to close down the Post Road as they spilled onto the street. While faced with signs that read "Police are Murderers" and other profane language, they continued to provide safe passage with the utmost professionalism.

On Monday afternoon, I held a press conference on the front steps of the Fairfield Police Department with law enforcement and other local elected officials to express concerns regarding HB 6004, An Act Concerning Police Accountability, which passed the Connecticut House of Representatives last week.

Instead of being afforded the same courtesy to exercise our First Amendment right, we were shouted down, called a shocking array of profanities and further insulted with vulgarities displayed on posters, along with a large banner with the words "Defund & Disarm Police."

READ MORE: Fairfield Cops Call For Patience But Protesters Want Reform Now

Let me be very clear about one thing. As the chief elected official of the town of Fairfield, I will never support defunding or disarming the Fairfield Police Department.

I unequivocally support the sections of the bill that include further training, education, mental health screenings and accountability of law enforcement. I'm extremely proud that the Fairfield Police Department already has policies in place that meet or exceed many of those provisions outlined in the bill.

However, there is language in the bill, specifically the section ending qualified immunity, that our police chief and I believe will significantly impact the ability of our police officers to do their jobs and it will hinder Fairfield's ability to retain good cops and recruit new ones.

Additionally, there will potentially be a huge financial impact on town budgets, the extent of which is still unknown because the bill has not been fully vetted.

Undoubtedly there are policies we can put in place to hold bad actors in police departments accountable, but we should do so without punishing the majority of the good men and women who protect our community every single day.

For a bill of this magnitude with such broad implications to be rushed through a three-week process, and then voted on in the middle of the night, is concerning and irresponsible.

The Senate should table HB 6004 until the legislature reconvenes in September so it can be fully scrutinized with all voices being considered.

Emotions are high and the national political landscape makes it more difficult for all of us on a local level, but I was extremely disheartened by the behavior of the protesters who disrupted the press conference on Monday. Everyone is afforded the same protections under the First Amendment, but the only way we can truly find solutions is to participate in civil discourse, whereby conversation occurs with the intention of enhancing one's own understanding.

I call on our residents to engage in respectful and productive conversations. I appreciate and value the input from members of our community who have called me over these last few months in an effort to help provide a greater understanding to me of life experiences that are different than my own.

I want to close by thanking the men and women who serve our community honorably; for their professionalism and integrity, and for putting their personal safety on the line every day to keep the residents of Fairfield safe. I thank you and many of our residents thank you.

Fairfield will get through these challenging times together.

Brenda Kupchick

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Kupchick Disheartened By Protesters At Fairfield Police Station - Fairfield, CT Patch

Trump talks oil in Texas as pandemic, recession rage – Politico

Editors Note: Morning Energy is a free version of POLITICO Pro Energy's morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 6 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the days biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro.

With help from Ben Lefebvre, Annie Snider and Alex Guillen

President Donald Trump heads to the Texas oil patch to tout his regulatory rollbacks as the industrys ails deepen during the pandemic.

House lawmakers will battle over amendments to a spending bill funding the Energy Department, Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation.

Proposed revisions to the Democratic National Committees draft platform will put climate change in the convention spotlight.

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RALLY AT THE RIG: President Trump will be appearing Wednesday at a rig site in Texas owned by a campaign donor to boast about his administration's record on energy production. There, in the heart of the west Texas oil country, Trump is expected to discuss how reducing regulation, streamlining the permitting of projects and incentivizing private investment in energy infrastructure have helped make the United States a dominant energy power, White House spokesman Judd Deere said.

Yet that talk might ring hollow to an industry thats seen the coronavirus pandemic in this country continue to rage and suppress fuel sales while countries overseas have been better able to suppress it. Oil companies here have been slashing their workforce by double-digit percentages or been forced to receive grants from the government to survive. Double Eagle, which is hosting his remarks, received up to $1 million in grants from the Paycheck Protection Program.

Choppy weather ahead? U.S. producers have been able to make up some ground as states tried reopening their economies and oil prices climbed back to around $40 a barrel. But even as Trump takes the stage today, domestic Covid-19 cases are spiking again and OPEC is signaling that it may turn the oil taps back on after having cut production earlier this year. That combination could bring another flood of fossil fuels to the market just as the U.S. industry started to find its feet again. OPECs experiment to increase production from August could backfire as we are still nowhere near out of the woods yet in terms of oil demand, Bjornar Tonhaugen, Rystad Energys head of oil market research, said in a client note Tuesday. The overall liquids market will flip back into a mini-supply glut and a swing into deficit will not happen again until December 2020.

Trumps visit also comes as polls show Texas is within relative reach for Joe Biden, his presumptive White House opponent. A Quinnipiac poll released last week showed Biden with a 1 percentage point lead over Trump. Still, the Lone Star State hasnt voted for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1976, and the solidly red oil industry hasnt shown signs of abandoning Trump. Deere said a combined $91,400 of donations from Double Eagle owners Cody Campbell and John Sellers since 2016 to Trumps campaign and Trump Victory, the joint Trump and Republican National Committee operation, did not influence the site visit or aid Double Eagle in securing PPP loans.

READY TO ROLL (AGAIN): The House Rules Committee adopted a rule setting up debate on a sprawling government funding package that includes 42 amendments to the Energy and Water title. Here are some of the measures that caught MEs eye:

Grant applications: Lawmakers will consider measures barring the rejection of grant applications for using the terms climate change or global warming, and sea level rise; Pebble mine: An amendment from Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) would bar the federal government from moving forward with permitting the proposed Pebble Mine project in Alaska; Big funding boosts: The chamber will consider whether to boost weatherization and energy efficiency grant funding by $250 million each in light of the economic strain wrought by the coronavirus pandemic; Transfers with offsets: Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) has a host of amendments boosting funds for DOEs critical minerals and energy efficiency offices to be in line with Trumps request and adding $5 million each for cybersecurity and quantum computing efforts. A bipartisan amendment would transfer $5 million to DOEs fossil energy office. Grab bag: Amendments to clarify that DOEs Section 1703 loan guarantee program must go only to projects that avoid, reduce, or sequester greenhouse gas emissions; that bar governmental contacts with Trump-owned businesses and that stress safety requirements from FERC in dam approvals will also get votes.

No dice: A lightning-rod amendment from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) that would have blocked the Army Corps of Engineers from issuing a key water permit for any oil and gas pipeline will not get a vote. The amendment had rattled the oil and gas industry after a series of high-profile court losses relating to Corps water permits.

DNC COMMITTEE SENDS ALONG CLIMATE ADDITIONS: The Democratic National Committees platform committee approved several amendments that would beef up the partys stance on climate change. The DNC will now weigh whether to include statements that would, among other things: commit the U.S. to emissions targets keeping global temperatures below 1.5 degrees Celsius beyond preindustrial levels, rather than 2 degrees C; require companies to publicly disclose climate risks both physical and financial and greenhouse gas emissions in their operations and supply chains; ban new oil and gas permits on federal land and water; raise royalty rates for existing federal fossil fuel leases to account for climate change; and eliminate fossil fuel tax breaks and subsidies.

The DNC will vote on the new measures at its August convention, capping months of both public and private jockeying. The progressive-friendly DNC Council on the Environment and Climate Crisis, a DNC advisory body, has urged the party to go bolder on climate. Meanwhile, a unity task force composed of Biden confidants and allies of Sen.Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) crafted a compromise climate platform. Biden followed up with a refreshed climate vision earlier this month, while the DNC last week laid out its own draft plan.

DO YOU KNOW THAT YOURE TOXIC? Coastal flooding fueled by sea-level rise and worsening storms linked to climate change increasingly threatens spreading toxics from Superfund sites throughout the U.S., according to a Union of Concerned Scientists report. More than 800 Superfund sites face flooding risks with low sea-level rise over the next 20 years, leaving public health implications for millions of people living nearby. Those closest to Superfund sites are also disproportionately people of color and low-income residents, creating equity concerns. The report argued executive or legislative action is necessary to improve Superfund sites abilities to withstand flooding, noting it is unlikely responsible parties will improve their sites resilience.

REPORT: DECARBONIZING CREATES JOBS: A rapid and total decarbonization of the U.S. economy by 2035 would create bout 25 million new jobs at the peak of the transition and 5 million sustained new jobs, according to a report by Rewiring America, a new nonprofit organization advocating a dramatic reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. The report said the effort would require a $3 trillion federal investment over a decade and save the average household up to $2,000 annually on energy costs.

ERNST VS. WHEELER, REDUX: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) clashed again with EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler over ethanol, Pro's Anthony Adragna reports. In a letter dated Tuesday, Ernst requested the EPA initiate a rulemaking certifying that existing infrastructure can handle 15 percent ethanol gasoline (E15) and remove an orange and black unnecessary warning label concerning E15 use. Iowa Republican and Twitter celebrity Sen. Chuck Grassley chimed in with a supportive tweet: "I agree w Sen Ernst EPA needs to hurry up w E-15 labels to show its a safe and clean fuel for cars & trucks Thx to Joni for her leadership on biofuels."

PARK POLICE CHIEF DEFENDS LAFAYETTE SQUARE APPROACH: U.S. Park Police Acting Chief Gregory Monahan defended the way his officers cleared Black Lives Matter demonstrators from near the White House last month, shortly before President Donald Trump's walk to a historic church, Anthony reports. Testifying at a House Natural Resources Committee and becoming the first Trump official to speak about the episode under oath Monahan also said the White House did not give the order to clear the protesters. His testimony maintaining that officers followed all rules in a volatile situation paints a far different image than the prepared testimony from a major in the D.C. National Guard who later told the panel the protesters' removal was deeply disturbing and appeared to be an infringement of their First Amendment rights.

CONSERVATIVES PUSH GOP ON CLIMATE BILL: A collection of climate-friendly conservative organizations urged Republican lawmakers to back the Growing Climate Solutions Act (S. 3894 (116)), which would create an Agriculture Department certification program enabling farmers, ranchers and forest managers to participate in carbon credit markets. As conservatives, we see this legislation as an opportunity to offer effective, meaningful, and fiscally responsible policies that can be enacted right now to mitigate the effects of climate change, Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions, American Conservation Coalition, ConservAmerica, National Taxpayers Union and R Street Institute wrote in a letter.

TRASH TALK: The House Foreign Affairs Committee will mark up a series of bills that include legislation designed to foster international cooperation on removing plastics from the ocean (H.R. 4636 (116). A bill from Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) would authorize the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development to work on improving waste management systems.

CARPER ASKS FOR BECK INQUIRY: Senate Environment and Public Works Committee ranking member Tom Carper (D-Del.) asked the EPA's inspector general to open a probe into Trump's nominee to head the Consumer Product Safety Commission for her role in changes that potentially weaken a final rule governing the import of toxic "forever chemicals, Pros Annie Snider reports.

Carper said his office learned that CPSC nominee Nancy Beck, who is now at the White House Council on Economic Advisers and previously worked at EPA, ordered that language be deleted stating that any portion of a product coated with PFAS was subject to the rule. Instead, he said, she directed a statement to be added indicating that EPA would later issue guidance about which coatings would be governed by the rule, "raising questions about whether that guidance would ultimately make fewer products coated with PFAS subject to the rule," according to Carper. He also alleged Beck nixed language in the signed version of the rule about Congress' intent relating to a step in the regulatory process for toxic chemicals.

EPA ADVANCES PFAS REGS: EPA on Tuesday sent a pair of proposals relating to PFAS to the White House for review. One is guidance (Reg. 2050-ZA18 ) that was mandated by Congress in last years defense bill on how to dispose of waste containing the chemicals that are nearly impossible to break down. The other is a rule mandating a new round of drinking water testing (Reg. 2040-AF89 ) that the Trump administration has said will include new monitoring requirements for PFAS. An earlier round of drinking water monitoring for PFAS was limited to a handful of chemicals and did not require utilities to test down to the very low concentrations that scientists now say can pose health dangers.

Speaking of EPA and regulations: Wheeler will join the Heritage Foundation for a 10 a.m. webinar. Heritage said the event will get to the truth about the agency's 2020 regulatory actions and what they mean to Americans.

COURT UPHOLDS FIRST VAPOR INTRUSION SUPERFUND LISTING: A federal court on Tuesday upheld EPA's first-ever addition to the Superfund National Priorities List based solely on "vapor intrusion," a process by which noxious vapors emanate from soil into buildings. EPA in 2018 listed a former wheel-covering manufacturing and chrome-plating site in northern Mississippi; Meritor, the company now responsible for the site, said EPA failed to consider steps it had already taken to lessen the intrusion. But a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Meritor's arguments, calling EPA's listing "reasonable and consistent with the governing regulatory provisions."

WATCHDOG FAULTS MSHA CORONAVIRUS RESPONSE: The Mine Safety and Health Administration must do more to protect miners from the coronavirus pandemic, the Labor Department's inspector general said in a new report. The agency's Covid-19 guidance remains unenforceable absent a temporary emergency rule, which MSHA has declined to issue. The Labor IG also flagged reduced enforcement, delayed inspections, PPE shortages and postponed mine rescue trainings as challenges to carrying out MSHA's mission. The agency agreed with the recommendations to monitor and manage the enforcement backlog and track Covid-19 outbreaks at mines and use that to potentially reevaluate the decision not to issue an emergency standard.

Oil and gas groups see some common ground in Biden energy plan, via The New York Times

The curse of both-sidesism: How climate denial skewed media coverage for 30 years, via Grist

EPA Biomass Carbon Rule Delayed Over Potential Ties To RFS, ACE, via Inside EPA

Murray Energy finds bankruptcy exit path, discloses $15.7M founder settlement, via S&P Global

Believe It Or Not, Forests Migrate But Not Fast Enough For Climate Change, via NPR

A message from Chevron:

Its only human to protect the world we all live in. Through our $100 million Future Energy Fund, were investing in startup companies working to capture carbon. Learn more.

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Trump talks oil in Texas as pandemic, recession rage - Politico

‘Voire Dire’: How the Portage County Circuit Court inspired an opera, and now a CD – Stevens Point Journal

Jason Zencka(Photo: Courtesy of Amy Anderson Photography)

STEVENS POINT The Portage County Circuit Court has to be one ofthe least likely settings for an opera.

Yet here it is: An original-cast recording of "Voire Dire,"set to be released in CD and by digital streaming services on Aug. 7. "Voire Dire" the title means a preliminary examination of a witness or juror depicts a single day in a fictional courtroom set in central Wisconsin, and it wasinspired by what happened more than a decade ago in the Portage County courthouse.

The work was created by college friends and collaborators Jason Zencka, a reporter for the Stevens Point Journal in 2006 and 2007, and Matthew Peterson, a Swedish/American composer. The two met each other when they attended St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota. Peterson composed the music and Zencka wrote the liberetto, or text, of the piece shortly after Zencka left Stevens Point and moved to Washington, D.C.

The opera was performed in 2017 by the Fort Worth Opera, and the original cast of singers recorded the work in June 2018 in a Minnesota Public Radio studio. The album will be released through RedHouse Studios, a music label created by Peterson and another partner, and it's funded through the help of 100 crowd-funded financial supporters and the Swedish Arts Council.

The whole thing is a little surreal, and when Zencka was sitting in the courtroom, taking notes, he said he never would have guessed that the experience would end up as a musical work of art.

"I loved the job.I loved being a reporter at the time, and I wanted to be a good reporter. That's all I was thinking about," Zencka said. "But I have been writing since I was a kid. It was part of how I made sense of the day."

It was unlikely that Zencka became a reporter in the first place. When he was in high school, he toyed with the idea of becoming a pastor. So he studied classical languages, Greek and Latin, at St. Olaf.

He met Peterson there. Peterson, from Grand Forks, North Dakota, and he hit it off, and they collaborated on an opera when they were students, a piece based on the story of Isaac and Abraham of the Bible's Old Testament.

While Zencka was studying in Northfield, his mother, the Rev. Susan Gilbert Zencka, became pastor of Frame Presbyterian Church in Stevens Point. He found and got the reporting job at the Stevens Point Journal with the help of her connections in the community.

Zencka said he was still working in Stevens Point when Peterson approached him again to collaborate on another opera. Peterson was looking to move to Sweden through a Fulbright program and thought the work could help his cause.

It worked. Or at least it didn't hurt his cause. He moved to Sweden shortly after and has been living there ever since, Zencka said.

"Voire Dire" CD cover(Photo: Courtesy of Matthew Peterson)

When he was brainstorming for ideas with Peterson, he started to think about what he saw and heard in the courthouse. They decided that it could work for their piece.

The courthouse "is a particular place with particular cultural signifiers," Zencka said."You're getting this tawdry, pulpy, almost raw, stuff of life and you are filtering it through this kind of sung language. It seemed like a good match."

The people at the Forth Worth Opera thought so. Almost a decade after Peterson and Zencka wrote "Voire Dire," the company chose the work as one to refine and perform.

It was a strange feeling seeing the words he wrote being performed on stage, Zencka said. "It's kind of like stumbling on a home video that you haven't seen for a long time. I had matured in every possible way."

After Zencka left Stevens Point, he worked for a while as an investigator for the public defenders office in Washington, D.C. He then moved on to earn a master's degree in creative writing at the University of Minnesota, and became a high school English teacher, first in the Twin Cities area, now in Syracuse, New York. He is married and the father of a baby boy.

He has written through it all. Zencka has had several short stories published in the past few years, and is refining a novel before sending it to publishers.

Zencka still looks back on his time in Stevens Point with a wistful feeling. He learned so much, he said.

"I saw plenty of things in the courtroom that shocked and saddened me," he said. "I also saw a lot of wonderful people in the community wrestling with how to do right in an impossible situation."

To learn more about "Voir Dire" and to preorder the album, people can log on to Matthew Peterson's website: http://www.matthew-peterson.com/voir-dire-album.

RELATED:He says he's 'lazy.' But this Wisconsin photographer is hiking the Ice Age Trail for art

RELATED:Horseshoes & Hand Grenades' Adam Greuel offers musical hope, comfort in face of COVID-19

Contact Keith Uhlig at 715-845-0651 or kuhlig@gannett.com. Follow him at @UhligK on Twitter and Instagram or on Facebook.

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'Voire Dire': How the Portage County Circuit Court inspired an opera, and now a CD - Stevens Point Journal

Psychedelic drug – Wikipedia

Psychedelics are a hallucinogenic class of psychoactive drug whose primary effect is to trigger non-ordinary states of consciousness and psychedelic experiences via serotonin 2A receptor agonism.[2] This causes specific psychological, visual and auditory changes, and often a substantially altered state of consciousness. "Classical" psychedelic drugs include mescaline, LSD, psilocybin, and DMT.

Most psychedelic drugs fall into one of the three families of chemical compounds: tryptamines, phenethylamines, or lysergamides. These chemicals all activate serotonin 5-HT2A receptors, which modulate the activity of key circuits in the brain involved with sensory perception and cognition, however the exact nature of how psychedelics induce changes in perception and cognition through the 5-HT2A receptor is still unknown. The psychedelic experience is often compared to non-ordinary forms of consciousness such as those experienced in meditation,[3][4] mystical experiences,[5][6] and near-death experiences.[6] The phenomenon of ego dissolution is often described as a key feature of the psychedelic experience.[3][4][6]

Many psychedelic drugs are illegal worldwide under the UN conventions, occasionally excepting use in a religious or research context. Despite these controls, recreational use of psychedelics is common.[7][8] Legal barriers have made the scientific study of psychedelics more difficult. Research has been conducted, however, and studies show that psychedelics are physiologically safe and do not lead to addiction.[9][10] Studies conducted using psilocybin in a psychotheraputic setting reveal that psychedelic drugs may assist with treating depression and alcohol addiction, and possibly also nicotine addiction.[11][12] Although further research is needed, existing results are showing that psychedelics may be useful for treating certain forms of psychopathology.[13][14][8]

The term psychedelic is derived from the Greek words (psyche, "soul, mind") and (delein, "to manifest"), hence "mind manifesting", the implication being that psychedelics can develop unused potentials of the human mind.[15] The word was coined in 1956 by British psychiatrist, Humphry Osmond, the spelling loathed by American ethnobotanist Richard Schultes, but championed by the American psychologist, Timothy Leary.[16]

Aldous Huxley had suggested to Humphry Osmond in 1956 his own coinage phanerothyme (Greek phaneroein- "visible" and Greek thymos "soul", thus "visible soul").[17] Recently, the term entheogenic has come into use to denote the use of psychedelic drugs in a religious, spiritual, and mystical context.

Psychedelics have a long history of use in traditional medicine and traditional religion, for their perceived ability to promote physical and mental healing. In this context, they are often known as entheogens. Native American practitioners using mescaline-containing cacti (most notably peyote, San Pedro, and Peruvian torch) have reported success against alcoholism, and Mazatec practitioners routinely use psilocybin mushrooms for divination and healing. Ayahuasca, which contains the potent psychedelic DMT, is used in Peru and other parts of South America for spiritual and physical healing as well as in religious festivals.[citation needed]

Psychedelic substances which may have therapeutic uses include psilocybin, LSD, and mescaline.[14] During the 1950s and 1960s, lack of informed consent in some scientific trials on psychedelics led to significant, long-lasting harm to some participants.[14] Since then, research regarding the effectiveness of psychedelic therapy has been conducted under strict ethical guidelines, with fully informed consent and a pre-screening to avoid people with psychosis taking part.[14] Although the history behind these substances has hindered research into their potential medicinal value, scientists are now able to conduct studies and renew research that was halted in the 1970s. Some research has shown that these substances have helped people with such mental disorders as obsessive-compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), alcoholism, depression, and cluster headaches.[8]

Many of the currently known psychedelics are classified as having no accepted medical use in the United States.[18] However, in 2018 the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation for psilocybin-assisted therapy for treatment-resistant depression.[19] In 2019, the FDA also granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation for psilocybin therapy treating major depressive disorder.[20] In 2017, a Phase II clinical trial of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD led to a designation of breakthrough therapy status by the FDA.[21] The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies and the FDA have agreed on the design for the Phase III trial, and if the trial is successful the treatment could be approved as early as 2021.[22]

Recreational use of psychedelics is common.[7][8]

Psychedelic microdosing is the practice of using sub-threshold doses (microdoses) of psychedelics in an attempt to improve creativity, boost physical energy level, emotional balance, increase performance on problems-solving tasks and to treat anxiety, depression and addiction.[23][24] The practice of microdosing has become more widespread in the 21st century with more people claiming long-term benefits from the practice.[25][26]

Tryptamine, along with other trace amines, is found in the central nervous system of mammals. It is hypothesized to play a role as a neuromodulator on classical monoamine neurotransmitters, such dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine (epinephrine). Tryptamine acts as a non-selective serotonin receptor agonist to activate serotonin receptors, and a serotonin-norepinephrine-dopamine releasing agent (SNDRA) to release more monoamine neurotransmitter, with a preference for evoking serotonin and dopamine release over norepinephrine( epinephrine) release.[27][28][29] This chemical class is well documented to cause classic psychedelic states, such as increased empathy, visual distorsions (drifting, morphing, breathing, melting of various surfaces and objects), auditory hallucinations, ego dissolution or ego death with high enough dose, mystical and spiritual experiences, closed eye hallucinations and complete detachment from reality with a high enough dose.[30] Psychedelic tryptamines that could be found in nature are psilocin, DMT, 5-MeO-DMT or they could be synthesised in a laboratory like 4-HO-MET or 5-MeO-DALT.

Phenethylamine is also a trace amine but to a lesser extent acts as a neurotransmitter in the human central nervous system. Phenethylamine instead regulates monoamine neurotransmission by binding to trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1), which plays a significant role in regulating neurotransmission in dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin neurons in the CNS and inhibiting vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) in monoamine neurons.[31][32] When VMAT2 is inhibited monoamine neurotransmitters such as dopamine cannot be released into the synapse via typical release mechanisms.[33]

Amides of lysergic acid are collectively known as lysergamides, and include a number of compounds with potent agonist and/or antagonist activity at various serotonin and dopaminereceptors. LSD is one of many lysergamides. A wide range of lysergamides have emerged in recent years, inspired by existing scientific literature. Others, have appeared from chemical research.[34]

Classic psychedelics are considered to be those found in nature like psilocybin, DMT, mescaline, and LSD which is derived from naturally occurring ergotamine, and non-classic psychedelics are considered to be newer analogs and derivatives of pharmacophore lysergamides, tryptamine, and phenethylamine structures like 2C-B. Many of these psychedelics cause remarkably similar effects, despite their different chemical structure. However, many users report that the three major families have subjectively different qualities in the "feel" of the experience, which are difficult to describe. At lower doses, these include sensory alterations, such as the warping of surfaces, shape suggestibility, and color variations. Users often report intense colors that they have not previously experienced, and repetitive geometric shapes are common. Higher doses often cause intense and fundamental alterations of sensory perception, such as synesthesia or the experience of additional spatial or temporal dimensions.[35] Some compounds, such as 2C-B, have extremely tight "dose curves", meaning the difference in dose between a non-event and an overwhelming disconnection from reality can be very slight.[citation needed] There can be very substantial differences between the drugs, however. For instance, 5-MeO-DMT rarely produces the visual effects typical of other psychedelics. It has long been known that psychedelics promote neurite growth and synaptic plasticity.[36][37][38] Psychedelics have also been shown to have potent anti-inflammatory activity and therapeutic effects in animal models of inflammatory diseases including asthma,[39] and cardiovascular disease and diabetes.[40]

Although not pharmacologically considered psychedelics, empathogen-entactogens are phenethylamines of the MDxx class such as MDMA, MDEA, and MDA have some overlap in the behaviors that they elicit with psychedelics. Their effects are characterized by feelings of openness, euphoria, empathy, love, heightened self-awareness, and by mild audio and visual distortions (an overall enhancement of sensory experience is often reported). Their adoption by the rave subculture is probably due to the enhancement of the overall social and musical experience.

Salvia divinorum is a dissociative that is sometimes classified as an atypical psychedelic with some overlap in its perceptual effects with serotonergic psychedelics. The active molecule in the plant, salvinorin A, is a kappa opioid receptor agonist, working on a part of the brain that deals with pain. Activation of this receptor is also linked to the dysphoria sometimes experienced by users of opioids either therapeutically or recreationally. An unusual feature of S. divinorum is its high potency (dosage is in the microgram range) and extremely disorienting effects, which often include "entity contact", complete loss of reality-perception and user's experiencing their consciousness as being housed in different objects, for example a pane of glass or a pencil. Cannabis (containing THC), particularly when taken in edible form is commonly referred to as a mild psychedelic, and produces behavioral effects with some similarity to true psychedelics.

Psychedelic drugs are not addictive.[9][10] There is also no evidence that they cause long-term harm to mental health.[41]

Ira Byock wrote in 2018 in the Journal of Palliative Medicine that psilocybin is safe when administered to a properly screened patient and supervised by a qualified professional with appropriate set and setting. However, he called for an "abundance of caution" because in the absence of these conditions a range of negative reactions are possible, including "fear, a prolonged sense of dread, or full panic." He notes that driving or even walking in public can be dangerous during a psychedelic experience because of impaired hand-eye coordination and fine motor control.[42]

Many psychedelic drugs have been declared illegal under the UN Convention on Psychotropic Substances of 1971. In addition, many countries have analogue acts that automatically forbid any drugs sharing similar chemical structures to common illicit substances regardless of whether or not they are harmful.

Psychedelic culture includes manifestations such as psychedelic music,[43] psychedelic art,[44] psychedelic literature,[45] psychedelic film,[46][47] and psychedelic festivals.[48]

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Psychedelic drug - Wikipedia

Psychedelics – Mushrooms, LSD, Salvia

Psychedelics, while they can cause pleasurable side effects, are mostly Schedule I classified drugs that are not only illegal but dangerous. While psychedelics can cause a person to feel a sense of oneness with the universe and experience spiritual or enjoyable hallucinations and distorted perceptions, they can also cause intense fear, paranoia, and panic.

Whether or not a person has a good trip or a bad tripall depends on many variables, and there is no assurance that even the same individual will experience a positive reaction twice. This is only one of the dangers of psychedelics which, while they have been used in spiritual rituals for centuries, can cause many harmful effects.

We can help you quit using psychedelic drugs. Call 800-895-1695 today.

The effects of psychedelics are extremely hard to predict. As stated by CESAR, psilocybin or psychedelic mushrooms are one of the most popularly abused psychedelics to this day, and the effects produced by psilocybin are highly variable and depend on several factors including the age, type, and dosage amount of the mushroom used, the setting the mushroom is used in, the users expectations, past drug experiences, and personality.

This is what makes psychedelic drugs so different from other commonly abused substances; it is very difficult to pinpoint how a person will react to these drugs or what they should even expect. While some effects like hallucinations, nausea, and an altered perception of space and time can all be expected to be experienced by the user, psychedelics may cause a different type of high in every user (each and every time) and their effects could last anywhere from an hour to six or more.

Psychedelic drugs can cause severe psychological distress and other harmful side effects.

While there isnt a strong amount of research on the issue of psychedelic drug addiction, it is possible in some instances. Especially with a drug like MDMA, some users report symptoms of dependence, including continued use despite knowledge of physical or psychological harm, tolerance (or diminished response), and withdrawal effects (NIDA).

Some other drugs (like LSDand peyote) only cause tolerance while the effects of salvia divinorum have not yet been researched enough to provide any conclusive results. The question of whether or not addiction to certain psychedelic drugs exists can be puzzling. In many cases, though, treatment may still be necessary to help with the effects abusing psychedelic drugs can cause.We can help you find the treatment you need. Call 800-895-1695 toll free today.

If you are concerned about your psychedelic drug abuse or that of another individual, here are some steps to follow in order to better the situation.

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Buy psychedelics online | Avalon Magic Plants

Most herbal formulas in our selection contain seeds with the well-known alkaloid LSA and other psychedelic, hallucinogenic ingredients. These substances are best used in the company of trusted friends and in a natural environment that you feel safe in. Psychedelics function in the same way as LSD. The difference between LSD and psychedelics is that the latter does not contain any synthetic substances that could be hazardous. In general, psychedelics are natural products and often mimic medications that doctors prescribe to their patients.

Product 1 to 9 (of 9 products) Result:1

Product 1 to 9 (of 9 products) Result:1

There are various types of psychedelics, which can be broken down into the form that you consume the substance and its chemical structure. The different usage types are:

Chemical structure varies for each psychedelic. Some contain the compounds that are also in alcohol. As such, these create a similar effect, but without the hangover, dehydration, or nausea. Others directly mimic the substances in LSD, but the psychedelic itself is different. However, the effect is practically the same. There are also substances that contain LSA, a substance that changes your sense of awareness in a variety of ways. You may see things differently than they are and think about them differently.

Psychedelics will make you hallucinate. This can happen in a number of ways. Some people only see moving images, while others begin to view the world in a totally different way. Hallucination is typically a fun experience. However, people can also have a bad trip. This is a trip that causes fear, sadness or other negative emotions. For this reason, it is important to use these substances in the company of people you trust.

Do you have any questions about our selection or using the psychedelics? Dont hesitate to contact us!

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How to Become a Psychedelic Therapist – Training Opportunities

As recent trials of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy enter the last phase of testing, the coming need for many trained therapists and guides seems inevitable. Until recently, the only opportunity to train and work legally as a psychedelic therapist was in clinical trials. That will likely change over time as expanded access becomes the next step for current trials (evaluating MDMA and psilocybin) and if psychedelic-assisted therapies become FDA approved.

Many people are looking for information about psychedelic therapy and opportunities to become guides or therapists after reading Michael Pollans new book HowtoChange Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us about Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence [1]. Providers are seeking trainings to become more informed about psychedelic experiences. They also want to know how to become certified to administer psychedelics in clinical trials and potentially post approval.

Still, there remain many unknowns about what training programs outside of the drug sponsors will be acceptable by FDA to dispense MDMA or psilocybin post-approval. FDA has never regulated psychotherapy, but medical devices often require training in a certified program. Demonstration of competency and maintaining of the acquired skills is required for compliance with regulatory agencies. Transcranial magnetic stimulation is one example of a specialized device with specific training requirements. Its not yet known how FDA will regulate trainings for psychedelic-assisted therapies.

The FDA may approve MDMA for PTSD treatment as early as2021, as MAPS has projected based on an optimistic (and likely realistic)finding of significant and positive results from two on-going Phase 3 trials.If so, thousands of therapists and doctors will be needed to meet the increaseddemand and opportunity for greater access. PTSD can be a difficult to treatcondition with many individuals not accessing or responding to availabletreatments, so this call for expanded access will be an exciting opportunity toprovide care to a much larger number of people who are currently suffering.

The next likely candidate for FDA approval after MDMA is psilocybin for the treatment of depression. In late 2018, the FDA granted Breakthrough Therapy designation for psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression, which will help expedite its approval as long as results from clinical trials remain positive

Despite many unknowns, some training programs already exist,and many more are expected to become available.

In 2015, the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) started a formal training program called the Certificate in Psychedelic-assisted Therapies and Research. The hybrid residential, in-person and online curriculum is a roughly 9-month course with rotating guest lecturers and a weeklong retreat. This program is broad in focus, interdisciplinary, and covers classic psychedelic medicines (e.g., psilocybin, ayahuasca, peyote, LSD) as well as the newer medicines (sometimes labeled empathogens or entactogens) like MDMA and ketamine.

To enroll in the CIIS certificate program, interestedindividuals must fill out an application, complete an interview, and receive anoffer from the programs selection committee. Applicants are required to be alicensed mental health or medical professional, counseling attorneys, or ordainedor commissioned clergy and chaplains. The tuition cost is currently set at$10,000. There are several information sessions scheduled throughout the yearto explain more and answer questions about the program. Each cohort generallystarts in the Spring and graduates in December.

More substance-specific trainings also exist. In anticipation of Expanded Access approval, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) has now posted an application for the MDMA Therapy Training Program with an invitation to apply. Training is currently prioritized for providers who would likely qualify for the Expanded Access program. If accepted by FDA, more clinics will open for MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD treatment during expanded access. Requirements for clinics and providers are provided as is a forum for providers to connect with others who are interested in starting up MDMA clinics.

While no strict criteria have been released about who would qualify, the MAPS website states that at minimum one person in the therapy team pair must be licensed to conduct psychotherapy. While the other person does not need to be licensed, they must display training in therapeutic relationship, ethics, and traumas.

Each clinic also needs a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) license, which requires a licensed medical provider who can prescribe (e.g., medical doctor (MD), doctor of osteopathy (DO), or other eligible prescriber). MAPS encourages interested providers to apply now in preparation for the expected post-FDA approval. The cost for training and supervision is currently set at $9,000.

Other industry drug sponsors, such as Usona Institute and COMPASS Pathways, and researchers at various universities have devised their own trainings and ways to prepare clinicians to work on clinical trials of psychedelics. At this time, there are no details posted on websites about what the trainings consist of, but journal publications have described procedures, such as the Usona Guide Manual [2].

The CIIS program is approximately 180 hours and covers awider range of topics related to psychedelic therapies. More time is spent onhistorical and philosophical aspects of non-ordinary states of consciousness,including non-substance induced ones as seen in Holotropic Breathwork and deepmeditation. The learning objectives are focused more broadly on psychedelicsand empathogens, rather than specifically on MDMA-assisted psychotherapy [3].

The MAPS program is a 5-part course with didactic training and experiential learning components. Trainees start with online e-learning modules covering MDMA pharmacology and its clinical safety profile, an introduction to the MDMA Treatment Manual [4], and some basics about clinical trials. A week-long, in-person training follows where MDMA session videos are viewed and discussed with the therapists who treated the study participants. The next parts involve role playing, observing MDMA sessions, and then treating a patient with supervision and evaluation from the trainers.

Some parts of these two programs overlap significantly. For example, the weeklong in-person retreat for both programs focuses on MDMA-assisted psychotherapy and are taught by Michael and Anne Mithoefer, MDMA study therapists and lead instructors at MAPS.

Dating back to the first research studies of LSD in the1950s, a first-hand experience in a non-ordinary state of consciousness hasbeen perceived valuable for administering psychedelics. Its thought that byunderstanding the drug effects, the therapists can more readily establishempathetic rapport and presence to support a persons therapeutic process. Theycan also be better able to respect the power and significance of theseexperiences.

For indigenous communities, its deemed essential thatshamans or ceremonial leaders have personal experience with the psychoactive plantsthey give to others. But in Western medical practices, it is rarely the case thatdoctors are encouraged (or even allowed) to take a medication to understand theeffects a patient would feel.

Thus, psychedelics present a new challenge for psychiatricmedical training. If there is value in having a personal experience, then howcan providers legally pursue an experiential learning component to theirtraining? To date the evidence of potential benefits of doing so remainanecdotal due to lack of approved controlled research.

CIISs program is an above board program with no use of illicit substances. MAPS, however, received approval in their sponsored, FDA-approved study that allows trainees in their program to receive one dose of MDMA in a clinical setting if they also are eligible for the research study as a participant. As with all clinical trials, participants in the approved study must meet criteria to enroll and provide data to assess potential benefits or harms. Even if they meet the basic inclusion criteria, trainees are not required to undergo an MDMA session. Some might have conditions that would counter-indicate the use of MDMA. For example, pregnant women or individuals with cardiac disease would be excluded. Trainees may also simply not want to take a drug.

As alluded to earlier, Holotropic Breathwork is one alternative to reach a non-ordinary state of consciousness without consuming any substance. Through accelerated breathing and stimulating music, a person can enter into states similar to ones induced by drugs.

CIIS incorporates Holotropic Breathwork as experiential learning in their program. Therapists may consider alternatives, but they should do so while considering carefully the legal and ethical guidelines of their licensing board and professional organizations. Psychedelic Support and its partners do not encourage or condone the illegal use of substances.

Given this reality, other possible alternatives for experiential learning do exist. They include attending plant medicine ceremonies in other countries where it is legal, shamanic drumming/chanting practices, or extended meditation. Research is needed to understand if first-hand exposure by therapists impacts patient outcomes, and if so, what type of drugs or experiences are best for training. We encourage therapists exploring this new area to consult with their colleagues and even seek out legal counsel as they deem appropriate.

If becoming a psychedelic therapist is of interest to you, then there are things you can do now to help figure out if this path is right for you and if so, prepare for the future. You can start by reading books and articles about psychedelic-assisted therapies. If you want hands-on experience supporting individuals undergoing a difficult psychedelic experience, one great way to do so is to volunteer for harm reduction services at festivals.

Already a health provider? Network with other professionals interested in this topic and attend psychedelic conferences. If you are a clinician, consider joining a Psychedelic 101 and 102 Introductory Course by Psychedelic Support providers, Dr. Elizabeth Neilson and Dr. Ingmar Gorman. Check out our website Psychedelic.Support to view a current list of organizations offering professional trainings related to psychedelics.

Lastly, educate yourself and share what you are learning with others. A new profession is evolving, and more opportunities are becoming available for those who wish to pursue a career in psychedelic medicine.

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The Evolution Of Capitalism: A Cannabis And Psychedelics Investor’s Proposal – Benzinga

Last week was a rough one for me.

I woke up on Monday morning with a severe case of vertigo.

Nothing like this has ever happened to me before.

The room was spinning so fast, and it didnt take long for me to start freaking out.

I had no idea what was going on.

I managed to get out of bed and walk to the kitchen where I attempted to sit down, but ended up losing my balance and falling over.

I really thought that something terrible was about to happen. I thought I was about to die. And as most folks do in such situations, I quickly started evaluating my life. Getting somewhat philosophical, if you will.

Has my life had purpose?

Have I offered any positive contributions to my community?

Have I offered any real value to society?

Have I offered value to my friends, co-workers, colleagues, and you, as well?

I have close to 50 years on me, and Im now looking back on nearly five decades, questioning whether or not Im content or satisfied with what Ive learned, what Ive offered, and what Ive contributed to the world.

Yes, these are big philosophical questions, and questions that I probably havent pondered since my college days. Back when books and teachers and peers challenged my limited world view, and schooled me and exposed me to new worlds and ideas that ultimately made me the person I am today.

For better or worse, Im content with the person I am today.

But is that enough?

If someone were to ask you at age 16, whether youd like your life to be considered one of contentment or one of great joy and extreme fulfillment, which would you choose?

Sitting here today at my laptop, typing out these words, Im forcing myself to face this question.

Am I truly happy and fulfilled? And if not, then why?

Truth is, I have no reason to complain.

I have an amazing family, great friends, and a job I absolutely love.

You know, I watched my father work two jobs for most of his working life. And I can tell you, the man never looked forward to going to work. As far as I know, anyway.

I dont think he ever liked his jobs, but he had a responsibility to take care of his family. He needed a paycheck, and didnt have the privilege of time or inherited wealth that wouldve allowed him the opportunity to pursue any kind of real passion. Yet, without much in the way of complaining, he took his responsibility to his family very seriously. And despite spending more than 40 years working jobs he didnt enjoy, he sucked it up so that his kids could have a good life. I believe that he sacrificed his happiness so that I could have certain advantages he never had: a stable home, a safe neighborhood in which to grow up, and a world where I never had to worry about having a roof over my head or food on the table.

Both my parents worked their asses off so I could have a good life. And yet here I am, questioning the value of this amazing life Ive been gifted.

Honestly, I feel pretty shitty even talking about it. How unappreciative I must sound. The fact that I even have the privilege of questioning the value of my existence is because of what my parents did for me.

Of course, it doesnt take a near death experience (or perceived near death experience), to be forced to confront our lives, goals, and purpose in a different way. Certainly not over the past few months, anyway.

Being on lock-down, worrying about pandemics, watching my country come to terms with a long history of intolerance and violence in a way that we havent seen since the 1960s. Or in my case, for the very first time. This is all very intense.

Ive actually been thinking about this a lot lately, particularly with how Ive been watching the United States become further divided. And I watch politicians use the recent uprisings in our country as fodder for sound bytes and re-election campaigns. They use these crises to their advantages by manipulating us to fight against each other, when in fact, the things we seem to be fighting about are shared concerns. Things that should actually be bringing us together, not separating us.

Are our jobs safe?

Do we have enough savings set aside for a rainy day (or many rainy days)?

Are our constitutional and civil rights still valid?

Is our personal safety at risk?

Is our food safe to eat, our water clean to drink, and our air safe to breathe?

These are not left vs. right issues.

These are issues that affect all of us, no matter which side of the aisle we call home.

But instead of uniting to address these issues, we are allowing these politicians and opportunistic media pundits to play us against each other.

How has this happened?

How did we get here?

Ive had a lot of time to think about this, and I really believe that much of this has to do with economics.

I know, it sounds weird, but bear with me, because my argument is sound.

Ive long been an unapologetic supporter of capitalism. Its just always made sense to me. This idea where individuals and businesses freely produce, buy and sell goods and services based on voluntarily agreed upon contracts.

I grow apples. You want an apple. I will sell you an apple for a mutually agreed upon price whereby we both benefit. You walk away with the apple, and I am compensated for the time, energy, and capital it took me to grow that apple, and have the ability to continue growing apples.

Yes, this is incredibly simplistic, but I am not an economist. So dont expect more from me on this.

But generally speaking, this works. Its a good thing, as such transactions are done voluntarily without interference or threats of violence, and with the goal of both parties gaining something of value.

Although, like all good things, sometimes flaws can be found in systems weve always believed to be inherently sound. The argument can be made that this is the case when it comes to what we understand as free market capitalism.

Im not saying these flaws render this system irrelevant. Quite the contrary, actually. Identifying those flaws, and addressing those flaws to make the system better is beneficial for all of us, and can strengthen the bedrock of this system that has allowed so many people to not only be lifted out from under the burdens of poverty, but actually prosper.

About 15 years ago, I read a book called Natural Capitalism, which suggests that natural and human capital are not adequately figured into the equation of what we would describe as industrial capitalism.

Human and natural capital are not free amenities in inexhaustible supply, but instead, finite and integrally valuable factors of production.

The authors argue that the traditional system of capitalism "does not fully conform to its own accounting principles. It liquidates its capital and calls it income. It neglects to assign any value to the largest stocks of capital it employs the natural resources and living systems, as well as the social and cultural systems that are the basis of human capital."

While I didnt find all of the arguments made in the book to be entirely valid, the basic fundamentals of Natural Capital are completely on point. The authors dont suggest that capitalism is ineffective or inferior to other economic models, but the points that are made serve as a reminder that our understanding of how economic systems work dont have to remain static. They can develop and evolve.

Look at our understanding of science, for instance.

The greatest minds once believed the earth was flat, fevers could be cured with blood-letting, and the earth was the center of the universe.

But as we evolved as a species, and continued learning and developing new understandings of biology, physics, and chemistry, our applicable systems and models also evolved.

While I maintain that the basic building blocks of capitalism are reliable, it is also potentially absent additional building blocks that could actually make capitalism an even stronger force for prosperity and freedom. Not just in the way we understand it today, but in a way that also takes into account the value of health, wellness, and equal opportunity.

In other words, imagine a system of free trade whereby there are fewer negative social, health, and ecological effects resulting from the production and consumption of goods and services.

It may be a bit hard to wrap your head around this at first, as our general understanding of what capitalism is, has been limited by what weve been taught up to this point.

As I noted, theories and systems are not always static. They can change and evolve. And such is the case with a relatively new model of capitalism that has been dubbed Doughnut Economics.

Despite the somewhat silly name, the concept is actually quite fascinating, and further strengthens my argument that investors can do well by doing good.

Doughnut Economics, in my opinion, is a more defined framework of what the authors of Natural Capitalism brought us, arguing that more prosperity can be created for more people if we're willing to look beyond the constraints of contemporary capitalism.

Kate Raworth, the architect of this model, proposed this framework to regard the performance of an economy by the extent to which the needs of people are met without overshooting Earth's ecological ceiling.

The main goal of the new model is to re-frame economic problems and set new goals. In this model, an economy is considered prosperous when all twelve social foundations are met without overshooting any of the nine ecological ceilings. This situation is represented by the area between the two rings as the safe and just space for humanity.

Heres the model that illustrates what shes talking about

At first glance, it may seem counterintuitive, as this is a bit of a departure from everything weve ever learned about free market capitalism, but Raworths argument deserves some consideration. That is, that a healthy economy shouldnt necessarily be designed to just grow, but instead thrive.

Understand, Im not saying Doughnut Economics is the perfect model for freedom and prosperity. I dont know. And surely there are plenty of economists that could counter the arguments made by those who say Doughnut Economics is superior to what weve been taught for decades about the benefits of capitalism. But on its surface, it sure as hell makes a lot of sense to me.

I'm particularly fascinated by this idea of distributive economics, not by way of increased taxation or a centrally-controlled distribution of income (two things I find to be at odds with wealth creation and prosperity for all), bur rather fair access to the wealth that exists in land and resources, the controlling of money creation, and owning technology and knowledge.

Certainly digital currencies, blockchain technology, and open source software have already given us a small peak at what the benefits of this could be.

Either way, I'm definitely looking forward to learning more about all of this in the coming weeks and months.

After all, if my life is to have any purpose, it must include educating myself on ways in which I can be an ally in the move to create a more prosperous and just world for everyone. Not just those born into privilege. This could be a way to further accomplish that.

Photo by Marcel Strau on Unsplash

The preceding article is from one of our external contributors. It does not represent the opinion of Benzinga and has not been edited.

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